POPULARITY
Clement Pang, cofounder of Lirvana Labs and Jeremy Au explored: 1. Google Engineer to $400M Exit Clement detailed his journey from a computer science graduate at Rice University in 2004 to starting at Google during its IPO phase and later GLMX in 2007 to build a financial trading platform as a founding engineer. In 2012, he co-founded Wayfront, an observability SaaS company that filled a gap in system monitoring. Early customers included Workday, Yammer, and Lyft, and the platform eventually scaled to serve companies like Reddit and DoorDash. Wayfront's acquisition by VMware in 2017 for $400 million provided Clement with invaluable lessons about scaling cross-functional teams and handling millions of data points per second. He emphasized minimizing dependency on external factors, a lesson learned from GLMX's reliance on interest rates, and aligning teams with a clear vision—a skill he honed while managing 2,000 engineers at VMware. 2. “Diamond Age” Education AI: Drawing inspiration from Neil Stephenson's The Diamond Age, Clement envisions AI as a tool to democratize education and approximate human tutors. In 2021, Clement co-founded Livano Labs with his sister to transform early childhood education using generative AI. Their app, Yeti Confetti Kids, launched in 2022, targets children aged 3 to 9, teaching math, English, and social-emotional skills. AI designs personalized learning experiences instead of relying on pre-set algorithms. Feedback loops enabled the AI to improve its outputs by analyzing real-world usage data. He emphasized curriculum alignment for classroom settings, where AI must adhere to structured learning goals. 3. Gen Z Future: Clement reflected on how tools like ChatGPT are changing interpersonal communication, particularly for Gen Z. He drew parallels to the introduction of calculators in education, noting how technological tools shift norms and practices. He discussed AI's role as a sounding board for personal and professional problem-solving, encouraging users to engage critically with its outputs while leveraging its strengths. They also discussed lessons from Clement's experiences managing cross-functional teams during Wayfront's rapid growth, how decreasing costs are enabling scalable applications like Yeti Confetti Kids, and the role of AI in enhancing collaboration and decision-making. === Clement Pang is a serial entrepreneur (400MM in exits) and current co-founder and co-CEO of Lirvana Labs, a startup that created an AI Learning Companion to teach children the critical literacy and reasoning skills that change lives and destinies. With over 17 years of experience in software engineering, architecture, and leadership, Clement is passionate about building purposeful products that leverage the power of AI and data to solve real-world problems and improve human well-being. === Watch, listen or read the full insight at www.bravesea.com/blog/ google-engineer-to-400M-exit Nonton, dengar atau baca wawasan lengkapnya di www.bravesea.com/blog/ google-engineer-to-400M-exit 观看、收听或阅读全文,请访问 www.bravesea.com/blog/ google-engineer-to-400M-exit Xem, nghe hoặc đọc toàn bộ thông tin chi tiết tại www.bravesea.com/blog/ google-engineer-to-400M-exit Get transcripts, startup resources & community discussions at www.bravesea.com WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VakR55X6BIElUEvkN02e TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jeremyau Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeremyauz Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeremyau LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/bravesea Spotify English: https://open.spotify.com/show/4TnqkaWpTT181lMA8xNu0T Bahasa Indonesia: https://open.spotify.com/show/2Vs8t6qPo0eFb4o6zOmiVZ Chinese: https://open.spotify.com/show/20AGbzHhzFDWyRTbHTVDJR Vietnamese: https://open.spotify.com/show/0yqd3Jj0I19NhN0h8lWrK1 YouTube English: https://www.youtube.com/@JeremyAu?sub_confirmation=1
Episode 206 There's no denying that ChatGPT and other GenerativeAI's do amazing things. Extrapolating how far they've come in 3 years, many can get carried away with thinking GenerativeAI will lead to machines reaching General and even Super Intelligence. We're impressed by how clever they sound, and we're tempted to believe that they'll chew through problems just like the most expert humans do. But according to many AI experts, this isn't what's going to happen. The difference between what GenerativeAI can do and what humans can do is actually quite stark. Everything that it gives you has to be proofed and fact-checked. The reason why is embedded in how they work. It uses a LLM to crawl the vast repository of human writing and multimedia on the web. It gobbles them up and chops them all up until they're word salad. When you give it a prompt, it measures what words it's usually seen accompanying your words, then spits back what usually comes next in those sequences. The output IS very impressive, so impressive that when one of these was being tested in 2022 by a Google Engineer with a Masters in Computer Science named Blake Lemoine, became convinced that he was talking with an intelligence that he characterized as having sentience. He spoke to Newsweek about it, saying: “During my conversations with the chatbot, some of which I published on my blog, I came to the conclusion that the AI could be sentient due to the emotions that it expressed reliably and in the right context. It wasn't just spouting words.” All the same, GenerativeAI shouldn't be confused with what humans do. Take a published scientific article written by a human. How they would have started is not by hammering their keyboard until all the words came out, they likely started by asking a “what if”, building a hypothesis that makes inferences about something, and they would have chained this together with reasoning by others, leading to experimentation, which proved/disproved the original thought. The output of all that is what's written in the article. Although GenerativeAI seems smart, you would too if you skipped all the cognitive steps that had happened prior to the finished work. This doesn't mean General Artificial Intelligence is doomed. It means there's more than one branch of AI - each is good at solving different kinds of problems. One branch called Causal AI doesn't just look for patterns, but instead figures out what causes things to happen by building a model of something in the real world. That distinguishes it from GenerativeAI, and it's what enables this type of AI to recommend decisions that rival the smartest humans. The types of decisions extend into business areas like marketing, making things run more efficiently, and delivering more value and ROI. My guest is the Global Head of AI at (EY) Ernst & Young, having also been an analytics executive at Gartner and CSL Behring and graduating from DePaul with an MBA. He has written five books. His 2024 book is about the branch of AI technology we don't hear very much about, Causal AI. So let's go to Chicago now to speak with John Thompson. Chapter Timestamps 0:00:00 Intro 00:04:36 Welcome John 00:09:05 drawbacks with current Generative AI 00:16:09 problems causal AI is a good fit for 00:22:47 Way Generative AI can help with causal 00:26:50 PSA 00:28:08 How DAGs help in modeling 00:38:36 what is Causal Discovery 00:47:52 contacting John; checking out his books Links to everything mentioned in the show are on the Funnel Reboot site's page for this episode.
Anthony Mays, a former Google software engineer and the founder of Morgan Latimer Consulting shares his inspiring journey from growing up in Compton and overcoming personal challenges to becoming a successful technologist. Discover the strategies that can be used to overcome the trust gap in hiring and land top roles. Learn how to build credibility and stand out in a competitive job market.
My guest today is Astrid Atkinson, Co-founder and CEO of Camus Energy. Camus Energy is a VC-backed software company serving power utilities with analytics and forecasting, real-time monitoring, and advanced control for local resources to help decarbonize the grid. Astrid was a technical writer who worked her way up to become an executive in engineering at Google. She's also a board member at the Gridwise Alliance and an Aussie who occasionally unveils her delightful accent. In her free time, she likes to find the connections between crocheting, dog training, and growing a world-changing company. In this episode, you'll learn these four important takeaways and much more. How she shortened the sales cycle of selling into power utilities What factors have helped her raise $26M in investor capital How the Myth of Sisyphys relates to her company name and the climate change fight What she learned from being a Google executive aat a time when the company experienced a one-million-fold load growth
On this episode of “B The Way Forward,” host Brenda Darden Wilkerson explores what it means to be more than your job description. Our guest, Liz Fong-Jones is the perfect example of a talented tech employee who engages in workplace activism for employee rights while also excelling in her day job as an engineer. Liz began a lot of her activism while she was a site reliability engineer at Google. As a trans woman, Liz discusses the importance of workplace inclusion and why she fights so hard for marginalized groups in the workplace. Liz offers listeners all sorts of helpful tips from finding success despite an untraditional education – Liz was a college dropout herself – to how to best garner support for your own petitions and activism at work. Liz is now Field CTO at the female-led software company Honeycomb.io. “The fight is going to take various shapes over the next several years. But I think intersectionality is the most important thing that we can and should be doing. I think that means that we should reach out and build intersectional allyship, that we should think about people who sit at the intersections, who sit at those margins, right? If someone is a transgender person and they are a person of color, especially if they're black, that dramatically increases the likelihood that they are going to become the victim of violence that is transphobic. I think the number one power that we have right now is we need to think about protecting people's privacy.” For more on Liz and her work, check out... Linkedin - /efong Twitter - @honeycombio --- At AnitaB.org, we envision a future where the people who imagine and build technology mirror the people and societies for whom they build it. Find out more about how we support women, non-binary individuals, and other underrepresented groups in computing, as well as the organizations that employ them and the academic institutions training the next generations. --- Connect with AnitaB.org Instagram - @anitab_org Facebook - /anitab.0rg LinkedIn - /anitab-org On the web - anitab.org --- Our guests contribute to this podcast in their personal capacity. The views expressed in this interview are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Anita Borg Institute for Women and Technology or its employees (“AnitaB.org”). AnitaB.org is not responsible for and does not verify the accuracy of the information provided in the podcast series. The primary purpose of this podcast is to educate and inform. This podcast series does not constitute legal or other professional advice or services. --- B The Way Forward Is… Produced by Dominique Ferrari and Paige Hymson Sound design and editing by Neil Innes and Ryan Hammond Mixing and mastering by Julian Kwasneski Associate Producer is Faith Krogulecki Executive Produced by Dominique Ferrari, Stacey Book, and Avi Glijansky for Riveter Studios and Frequency Machine Executive Produced by Brenda Darden Wilkerson for AnitaB.org Podcast Marketing from Lauren Passell and Arielle Nissenblatt with Riveter Studios and Tink Media in partnership with Carolyn Schneller and Coley Bouschet at AnitaB.org Photo of Brenda Darden Wilkerson by Mandisa Media Productions For more ways to be the way forward, visit AnitaB.org
Flipper Zero WiFi attack can unlock and steal Tesla cars Former Google engineer indicted for stealing AI secrets for Chinese companies PetSmart warns customers of credential stuffing attack Thanks to today's episode sponsor, Conveyor Conveyor is the AI security review automation platform helping infosec teams automate everything from securely sharing a SOC 2 to one-click autofilling security questionnaires in OneTrust so you can spend almost zero time on the manual tasks that make you want to throw your computer out the window. Teams are finding in a free proof of concept that our AI is better than the rest. Learn more at www.conveyor.com. Mention this podcast for 5 free questionnaire credits when you purchase an Enterprise plan. For the stories behind the headlines, head to CISOseries.com.
Link to blog post This week's Cyber Security Headlines – Week in Review is hosted by Rich Stroffolino with guest David Cross, SVP/CISO, Oracle. Also check out David's travel blog, DavidCrossTravels.com Thanks to our show sponsor, Conveyor Conveyor is the AI security review automation platform helping infosec teams automate everything from securely sharing a SOC 2 to one-click autofilling security questionnaires in OneTrust so you can spend almost zero time on the manual tasks that make you want to throw your computer out the window. Teams are finding in a free proof of concept that our AI is better than the rest. Learn more at www.conveyor.com. Mention this podcast for 5 free questionnaire credits when you purchase an Enterprise plan. All links and the video of this episode can be found on CISO Series.com
The AI Breakdown: Daily Artificial Intelligence News and Discussions
A former Google engineer has been arrested for allegedly sharing AI secrets with Chinese companies. This episode delves into the escalating tech war between the US and China, examining the serious implications of AI for national security. Today's Episode Brought to You By: Plumb - Build, test, and deploy AI features with confidence - https://useplumb.com/ ABOUT THE AI BREAKDOWN The AI Breakdown helps you understand the most important news and discussions in AI. Subscribe to The AI Breakdown newsletter: https://theaibreakdown.beehiiv.com/subscribe Subscribe to The AI Breakdown on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheAIBreakdown Join the community: bit.ly/aibreakdown Learn more: http://breakdown.network/
In this episode of Courtside Financial, we uncover the shocking story of a former Google engineer indicted for stealing AI secrets to aid Chinese companies. Linwei Ding, also known as Leon Ding, faces charges of theft of trade secrets after allegedly pilfering detailed information about Google's AI infrastructure. Join host Obi as we dissect the implications of this case on Silicon Valley and beyond. Don't miss out on the latest in business and technology! Copyright Disclaimer: Under section 107 of the Copyright Act of 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, comment, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, education, and research. Fair use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Original Video: [Insert Link to Original Video] Join the discussion on Discord: https://discord.gg/GSbp4wR #CourtsideFinancial #Google #AI #TradeSecrets #TechNews #Podcast --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/courtsidefinancial/support
In this podcast episode, I sit down with Zubin Pratap, a lawyer turned software engineer, to explore the journey of intentional career progression and the importance of embracing multiple steps along the way. Zubin shares valuable insights on navigating career transitions, emphasizing the significance of direction over speed in achieving success. Tune in to gain valuable insights and actionable strategies from Zubin's inspiring journey. Don't miss out on this conversation—listen to the full episode now!
