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Die chinesische Firma DeepSeek hat mit ihrem neuen KI-Modell die Finanzwelt schockiert. Der Wirtschaftsjournalist Holger Zschäpitz debattiert mit dem KI-Experten, Investor und Gründer von Bardeen.AI Pascal Weinberger über die Folgen für den KI-Komplex von Nvidia über Equinix bis Siemens Energy. Der dieswöchige Dietmar-Deffner-Ersatz verrät, was Anleger jetzt tun sollten und was hinter dem Jevons Paradox steckt. DEFFNER & ZSCHÄPITZ sind wie das wahre Leben. Wie Optimist und Pessimist. Im wöchentlichen WELT-Podcast diskutieren und streiten die Journalisten Dietmar Deffner und Holger Zschäpitz über die wichtigen Wirtschaftsthemen des Alltags. Schreiben Sie uns an: wirtschaftspodcast@welt.de Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutzerklärung: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html
Kenner discusses the top five resources for small business owners in terms of business automation and AI. He highlights the benefits of using AI-powered systems like Cassidy.ai, Bardeen.ai, X, Blue Prism, and UiPath. Kenner emphasizes the importance of business automation for small business owners and how it can improve efficiency, lower costs, and provide better customer service. He also mentions the role of AI in tax liability mitigation. Overall, the conversation focuses on the potential of AI and automation to help small businesses succeed. Takeaways • Business automation and AI can greatly benefit small business owners by improving efficiency and lowering costs. • AI-powered systems like Cassidy.ai, Bardeen.ai, X, Blue Prism, and UiPath offer various automation solutions for different business needs. • Automation can help with tasks such as answering client questions, social media posting, customer service, and enterprise-level queries. • Using AI and automation can potentially expand a business's reach and offer products or services to a wider audience. • AI can also be utilized for tax liability mitigation, providing a more thorough analysis and potential cost savings. Sound Bites • What are the five best resources for a small business owner as far as business automation and AI? • Business automation, which there's going to be a theme here. Well, Cassidy .ai. • Bardeen .ai. It's only like 10 bucks a month. Basically, you can automate almost every business system you have in one smart way is Bardeen .ai. If you have any questions in general you can reach our office at: VastSolutionsGroup.com Phone: 415-854-6512 Email: info@vastsolutionsgroup.com Monday-Thursday 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM (Pacific) Thank you for listening!
The Shred is a weekly roundup of who's raised funds, who's getting acquired and who's on the move in the world of recruitment. The Shred is brought to you today by Jobcase.
On our final episode this season of Working Smarter we talk to Sophia Wang, an assistant professor of ophthalmology at Stanford University. Wang leads the school's ophthalmic informatics and artificial intelligence group, which uses the latest machine learning techniques to analyze electronic health records. In practice, that means looking at disparate sources of data—from doctors' notes and eye exam data to diagnostic imagery and billing codes—and finding the sorts of patterns that can be difficult for humans to spot.Hear Wang talk about using AI to extract useful information from a sea of unstructured data, and how to make better decisions with the data you already have—which, in Wang's case, means improving outcomes for glaucoma patients and providing a better quality of care.Show notes:Learn more about Sophia and her researchVisit Stanford University's Ophthalmic Informatics and Artificial Intelligence Group~ ~ ~Working Smarter is a new podcast from Dropbox about how AI is changing the way we work and get stuff done.You can listen to more episodes of Working Smarter on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. To read more stories and past interviews, visit workingsmarter.aiThis show would not be possible without the talented team at Cosmic Standard, namely: our producers Samiah Adams and Aja Simpson, technical director Jacob Winik, and executive producer Eliza Smith. Special thanks to Benjy Baptiste for production assistance, our marketing and PR consultant Meggan Ellingboe, and our illustrators, Fanny Luor and Justin Tran. Our theme song was created by Doug Stuart. Working Smarter is hosted by Matthew Braga.
For our sixth episode of Working Smarter we're talking to Pascal Weinberger, the co-founder and CEO of Bardeen, an AI-powered automation platform. Weinberger wants to help people effortlessly automate repetitive tasks in the apps they already use for work—no code required. His hope is that by removing some of the friction that makes it hard for people to do their jobs, they can use the time they save on more rewarding, impactful work.Hear Weinberger talk about what people are already automating, how automation can benefit teams as much as individuals, and why he doesn't want to build tools that replace us.Show notes:To learn more about Bardeen, visit bardeen.ai~ ~ ~Working Smarter is a new podcast from Dropbox about how AI is changing the way we work and get stuff done.You can listen to more episodes of Working Smarter on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube Music, Amazon Music, or wherever you get your podcasts. To read more stories and past interviews, visit workingsmarter.aiThis show would not be possible without the talented team at Cosmic Standard, namely: our producers Samiah Adams and Aja Simpson, technical director Jacob Winik, and executive producer Eliza Smith. Special thanks to Benjy Baptiste for production assistance, our marketing and PR consultant Meggan Ellingboe, and our illustrators, Fanny Luor and Justin Tran. Our theme song was created by Doug Stuart. Working Smarter is hosted by Matthew Braga.Thanks for listening!
Join us on our SaaS Founder episode today as we explore the transformative power of automation and the challenges of streamlining non-technical processes with Pascal Weinberger, CEO of Bardeen.ai. Tune in as they discuss the importance of fast feedback and adapting to user needs in SaaS products, the effectiveness of the freemium model, and the recent launch of collaboration and team features. Pascal shares insights on standardizing and automating workflows, the challenges of messaging and positioning Bardine, and the future of AI in revolutionizing various industries.Subscribe, buckle up, and let's fuel up with SaaS knowledge!Key Takeaways00:00 SaaS Fuel podcast explores scaling micro SaaS.03:11 Micro SaaS emphasizes streamlined operations and focus.08:46 Experienced in AI and machine learning, seeking impact.11:47 Easily automate tasks using our AI technology.13:54 Automate guest outreach with Bardeen's AI tool.17:51 Browser extension suggests useful automation based on usage.20:40 Efficiency unlocks productivity gains across various roles.24:27 Extension monitors activities, minimal privacy concerns anticipated.28:11 Fast feedback loop enables quick product development.29:37 Finding data and acting on it purposefully.34:37 Free tier available for the majority of features.36:26 Automating team workflows with standardized team workspaces.40:24 Pushing for go-to-market, specific messaging, long-term automation platform vision.44:16 AI wave leads to many non-defensible companies.45:17 Concerns about technology's impact on businesses.49:25 Innovation pace fast, diverse applications predicted.54:11 Regulating fast-moving tech: challenging but necessary.56:46 Robot builds robots, don't forget Bardeen AI.Tweetable QuotesThe Impact of AI on Startups: "With this new wave of machine learning and AI that's happened, thanks to large language models and, like, the technology being much more accessible now than it ever was before, I think there's 2 things that happen."— Pascal Weinberger 00:44:16The Future of AI: "All these previous things that we thought were, like, long out there or impossible to do, we've solved now. So I think that's to say that, like, the pace of innovation is so incredibly fast that it's virtually impossible to predict what happens."— Pascal Weinberger 00:49:38Micro SaaS: "Creating a micro SaaS is starting smart and scaling with precision. It's a lean focused approach to SaaS that really just revolutionizes the business model, combines productivity, profitability, and purposeful growth."— Jeff Mains 00:02:20The Challenge of Scaling a SaaS: "I think it's building a SaaS that remains agile and impactful without succumbing to the pressure to over expand."— Jeff Mains 00:03:39The Power of Micro SaaS: "But think about a few, what I would say, micro SaaS companies in the beginning that you would definitely know and have grown up to be pretty significant. Buffer is one of those that I think of."— Jeff Mains 00:05:17SaaS Leadership Lessons1. Importance of Fast Feedback and Adaptation: SaaS leaders should prioritize fast feedback loops with customers to drive product development. Adapting to user needs quickly can be a catalyst for success in delivering valuable solutions.2. Conviction in Innovation: Have conviction in pushing through new ideas and solutions in the SaaS space, emphasizing the need to balance innovation with user feedback and adaptability.3. Freemium Model for User Feedback: Utilize freemium models to gather user feedback and insights, allowing for a low barrier to entry while encouraging user engagement and product...
