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Andy Tryba is a technology optimist and 19x CEO. He is the co-founder & CEO of Ionic Partners as well as the CEO of 2 recent acquisitions by Ionic – Gigster & Sparkrock. Ionic Partners is an enterprise software buyout firm focused on reaccelerating companies that have grown to $20-$50m in revenue, but now need additional playbooks & talent to reach the next level. Prior to co-founding Ionic Partners – Andy created and ran a $1B division of ESW Capital called Think3. Through this fund – Andy has purchased and was the CEO of 12 enterprise software companies – Engine Yard, DNN Corp, Kayako, Bizness Apps, FogBugz, MyAlerts, School Loop, Agemni, SLI Systems, Infinio, Sococo and StreetSmart. Prior to Think3, Andy founded one of the largest online talent marketplaces – spanning over 130 countries. Crossover grew from scratch to over $500m/yr in revenue before being acquired. Andy also created the world's only non-profit rideshare – which completed over 3M rides in 4 years. Through the non-profit model – RideAustin was been able to innovate with local organizations to help solve transportation issues – including driving underprivileged patients to doctors' visits, Veterans to their jobs and medical visits, elimination of underutilized bus lines and enabled local charities to raise $450k in donations through the Round-Up feature – also first in the industry. Andy is a Board member of the Texas High Speed rail – working to bring the first high speed rail to the United States, serves as a Delegate in the US-Japan Leadership Program – bringing together key leaders from US & Japan, and founded a local Japanese school in Austin called the Japanese Heritage Academy. Previously, Andy started and sold 2 software startups, spent 14 years running strategy at Intel Corporation, and was also an advisor to the US White House on the future of jobs and engineering talent. He received a Bachelor of Science in Engineering from the University of Illinois and a MBA from Rice University. Connect with him on LinkedIn at https://www.linkedin.com/in/andytryba/ Connect with Jon Dwoskin: Twitter: @jdwoskin Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jonathan.dwoskin Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thejondwoskinexperience/ Website: https://jondwoskin.com/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jondwoskin/ Email: jon@jondwoskin.com Get Jon's Book: The Think Big Movement: Grow your business big. Very Big! Connect with Andy Tryba: Website: https://gigster.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/andytryba Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gigster_official/?hl=en LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/andytryba/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/TryGigste *E – explicit language may be used in this podcast.
On this week's episode, the trio is totally focused and not at all awkward in their transitions as Steve recounts his recent FogBugz drama and Kotaro discusses a recent foray into building a straight-up macOS app in SwiftUI! Steve wonders if the culture of building your own tools has changed in the mobile world and a brief update on the PickleJarTodo app leads into a plug for Mike Zornek's blog, which you should totally read! Topics Discussed: - Follow-up: FogBugz Drama - Kotaro's Experimental SwiftUI Mac App Development - Platform Expectations - Building Your Own Tools From Scratch - PickleJarTodo Update - Images in Core Data - UI Component “Lego Bricks” - Stealing moments to work on the app - https://mikezornek.com/posts/2022/9/side-project-tiny-tickets/ Intro music: "When I Hit the Floor", © 2021 Lorne Behrman. Used with permission of the artist.
Manton and Daniel talk about the latest stage of FogBugz's corporate ownerhip, the reaction among its few remaining users, and how happy Daniel is to have gotten out when he did. They ponder how important it is for any company to continually update their apps, as long as they continue to fulfill their primary purpose, and Manton makes a discovery about a long-time service he'd assumed was not receiving regular updates. The post Episode 522: I’m Sure You’re Happy appeared first on Core Intuition.
Daniel tells Manton about finally leaving FogBugz and going deep on Help Scout and GitHub Issues. Meanwhile Manton has also finished his migration to Help Scout! They talk about their mutual satisfaction with Help Scout and about how to best manage GitHub Issues. The post Episode 503: I’m Not Complaining Exactly appeared first on Core Intuition.
Manton talks to Daniel about his decision to switch from Zendesk to Help Scout, and gets Daniel excited about the prospect of finally switching away from FogBugz for his own work. The post Episode 502: A Fancy Email Client appeared first on Core Intuition.