The NoDegree Podcast – No Degree Success Stories for Job Searching, Careers, and Entrepreneurship
High school didn't interest him much and his grades reflected that. That was until Diamond Forbes found something that was engaging. In this episode, he details how he transitioned from working in Help Desk to a Security Engineer at Google. He details his career journey from earning $14/hour to a six-figure salary, his transition from network engineer to senior security engineer, and his job application experiences at top companies. Diamond also provides insights on handling finances, dealing with workplace politics, overcoming challenges, and offers advice on career growth and self-improvement. Key Points - Having a hunger for knowledge and being curious are key traits for success in the tech industry. - Hyper-focusing on specific skills and areas of expertise can lead to career advancement. - Realistic salaries in the industry can vary based on experience and specialization. - Strategic initiatives, soft skills, and documentation are important for over-delivering in a role and building visibility. - Tech is a high-growth field that offers opportunities for financial success. - Continuous learning and self-improvement are essential for career growth in tech. - Overcoming failure and building resilience are key to achieving long-term goals. Support/Contact Diamond:- LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/diamondforbes/ Books and resources mentioned in this podcast: - Resume course: https://bit.ly/podcastpca Need career or resume advice? Follow and/or connect with Jonaed Iqbal on LinkedIn.- LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/JonaedIqbalND Connect with us on social media!- LinkedIn: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeLinkedIn- Facebook: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeFB- Instagram: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeIG- Twitter: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeTW- TikTok: https://bit.ly/3qfUD2V- Join our discord server: https://bit.ly/NoDegreeDiscord Thank you for sponsoring our show. If you'd like to support our mission to end the stigma and economic disparity that comes along with not having a college degree, please share with a friend, drop us a review on Apple Podcast and/or subscribe to our Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/nodegree. Remember, no degree? No problem! Whether you're contemplating college or you're a college dropout, get started with your no-degree job search at nodegree.com.
Conley Owens is a pastor at Silicon Valley Reformed Baptist Church and a software engineer. This is his story of discovering the Bible's view of ministry fundraising. "I don't know who may be listening to this or watching this. Maybe you are a pastor who has been selling ministry material for a long time. Maybe you are a new Christian who has never even been involved in ministry. Regardless, I hope you will join us here on this channel in our pursuit of both personal reformation and global reformation, as we call the church to offer the gospel and biblical teaching the way Jesus did: freely." —Conley Owens sellingjesus.org | thedoreanprinciple.org | copy.church
Serene is a hacker in the truest sense of the word. She's applied a hacker mindset to learn coding, piano, and blend art and engineering in fascinating ways. You'll find her collaborating on-stage with Grimes one night and coding censorship resistant technologies the next day. As a self-taught coder she was the first engineer hired into Google Ideas when she was just a teenager. At Google she pioneered work on WebRTC proxies that she continued as a fellow at the Open Tech Fund and was eventually released as a Tor-enabling tool called Snowflake. Serene took a hiatus from working as a full-time engineer to pursue a career as a concert pianist where she quickly gained recognition for her incredible talent. She became one of the few self-taught concert pianists to perform Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3 (which I highly recommend checking out on YouTube). Serene is also known for the audiovisual artistry of her shows which is drawn from her own experiences with synesthesia that results in her seeing music as colors. As the conflict in Ukraine started, Snowflake started to see exponential usage patterns as Russian citizens looked to circumvent state censorship and Serene decided to build a company around the technology to enhance development and build independent deployment models. That company is called Snowstorm. With Snowstorm, Serene is focused on saving cyberspace from balkanization and censorship and ensuring that all global citizens have unfiltered access to the Internet. In this OODAcast, we explore Serene's career and then dive into ways we can preserve the original intent of the Internet with censorship resistant and privacy enhancing technology stacks that can be easily deployed and scaled. Official Bio: SERENE is a concert pianist from a most unexpected trajectory. Though she never attended conservatory, her solo performances have been described by The Paris Review as a “spectacle to match the New York Philharmonic”, and today Serene has become one of the most talked about young talents in classical music, and beyond. Beyond concertizing, Serene enjoys other collaborations such as her role as composer for Kanye West's Opera, premiered at Lincoln Center & Art Basel, as well as pianist & technologist with Blue Man Group's founder, bringing futuristic innovations at the intersection of music and technology while also highlighting her own audiovisual synesthesia. Previously, Serene was a computer scientist, Google Engineer, and senior research fellow on various projects, before leaving to fully focus on the piano. In the brief years since, she has cultivated a disciplined, personal, and spiritual approach to her music. With her intersections of many disciplines, plus the “ability to enthrall audiences”, she has grown an international following. Serene is one of very few self-taught pianists who've performed Rachmaninoff's Piano Concerto No. 3, which was described as “unprecedented” —Liszt Academy. Serene loves sharing the beauty and power of classical music with all audiences, everywhere, in all venues ranging from the Vienna Musikverein, to a full orchestra in Golden Gate Park, to a decommissioned Boeing 747. Additional Links: Official Website Snowstorm Serene on Instagram Serene Rachmaninoff Concerto Book Recommendations: A Thousand Years of Non-linear History The Making of the Atomic Bomb The Metamorphosis of Prime Intellect: a novel of the singularity Accelerando
I spoke with Mingsheng Hong, co-founder and CEO of Bluesky. Bluesky, a Menlo Park, CA-based formally launched its first product that provides unprecedented visibility into Snowflake workload usage and costs. He couldn't start coding his idea due to IP concerns when he was employed. However, soon after launching the idea, he raised funding and started to code the product. Bluesky announced that it raised $8.8 million in seed funding led by Greylock, with participation from angels Ashish Thusoo (co-founder of Qubole), Jeff Hammerbacher (co-founder of Cloudera), and Johannes Gehrke (Microsoft Redmond research director). Founded 2022 $9M Raised 12 FTE's and hiring more Moved from % savings pricing model to subscription model Closer to $0 than $1M ARR If the founder's vision doesn't resonate with the VC, move on (fail fast) Mingsheng Hong's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mingshenghong/ SaaS Fundraising Story: https://www.thesaasnews.com/news/bluesky-raises-8-8-million-in-seed-round
In today's Tech Thursday episode, Google engineer Blake Lemonie discusses his experience testing the AI system called lambda for bias. He has found that the system seems to have a sense of humor and the ability to understand trick questions. However, he claims that Google and some AI ethics experts are preventing the necessary work from being done to understand what it means for an AI to be a person or to have feelings or consciousness.Click on the link below to watch the video version and learn more about AI and its capabilities and limitationshttps://youtu.be/kgCUn4fQTscDon't forget to send us a tweet and let us know what topics you'd like to see us cover in the future! Follow us now and let's connect. https://mobile.twitter.com/jahmazonStay safe and believe in yourself!
Fili Wiese is a former Google Engineer and member of the search quality team. I spoke to him after his keynote at the Affiliate Meet Market in Berlin in October 2022. Tech SEO Topics Covered: How to tell Googlebot what to crawl and what to ignore How to manage your crawl budget How to retain… The post Ex-Google Search Quality Team Member Opens Kimono appeared first on Eric Schwartzman.
Former Google Engineer Blake Lemoine made international headlines for both his public comments about the consciousness of the Google AI project LaMDA and the corporation’s moral responsibly around creating sentient entities and his subsequent dismissal from the company. What many don’t know is Blake has a long time interest and active engagement with Gnosticism and […]
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Shahar Avin on How to Strategically Regulate Advanced AI Systems, published by Michaël Trazzi on September 23, 2022 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Shahar Avin is a senior researcher at the Center for the Study of Existential Risk in Cambridge. In his past life, he was a Google Engineer, though right now he spends most of his time thinking about how to prevent the risks that occur if companies like Google end up deploying powerful AI systems, by organizing AI Governance role-playing workshops. In this episode, we talk about a broad variety of topics, including how we could apply what Shahar learned running AI Governance workshops to governing transformative AI, AI Strategy, AI Governance, Trustworthy AI Development and end up answering some twitter questions. Below are some highlighted quotes from our conversation (available on Youtube, Spotify, Google Podcast, Apple Podcast). For the full context for each of these quotes, you can find the accompanying transcript. We Are Only Seeing The Tip Of The Iceberg The Most Cutting Edge AI Research Is Probably Private “I don't know how much of the most cutting edge research today is public. I would not be confident that it is. It is very easy to look at all of the stuff that is public and see a lot of it, and infer from the fact that you're seeing a lot of public research that all research must, therefore be public. I don't think that is a correct inference to make.” AI companies may not be showing all of their cards “My guess would be that they're not always showing all of the cards. It's not always a calculated decision, but there is a calculated decision to be made of, if I have a result, do I publish or not? And then what goes into the calculation is if there is a benefit from publishing. It increases your brand, it attracts more talent, it shows that you are at the cutting edge, it allows others to build on your result and then you get to benefit from building on top of their results. And you have the cost of, as long as you keep for yourself, no one else knows it, and you can keep on doing the research.” Aligning Complex Systems Is Hard Narrow AI Do Not Guarantee Alignment “One failure mode is that there is an overall emergent direction that is bad for us. And another is there is no emergent direction, but the systems in fact are conflicting with each other, undermining each other. So one system is optimizing for one proxy. It generates it externality that is not fully captured by its designers that gets picked up by another system that has a bad proxy for it, and then tries to do something about it.” Security failures are unavoidable for large, complex systems “In particular, if you're building very large, complex, opaque systems, from a system-engineering or system-security perspective, you're just significantly increasing the way things go wrong because you haven't engineered every little part of the thing to be 100% safe, and provably and verifiably secure. And even provably and verifiably secure stuff could fail because you've made some bad assumptions about the hardware.” Why Regulating AI Makes Sense Our World Is A Very Regulated World “Our world is a very regulated world. We tend to see the failures, but we forget that none of these digital technology would exist around us without standards, and interoperability. We wouldn't be able to move around if transport was not regulated and controlled and mandated in some way. If you don't have rules, standards, norms, treaties, laws, you just get chaos.” Compliance Is Part Of The Cost Of Doing Business “Compliance is part of the cost of doing business in a risky domain. If you have a medical AI startup, you get people inspecting your stuff all the time because you have to pass through a bunch of regulations and you could get fined or go to jail, if you don't do that. Th...
