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One of the most fundamental questions a tech executive must answer is, should we buy or build our software solutions? On the surface, this seems like a pretty straightforward question, but it can get complicated in a hurry. The basic line of reasoning works like this: Is there a commercial solution that meets my needs? If so, I should probably buy it, because why would I reinvent the wheel? That would be dumb. On the other hand, if I have... Read More Read More The post Reimagining the Buy vs. Build Process appeared first on Zach on Leadership.
Sponsors:• ◦ Visit Buildertrend to get a 60-day money-back guarantee on your Buildertrend account!• ◦ Pella Windows & Doors• ◦ Sub-Zero Wolf Cove Showroom PhoenixConnect with Keith Galbut:https://www.gb.law/Connect with Brad Leavitt:Website | Instagram | Facebook | Houzz | Pinterest | YouTube
Ted speaks with Ryan Fink and Ty Frackiewicz, the co-founders of Digs. Digs is a collaboration software solution for home builders, vendors, and homeowners that provides more efficient file storage, collaboration, and homeowner handoff for home construction projects. Ryan and Ty share their journey of creating and growing their AI solution and how it's affecting the home building industry. TOPICS DISCUSSED01:00 Introducing the founders of Digs02:25 The ideal customer03:15 Processes and enhancing the customer experience06:00 What were some challenges since you've launched?09:15 Partnering with Mike Rowe10:40 Educating others about the technology Digs uses11:45 How does Digs stand out from other technology companies?12:45 Why are customers excited about Digs?15:05 Future plans16:35 Expanding teamsCONNECT WITH GUESTDigsWebsiteLinkedInInstagramKEY QUOTES FROM EPISODEWe don't want to blow up the existing build process. We want to enhance it.Instead of having somebody come out and scan your space and turn that into a twin, it becomes super accessible and inexpensive, frankly. For the first time digital twins become accessible.
Deciding to build your own healthcare facility is a big decision. Realistically, it's just the start of a long, nuanced journey. Working with a partner who specializes in the healthcare industry can potentially save you hundreds of thousands of dollars and months of delays. In this episode, we're talking to Ron Evans and Joe Golden from Cadre Construction, a Texas-based general contractor providing a one-stop shop for commercial construction, real estate, and architecture expertise. Their firm specializes in designing and building healthcare facilities that meet providers' needs. They'll explain: How design-build firms offer a streamlined approach to construction projects, providing expertise in both design and construction Why site selection is a crucial step in the design-build process and shouldn't be attempted on a DIY basis Why working with healthcare-specific builders and developers can save time and money Some common challenges that healthcare facility construction projects face How the timeline and cost of a construction project can vary depending on a number of factors Are you ready to take the next step in scaling up your practice ownership dreams? Visit getprovide.com.
With SAP Build Process Automation you can simplify the life of your end users! Model a process, use a bot, monitor bottlenecks ... all is possible. In this episode Jana de Klerk from TheValueChain explain how she realised significant value for customers using #SAPBuild #ProcessAutomation. Your #hanacafeNL hosts: Jan Penninkhof and Twan van den Broek. Blogs by Jana Migrate from Workflow Management SAP Store solutions from TheValueChain S09E01
During the 15-year stretch from 2004 to midway through 2019, the top three brands within the U.S. energy drinks market went unchanged (e.g. Red Bull, Monster Energy, and Rockstar Energy). But then Bang Energy blasted past Rockstar Energy that summer with a staggering 700%+ YoY growth rate…ending the 2019 calendar year at around $1.2 billion in sales. This sent shockwaves across the packaged beverage space for many reasons, but I want to focus on a particular aspect of the “Bang Effect.” It's time we all give Bang Energy the respect it deserves for what the brand did in the late 2010s to totally disrupt the energy drinks market. A great tasting “carbonated water with sugar or sweetener, flavor, and caffeine” just wasn't going to be enough anymore…because energy without the “plus” had started looking boring to the market! Bang Energy put Energy+ on the map, which forced Monster and Rockstar into defensive product strategy mode, and at the same time conscious (or subconsciously) inspired many sports nutrition brand entrepreneurs to take the leap from pre-workout powders to energy drinks. While I might be a bit biased considering my professional background, I've always believed the best and brightest sports nutrition brands could compete against any large CPG incumbent when it comes to functional food and beverage. Even if they won't ever admit it publicly, large energy drinks incumbents are worried about the “often imitated, never duplicated” influential epicenter of the CPG industry…sports nutrition. Why? Well…it reminds me of something I said in a recent piece of content about the sports drinks market. Gatorade had been accustomed to fending off direct attacks from known competitors. However, what happens when the market leader must fend off a rapidly multiplying amount of legitimate indirect attacks from lesser-known competitors? Now…swap Gatorade for Red Bull and Monster Energy. What Red Bull and Monster Energy want is for new categorical entrepreneurs to follow existing energy drink category playbooks (that they created). Following that “build process” within today's energy drinks market is almost guaranteed to fail because traditional category leaders understand how to compete against it. But now…sports nutrition brands have started to change the game. And the proof is in the pudding for how disruptively successful this “build process” has become within the energy drinks market. If we took the top 10 energy drink brands in 2023, you'd have half that were in one way, or another incubated within the sports nutrition space (e.g. Celsius, GHOST, C4 Energy, Alani Nu, and Bang Energy). If we just take those five “incubated in sports nutrition” market leaders…they generated over $3.6 billion in retail sales in 2023. Finally, consider the strong list of powdered pre-workout energy supplement platforms that are below those Top 10 energy drink brands…and in different phases of beverage commercialization strategies. A collection of names like RYSE Fuel, Bucked Up Energy, G Fuel, Recon1 Energy, and Jocko Go…that's an aggregate of several hundred million more in energy drink retail sales. And I won't even go one more a layer deeper because you get the point here…as this “changing of the guard” within the energy drinks space is only getting started. FOLLOW ME ON MY SOCIAL MEDIA ACCOUNTS LINKEDIN - https://www.linkedin.com/in/joshuaschallmba YOUTUBE - www.youtube.com/c/joshuaschall TWITTER - https://www.twitter.com/joshua_schall INSTAGRAM - https://www.instagram.com/joshua_schall FACEBOOK - https://www.facebook.com/jschallconsulting --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/joshua-schall/support
What is Mosby Building Arts' Design Build Process and how could it benefit you?
Tune in to hear Denise Wenacur's insights on the differences between interior design firms and design-build firms.In this episode, you'll learn:The key differences between interior design firms and design-build firms.How to navigate the interior design process and create a stress-free experience.Strategies to address common client fears and make confident design decisions.Find out more about Denise here:https://denisewenacur.com/@dwdesigndecorIf you liked today's episode, please leave me a rating and review in Apple podcasts. Check out the House Calls for Physicians Website. Join the House Calls for Physicians Private Facebook Group Check us out on Instagram!