In this week's episode of The Conference Room, host Simon Lader sits down with Pascal Weinberger, co-founder and CEO of Bardeen.ai, discusses the journey of founding a startup in the AI space and emphasizes the importance of trust, innovation, and critical thinking in building a successful team. Key topics include hiring strategies, prioritizing speed and experimentation, and applying first principles in AI deployment. KEY TAKEAWAYS FROM THIS WEEK'S EPISODE 01:06 - 02:51 - Pascal's Journey into AI 03:43 - 05:56 - Automating Repetitive Manual Workflows 06:26 - 14:06 - Impact of AI on the Modern Workforce 14:06 - 21:14 - Building a Startup Team in a Cutting-Edge Field 21:14 - 21:40 - Building Trust Through Connections 21:40 - 22:27 - Critical Role of Early Hires 22:27 - 23:23 - Balancing Experience and Innovation 23:23 - 24:18 - Cultural Alignment and Vision 24:18 - 25:36 - Prioritizing Speed and Experimentation 25:36 - 26:45 - Three Tips for Success 26:45 - 28:30 - Applying First Principles 28:30 - 30:01 - Critical Thinking in Innovation Pascal Weinberger is the Co-Founder and CEO of Bardeen.ai, a leading AI company focusing on automating repetitive and manual workflows across web apps. Previously, Pascal built and scaled other ventures leveraging AI and machine learning for industrial applications and the AI team at Telefonica Alpha, Europe's first moonshot factory. Pascal is also an active angel investor in AI and deep-tech companies globally. To learn more about Pascal Weinberger please visit his Linkedin Profile To learn more about Bardeen.ai, please visit their website YOUR HOST - SIMON LADER Simon Lader is the host of The Conference Room, Co-Founder of global executive search firm Salisi Human Capital, and lead generation consultancy Flow and Scale. Since 1997, Simon has helped cybersecurity vendors to build highly effective teams, and since 2022 he has helped people create consistent revenue through consistent lead generation. Get to know more about Simon at: Website: https://simonlader.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/simonlader LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/headhuntersimonlader/ The Conference Room is available on Spotify Apple podcasts Amazon Music IHeartRadio
In this episode of "The Cone Zone," Jesus delves into the critical topic of carbon storage in forests and introduces the innovative Reforest America Carbon Program by American Forests. Ben Rushakoff, from American Forests, provides insights into how this program connects landowners with carbon finance to fund climate-smart reforestation projects. The discussion touches upon the program's objectives, partnership opportunities for corporations seeking nature-based climate solutions, and its differentiation from traditional carbon credit systems. Rushakoff emphasizes the importance of planting carbon-rich, climate-adapted forests and outlines the unique qualities of such forests. Despite the high cost of reforestation, it is hailed as the lowest-cost method of carbon removal from the atmosphere. The episode explores factors influencing reforestation costs and compares them to other carbon capture methods. Rushakoff shares perspectives on the viability of carbon storage and capture technology versus natural carbon sinks, advocating for a balanced approach. He also discusses the program's impact on forests, communities, and emissions, along with future prospects and ideal outcomes. References: Carbon financing. American Forests. (2024, March 18). https://www.americanforests.org/project/racp/ How forests store carbon. Penn State Extension. (n.d.). https://extension.psu.edu/how-forests-store-carbon#:~:text=Forests%20are%20an%20important%20carbon,planting%20occurs%20on%20the%20landscape Lindsey, R. (2023, April 9). Climate change: Atmospheric carbon dioxide. NOAA Climate.gov. https://www.climate.gov/news-features/understanding-climate/climate-change-atmospheric-carbon-dioxide Person, Bardeen, S., & Peterson, C. (2023, November 15). Are carbon offsets actually working?. Public Policy Institute of California. https://www.ppic.org/blog/are-carbon-offsets-actually-working/ What is a carbon sink?. ClientEarth. (n.d.). https://www.clientearth.org/latest/news/what-is-a-carbon-sink/ Additional Material: What are greenhouse gasses? https://www.epa.gov/ghgemissions/overview-greenhouse-gases What is carbon finance? https://www.americanforests.org/project/racp/ What is Verra? https://verra.org/?gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjw_qexBhCoARIsAFgBleuqgUNhpwWziD_ignFz1tBtf9TMFJoDv5RA_-ERNt6cH4f1_LrPt1gaAhQ-EALw_wcB The producers of The Cone Zone strongly believe in the value of open discourse, and the right to freedom of expression. We would like to remind listeners that the views and comments expressed by our guests are theirs and theirs alone, and do not necessarily represent the opinions and perspectives of the Cone Zone's project sponsors or affiliates, including American Forests, the California Climate Action Corps and California Volunteers.
In this conversation, I jumped into the world of Artificial Intelligence (AI) and its applications beyond just content creation. Focusing on automation and workflow efficiency, AI enthusiast, Parker Olson discusses how he uses AI to streamline operations in his business, PodPitch - an initiative fueled by AI. Day-to-day business tasks like data collection, data analysis, content creation, and more can be efficiently automated using AI. Olson introduces us to some handy tools for such purposes, like Bardeen and the ChatGPT API for Google Sheets. These tools can gather data from popular websites, analyze large datasets, clean and summarize the data, and even outreach prospective customers - all in real-time. Today's businesses are leveraging AI to automate their LinkedIn tasks, using tools like MeetAlfred. Coupled with ChatGPT and Bardeen, this AI trio can run a comprehensive LinkedIn profile analysis to determine potential customers. By comparing and contrasting your profile information with others, it gives you a list of potential business connections. But AI doesn't stop at LinkedIn automation; it also helps identify other sources for content publishing and relevant websites for clients. By creating a Google filter for specific search terms, AI tools can gather data on the latest publishing channels directly into a spreadsheet and provide an insightful analysis of the content.
Bardeen is an AI automation platform to replace your repetitive tasks. Explore our integrations with your favorite apps and hundreds of pre-built playbooks that help you stay in the flow. Bardeen is a productivity tool to automate your repetitive tasks and control your web apps from anywhere. Connect with Pascal
In this episode of BetterTech, host Colin McCarthy engages in a captivating conversation with Pascal, the CEO of Bardeen, to explore the evolving landscape of artificial intelligence (AI) and its impact on workflow automation. Pascal sheds light on the current trends, challenges, and the future trajectory of AI in business, emphasizing its integration into everyday workflows and the role of accessibility in shaping technology. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bettertech/message
The First 100 | How Founders Acquired their First 100 Customers | Product-Market Fit
My guest today is Artem Harutyunyan the cofounder of Bardeen.ai, an AI workflow automation startup. Bardeen has raised to date $ 18.8 million from notable investors such as Insight Partners, 468 Capital, and FirstMark Capital.According to recent public data, Bardeen has close to 200k installations.Where to find Artem Harutyunyan:• Website: https://www.bardeen.ai/• LinkedIn: Artem Harutyunyan | LinkedInWhere to find Hadi Radwan:• Newsletter: Principles Friday | Hadi Radwan | Substack• LinkedIn: Hadi Radwan | LinkedInIf you like our podcast, please don't forget to subscribe and support us on your favorite podcast players. We also would appreciate your feedback and rating to reach more people.We recently launched our new newsletter, Principles Friday, where I share one principle that can help you in your life or business, one thought-provoking question, and one call to action toward that principle. Please subscribe Here.It is Free and Short (2min).