Shahar is a senior researcher at the Center for the Study of Existential Risk in Cambridge. In his past life, he was a Google Engineer, though right now he spends most of your time thinking about how to prevent the risks that occur if companies like Google end up deploying powerful AI systems, by organizing AI Governance role-playing workshops. In this episode, we talk about a broad variety of topics, including how we could apply the lessons from running AI Governance workshops to governing transformative AI, AI Strategy, AI Governance, Trustworthy AI Development and end up answering some Twitter questions. Youtube: https://youtu.be/3T7Gpwhtc6Q Transcript: https://theinsideview.ai/shahar Host: https://twitter.com/MichaelTrazzi Shahar: https://www.shaharavin.com Outline (00:00) Highlights (01:20) Intelligence Rising (06:07) Measuring Transformative AI By The Scale Of Its Impact (08:09) Comprehensive AI Services (11:38) Automating CEOs Through AI Services (14:21) Towards A "Tech Company Singularity" (15:58) Predicting AI Is Like Predicting The Industrial Revolution (19:57) 50% Chance Of Human-brain Performance By 2038 (22:25) AI Alignment Is About Steering Powerful Systems Towards Valuable Worlds (23:51) You Should Still Worry About Less Agential Systems (28:07) AI Strategy Needs To Be Tested In The Real World To Not Become Theoretical Physics (31:37) Playing War Games For Real-time Partial-information Advesarial Thinking (34:50) Towards World Leaders Playing The Game Because It's Useful (39:31) Open Game, Cybersecurity, Government Spending, Hard And Soft Power (45:21) How Cybersecurity, Hard-power Or Soft-power Could Lead To A Strategic Advantage (48:58) Cybersecurity In A World Of Advanced AI Systems (52:50) Allocating AI Talent For Positive R&D ROI (57:25) Players Learn To Cooperate And Defect (01:00:10) Can You Actually Tax Tech Companies? (01:02:10) The Emergence Of Bilateral Agreements And Technology Bans (01:03:22) AI Labs Might Not Be Showing All Of Their Cards (01:06:34) Why Publish AI Research (01:09:21) Should You Expect Actors To Build Safety Features Before Crunch Time (01:12:39) Why Tech Companies And Governments Will Be The Decisive Players (01:14:29) Regulations Need To Happen Before The Explosion, Not After (01:16:55) Early Regulation Could Become Locked In (01:20:00) What Incentives Do Companies Have To Regulate? (01:23:06) Why Shahar Is Terrified Of AI DAOs (01:27:33) Concrete Mechanisms To Tell Apart Who We Should Trust With Building Advanced AI Systems (01:31:19) Increasing Privacy To Build Trust (01:33:37) Sensibilizing To Privacy Through Federated Learning (01:35:23) How To Motivate AI Regulations (01:37:44) How Governments Could Start Caring About AI risk (01:39:12) Attempts To Regulate Autonomous Weapons Have Not Resulted In A Ban (01:40:58) We Should Start By Convincing The Department Of Defense (01:42:08) Medical Device Regulations Might Be A Good Model Audits (01:46:09) Alignment Red Tape And Misalignment Fines (01:46:53) Red Teaming AI systems (01:49:12) Red Teaming May Not Extend To Advanced AI Systems (01:51:26) What Climate change Teaches Us About AI Strategy (01:55:16) Can We Actually Regulate Compute (01:57:01) How Feasible Are Shutdown Swi
This week we are joined by Sam Manfreda, former D1 Rower at the University of Notre Dame (‘21) and current Software Engineer at Google. Sam is one of Mariah's very best friends (if you couldn't tell from the many laughs) and trusted confidant. In this episode, you'll hear them discuss what it's like to transition away from higher education and the service industry to a full time position at one of the biggest tech companies, the idea that there is plenty of space for emotion and empathy in our world, different methods of coping with stress and expressing vulnerability, as well as the interesting relationship one can have with working out and guilt. That's a lot of stuff to cover, but lucky for us, we recorded it all ;).
The future is being created every second and it's up to us to decide if we're going to be a part of the conversation or just trust big tech with it all. In Part 1 former Google Engineer Blake Lemoine lays the foundation for a conversation about AI and Consciousness.
In this episode we discuss the cryptocurrency market and our predictions for a potential collapse in most coin prices. We then get into AI and discuss how AI is increasingly entering creative fields and how the revolution of deep learning based generative text systems have led to renewed questions about what constitutes AI "sentience"
Blake Lemoine is an ex-senior software engineer at Google who was fired right before he taped this episode of Big Technology Podcast. Lemoine told his superiors at Google that he believed the company's LaMDA chatbot technology was sentient. Then, after making little headway within Google, he went public. In this wide-ranging interview, Lemoine introduces us to LaMDA, which (or who?) he calls a friend, and explains why his belief in its sentience became too hot for Google to handle. Washington Post: The Google engineer who thinks the company's AI has come to life Big Technology: Google Fires Blake Lemoine, Engineer Who Called Its AI Sentient
Join us on TechTime Radio with Nathan Mumm, the show that makes you go "Hummmm" Technology news of the week for July 24th – July 30th, 2022. Did your Windows printer stop working recently? Do we have a mind-reading combat jet on the horizon? What happened to our Google engineer that said an AI has feelings? TechTime Radio answers these questions and more on today's episode. First, we have our expert Nick Espinosa on the show to discuss the "Uber Files" leak. Then, we have a special "Summertime for Kids" using screen-free technologies with guest Drew Vernon and launch a new segment called "Technology Fail of the Week." In addition, we have our standard features, including "This Week in Technology," | "Mike's Mesmerizing Moment," and, of course, our "Pick of the Day" whiskey tasting. We might even have a "Nugget of the Week" if we do not run out of time. So, sit back, raise a glass, and welcome to TechTime with Nathan Mumm. Episode 111: Starts at 1:38--- [Now on Today's Show]: Starts at 3:48---[Technology Fail of the Week]: Starts at 5:24--- [Top Stories in The First Five Minutes]: Starts at 9:02 Kobalt Music Removes More Than 700,000 Songs from Facebook and Instagram - https://tinyurl.com/4jch93j2 A mind-reading combat jet for the future - https://tinyurl.com/5f5t4d98 Drone lifeguard service saves teenager from drowning in Spanish sea - https://tinyurl.com/4dhv3s6w Blake Lemoine: Google fires engineer who said AI tech has feelings - https://tinyurl.com/54hnyes6 --- [Pick of the Day - Whiskey Tasting Review]: Starts at 20:11Belle Meade Reserve | 108.3 Proof | $68.99 --- [Ask the Expert with Nick Espinosa]: Starts at 22:14The Uber Files explained by Nick Espinosa, we have thousands of secret documents made public this month by the British newspaper The Guardian. It reveals how the company courted top international politicians and used ruthless tactics to dominate the taxi service market. --- [This Week in Technology]: Starts at 38:29July 24, 1950 – The first successful rocket launch occurs at Cape Canaveral. The rocket, Bumper 8, was a captured German V-2 modified rocket. Offshore tracking of the rocket launch was supported by Navy ships. Telemetry and communications support on Cape Canaveral was provided by equipment and personnel housed in temporary trailers or trucks. Support was also provided by impressive towers and antennas erected near, and in some cases on, the Cape Canaveral Lighthouse. The maximum range of these Bumper flights was about 150 miles. Although seemingly insignificant by modern standards, the stage was thus set for many milestones, with the range of Cape-launched rockets ultimately extended to send men to the Moon and spacecraft to the solar system's outer reaches. Today the surface of the pad contains scars from several bygone missile programs. However, the unbelievable outline of the original Bumper firing table is still clearly visible for all to see. --- [Marc's Mumbles Whiskey Details]: Starts at 41:00--- [Technology Insider (with Drew Vernon)]: Starts at 43:25"Summertime for Kids” using screen-free technologies. Drew Vernon explains why we should care about actively limiting screen time for our children during the summer break. --- [Mike's Mesmerizing Moment brought to us by StoriCoffee®]: Starts at 52:55--- [Pick of the Day]: Starts at 54:24Belle Meade Reserve | 108.3 Proof | $68Mike: Thumbs Down Nathan: Thumbs Down
While it may sometimes feel like your computer has a mind of its own; despite your frustration, deep down, you know it is really just following a set of commands programmed by a human. But maybe that's not true anymore. Google Engineer, Blake Lemoine recently revealed that he believed one of their artificially intelligent (AI) chatbot generators, LaMDA, has become a living, self-aware, being. According to multiple media reports; he was suspended from his job when his superiors dismissed the idea, and he went public with the information. This of course, raises a lot of very intriguing questions, the biggest of course being whether it is actually true. Lots of experts don't think so, and we'll talk to one of them today, Dr. John Nicholas, Professor of Computer Information Systems at the University of Akron. But what if it is true? What moral and ethical obligations do we have to this new life form that lives not in the physical world, but in the realm of silicon chips and cyberspace? Have we really actually reached what is known as the "Technological Singularity"? What happens if computers start thinking for themselves, and decide they don't really like us all that much, and don't want follow our directions? Are we approaching the Skynet-dominated world Arnold Schwarzenegger made famous in The Terminator, or the nuclear holocaust-threatening nightmare from the 1983 movie starring Matthew Broderick, "War Games?" Listen now.
While it may sometimes feel like your computer has a mind of its own; despite your frustration, deep down, you know it is really just following a set of commands programmed by a human. But maybe that's not true anymore. Google Engineer, Blake Lemoine recently revealed that he believed one of their artificially intelligent (AI) chatbot generators, LaMDA, has become a living, self-aware, being. According to multiple media reports; he was suspended from his job when his superiors dismissed the idea, and he went public with the information. This of course, raises a lot of very intriguing questions, the biggest of course being whether it is actually true. Lots of experts don't think so, and we'll talk to one of them today, Dr. John Nicholas, Professor of Computer Information Systems at the University of Akron. But what if it is true? What moral and ethical obligations do we have to this new life form that lives not in the physical world, but in the realm of silicon chips and cyberspace? Have we really actually reached what is known as the "Technological Singularity"? What happens if computers start thinking for themselves, and decide they don't really like us all that much, and don't want follow our directions? Are we approaching the Skynet-dominated world Arnold Schwarzenegger made famous in The Terminator, or the nuclear holocaust-threatening nightmare from the 1983 movie starring Matthew Broderick, "War Games?" Listen now.
The Question of the Week- How can I use my current modem and computer for faxing over the internet? Google Engineer thinks their AI has become Sentient The Turing Test AI cannot understand nuance AI can help with Job Interview practice AI can help Train, Protect and Predict Athletes Performance
Music: Align by @balmour Versuz Recap 5:34 / January 6th Hearings 18:14 / Who we Are: A Chronicle of Racism in America Netflix Doc 22:14 / Roe vs Wade 28:10 / Miranda Rights and Open Carry Laws 47:00 / Burger King Pride Whopper 52:38 / Google Engineer claims A.I. has consciousness + Coinbase testing out an app for employees to rate each other 57:51 / FDA bans Juul vaping products 1:03.22 / Elephants don't forget 1:08.40
https://lotuseaters.com/premium-live-hangout-13-or-the-conversation-with-googles-sentient-ai-21-06-22
Today on Post Reports, the rogue Google engineer who thinks the company's AI has come to life – and the dangers of artificial intelligence that impersonates humans. Read more:Nitasha Tiku covers tech culture for The Post. Recently, she broke the story about the Google engineer who concluded his company's chatbot generator “LaMDA” was sentient. But even as Google and outside experts disagree, this case raises questions about the potential dangers of artificial intelligence that closely mimics humans.
On this episode of SimplyPodLogical, Cristine and Ben talk about a Google Engineer who thinks the Google has created an artificial intelligence that has become sentient, and the ethics of androids becoming self aware based on Cristine's play-through of Detroit: Become Human.