Nachdem wir (Christian, Johannes, Dominik und Jochen) uns schon mehrfach zu diesem Thema zusammensetzen wollten, es dann aber aus Terminfindungsschwierigkeiten nicht hinbekommen haben, es dann doch noch geschafft haben, mit dem Ergebnis aber noch nicht zufrieden waren, um uns dann noch einmal in das Fegefeuer der Terminfindungsschwierigkeiten zurückzubegeben, haben wir es letztlich doch noch hinbekommen, eine Episode zu diesem Thema aufzunehmen o/. Shownotes Unsere E-Mail für Fragen, Anregungen & Kommentare: hallo@python-podcast.de News aus der Szene pipenv release appenv auf dem pythoncamp Async Python is not faster | Klarstellung dazu von Łukasz Langa asyncio Promise Projektmanagement Projekt Project management triangle Cynefin Manifesto for Agile Software Development Peopleware - Buch zum Thema ("make a cheeseburger, sell a cheeseburger") Original waterfall paper Rapid Application Development Manager Tools Employee Retention YAGNI Second System Tools GitLab FogBugz Jira Trello Odoo Taiga Redmine CRE028 Extreme Programming Öffentliches Tag auf konektom
If productivity is a challenge for you or your remote team then you should listen to Today's guest is CEO of Cross Over Andy Tryba. He's also a serial entrepreneur, investor and futurist with interests in a number of other businesses including, Think3, RideAustin, Crossover, EngineYard, Kayako, DNN, BiznessApps, MyAlerts, FogBugz, SchoolLoop, SLI Systems, Agemni, Sococo and StreetSmart. Crossover connects companies to the best talent from around the world and provides a seamless end-to-end solution for remote team management. But Andy and I won’t just be talking shop, no. Andy also talks through his personal experience of growing multiple business and his incredible plans to grow even further in 2020 up to 2021 where he plans to acquire one business per day... Reach out to Andy via Twitter here >>> https://twitter.com/andytryba And remember to take a look at Crossover >>> crossover.com
The 11th episode of the Side Quest Completed podcast, a podcast about game development hobbies. Calvin and Jaycie talk about the initial efforts to organize a new project and get your planning and tracking off to a good start. Initial project setup with timelines and outlines FogBugz Trello OneNote Remember …
There is a constant influx of notifications from Slack, e-mail, text messages, and news alerts. This week we discuss how to keep productivity high even with all this going on. We cover some of the tips and tricks that we use to stay organized as developers and go a bit further as to not go crazy and not get distracted when working from home. Links & Show Notes Clear Google Keep FogBugz Frank: Twitter, Blog, GitHub James: Twitter, Blog, GitHub Music : Amethyst Seer - Citrine by Adventureface Subscribe iTunes Google Play Music Stitcher Pocket Casts
There is a constant influx of notifications from Slack, e-mail, text messages, and news alerts. This week we discuss how to keep productivity high even with all this going on. We cover some of the tips and tricks that we use to stay organized as developers and go a bit further as to not go crazy and not get distracted when working from home. Links & Show Notes Clear Google Keep FogBugz Frank: Twitter, Blog, GitHub James: Twitter, Blog, GitHub Music : Amethyst Seer - Citrine by Adventureface Subscribe iTunes Google Play Music Stitcher Pocket Casts
More Than Just Code podcast - iOS and Swift development, news and advice
This week we discuss the rumoured OLED display bar for the MacBook Pro line. We follow up on Mekorama, Mekorama Forum and Twitterrific's Tip Jar. We discuss Apple Pay initial role out in Canada. We cover the Swift 3.0 Preview for developers. We discuss naming classes in code as well as delegates vs observers. Picks: MTJC T-Shirts Update, NSCache, Jazzy and Hyperdev Tim's conversation with Martin Magni > How did you build it? Unity? I wrote it from scratch in C and used the (open source) Bullet Physics library. > Did you do all the work, art, music? Yes. I'm a bit of a jack of all trades ;) > What made you decide on pay what you want? I wanted to try IAPs. But locking features down would hurt the game. Especially given its create and share functionality, which benefits from having many users contribute content. PWYW "solves" these issues and seems relatively untried in the app stores. > We talk about devs charging decent money for their work. How has the IAP performed. Not