¿Quieres potenciar tu Marketing con IA? Aquí te presento algunas herramientas que cambiarán tu juego (Parte 1): 1. ChatGPT ️ Ideal para ideación de contenido y correcciones, pero conserva el toque humano. 2. Claude 2 Una versión más humana y actualizada de ChatGPT. Gran chatbot con el que conversar. 3. Midjourney Crea imágenes de alta calidad con descripciones simples. 4. Photoshop con IA Mejora tus imágenes existentes y crea nuevas visualizaciones. 5. Automatización ⚙️ Herramientas como Make, Bardeen y Zapier simplifican flujos de trabajo. 6. Notion AI Tu "segundo cerebro" para notas. Con Super, convierte esas notas en sitios web. 7. Rewind ⏪ Documenta y agrupa todo lo que ves en tu laptop o móvil. 8. Fireflies AI ️ Transcribe y resume tus reuniones para futuras consultas. 9. Wondercraft AI Convierte contenido escrito en episodios de podcast. 10. Vimcal El "calendario más rápido del mundo" para maximizar la productividad. 11. Superhuman Asistente de correo electrónico con IA que agiliza la gestión de emails. TEKDI: Instituto de Marketing Digital de los Negocios Mejora los Resultados del Negocio con el Marketing Digital y la IA ► Dedicando solo 15 minutos al día con nuestra plataforma online con más de 125 cursos, másters y certificaciones con divertidas clases prácticas en video, acompañamiento de un tutor, mentorías en directo, retos reales en vivo y mucho más. ►►►https://tekdi.education/ Y no olvides suscribirte y valorar nuestro podcast ★★★★★
Sign up for our next LLM in production conference: https://go.mlops.community/prodiii #180 with LLMs in Production Conference part 2 Ux of a LLM User Panel, Misty Free, Dina Yerlan, and Artem Harutyunyan hosted by Innovation Endeavors' Davis Treybig. // Abstract Explore different approaches to interface design, emphasizing the significance of crafting effective prompts and addressing accuracy and hallucination issues. Discover some strategies for improving latency and performance, including monitoring, scaling, and exploring emerging technologies. // Bio Misty Free Misty Free is a product manager at Jasper, where she focuses on supercharging marketers with speed and consistency in their marketing campaigns, with the power of AI. Misty has also collaborated with Stability and OpenAI to offer AI image generation within Jasper. She approaches product development with a "jobs-to-be-done" mindset, always starting with the "why" behind any need, ensuring that customer pain points are directly addressed with the features shipped at Jasper. In her free time, Misty enjoys crocheting amigurumi, practicing Spanish on Duolingo, and spending quality time with her family. Misty will be on a panel sharing her insights and experiences on the real-world use cases of LLMs. Davis Treybig Davis is a partner at Innovation Endeavors, an early-stage venture firm focused on teams solving hard technical & engineering problems. He personally focuses on computing infrastructure, AI/ML, and data. Dina Yerlan Head of Product, Generative AI Data at Adobe Firefly (family of foundation models for creatives). Artem Harutyunyan Artem is the Co-Founder & CTO at Bardeen AI. Prior to Bardeen, he was in engineering and product roles at Mesosphere and Qualys, and before that, he worked at CERN. // MLOps Jobs board https://mlops.pallet.xyz/jobs // MLOps Swag/Merch https://mlops-community.myshopify.com/ // Related Links Website: https://www.angellist.com/venture/relay Foundation by Isaac Asimov: https://www.amazon.com/Foundation-Isaac-Asimov/dp/0553293354 AngelList Relay blog: https://www.angellist.com/blog/introducing-angellist-relay --------------- ✌️Connect With Us ✌️ ------------- Join our slack community: https://go.mlops.community/slack Follow us on Twitter: @mlopscommunity Sign up for the next meetup: https://go.mlops.community/register Catch all episodes, blogs, newsletters, and more: https://mlops.community/ Connect with Demetrios on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dpbrinkm/ Connect with Davis on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davistreybig/ Connect with Misty on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/misty-miglorin/ Connect with Dina on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dinayerlan/ Connect with Artem on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/artemharutyunyan/
Part II is here and I've got to admit, putting together this episodes has been a real journey down the rabbit hole of AI insights. In this episode, we explore the transformative impact of AI on marketing and technology. We discuss AI's influence on product and content marketing, its role in reshaping SEO strategies, and how Chat-GPT is changing search dynamics. We delve into the evolving digital advertising landscape, augmented analytics, and the ethical considerations surrounding AI. Tune in Now! Chapters: (00:00) Intro (02:23) How will AI impact content marketing (Derek Osgood, Founder & CEO @ Ignition) (04:16) SEO new landscape (Hikari Senju, Founder & CEO @ Omneky) (07:03) How does Chat-GPT change the SEO game? (Pascal Weinberger, Founder & CEO @ Bardeen.ai) (12:09) The new searching habits (Tom Taulli, author of "Generative AI: How ChatGPT and Other AI Tools Will Revolutionize Business") (14:43) Performance marketing in the age of AI (Hikari) (16:31) What is augmented analytics and what's happening in that space? (Sean Byrnes, Founder @ Outlier.ai and Flurry) (21:24) Are we prepared for widespread automation (Tom T.) (22:31) The potential flip side of using AI (Tony Beltramelli, Founder & CEO @ Uizard) (23:54) How AI is going to change work for the average person? (Hikari) (25:21) New work roles powered by AI (Hikari) (26:41) Who is responsible to address mass unemployment due to automation and AI (Reid Blackman, PhD, author "Ethical Machines") (32:34) Generative AI (Chat-GPT) and copyright law (Rasty Turek, Founder & CEO @ Pex) (34:53) AI Regulations (Tom T.) (36:49) Responsible AI (Yaniv Makover, Founder & CEO @ Anyword) (38:06) Are we approaching Artificial General Intelligence? (Alexander De Ridder, Co-Founder & CTO @ Ink) (40:17) When will we see the singularity? (Pascal) (41:32) Conclusion Sponsor: This podcast is brought to you by grwth.co. Grwth offers fractional CMOs, paired with best-in-class digital marketing execution to support early-stage startup success. With a focus on seed and series-A companies, Grwth has helped a number of SaaS, digital health, and e-commerce startups build their go-to-market function and scale up. To learn more and book a free consultation, go to grwth.co. Get in touch with Mosheh: linkedin.com/in/moshehp/ https://twitter.com/Moshehp hello@pmfpod.com https://www.pmfpod.com/
Are you as excited about generative AI as I am? My guests and I have covered generative AI extensively on the podcast. The applications of this technology are far-reaching and the speed of innovation is dizzying. I've put together a special 2-part mashup of previous episodes on the topic. In this first installment, we dive deep into the foundational concepts, from exploring the power of transformers to unveiling the game-changing potential of ChatGPT. We also explore the competitive landscape of AI, giving you insights into the race among tech giants and startups, from the perspective of founders and investors. I hope you enjoy it and go back to listen to the full episodes (if you haven't already done so). Tune in to part 2 next week as we cover the implications of AI on marketers and the societal and ethical implications. Chapters: (00:00) Introduction (02:07) What are transformers? (Pascal Weinberger, Founder & CEO @ Bardeen.ai) (05:01) Can machines understand? (Pascal) (05:37) Is Chat-GPT truly a game changer? (Pascal) (9:12) The chat interface (Alexander De Ridder, Co-Founder & CTO @ Ink) (11:13) How Chat-GPT continues to improve (Alexander) (13:49) Google and the Innovator's Dilemma (Tom Taulli, author of "Generative AI: How ChatGPT and Other AI Tools Will Revolutionize Business") (15:51) Is Google ahead of OpenAI? (Pascal) (17:23) The AI race between tech giants (Tom) (18:24) Where does value accrue in the AI race? (Pascal) (20:16) The new generation of AI startups (Tom) (22:33) The impact of AI on startups (Leo Polovets, Founding Partner @ Susa Ventures) (24:25) AI is helping entrepreneurs in starting and scaling companies (Tony Beltramelli, Founder & CEO @ Uizard) (25:43) Thinking about the competitive landscape (Danielle Dafni, Founder & CEO @ Peech.ai) (28:16) Where do moats develop? (Hikari Senju, Founder & CEO @ Omneky) (29:50) Better tech leads to sustainable advantage (Asaf Yanai, Founder & CEO @ Alison.ai) (32:13) Differentiation and positioning (Yaniv Makover, Founder & CEO @ Anyword) (34:48) Being AI-first vs. AI as an add-on (Tony B.) (35:54) People don't buy AI, they buy the value it's creating (Yaniv) (36:51) Informed AI investments amidst the buzz (Leo) (40:05) The bull case for investing in AI (April Underwood, Founding Partner @ Adverb Ventures) (41:33) Conclusion Sponsor: This podcast is brought to you by grwth.co. Grwth offers fractional CMOs, paired with best-in-class digital marketing execution to support early-stage startup success. With a focus on seed and series-A companies, Grwth has helped a number of SaaS, digital health, and e-commerce startups build their go-to-market function and scale up. To learn more and book a free consultation, go to grwth.co. Get in touch with Mosheh: linkedin.com/in/moshehp/ https://twitter.com/Moshehp hello@pmfpod.com https://www.pmfpod.com/
Blog post: https://medium.com/asecuritysite-when-bob-met-alice/noyce-moore-and-grove-a-template-for-spin-out-start-up-success-b67d9795154a Introduction So, is there a formula for a successful start-up/spin-out — and if you followed it, you would be guaranteed success? For this, many people approach me and say, “I want to have a spin-out. What should I do?”. To me, this is a little like saying, “I want to fly, can you give me wings?”. So, let me lay out a few things that I have learned over the past two decades of being involved in spin-out companies. Overall, we have been very lucky in our spin-outs, with three highly successful ones, and where two have been bought out (Zonefox and Symphonic), and the third is expanding fast within digital forensics (Cyacomb). But, as they say, “The Harder I Practice, the Luckier I Get”. We have had failures, but every time our team has licked their wounds and come back stronger. And the one thing, though, I've observed is that the leadership of an innovative company often needs to change as it evolves, and those leading it need to know when they need to move aside and let others take their place. So, I'm going to define the three stages as: Visionary, Strategy and Grit, and where there are very different leaders at each stage. But, fundamentally, the first two stages set up the culture and approach of the company, and which are fundamental to its long-term beliefs and ideals. Overall, few companies in the third stage can turn their ship and travel in a different direction. The approach of IBM, for example, is still one of an engineering approach to their work and one built on rewarding innovation. Forgive me, I'm technical And, so I am a cryptography professor, and not a business one, so please forgive me for not covering the core literature in the areas of business. I am also highly technical, and that is what I love. I would never want to be a cut-throat business person and would never want to be. I love inventing things and seeing ideas grow from seeds. And one thing I know is when my role is complete as part of the innovation process and when to move aside. But, deeply technical people are at the core of creating a successful spin-out, along with people with a vision. And, so, I would like to lay out a basic template of my observations in creating a successful spin-out — and based on the ones we have produced. To me, also, a great technical company should have a core of theoretical work, and where the best work