Podcasts about early access program

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Best podcasts about early access program

Latest podcast episodes about early access program

Clinical Pharmacology Podcast with Nathan Teuscher

Today's show was an overview of Aplos Analytics and the development story for Aplos NCA. Please consider participating in the Early Access Program. Use the link below to learn more about Aplos NCA. Links discussed in the show: Aplos Analytics website Aplos Analytics Contact Us Page You can connect with me on LinkedIn and send me a message Send me a message Sign up for my newsletter Copyright Teuscher Solutions LLC All Rights Reserved

early access program
Stocks To Watch
Episode 191: How is Plurilock Security Inc. Making AI Use Safer?

Stocks To Watch

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 11:49


The emergence of AI tools like ChatGPT is causing a frenzy in the business world. Executives and employees are running experiments to harness the power of these tools but their use brings up the concerning problem of data leakage. Company secrets may be accidentally revealed through AI platforms. Fortunately, Plurilock Security Inc. (TSXV: PLUR | OTCQB: PLCKF | FRA: 659) is developing its answer. Plurilock CEO Ian Paterson gives Global One Media insights on its latest product PromptGuard, which aims to provide guardrails for AI use.As a part of the Plurilock AI platform, PromptGuard aims to enable firms to use generative AI without compromising compliance, security, or productivity. Under its Early Access Program, Plurilock has recently certified several global channel partners for PromptGuard. Peterson relays his excitement about the prospects of the product as interest in safe AI usage grows.Learn more about us: https://plurilock.comWatch the full YouTube interview here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wK_0NDeWg30And follow us to stay updated: https://www.youtube.com/@GlobalOneMedia?sub_confirmation=1

Mind Body Peak Performance
Optimal Health Testing, Personalized Nutrition, Live Coaching, All In One Tool | Ari Tulla @ ELO Health

Mind Body Peak Performance

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 68:03


Imagine a system that understands all your body's intricate biomarkers. Then it uses that along with over 3,000 clinical studies to devise your own personal health optimization protocol. Adapting as your biology improves. Our guest this week has devised a platform that does exactly that — and more. You get a real, competent health coach in your corner to adapt the AI's recommendations to your unique lifestyle. To answer all your questions and keep you accountable. Meet our guest Ari Tulla is a San Francisco-based entrepreneur and the co-founder & CEO of the smart nutrition service, Elo, whose mission is to transform food from the leading cause of disease to medicine. Ari is also an active angel investor and advisor with a portfolio of 40 startups, including Virta Health, Good Eggs, and Ōura. Previously, Ari was the CEO of Quest Analytics, the market leader in doctor data and network management. Ari led the company through a pivotal growth stage from $15M to $40M in revenue. Before joining Quest Analytics, Ari was co-founder and CEO of BetterDoctor, a doctor search engine. When not working or co-parenting his two young children with his wife, Ari spends his time on the steep cliffs, powdery slopes, and big cold waves that only Northern California can offer. Thank you to our partners Outliyr Peak Performance Shop: get exclusive discounts on cutting-edge health, wellness, & performance gear ELO Health total human optimization: get the exact nutrients you need to thrive, updated as your health improves. Join their Early Access Program and use the code NICKURBAN to get a free blood test, free supplements, concierge health coach access, and more. Key takeaways "If you can quantify something, you can improve it” A single blood test is useful but volatile. Getting multiple per year powerfully reveals your progression AI systems that ignore lifestyle don't matter much. Find a platform that adds the human contextual layer The best use of technology is to augment your body's natural signals so that you learn to recognize them on your own Links Watch it on YouTube: https://youtu.be/MksgMk3829g Full episode show notes: mindbodypeak.com/54 Connect with Nick on social media Instagram Twitter YouTube LinkedIn Easy ways to support Subscribe Leave an Apple Podcast review Suggest a guest Do you have questions, thoughts, or feedback for us? Let me know on the website and one of us will get back to you! Be an Outliyr, Nick

Stock Day Media
Pressure BioSciences Discusses Launch of Early Access Program for Ultra Shear Technology for the Processing of Nanoemulsions with The Stock Day Podcast

Stock Day Media

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2022 10:50


The Stock Day Podcast recently welcomed Pressure BioSciences, Inc. (OTCQB: PBIO) (“PBI” or “the Company”), a leader in the development and sale of innovative, broadly enabling, pressure-based instruments, consumables, and specialty testing services for the worldwide life sciences markets and other industries. CEO of the Company, Mr. Richard T. Schumacher, joined Stock Day host Mr. Sever Copley. 

Music Production Podcast
#265: GPU Audio - Next Level Audio Processing

Music Production Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2022 51:17


GPU Audio is a Digital Sound Processing platform that unlocks a standard Graphics Processing Unit to handle audio production with next-gen performance capabilities. GPU Audio dramatically enhances performance by offloading processing from a computer's CPU to its GPU. I spoke with Jonathan and Sasha of GPU Audio as they shared the potential of GPU Audio. We spoke about the capabilities of their new system and how it could revolutionize the way we make music. Listen on iTunes or Stitcher or Google Play or Spotify; watch on YouTube Show Notes: GPU Audio - https://www.gpu.audio Early Access Program - https://earlyaccess.gpu.audio Join the GPU Audio Community on Discord - https://discord.gg/sJ7zxgeb7T Brian Funk Links: Website - https://brianfunk.com Intro Music Made with 16-Bit Ableton Live Pack - https://brianfunk.com/blog/16-bit Ableton Live Pack Archive - https://brianfunk.com/blog/ableton-live-pack-archive Music Production Club - https://brianfunk.com/mpc Music Production Podcast - https://brianfunk.com/podcast Save 25% on Ableton Live Packs at my store with the code: PODCAST - https://brianfunk.com/store Thank you for listening.  Please review the Music Production Podcast on your favorite podcast provider! And don't forget to visit my site https://BrianFunk.com for music production tutorials, videos, and sound packs. Brian Funk

spotify discord stitcher google play next level processing cpu gpu early access program music production podcast
That's my JAMstack
S3E3 - Raymond Camden (REMIX) on the amazing expansion of the Jamstack ecosystem and how far we've come