In this episode Jeff shares with us his recent family vacation driving an RV out West. Jeff and his family visited so many places that include St. Louis, MO, Oklahoma, New Mexico, Arizona, Colorado, Wyoming, South Dakota, Iowa and Chicago, IL. They visited National Parks and dear friends in the home building industry too!In this episode Jeff continues to discuss the home building process that Wieland Builders follows. During the Mid Stage Phase we celebrate that the drywall is up and now the moisture control continues for the walls and flooring inside the home. Sanding of the drywall is completed and the floor prep and roll-out begins. During this time the floors are screwed down and joints are sanded so there are no future squeaks. Also, multiple coats of paint are applied to the ceiling, one coat on the drywall and the electrician installs all plugs, switches, outlets and can lights. The furnace is hard wired and the sump pump installed and then ceramic tile and hardwood flooring is installed all while continuing to check the moisture reading on the interior of the home. The cabinets and the built-ins are next to be installed.Te next stage is the Trim Stage. Inside the home during this stage the beams are set and then the inside trim, sills, casing, molding, doors, cabinetry are installed and the countertop templates are measured. The interior painting is completed. On the outside of the home during this phase the brick is finished and cleaned, straw put down around the home to prevent mud splashing on the newly installed brick. The trim is installed, vinyl wrap, doors and gutters. When we are done on the outside then the stone is applied on the home and also on any fireplaces both on the inside and outside of the home. Landscaper does the walkway layout planning during this phase. Concrete prep work and pouring of the porches and driveway is completed. This is an exciting phase and a time for us to share the progress with our clients. We provide a special date night for our clients to enjoy on us and time to visit the home to see how all the selections and planning has come together.When Jeff continues the Home Building Phases in a future podcast, he will be discussing the Finishing and Mechanics Phases.Email Jeff your comments, questions, topic requests or be a guest on The WB Download. WBDOWNLOAD@wielandbuilders.comSee Wieland Builders custom home gallery www.wielandbuilders.comSee podcast behind the scenes photos Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, Houzz or Pinterest
Things like meetings, reports and team structure are in place to help the game dev process go smoother, and create cohesion among team members. But are these work systems actually having a positive effect? If not, you probably have an alignment issue. In this episode, we dive into this topic and offer tips to build a system that inspires autonomy, creativity, and effective decision making. You'll hear about the benefits of defining goals and sharing this vision with your team, understanding how work systems and humans interact in game development, and more. These changes will help you avoid doing extra work that's not needed, utilize information in a way that will push you forward toward your goals, and rethink your approach to managing a team. Listen to this episode to learn WHY and HOW you can invest in alignment every step of the way! Topics discussed in this episode: - Our ideal world of game development - The purpose of process - Defining alignment and why it's important - What makes up a work system in game dev - The role of humans in the system - Adapting to the uncertainty and change in game dev - How to keep teams consistently aligned - Dealing with dissension - Facilitating effective decision making - Riot's superpower - The impact of trust in work systems Sign up for the Building Better Games Newsletter for monthly tips to help you lead game teams! https://buildingbettergames.gg/newsletter/ Check out our website: https://buildingbettergames.gg/ If you've enjoyed this episode and wonder if we could help your studio or company out, email us at info@valarinconsulting.com to set up a free 90-minute call! For more episodes, head to the Building Better Games Podlink https://www.pod.link/1559448378 Connect with us: https://www.tiktok.com/@building_better_games https://www.instagram.com/building_better_games/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/valarin-inc/ This episode was produced by Podcast Boutique http://www.podcastboutique.com Content Producer: Ben Chadfield
We recently hosted an online Masterclass on how to build your entire business on one sheet of paper. Near the end of the Masterclass, a business owner lobbed this question into the chat window, “How do you ensure, your processes aren't stolen and replicated by employees who leave?” The short answer is, “you don't.” Owning a business is risky, leading people is risky, serving customers and clients is risky, and bringing your product and service into an open market is risky. What are some things you can do to ensure that others don't “steal” your proprietary process? First, legally it is always good to have each employee sign an employee agreement that has been drafted by a legal professional. Within that agreement, there can be language and clause that reflects the desire to maintain “trade secrets" and proprietary process. Some would say that the agreement is as valuable as the paper it's written on. Maybe, however, you would rather have that signed in the rare case it would need to be referenced. Second, this is all the more reason to work diligently to create a culture where each contractor and employee has bought into the mission and has a desire to add value instead of extracting value to take elsewhere. Owners cannot take for granted that a job and a paycheck are good enough reasons to be engaged, and remain engaged. The fruit of culture is a direct result of the ingredients that you put into the culture. While the vision that culture is leading towards is largely at the determination of the owner, the methods towards that vision can be a powerful way to engage the team and to build longevity with each person. We all have a desire to leave our fingerprints of value-add to anything we do. The best way to ensure that no one takes your process is to create a place they never wish to leave. Finally, although the fear is real that someone could steal your process, the likelihood of their implementation is typically low. YouTube hosts completely free content on how to do just about anything in the world. Want to build a sprinter van? It's there. Want to start a bookkeeping company? The answers are there. Truth is, our processes are actually not very proprietary. Remember, “there is nothing new under the sun.” Instead, there is implementation. As Joe Calloway says, “vision without implementation is hallucination.” Someone may take your process, and yet it will be hard to implement. There is no competition to a well-run business in a needy and growing marketplace. Build an unleavable culture, and you will be even more incentivized to share your process.
In this episode of SAP BTP Talk, January' 2023 we interact with the vice president for SAP Build Process Automation and hear how SAP Build Process Automation offers a simpler and faster way to automate business processes. We will also talk about how this business service helps in simplifying automation with drag-and-drop and AI capabilities, accelerating development using pre-built workflows, bots and connectors for SAP and non-SAP systems and also collaborate securely.
On this episode, Andrew walks through his NBA post-build process. Watch on YouTube: https://youtube.com/live/9tyMuQ23LdM 00:00 Intro 01:54 Setting Group Rules04:28 Pre and Post build settings 09:32 Post Build Walkthrough 21:00 How often are you limiting team stacks and game stacks in NBA?26:24 Andrew’s thoughts on DFS 31:00 Is there anyway to keep min uniques during the late swap step?32:20 Andrew’s thoughts on DFS part 236:09 Bankroll management 37:38 Custom Metrics Join our Discord! Sign-up here: https://discord.gg/SNN2Xs5rtFStart Your Free 7-Day Trial of SaberSim Now: https://www.sabersim.com/Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sabersim
Today we cover the design-build process! There can be major differences from one design-build company to the next. Here's what you need to know.
Home has always been a meeting place and a sanctuary from the hustle and intrusiveness of the outside world. Selecting the best support service for building contracts is what we are looking for and that is exactly all of this is about. In this episode, Ninedots Founder and Director Rebecca Hall joins and discusses how we can select the right builders that match the client's preferences. This goes into a lot of intricate, fine details, material selection, and particular home location. Rebecca is a dedicated, tenacious, and results-driven professional with a knack for tackling complex challenges creatively. Going far beyond the ‘industry standard', Rebecca is especially renowned to be able to cleverly source and structure solutions for clients to secure optimal new build and investment outcomes. Looking to construct a new home or an investment property? If that's the case, you've come to the correct spot to get the best advice on this episode of Financial Freedom Secrets. Key Takeaways: What a build advocate and what they do The typical time frame it takes from starting contracts to building a home Communication between the contractors involved in building a home is important Builders should knowledgeable in all areas of construction Consultation and building inspection options The future of the property market Connect with Rebecca Hall: Rebecca on LinkedIn Rebecca on Facebook Check Ninedots website P.S Whenever you're ready, here are 3 ways I can help you create more cash flow, more wealth and more time: 1. Get the 60-minute crash course In our FREE Facebook Community, we have an on-ramp program that will help you map out your goals, review your foundations, get some quick runs on the board and get you excited again about your life and business. If you want to learn more, visit https://www.facebook.com/groups/thewealthmentorcommunity/ 2. Join our Your Lifestyle Business Implementation Program and be a Case Study I'm putting together a new business owner case study group this month... stay tuned for details. If you'd like to work with me on your scale plans... contact me on Messenger and comment the word 'Case Study' at https://www.messenger.com/t/jackson.millan 3. Book a Breakthrough Session And if you ever want to get some 1:1 help, we can jump on the phone for a quick call, and brainstorm how to get you to remove cash flow bottlenecks and turn your business profits into personal wealth. contact me on Messenger and comment the word 'Breakthrough' at https://www.messenger.com/t/jackson.millan
Faith Led Interior Design Show | Luxury Interior Design on Any Budget
Do you know what the ultimate dream team is for a new build? First, you are starting with your architectural plans. Once they are approved, you take those plans to your contractor. This is also a great time to have your interior designer review the plans too. Why is an interior designer important in these beginning phases of your project? Keep listening to find out more! For full show notes, visit https://www.dcdouglasinteriors.com/faith-led-interior-design-show-episodes/23
So langsam klingt die Sommerpause ab und die News werden wieder mehr. Diesmal gehts um Urlaubsbilder mancher CCH-Ultras, die Corne PCBs sind da und der CCH ist in der Tech-Podcast Liste von Engineering-Kiosk. Außerdem gehts weiter im Sommer der Eskalation. Es gibt neue Sticker für euch und ein kleines neues Feature im CCH! Natürlich gibt es auch mal wieder ein Thema. Diesmal erzähl geht es um die Basics des Build Process eine Custom Keyboards. Grade wenn ihr neu im Hobby seid kann das schnell überfordern. Natürlich soll hier beim CCH! jeder die Möglichkeiten haben Keyboards zu bauen und deswegen gibts hier die Basics zum Selberbau.