can come from academic collaborations. In academia, there is an attention to detail and theory, and which makes sense of the complex world of invention and discovery. But, the magic comes from practical implements, and where the best collaborations mix practice with theory. So, my basic template for success is to get the right leadership team in place, and get the right leader for the right time. A core part of this is knowing when the leader should move aside and let someone else take over. For this, I'll map it to the success of Intel and its first three employees: Robert Noyce, Gordon Moore and Andy Grove. Stage 1: Robert Noyce — the Visionary (1968–1975) If there's a superstar of our digital era, it must be Robert Noyce. Imagine inventing the one thing that now drives virtually everything in our digital age: the integrated circuit. It all started in the late 1950s with John Bardeen and Walter Brattain at Bell Labs and who first invented the transistor. William Shockley advanced the concept with the creation of the bipolar transistor. Bardeen and Brattain were a great research team and has a great balance of theoretical skills with practical ones. Brattain did the theory, and Bardeen did the practical work. All three eventually received a Nobel Prize for their work — with Brattain being one of the few people to ever get two Nobel Prizes. While Bell Labs was a hub of innovation at the time, Shockley wanted to take a good deal of the credit for the invention of the transistor and left Bell Labs to set up his own company in 1955: Shockley Semiconductor. For this, we recruited Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore to work on his ideas. But Shockley was a difficult boss and had an overbearing approach to his management style. This caused eight of Shockley's employees — including Robert Noyce and Gordon Moore — to leave the company and start their own venture with the support of Fairchild Camera and Instrument. It was there, in 1961, that Robert created one of the most significant patents of all time: It outlined a magical way of doping a semiconductor substrate and producing an integrated circuit: This invention differed from Jack Kilby's work at Texas Instruments, as Robert outlined a monolithic circuit while Jack defined a hybrid circuit approach. And, so, Fairchild grew fast as a leader in semiconductors, but as the company grew, Robert increasingly missed the days of true innovation and decided to team up with Gordon Moore to create Integrated Electronics (which would end up just being known as Intel). And, so, Robert was the anchor for the creation of Intel. A true visionary and someone that people trusted and listened to. It was thus not difficult for Andy Rock to find the seed funding for the start-up — as it had Robert's name on it. Those who invested in the company were not investing in the company and its projected product line but in Robert. In Stage 1 we thus have the visionary leader. The person who can see beyond the near future and build a company that could scale towards their vision, and someone who both inspired people to believe and someone who others could trust with the vision. And, so, Robert led Intel from 1968 to 1975 but knew the time that he needed to hand over to someone else. And, that needed to be someone who had a core understanding of the technology required to scale Intel: Gordon Moore. Stage 2: Gordon Moore — the technical and strategic genius (1975–1987) In Stage 2, we move from the visionary leader to the strategic leader, and there was no better person than Gordon Moore (and who created the mighty Moore's Law — and which is still relevant to this day). Gordon had an eye for detail and quality. For Intel to succeed, they needed someone to convert the vision shown by Noyce to something that matched the market. For this, he invested heavily in R&D and made Intel a world leader in the memory market. But, he showed his strategic brilliance by spotting the opportunity to initiate work in microprocessors. As we all know, in 1969, Intel was designing some chips for Busicom and decided to integrate these into a single device, which could be programmed with software. The designer was Ted Hoff, and he produced the first microprocessor: the 4004. And, so, as the memory market became crowded and profits fell, Gordon moved Intel out of it and ramped up the development of the 8-bit and 16-bit microprocessors. The device that sprang out of this development was the Intel 8086, which — luck would have it — was the processor selected for the IBM PC. It was luck and strategy, and Gordon was a core part of this. Most CEOs would have pushed forward in the memory market, but Gordon focused Intel's R&D on new markets. Gordon Moore was thus the second phase leader and the one who could stop opportunities and be in the right place at the right time to exploit them. Without his technical genius, the company would have struggled to understand how to scale R&D into emerging markets. Stage 3: Andy Grove — the detail (1987–1998) And now we need the last piece of the puzzle … Andy Grove. Intel had grown up as a company of idealists and lacked a “Us and Them” approach to management. Noyce, Moore and Grove had led the company, but they were colleagues. Many remember that it was often difficult to find Gordon in the company when they visited him, as he sat in a cubical in the open plan set up and shared the same physical space with others in the company. There were no fancy trimmings for Gordon in his CEO role — he was as much a worker as any other. And both Robert and Gordon had a gentle approach to their management style, but Andy brought an edge that the congenial Moore and Noyce could never give. At eight years old, Andy escaped with his mother from the Nazis and left Hungary at the age of 20 during the Hungarian Revolution. He arrived in the US as a refugee with no money but with a passion for learning. Eventually, he gained his PhD from the University of California, Berkeley. And, so, Andy provided the grit and desire to succeed that Intel needed, and, as with Gordon, he had an eye for quality and in making sure that everything that Intel did was at the highest possible technical level. And so it was Andy who had the grit to move Intel out of its core memory business and into microprocessors. He had a knack for taking complex problems and distilling them down into strategies that were easy for those involved to understand. Perhaps it was because he was an engineer first and then had to learn about management and strategic approaches. His strategy was to move Intel out of memory and straight into the PC. The natural choice at the time for the processor in the PC was Motorola, but Grove managed to get the technical support in place for the Intel chip, and that allowed engineers to develop their prototypes. And, what did Grove do about the expertise in memory? He put it to good use in integrating SRAM caches into the processor, which massively speeded up their operation. Andy thus had the grit that Intel required to take it into new markets and win: The most important role of managers is to create an environment where people are passionately dedicated to winning in the marketplace. Fear plays a major role in creating and maintaining such passion. Fear of competition, fear of bankruptcy, fear of being wrong and fear of losing can all be powerful motivators. Conclusions Moore and Noyce drove Intel to become one of the world's most powerful companies. The team had a perfect balance … Noyce inspired everyone he met and built an initial customer base, while Moore built technical excellence and then followed through. It was left to Grove to focus on detail and excellence. William Shockley failed in the market as he couldn't share success with others, while Moore, Noyce and Grove built a culture of collaboration and in taking shared ownership of the company they built. The first stages of a company are thus so important is building its culture into the future. If those involved in those first stages do not act in the right way, then the company may be doomed to have the wrong approaches to its employees and customers. The initial leaders are the ones that people should look up to and be inspired by. This is not often through business practice, but having core scientific and technical expertise in their field. So, get your team in place … a visionary, a technical genius, and a true leader with grit. But, knowing the best leader at any given time and knowing when to hand over to someone else can take the next great step forward. And, go do something wonderful …
47 : The Flow: Episode 47 - Notion for Podcasters Ecamm Network Listen to The Flow Podcasting, especially video podcasting, can be a great way to share your message with the world. There are so many things to learn and do, but it's hard to know where to start if you've never done it before. Producing a podcast can seem daunting at first; it's easy to feel overwhelmed when you're starting something new. Using a Video First approach with Ecamm Live will make it much easier and save you lots of time.The Flow is here to help. We'll take you step-by-step through creating a video podcast, from planning and production to promotion and monetization. You'll learn how to build an efficient workflow that will make your content shine, leaving you to focus on creating great content.In this episode of the Flow Podcast, Doc Rock, Community Manager at Ecamm, and Cat Mulvahill, a Notion and Productivity Specialist, explore the world of Notion. They discuss how Notion can be utilized by podcasters, content creators, and entrepreneurs to streamline their workflow, organize their content, and enhance their productivity.Learn more about Cat Mulvihill at: https://www.youtube.com/@CatMulvihillLearn more about Notion w/ Cat: https://notion.catmulvihill.comCat's Notion tutorial videos: Get Organized with Notion: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLvHSfPVVKOLFzN1znC6uT3hNFhFHN-Fby 1. **Introduction** - Introduction of Cat Mulvahill, a Notion and Productivity Specialist. - Overview of Notion and its capabilities.2. **Notion for Podcasters** - **Organizing Content**: How to use Notion to organize books, shows, episodes, and more. - **Creating Databases**: Discussion on creating databases, linking tables, and managing relationships. - **Scraping Data**: Cat explains how to scrape data from websites like YouTube using tools like Bardeen. - **Integrations**: How to integrate Notion with other tools like Tally, Zapier, and more. - **Checklists and Templates**: Creating pre-live checklists and templates for podcasting.3. **Advanced Notion Tips** - **Automation**: How to automate tasks within Notion. - **Customization**: How to customize Notion to fit individual needs, including adding properties to databases. - **Community Engagement**: How to engage with the community through Notion, including creating community book clubs.4. **Q&A Session** - Answers to live audience questions about Notion, including linking forms, scraping, and more.5. **Conclusion** - Final thoughts on Notion and its potential for podcasters and content creators.#### Bonus Section: For More ExplorationFor content entrepreneurs who want to grow and monetize an audience, and specifically for the topic of "Notion for Podcasters," here are additional resources:- **Tally**: Learn how to create forms and integrate them with Notion [here](https://tally.so).- **Bardeen**: Explore how to scrape data from websites [here](https://bardeen.ai).- **Notion Free Plan**: Start using Notion for free and explore its features [here](https://www.notion.com).---Welcome to The Flow. Created by Ecamm and hosted by Doc Rock and Katie Fawkes, this weekly video podcast will take you step-by-step through the process of video podcasting.Want to see behind-the-scenes? Join the studio audience of our live recordings every Tuesday at 12 pm Eastern on YouTube.This video podcast is powered by Ecamm. With Ecamm, you...