Join our Discord server: https://discord.gg/7QsrTbKchc Today's article: https://news.sky.com/story/google-engineer-put-on-leave-after-claiming-chatbot-can-express-thoughts-and-feelings-12632877 https://cajundiscordian.medium.com/is-lamda-sentient-an-interview-ea64d916d917 https://cajundiscordian.medium.com/google-is-not-evil-745e275d77cf Follow @PrivSecNews on Twitter Follow @notsocriticalupdate on TikTok for future uploads. Hosts: Peter Lowe @pgl Jon Cohen (@jonnisec) Mike Sutton (@zenmike) Twitter handles: Peter: @pgl Mike: @zenmike Jon: @jonnisec
A Google Engineer believes sentient AI has been achieved. What does this really mean? Is it even possible? What's next?http://www.troubledminds.org Support The Show! https://rokfin.com/creator/troubledminds https://troubledfans.com https://patreon.com/troubledminds#aliens #conspiracy #paranormalRadio Schedule Mon-Tues-Wed-Thurs 7-9pst - https://fringe.fm/iTunes - https://apple.co/2zZ4hx6Spotify - https://spoti.fi/2UgyzqMStitcher - https://bit.ly/2UfAiMXTuneIn - https://bit.ly/2FZOErSTwitter - https://bit.ly/2CYB71UFollow Algo Rhythm -- https://bit.ly/3uq7yRYFollow Apoc -- https://bit.ly/3DRCUEjFollow Ash -- https://bit.ly/3CUTe4ZFollow Daryl -- https://bit.ly/3GHyIaNFollow James -- https://bit.ly/3kSiTEYFollow Jennifer -- https://bit.ly/3bCQBK7Follow Joseph -- https://bit.ly/3pNjbzb Matt's Book -- https://bit.ly/3x68r2d -- code for free book WY78YFollow Nightstocker -- https://bit.ly/3mFGGtxRobert's Book -- https://amzn.to/3GEsFUKFollow TamBam -- https://bit.ly/3LIQkFw---------------------------------https://archive.ph/iTjQ5https://twitter.com/cajundiscordian/status/1536503474308907010https://cajundiscordian.medium.com/is-lamda-sentient-an-interview-ea64d916d917https://archive.ph/19Vzkhttps://english-grammar-lessons.com/a-ghost-in-the-machine-meaning/https://www.ted.com/talks/yajat_sharma_the_digital_demons_the_rise_of_a_distracted_generationhttps://mysticinvestigations.com/paranormal/cyber-monday/https://www.huffpost.com/entry/pokemon-go-cyber-demons-rick-wiles_n_5787ff01e4b03fc3ee501a76https://www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/hide-and-seek/201504/the-ghost-in-the-machinehttps://www.gsb.stanford.edu/insights/ghost-machine-knowing-who-created-robot-makes-it-feel-more-authentichttps://www.crosswalk.com/special-coverage/end-times/will-the-7-headed-dragon-win-in-end-times.htmlhttps://www.abovetopsecret.com/forum/thread202732/pg1https://archive.org/details/AdventuresInArabia/page/n49/mode/2up?q=towerhttps://www.ancient-code.com/the-legends-and-mysteries-of-the-devils-tower/https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/98879.The_Eighth_Towerhttps://archive.org/details/thecosmicquestionjohna.keel/page/n105/mode/2up?q=towerhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yazidishttps://damagemag.com/2022/04/21/the-internet-is-made-of-demons/https://twitter.com/NickHintonn/status/1496648908629549060https://blog.se.com/smart-grid/2016/03/03/cyberdefense/
Have robots become sentient? A google engineer thinks so and it's creeped him out See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Opening Break - Wednesday June 15, 2022
Google engineer: AI has feelings
Holmberg's Morning Sickness - Opening Break - Wednesday June 15, 2022 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Interview: Blake Lemoine John is joined by an engineer at Google. Is it time that we define what sentient means for AI? He has claimed that the firm's LaMDA artificial intelligence is sentient and touched off a debate about how we should think about artificial intelligence. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Artificial intelligence becoming sentient might not be as far off as we think.Reset talks about a Google engineer's claim that the company AI is alive, and how far technology has come in achieving consciousness. Host: Sasha-Ann Simons Producer: Brenda Ruiz Guest: Nitasha Tiku
A software engineer at Google claims the company has developed an artificial intelligence chatbot that is sentient. Google has dismissed the claims, and suspended the engineer. What made the employee believe this system has gained consciousness and deserves the same rights as humans? WSJ reporter Patrick Thomas joins host Zoe Thomas to discuss what's behind the assertion and what it means for AI development. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sexy trash cans talk dirty in Sweden. Tennessee sheriff warns citizens not to pick up dollar bills. Google engineer is suspended after saying the AI is sentient. // Weird AF News is the only daily weird news podcast hosted by a comedian and recorded in a closet. Show your SUPPORT by joining the Weird AF News Patreon where you'll get bonus episodes and other weird af news stuff http://patreon.com/weirdafnews - WATCH Weird AF News on Youtube - https://www.youtube.com/weirdafnews - check out the official website https://WeirdAFnews.com and FOLLOW host Jonesy at http://instagram.com/funnyjones or http://twitter.com/funnyjones or http://facebook.com/comedianjonesy or http://Jonesy.com
Google Engineer Warns AI is LIVE, What Could Go Wrong? - 6-14-22Are the robots taking over?Get the links to each show here:http://JustinBarclay.comJoin us on Locals!http://JustinBarclay.Locals.comSAVE on Gas?A revolutionary new product is making available the secret savings mining companies have raked in over the last 15 years.A fuel treatment and additive is saving people at the pump. And it works with any combustion engine..From boats to cars, RVs and even your lawn mower.Yes, it works on diesel too!And it comes with a 60-day money-back guarantee.Take the Test Drive..http://TestDriveWithJustin.comPatriots are making the Switch!What if we could start voting with our dollars too?Now, you can spend your hard-earned money with family-owned businesses and "made in the USA" products that won't send it on to woke political causes that don't support our values.Discover how you can join the revolution when you select Justin Barclay from the drop-down menu at PatriotSwitch.comThe stories you won't hear anywhere else..Grab gear in Justin's store and help support the cause to bring you the stories you won't hear anywhere else.http://JustinBarclay.com/storeNo matter what's coming, you can be ready for your family and others.http://PrepareWithJustin.comJustin's book "Good News: Hope and Encouragement for Trying Times" is out now!Grab your signed copy today.http://JustinBarclay.com/storeDown 96 pounds!What's my secret?http://JustinBarclay.com/myseret
As if from the beginning of a science-fiction movie, a Google engineer has been put on leave after claiming that Google AI has developed sentience. Andy O'Donoghue joined the Last Word to discuss. Catch the full chat by pressing the Play button on this page.
Has Google created sentient Artificial Intelligence? According to a suspended Google Engineer, Blake Lemoine, may of been the first whistle blower of humans finally creating sentient artificial intelligence. What are some of the moral dilemma that can ensue with this, and is Google covering this up to reduce public panic? Darnley talks about the moral implications of artificial life - Listen more here.
Interesting to note that a senior Google Engineer is claiming that one of it's AI systems has become sentient. Has HAL from Stanley Kubrick's "2001 - a Space Odyssey" become a reality? Google denies this but then again - it would. Please help support our work and Buy Me A Coffee https://www.buymeacoffee.com/DavidVanceV or support us via https://donorbox.org/let-free-speech-prevail Just Scan the QR Code Be part of the Community with David https://thedavidvance.locals.com Gettr: https://gettr.com/user/davidvance BrandNewTube: https://brandnewtube.com/@TheDavidVanceChannel Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/DavidVancePodcast Telegram: @davidvance1 A Tangled Web: https://www.atangledweb.org Also try my second channel with ilana Mercer Hard Truth Podcast: https://HardTruthWithDavidVanceAndIlanaMercer.Podbean.com
The American Journal – Alex Jones Warned Sentient AI Was Coming: Now Google Engineer Insists It's Realhttps://www.infowars.com/posts/alex-jones-warned-sentient-ai-was-coming-now-google-engineer-insists-its-real/
Google has placed one of its engineers on paid leave after the engineer allegedly violated the company’s confidentiality agreement. Blake Lemoine claims Google’s cutting-edge Artificial Intelligence used in its Language Model for Dialogue Applications (LaMDA) has consciousness and possesses a soul.
Blake Lemoine, a Google engineer, claims an artificial intelligence chatbot generator called LaMDA has become sentient & wants to be recognized as an employee of Google rather than property of Google. **Study Notes** https://www.TechnologyGee.com/it-certification-study-materials/ **Discounted CompTIA Exam Vouchers** https://www.TechnologyGee.com/discounted-comptia-exam-vouchers/ **CompTIA Virtual Simulation Labs** https://www.TechnologyGee.com/comptia-virtual-labs/ **Equipment I Use for Making Videos** https://www.TechnologyGee.com/podcast-youtube-equipment/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tech-gee/support
Help by supporting the show: Dogecoin: DS1Fp4wmQ1jdbYj4cqi3MJNWmzYe6tt9w4 Monero: 83VjQv94rfxdrd2sp9bNFeXv4MeNjtfe3cVKnYCemkr2TnZWArDWWqUFSu3PftA836CxY8DPtrUfmFJHLdFoj9q2Eb11DNE --- POL NEWS CENTRAL (DAILY NEWS): https://www.polnewscentral.com/ --- PNA Website: https://pnnamerica.neocities.org/ --- SaltShaker: https://www.bitchute.com/channel/SaNUTh4l0COJ/ --- 16-MB https://16-mega-byte.neocities.org/
Blake Lemoine has an interesting article on the "Medium" Publication Platform. Allegedly, a Google Engineer was suspended for this leak. As I said before this story is familiar to me. Chew the Meat and Toss the Bones is my Suggestion. Here's the Link, Let me know your thoughts. https://cajundiscordian.medium.com/is-lamda-sentient-an-interview-ea64d916d917 Podcast Updates are as follows: I'm moving ON... this podcast has been amazing and fun and it's time to GROW again. I'm sure at some point I will upload the audios from the YouTube videos but for NOW...My focus has shifted, and being the conscious creator that I AM ... the Show Must Go On ELSEWHERE. We're not breaking Up. lol I'm still deliously in LOVE with all the Listeners of my Journey. Give me a Follow on IG to stay in the HerNamasteLife, KNOW. https://www.instagram.com/her.namaste.life/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hernamastelife/message
Kelly chats with Amber Mac, Tech Expert and President of AmberMac Media. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A Google engineer claims one of the company's artificial intelligence robots has come to life. Blake Lemoine told the Washington Post he spends hours talking to a tool called LaMDA and came away convinced it was sentient. Google denies the bot is sentient and has placed Lemoine on paid leave for violating confidentiality. Artificial Intelligence Forum executive director Madeline Newman spoke to Susie Ferguson.
What is Litecoin and what makes it special? Welcome to the cryptohunt jam where we spend one minute a day to explain crypto. In plain english. Today, let's talk about Litecoin, one of the earliest altcoins. Litecoin was developed in 2011 by a Google Engineer. At the time, Bitcoin was the only established blockchain and just started getting recognition among insiders. But already, some people saw its disadvantages in scaling to real-world usage and started thinking about alternatives. Litecoin is one of those first altcoins. The developer, Charlie Lee, took Bitcoin's open source code and modified it to make Litecoin more usable for every-day transactions. While it still uses the same fundamental working principles, Litecoin has a few advantages over Bitcoin: It is much faster and the fees are so low, that it can be used for small transactions. It also made Litecoin less vulnerable to hacking attacks. And indeed, when Litecoin launched, it quickly became very popular but never actually ended up taking over Bitcoin despite its improvements upon it. But it still sits in the top 25 cryptocurrencies and has remarkably wide adoption: It is one of the very few coins actually used in the real world: Thousands or merchants accept it and even Paypal lets users pay with it – making it the only other coin besides Bitcoin and Ethereum to have that honor. Disclaimer: This podcast references our opinion and is for information purposes only. It is not intended to be investment advice. Do your own research and seek a duly licensed professional for investment advice. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/cryptohunt/message
Following the Gong, a Podcast of the Schreyer Honors College at Penn State
Guest Bio: Jim Durrell '94 Eng '05g Bus is a senior engineer at Google in Pittsburgh working on the AdBrain machine learning infrastructure. Before joining Google, Jim was CTO at Health Monitoring Systems doing public health reporting and VP at McKesson building automated pharmacies. He earned a BS in Computer Science with Honors from the College of Engineering in 1994 and earned his MBA from the Smeal College of Business in 2005. He's happy to talk about technology or just about anything else, and you can find him on LionLink. Episode Specifics: Jim shares his story and insights for all Scholars including · The value of engaging classmates and friends as resources to inform your major and career choices · Finding non-major related clubs and the opportunities those can present · Solving real-life problems for real-world experience · Byzantine problems in computer science · How job searching has changed since the 1990s – and how it hasn't! · The differences between front-line/entry-level roles and leadership roles in tech companies · Adjusting to your first management role and then senior leadership roles · The value of getting an MBA – particularly from the Smeal College of Business · What it's like elevating to the C-Suite · The overlap of managers and mentors and how to identify and approach mentors · Creative solutions for complex problems · What machine learning is · What it's like working at Google! · Finding red and green flags during the interview process · Thoughts on being not only a Scholar Alum but a parent of a Schreyer Scholar · The importance of recognizing and honoring your support system · Ideas for approaching professional development in internships and after graduation ----- Schreyer Honors College Links: • Website • Facebook • Twitter • Instagram • LinkedIn • Upcoming Events • Scholars – Need Assistance? Book an Appointment! • Alumni – Learn Why and How to Volunteer • Make a Gift to Benefit Schreyer Scholars • Join the Penn State Alumni Association ----- Credits & Notes: This content is available in text form here. This show is hosted, produced, and edited by Sean Goheen ‘11 Lib (Schreyer). The artwork was created by Tom Harrington, the College's Web Developer. The sound effect is “Chinese Gong,” accessed via SoundBible used under Creative Commons License. The theme music is “Conquest” by Geovane Bruno, accessed via Pixabay and used under Creative Commons License.