Jordan discusses how editing projections and ownership can improve the quality of your lineup builds. DFS Office Hours is hosted live by SaberSim Monday-Friday at 2pm ET to answer your questions on daily fantasy sports, sports betting, and more. We'll cover everything you need to know to improve your DFS process and build winning lineups fast on DraftKings, FanDuel, and Yahoo for NFL, NBA, MLB, PGA, MMA, and more. Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BCEW-LY1P9s&t=3067s 00:00 Intro01:55 Next Steps after mastering a research build07:31 Using SaberSim to Evaluate your slate results14:53 Getting the same lineup with different settings in Tennis DFS21:44 In-depth look at exposures and research builds in MLB DFS51:08 Is changing things in SaberSim suboptimal?55:48 Approaching small contests on FanDuel1:00:35 Adjusting sliders with custom projections1:04:37 Is there a way to save a player pool from a build?1:09:31 Is there an advantage to running cash research builds to find value?1:12:31 More research build analysis Head over to the #office-hours channel in our Slack group to get the link and catch these shows live. Not in Slack? Sign-up here: https://bit.ly/3cGr2c4 Start Your Free 7-Day Trial of SaberSim Now: https://www.sabersim.com/Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/sabersim
Listen in as David looks back on 30+ years of building custom homes and how tastes and technologies have evolved over the decades.A lover of travel, he also talks about his architectural inspirations as well as the unique strengths that Europe and America have in the homebuilding industry respectively, and how David incorporates these design and construction strengths into his own work.Finally, David shares how his wife has proven herself to be an invaluable partner both in life and business.Topics Discussed:[06:25] Communicating and managing expectations with clients throughout the process[11:54] David's hands-on approach to his work[14:09] How advancements in 3D modeling changed the way David interacts with clients[18:13] How client expectations and tastes have changed over the years[26:32] About Align West Homes' custom fabricated exterior metal railing for decks[28:03] Keeping up with new technologies[31:46] How the lot dictates the design[33:26] David's architectural inspirations[35:19] Managing risk with each project[37:46] Keeping up with the latest trends[40:50] Working with your spouse[49:38] David's biggest challenge at the momentConnect with David Pfuetzner & Align West Homes:Website: https://www.alignwesthomes.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alignwesthomes/?hl=enFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/AlignWestHomes/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/davepfuetzner/? originalSubdomain=caConnect with Build Magazine:Website - https://rebrand.ly/bmwebInstagram - https://rebrand.ly/bmigwebFacebook - https://rebrand.ly/bmfbwebKey Quotes by David:My clientele hasn't changed. They're still human. There are still dynamics. There are still triggers. They haven't become different.Keeping up with the technology is almost a full-time job in itself—anywhere from the energy side of things, to products.The lot dictates the design.Today, the things that are trend-setting are related to energy efficiency.
James and Rich discuss the question we get asked a lot, 'How long will it take to build my website' .
In this episode of The Real Build, I featured Matt Vetter, president of Schafer Construction in Brighton, Michigan. Matt and I discussed many topics in the construction business. But most importantly, we talked about the client experience and how we both strive to learn how to deliver the best experience possible. We are constantly figuring out ways to improve customer experience through communication, technology, listening, and much more. Matt, first and foremost, is a husband and a father. Outside of that, he brings more than twenty years of varied experience in the construction industry to Schafer Construction, a small but fiercely growing True Design-Build construction firm. Matt has been a serial entrepreneur in the construction industry; owning and operating everything from a residential remodeling company to a nation-wide consulting firm. As President and Owner of Schafer Construction, Matt focuses on strategic direction and overall company culture while also maintaining the firms Preconstruction needs. In addition to managing the success of the Company, Matt co-hosts The Construction Corner Podcast and champions numerous other efforts geared towards “Making the Trades Cool Again” to promote the future of the industry to not only much needed new talent, but also to those currently engaged in some form or another. Matt's Website: https://www.schaferconstruction.net/ Matt's Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mattvetter/ Host Info Email: Bill@rkreiman.com CONNECT WITH ME ON SOCIAL MEDIA: ▶︎ YOUTUBE | https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxAdSxHN0dIXZPhA-6p1HYA ▶︎ INSTAGRAM | https://www.instagram.com/imbillreiman ▶︎FACEBOOK| https://www.facebook.com/billy.reiman ▶︎ LINKEDIN | https://www.linkedin.com/in/bill-reim... ▶︎ TWITTER | https://twitter.com/ImBillReiman ▶︎ WEBSITE | https://www.rkreiman.com
In today's clubhouse takeaway, I discussed how vital it is to have the buyer's consultation agreement signed to protect you as an agent when a client goes to a new build appointment without you. It is equally important to make sure you are having the new construction conversation with your client first before you look at the pre-existing housing market. Learn more by watching my video. Want to learn more about the clubhouse or learn about how Jon can help you grow your business? Schedule a call with Jon @ callwithjon.com https://lnkd.in/eK9vQhNs For more updates please do SUBSCRIBE and hit the notification bell. Click the link below to subscribe http://ow.ly/GKpY50HoY8k #realestatecoach, #realestateadvice, #realestateagent, #realtor, #realestatetips, #realestatelife, #realestatecoaching, #realestateagent, #home, #realtorlife, #columbusrealestate, #columbusohiorealtor, #columbusohiorealestateagent, #newagenttraining, #newrealtor, #newrealestateagent
Aaron talks with friend and former coworker Ben Reynolds, a fellow Ruby on Rails dev and Rust enthusiast. They talk about Ben’s background in music, working for a call center, and his atypical journey into...
Episode 6 is the final episode of the 4 phases of the build process, this last stage is construction. This is where the fun begins, and you get to see your project come to life. If you have done the previous 3 stages correctly this stage will be a breeze. We discuss variations, site meetings and the process throughout the build.
In episode 05 we continue our journey on the 4 phases of the build process, with this episode about stage 03 which is costing and contracts. We discuss how detailed your quote should be, what should be included and what happens if your build quote comes in over budget.
Thank you for joining us as we worship together! Below are some links you may find helpful:Digital Connection Card - www.yourepicenter.com/welcomehomeDigital Sign Ups - www.yourepicenter.com/signupeKids at Home - www.ekidsathome.comGive Online - www.yourepicenter.com/give
Build Process returns for 2022 with an interview with front end developer Lydia Winters from Limelight Marketing. Lydia is a relatively new developer with a passion for design who’s working on her master’s degree in...