That's my JAMstack

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2022


Quick show notes Our Guest: Raymond Camden What he'd like for you to see: His New Jamstack book with Brian Rinaldi His musical Jam: Pink Martini Transcript Bryan Robinson 0:14 Welcome, everyone to another episode of That's My Jamstack the podcast where we ask that amazingly complex question. What's your jam and the Jamstack? This week, we've got another That's My Jamstack REMIX! Going all the way back to season one, episode two, we're catching up with the amazingly prolific Jamstack author Raymond Camden. Raymond is a senior DevRel at Adobe, a Star Wars nerd, and a web and serverless hacker. Bryan Robinson 0:55 Hey, Raymond, thanks for joining us today on the podcast. Raymond Camden 0:57 Thank you so much for having me. Bryan Robinson 0:59 All right. So for longtime listeners of the show, I mean, like the longest time listeners of the show, they might recognize that Raymond has been on before, but it was legitimately two years ago, more than two years ago, and it was the second episode. And I think we're both older and wiser since then. And there might be folks that haven't listened to the entire archive of That's My Jamstack. So why don't you give everyone a refresher on who you are, what you do for work and what you do for fun? Raymond Camden 1:26 Absolutely. So yeah, first off, I'm definitely older. I'm not quite sure about Weiser. Give me 30 or 40 more years from that. So hi, everyone. I am Raymond Camden. I'm actually not sure what company I was at two years ago, probably two or three different ones. Bryan Robinson 1:45 You weren't allowed to say is actually what you had yet people go to your LinkedIn. Raymond Camden 1:49 yeah. That was American Express. They were antsy about, you can't see where you work. Yeah, I was American Express. And I'm not there anymore. So yes, I am currently at Adobe, I am a developer evangelist, I am working on the document services team. So we have API's that work in PDS. So like a concrete example of that is you let people upload PDFs and you want a consistent way to render it in the browser. And we have a free tool for that. You want to do some stuff on the server side. So you want to like OCR to PDF, or maybe cut it in half, or add something to finance, slice and dice PDFs, basically. So we have sort of API's that work with PDF, but that work with PDFs, and we have a PDF viewer for the web as well. And that's the team that I'm on. That's what I do for work. And it's got to find as well. But for fun. I am a big video game player, so as my wife so. And even better. She's a big PC Gamer, so she'll game on her laptop while I take away the TV from my console. So again, like that works Bryan Robinson 3:00 Best of both worlds. What? What games are you playing right now? Raymond Camden 3:06 When I'm not playing with my friends, every Friday night, we call it bowling league, we hang out and play Call of Duty. We just switched to Vanguard. But outside of that, and when I'm by playing solo, I currently am playing Far Cry six, which is pretty cool. I pretty much like only do multiplayer stuff on Friday nights. Because when you have kids, it's hard to do anything multiplayer, because there's no pause that all Bryan Robinson 3:35 that pause button is so important with kids. Raymond Camden 3:37 Oh, yeah. Bryan Robinson 3:38 Yeah. So cool. So you're doing some cool PDF stuff with with Adobe. But you're also probably one of the more prolific writers in at least in the Jamstack space, but like you do quite a bit of writing too, right? Raymond Camden 3:52 I do too much writing. been blogging since 2003 or so. And I try to blog about once a week. I did a lot more in the early days. But I also started before Twitter, you know, and so Twitter as bad as it is, you know, Twitter's great for short things like, Hey, you wrote a cool article, here's the link. And the old days, you know, there wasn't that. So on my blog, I would just quickly share stuff like that. So I look at my stats, there was one year right at about I think 800 blog posts, which is stupid. The last couple of years, it's a bit more reasonable. So I'm approaching 74 This year, so I definitely hit my one per week average. Bryan Robinson 4:40 Nice. That's I used to go for one a month and I'm not even there. So that is super impressive to me at least. So we talked a little bit last episode, but I want to give a recap. What was your entry point into static sites and the Jamstack? Sure. Raymond Camden 4:55 So I've been around for a very long time to I started web development and 93 year 94 or so, you know, back when there wasn't any defined roles, like you did everything. And I quickly found out that while I could do HTML, no problem, making things pretty was not my forte. So I got really involved in Perl, CGI scripts, and just the dynamic web, which back then, even though we had JavaScript, it quickly became really crappy. On the front end, so the back end really became the place to do anything dynamic. It's been a very long time in the ColdFusion community, which is in law was, you know, a great product, you know, it wasn't open source, and a lot of people look down on it. But it was very practical. It made hard things easy back, when there wasn't a lot of solutions out there that would do that. But yeah, you know, 1015 years to everything, and ColdFusion, and a database and a web server, and that was my jam for a long time. And it kind of two things happen at once. The front end began to get less crappy, like, shockingly, less crappy. And, you know, I always knew JavaScript, but you know, there wasn't much that you could do with it. And all of a sudden, you could start doing really good things. And so like that happened. And I began to realize that I was using a lot of power for websites that probably didn't need it. And I ran across a tool called hark js, which is still around, but I don't think it's been updated for a while. But it was my first introduction to the idea of a static site generator. And I, you know, sort of played with it and just clicked, it was like, oh, okay, it could be dynamic locally, but like, when I'm done with just files, and like, nothing can can crash, nothing could go wrong, nothing could be hacked. So like, I took a couple of my old ColdFusion websites, where, you know, they were database driven. And I recognized, you know, I haven't edited the database in like months. And I began to have to convert them to static and almost like, this is the best thing ever. And this began to do more and more with it. And it really kind of clicked for me. Bryan Robinson 7:20 So out of curiosity, and I don't know if we talked about this last time or not, but you're primarily a back end person from back in the day. And I found not always, but often back in people like servers, they they enjoy working on the server, not me personally, not back in person. But it's interesting that you made this transition to something that is not at all, like, you can host it on any server anywhere. It's just HTML, it's just whatever. But I guess, was it the simplification of the workflow that drew you to it? Or was it something different, as a back end guy coming in? Raymond Camden 8:00 It definitely the simplification. I mean, while I can appreciate the power of something like ColdFusion, or PHP, even, not having to worry about it breaking live was was huge. And doing more in JavaScript, you know, that doesn't need a server, you do have to worry about browsers. But you know, in general, browsers have a good level support for nearly everything that I want to do. You know, ignoring a certain mobile browser from a company in California, but even that does the basic stuff. Okay. Bryan Robinson 8:35 Yeah, exactly. We won't talk about that. It's fine. So cool. So a lot has changed in two years. It's amazing how much this ecosystem changes on a regular basis. How are you today using the Jamstack both professionally and personally and maybe like a slight comparison to maybe how you were using it two years ago? Raymond Camden 8:57 Well, for one, it's definitely nice to see the the ecosystem and not just in API's, but in companies like Netlify and their competitors providing more and more value out of this just off the box. When I first started I used s3 which was convenient you just FTP the files up and you're good to go. But then we saw tools like search for example, which is something else I don't see a lot of people using but I know it's still there and just command line and live what was just really really great like when I started getting a website up involved calling an ISP and waiting a couple days and then you know maybe you got your website where they you had access to again to copy stuff up. So seeing that ecosystem evolved seeing that the different features and seeing different companies now competing to offer more the most value just makes things great for for me I love the fact that I feel like I have good solutions for for like real science. So like, as an evangelist, I don't do a lot of real work. I make a lot of dumb demos. So I like mentally in my brain. I have a path that I use for like my blog, which is a real site. And then I have like a path for here's a dumb toy. I went online, and I don't care if it's online 10 years from now. Bryan Robinson 10:23 Thanks. And it's interesting to me. You mentioned surge and surge was early on for me as well like a way of getting things live. And I really appreciate it. And that was in the days before, like, honestly, important Netlify came around. And I remember the first couple times I use Netlify and figured out like I don't need I was using CodeShip with Serge as you needed to see ICD to like, have those deploys work well. And it's interesting to me how I think it was Phil Hawksworth said on Twitter, like, the table stakes have changed, right? Like what a company that is planning on doing Jamstack or Jamstack, a Jason stuff has is very different than it was in 2015 2016. And like, we expect to see ICD, we expect like these, these server side things that we don't want to have to write. And if you look like the ecosystem has has done that to like Vercel, as a competitor Netlify has many of those things. AWS has amplify now doing a lot of that stuff. Azure has static web apps, I think so like all these. It's interesting to see huge companies, Amazon, Microsoft, like chasing the tail of the little upstart that like said, a front end developer needs these things. Like, let's just give it to him. Raymond Camden 11:39 I agree. 100%. Bryan Robinson 11:42 Seal of Approval. Back in the day, I think at some point we talked about you said talking about harp, I think in the last episode, we might have talked about Jekyll a little bit. And I seen a few of your presentations from way back in the day, I had a chance to see a couple times that a couple conferences talking about different form handlers and stuff like that. But in the 2021 2022 era of the Jamstack. What's your current jam in the Jamstack? What sorts of technologies are you using? How are you putting them together and all that Raymond Camden 12:12 I quickly moved on from harp to other engines heart was good and simple. And I'm really happy with the first thing I saw, because within five minutes, I had stuff going. But I've gone to a couple of different generators over time. And they all have different philosophies. And I have found that my philosophy is that I like a lot of freedom. I like the freedom to write bad code for a sample if I want to, or I need something very unique. I need extremely configured stuff to do whatever I want. Some generators just don't allow that. I don't want to attack any generator. So I'll be vague, but I was using one from my blog for a while. And blog is a huge site. So build times are kind of important. And one of the things I found out is that, you know, in my blog UI, I had like the last five blog posts and my nav. And every time I'd write a new blog post, all 6000 Plus URLs had to be updated on that URLs, files had to be updated, because I was changing part of the UI for every blog posts. So my my quick fix was I'll just make that Ajax, you know, that can load later. It's not crucially important that just a way to drive, you know, more traffic monster on my site. And the generator I was using at a time, competed incredibly hard out but JSON, like it was fine tuned for blog posts and HTML. And I want to output JSON and I spent a day and it was very frustrating. And in