Today my guest is Lorraine Bardeen, VP and Chief Technology officer at Microsoft! We discuss her journey through life and Cornell (ever heard of it) that led her to Microsoft. We discuss her life through high school and college, and why there are many people in her rolodex she would call before Bill Gates if she needed a tire change. She defends Clippy, the original AI Microsoft assistant, ranks her sisters, and lists keys to success, hiring and what she looks for in a potential fast tracker. She validates my adherence to Atomic Habits. Check out her inspirational and informational blogs on linkedin!
Explore the cutting edge of healthcare delivery and innovation with Derek Miles, founder and CEO of CourMed and chairman of TMB Equity Partners. Derek shares his journey from discouraged entrepreneur to successful leader in the healthcare industry, offering valuable insights on fundraising, global expansion, and partnerships for sourcing skilled healthcare professionals. Discover the benefits of CourMed's concierge healthcare services, including prescription delivery, medical services, infusion therapies, vaccines, and advanced testing. With a world-class team of medical practitioners, CourMed is dedicated to providing exceptional healthcare and wellness solutions to consumers wherever they are. Don't miss this exciting episode featuring Derek Miles, as he discusses the future of healthcare and the challenges of scaling a healthcare business. If your company is looking to scale its AI initiatives, head over to Tesoro AI (www.tesoroai.com). We are experts in AI strategy, staff augmentation, and AI product development. Founder Bio: Derrick is Founder/Chief Executive Officer at CourMed. In addition, Mr. Miles is Chairman + Founder of TMB Equity Partners (executive team are former healthcare executives with 15+ years of experience); a boutique firm focused on investing/developing innovative healthcare solutions that achieve a liquidity event within five years. Derrick is also a multiple patented inventor, he received both an MSHA (#1 Program in the country) and MBA from the University of Alabama at Birmingham. He also holds a BS in Medical Technology (minor in Chemistry) from Bethune-Cookman University. Derrick is married with two sons; his family lives in Collin County, TX, and Dade County, FL. Show Notes: 02:47 Derrick Miles background to Healthcare Executive 06:13 Encouraging people through innovative healthcare delivery platforms 09:22 Investing in health care company to serve high net worth clients 14:34 CourMed health and wellness service models 17:14 Becoming national provider of concierge health and wellness for the NBA 19:16 Benefits of CourMed concierge health care platform and wellness services 26:04 Tech features for scalability in the concierge business 28:34 Building a tech stack for CourMed with a fractional CTO 35:22 Leveraging partnerships to source high-skilled healthcare professionals 38:37 Exploring the challenges of expanding a healthcare business globally 40:18 Journey of raising funds for a startup and understanding the investment process 42:58 Understanding the difference between investment and found less sponsorship 45:50 What's next for CourMed in 2023 46:40 How to get in contact with the Bardeen team Resources: Company website: https://www.courmed.com/about-us/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/courmed/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/courmed/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/CourMed
The Psychology of Self-Injury: Exploring Self-Harm & Mental Health
A lot of therapies address the context in which nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI) and self-harm may occur, but only a few treatments have been designed to address NSSI specifically. In this episode, we dive into one of these treatments: Emotion Regulation Group Therapy (ERGT). Drs. Kim Gratz and Matthew Tull from the University of Toledo in Ohio walk us through in significant detail each of the 90-minute 14 sessions of ERGT.Learn more about Dr. Gratz here and reach her at klgratz28@gmail.com. Learn more about Dr. Tull here and follow him on Twitter @MTTull. Learn more about the Personality and Emotion Research and Treatment (PERT) Laboratory within the Department of Psychology at the University of Toledo here, and follow the PERT Lab on Twitter @LabPert. Below are links to their research on ERGT referenced in this episode:Gratz, K. L., & Gunderson, J. G. (2006). Preliminary data on an acceptance-based emotion regulation group intervention for deliberate self-harm among women with Borderline Personality Disorder. Behavior Therapy, 37(1), 25-35.Gratz, K. L., & Tull, M. T. (2011). Extending research on the utility of an adjunctive emotion regulation group therapy for deliberate self-harm among women with borderline personality pathology. Personality Disorders: Theory, Research, and Treatment, 2(4), 316–326.Gratz, K. L., Tull, M. T., & Levy, R. (2014). Randomized controlled trial and uncontrolled 9-month follow-up of an adjunctive emotion regulation group therapy for deliberate self-harm among women with borderline personality disorder. Psychological Medicine, 44, 2099–2112.Gratz, K. L., Bardeen, J. R., Levy, R., Dixon-Gordon, K., L., & Tull, M. T. (2015). Mechanisms of change in an emotion regulation group therapy for deliberate self-harm among women with borderline personality disorder. Behaviour Research and Therapy, 65, 29-35.Sahlin, H., Bjureberg, J., Gratz, K. L., Tull, M. T., Hedman, E., Bjarehed, J., Jokinen, J., Lundh, L., Ljotsson, B., & Hellner, C. (2017). Emotion regulation group therapy for deliberate self-harm: A multi-site evaluation in routine care using an uncontrolled open trial design. BMJ Open, 7(10), e016220.Follow Dr. Westers on Instagram and Twitter (@DocWesters). To join ISSS, visit itriples.org and follow ISSS on Facebook and Twitter (@ITripleS).The Psychology of Self-Injury podcast has been rated #5 by Feedspot in their "Best 20 Clinical Psychology Podcasts" and by Welp Magazine in their "20 Best Injury Podcasts."