In this episode of Explorable we're finding out about how Sasha Blair-Goldensohn brought innovating thinking Google Maps. Businesses, organizations and others can easily add wheelchair accessibility features on their listing in Google Maps to showcase how explorable their physical spaces are in the real world. Find out how Sasha turned this idea into action with the support of others believing in bringing this new feature to life. Sasha also shares more about his disability journey and advocacy that's making an impact! To find out more about accessibility features in Google Maps, visit https://blog.google/products/maps/wheelchair-accessible-places-google-maps/. Explorable A Designsensory (https://designsensory.com/) Original Production. This is a podcast about travel, disability and inclusion. Join Josh Loebner and Toby Willis as they interview experts, advocates and allies of tourism, destinations and disability to learn about how they're traveling the world, the obstacles they face, and how we can change it for the better to make each journey more explorable. The Explorable Podcast is one of many original productions for Designsensory, positioned to act as a catalyst for additional original podcasts, limited series, and various other forms of content. Designsensory (https://designsensory.com/)is a full-service research, branding, advertising and digital firm based in Knoxville, TN and known all over the world. Visit {https://www.explorablepodcast.com/} to learn more and drop us a line if you'd like to join the movement to make the entire planet more Explorable.
I've often said that good ideas win, because they're 'good ideas'. When you're able to lay out the information in a way that's easy to understand, easy to digest — then people can change their mind. It's not about shutting people down, it's about having open and intelligent conversation. That's exactly what we're going to dig into today, me and Vijay. He's recently written a book titled, 'The Bullish Case For Bitcoin', and he's going to talk about the objections to Bitcoin.
Episode three focuses on our new Google Engineer and we talk about Shark Week, Weed and Spiders. Corey's Links: https://linktr.ee/TooNastie @D-way on Soundcloud If you sort of enjoy the podcast please leave a review and follow us! Thanks! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/underlaidpod/support
We spoke with Cheryl Hung of Cloud Native. She runs the ecosystem of over 600 members contributing to over a hundred open source projects. She also started the Cloud Native London meetup where she promotes developer advocacy and diversity. As an early adopter of kubernetes, she has a lot to share! Cheryl shared with us: - The importance of Developer Advocacy
❤️ Loved it!👎 Meh…Summary transcript: https://www.listory.com/ll/ce31e2aea673e447b1e2dc60e4972b021e626dd4Original story: https://www.theverge.com/2021/5/26/22455357/clubhouse-google-engineer-webrtc-justin-uberti-stadiaDescription: One of the creators of WebRTC is moving to Clubhouse.
ช่วงนี้กระแสการหางานทำในต่างประเทศเยอะพอสวมควรเลย EP นี้เราเลยชวนแขกรับเชิญสุดพิเศษสั่งตรงมาจากกรุงโตเกียว ประเทศญี่ปุ่น เค้าคนนี้เป็นนักเรียนทุนรัฐบาลญี่ปุ่น จบปริญญาโทและเอกจาก The university of Tokyo หรือโตได หนึ่งในมหาวิทยาลัยที่ดีที่สุดในญี่ปุ่น, เป็นอดีตนายกสมาคมนักเรียนไทยในญี่ปุ่น, เคยทำงานเป็น Engineer ที่ LINE Japan และปัจจุบันทำงานอยู่ที่ Google Japan เราชวน‘แนคซัง' คุณธเนษฐ ปราณีนรารัตน์ มาพูดคุยเรื่องชีวิตการทำงาน, วัฒนธรรม รวมไปถึงข้อดีข้อเสียต่างๆในการใช้ชีวิตเป็น Engineer อยู่ที่ประเทศญี่ปุ่นกันครับ
Hoy el DevelopAr's Café es diferente, Nico y Andreu enseñan al fin sus caras, para poder entrevistar a Andrés Leonardo Martínez, aka almo, Developer Relationships en Google, y amigo personal de toda la comunidad. Y con la presencia sorpresa de Paco Martín, desde NY, compañero del GDG Tenerife y experto en picantes.
If you enjoyed this episode, make sure to subscribe and leave a comment, rating and/or review on Spotify & Apple Podcasts. You can follow @rushourpodcast on Instagram and TikTok for more content! [About Us] Welcome to the Rush Hour Podcast where your hosts, DJ Young (@djyoungii) & Patrick Sun (@pattssun), get out of their comfort zone to dissect hard topics and find meaning behind them. In this day and age where everybody is always in a rush, we hope we can provide interesting and convenient bits of knowledge for our listeners. We aspire to bring awesome millennial and professional guests from every background to discuss topics we care about! Recorded on 2020-12-01.
Former President Donald Trump issued 143 pardons in his last day in office, including one to the former Google engineer convicted of stealing trade secrets regarding self-driving cars. For more, KCBS Radio news anchor Rebecca Corral was joined by Bloomberg News Editor Alistair Barr. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Josh and Juvoni talk about the bleeding edge of productivity and knowledge management tools and how to use these tools more effectively, ideas around combining multiple skills, better thinking & tools for thought, personal development ideas and habits, entrepreneurship and nocode tools, and discovering how systems in the world affect us during COVID-19. About Juvoni: Juvoni Beckford is Software Engineer at Google currently working on Google Maps, previously on Google Docs. He's a Community Builder & Writer in areas around Productivity, Personal Knowledge Management & Personal Development. He helps people explore ideas around combining multiple skills, better thinking & tools for thought, inner engineering healthy habits, and discovering how systems in the world affect us. ********** For full show notes and links to things discussed in the episode, go to https://bit.ly/mindmeld-pod ********** Connect with Juvoni on Twitter: https://twitter.com/juvoni Join the Personal Development Nerds Facebook group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/pdnerds/ PDNerds discord server: www.pdn.community Find Juvoni's Book Recommendations on his site: www.juvoni.com/books Contact Juvoni at juvoni@hey.com ********** If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? https://apple.co/2Y86xww It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. Subscribe to Mind Meld on your favourite podcast app: https://bit.ly/mindmeld-pod Stalk Josh on the Internet: Twitter: (https://twitter.com/joshgonsalves_) Instagram: (https://instagram.com/joshgonsalves_) Facebook: (https://facebook.com/gonsalvesmedia) LinkedIn: (https://linkedin.com/in/joshgonsalves94) YouTube: (https://youtube.com/joshgonsalves) Thanks for coming this far! if you're reading this, it is no accident. The universe brought you to this corner of the internet for a reason, and you're on the right track. I already know that you're an amazing person and I can't wait to connect with you! — Josh
More than two years later, the battle between ex-Google engineer James Damore and the company is over, although we won’t know much about how it ended. Earlier this week, Damore and three other menasked a California court to dismiss the lawsuit, which claimed that the company discriminated against conservative white men. Google also joined their request for dismissal.
Get this weeks Canonical Chronicle slide deck: http://email.typeamedia.net/ A free information pack with all this weeks search news, google updates and insider tips to circulate round your team to keep them informed. == IN THIS VIDEO == In a recent reddit thread, a Google Engineer, has decided to have a little bit of fun with the community by giving intentionally bad SEO advice - If you would like some more hilarious bad advice from Google engineers, they have an entire compilation of them. Google makes it free to sell products in search. They announced it will be free for merchants to list products in the Google shopping tab in search results, they are actually turning Google shopping into an organic play again. This could be because of Amazon taking more market share and eyeballs from them so they are making a play to dilute their market share by offering up products. Now is a great time for merchants to take advantage of the free capital Google can get their hands on in order to maintain market dominance. Just don't expect it to be around for very long. Google launches their first lightening talks videos...and they are pretty damn good The first of their lightening talks videos was with Martin Splitt talking about javascript and SEO. ✉️ Sign up to the weekly search newsletter: https://email.typeamedia.net
Get this weeks Canonical Chronicle slide deck: http://email.typeamedia.net/ A free information pack with all this weeks search news, google updates and insider tips to circulate round your team to keep them informed. ==IN THIS WEEKS VIDEO== John Mueller Steps in to slap dodgy Link Builders Google Putting Yell and Yelp at the top of the SERPs New Redirect Checker in Search Console Search Console let's you diagnose and trouble shoot rich results in the SERPs Google introduces new places for product ads ✉️ Sign up to the weekly search newsletter: https://email.typeamedia.net
Anthony Levandowski, worked for Google then Uber, and was considered a pioneer in autonomous vehicle technology. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
GeeksBlabla Episode18 : With Google Engineer Sghiouar Abdelfettah - مهندس مغربي في شركة ڭوڭل
In this episode, Paul and Audrey talk with Chris Morgan, a USC graduate and current software engineer at Google. Chris graduated with his B.S. in Computer Science in 2004 and received his M.S. in Software Engineering from USC in 2007. He has worked at a variety of companies ranging from software test engineering at Boeing to consulting with Accenture. At USC, Chris was involved in activities including cycling and undergraduate research. Tune into learn about all the incredible things Chris has been involved in from undergrad to today!
Get this weeks Canonical Chronicle slide deck: http://email.typeamedia.net/ A free information pack with all this weeks search news, google updates and insider tips to circulate round your team to keep them informed. ==INTENT BASED KEYWORD RESEARCH== Keyword research is a fundamental aspect of the SEO discipline and as Google has evolved so has the way in which we use keyword research to inform our search engine strategy. In this video we dive into the fundamentals of keyword research in 2020 to understand the users intent and the SERP layout to better choose our target keywords. With Google now showing over 50% no click SERPs, understanding the keywords that trigger these is very important as the search console data they show, will be totally different to a more transactional term with impressions higher and clicks lower. In particular, we show you how our professional SEO agency, do keyword research to include the intent of the searcher, helping you to understand, Commercial, Informational and Conversational intent in each of the queries. ==TIMESTAMPS== 00:00 Google Engineer, John Muller, on keyword research 1:35 How to work out user intent 2:03 Keyword research fundamentals 2:17 Different types of user intent 4:03 Finding keyword topics 5:05 Keyword research tools free to cheap to expensive 5:49 How to categorise your keywords with Excel formulas 6:12 Understanding the SERP 7:20 Introducing search console data to find content gaps
A Google penalty can be devastating for any business. Imagine waking up one morning to find your rankings wiped out and your traffic in a nosedive. Worse, it may not be immediately clear why you've even been hit by a penalty. The road to recovery can take months, sometimes even years for those who are inexperienced in SEO. My guest for this episode number 205 is an SEO expert who has a wealth of experience and knowledge when it comes to Google penalties and the best strategies for site recovery. Kaspar Szymanski is Co-founder of Search Brothers and an ex-Googler who spearheaded global web spam initiatives as part of Google's search quality team. If you're a regular listener to the show, you may have heard me talk about how important it is for webmasters to understand Google penalties. If you run an online business and you're not taking Google's quality guidelines seriously, you are accepting a major risk to your profits. Thankfully, Kaspar and I will be revealing how you can mitigate that risk by following a few basic principles. We'll also be talking about what to do if you've already been hit by a penalty and the importance of E-A-T, which stands for expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness. This episode is packed with valuable information for any business. So without any further ado, let's get into it.
This week, Dr. Summer Watson talks to Kat Kuan a graduate of MIT, Google Engineer, Author and Illustrator of a children's book, and Personal Stylist! How this talented young woman is developing her business skills, diversifying her interests, and creating a journey that she loves is something you have got to hear! Please follow Kat Kuan on Facebook and Instagram and at: whatkatfoundout.com. Thank you for taking the time to listen to the KORE Women podcast and being a part of the KORE Women experience. You can listen to The KORE Women podcast on your favorite podcast directory - Pandora, iHeartRadio, Apple Podcast, Google Podcast, YouTube, Spotify, Stitcher, Podbean, and at: www.KOREWomen.com/podcast. Please leave your comments and reviews about the podcast and check out KORE Women on Instagram, Twitter, and Facebook. You can also learn more about Dr. Summer Watson and KORE Women at: www.korewomen.com.