to be to specific. Are you happy with the result? I charge exactly what the app is worth to you, couldn't get more decent than that. Are people paying? Some. (Thank you!) Am I making minimum wage? No. Will I survive? Yes, I'm extremely frugal. > What cause the app to tip? Was it marketing, interviews, luck? Would it be presumptuous of me to suggest that the quality of the game played a role? Making it free helped too. > How long did it take? Were you working on it exclusively? I'm a full time indie dev. I worked exclusively on the game for almost a year and a half. > How are your other apps doing, do you have any? My first game (in my current solo constellation) was 2015's Odd Bot Out. It's pay to play and has done better than Mekorama (so far). Episode 94 Show Notes OLED display on MacBook Pro Optimus Maximus keyboard Conversation with Martin Magni Mekorama Forum Super Mario Maker League of legends Twitterrific’s new tip jar Monument Valley lego Linden labs Second Life Apple Pay - Canada Venmo Apple Pay SDK? Swift 3 Preview 1 Xcode: Switching Toolchains Apple releases Swift 3.0 Preview 1 ahead of WWDC 2016 Too Many Managers Delegates vs Observers Objective-C for Swift Developers Trello FogBugz Dash ConstraintLayout 101 & the new Layout Builder in Android Studio Episode 94 Picks MTJC T-Shirts Update Un: NSCache Deux: jazzy Hyperdev
02:27 - Alex Eagle Introduction Twitter GitHub Google 02:54 - Jonathan Turner Introduction Twitter GitHub Microsoft [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ ng-conf 2015 [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ Angular U 2015 03:30 - What is TypeScript? 04:40 - Google + Microsoft =
02:27 - Alex Eagle Introduction Twitter GitHub Google 02:54 - Jonathan Turner Introduction Twitter GitHub Microsoft [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ ng-conf 2015 [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ Angular U 2015 03:30 - What is TypeScript? 04:40 - Google + Microsoft =
02:27 - Alex Eagle Introduction Twitter GitHub Google 02:54 - Jonathan Turner Introduction Twitter GitHub Microsoft [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ ng-conf 2015 [Talk] Jonathan Turner: TypeScript and Angular 2 @ Angular U 2015 03:30 - What is TypeScript? 04:40 - Google + Microsoft =
The SaaS Podcast - SaaS, Startups, Growth Hacking & Entrepreneurship
Michael Pryor is the CEO of Trello, a free app that makes working on group projects as easy as using sticky notes on a whiteboard. He is also the co-founder and President of Fog Creek Software, the makers of products such as FogBugz and Kiln. To date, Trello has raised over $10M in funding and is used by millions of people and companies of all kinds and sizes including Google, Adobe and The New York Times.Links & Resources MentionedTrelloFog CreekMichael Pryor - @michaelpryor | michael [at] trello [dot] comOmer Khan - @omerkhanEnjoyed this episode?Subscribe to the podcastLeave a rating and reviewFollow Omer on TwitterNeed help with your SaaS?Join SaaS Club Plus: our membership and community for new and early-stage SaaS founders. Join and get training & support.Join SaaS Club Launch: a 12-week group coaching program to help you get your SaaS from zero to your first $10K revenue.Apply for SaaS Club Accelerate: If you'd like to work directly with Omer 1:1, then request a free strategy session.
The SaaS Podcast - SaaS, Startups, Growth Hacking & Entrepreneurship
Michael Pryor is the CEO of Trello, a free app that makes working on group projects as easy as using sticky notes on a whiteboard. He is also the co-founder and President of Fog Creek Software, the makers of products such as FogBugz and Kiln. To date, Trello has raised over $10M in funding and is used by millions of people and companies of all kinds and sizes including Google, Adobe and The New York Times. Links & Resources Mentioned Trello Fog Creek Michael Pryor - @michaelpryor | michael [at] trello [dot] com Omer Khan - @omerkhan Enjoyed this episode? Subscribe to the podcast Leave a rating and review Follow Omer on Twitter Need help with your SaaS? Join SaaS Club Plus: our membership and community for new and early-stage SaaS founders. Join and get training & support. Join SaaS Club Launch: a 12-week group coaching program to help you get your SaaS from zero to your first $10K revenue. Apply for SaaS Club Accelerate: If you'd like to work directly with Omer 1:1, then request a free strategy session.