Stage 2 of the 4 phases of the build process is Design. This is normally the most exciting stage of the build as this is where your ideas and dreams are translated into documentation. Done correcetly this can set you up for success during the construction process.Engage the right architect or designerDraftie/Building Designer/ Architect?Engage Building and Design consultant at the same timeDesigners and Architects are there to translate your wish list to a set of plans, they do work to cost constraints however they do not know the exact price of construction and noir should they, that's what the builder is for.How much to allow for pre-construction Draftie - 1-2% or $5-10kBuilding Designer – 2-10%Architect – Can vary largely 8% and upBudget drives the designKnow your wish listFunctionalityfinishes have you got carried away?has your designer managed your expectations?Reality vs dream – just because you want it does not mean you can have itIs your architect/designer designing for you or for them?
In todays episode we discuss the 4 phases of the build process. These 4 phases are critical in setting up correctly to ensure your project is a success.
Today we cover Stage 1 of the 4 phased of the build process. Stage 1 is Preliminary, what is driving the project.What is the goal of the project?Development?Family Home?Have you spoken to your financial provider?Do you know your budget?Is the project feasible?Are you over-capitalising?Reno or knockdown
We've got a new ShopTalk Show mug you can order, Safari and Chrome #HotDrama to discuss, what is the modern WordPress build process like, and what's the state of your local bowling alley or pickleball website?
When building houses or doing big renovations, dealing with the city is always a big hurdle. In this episode of Tips from the Pros, we are talking to Seth Teel owner and broker of Somos Real Estate. Seth brings a unique insight from his time on the Zoning Board of Adjusters for the city of San Antonio. ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ Text "Info" to 210-794-9898 to receive insider information we don't share anywhere else. ▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬▬ ⏰ TIME CODES ⏰0:00 ✅ Understanding the New Build Process In Texas With Seth Teel 0:51 ✅ How has Seth adapted during the pandemic 3:31 ✅ How does Somos Real Estate support Real Estate Agents 7:58 ✅ The current status of Seth's New Build 10:28 ✅ Yes means maybe when dealing with the city 13:14 ✅ Zoning Board of Adjusters for San Antonio 16:18 ✅ How to be sure you're good to build 18:08 ✅ Who can save you the MAJORITY of these headaches
04/07/21 - On this episode, Sean Faulk breaks down the last five of the ten steps in the new build process.
03/31/21 - In this episode, Sean Faulk breaks down five of the ten steps in the new build process!
Ellen and Dustin give us an overview of the 3rd step of the building process at Wausau homes.
Support the ModelGeeks. https://paypal.me/modelgeekspodcast?locale.x=en_US “What Goes into Your Build Process?” Welcome to Episode 003 of the ModelGeeeks Podcast. In this episode Nemo, Darrin, Frildo and Whitey dive into the build process. We'll discuss our own build process and talk a little bit about the things we take into consideration. We'll answer the mail and touch on some of issues making the news. So, head on over to your bench turn up the volume and start building!!Contact the ModelGeeks: contact@modelgeekspodcast.com We are very fortunate to be able join the scale modeling podcast community and we are in the company of several other really GREAT podcast. Hopefully someday well earn our wings and be able to keep up with those guys! Please check them out at the links below and make us all a part of your model bench sessions.On the BenchWeb: https://otbmodellerspodcast.libsyn.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/On-the-Bench-817919571710526/ Scale Model PodcastWeb: https://scalemodelpodcast.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ScaleModelPodcast/ Plastic Model MojoWeb: https://www.plasticmodelmojo.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlasticModelMojo Plastic Posse PodcastWeb: https://www.buzzsprout.com/1307707 Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/PlasticPosse/ Just Making ConversationWeb: Just Making Conversation Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/justmakingconversation Music: Good Times Rollin'by: DreamlampLicense available upon request Support the show (https://paypal.me/modelgeekspodcast?locale.x=en_US)
Let’s start out 2021 with a bang, and dive into how Babel fits into your build process and tool chain. To help us out in the discussion, we’re joined by software engineer Kurtis Rainbolt-Greene to...
Straight Talk host Alaattin Kiliç and Cameron Deggin, founder of Property Turkey, come to you from Property Turkey's Istanbul office.(00:00) Design and Build in Turkey(02:00) Design and Build vs. Resale(04:00) Property Turkey's Design and Build Portfolio(09:00) New U-House Design(13:20) Other Design and Build Designs(14:30) Design and Build Process with Property TurkeyReach us at:Whatsapp: wa.me/908505325195 |Website: www.propertyturkey.com |Instagram: www.instagram.com/propertyturkeycom |YouTube: www.youtube.com/PropertyTurkeyCom
We have been testing our new format and gathering momentum, and we're excited to bring you the first season. The power to you podcast presents a small conversation with Matt and Giovanni about taking small steps.. And the potential benefits it has once a process is built.
People all across the hunting world have been hearing about the heavy arrow build hype! I first heard of the process this past spring thanks to the Ranch Fairy and Hunting Public channels. This is my take on the process, what it was like for me (the easiest and most frustrating steps), and the proof of its success in my first deer test subject. I will say, this is one episode where it would definitely benefit you to check out the YouTube video version. Thanks so much for listening to Fins to Forest! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sam-carris/support
Kol Peterson, a blogger, teacher, and expert on all things relating to accessory dwelling units (ADUs), speaks with Michael Frank of Prefab Review about the process of building an ADU. Michael and Kol cover topics including local regulations, the design process, and financing an ADU.
John Corless is Ireland's leading independent self-build advisor and the host of the Selfbuild Live Bootcamp. We caught up with him at Selfbuild Live Belfast to give us a bird's eye view of the self-build process. Topics covered: - Turning a house into a home: how vital good design is and why you should hire a professionally trained architectural designer - Why you should hire a quantity surveyor and how to keep on top of the budget - Finance, insurance and warranties - Building contracts and what happens when things go wrong - Quality control and the roles of the advisors you need to hire - The three regulatory pillars: planning permission, Building Control/Building Regulations and Health and Safety - How big is too big and re-saleability of the property
Most businesses in our industry are living in a constant state of chaos. Every day they push and push to put out fires, but never think about building processes to grow their company longterm. In this episode, I sat down with Eli Rosa (VP of Inside Operations, Fireside Home Solutions) to talk about how to build process in the midst of chaos. Her journey to Vice President is an uncommon one and she brings some amazing insight into what it takes to run a huge organization. In this conversation, you'll learn: Why process is the bedrock of growing your business (this is seriously the key to everything) Where to start if you want to build something bigger than yourself (a lot of companies miss this) Where to go for council in making the right decision (this isn't the answer that you think) No one wants to wake up in 15 years to a business they can't sell because everything relies on the owner—process is the answer! This episode will help you learn exactly where to start building a business that will stand the test of time.