in that particular instance, defense, I know it's gotten better at that. But it was enough to kind of get me off that so in general, I look for things that are very flexible. Raymond Camden 13:55 I use Jekyll for a long time I like liquid it again was was very flexible. But the Ruby dependency was a bit of an issue. I always liked using Jekyll I hated installing. It's gotten better, which is nice. But when I ran across 11ty and saw that it was Node based and it certainly wasn't the first one. But it was the first one and that kind of clicked for me. And it had that flexibility in there to an extreme phase. Raymond Camden 14:32 So for example, supporting markdown liquid Jade, handlebars, everything. I felt like I could do anything I wanted to there even if it was a foot gun like it let me do what I wanted. And like since I have started using 11ty, every kind of crazy wild idea I have just plain works because you know Levante is very light. You know, I get For tools, you do whatever, like, a couple weeks ago, I did this really dumb idea of, I want to file I want it to output to PDF. And he gave me the hooks to allow me to, you know, use frontmatter and say this is a PDF, it gave me the hope to recognize that and change the output stream, I used our PDF services to do that. And, you know, again, maybe it's not a very practical idea, but I loved that 11 D allowed me to do that. Well, Bryan Robinson 15:31 so I remember back in my agency life, it didn't happen often. But it happened enough that clients wanted to be able to generate PDFs. And you know, we were a PHP shop, and we had a custom content management system. And so like our CTO, and our developers would work on like, these big, like, monolithic PDF generators, and like, they would use services and like, there's like Doc raptor and stuff like that. And, but it was, it was always dependent on that. And like the idea that you can theoretically hook into any custom content management system, using like 11ty data, JS data files, and you could hook into any service, like like Adobe's PDF service, and then all you're really doing is changing the data. And then using 11ty to create a template, and that template could go somewhere. And that template could be written, I don't know, like, in probably like, in an HTML or HTML, like, you know, system, it means that anyone can generate this sort of thing. As long as they know, a few basics. We're talking about, like making the transition from Jekyll into like, eleventy. I, that was my personal transition, as well. And I've heard a few different people kind of, kind of talk about that. Was it eleventy is Jekyll likeness that brought you to it? And it was just like, oh, it's it, but it's a Node and it allows these other things, or was it actually the extensibility of an actually the configuration of it? Like, what what caused like that perked you up to 11ty, I suppose. Raymond Camden 17:04 All of that, um, I know, specifically, I was looking at Node based static site generators. And I'm like, I recognize that much as I like Jekyll, I wasn't happy with Ruby. So I looked at a couple of them, I think, like ghost, for example. And they just wasn't clicking with me. So eleventy was easy to start with. I think a couple things. The way it did pagination was mind numbingly awesome. And again, I think all the generators out there support pagination, but I don't think any has done it quite as easily as How 11ty did it. So that was a huge, big thing. And the data files, I think, was also really cool, especially being able to do API type calls. And then and just make it available. I think those two features in particular, I might push me over the edge, like everything I'm going to do, for the time being is going to be with this particular Bryan Robinson 18:08 tool. I remember thinking about data in the in the Jekyll world, and I would end up I need to write Jason, I need to write a script that's in my build process that spits out Jason that Jekyll can consume. There might be better ways of doing that. But I have not Ruby Dev. So like, where's my where's my JavaScript? It's in my build step. So yeah, that was that was a big selling point for me as well. I do want to talk a little bit because you've been you've done a little bit of a blog series. 11ty 1.0 is in official beta, a lot of cool features coming out. I'm curious your take on it. And like the the pieces that have you excited in that world, Raymond Camden 18:45 there's a lot. So one thing is the template engine upgrade. And that really hit me coming from liquid. So what you may not know if you're new to 11 AR VR or not use it. It supports all these template languages. But it's important that at a certain version, when I came to it from liquid from from Jekyll, not only the Jekyll have, I believe a newer version of liquid, it had its own added things to liquid. I didn't quite grok that. So I would do things and eleventy that wouldn't work. Also, when you add it back, that liquid has this really, really, really bad default of if you're trying to do something I don't support, I do nothing. I just return an empty string, which you can configure to throw an error instead. But I'll never understand I'm like so I tripped up on that a lot. And so one of the things I love in 1.0 is just kind of catching up the the template engine so the most recent version so I really appreciate that that's it's not it's not a whiz bang type feature but it's a daily life thing that I think is really really great. There's a lot of small Claudia live things like even dynamic ignores having a larger website, I had an ignores file that was a press like 90% of my content just so that my reloads were quicker file based, I could check that into GitHub, because then that would get pushed to production. eleventy just adds a way to to kind of make that a bit easier. Another thing that they just just released is the ability to have a file in one language like liquid and literally embedded different language in there. So one of the things I did early on with eleventy is because it's supported all these different languages, I like the liquid. But it's also a bit prescriptive in terms of how it works. EGS is it is a, it's not a pretty language at all. It reminds me a lot of classic ASP, but it's incredibly flexible. So I one of the things I've done on my blog is I have a static page, which pretty much only I use, but a lot of number crunching and stuff like that, I could have built a lot of eleventy filters and stuff like that, no, I, I just switched the EGS for that page. And I have a very ugly page, because EGS is not pretty. But it got the job done. So the fact that in a 11ty 1.0 I could use liquid for like my main stats, and perhaps just have a block, have it be the ugly block, where I use EGS to do all that crazy number crunching. I like that as long as well. Bryan Robinson 21:32 My, my excitement on that is probably worse than that. But like I'm a Nunjucks person again, like we get to have these kinds of like decisions made on a file by file basis by like nunchucks is very similar to liquid, a couple extra powers maybe a little slower. But the default installation of nunchucks in 11 D And again, that's changing, I actually need to look into the new versions but have fewer filters than liquid liquid does built in. So if I want to handle dates, the liquid installation handles it with a filter, I have to write my own filter in nunchucks, no big deal. But now, I could literally have my nunchucks file and then have one liquid tag that renders a date when I need it rendered and not ever have to worry about it again, not ever have to write that filter. And that's, that's exciting. For me, it's just the fact that it opens up these interesting worlds where you can have whatever also like as a plugin creator, nunchucks, handles, filters and some of the other stuff that or you can do a little bit more like Object Notation inside of it. Liquid, it's space delimited. And it's just kind of like, that's really ugly to me. But like I could then let my plugin be used as nunchucks and not have to worry about it for anyone like they can just bring it in use liquid for everything else. And we're use handlebars or use whatever. Or use handlebars until you need a loop. And then you can bring a loop in via these other ones. But Raymond Camden 22:56 I'm just saying like how freeing it is. And this is not an 11 a thing or I love the one final thing, but it's so freeing, know that I could write code that's going to be run one time only period. And you know, I still try to write proper code, clean code documented code. But I it's so freeing, like I don't have to worry about performance, like it's going to build one time. And then it's done. Like and if it's a little slow, that's okay. And that relieves a lot of pressure from me when I'm building things it's referring to Bryan Robinson 23:30 when when when the performance concerns or performance for your build step. You can be a little bit more lax about it. You don't have to worry about it as much you can. You can render, you don't want to render 1000s of pages, right? Like obviously, that's not great for quick iterations. But you can and that's not the worst thing in the world. Awesome. So let's, let's pivot a little bit and talk about your musical jams. What are you listening to nowadays? I think last time, you mentioned a band called Hatchie I think are they still in your in your listening queue? Or have you moved on to different pastures? Raymond Camden 24:08 i Yeah, I'm not day to day. I have pretty varied things I'll listen to. But the one that comes to mind and just so happens to be one applying this morning. There's a band called Peak Martini. And they're very eclectic. Think like 1930s Jazz and Paris or beatnik kind of 60s. Great background, great party music. It sounds very highfalutin. And I say like I think they imagine without the long cigarette type. That type of vibe but listening to is really kind of cool and relaxing. And one of my favorite features of Spotify is you can like pick a core band or a core song and Spotify just going to read from there. So I've been doing Pink Martini radio on Spotify a lot. It's a really great, Bryan Robinson 25:06 um, I have to check that because I've recently, due to some tick tock videos gotten back into like the 90s arts like jazz scene that was happening. And I could I could use to mix that up a little bit stay in similar genres. Awesome. So is there anything that you're doing that you'd like to promote out to the Jamstack community? Raymond Camden 25:24 Absolutely. And myself and Brian Rinaldi, we are writing a book, we call it the Jamstack book, because we're that eco tip book you'll ever need. We are working on it for Manning. And I assume we could share URLs late. So it's available now and meat, which is manning Early Access Program, which means you get a beta copy of the book, but it is pretty much done. And when you buy me, you get the real book later. So it's totally safe to buy right now. But if you want to wait, it also should be out in 1.0, relatively soon. And I think it's a great book for people who are new to Jamstack because it gives you a variety of different tools and techniques, and also give you some basic examples. So building a blog building a brochure where site but doing ecommerce, and then goes deep into things like adding API's and services and doing serverless functions. So I think it's a great book, and every copy you buy helps me feed my children. So guilt at all, Bryan Robinson 26:30 you know, none, none. And I could be wrong about this. You and Brian wrote something similar ages ago, right? Yeah. So this is like a big, big updated version of all of that. Absolutely. Cool. All right, Raymond. Well, I appreciate you being on the show with us today. And I hope you keep doing awesome stuff help the blog keeps rolling at a once ish per week rate, because it's a lot of great stuff. And I appreciate you being here. Raymond Camden 26:53 Thank you for having me. Bryan Robinson 26:55 Thanks again to our guest, and thanks to everyone out there listening to each new episode. If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to leave a review rating, Star heart favorite, whatever it is, and your podcast app of choice. Until next time, keep doing amazing things on the web. And remember, keep things jammy Intro/outtro music by bensound.com Support That's my JAMstack by contributing to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/thats-my-jamstack