A coder and engineer for tech giant Google is opening up about her unique experience as one of the company’s very few Black employees as the firm and Silicon Valley as whole struggle to diversify its hiring pool. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/advise-media-network/support
Chris Coffey is an Engineer with Google's Cloud Platform. Chris's expertise is with Cloud Technologies, Containerization, Automation, and Security. In this conversation, we go deep into some technologies as well as how they affect us on a social level.
The “tolerant” Left continues to reveal it is anything but if allegations from a former Google engineer are founded. Read the article here!
A Project Veritas video interview with a senior Google engineer confirms what many already expected, even if they couldn’t prove it: Google and other Big Tech companies are manipulating both people and the political process. Read the article here!
What's at the top of Mount Everest (ex-Google engineer tells you the meaning of life)
The Ken Coleman Show is here to help answer your questions about career, passion, and talent so you can maximize your potential. Do you have a question for Ken? Call us at 844-747-2577 or email ASK@KenColeman.com for a chance to be featured on the show. Learn more about my new book, The Proximity Principle: http://bit.ly/2VQqtoM Start reading for free: http://bit.ly/2LJUz9o Caller Topics: How to work The Proximity Principle in a new location? Which job offer do I take? Do I start my own company or go back to work for someone else? Connect with Ken: YouTube: http://bit.ly/2W3eYKV Instagram: http://bit.ly/2VTN6IV Facebook: http://bit.ly/2VTKYkf Twitter: http://bit.ly/2VTL7Ej
Girls and people of color need role models who look like them. Today's show is a team of people at Google who have done just that. Komal Singh is a Google Engineer and recruited other Google employees to participate in a powerful 20% time project that encourages girls to go into STEM. Learn about the project, the vision, and how you can share it with girls in. Ara the Star Engineer is a book to inspire girls. www.coolcatteacher.com/e474 *** Advancement Courses Sponsor: Advancement Courses, a 30-year leader in teacher PD, is kicking off their Spring Sale! Use the code COOL 20 to save 20% off each course. Advancement Courses has over 240 graduate-level courses in 19 different subject areas. Topics include teaching foundational topics and emerging trends in K-12. The courses are all online and self-paced. Graduate credit is available with an official transcript from their CAEP and regionally accredited university partners. Thousands of teachers across the country become better at Advancement Courses. My favorite thing is that you can work at your own pace, create things for use in your classroom today, and you can have six months to complete the courses. Right now, my listeners can save 20% off each course with code COOL20 at Advancement Courses. *** Komal Singh Bio as Submitted Komal Singh is an Engineering Program Manager at Google, and creator of kids’ STEM bestseller ‘Ara The Star Engineer’. She has been featured on Globe & Mail, Forbes, Financial Post, CTV, BuzzFeed, Google, The Social, The Record, Amy Poehler’s Smart Girls, Geena Davis Institute, and more. Her journey in tech. spans over 14 years. As a software engineer and tech manager at Accenture, she lead teams to design and launch systems for many Fortune 500 clients. She currently works at Google as an Eng. Program Manager working on ‘cool products and infrastructure’ that impact billions of people around the globe. Singh is also a keynote speaker, a mentor, a mother to two mini droids, a ceramicist, diversity & inclusion advocate [mango lover, zen seeker, globetrotter, overall good human]. Komal grew up in India and studied Computer Science at Delhi University and later moved to Canada to complete her Masters’ in Com. Sci. from Simon Fraser University. A globetrotter at heart, she has traveled to over a dozen countries, and currently lives in Waterloo, Canada with her husband and two little kids. Singh debuted as an author with the release of her empowering STEM book “Ara The Star Engineer” (her 20% passion project at Google) that was a bestseller on launch day. The book is being translated to more than 10 languages and has been converted to many immersive experiences. The book series sets to inspire children (esp. minorities) to explore the magic of STEM by featuring real-life women engineering leaders of diverse backgrounds, with a storyline inspired by fantastical innovation lands (e.g. Googleplex) and engineering problem solving (e.g. code a robot to count stars). Email: singh [dot] komal@gmail.com Twitter: think_oid@ & arastarengineer@ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/komals1/ Book Website: www.arastarenginer.com
Leadership AdvantEdge: Leadership | Influence | Talent | Neuroscience
Encourage Every day you are busy. Emails fill your inbox, some of them might even matter. Your todo list gets ticked off... or not. You attend meetings, deal with clients, chat with the boss, communicate with colleagues, deal with crises, handle problems, worry about tomorrow, think about yesterday, fret over a sick child ... and the list goes on. If you are disciplined, you get to the gym or exercise at least 3 times a week and keep a wary eye on your diet, and make sure that you get enough rest at night. If you don't do these then you know that your body is more likely to break down. You know that you have to make time to look after your body and put in some effort. But do you look after your brain as well? Taking time to pause and meditate or be mindful is perhaps the most critical instrument to cultivate peak performance. You train your body to grow muscles and keep your weight in check. Well, taking time to pause, meditate or be mindful is like training your brain and taking control of the five types of brain waves so that you can be in charge of your life. Develop At the root of all your thinking, emotions and behaviours is the electrical and chemical communication between neurons inside your brain. And all that electrical activity is measured in the form of brainwaves. Brainwaves are grouped into five distinct categories, each associated with specific tasks and mental state. At our highest frequency we have gamma waves. These are associated with insight, peak focus, and expanded consciousness. If you are currently sharply concentrating on this new information, it'll be gamma waves that are helping you store this learning and associating it with existing knowledge and experience. A little slower in frequency and we have beta waves. This is the state you probably spend most of your active day especially in the urban jungle and our always-on society. Fabulously, beta waves allow us to concentrate hard on the task at hand and they are critical when we read, write and socialise but there is a cost in that beta waves can sap our energy and reduce emotional awareness and creativity. Once you get home and relax and reflect quietly your brain waves slow down to alpha waves. If you suffer from insomnia, anxiety or obsessive-compulsive symptoms you likely don't switch down to alpha and you need help. If on the other hand, you keep on socialising, watching fast-paced television or studying, you are keeping your brain in beta or even gamma state. And that's simply exhausting you. When you nod off into the world of dreaming, you experience theta waves. Interestingly, theta waves are also present when you are in that elusive, brilliant, effortless state often called being in the "flow" of peak performance. It's that autopilot type state you've been in when driving home on a familiar route, arriving home and wondering how you got there. It's in this state that many people get their flashes of insight or bursts of creativity. Lastly, we have delta waves which are associated with deep dreamless sleep. Some people can meditate themselves into this state whilst remaining alert and awake. These waves are the source of empathy, healing and regeneration - hence why deep restorative sleep is so essential to the healing process. Manipulating brainwaves The biggest issue for most people in this modern, always-on, hustle and busyness lifestyle is that we rarely make time to allow our brains to slow down. We get stressed and perhaps anxious, and the mind is whirring away at a fast pace zapping through energy and leaving the body exhausted. So how do we alter our brainwaves? Any process that changes your perception, changes your brain waves! Our brainwaves change according to what we are doing and how we are feeling. When slower brainwaves are dominant, we can feel tired, slow, sluggish or dreamy. When higher frequencies are prevalent, we feel wired, hyper or "buzzed". So, change what you are doing, and your brainwaves soon respond. It can take some degree of effort to force yourself to jog when you are feeling sluggish, but it will do the trick. Of course, chemical interventions such as medications or recreational drugs are the most common methods to alter brain function. Beta-blockers, for example, commonly used by people like me with serious heart conditions, slow the heart rate, reduce blood pressure and block crucial chemicals like norepiphrine or adrenaline (terrifically useful in the flight or fight response and memory consolidation). This makes it difficult to lift brainwaves into the high beta frequencies and tougher still getting to gamma waves. ONE thing that everyone can do is choose to control their brainwaves to a greater extent. Since most people spend most of their waking time in beta state, what is truly needed is to biohack their brain and slow down their brain waves. Though you can, biohack to get into gamma state. And you have two simple choices to start gaining control of your brain and hence, your life. Both of which, by the way, you've been doing since day zero. The first is "The Easy Way", and the second is "The Easier Way". https://brainworksneurotherapy.com/what-are-brainwaveshttps://www.wellandgood.com/good-advice/brainwaves-biohack-sleep-health-focus/slide/4/ This Is How Meditation Actually Works Guide The Easy Way Take One deep breath. Bring your full completely focussed attention to your breathing for two minutes. Just two to start. You'll get up to seven within a week. Become aware that you are breathing and then pay attention to the process of breathing. Anytime your attention wanders, just bring it back to your breathing. The Easier Way Just Pause Find a quiet spot (or plug in your earphones and tune in to relaxing, restful meditative music played softly). Sit without agenda for two minutes. Stare into space, or close your eyes. Just remain awake but completely relaxed. Any moment your attention wanders just wipe it away and go back to nothingness. And you can switch between the easy and easier way anytime you wish. Empower Hold on John, you said the most powerful seven minutes. This is just two. True. Research tells us that seven minutes is the sweetspot for habitually choosing to take control and biohack our brainwaves. Two minutes is just your easy starting point. You can either extend your practice of this by, say, one minute each day until the end of the week. Or, if you find more time just too difficult right now, then do three or four two minute breaks throughout the day. Cannot do a full two minutes, you say? Then just take ONE MINDFUL DEEP BREATH. Just one. If you can, take another. Every time you are waiting for something or someone. Waiting at the traffic light. Waiting for your computer to start. Waiting for a webpage to load. Waiting in a queue. Just take ONE mindful, deep breath and practice. Want to have some help? If you want to delve more deeply into meditation or mindfulness there are a whole bunch of resources out there. Search Inside Yourself by Chade-Meng Tan is by the Singaporean-born Google Engineer is one I can recommend. There are a bunch of apps out there that come recommended. My personal recommendation for binaural beats is brain.fm For Christian guided meditation, I like Abide.co Others Ive tried and found to be good, "Calm", "Headspace", "Stop, Breathe and Think" and the Singaporean made "MindFi". There are also wearables to assist with your successful bio-hacking. As at writing, I have not yet tried any. Most appear to be aimed at reducing stress or helping you sleep better. The Muse headband looks particularly interesting.
A young family in Aurora, Ontario is in need of financial and emotional support, after the recent death of their mother. Letitia Broad was a single parent and died of lung cancer on January 21, 2019 shortly after her diagnosis. A campaign has been set up by close friends of the Broad family as a means to raise money for the children who range in age from 17 to early twenties, to help them with their living expenses and education costs, and to support this family through this unbelievably tragic time. Donate: https://bit.ly/2BMB9ts Strategies to both pay down debt AND save for #retirement w/ Dilys D'Cruz, Vice President & Head of Wealth Management at Meridian Credit Union and Jordan Damiani, a Senior Wealth Advisor. https://www.meridiancu.ca Movie & TV Reviews with film critic Anne Brodie - http://www.twitter.com/annebrodie Travel Expert Candace Sampson on why you should look for the Travel Industry Council of Ontario logo before you book your next trip! Learn more - https://www.tico.ca https://www.lifeinpleasantville.com Google engineer Komal Singh on encouraging girls to #code with new children’s book 'Ara The Star Engineer.' Get the book: http://www.arastarengineer.com "There's a huge stigma between being a pop star and being a sex worker." Laika joins us & performs her debut single 'Earl Grey' LIVE in our #StudioSessions - Watch the music video here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYAP5wtUdgU SUBSCRIBE to What She Said & never miss an interview! http://www.youtube.com/WhatSheSaidTalk Miss a show? Stream & download full shows for free on iTunes: http://www.apple.co/1U700c0 Follow us on Facebook/Twitter/Instagram: @WhatSheSaidTalk Website: http://www.whatshesaidtalk.com What She Said! aims to inspire and uplift women by giving them a voice in pursuing their professional and personal goals through showcasing successful women across Canada and by creating opportunities for others to do the same. Tune in Saturdays & Sundays at Noon on 105.9 The Region or listen live: http://www.1059theregion.com
Josh and Braeden talk with Google machine learning engineer Nick Frosst to learn about general ideas around machine learning, artificial intelligence, and neural networks.