With the release of Chat-GPT, everybody is suddenly talking about AI. How does Chat-GPT work? Is it truly a game-changer? What will happen to Google and the field of SEO? In the previous episode (#7), I talked to Pascal Weinberger, CEO of Bardeen.ai, and we talked about Bardeen's journey and the growth lessons he learned along the way. If you haven't listened to that episode yet, you should definitely check it out. When I was chatting with Pascal I took the opportunity to pick his brain about artificial intelligence and he was generous enough to take me down that rabbit hole, so I'm excited to share that conversation with you here, in this special bonus episode. Timestamps: (2:55) How does Bardeen leverage AI? (6:13) Is Chat-GPT truly a game changer? (13:19) How does Chat-GPT change the SEO game? (19:31) Is Google ahead of OpenAI? (21:41) Is there room for startups in the future? (23:49) What are transformers? (27:00) Can machines understand? (28:47) Symbolic AI vs. machine learning (33:29) When will we see the singularity? Links and further reading: www.bardeen.ai/ai www.aleph-alpha.com "Attention Is All You Need" https://proceedings.neurips.cc/paper/2017/file/3f5ee243547dee91fbd053c1c4a845aa-Paper.pdf Episode of Invest Like the Best: https://www.joincolossus.com/episodes/77957344/lowin-explaining-the-new-ai-paradigm Guest contact info: https://www.linkedin.com/in/pascalweinberger/ https://twitter.com/bardeenai www.bardeen.ai Sponsor: This podcast is brought to you by grwth.co. Grwth offers fractional CMOs, paired with best-in-class digital marketing execution to support early-stage startup success. With a focus on seed and series A companies, Grwth has helped a number of SaaS, digital health, and e-commerce startups build their go-to-market function and scale up. To learn more and book a free consultation, go to grwth.co. Get in touch with us: www.linkedin.com/in/moshehp/ twitter.com/MoshehP hello@pmfpod.com www.pmfpod.com
Pascal Weinberger is the founder and CEO of Bardeen. I don't throw the word genius around lightly but Pascal definitely ranks up there. I really enjoyed this thoughtful and honest interview and I think you will too! In this episode, Pascal shares Bardeen's growth story and we cover: How they built a beta product and iterated with user feedback His experience launching on Product Hunt How to activate new users And whether startups should be multi-platform or go all-in on a single one to start We also touched on topics covered in previous episodes such as programmatic or product-led SEO and building viral Growth loops into the product. So if you haven't listened to those episodes, definitely go back and check those out. Timestamps: (0:00) Introduction (3:05) what is Bardeen? (4:40) competitive landscape (9:50) Pascal's background and coming up with the idea for Bardeen (14:18) iterating through the beta launch (17:22) launching on Product Hunt (23:09) activation growth loops (27:09) leveraging programmatic SEO (30:16) other growth strategies (building virality) (34:39) pricing strategy and freemium (39:50) collecting user feedback (41:18) selling through the Chrome Web Store (44:31) should you go multi-platform? (47:26) lightning round
Story 1: Today marks the 75th anniversary of the first successful test of the transistorOn this day, December 16, in 1947, scientists at Bell Labs conducted the first successful test of their semiconductor amplifier, the transistor.Over time, the transistor totally revolutionized the field of electronics, and paved the way for all the electronic devices in our lives today.As one of the most important building blocks of modern electronics, many historians contend it stands as one of the most important scientific inventions in world history.But first, what is a transistor?In the most fundamental terms, a transistor is a semiconductor device used to amplify or switch electrical signals and power.Another definition is a transistor is a semiconductor device for amplifying, controlling, and generating electrical signals. Transistors are the active components of integrated circuits, or “microchips,” which often contain billions of these minuscule devices etched into their shiny surfaces.In its role as a switch, the transistor either prevents or allows current to flow through.Here's what motivated the researchers at Bell Labs to create the transistor 75 years ago:An amazing team of scientists at Bell Labs, most notably John Bardeen and Walter Brattain working under William Shockley, wanted to replace the unreliable and hot vacuum tubes [as well as slow electromechanical relays] used in long-distance telephone service equipment with something much more reliable and cost effective.The ideal substitute they created to replace vacuum tubes used to amplify weak electrical signals and produce audible sounds was a highly reliable solid-state transistor which offered dramatically smaller size and significantly less power consumption.Although today we're celebrating the first successful test of the transistor, but the team demonstrated the discovery a week later on December 23, often considered the date the transistor was invented.In terms of sharing the news with the world officially, it was not until June 30, 1948, at a press conference that Bell Labs publicly announced their invention.At the event a spokesman for the Labs claimed that “it may have far-reaching significance in electronics and electrical communication.”Nine years later, Bardeen, Brattain and Shockley received the Nobel Prize in Physics in 1956 for the first transistor.The first commercial applications for transistors were for hearing aids and “pocket” radios in the 1950s.In 1959 scientists Mohamed Atalla and Dawon Kahng at Bell Labs invented the metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor the most widely used type of transistor – this was another major step in the advancement of transistor technology which ultimately laid the foundation for the development of semiconductor chipsOver time scientists, like those at Fairchild Semiconductors [which was founded in 1957 by scientists who came to California to work with Shockley in Palo Alto but left to start their own venture] and Intel and others, figured out how to super miniaturize transistors and perfect manufacturing of transistors and integrated circuits.A semiconductor chip [also called an integrated circuit] is an electric circuit with many components such as transistors and wiring formed on a semiconductor wafer.Fast forward to today, and the silicon chips in our smartphones, computers, TVs, cars, you name it, may contain millions if not billions of microscopic transistors on a chip the size of a fingernail, or smaller!And recently Intel announced their will be one trillion transistors on their chips by 2030! That's ten times the number of transistors currently available on modern Central Processing Units, or “brain chips” like the ones that power your laptop, smartphone, etc.And here's how the 75th anniversary of the transistor is of personal family history interest for me.My maternal grandfather, Gustave Charles de Coutouly, was on the team at Bell Labs working with William Shockley.He was a French scientist who was recruited by the US Army during the first world war to help develop our military's radio technology.He met and married my American maternal grandmother, became an American citizen, the contributed to the field of electronics for decades.And regarding William Shockley, after work, my grandfather and Shockley would sometimes go up into the attic of my grandfather's home in Madison, New Jersey and do research and experiments!Unfortunately, Shockley was an ardent eugenicist whose theories of black racial inferiority eventually made him an academic pariah.To my knowledge my grandfather did not share his beliefs. I do know from my mother's stories that my grandmother did not like Shockley – who was famous for having a very difficult personality.I'll never forget the day in the late 1950s [when I was maybe 7 years old] when he was visiting us in California, and he was so excited to give me a “transistor” pocket radio. I was old enough to be thrilled to get this amazing gadget, but too young to understand the significance.Story 2: Airbus plans to test a hydrogen fuel cell engine on a modified superjumbo jetSource: Futurism.com Story by Victor TangermannLink: https://futurism.com/the-byte/airbus-hydrogen-fuel-cell-jetSource: Aerospace Manufacturing and Design Story by
Sejam bem-vindos ao milésimo octingentésimo quinquagésimo sexto Spin de Notícias, o seu giro diário de informações científicas... em escala sub-atômica. E nesse Spin de Notícias falaremos sobre... Eletro e TI! *Este episódio, assim como tantos outros projetos vindouros, só foi possível por conta do Patronato do SciCast. Se você quiser mais episódios assim, contribua conosco!*
Sejam bem-vindos ao milésimo octingentésimo quinquagésimo sexto Spin de Notícias, o seu giro diário de informações científicas... em escala sub-atômica. E nesse Spin de Notícias falaremos sobre... Eletro e TI! *Este episódio, assim como tantos outros projetos vindouros, só foi possível por conta do Patronato do SciCast. Se você quiser mais episódios assim, contribua conosco!*
Welcome to another episode of Category Visionaries — the show that explores GTM stories from tech's most innovative B2B founders. In today's episode, we're speaking with Pascal Weinberger, CEO & Founder of Bardeen, a no-code workflow automation platform that has raised over $18 Million in funding. Here are the most interesting points from the conversation: Origin of Bardeen: Pascal and his co-founder Artem were frustrated by the time spent copy-pasting data between tabs and set out to solve this with Bardeen, aiming to automate tedious workflows. Proactive Automation: Unlike traditional trigger-based tools like Zapier, Bardeen operates on user context, enabling more powerful and intuitive automations. PLG Approach: Bardeen employs a product-led growth strategy, focusing on community support and direct user feedback to continuously refine their product. Challenges of PLG: While PLG offers rapid feedback and user-centric development, it also demands high attention to detail and faces competition for user attention. Category Creation: Bardeen aims to establish a new category of proactive automation, bridging the gap between simple trigger-based tools and complex enterprise solutions. Future Vision: Bardeen aspires to bring automation to everyone, aiming for a world where automation tools proactively identify opportunities to save users' time, akin to how Honey finds savings at checkout.
Artem Harutyunyan, the co-founder and CTO of Bardeen, joins us to discuss how his company helps automate browser-based workflows. Bardeen raised a $15.3 million Series A round this year to grow their engineering and AI teams. Artem also shared with us his thoughts on the importance of students from Armenia having opportunities to study at universities abroad, emphasizing the perspective shift that comes from being exposed to new environments, and how they are able to impact Armenia positively when they return to the country.
Artem Harutyunyan, the co-founder and CTO of Bardeen, joins us to discuss how his company helps automate browser-based workflows. Bardeen raised a $15.3 million Series A round this year to grow their engineering and AI teams. Artem also shared with us his thoughts on the importance of students from Armenia having opportunities to study at universities abroad, emphasizing the perspective shift that comes from being exposed to new environments, and how they are able to impact Armenia positively when they return to the country. The post Artem Harutyunyan: Automating Tasks With Bardeen appeared first on EVN Report.