RadioDotNet
Новинки .NET 6 RC2, знакомство с VS Code for the Web, анонс VS 2022

RadioDotNet

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2021 61:42


Подкаст RadioDotNet выпуск №38 от 25 октября 2021 года Сайт подкаста: radio.dotnet.ru Темы: [00:00:50] — Announcing .NET 6 Release Candidate 2 devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/announcing-net-6-release-candid... devblogs.microsoft.com/aspnet/asp-net-core-updates-in-net-6-rc-2 [00:15:25] — Announcing .NET MAUI Preview 9 devblogs.microsoft.com/dotnet/announcing-net-maui-preview-9 [00:18:33] — Bringing VS Code to the browser code.visualstudio.com/blogs/vscode-dev [00:25:14] — Launch of Visual Studio 2022 devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/join-us-november-8th-for-... [00:31:10] — Visual Studio 2022 for Mac Preview 1 and 2 is now available devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/visual-studio-2022-for-ma... devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/visual-studio-2022-for-ma... [00:34:58] — Learn to write Visual Studio extensions devblogs.microsoft.com/visualstudio/learn-to-write-visual-stu... [00:37:04] — ReSharper and Rider 2021.3 Early Access Program blog.jetbrains.com/dotnet/resharper-2021-3-eap blog.jetbrains.com/dotnet/rider-2021-3-eap [00:45:42] — LINQPad 7 linqpad.net/LINQPad7 [00:52:06] — Introducing the New NuGet.org Package Details Page devblogs.microsoft.com/nuget/introducing-the-new-nuget-org-pa... [00:55:33] — .NET Conf 2021 dotnetconf.net/agenda Фоновая музыка: Максим Аршинов «Pensive yeti.0.1»

Tech ONTAP Podcast
Episode 299 - NetApp Lab on Demand Early Access Program

Tech ONTAP Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 24:37


This week, NetApp's Lab on Demand Content Manager Brian de Loureiro stops by to tell us all about the new Early Access Program feature of the NetApp Hands on Labs.

labs lab netapp loureiro early access program
Real Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast
Due Diligence: Cervest Raises $30 Million for Climate Risk Assessment Platform

Real Estate News: Real Estate Investing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2021 4:52


A London-based company is betting on the need for climate risk management for governments, companies, and investors around the world. Cervest just announced $30 million dollars in new venture capital funding to grow its climate intelligence platform called Earthscan. According to media website Axios, the money will be used to expand the company's presence from London to the U.S. and other countries in Europe. (1)The Cervest website calls the service “on-demand climate intelligence.” It promises to help you “understand how current and future climate events will affect your physical assets.”Understanding Climate Change RiskFounder and CEO, Iggy Bassi, said in a press release: “Climate volatility has thrown us into a new era where climate intelligence needs to be integrated into all decisions. Organizations that fail to do so risk being blindsided by climate events such as the recent floods and fires in Australia, the droughts in Europe and the winter freeze in Texas.” (2)The new Earthscan platform is still under development, but you can see the kinds of information it will provide. You can also sign up for a spot in the company's Early Access Program. (3)Cervest's Earthscan ToolEarthscan is described as an on-demand asset-level risk analysis tool that combines statistical science and machine learning with public and private data. And it says it will make the Earthscan platform openly accessible to everyone for free. It calls this a “freemium model.”The company says Earthscan will look at data for things like flooding, droughts, and extreme temperatures going back 50 years, and use that data to forecast the risk to assets over the next 80 years. It says: “EarthScan equips all organizations with the climate intelligence needed to anticipate and act on climate risk to assets.”Cervest anticipates that climate intelligence will soon be a requirement for all major asset-related decisions. It claims that climate risk is business risk, and climate intelligence is business intelligence because climate events are expected to be a threat to assets everywhere.Climate Risk is Business RiskOf course, the impact and the timeline will vary from place to place. Cervest says that: “Climate intelligence can tell us what's happening with any asset in the world, right now, as well as how it's changed over time, and how it will change in the future.”The questions that Cervest says its tool will answer include:1 - What are the physical risks to my assets?2 - How will a changing climate impact my supply chains?3 - What competitive opportunities will emerge?4 - How can I calculate, disclose and comply with regulatory requirements now and in the future?Axios reports that Cervest has been growing the Earthscan database with asset data from around the world. And that by opening the platform up to the public for free, it will help connect all the stakeholders for a particular asset to the same data on climate risk. For example, that might be an investor, the bank that loaned the money to the investor, and a future tenant.Climate Risk as a Major IndustryAxios says that Cervest isn't the only player in this field. It mentions a few others including one called Jupiter Intelligence. It says Jupiter claims to have already signed contracts with the U.S. government, a major bank, several insurance companies, and two big U.S. cities.Jupiter CEO, Rich Sorkin, told Axios that he isn't concerned about competition from Cervest. He says: “We believe that climate risk management will be a major industry, and we think there will be room for multiple companies.”Axios listed a few other climate risk companies such as Demex, First Street Foundation, the Rhodium Group, KatRisk LLC, and The Climate Service. Demex co-founder, Steven Bennett, says these companies can be divided into three types. He says that some focus on extreme weather events, while others assess the risk and help clients make plans for climate change events or they are designed to help customers operate within the context of those extreme events.The Axios report expects to see more climate risk companies emerging, as demand grows for this kind of data and the AI tools become more sophisticated. It also expects investor interest to rise which will help feed the growth of this space. So it may not be a big surprise to hear more about massive funding rounds for these kinds of operations in the near future.If you want to read more about this, check for links in the notes for this episode at NewsForInvestors.com.Click here to join RealWealth now, it's free and only takes a minute!Thanks for listening. I'm Kathy Fettke.Links:1 - https://www.axios.com/prominent-investors-jump-into-climate-change-risk-47e0168b-d416-4338-a427-507f2304b8bc.html2 - https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/cervest-secures-30-million-in-series-a-funding-to-launch-worlds-first-ai-powered-climate-intelligence-platform-and-lead-new-40-billion-market-301295454.html3 - https://cervest.earth/

The Thirsty Mage
Single Handedly Starting an Early Access Program on Consoles – Cyberpunk 2077

The Thirsty Mage

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 24, 2021 87:29


The pub throws caution to the wind by playing through Cyberpunk 2077 on the PlayStation 5. Enjoy the podcast and wondering how you could support us? Tell a friend! – The best way for the show to grow is to get more people to listen in each week. Support us on Ko-Fi – ko-fi.com/thethirstymage Join our Patreon – patreon.com/TheThirstyMage

BrainChip Podcast
This is our Mission

BrainChip Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2021 12:45


This second episode provides a detailed view of the Company's served markets, success of the Early Access Program, and Intellectual Property licensing. The episode will conclude with an update on the current status of device development and commercial efforts. Subsequent podcasts may include BrainChip management and industry experts.

PHPUgly
217: Our Guest is as Good as Yours

PHPUgly

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2020 51:11


LAST SHOW OF 2020This is the last Ugly recording for 2020. We would really like to say how much we truly appreciate everyone who has listened, watched, and participated in or weekly ranting. We enjoy talking so much discussing PHP, the work we do with it, the pros and cons of the language. In this final show of 2020 Eric, John, and Thomas talk about Qodana, what it is, and why you might want to think about using it. We discuss why Sony removed Cyberpunk from their store, the SolarWinds Hack, and much more...Early Access Program for Qodana, a New Static Analysis and Quality Management Tool by JetBrains, Is Open | PhpStorm Blog | JetBrainsSony removes Cyberpunk 2077 from PlayStation Store and offers refunds to customersMalicious Domain in SolarWinds Hack Turned into ‘Killswitch’Why the US government hack is literally keeping security experts awake at nightInside the Lab That Invented the COVID-19 VaccinePHPUgly streams the recording of this podcast live. Typically every Thursday night around 9 PM PT. Come and join us, and subscribe to our Youtube Channel, Twitch, or Periscope. Also, be sure to check out our Patreon Page.

Health Professional Radio - Podcast 454422
Caris Life Sciences partnering with Merus to detect neuregulin 1 (NRG1) fusions in cancer patients

Health Professional Radio - Podcast 454422

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2020 7:17


Returning guest, Dr. David Spetzler, President and Chief Scientific Officer at Caris® Life Sciences discusses partnering with Merus, a clinical-stage oncology company, to detect neuregulin 1 (NRG1) fusions in cancer patients using Caris’ whole exome and whole transcriptome sequencing. The goal of this collaboration is to use Caris’ extensive suite of breakthrough next-generation sequencing technology to identify patients who may be eligible for Merus’ bispecific antibody Zenocutuzumab (“Zeno”) Phase 1/2 eNRGy trial and Early Access Program.