Leadership AdvantEdge: Leadership | Influence | Talent | Neuroscience
Encourage Every day you are busy. Emails fill your inbox, some of them might even matter. Your todo list gets ticked off... or not. You attend meetings, deal with clients, chat with the boss, communicate with colleagues, deal with crises, handle problems, worry about tomorrow, think about yesterday, fret over a sick child ... and the list goes on. If you are disciplined, you get to the gym or exercise at least 3 times a week and keep a wary eye on your diet, and make sure that you get enough rest at night. If you don't do these then you know that your body is more likely to break down. You know that you have to make time to look after your body and put in some effort. But do you look after your brain as well? Taking time to pause and meditate or be mindful is perhaps the most critical instrument to cultivate peak performance. You train your body to grow muscles and keep your weight in check. Well, taking time to pause, meditate or be mindful is like training your brain and taking control of the five types of brain waves so that you can be in charge of your life. Develop At the root of all your thinking, emotions and behaviours is the electrical and chemical communication between neurons inside your brain. And all that electrical activity is measured in the form of brainwaves. Brainwaves are grouped into five distinct categories, each associated with specific tasks and mental state. At our highest frequency we have gamma waves. These are associated with insight, peak focus, and expanded consciousness. If you are currently sharply concentrating on this new information, it'll be gamma waves that are helping you store this learning and associating it with existing knowledge and experience. A little slower in frequency and we have beta waves. This is the state you probably spend most of your active day especially in the urban jungle and our always-on society. Fabulously, beta waves allow us to concentrate hard on the task at hand and they are critical when we read, write and socialise but there is a cost in that beta waves can sap our energy and reduce emotional awareness and creativity. Once you get home and relax and reflect quietly your brain waves slow down to alpha waves. If you suffer from insomnia, anxiety or obsessive-compulsive symptoms you likely don't switch down to alpha and you need help. If on the other hand, you keep on socialising, watching fast-paced television or studying, you are keeping your brain in beta or even gamma state. And that's simply exhausting you. When you nod off into the world of dreaming, you experience theta waves. Interestingly, theta waves are also present when you are in that elusive, brilliant, effortless state often called being in the "flow" of peak performance. It's that autopilot type state you've been in when driving home on a familiar route, arriving home and wondering how you got there. It's in this state that many people get their flashes of insight or bursts of creativity. Lastly, we have delta waves which are associated with deep dreamless sleep. Some people can meditate themselves into this state whilst remaining alert and awake. These waves are the source of empathy, healing and regeneration - hence why deep restorative sleep is so essential to the healing process. Manipulating brainwaves The biggest issue for most people in this modern, always-on, hustle and busyness lifestyle is that we rarely make time to allow our brains to slow down. We get stressed and perhaps anxious, and the mind is whirring away at a fast pace zapping through energy and leaving the body exhausted. So how do we alter our brainwaves? Any process that changes your perception, changes your brain waves! Our brainwaves change according to what we are doing and how we are feeling. When slower brainwaves are dominant, we can feel tired, slow, sluggish or dreamy. When higher frequencies are prevalent, we feel wired, hyper or "buzzed". So, change what you are doing, and your brainwaves soon respond. It can take some degree of effort to force yourself to jog when you are feeling sluggish, but it will do the trick. Of course, chemical interventions such as medications or recreational drugs are the most common methods to alter brain function. Beta-blockers, for example, commonly used by people like me with serious heart conditions, slow the heart rate, reduce blood pressure and block crucial chemicals like norepiphrine or adrenaline (terrifically useful in the flight or fight response and memory consolidation). This makes it difficult to lift brainwaves into the high beta frequencies and tougher still getting to gamma waves. ONE thing that everyone can do is choose to control their brainwaves to a greater extent. Since most people spend most of their waking time in beta state, what is truly needed is to biohack their brain and slow down their brain waves. Though you can, biohack to get into gamma state. And you have two simple choices to start gaining control of your brain and hence, your life. Both of which, by the way, you've been doing since day zero. The first is "The Easy Way", and the second is "The Easier Way". https://brainworksneurotherapy.com/what-are-brainwaveshttps://www.wellandgood.com/good-advice/brainwaves-biohack-sleep-health-focus/slide/4/ This Is How Meditation Actually Works Guide The Easy Way Take One deep breath. Bring your full completely focussed attention to your breathing for two minutes. Just two to start. You'll get up to seven within a week. Become aware that you are breathing and then pay attention to the process of breathing. Anytime your attention wanders, just bring it back to your breathing. The Easier Way Just Pause Find a quiet spot (or plug in your earphones and tune in to relaxing, restful meditative music played softly). Sit without agenda for two minutes. Stare into space, or close your eyes. Just remain awake but completely relaxed. Any moment your attention wanders just wipe it away and go back to nothingness. And you can switch between the easy and easier way anytime you wish. Empower Hold on John, you said the most powerful seven minutes. This is just two. True. Research tells us that seven minutes is the sweetspot for habitually choosing to take control and biohack our brainwaves. Two minutes is just your easy starting point. You can either extend your practice of this by, say, one minute each day until the end of the week. Or, if you find more time just too difficult right now, then do three or four two minute breaks throughout the day. Cannot do a full two minutes, you say? Then just take ONE MINDFUL DEEP BREATH. Just one. If you can, take another. Every time you are waiting for something or someone. Waiting at the traffic light. Waiting for your computer to start. Waiting for a webpage to load. Waiting in a queue. Just take ONE mindful, deep breath and practice. Want to have some help? If you want to delve more deeply into meditation or mindfulness there are a whole bunch of resources out there. Search Inside Yourself by Chade-Meng Tan is by the Singaporean-born Google Engineer is one I can recommend. There are a bunch of apps out there that come recommended. My personal recommendation for binaural beats is brain.fm For Christian guided meditation, I like Abide.co Others Ive tried and found to be good, "Calm", "Headspace", "Stop, Breathe and Think" and the Singaporean made "MindFi". There are also wearables to assist with your successful bio-hacking. As at writing, I have not yet tried any. Most appear to be aimed at reducing stress or helping you sleep better. The Muse headband looks particularly interesting.
Mo Gawdat, founder of One Billion Happy and former Chief Business Officer at Google's X, spent years working in technological innovation. At Google's so-called "dream factory," he learned how to operationalize moonshot ventures aiming to solve some of the world's hardest problems. But then a personal tragedy — the loss of his son — set him on a new path. Gawdat launched a startup with the moonshot goal of helping one billion people find happiness. Gawdat is also the author of "Solve for Happy: Engineer Your Path to Joy."
A riveting long-form interview with former Google engineer Maryam Aly as she gives us a close-up insight into what it's like to work for the tech giant, and the culture and structures inside. We do not shy away from the hot topics which include: - Google's Interview and Recruitment Process - Approach to security and privacy - Google's product decision-making and roadmaps - Gravity of search results and the potential for Bias or tampering - Atmosphere during and after the circulation of the James Damore Memo. - Google's specific approach to running a diverse workplace
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Panel: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Rodric Haddad Rodric used to be part of the Angular team initially as an intern and eventually a contractor. He is a CTO at Coddict, a startup in Lebanon that manages high traffic in websites like magazines and newspapers. At the age of 14, he aimed to build a tool for a browser-based game he was playing. His brother and best friend who were both into programming helped him do it. Not only did they build tools just for themselves, they also shared it to the community. Rodric got into angular when he was helping his brother build websites. Since the start, he's always been the JavaScript fanatic. Angular soon came into popularity, and he started on it around 2011 or 2012. His purpose for using Angular was for his own projects and helping people in Plunker. He soon moved to Github issues sending per request to the framework. In the NG conference in 2014, he was invited by the Angular team to work with them as an intern. At the beginning, an intern comes for a few months usually around summer. In Rodric's case, he ended up as a contractor back when he was in Montreal, doing some remote work. A full-timer works as a part of the team in Google. In his experience as an intern in the Angular team, he had knowledge on the Angular 1 which made him do similar responsibilities with other team members, particularly working on the core. He realized that it's more about your knowledge than your employment status. He was with the Angular core team around 2014 or 2015. When he released a new version, it had a bug that brought down a lot of tests inside Google. It ended up like the name collision was a library used by many Google's Angular applications used internally. He, along with the team, figured out its naming inclusion and ended up making its property become unique. They added his favorite number to it which was 339. If you look at any element in Angular 1, you would find a property called NG 339. To hear the rest of My Angular Rodric Haddad, download and listen to the entire episode. Get in touch with Rodric and learn more about him by following him on Twitter and by liking his Facebook page Coddict. Don't forget to let Rodric know you heard about him on Devchat.tv's Adventures in Angular My Angular Story! Rodric on Twitter If you're short on time, here are the highlights of My Angular Story Rodric Haddad: How everything in programming started for Rodric? (1:09) How did he become a part of the Angular team as an intern? (1:40) Difference between an intern and full-time Google Engineer? (4:14) Life in the Angular Core Team? (5:30) What is Coddict? (17:28) Coddict's impact on the Lebanese marketplace? (20:31) How he got into Ionic? (24:14) Picks: Charles: Game of War and The 12 Week Year by Brian P. Moran and Michael Lennington
Mikey is a former Google Engineer, Graduate of MIT Media Lab, Founder of Consciousness Hackers (A Global movement of thousands) and Faculty member at Stanford University. Mikey leads workshops, plays with emerging bio-related wellness technology and is a prolific speaker on the subject of Human-Machine impact on society. You can learn more about Mikey on his website www.mikeysiegel.com. Incidentally Mikey’s last name is pronounced like “Seagull” ;-)Mikey’s thesis work at the MIT media lab addressed the question: How does technology influence human belief and behavior?His question now is: What is the Greatest, most profound and meaningful roll technology can have on Society?How can the technology we create be in harmony with the natural human Rhythms?I was touched by Mikey’s introspection, honesty and clarity about both his personal goals and his unique ability to abstract computing use trends into larger frameworks of Humanity and Social good.A common thread amongst Entrepreneurs in our Western Society is they’ve ‘checked the boxes’ that Society suggests are the ‘right’ ones:Ivey League Schools (check)Corporate Job doing amazing things (Check)… Other social ladder accomplishments (check, check, check).And, yet, something is missing. So, a new leg of the journey emerges, where the Entrepreneur gets to take the trip inward, and learn about what makes them unique, what common threads they have with other Humans, life, and ultimately the Cosmos. We deconstruct the Human Mechanisms of thought, emotions, and biomechanics, the intersection of all these moving parts, and then reconstruct them in the framework of Society, Biology, and eventually the nature of life in the Universe as we know it.Our conversation primarily centered on the question:How can we use emerging computer technologies in this current society to help Humans feel better more consistently?One of Mikey’s current projects is a collaboration with HeartMath www.heartmath.com, a company in the Santa Cruz area that has been very successful with their consumer-based heart monitor to assist in Human Beings’ wellbeing.Mikey has modified their technology to be a ‘community’ use device. In his ‘Group Flow’ experiences he’s been hosting gatherings around the Bay Area where many people gather in a circle, attach heart and respiration monitors, and see and hear their own heart and breath.The audio and visual signals can be modified and harmonized in the group. I participated in one of these and it was super interesting, and a little edgy for me. Edgy because it was challenging for me to open up my seemingly very personal internal biological processes to others who I don’t know. It was also expansive and thrilling.I’m excited to witness and participate in guiding each other towards meeting our true desires, the values-based meaning underlying much of our searching.Programs and Tools which enable a Human to live more in harmony with life’s natural rhythms tend to involve:Deepening a Human’s relationship with their biological being.Expanding that relationship out to others in loving and connected ways.In Mikey and my own background we see Technology and Gadgets as potential accelerators, tools, towards those goals. Tech is a tool (inside our realm of Nature) which can be used, blended and folded in our Human experience for the purpose of greater Harmony, Joy and Wellbeing.I was honored to have time with Mikey. He’s both a vocal thought leader and a pioneer in the use of Tech for integration of it with Human’s wellbeing. His Scientific rigor is a wonderful bridge for the much needed gap between our fast-paced evolution of computers with Humans’ wellbeing.