There's no need to spell out the advantages of easy-to-use software that automates everyday workflows. In this episode, we bring on Artem Harutyunyan to talk about how leveraging a browser-based approach helps bring workflow automation to the masses. Artem is a co-founder and CTO of Bardeen, a no-code tool that saves you time by automating repetitive tasks with a shortcut. It combines a powerful workflow builder, AI-based recommendations, and contextual automation. https://www.linkedin.com/company/bardeen/ https://twitter.com/bardeenai https://www.youtube.com/c/Bardeenai
Jakie konsekwencje dla planety i środowiska wywoła globalna wojna atomowa? Czy rzeczywiście głód wywołuje agresję i negatywne emocje? Jak długo zwlekamy z pójściem spać w weekend i czy śpimy dłużej? W tym odcinku opowiem również o tym jak wykorzystujemy dziką przyrodę oraz w jaki sposób robaki mogą pomóc w leczeniu nowotworów. Zapraszam!Jeśli uznasz, że warto wspierać ten projekt to zapraszam do serwisu Patronite, każda dobrowolna wpłata od słuchaczy pozwoli mi na rozwój i doskonalenie tego podkastu, bardzo dziękuję za każde wsparcie!Zapraszam również na Facebooka, Twittera i Instagrama, każdy lajk i udostępnienie pomoże w szerszym dotarciu do słuchaczy, a to jest teraz moim głównym celem :) Na stronie Naukowo.net znajdziesz więcej interesujących artykułów naukowych, zachęcam również do dyskusji na tematy naukowe, dzieleniu się wiedzą i nowościami z naukowego świata na naszym serwerze Discord - https://discord.gg/mqsjM5THXrŹródła użyte przy tworzeniu odcinka:Wildan Mubarok, Masaki Nakahata, Masaru Kojima, Shinji Sakai, "Nematode surface functionalization with hydrogel sheaths tailored in situ", https://doi.org/10.1016/j.mtbio.2022.100328Viren Swami, Samantha Hochstöger, Erik Kargl, Stefan Stieger, "Hangry in the field: An experience sampling study on the impact of hunger on anger, irritability, and affect", https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0269629Harrison, C. S., Rohr, T., DuVivier, A., Maroon, E. A., Bachman, S., Bardeen, C. G., et al. (2022). "A new ocean state after nuclear war". AGU Advances, 3, e2021AV000610. https://doi.org/10.1029/2021AV000610IPBES (2022): "Summary for policymakers of the thematic assessment of the sustainable use of wild species of the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services". J.-M. Fromentin, M.R. Emery, J. Donaldson, M.-C. Danner, A. Hallosserie, D. Kieling, G. Balachander, E. Barron, R.P. Chaudhary, M. Gasalla, M. Halmy, C. Hicks, M.S. Park, B. Parlee, J. Rice, T. Ticktin, and D. Tittensor (eds.). IPBES secretariat, Bonn, Germany. 33 pages. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6425599Su, S., Li, X., Xu, Y. et al. Epidemiology of accelerometer-based sleep parameters in US school-aged children and adults: NHANES 2011–2014. Sci Rep 12, 7680 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-022-11848-8Zdjęcie Thought Catalog z Unsplash
Die Themen: Home24 - Westwing - Homelike - Bardeen - Xeotek - F&B Software - Janna Ensthaler - Molab.ai - Cinference - Junto - 7Learnings - Saleauto.de - Altitude +++ Home24, Westwing und Co. im Zeichen von Corona, Inflation und Ukraine-Krise #ANALYSE +++ Investmentrunde bei Homelike geplatzt - Merger mit Wunderflats gescheitert #EXKLUSIV +++ Insight investiert 15 Millionen Euro in 468-Investment Bardeen #EXKLUSIV +++ 468 Capital investiert in Xeotek und F&B Software #EXKLUSIV +++ Unternehmerin und Investorin Janna Ensthaler wird neue TV-Löwin #ANALYSE +++ Picus Capital investiert in die BioTech-Startups Molab.ai und Cinference #EXKLUSIV +++ Zahlreiche Angel-Investor:innen investieren in Junto #EXKLUSIV +++ Ventech investiert in 7Learnings #EXKLUSIV +++ Flash Ventures schiebt Saleauto.de an #EXKLUSIV +++ Videesha Böckle, Ingo Drexler und Marc Penkala starten Frühphasen VC Altitude #EXKLUSIV Unser Sponsor Die heutige Ausgabe wird präsentiert von CAYA. Mit dem digitalen Posteingang von CAYA könnt ihr eure Post online empfangen. Dafür leitet CAYA eure Post um – bevor diese überhaupt bei euch im Unternehmen eintrifft – und scannt sie tagesaktuell ein. In der CAYA Document Cloud könnt ihr dann alle eure Dokumente online organisieren und bearbeiten. So könnt ihr zum Beispiel eingehende Dokumente ganz einfach im Unternehmen verteilen, Rechnungen bezahlen oder Formulare ausfüllen und unterschreiben. Inzwischen vertrauen Branchengrößen wie z.B. FinCompare, Zolar, Enpal, McMakler, Zendesk und Getir auf den Service von CAYA. Der Grund, warum ich euch das erzähle? CAYA bietet mit “CAYA für Start-ups” jetzt ein Programm für Startups an. Als Startup erhaltet ihr so bis zu 50 % Rabatt auf alle Tarife bei CAYA. Damit gibt's jetzt wirklich keine Ausreden mehr, schaut euch das Ganze mal genauer an! Alle Infos findet ihr unter www.getcaya.com/startups. Oder ihr googelt einfach mal nach “CAYA für Start-ups”. Vor dem Mikro Alexander Hüsing, deutsche-startups.de - www.linkedin.com/in/alexander-huesing/ & www.twitter.com/azrael74 Sven Schmidt, Maschinensucher - www.linkedin.com/in/sven-schmidt-maschinensucher/ Hintergrund Der deutsche-startups.de-Podcast besteht aus den Formaten #Insider, #StartupRadar, #Interview und #Startup101. Mehr unter: www.deutsche-startups.de/tag/Podcast/ Anregungen bitte an podcast@deutsche-startups.de. Unseren anonymen Briefkasten findet ihr hier: www.deutsche-startups.de/stille-post/
A Spectre is Haunting Europe: Nuclear Winter with Dr. Alan Robock & Dr. Joshua Coupe On Sustainability Now! Sunday, March 20th, 5-6 PM on KSQD 90.7 FM and KSQD.org “A spectre is haunting Europe,” but this time it is not communism. Vladimir Putin has put Russia's nuclear forces on “special combat readiness,” bringing back memories and fears for some of us, reminiscent of the darkest days of the Cold War. What would be the climatic consequences of nuclear war? Our guest are Dr. Alan Robock, Distinguished Professor in the Environmental Sciences Department at Rutgers University and Dr. Joshua Coupe, a postdoctoral researcher at Louisiana State University. They and their colleagues are modeling the climatic consequences of a nuclear exchange between Russia and the United States, aka, “Nuclear Winter,” a notion popularized by Carl Sagan in the 1980s (some of us are old enough to remember both). That's our explosive show broadcast on Sunday, March 20th, 2022. Previous broadcasts of Sustainability Now! are archived at KSQD.org and on Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts and Spotify. Sustainability Now! is underwritten by the Sustainable Systems Research Foundation and Environmental Innovations. Here are some resources: Coupe, J., Bardeen, C. G., Robock, A., & Toon, O. B. (2019). "Nuclear winter responses to nuclear war between the United States and Russia in the Whole Atmosphere," Journal of Geophysical Research: Atmospheres 124, 8522–43. Jeannie Peterson, ed. The Aftermath--The Human and Ecological Consequences of Nuclear War (New York: Pantheon/Ambio, 1983). Kjølv Egeland (2021) "The Ideology of Nuclear Order," New Political Science, 43:2, 208-230. Rutgers U. Research Archive: http://climate.envsci.rutgers.edu/nuclear/
With Founders who scaled companies to $250m+ & who are obsessed with the future: no-need-to-code automation, Bardeen is automation for everyone!