SMA News & Perspectives
Early Access Program From Roche for SMA Therapy Risdiplam in Europe

SMA News & Perspectives

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2020 4:48


SMA News Today’s multimedia associate, Price Wooldridge, discusses an early access program from Roche for SMA therapy Risdiplam in Europe and forums Director Kevin Schaefer talks about forming friendships with his caregivers, and why he thinks this is important. Are you interested in learning more about spinal muscular atrophy? If so, please visit https://smanewstoday.com/

europe therapy roche sma early access program
.NET Bytes
Episode 11: News from October 24th, 2019 through November 6th, 2019

.NET Bytes

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 10, 2019 46:17


THE NEWS FROM REDMOND Windows Terminal Preview 1910 Release Update Visual Studio for Mac for an improved Unity experience! .NET Framework October 2019 Cumulative Updates Introducing Microsoft Q&A Orleans 3.0 The history of the GC configs All Things Developer Tools at Microsoft Ignite Visual Studio 2019 for Mac version 8.4 Preview 2, now available Announcing Visual Studio Online Public Preview ASP.NET Core updates in .NET Core 3.1 Preview 2 Announcing .NET Core 3.1 Preview 2 Secure your Custom Domains at no cost with App Service Managed Certificates (preview) SQL Server 2019 is now generally available What’s new in Azure Cosmos DB: November 2019 Visual Studio 2019 v16.4 Preview 3 Azure services now run anywhere with new hybrid capabilities: Announcing Azure Arc Join the Visual Studio for Mac ASP.NET Core Challenge PowerShell Support in Azure Functions is now Generally Available Visual Studio 2019 v16.3.8 Announcing TypeScript 3.7 .NET Core with Juypter Notebooks – Available today | Preview 1 Announcing ML.NET 1.4 general availability (Machine Learning for .NET) AROUND THE WORLD New features in .NET Core 3.0 on Linux ReSharper Ultimate 2019.3 Starts Early Access Program! Rider 2019.3 Early Access Program is Open! Technology and Friends: Jeremy Likness on Blazor Microsoft’s Edge browser is officially coming to Linux soon Preview of AWS Tools for PowerShell v4 features PROJECT OF THE WEEK ConsoleGUI is a simple layout-driven .NET framework for creating console-based GUI applications. SHOUT-OUTS / PLUGS .NET Bytes on Twitter Matt Groves is: Tweeting on Twitter Live Streaming on Twitch Calvin Allen is: Tweeting on Twitter Live Streaming on Twitch

Avanet
#012 - Sophos News 11-2019

Avanet

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2019 52:59


Dies ist die zwölfte Folge unseres Avanet Podcasts rund ums Thema Sophos. In dieser Episode sprechen wir unter anderem über das Übernahmeangebot von Toma Bravo, informieren über den neuen MTR Service, weisen auf das neuste EAP für Endpoint hin und stellen zwei unschlagbare Sophos-Promos vor. Gleich zu Beginn sprechen wir über das Übernahmeangebot von Thoma Bravo und was sich dadurch ändern könnte. Für den Moment muss man sich allerdings nicht vor zu grossen Änderungen fürchten. ## XG Firewall Da bis jetzt noch zu wenig Zeit vergangen ist, um über die Tests mit der kommenden V18 Firmware zu berichten, verschieben wir ein Zwischenfazit auf die nächste Folge. Stattdessen bietet es sich perfekt an, noch kurz über die zwei neuen Firewall-Promos von Sophos zu sprechen, die bis am 31. März 2020 angewendet werden können. Alle Informationen zu den zwei Angeboten findet ihr in unserem Blog: - Sophos Promo: 50% auf SG/XG Firewalls bei Renewals - Sophos Promo: 100% auf SG/XG Firewalls für Neukunden ## Sophos Central Sophos hat einen neuen Service mit der Bezeichnung **MTR** gestartet. MTR steht für **Managed Threat Response** und ist das Ergebnis der beiden Unternehmen "Rook Security" und "DarkBytes", die Sophos vor kurzer Zeit übernommen hat. Was genau hinter diesem Service steckt und für wen dieser interessant sein könnte, erfahrt ihr im Podcast. Es gibt ein neues Early Access Program, welches zwei zusätzliche Funktionen zu **Endpoint Protection**, **Intercept X Advanced** und **Intercept X Advanced mit EDR** hinzufügt. Die beiden Funktionen heissen **Anti-Malware Scanning Interface** (AMSI) und **Malicious Network Traffic Protection**, oder auch bekannt unter der Bezeichnung **Intrusion Prevention System** (IPS). Was sich hinter diesen beiden Features versteckt, erfahrt ihr im Podcast. Für Server werden die Funktionen zu einem späteren Zeitpunkt implementiert. Sophos versucht gerade, Kunden von **Symantec** zu einem Wechsel zu Sophos zu bewegen. Dafür haben sie extra eine Landingpage erstellt und stellen die beiden Produkte zum Vergleich gegenüber. Wer sich angesprochen fühlt und ein Eintauschangebot braucht, kann sich gerne bei uns melden. Zum Schluss sprechen wir noch kurz über **Sophos Central Mobile 9.5** und **Central Mobile Security**, welches kürzlich in **Intercept X for Mobile** umbenannt wurde. Die wichtigsten Neuerungen zu diesem Update gibt es aber erst in der nächsten Folge.

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast
998: MagentoLive Europe 2019 - Jason Woosley

The Tech Blog Writer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2019 22:13


Jason Woosley is a seasoned technology executive with over 20 years of proven success in building high-performance product development organizations at scale. I invited Jason onto my daily tech podcast to learn more about Adobe Announcements at this year's Magento Live event. We discuss the new commerce capabilities for SMBs and Mid-market Merchants such as the Amazon Sales Channel Extension for Amazon's U.K. Marketplace and how the Amazon Sales Channel in Magento is now available for the Amazon U.K. Marketplace, with support for additional European territories arriving next year. The extension for Magento Commerce and Open Source removes the barriers to entry for merchants that are trying to gain a strong position with Amazon while also managing their owned channel. It also allows brands to quickly and easily integrate their catalog, establish a bi-directional data flow, and start managing listings from their Magento admin. Jason Woosley explains that since Imagine 2019, their work with Product Recommendations powered by Adobe Sensei has garnered a lot of enthusiasm from their customers as it enabled brands to leverage data and insights to drive real-time relevance and personalized experiences. At MagentoLive Europe, I learn more about the announcement and that in January of next year, they will be opening the Early Access Program to Magento Commerce customers. Once the program kicks off, participating merchants will be able to embed the feature in their Magento storefront and reap the benefits immediately. We also discuss the opportunities and challenges ahead facing business leaders and how Adobe's increasing suite of products is helping to transform e-commerce.    

Ride the Lightning: Tesla Motors Unofficial Podcast
Episode 216: V10 Rollout Begins + Cuphead Interview

Ride the Lightning: Tesla Motors Unofficial Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2019 95:00


Software version 10 begins rolling out to the Early Access Program members of the community, so I’ll tell you all about what’s in it. Plus: an interview with one of the developers behind Cuphead, which is part of the V10 release, additional details on the Plaid Mode Model S, and more! If you enjoy the podcast and would like to support it, please check out my Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/teslapodcast and consider a pledge. Every little bit helps! And don't forget to leave a message on the Ride the Lightning hotline anytime with a question, comment, or discussion topic for next week's show! The toll-free number to call or Skype is 1-888-989-8752. P.S. Get 15% off your first order at AbstractOcean.com by using the code RTLpodcast at checkout. And if you're ordering a newly redesigned Jeda Wireless Charging Pad or USB hub for Model 3, please use my referral link if you don't mind! https://getjeda.com/ref/8/

Tesla Daily: Tesla News & Analysis
Shareholder Meeting Questions, Sentiment, Early Access Program (06.05.19)

Tesla Daily: Tesla News & Analysis

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2019 11:31


– Discussing questions for the upcoming Tesla Shareholder Meeting, which you can submit and vote for at https://www.say.com/qa/tesla/ – Adam Jonas note may be indicative of a shift in sentiment – Tesla provides Ars Technica with an update on Early Access Program for early purchasers of FSD – YouTube channel “LikeTesla” shares rumors of S/X refresh Links: Email > tesladailypodcast@gmail.com Twitter > @teslapodcast Patreon > patreon.com/tesladailypodcast Executive producer Rob Gill Executive producer Jeremy Cooke Music by Evan Schaeffer Disclosure: Rob Maurer is long TSLA stock & derivatives The post Shareholder Meeting Questions, Sentiment, Early Access Program (06.05.19) appeared first on TechCast Daily.