Recording date: 2019-09-24 John Papa @John_Papa Ward Bell @WardBell Dan Wahlin @DanWahlin Dan Muller @the_meku Resources: Bazel Angular Connect Nrwl Angular React Rally React Ivy Angular compiler Greenfield vs Brownfield Bazel WebPack Hapi Protocol Buffers Open API Swagger Swagger OpenAPI GitLab Bose nc700 Timejumps 00:52 Angular Connect recap 01:52 Guest introduction 02:40 What is Nrwl 05:46 Challenges of building an evergreen project 10:03 Sponsor: Nrwl 10:39 Why Bazel? 20:14 What problem does this solve? 25:52 Sponsor: Ag Grid 27:14 Things to avoid when starting a new project 29:28 How long was the project? 32:10 How did it go? 34:52 Transitioning from launch to a reliable project 41:59 What should you do if you want to be successful? 43:04 Final thoughts
Guest’s Background: Melissa Crowhurst is the Chief Executive Officer of Melbourne SEO Services. She has over 20-years of entrepreneurial experience stretching across a variety of industries including publishing, banking, real estate, wholesale, retail developments & more. This practical understanding of the ‘real world’ has bolstered her formal education, turning her creative genius into effective tools – such as copywriting, business automation, systems documentation & more – that help business owners improve their overall situation immediately. Website: melbourneseoservices.com Website Build Overall ProcessSales Team When a new client is ready to start a website build, the Sales Team should “handover” the lead’s billing details to the Accounts Team for invoicing. The Sales Team CC in both the client and the Accounts Team in this email. Accounts Team 1. Taking the information from the “handover” email, the Accounts Team will prepare the initial deposit invoice for the client. 2. Once the invoice has been created, the Accounts Team will “reply all” to the sales person’s email (to ensure the client is included) – and paste in the project’s questionnaire link and further information. 3. The Accounts Team will then set up the Client Workspace in our Project Management Platform (we use Asana) by duplicating our workspace template – this includes the client’s business name, contact name, URL, and account notes, as appropriate. 4. Once that’s done, the Master Website Build Task Template gets duplicated and dragged it to the Client’s Workspace you set up in #3 above. 5. Once the payment is received and the questionnaire completed, the Accounts Team will set up a Dropbox Client Folder Template in the appropriate section for additional information and files that won’t be stored in the Project Management Platform – such as the PDF of the client’s completed questionnaire. 6. The Accounts Team will now assign the Website Build Task to the Operations Team Project Manager and make a comment letting them know the project is ready to begin. Operations Team – Project Manager 1. The Project Manager will now review the client’s questionnaire and any further information then assign out the first of many sub-tasks from the Website Build Task thread. 2. The Project Manager will then get the Client Support Team to email the client – either clarification questions or an official “Start Date” – using the Questions or Info + Start Date Email Template. 3. The Project Manager then adds a “Target Completion Date” for themselves to oversee the project. Operations Team 1. The Operations Team will now execute the following tasks, in accordance with the systems provided and due dates are given. a. Theme Research b. Create a Staging Site & Initial Customisation c. Round 1 Client Feedback – this is assigned once the client provides their first round of feedback from the initial customisation. d. Round 2 Review Minor Review – this is assigned once the client provides their second round of feedback after Round 1 feedback has been implemented. e. Round 3 Review Finishing Touches – this is assigned once the client provides their last round of feedback after Round 2 feedback has been implemented. f. Quality Check 2. Once all feedback rounds are completed by the team, the Operations Team alert the Project Manager that the site is ready to go live. Operations Team – Project Manager At this point, the Project Manager will get the Client Support Team to email the client with the “Staging Site – Ready to Go Live” Email Template and CC in the Accounts Team. Accounts Team 1. Once CC’d into the email that a staging site is ready to go live, the Accounts Team will invoice the 50% Balance invoice. 2. Once the balance invoice is paid, the Accounts Team will alert the Project Manager so they can proceed. Operations Team – Project Manager The Project Manager now assigns the series of sub-tasks in the “Site Goes Live section of the Website Build Task template. Operations Team 1. The Operations Team will now execute the following tasks, in accordance with the systems provided and due dates are given. a. Review website and email hosting (if applicable) b. Create a backup of the old live site c. Staging Site Migration to Live Server i. For site re-build, create 301 redirects and ensure existing SEO is transferred (if applicable) d. Set-up the site on Search Console (if applicable) e. Set-up Google Analytics (if applicable) 2. Once the staging site is live and working, the Operations Team alert the Project Manager to perform a QA Review. Operations Team – Project Manager 1. The Project Manager will now assign out the Site Quality Control Review task to either themselves or a relevant team member to run a “Quality Assurance” review over the new live site. i. Any QA issues will be fed back to the web team, if necessary, by simply re-assigning the Site Quality Control Review task to the appropriate team member. 2. Once QA is done, the Project Manager will get the Client Support team to email the client with all their relevant new login details, and further information, as necessary. 3. The Project Manager will also assign the Onpage SEO task to the SEO Manager to execute, as per their systems. Operations Team – SEO Manager 1. The SEO Manager will assign out and supervise all the relevant on-page SEO work for this last component of the site build. 2. Once all the Onpage SEO work is done, the SEO Manager will use the pre-made Offboarding subtask and assign to the Client Support team to advise the client that the project is now finished. 3. At the same time, the SEO Manager will then assign the pre-made Sales Follow-up subtask in the client comms thread and assign it to the appropriate Sales Team Member. Operations Team – Project Manager Once all work is totally completed, the Project Manager can archive the project in Asana. Sales Team Once assigned a Follow-up task to touch base with the client 1-week after offboarding, then set up the lead in your lead software (we use Nutshell) and follow your normal sales process. Support the show.
Hi and welcome back to Weekly Dev Tips. I’m your host Steve Smith, aka Ardalis. This is episode 56, on the importance of having a simple way to build, test, and run your application locally. One Step Build Test Run This week's tip is brought to you by devBetter.com. Sponsor - devBetter Group Career Coaching for Developers Need to level up your career? Looking for a mentor or a the support of some motivated, tech-savvy peers? devBetter is a group coaching program I started last year. We meet weekly for group Q&A sessions and have an ongoing private Slack channel the rest of the week. I offer advice, networking opportunities, coding exercises, marketing and branding tips, and occasional assignments to help members improve. Interested? Check it out at devBetter.com. Show Notes / Transcript I've worked on a lot of projects for a lot of different companies and teams. One thing that dramatically increases the friction of becoming productive on a project is the number of manual and often undocumented steps required to take a new developer on a new machine and get them up and running the application from its source code locally. A lot of the time the developers on the team don't even recognize this as an issue because they've all been there long enough that they've absorbed the knowledge that's been passed down through shared oral history since the ancient times. But new developers, and especially new developers on distributed teams, weren't there last week when someone said "Oh yeah, I changed this thing so now you have to install this tool before you run the app on your machine". They don't just magically know the arcane command line scripts that must be run from 4 different nested subfolders of the application's source code in order to get the system up and running. As soon as you have one new remote team member, it exposes all the implicit knowledge-sharing and manual steps that have taken root in the team's processes and, hopefully, forces the team to make these steps explicit and then to automate them as much as possible. Simple projects don't require much, if any, documentation or automation. If you have an application that is so simple that any new developer can pull it down from source, use the default compilation step for the platform, like dotnet run for .NET Core or F5 for a Visual Studio-based solution, then you may not need any more documentation or automation than that. But when it's not that simple, you'll make everybody's life easier if you document and automate the steps. Documentation should be first, since it just makes the steps explicit, and sometimes automation can be difficult to achieve, especially if you need it to work across different operating systems. This is getting easier, though. Once you have the steps documented, you should strive to automate them to the point where common tasks are a single step. Ideally you want a One Step Build Test Run script that does all of these things: builds the app, runs tests against it, runs the app. But before we get that far, let's talk about how to document the process a bit more. Today, GitHub has become the standard for open source software projects. And GitHub has essentially codified the standard that projects should have README.md files in their root that describe what the project is. Even if you're not hosting your application's code on GitHub, it's a good guess that your dev team has looked at projects on GitHub and is familiar with this convention. Thus, purely from a discoverability standpoint, the best place to put important steps for building and running your app is in its README file in the root of the repo. If you have a lot of repositories that all use the same steps and you don't want that duplication, then put a link to the shared docs into each README. What about wikis? Wikis are less discoverable. They're not right there in your face when you hit the home page of a repo, and they're not right there with your code when you're looking at the source in your favorite editor like a README file is. You can put more detailed documentation and steps into a wiki if you like, but to make it discoverable you should put links to it in the README file. If you use some CMS system or project management system the answer's the same - use the README as the place to include the links to the relevant information so new team members don't have to try and find it themselves. HTML supports hyperlinks for a reason. Probably the worst thing you can do in documenting your local build/test/run process is to start by putting it in the README file and then later decide to put the process in a wiki or another location, but not update the README. This will cause team members to use the README and not discover the new location, wasting lots of their time. Bad information is worse than no information. Put a link to the new process documentation location in the README. Show Resources and Links devBetter Really old blog post on one-click builds That’s it for this week. If you want to hear more from me, go to ardalis.com/tips to sign up for a free tip in your inbox every Wednesday. I'm also streaming programming topics on twitch.tv/ardalis most Fridays at noon Eastern Time. Thank you for subscribing to Weekly Dev Tips, and I'll see you next week with another great developer tip.