1:00 - Matt and Ben check-in3:53 - Webflow launched Workspaces (See blog post)7:00 - Whiteboard.is are looking to hire a Webflow Developer!8:56 - 8020 is hiring a Low-Code Developer!11:57 - Edgar Allan officially released Knockout!!12:47 - Visual Dev is going to host a Webflow Framework smack down and you're all invited14:15 - Last Round Up we mentioned No Code Map App which looks awesome, but has anyone tried Nown?14:43 - If you're looking for pre-built Webflow components you need to check out Mozaik (think Relume or Flowbase)15:24 - Stacket (mentioned in the Webflow forums) 17:43 - You know who we haven't heard much from this year? Memberstack and Parabola.18:50 - Noodl is a new no-code tool to help you build MVP's and web apps. (Editor Tour)19:42 - Bubble launched their #BuildwithBubble influencer campaign.20:25 - If you're into no-code and productivity then Bardeen is a tool you're going to LOVE.21:50 - Tally has hit $10K MRR!!!23:31 - Also, Tally announced they're a part of Coda's maker fund and they're building a Coda pack!!23:54 - Figment is another Figma to Website tool you can check out!25:05 - Candu lets you build components for your app with no-code!26:08 - Voicl lets you add voice to your website.29:05 - Circa is a new no-code app boasting some big logos that looks pretty interesting.31:35 - Postman released a Graphic Novel to cover the basics of APIs and it's pretty awesome.32:55 - Flow Ninja launched their own pre-launch checklist34:09 - Simon Bloom wrote us and said: Love your podcast and listen religiously. Would really like a roundup on the best no code apps for producing phone apps. Are any of them ready for serious native app creation? I have been a Webflow nerd for 5 years.39:47 - Flutterflow Showcase41:20 - RR Abrot's Twitter Thread
Karan speaks with Dr. Regan Buck Bardeen, a resident of Hawthorne who teaches history at Windward School and owns a local brewery, Far Field Beer Company. Thanks to Frankum (https://freesound.org/people/frankum/) for the introductory music!
Hola, bienvenidos una vez más a este tu podcast Hablemos de Psicooncología, mi nombre Renmaly Angulo, alguna vez te has detenido a darte cuenta del efecto que tienen tus pensamientos en tu vida, eres capaz de diferenciar la realidad de lo que tu mente imagina, es muy común que nos fusionemos con nuestros pensamientos sin darnos cuenta. Hoy hablaremos de la fusión cognitiva y te daré algunas herramientas para cambiar esta forma de pensar. Tomado de: - Xiong, A. et. Al. (2021) Relationship Between Cognitive Fusion, Experiential Avoidance, and Obsessive–Compulsive Symptoms in Patients With Obsessive–Compulsive Disorder. Front. Psychol; 12: 655154. - Cookson, C. et. Al. (2020) Examining the role of cognitive fusion and experiential avoidance in predicting anxiety and depression. Psychol Psychother; 93(3): 456-473. - Bardeen, J. & Fergus, T. A. (2016) The interactive effect of cognitive fusion and experiential avoidance on anxiety, depression, stress and posttraumatic stress symptoms. Journal of Contextual Behavioral Science; 5(1). - Harris, R. (2009). ACT made simple. Oakland, CA: New Harbinger Publications, Inc. - Hayes, S. C. et Al. (1996) Experiential avoidance and behavioral disorders: A functional dimensional approach to diagnosis and treatment. Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology; 64: 1152-1168. - Ruiz, R. 2018. Defusión y fusión cognitiva: ¿Eres lo que piensas? Recuperado el 04/06/2021 de: Defusión y fusión cognitiva: ¿eres lo que piensas? | UPAD (upadpsicologiacoaching.com) - Ruiz, L. 2021. Fusión cognitiva: Cuando eres lo que piensas. Recuperado el 04/06/2021 de: Fusión cognitiva: cuando eres lo que piensas - La Mente es Maravillosa - Conducta Verbal. 2021. La fusión cognitiva. Recuperado el 04/06/2021 de: La fusión cognitiva. La forma en la que el ser humano se cree sus pensmientos (conductaverbal.com) - Fondo musical: Obra: Interconectados - Música de https://www.fiftysounds.com/es/
«Digital» es una de esas palabras que se pueden usar para lavar y para planchar. Se habla de nativos digitales, brecha digital, agencias digitales, cultura digital, etc., etc. Sin embargo, detrás de todo eso hay un concepto maravilloso y profundo. En este episodio nos preguntamos por el transistor, el lenguaje binario y las ideas que, juntas, explican por qué la revolución digital es una de las transformaciones más importantes de nuestra historia. También anunciamos el lanzamiento de nuestra tienda, si quieren conocerla visiten www.tiendacosasdeinternet.com Con el apoyo de: ▸ Oyentes como tú en Patreon. ▸ Compradores de la Tienda de Cosas de Internet. Notas del episodio: La palabra «Digital» viene del latín «digitus» (dedo), y por muchos años el diccionario la definió como algo relativo a los dedos y no a la información. Acá un video que explica la diferencia entre la información digital y la analógica usando el clásico ejemplo del reloj. Acá un documental sobre Lucho Bermúdez y su legado musical. Pregunta para las personas que vivieron la década de los setenta: ¿«digital» era un término relevante para ustedes? Laura consultó la investigación del periodista Jon Gertner, él se dedicó durante años a entender la innovación en Bell Labs y terminó escribiendo «The Idea Factory: Bell Labs and the Great Age of American Innovation». Mervin Kelly, a quien llamamos «el padrino» del transistor. ¿Cómo se mueven los electrones dentro del tubo de vacío? William Bradford Shockley, uno de los inventores del transistor. Walter Houser Brattain, también inventor del transistor. John Bardeen, el último en la triada de inventores del transistor. En esta charla Jon Gertner cuenta varias anécdotas de la creación del transistor, incluída el encuentro entre Mervin Kelly y William Shockly que menciona Laura. En 1953, Bell Labs publicó un documental anticipando la importancia que tendría la invención del transistor. No estaban equivocados. ¿Cómo funciona un transistor? Un fragmento de Shockley, Brattain y Bardeen recibiendo el Nobel de física. Este video es alucinante. El mismísimo Walter Brattain enseña una clase sobre la física detrás de los elementos semiconductores. Cómo funciona el código binario, en una explicación de José Américo NLF Freitas para TEDEd. Los computadores entienden el código que escriben los programadores gracias a otros programas que se llaman «compiladores», son como un traductor que indica que unos y ceros se deben modificar.
Diane Bardeen - Tells Lessons From Her Grandfather
Jeen the jeenius shares his thoughts on Chris Stylezz and rape culture. He also talks about friendship ties and the idea that black men aren't properly loved until they have money. Cover Art by: Donnell Sainvil Music by:Bardeen : is it fine if i kiss you? by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US
Jeen the Jeenius talks about the importance of setting expectations for yourself, how to deal with certain managers in the work place, and also his future predictions post corona pandemic Art Work by Donnell Sainvil Music by :Bardeen : is it fine if i kiss you? by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US
Welcome to the jeenius Corner with Jeen the Jeenius. This is just a relaxed/extended version of Nabruh Talk. Hope you all enjoy. Art Work By: Donnell Sainvil Music by:Bardeen : is it fine if i kiss you? by Barradeen | https://soundcloud.com/barradeen Music promoted by https://www.free-stock-music.com Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/deed.en_US
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Climate Change and Extinctions Following an Asteroid Impact (starts at 8:45) It has been hypothesized that the dinosaurs were killed off by a large asteroid that struck the Earth. The details of how the impact of a 10 kilometer diameter asteroid led to global scale extinction have remained elusive. Recently, climate researchers from the Boulder area published new climate model results that show how the asteroid impact ultimately leads to widespread cooling in the atmosphere and increased exposure to ultraviolet radiation. These drastic and rapid changes to the climate due to the asteroid impact may explain the global scale extinction. Two of the authors join us today to talk about this new research. Dr. Charles Bardeen works as a scientist at the National Center for Atmospheric Research, and is the lead author of the new paper. Joining Dr. Bardeen is Professor Brian Toon, a co-author of the new research and a professor at the University of Colorado, Boulder. Hosts: Alejandro Soto & Joel Parker Producer and Engineer: Joel Parker Additional Contributions: Susan Moran, Beth Bennett, Chip Grandits Executive Producer: Alejandro Soto Listen to the show:
On this episode of the Mongabay Newscast we speak with Sarah Bardeen, the communications director for the NGO International Rivers. Bardeen wrote a commentary for Mongabay recently after attending an international gathering of river defenders, who face harassment, intimidation, and worse for their opposition to massive hydropower projects. We also speak with Yannick Dauby, who has been making field recordings throughout the small country of Taiwan. In this Field Notes segment, Dauby plays a recording of his favorite singer, a frog named Rhacophorus moltrechtpi, the sounds of the marine life of Penghu, the calls bats, and more. Please help us improve the Mongabay Newscast by leaving a review on its page at Android, Google Play, iTunes, Stitcher, TuneIn, or wherever you subscribe to it. Thanks!