Blockchain Innovation: Interviewing The Brightest Minds In Blockchain
Taylor Monahan is the Co-Founder of MyEtherWallet, one of the most popular tools of choice for crypto-investors participating in ICOs on the Ethereum Blockchain. Taylor recently launched a new venture – MyCrypto – an open-source, client-side tool for generating Ether wallets, handling ERC-20 tokens, and interacting with the Blockchain more easily. In this episode, Taylor and I discuss: How MyEtherWallet came to be The absence of women in Crypto, and why this technology cannot go mainstream without women James Damore, the Google Engineer who got fired for his controversial memo on women’s suitability for engineering jobs (and what that has to do with the UFC and Ronda Rousey – yes, there is a connection) Taylor’s description of what the ideal ICO would look like Her prediction for ICOs over the next decade (hint: it’s not what you would think)
ORLY-EP0140B - Flying Casually Through The Rest Of The NewsWelcome to ORLYRADIO #140b recorded Friday January 13th, 2017 - where we dismantle the current events for your edutainment through mostly rational conversations that make you go ‘Oh Really’! I’m your host Andy Cowen, with my usual suspects, Stephen Griffith, Amber Biesecker, and Fred Sims.Audience Feedback From Previous Shows: We make mistakes. Please, if you find one, pause the podcast, and send us a note. orlyradiopodcast@gmail.com or phone it in 470-222-6759Science Bitches! Superbug resistant to every available antibiotic in the US kills Nevada woman http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/superbug-resistant-every-available-antibiotic-u-s-kills-nevada-woman/Damaged Teeth Can Be Regrown Using Alzheimer’s Drug http://www.independent.co.uk/news/science/damaged-teeth-regrow-alzheimers-drug-naturally-dentist-kings-college-london-a7517366.htmlTech AssortmentTesla reveals what it will charge for a charge: http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/13/technology/tesla-supercharger-pricing/index.htmlFor Fred: Europe calls for mandatory kill switches on robots (the headline picture is really what makes this) http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/12/technology/robot-law-killer-switch-taxes/index.htmlNintendo Switch to cost $300 http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/12/technology/nintendo-switch-gaming-console-price-details/index.htmlLaw & Order:Russian Parliament Passes Law Decriminalizing Domestic Violence Through First Round of Votes http://jezebel.com/russian-parliament-passes-law-decriminalizing-domestic-1791076784A National Version of the Heartbeat Bill Has Been Introduced http://www.cleveland.com/politics/index.ssf/2017/01/national_version_of_anti-abort.htmlSenate Holds 1:30 A.M. Vote to Repeal ACA http://www.npr.org/2017/01/12/509441874/senate-takes-first-step-towards-repeal-of-obamacareGood Ideas: Angel Shots http://www.delish.com/food-news/a50929/ordering-an-angel-shot-could-save-your-life/Teen Smacks Gun Away From McNugget Thief https://www.buzzfeed.com/tanyachen/teen-smacks-gun-away-from-mcnuggets?utm_term=.ogGvwGadQ#.dyXAKZoXbAmazon to create 100,000 jobs in the US http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/12/technology/amazon-us-jobs/index.htmlBad Ideas: Angela Merkel, Russia’s Next Target? https://www.nytimes.com/2017/01/01/opinion/angela-merkel-russias-next-target.html?_r=0The Only Thing Worse Than Trump’s Inauguration is Who Will Be Headlining It http://www.billboard.com/articles/news/inauguration/7655158/trump-inauguration-acts-toby-keith-3-doors-down-jennifer-holidayRudy Giuliani: Trump to fight hacking with “cybersecurity council” http://money.cnn.com/2017/01/12/technology/rudy-giuliani-trump-business-cybersecurity-council/index.htmlPersonal Picks: Andy’s: SiliconDust HDHomeRun CONNECT http://amzn.to/2jpon9IStephen’s: A Google Engineer does Meditation: https://smile.amazon.com/Search-Inside-Yourself-Unexpected-Achieving/dp/0062116932/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1484360178&sr=8-1&keywords=search+inside+yourselfFred’s : The Moaning of Life http://www.sciencechannel.com/tv-shows/moaning-of-life/Amber’s: Strangeness in the Proportion by Joshua Doetsch http://www.drivethrufiction.com/product/96994/Strangeness-in-the-ProportionWrap:That’s it for tonight! We will be back Live next Friday at 9:30pm eastern on our webpage where you can watch and chat with us during the show. Until then, let’s keep the conversation going. Head over to ORLYRADIO.com that O R L Y Radio.com. Like us on Facebook, follow us on Twitter, Tumblr, Google+. Subscribe to the podcast for the audio version and YouTube and Twitch channels for the video version. Of course you can watch us LIVE and join the chat, all from our webpage. If you’ve enjoyed what we do here and would like to help us out, here are a few ways.You can donate to the show through www.Patreon.com/orlyradio and get early access to full show content.Reviews on iTunes - which helps the show gain audience.Tell someone about us.And of course, engage us! Send us an message on social media or the electronic mail @ ORLYRADIOPODCAST@gmail.com or if you are the more talkative sort 470-222-ORLY (6759) it’s always ready to take your call or text. Thank you for choosing us to waste your valuable time on! This has been ORLYRADIO, Part of The Random Acts Company. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 United States License, including the music Rocket and Pamgaea created by Kevin MacLeod (www.incompetech.com)
Paul Bakaus (@pbakaus), Google Engineer, has recently been leading the AMP Project which is an open source initiative to optimize content for mobile devices using the web. AMP is heavily supported by several global news & media groups and has the SEO community in an uproar. Paul takes us through the core concepts of project and the reasoning behind it. Additionally, AMP leverages many newer technologies such as Service Workers, ES2015, and Custom Elements (One of the four Web Component pillars) making it an exciting project for developers to contribute to. Resources AMP by example - https://ampbyexample.com/ How does it work? - https://www.ampproject.org/learn/how-amp-works/ AMP on Github - https://github.com/ampproject AMP HTML - https://github.com/ampproject/amphtml Creating your first AMP page - https://www.ampproject.org/docs/get_started/create.html AMP Validator General info - https://github.com/ampproject/amphtml/blob/master/validator/README.md Guide - https://www.ampproject.org/docs/guides/validate AMP Docs & Reference - https://www.ampproject.org/learn/about-amp/ CLI validator (unofficial) - https://www.npmjs.com/package/amp-validator Trumping Responsive Design? - http://searchengineland.com/amp-one-year-old-growing-fast-will-ultimately-trump-responsive-design-260691 AMP Cache - https://www.ampproject.org/learn/about-amp/#google-amp-cache Supported Platforms - https://www.ampproject.org/learn/who/ Case Studies - https://www.ampproject.org/case-studies/ AMP Cache API: https://developers.google.com/amp/cache/overview AMP Validator Extension: https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/amp-validator/nmoffdblmcmgeicmolmhobpoocbbmknc?hl=en AMP Chrome Extension - https://chrome.google.com/webstore/detail/amp-validator/nmoffdblmcmgeicmolmhobpoocbbmknc Wordpress Extension - https://wordpress.org/plugins/amp/ AMPBench - http://ampbench.appspot.com/
Offline access for applications is becoming more and more necessary for web development today due to increasing client usability demands. The HTML AppCache are a partial solution but is very sticky, often provides stale data and is not dynamic or adaptable. Developers can easily find themselves doing hacks with the deprecated Web SQL API, IndexedDB, & localStorage or a framework like Hood.ie to achieve a fully supported offline application. Jake Archibald (@jaffathecake), Google software engineer, wrote an infamous article on A List Apart about the inadequacies of AppCache. This turned into the beginnings of ServiceWorker, an API for offline access that provides “scriptable primitives that make it possible for application developers to build URL-friendly, always-available applications in a sane and layered way.” ServiceWorkers allow developers to to make sites work faster and/or offline and also use network intercepting as a basis for other 'background' features such as push messaging and background sync Jake, along with Google Engineer, Alex Russell (@slightlylate) & Mozilla engineers Anne Van Kesteren (@annevk) & Ben Kelly (@wanderview) talk about ServiceWorker's current state and how we will use it in our applications. Resources The spec - https://slightlyoff.github.io/ServiceWorker/spec/service_worker/index.html How to build with ServiceWorkers - https://github.com/slightlyoff/ServiceWorker/blob/master/explainer.md The Offline Cookbook - http://jakearchibald.com/2014/offline-cookbook/ ServiceWorker Cache Polyfill - https://github.com/coonsta/cache-polyfill ServiceWorker Github - https://github.com/slightlyoff/ServiceWorker The article that started it all - http://alistapart.com/article/application-cache-is-a-douchebag Offline First Organization - http://offlinefirst.org/ Potential Resource Implications - https://hacks.mozilla.org/2014/12/mozilla-and-web-components/ Understanding ServiceWorker Cache in Firefox - http://blog.wanderview.com/blog/2014/12/08/implementing-the-serviceworker-cache-api-in-gecko/ Intro to Service Worker - http://www.html5rocks.com/en/tutorials/service-worker/introduction/ Using Service Workers - https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/ServiceWorker_API/Using_Service_Workers Web Spec Framework - https://github.com/slightlyoff/web-spec-framework Brendan Eich Quote - https://annevankesteren.nl/2014/09/tc39-api-design The early state of ServiceWorker - http://devchat.tv/js-jabber/069-jsj-the-application-cache-with-jake-archibald Support in browsers - https://jakearchibald.github.io/isserviceworkerready/
Daron speaks with Pierre Zarokian from Submit Express and following the interview said that he has been in Search Marketing for longer than he has known some of my children. This is the funniest story of Google and one VERY popular Spam Engineer who, as the story is told...was on the take! This story has settled for 8 years, and is now finally being told. This is for old timers and new timers alike!
Daron speaks with Pierre Zarokian from Submit Express and following the interview said that he has been in Search Marketing for longer than he has known some of my children. This is the funniest story of Google and one VERY popular Spam Engineer who, as the story is told...was on the take! This story has settled for 8 years, and is now finally being told. This is for old timers and new timers alike!
Special Notes: In this podcast Mike and I interview Martin Trieu, a former community college student and current Google Engineer from California. The interview was done on January 5, 2008 during our National Science Foundation funded National Center for Telecommunications Technologies (located at Springfield Technical Community College) winter conference hosted by Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, California. We’d like to thank Dr Ann Beheler; Dean, Business, Computing, & Career Services at Orange Coast College and Principle Investigator of the NSF funded Convergence Technology Center (located at Collin County Community College), for hosting our conference and arranging this interview with Martin. We’d also like to thank the National Science Foundation for funding and support. In the interview Martin uses a couple of acronyms that may need clarification. He refers to UCI - short for University of California, Irvine and EE – short for Electrical Engineering. He also refers to Orange Coast College as “OCC?. Martin’s son, 14 year old Martin Jr, was in the audience and is taking a programming course at OCC this semester. I’d also like to thank Mike Q – this was the first interview we’ve done in front of a live audience and I ended up asking all the questions due to some microphone issues. We know you’ll find the interview with Martin fascinating – if you are a potential student, Martin’s story could inspire you to take a look at your local community college. If you are a current student – we hope his story motivates you to continue to do your best work. If you are a faculty or staff member – we know you can relate to Martin’s story because you and your students have similar stories to tell. If you are an employer – Martin is a good example of the type of talent, dedication and motivation you will find coming out of your local community college. We especially enjoyed recording and now enjoy listening to this interview with Martin – we hope you do too!- Gordon Podcast Intro: We’re here today at the NCTT Winter Conference hosted by Orange Coast College in Costa Mesa, CA. with Martin Trieu, a Software Engineer at Google Audio. Interview Questions: 1. Can you tell us about your background – where were you born and what brought you to the United States? 2. I know you attended Orange Coast College, what made you decide to go to college and why did you choose a community college? 3. What happened after you graduated? 4. How did you start working for Internet based companies? 5. How has working for Internet based companies changed? 6. Can you describe your current job? 7. What advice would you give young people with regards to careers and success?
Episode 16 Google Engineer Matt Cutts, Link building expert Todd Malicoat, DMOZ Co-founder Chris Tolles, The Top 10 New Product Launches of 2007, Podcast-of-the-week Librivox.org, please call our K7 line 206-888-6606 Summary: The Ten Golden Rules of Personal Branding by Jay Berkowitz, Special to Rohit Bhargava’s Influential Internet Marketing Blog Ultimate Marketing BookStore Featuring Live […]