A lot goes into the installation of LED video displays from structural support to electrical engineering. When building a new display system, working with the Daktronics design build process helps create a partnership to ensure all of these areas are covered while saving time and money. Todd Rose, Daktronics Project Engineer and Business Development, joins Justin and Matt to talk about the design build process and share some of his experiences over the years. Design build webpage: https://www.daktronics.com/en-us/services/design-build-services Mercedes-Benz Stadium project webpage: www.daktronics.com/mbstadium
This episode Chris and Spencer discuss efforts to "decouple" webpack from the Rails Asset Pipeline by implementing a lighter version using webpack plugins and a few Rails helpers. Show Notes webpack Rails Asset Pipeline Sprockets Squeezing Webpack into backend frameworks
Wir tauchen ein in die Welt der Module Bundler und beschäftigen uns hauptsächlich mit webpack. Wie setzen wir es in unseren Produkten ein, was waren Hürden, die uns auf dem Weg begegnet sind und welche Plugins und Loader sind für uns unersetzlich? Endlich waren wir mal wieder in gewohnter Runde im heimischen Konferenzraum beisammen und konnten so auch Feedback von euch beantworten und mit ein paar Themen aufräumen. Leider hat diese Folge auch etwas Trauriges: Unser Podcast-Papa Mario verlässt Lotum und versucht sich an einem eigenen Unternehmen. Dafür wünschen wir ihm alles erdenklich Gute! Toll, zu was du diesen Podcast gemacht hast! Unsere liebsten Plugins: URL-Loader Bundle-Analyzer Einfach HTML-Dateien erstellen mit diesem Plugin Picks of the Day Sebi: redis ebook Mario: Augen lasern Fabi: Mobilfunk-Werbung Schreibt uns! Schickt uns eure Themenwünsche und euer Feedback. podcast@programmier.bar Folgt uns! Bleibt auf dem Laufenden über zukünftige Folgen und Meetups und beteiligt euch an Community-Diskussionen. Twitter Instagram Facebook Meetup YouTube Erfahrt hier, wann das nächste Meetup in unserem Office in Bad Nauheim stattfindet. Meetup Musik: Hanimo
What are the biggest challenges in building a distributed team as a startup? Today we discuss how to Hire, build process and lead in a distributed model. We will learn that uncovering the right people hinges on the Individual's desire and their emotional intelligence. Today’s Quote: “Completing one another is more important than competing with one another." - John C. Maxwell Show Guest: Mark Angel is the CEO and Co-founder of Amira Learning, the company reinventing learning to read with AI. Amira is a rapidly growing, venture-funded startup bringing the first intelligent reading assistant into K-3 classrooms. Mark formerly served as Chief Technology Officer at Renaissance Learning, where he led the R&D organization and worked on the two most successful reading apps in the United States – Accelerated Reader and STAR. He has worked for 30 years in the Silicon Valley as a CEO, CTO and General Manager for innovators in the realm of Artificial Intelligence and Natural Language Processing (Ernst & Young, Nuance, KANA Software). Mr. Angel is the founder of three successful start-ups. He is a chief inventor on more than 10 patents in the areas of search. Episode Highlights: The Story of the Challenges faced when building a distributed company 3 biggest issues you struggled with Tools & solutions that worked best for your team Problem: Challenges in Hiring a Distributed Team: Hire for the distributed model Learn to screen for people who are truly able to function in a distributed environment People not really self-aware. Build process around the distributed model; Challenge: creating infrastructure and culture of behavior to help people to collaborate Choices in tooling that turned out to be wrong Have to "servant-lead" for the distributed model. What issues have we struggled with around hiring? Where they will Thrive! People are not self-aware around work mode… The focus seems to be around the technologies they want to use or the comp they want. Discuss the Model Need to put the issue up front before people get excited about the rest of the story and fool themselves and consequently us Core Values alignment We need to be conscious that some folks like talking/collaborating and for others, it’s not the most pleasant part of the day. We aren't going to change a leopard’s spots. Creating a situation where there is a balance of work and not having too many meetings. Keeping people in a place where they are getting constructive work behavior. Getting that work done but also helping others to get the work done. People are happiest when you find the “groove”. Rick’s Challenges An issue of Upfront Expectations alignment Continually ask “Why” Solutions What have we done about this? Put this issue front & center in the interviewing process Getting out of the skills-based mindset. Screening - needed to find people who are able to cope with the nature of the model. Intentional about the need for people who are wired to work in a distributed environment. -talk about the distributed issue up front. Hired a recruiting expert Learned to screen for being at least somewhat "outgoing" and "opinionated" "Servant-leadership" for the distributed model. How do we manage work? Baking collaboration into everyday environment. Tools like google suite/slack/zoom/github/atlassian -- basically emphasis is on creating the norms around the tools. Understand when they should be using the tools Slack, Zoom, Gmail suite, Google docs works really well, hangouts did not for them. tools around design thinking. Set of heuristics and norms around the tools. Allow people Flexibility Work at home or at Wework, Techspace What went right & wrong in the process? right -- took a "team experiment" approach right -- recognized they needed help & hired an expert wrong -- didn’t push hard enough to create norms Rick’s first step Take the time to understand a person’s desires before you “Pitch” the company People will tell you what they want. You just have to ask. "If you could design your ideal company, what would that look like for you?" A company where you will Thrive! Key Takeaways: Hire people who are self-aware - Hire for EQ & cultural fit first Experiment with popular tools to find the tools that “best fit" for your team Recognize you are fighting human nature and hire to overcome
In this episode, we’re joined by GatsbyJS software engineer Dustin Schau to introduce our listeners to the concept of CSS-in-JS. Using this technique with React applications, you’re able to compartmentalize your styles to your individual...
The Build Process. The Machine Needs to Understand what we write in the source code. The build process is what makes it possible to have our source code execute on an embedded target. A small Section Describing how the build process works and how we get an executable binary from a source code.
This week we bring back previous Build Process guest Sean Marcia to join Aaron in a chat with Michael about the Ruby for Good project and their project DiaperBase. Together, we take a dive into...
Shelley’s career has taken her from a passion for technology to passionately advocating for the people who use technology. Spending many years working in higher education digital communications and marketing has made her hyper-aware of...
Join us for this month’s BP as we interview design student and freelancer Kailey Pearson. She’s also the person responsible for our fancy little show logo too! Kailey is a freelance graphic designer who enjoys...
In this month’s episode of Build Process, we’re joined by Rachel Cherry. She is a freelance software engineer with a background in higher education and other enterprise-level organizations, like Disney. She is the Founder and...
This chapter is an excerpt from our interview with Bree Glaeser at the 2018 VOICE Summit - the largest gathering of the conversational technology world. Bree is one of the many folks we interviewed, people who are thriving at the front edge of brand, UX, research and design. Bree is from The MARS Agency, where she’s leveraged her formal training as field researcher at Harvard Medical School and Parsons into the world of consumer insights and strategic global marketing. She’s helped to build voice assistants that help people navigate brick and mortar stores and it’s clear her thousands of hours of field work have paid off. This is just a taste, so make sure you grab the full episode and subscribe so you never miss a single Machine Yearning.