Tesla Owners Online Podcast
36 - Eric in 2020

Tesla Owners Online Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2019 82:11


Lots of autopilot features coming, Elon takes to Twitter to answer questions, Eric should be a politician and we answer viewer questions and much more! Links used in the show: Elon confirms Shanghai car production lines will be better than those found in Fremont https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1115693611494981638 Computer load on current AP 2.5 Autopilot computers is at 80%. New FSD computer can do that same thing with only 5% load https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1115357794335485953 AP pothole detection is in the plans https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1114722099623411713 Enhanced Summon coming out this week for anyone with enhanced AP or FSD in the US https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1114597013176246273 Tesla’s ‘Early Access Program’ will reportedly be extended to Full Self-Driving buyers (Earl!) https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1113977924947009536 Model Y will have the internal camera like Model 3 does. Answers question from Wilson last week. https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1113977924947009536 Superchargers will eventually have free WiFi hotspots https://twitter.com/elonmusk/status/1115001019652378624 Model 3 owner caught thief breaking his window using Sentry Mode https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=7&v=berotT5IPKc 2019.12 out, lots of improvements! IAN - 2019.12 appears to now be dead, 2019.8.6 is latest but doesn't seem to having any big changes over 8.5. Discuss no-confirm lane change, TPMS reset, etc. https://teslaownersonline.com/threads/firmware-build-v9-0-2019-12-cb68c3d-4-6-2019.12277/ Tesla Q1 Safety report is out: Cars are safer with Autopilot https://www.teslarati.com/tesla-q1-2019-vehicle-safety-report/amp/?__twitter_impression=true Tesla could get another 400k tax credits thanks to a bipartisan bill https://finance.yahoo.com/news/exclusive-u-lawmakers-introduce-bill-130812199.html Switzerland, March 2019: Based on 1094 vehicle registrations, the Model 3 became the best-selling passenger car in the country beating long-standing bestsellers like the Skoda Octavia (801) and the VW Golf (546). Model 3 is in fourth overall for 2019. https://www.auto.swiss/fr/statistiques/ventes-de-voitures-par-modele/ Tesla announced it would post its financial results for Q1 2019 after the market closes on Wed, April 24 httsp://ir.tesla.com Buying a Model S, X or performance Model 3? Use our owner referral code to get 6 months of free Supercharging Trevor's Referral: http://ts.la/trevor41818 Eric's Referral: http://ts.la/eric95497 Ian's Referral: http://ts.la/ian37694 You can also give the code to your Tesla owner advisor Special thanks to our sponsor FEYNLAB for all your ceramic coating needs: https://www.feynlab.com Special thanks to Duliban Insurance for Ontario Tesla Owners: https://dulibaninsurance.com Special thanks to EVAnnex for sponsoring the show. Check out their awesome Tesla accessories at https://EVAnnex.com T shirts for the cause. Model 3 Evolve by Mad Hungarian https://teespring.com/shop/model-3-evolve-by-madhungarian Our Twitter accounts: Trevor @Model3Owners Eric Camacho @ecfix Ian Pavelko @IanPavelko Our Patreon page: http://patreon.com/model3ownersclub

EV News Daily - Electric Car Podcast
02 Mar 2019 | Fire Destroys Half Of Tesla Service Centre, Dallas Rideshare Is EV Only and More Battery Factories

EV News Daily - Electric Car Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2019 17:21


Show #403.   Can You Help Me Fight The Fossils? Read More About Patreon here EVne.ws/patreon   Read today’s show notes on https://www.evnewsdaily.com   Good morning, good afternoon and good evening wherever you are in the world, welcome to EV News Daily for Saturday 2nd  March 2019. It’s Martyn Lee here and I’ve been through every EV story I could find today, and picked out the best ones to save you time.   Thank you to MYEV.com for helping make this show, they’ve built the first marketplace specifically for Electric Vehicles. It’s a totally free marketplace that simplifies the buying and selling process, and help you learn about EVs along the way too.   TESLA SERVICE CENTRE DAMAGED IN FIRE "A fire at a Tesla car service centre has damaged at least half of the site. The "significant fire" broke out in the workshop area at the premises in County Oak Way in Crawley, West Sussex, just before 10:30 GMT. No-one was injured." reports the BBC: "More than 50 firefighters and eight fire engines were sent to tackle the blaze, which was brought under control three hours later. A spokeswoman for the fire service said about 50% of the single storey building had been damaged by fire and heat. She added the fire was believed to have started in a store room for parts and spread to the main building. "It was an accidental ignition," the spokeswoman said."   A Tesla spokeswoman said: "The fire at Tesla's Gatwick Service Centre has stopped and we are working with the fire department to learn more about what caused this incident. "We can confirm that no Tesla staff or customers were injured or hurt."   https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-sussex-47427311   David Peilow @dpeilow tweeted: "@elonmusk while it is lucky that no one was hurt in this incident, the UK Roadster service centre is now destroyed. Single point failure. Shows why we asked to disseminate knowhow and specialist tools to community."   TESLA JUST PAID OFF A $920 MILLION BOND WITH CASH "Tesla reportedly just paid off a $920 million convertible bond in cash, according to CNBC. The payment highlights the company's improving financials recently. Tesla is aiming to achieve sustainable profitability and get to the point when it can fund both its current operations and business expansion with regular cash from operations." according to Daniel Sparks at Fool.com: "Fortunately, Tesla had plenty of cash to pay this $920 million convertible bond. The company's cash position increased by $1.45 billion in the second half of 2018, to $3.7 billion, despite paying off a $230 million convertible bond during the fourth quarter."   https://www.fool.com/investing/2019/03/01/tesla-just-paid-off-a-920-million-bond-with-cash.aspx   TESLA CUTS AUTOPILOT UPGRADE PRICES FOR EXISTING EV OWNERS Engadget reports: "Tesla's across-the-board price drops have been helpful for new car buyers, but painful for veteran owners who just watched their EV's value plunge. There's some consolation, however: Tesla is lowering the prices of its autonomy upgrades. Anyone who bought a vehicle before the price drops can buy the Autopilot upgrade for $2,000 after delivery, or half as much as before, while springing for the Full Self-Driving pack on top of that costs $3,000 instead of the earlier $7,000. You're saving about $6,000 if you go all-in, Tesla said." They continue: "Those who already splurged on the self-driving option won't be completely out of luck. They'll receive an invitation to the company's Early Access Program, giving them a chance to try new features ahead of their fellow drivers. While this won't fill the hole in your bank balance, it might provide some comfort."   https://www.engadget.com/2019/03/02/tesla-cuts-autopilot-upgrade-prices/   NEW DALLAS RIDESHARE SERVICE USES ONLY ELECTRIC CARS When riding with eCarra, customers get an eco-friendly, clean, luxury ride in a Tesla. It's what the founders call "the Whole Foods of the rideshare industry"—when you pay, you know you're not harming the environment. Operating by the tagline “rides that matter,” eCarra uses strictly electric vehicles for an experience that’s sustainable, fast, and luxurious. With its fleet of about 25 Teslas, eCarra offers a premium ride experience that’s customizable through its iOS app. They rented their first Tesla on Turro and started offering rides for free just to test the market. Demand soared. The ride are comparable to Uber, but customers know they’re getting a Tesla that’s cleaned daily and looks immaculate. Since the company launched, 97 percent of customers have said this is their first ride in a Tesla. And, eCarra’s drivers are all independent contractors who go through four different interviews before they are hired. Robinson said he likes to call eCarra the Whole Foods of the rideshare industry because customers will pay a little more for a better, environmentally friendly product. Most of their business so far has been trips to or from Dallas Fort Worth International Airport, the “last mile” for a business traveler.   https://dallasinnovates.com/rides-that-matter-new-dallas-rideshare-service-uses-only-electric-cars/   DRIVE A HYBRID? YOUR METRO EXPRESSLANES DISCOUNTS ARE GOING AWAY New rules are now in effect for those driving low-emissions vehicles in freeway toll lanes. We'll run you through all the changes, but this is the most important thing to know: unless you have an electric car, your clean-air decal probably isn't going to get you a discounted rate on the 10 or the 110 freeways anymore. The toll lanes, designed to reduce congestion, are now so congested themselves that perks to entice drivers to use them are no longer necessary.   https://laist.com/2019/03/01/drive_a_hybrid_your_freeway_toll_lane_discounts_are_going_away.php   SK INNOVATION PLANS TO BUILD NEW BATTERY PLANT IN EUROPE, THE MAJOR EV MARKET SK Innovation announced that it would invest about 859 million U.S. dollar in Hungary only three months after it made an announcement to build a plant in the U.S. late last year. The decision came as SK Innovation aims to strengthen its presence in the European market on top of the 7.5GWh EV battery plant which is under construction in Komarom, Hungary since early last year. With the new plant, SK Innovation will gain momentum to reinforce its foothold in the European EV market which is growing fast thanks to stricter environmental regulations. SK Innovation will break ground on the plant in March this year and finish construction in the first half of 2020. The company will begin mass production and delivery in early 2022 once facility stabilization, commissioning and product certification is completed. By 2021 when the new plant is completed, SK Innovation's global production capacity is expected to include the No.1 Komarom plant (7.5GWh per year) and the new No.2 Komarom plant in Hungary, Changzhou plant in China (7.5GWh per year), Georgia plant in the U.S. (9.8GWh per year), in addition to the Seosan plant in Korea (4.7GWh per year).   SCOTTISHPOWER TO LAUNCH PUBLIC ELECTRIC VEHICLE CHARGING BUSINESS "ScottishPower is to launch a public electric vehicle charging business as part of a £2 billion clean energy investment." says Fleetnews.co.uk: "the new business will install fast chargers across the UK at strategic commercial locations from winter this year. The £2bn investment is the company’s biggest investment in the country in a single year and was announced following the sale of this thermal generation business and transition to 100% renewable energy in 2018. The company also announced plans for a 50MW battery storage project at Whitelee the UK’s largest onshore windfarm. The large-scale battery project will be the first of a series of storage schemes, mainly located at windfarms and at strategic points on the network."   https://www.fleetnews.co.uk/news/fleet-industry-news/2019/02/27/scottishpower-to-launch-public-electric-vehicle-charging-business     COMMUNITY And thanks to MYEV.com they’ve set us another Question Of The Week. Keep your comments coming in on email and YouTube…   Where did you, or will you, buy an EV from? Let’s make of list of the best places, markets, dealers or companies who are making EV buying a pleasure!     I want to say a heartfelt thank you to the 197 patrons of this podcast whose generosity means I get to keep making this show, which aims to entertain and inform thousands of listeners every day about a brighter future. By no means do you have to check out Patreon but if it’s something you’ve been thinking about, by all means look at patreon.com/evnewsdaily     PHIL ROBERTS / ELECTRIC FUTURE (PREMIUM PARTNER) ELECTRICMOTORING.NET (PREMIUM PARTNER) BRAD CROSBY (PREMIUM PARTNER)   DAVID ALLEN (PARTNER) OEM AUDIO OF NEW ZEALAND AND EVPOWER.CO.NZ (PARTNER) SASCHA PALLENBERG (PARTNER) JON BEARDY MCBEARDFACE / KENT EVs (PARTNER) ALAN ROBSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ALEX BANAHENE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ALEXANDER FRANK @ https://www.youtube.com/c/alexsuniverse42 ARILD GEIR SKAALSVEEN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ASHLEY HILL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BÅRD FJUKSTAD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BARRY PENISTON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BOB MUIR / GINGERCOMPUTERS.COM IN DUNDEE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BORISLAV BORISOV (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRENT KINGSFORD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRIAN THOMPSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRIAN WEATHERALL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) BRYAN YOUNG / CONFT.SHOW PODCAST (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CESAR TRUJILLO (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CHRIS BENSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CHRIS HOPKINS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CRAIG COLES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) CRAIG ROGERS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAMIEN DAVIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DARREN BYRD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DARREN SANT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVE DEWSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID BARKMAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID FINCH (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID PARTINGTON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DAVID PRESCOTT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DIRK RUTSATZ (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) DON MCALLISTER / SCREENCASTSONLINE.COM (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ENRICO STEPHAN-SCHILOW (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) FREDRIK ROVIK (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) GEORGE CLARGO (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JACK OAKLEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JAMES STORR (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JASON FAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JEFF ERBES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JERRY ALLISON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JOHN BAILEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JON KNODEL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JON TIMMIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) JUAN GONZALEZ (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) KEN MORRIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) KEVIN MEYERSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LARS DAHLAGER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LAURENCE D ALLEN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LESZEK GRZYL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LOUIS HOPKIN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) LUKE CULLEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARCEL LOHMANN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARCEL WARD (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MARTIN CROFT (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MATT PISCIONE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MATTHEW ELLIS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MATTHEW GROOBY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MAZ SHAR (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MICHAEL PASTRONE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MIKE ROGERS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) MIKE WINTER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) NEIL E ROBERTS FROM SUSSEX EVS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PAUL SEAGER-SMITH (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PAUL STEPHENSON (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PETE GLASS (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER)  PHIL MOUCHET (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) PHILIPPE CALVE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RAJ BADWAL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RAJEEV NARAYAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RENÉ SCHNEIDER (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ROD JAMES (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) RUPERT MITCHELL (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) SARAH MCCANN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) SCOTT CALLAHAN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) SEIKI PAYNE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) STEVE JOHN (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) STUART HANNAH (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) THE LIMOUSINE LINE SYDNEY (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) WALTER MACVANE (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER) ZACK HURST (EXECUTIVE PRODUCER)     You can listen to all 402 previous episodes of this this for free, where you get your podcasts from, plus the blog https://www.evnewsdaily.com/ – remember to subscribe, which means you don’t have to think about downloading the show each day, plus you get it first and free and automatically. It would mean a lot if you could take 2mins to leave a quick review on whichever platform you download the podcast. And if you have an Amazon Echo, download our Alexa Skill, search for EV News Daily and add it as a flash briefing. Come and say hi on Facebook, LinkedIn or Twitter just search EV News Daily, have a wonderful day, I’ll catch you tomorrow and remember…there’s no such thing as a self-charging hybrid.   CONNECT WITH ME! EVne.ws/itunes EVne.ws/tunein EVne.ws/googleplay EVne.ws/stitcher EVne.ws/youtube EVne.ws/iheart EVne.ws/blog EVne.ws/patreon   Check out MYEV.com for more details: 