Falar com clareza, transmitir todos os objetivos e propostas de seu trabalho, estar disponível 100% do tempo para futuros e atuais clientes. Mais do que desafios, em tempos de competição ferrenha, habilidades como essas são fundamentais.Mauro Amaral, Humberto Oliveira & Carolina Vigna-Maru abriram seus canais de voz para, mais uma vez, criar a meia hora mais valiosa do seu dia. Neste episódio conheça três modelos básicos de centrais de comunicação com seus prós e contras, entenda que estar 100% online e 100% disponível são coisas diferentes e, claro, fique de ouvidos bem abertos para as dicas de ferramentas que vamos dar a você.E por falar em dicas, algumas referênciasEm resposta a “revolução” da Web 2.0, o post do Carreirasolo.org FogBugz, o mata baratas do Humberto OliveiraLogMeIn, uma das ferramentas de acesso remoto indicadasMais um detalhe: este episódio marca o início de uma nova periodicidade nos pods. Agora, a cada 15 dias um novo episódio novinho estará disponível. Mais tempo para as pautas e para vocês enviarem dúvidas, ok?O que você pode fazer para participar:Publique seu perfil ou post no Carreirasolo.org: Página de publicaçãoEnvie e-mail de voz, sua dúvida ou sugestão para: carreirasolo.org@gmail.comAssine no iTunes: http://feeds.feedburner.com/FalaFreela
Falar com clareza, transmitir todos os objetivos e propostas de seu trabalho, estar disponível 100% do tempo para futuros e atuais clientes. Mais do que desafios, em tempos de competição ferrenha, habilidades como essas são fundamentais. Mauro Amaral, Humberto Oliveira & Carolina Vigna-Maru abriram seus canais de voz para, mais uma vez, criar a meia hora mais valiosa do seu dia. Neste episódio conheça três modelos básicos de centrais de comunicação com seus prós e contras, entenda que estar 100% online e 100% disponível são coisas diferentes e, claro, fique de ouvidos bem abertos para as dicas de ferramentas que vamos dar a você. E por falar em dicas, algumas referências Em resposta a “revolução” da Web 2.0, o post do Carreirasolo.org FogBugz, o mata baratas do Humberto Oliveira LogMeIn, uma das ferramentas de acesso remoto indicadas Mais um detalhe: este episódio marca o início de uma nova periodicidade nos pods. Agora, a cada 15 dias um novo episódio novinho estará disponível. Mais tempo para as pautas e para vocês enviarem dúvidas, ok? O que você pode fazer para participar: Publique seu perfil ou post no Carreirasolo.org: Página de publicação Envie e-mail de voz, sua dúvida ou sugestão para: carreirasolo.org@gmail.com Assine no iTunes: http://feeds.feedburner.com/FalaFreela
Bienvenue dans le soixante-quinzième épisode de CacaoCast! Dans cet épisode, Philippe Casgrain et Philippe Guitard discutent des sujets suivants: Mac OS 10.7.3 - Ça a l'air de rien, mais c'est vachement important *tousse*bac à sable*tousse* id Software - Tout sur github DocSets App pour iOS - La documentation d'Apple sur iOS StackedGit - La gestion des patchs facilitée legit - Git sans tous les problèmes? FogBugz - Gratuit pour 2 usagers BugzKit - Pour interagir avec FogBugz en Objective-C Vim - Maintenant sur iPad ?! Ecoutez cet épisode
Download the MP3. While some entrepreneurs fret over new business ideas, Joel Spolsky of Fog Creek Software focuses on hiring the best and brightest for his New York City-based software company, and then figures out how to make a profit with the products they create. He bootstrapped his company to profitability and built a loyal following of fans along the way. While Joel developed Fog Creek's first product called FogBugz that tracks bugs, he let his 2005 summer interns develop their own product called Copilot that has already hit the market. Joel's out to prove he can put capital to work, scale his business, and maybe even revolutionize venture capital along the way. Update: Joel returned for a second interview on Venture Voiceover three years later in 2009.