August means that it’s time for our third installment of Build Process, and this month we take a few moments to sit down with Mike Richwalsky of Gas Mark 8 to talk about his first...
Today we’re interviewing Sean Marcia, a developer at USCIS and the founder of Ruby for Good, an annual conference for Ruby on Rails developers to volunteer their skills for non-profits. We were able to catch him...
Every Friday at 8:30am PST we record a live round-table show all about latest WordPress news stores of the week plus we discuss general stories connected to the Web and technology in general. This weeks Stories 1 - WP Rig – A WordPress Starter Theme and Build Process in One https://wptavern.com/wp-rig-a-wordpress-starter-theme-and-build-process-in-one 2 - State Sales Tax: Which States Are Most Affected By The Supreme Court Online Retail Ruling? https://www.forbes.com/sites/advisor/2018/06/21/state-sales-tax-which-states-are-most-affected-by-the-supreme-court-online-retail-ruling/ 3 - Gutenberg Team Panel Talks Release Timeline, Theme Building, and Customization at WCEU https://wptavern.com/gutenberg-team-panel-talks-release-timeline-theme-building-and-customization-at-wceu 4 - 4 Ways to Improve Your Site’s Content https://www.webdesignerdepot.com/2018/06/4-ways-to-improve-your-sites-content/ 5 - WordPress Security As A Process https://www.smashingmagazine.com/2018/06/wordpress-security-as-a-process/ 6 - Young people still love Twitter — as screenshots on Instagram
We’re really excited to be bringing you the first episode of our new segment, Build Process. This segment will be focusing on casual interviews with other web professionals to talk about their experiences in the...
- Honda Insight Details - Mid-Size Pickup Sales Soar - Cars and Cognac - Audi Uses Video Game to Train Dealer Employees - Ford Adds Street Smarts to Bicycle Jackets - New Build Process Needed for AVs
- Honda Insight Details- Mid-Size Pickup Sales Soar- Cars and Cognac- Audi Uses Video Game to Train Dealer Employees- Ford Adds Street Smarts to Bicycle Jackets- New Build Process Needed for AVs
How can you automate the build process for your application based on Software AG’s Adabas and Natural? I talk about our journey towards a completely automated build from scratch after each push to Git in the second episode of the Legacy Coder Podcast. How to automate the build process for an Adabas/Natural application Why would ... Read more Automating Your Natural Build Process – Legacy Coder Podcast #2 The post Automating Your Natural Build Process – Legacy Coder Podcast #2 appeared first on SOA rocks!.
GoodbyeWorld Games is the Los Angeles-based studio behind “Close Your,” a first-person interactive short story. In the game, you live an entire life from birth to death and make decisions big and small that shape the outcome of that life. The catch is that each scene lasts only as long as you can keep your eyes open. The game uses your webcam to track your eyes in real life, so every time you blink, you skip forward: could be five seconds or five years. Life literally flashes before your eyes as you try desperately to hold onto each fleeting moment.Join Jerry Nixon, Jennelle Crothers and Tobia Zarlez as they discuss how they helped GoodbyeWorld Games create a new, automated build and release pipeline. What used to take five hours of work with a seven-day lead time now happens automatically in minutes through DevOps practices.[1:00] Tell us a little bit about the background for this project. Who is GoodbyeWorld Games and what do they do?[5:42] What is a "Build Process" exactly?[9:25] How does a conversation like this start without feelings get hurt or something like that?[10:39] So how does an organization get started with Value stream Mapping?[15:51] What's special about introducing a build process and DevOps mindset to game development?[18:36] How does Azure fit into this conversation?[20:07] Does Unity have a service like this already? Why would I want to think about a customized process instead?[25:14] How does Azure compare to Amazon AWS in this scenario? What are the pluses and minuses here?[26:05] Can you list off a couple of more tools that I can use for this?[27:16] About how much time does a process like this take to build? If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogTobiah Zarlez on TwitterJennelle Crothers on TwitterLearn how to build your own custom Unity Cloud BuildsLearn more about “Close Your” from GoodbyeWorld Games
GoodbyeWorld Games is the Los Angeles-based studio behind “Close Your,” a first-person interactive short story. In the game, you live an entire life from birth to death and make decisions big and small that shape the outcome of that life. The catch is that each scene lasts only as long as you can keep your eyes open. The game uses your webcam to track your eyes in real life, so every time you blink, you skip forward: could be five seconds or five years. Life literally flashes before your eyes as you try desperately to hold onto each fleeting moment.Join Jerry Nixon, Jennelle Crothers and Tobia Zarlez as they discuss how they helped GoodbyeWorld Games create a new, automated build and release pipeline. What used to take five hours of work with a seven-day lead time now happens automatically in minutes through DevOps practices.[1:00] Tell us a little bit about the background for this project. Who is GoodbyeWorld Games and what do they do?[5:42] What is a "Build Process" exactly?[9:25] How does a conversation like this start without feelings get hurt or something like that?[10:39] So how does an organization get started with Value stream Mapping?[15:51] What's special about introducing a build process and DevOps mindset to game development?[18:36] How does Azure fit into this conversation?[20:07] Does Unity have a service like this already? Why would I want to think about a customized process instead?[25:14] How does Azure compare to Amazon AWS in this scenario? What are the pluses and minuses here?[26:05] Can you list off a couple of more tools that I can use for this?[27:16] About how much time does a process like this take to build? If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogTobiah Zarlez on TwitterJennelle Crothers on TwitterLearn how to build your own custom Unity Cloud BuildsLearn more about “Close Your” from GoodbyeWorld Games
GoodbyeWorld Games is the Los Angeles-based studio behind “Close Your,” a first-person interactive short story. In the game, you live an entire life from birth to death and make decisions big and small that shape the outcome of that life. The catch is that each scene lasts only as long as you can keep your eyes open. The game uses your webcam to track your eyes in real life, so every time you blink, you skip forward: could be five seconds or five years. Life literally flashes before your eyes as you try desperately to hold onto each fleeting moment.Join Jerry Nixon, Jennelle Crothers and Tobia Zarlez as they discuss how they helped GoodbyeWorld Games create a new, automated build and release pipeline. What used to take five hours of work with a seven-day lead time now happens automatically in minutes through DevOps practices.[1:00] Tell us a little bit about the background for this project. Who is GoodbyeWorld Games and what do they do?[5:42] What is a "Build Process" exactly?[9:25] How does a conversation like this start without feelings get hurt or something like that?[10:39] So how does an organization get started with Value stream Mapping?[15:51] What's special about introducing a build process and DevOps mindset to game development?[18:36] How does Azure fit into this conversation?[20:07] Does Unity have a service like this already? Why would I want to think about a customized process instead?[25:14] How does Azure compare to Amazon AWS in this scenario? What are the pluses and minuses here?[26:05] Can you list off a couple of more tools that I can use for this?[27:16] About how much time does a process like this take to build? If you're interested in learning more about the products or solutions discussed in this episode, click on any of the below links for free, in-depth information:Websites & Blogs: Jerry Nixon's BlogTobiah Zarlez on TwitterJennelle Crothers on TwitterLearn how to build your own custom Unity Cloud BuildsLearn more about “Close Your” from GoodbyeWorld Games
Learn how we create WordPress websites from the client's initial ideas, right through to making the site live. We take you through: The Briefing Process How we take the brief, reverse brief and quote. And also that all important deposit. Wireframing Getting the layout agreed before we get into Photoshop. Check out Google Slides or Moqups Design Designs and amend rounds based on the wireframes. Code The order in which we code and why. QA/Testing Testing, what we test and who tests first. Training Who and how we train. Content Explaining the client's responsibility and why you should be invoicing the final balance at this point. Go Live Basic go live process and what to remember. Resources If you are in the Conference/Expo industry, then do check out our new WordPress Podcast for Event and Expo Organisers - http://eventengine.tv/podcast/ --- OUR EVENT: Do you want to make real change in your business? Join us at our in-person event Agency Transformation Live Meet Troy Dean; Lee Jackson, Chris Ducker, Kelly Baader, Amy Woods, Paul Lacey, Dave Foy and other legends in this fantastic conference focused on actionable steps that you can use to transform your agency. --- See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
At the heart of Bijoy Jain and Studio Mumbai’s ethos is the concept of lore, defined as “a body of traditional knowledge passed on by word of mouth”. It follows that, in the creation of MPavilion, lore was heartily practiced when the MPavilion building team travelled to India to learn Studio Mumbai’s methods. This MTalk was a panel talk with the hands-on crew behind MPavilion’s build. Tony Isaacson from Kane Constructions, Helen Wellman from Tract Consultants, Sam Redston from Flot&Jet, lighting designer Ben Cobham from Bluebottle and senior structural engineer John Noel from ARUP engineering sat down to speak about how MPavilion was built, the working process with Studio Mumbai, the team’s visits to India and, of course, lore!