The Startup Chat with Steli and Hiten
335: How to Run an Early Access Program

The Startup Chat with Steli and Hiten

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 14, 2018


In today’s episode of The Startup Chat, Steli and Hiten talk about what Steli calls a beta program and Hiten calls an early access program. Before you launch a product or a new feature, it is important to test things out to catch bugs and product issues prior to launch. But how do you go about doing this in a way that provides value to you and the user who test it out for you? Tune in to this week’s episode to hear Steli and Hiten thoughts on what an early access program is, why it’s so important, how to do it properly and much more. Time Stamped Show Notes: 00:00 About today’s topic. 00:46 Why Hiten calls it an early access program. 01:53 Steli’s point of view on what to call it. 02:40 Hiten gives an inside look at how his company handles their early access program. 03:53 How an early access program can be beneficial to your startup. 04:22 The 3 kinds of releases you can aspire for. 06:53 The right time to go from internal release to early access. 07:56 How to ramp up an early access program. 09:10 Why it’s important to give your customers something worth their while. 09:52 How to do an early access program properly. 3 Key Points: You don’t wanna call it a beta, because that implies it’s buggy. Never call your customer an early adopter. The early access program is designed for you to learn so that you can figure out what that full release looks like. [0:00:00] Steli Efti: Hey everybody, this is Steli Efti.   [0:00:03] Hiten Shah: And this is Hiten Shah, and today on the Startup Chat, we're gonna talk about what Steli calls a beta program and what I call a early access-   [0:00:11] Steli Efti: Access program.   [0:00:13] Hiten Shah: ... Program. And that's okay. This is one of my pet peeves. I don't like calling it beta, so I'm gonna jump right in and talk about how to do this correctly.   [0:00:21] Steli Efti: Boom.   [0:00:22] Hiten Shah: I like talking about and framing it as an early access program because we have to grown to think of beta as buggy. So when you want to bring people into your product early, or a new feature, it doesn't matter, you don't wanna call it a beta 'cause that implies it's buggy. Also, I don't think the general population out there knows that a beta really is. It is a very techy type term.   [0:00:49] Steli Efti: Fair.   [0:00:49] Hiten Shah: So for me, I like calling it an early access program. I like framing it like that because that feels more exclusive. It really pulls in people that we would consider early adopters. Also, by the way, never call your customer an early adapter to their faces. That doesn't help you. They are just a human being, they're a person, and they're eager to use your product early because they really want this problem solved, or they're really just excited. So that's what I'm gonna start with, Steli. It's called early access and it's meant to make people feel special, not make people feel like robots.   [0:01:23] Steli Efti: Boom. All right, Hiten's on fire. I can already attest. You're right. You're very right. You know, when I talk about it in a sales context, whenever I talk to start ups about how to get the first few customers, I learned this phrasing from you a long time ago and I always talk about early access. But when I talk about, when we talk about it internally about giving a certain subset of our customers access to a new feature, we still call it beta. So I'm gonna work on changing that because I really like your reasoning and we both deeply care about words and communication, the impact it can have on things.   [0:02:09] Hiten Shah: I'm gonna go a little deeper. So what we're doing and my company is basically aspiring towards,

Cloud Unfiltered
Ep36: Pete Johnson explains the Cisco/Google partnership

Cloud Unfiltered

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 47:41


We needed to find somebody who could clearly explain what the Cisco/Google partnership is really all about, and man, did we hit the jackpot! Pete Johnson has been in on that project for a while now, and he does a terrific job of spelling out exactly why Cisco partnered with Google, what kind of customer is ideal for the Early Access Program, and how the technologies within the larger solution work to benefit both developers and IT Ops teams.

google partnership cisco pete johnson it ops early access program cisco google
PurePerformance Cafe
PurePerformance Cafe 012: with Derek Abing of Sentry Insurance

PurePerformance Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2016 11:27


For some reason, Andi was in Madison, Wisconsin. He got a chance to catch up with Derek Abing (https://www.linkedin.com/in/derekabing ) from Sentry Insurance. They talked about the evolution of Dynatrace AppMon & UEM within Sentry Insurance. In particular, how it evolved from App Monitoring to Enterprise System Monitoring replacing several of their other tools they had in place such as SCOM, OpenView, SiteScope. Derek was also part of our Dynatrace AppMon & UEM 6.5 Early Access Program and sees this as a major step forward to make everyone a Performance Expert thanks to the enhancements in the Web Dashboards, Transaction Flow and the Automatic Problem Detection.