David asked me (https://github.com/kentcdodds/ama/issues/174) about my Deploy/Build process and it was easier to answer in audio form :) Links: What we can learn about testing from the wheel (https://github.com/kentcdodds/talks/tree/3bab77a70a42f15a6dc5519a8b964bb42efaab44#what-we-can-learn-about-testing-from-the-wheel) (my talk at Ignite Fluent 2016 (http://conferences.oreilly.com/fluent/javascript-html-us/public/schedule/detail/48271)) See you all on twitter (https://twitter.com/kentcdodds)!
Translation is a complex undertaking that usually requires you to take advantage of dynamic variables and other parameters in your source format in order to generate out different languages. Although most people think of static site generators as containing static content only, it's actually only static output. During the build process, you can take advantage of these more dynamic characteristics to handle rules for outputting to different languages. In this post, I explain some of the details you have to account for (includes, links, images, re-used content, etc.) when managing a translation project using a static site generator such as Jekyll.
In this episode, Lennon chats with three members of the architecture firm Gluck+, a firm that specializes in architect led design build. We talk about the meaning and advantages of the design build process, the history of architecture and construction, and how vertical cities might benefit from the design build process. Our guests are Peter Gluck, Thomas Gluck, and Charlie Kaplan. Read full show notes and more at verticalcity.org/podcast/21-gluckplus. Vertical City is building a foundation for a sustainable urban future. If you enjoyed this podcast, or you would like to learn more about urbanism, sustainability, innovation and large-scale architecture, visit us atwww.verticalcity.org.
Check out RailsClips! 02:24 - Ben Drucker Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog EAZE Eaze MD Ben Drucker: Modular Angular: Apps that Scale @ ng-vegas 2015 03:00 - What is meant by “Angular apps that scale”? 04:54 - Tools Browserify AMD RequireJS 06:25 - Ben’s Background in Scalability 09:28 - “Scalability” and “Scaling” 14:00 - Team Size 14:53 - EAZE 17:00 - The EAZE Architecture Eaze MD 21:17 - What You Should Be Doing to Scale (Tips) Documentation API Answers the Right Questions for the UI Versioning Strategy 23:45 - Managing Scale (Monitoring Load) 26:58 - Server-side: Data Storage 28:58 - Client-side Dependency Injection Naming Collision and Conventions Build Process 37:24 - Ben's GitHub Repos and Open Source Picks Robots on the Line (Joe) Saint Petersburg, Russia (Katya) The Man Who Saw America: Looking back with Robert Frank, the most influential photographer alive (Ward) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Shyp (Ben)
Check out RailsClips! 02:24 - Ben Drucker Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog EAZE Eaze MD Ben Drucker: Modular Angular: Apps that Scale @ ng-vegas 2015 03:00 - What is meant by “Angular apps that scale”? 04:54 - Tools Browserify AMD RequireJS 06:25 - Ben’s Background in Scalability 09:28 - “Scalability” and “Scaling” 14:00 - Team Size 14:53 - EAZE 17:00 - The EAZE Architecture Eaze MD 21:17 - What You Should Be Doing to Scale (Tips) Documentation API Answers the Right Questions for the UI Versioning Strategy 23:45 - Managing Scale (Monitoring Load) 26:58 - Server-side: Data Storage 28:58 - Client-side Dependency Injection Naming Collision and Conventions Build Process 37:24 - Ben's GitHub Repos and Open Source Picks Robots on the Line (Joe) Saint Petersburg, Russia (Katya) The Man Who Saw America: Looking back with Robert Frank, the most influential photographer alive (Ward) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Shyp (Ben)
Check out RailsClips! 02:24 - Ben Drucker Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog EAZE Eaze MD Ben Drucker: Modular Angular: Apps that Scale @ ng-vegas 2015 03:00 - What is meant by “Angular apps that scale”? 04:54 - Tools Browserify AMD RequireJS 06:25 - Ben’s Background in Scalability 09:28 - “Scalability” and “Scaling” 14:00 - Team Size 14:53 - EAZE 17:00 - The EAZE Architecture Eaze MD 21:17 - What You Should Be Doing to Scale (Tips) Documentation API Answers the Right Questions for the UI Versioning Strategy 23:45 - Managing Scale (Monitoring Load) 26:58 - Server-side: Data Storage 28:58 - Client-side Dependency Injection Naming Collision and Conventions Build Process 37:24 - Ben's GitHub Repos and Open Source Picks Robots on the Line (Joe) Saint Petersburg, Russia (Katya) The Man Who Saw America: Looking back with Robert Frank, the most influential photographer alive (Ward) Paracord (Chuck) Soto Pocket Torch (Chuck) Shyp (Ben)
The Business Marketing Show with Ed Keay Smith and Brendan Tully
In this episode Ed and Brendan talk about the process for building a website and the several steps involved. If you're considering getting online or redeveloping your website this is one to listen to. Listen to this week's show and learn: the common trap many businesses fall into with the “website redesign loop” the discrete […] The post Episode 13 – Website Build Process appeared first on The Business Marketing Show.
MotoIQ Radio Episode 30: John Burton Rogers of Local Motors By Will Cannady In the episode on 2/15/12 at 7pm PST/10pm EST of MotoIQ Radio, I bring you a company with an idea that I have been following for some time now. Local Motors is, what I feel, is the perfect combination of crowd sourcing ideas and the ability to make them come true. with all the technologies available right now for manufacturing on a small scale with high quality, I believe Local Motors has put together a system and a process that can bring some of these ideas to light. At the head of Local Motors, John Burton Rogers brings the passion and the know how to make it work. Below you will see a picture of the end result of this process of concept, refinement, prototype and production. The Rally Fighter has all the specs and components for a awesome truck. Did I mention that it is street legal? Did I mention that you can build it yourself? Did I mention that this truck is open source, which means if you have the skills with CAD you can develop your own aftermarket parts for this truck? The reason why I believe that the MotoIQ readers will enjoy this interview is because all of you have a eye for form and function. You are all enthusiasts who can think outside of the box and because of that I am challenging you to join Local Motors community and offer your input and possibly start our own concept. I really hope you enjoy this interview and join Local Motors. Listen in HERE Fall back position HERE Past Episodes HERE