PurePerformance Cafe
PurePerformance Cafe 012: with Derek Abing of Sentry Insurance

PurePerformance Cafe

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2016 11:27


For some reason, Andi was in Madison, Wisconsin. He got a chance to catch up with Derek Abing (https://www.linkedin.com/in/derekabing ) from Sentry Insurance. They talked about the evolution of Dynatrace AppMon & UEM within Sentry Insurance. In particular, how it evolved from App Monitoring to Enterprise System Monitoring replacing several of their other tools they had in place such as SCOM, OpenView, SiteScope. Derek was also part of our Dynatrace AppMon & UEM 6.5 Early Access Program and sees this as a major step forward to make everyone a Performance Expert thanks to the enhancements in the Web Dashboards, Transaction Flow and the Automatic Problem Detection.

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv
223 JSJ WebStorm with Dennis Ushakov

All JavaScript Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2016 42:08


React Remote Conf and Angular Remote Conf   03:18 - Dennis Ushakov Introduction Twitter GitHub JetBrains JetBrains Issue Tracker WebStorm @WebStormIDE   03:54 - Writing an IDE in Java YouTrack TeamCity   04:50 - Specs 05:43 - WebStorm Defined Integrated Development Environment (IDE) 06:19 - IDEs vs Text Editors 08:31 - Building an IDE Language Support External Tool Support Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) 13:00 - Code Reuse 15:07 - Prioritizing Features 17:11 - Why is IDE tooling important? “Code is read a lot more than it’s written.” 19:57 - Refactorings The Dynamic Nature of JavaScript TypeScript-specific Refactorings 23:35 - Next Versions of Webstorm Early Access Program 25:07 - Framework Support; Usage Data 28:12 - Other Technology and Framework Support 31:12 - Working for JetBrains 32:17 - Release Cycles and Procedures Early Access Program 34:39 - Java Source Code Contribution Kotlin   Picks Jesse Kriss: Human scale technology (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Vote (Chuck) Transmit (Chuck) Steam Squad (Dennis) Ergobaby Four Position 360 Baby Carrier (Dennis)

building writing code defined procedures dal java github integrated javascript abstract ides ide specs typescript kotlin transmit jetbrains text editors teamcity webstorm language support early access program react rally code reuse angular remote conf react remote conf framework support
JavaScript Jabber
223 JSJ WebStorm with Dennis Ushakov

JavaScript Jabber

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2016 42:08


React Remote Conf and Angular Remote Conf   03:18 - Dennis Ushakov Introduction Twitter GitHub JetBrains JetBrains Issue Tracker WebStorm @WebStormIDE   03:54 - Writing an IDE in Java YouTrack TeamCity   04:50 - Specs 05:43 - WebStorm Defined Integrated Development Environment (IDE) 06:19 - IDEs vs Text Editors 08:31 - Building an IDE Language Support External Tool Support Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) 13:00 - Code Reuse 15:07 - Prioritizing Features 17:11 - Why is IDE tooling important? “Code is read a lot more than it’s written.” 19:57 - Refactorings The Dynamic Nature of JavaScript TypeScript-specific Refactorings 23:35 - Next Versions of Webstorm Early Access Program 25:07 - Framework Support; Usage Data 28:12 - Other Technology and Framework Support 31:12 - Working for JetBrains 32:17 - Release Cycles and Procedures Early Access Program 34:39 - Java Source Code Contribution Kotlin   Picks Jesse Kriss: Human scale technology (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Vote (Chuck) Transmit (Chuck) Steam Squad (Dennis) Ergobaby Four Position 360 Baby Carrier (Dennis)

building writing code defined procedures dal java github integrated javascript abstract ides ide specs typescript kotlin transmit jetbrains text editors teamcity webstorm language support early access program react rally code reuse angular remote conf react remote conf framework support
Devchat.tv Master Feed
223 JSJ WebStorm with Dennis Ushakov

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 3, 2016 42:08


React Remote Conf and Angular Remote Conf   03:18 - Dennis Ushakov Introduction Twitter GitHub JetBrains JetBrains Issue Tracker WebStorm @WebStormIDE   03:54 - Writing an IDE in Java YouTrack TeamCity   04:50 - Specs 05:43 - WebStorm Defined Integrated Development Environment (IDE) 06:19 - IDEs vs Text Editors 08:31 - Building an IDE Language Support External Tool Support Abstract Syntax Tree (AST) 13:00 - Code Reuse 15:07 - Prioritizing Features 17:11 - Why is IDE tooling important? “Code is read a lot more than it’s written.” 19:57 - Refactorings The Dynamic Nature of JavaScript TypeScript-specific Refactorings 23:35 - Next Versions of Webstorm Early Access Program 25:07 - Framework Support; Usage Data 28:12 - Other Technology and Framework Support 31:12 - Working for JetBrains 32:17 - Release Cycles and Procedures Early Access Program 34:39 - Java Source Code Contribution Kotlin   Picks Jesse Kriss: Human scale technology (Jamison) React Rally (Jamison) Vote (Chuck) Transmit (Chuck) Steam Squad (Dennis) Ergobaby Four Position 360 Baby Carrier (Dennis)

building writing code defined procedures dal java github integrated javascript abstract ides ide specs typescript kotlin transmit jetbrains text editors teamcity webstorm language support early access program react rally code reuse angular remote conf react remote conf framework support
PalmCast
PalmCast Episode 135 - Think Ahead

PalmCast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2011 111:34


Derek, Dieter, and Adam get together to talk about all the news from Think Beyond... and beyond. News HP Veer, hands-on The HP Veer Gamble Veer's funky headphone adapter and clever charging plug HP Pre 3, hands-on HP TouchPad, hands-on Touchstone Technology Expands: Exhibition, Touch-to-Share User interface changes, New apps in webOS 3.0 TouchPad to run up to $699, release in June, or is that April? HP unveils Tablet-compatible SDK, Enyo Enyo SDK released to Early Access Program, webOS 2.0 SDK still under NDA HP extends free developer Pre 2 program to all qualified developers HP to offer resources, promotions to for Mojo/Enyo transition Current apps will run in emulation on TouchPad HP to develop apps themselves for big-name partners New VP of Worldwide Developer Relations: Richard Kerris No major webOS OTA updates to older devices webOS 2 and the hard call HP hears you on update issue, working on "something to make things right" HP posts webOS 2.x update checker, says "maybe" for European Pre Plus webOS 2.1 download posted for European Pre Plus Verizon Pre 2 webOS Doctor now available, Sprint Pre 2 'FrankenPre' is finally a success webOS 2.1 hacked onto existing US Pre and Pre Plus phones webOS coming to the PC, to be integrated with Windows webOS Bluetooth keyboard gets some eyes-on time Touchstone v2 will communicate its identity, probably isn't NFC Apotheker: HP "takes too long to get to market" with innovations Fare thee well, Palm -- we'll miss you Verizon Pre 2 now available, free Mobile Hotspot not included Pre 2 GPS doesn't appear to be crippled HP donates a hefty server to WebOS Internals Sprint Premier changes will wipe out existing one-year upgrades after March 31 Thanks to everybody for writing in as well as everybody that participated live in person and in the chat! Credits Thanks to the PreCentral Store for sponsoring the Palmcast. You can email the PalmCast at podcast@treocentral.com or leave us a voicemail at 800-557-6819 x222. Music comes from ccMixter.org, a great Creative Commons music site. Our specific music is the following: "Hot Sax on a platter (jazzalicious mix)" by shagrugge "Valsa pra Ela" by trz