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In the first part of this two-part conversation taken from a webinar, Carolyn Woodard and Steve Longenecker, Director of IT Consulting at Community IT Innovators, walk through the security settings, risks, and first steps nonprofits need to know to get the most out of Google Workspace's free nonprofit tier.Google provides a genuinely secure platform, but security is a partnership. Steve explains that the risks nonprofits face in Google Workspace rarely come from Google's infrastructure and almost always come from the configuration decisions made on the customer side. Whether your organization has been on Google for years or just signed up, there are settings in the admin console right now that deserve your attention.Steve and Carolyn cover:Why Google Workspace is a strong platform for nonprofits and what the free nonprofit tier includes, including where it stops and paid tiers or third-party tools pick up.2SV (two-step verification) is Google's term for MFA Multi-Factor-Authentication, and enforcing it for every user account is the single most important step you can take.How phishing, email spoofing, and business email compromise play out specifically in nonprofit environments, and what DNS settings like DMARC and DKIM do to reduce your exposure and protect your organization.Why shared and generic accounts create MFA blind spots, and how Google Groups can be a cleaner alternative for shared inboxes like info@ or donations@.The risks of unmanaged personal Google accounts, inactive user accounts, and overly permissive admin privileges, and how to find and address them in the admin console.Why migrating from My Drive file sharing to Google Shared Drives is a security and governance upgrade, and why it's worth planning carefully before you start.Resources MentionedGoogle Admin Console – Google – https://admin.google.comGoogle for Nonprofits Security Checklist: https://support.google.com/nonprofits/answer/9251886Google Workspace Security Checklist for Small Organizations: https://knowledge.workspace.google.com/admin/security/security-checklist-for-small-businesses-1-100-usersNonprofit IT Management Reddit Community – Reddit – https://www.reddit.com/r/nonprofitITmanagementMigrating Within Google to Use Shared Drives – Community IT Innovators – https://communityit.com/migrating-within-google-to-use-shared-drives/Email Protection and Deliverability (DMARC/DKIM) – Community IT Innovators – https://communityit.com/podcast-email-protection-and-deliverability-with-johan-hammerstrom/Cybersecurity Readiness for Nonprofits Playbook – Community IT Innovators – https://communityit.com/cybersecurity-readiness-for-nonprofits-playbook/ _______________________________Start a conversation :)Register to attend a webinar in real time, and find all past transcripts at https://communityit.com/webinars/email Carolyn at cwoodard@communityit.comon LinkedIn on reddit/r/nonprofitITmanagementon the Community IT websiteThanks for listening.
When 33-year-old Sandra Bird, a devoted mother and the wife of popular Faith Lutheran Church pastor Tom Bird, was found dead in the Cottonwood River near Emporia, Kansas, the town mourned what appears to be a tragic car accident. But Kansas Highway Patrol Trooper John Rule felt like something was off. From a complete lack of skid marks to mysterious bloodstains found where they shouldn't have been, the physical evidence just didn't add up.Months later, the community was rocked again when Martin Anderson, the husband of the church's secretary, Lorna Anderson, was gunned down on a dark highway in an apparent robbery gone wrong.What followed was one of the most tangled criminal cases in Kansas history: competing trials, a jailhouse reversal, a made-for-TV movie, and a legal fight that stretched across nearly a decade.Today's snack: Biscoff Bala BaianaListen to part 2 on PatreonSources:Breneman, Allie. "Bird Bridge: What lies beneath." The ESU Bulletin, 30 Oct. 2025, https://esubulletin.com/19335/news/bird-bridge-what-lies-beneath/.Hrenchir, Tim. "Board grants parole to Lorna Anderson Moore." The Capital-Journal, 2 Feb. 2007. Google Groups, http://cjonline.com/stories/020207/bre_moore.shtml.Kraft, Scott. "Murderous Affair Shocks Kansas Town." Los Angeles Times, 17 Mar. 1986. Newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/image/401821025/.Kraft, Scott. "Who Killed Sandy Bird?" Los Angeles Times, 2 May 2004.Norton, Bill. "A love worth killing for. Part I. The Preacher & The Spider Lady." The Kansas City Star, 1 Dec. 1985, p. 14. Newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/image/679701233/.Norton, Bill. "Cleric convicted of killing spouse raps TV verdict." The Evansville Courier, 4 May 1987, p. 1. Newspapers.com, https://www.newspapers.com/image/768496369/.Sengupta, Sounak. "Martin Anderson Murder: What Happened to Lorna Elridge and Tom Bird?" 4 Nov. 2022.State v. Bird. 238 Kan. 160, 708 P.2d 946. Supreme Court of Kansas. 25 Oct. 1985.State v. Bird. 240 Kan. 288, 729 P.2d 1136. Supreme Court of Kansas. 5 Dec. 1986."A Murderous Minister & His Mistress in Emporia, Kansas | City Confidential | A&E." YouTube, uploaded by A&E, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rtEZYqZ69Vs
AI wearables have been an emerging industry for the blind and visually impaired. While there are a number of options, not all are designed using the input of the blind. With direct feedback from blind users, EchoVision Glasses have been shaped by well-respected leaders in America's blindness organizations such as NFB and ACB, icons such as Stevie Wonder, and a wide variety of potential users spanning our community. Kevin Chao returns to the virtual studio after connecting with Simon Bonenfant at the 2025 National Convention of the National Federation of the Blind to discuss how Agiga was founded, spotlight some of EchoVision's unique elements and demo several exciting features on the horizon. From the Agiga Website: “Empowering Independence, One View at a Time. EchoVision isn't just another smart glasses—it's a gateway to independence, knowledge, and boundless possibilities. Designed with the blind, for the blind, EchoVision empowers individuals to access visual information effortlessly and live life hands-free.” To learn more and pre-order your glasses, visit the Agiga website. To contact Agiga directly, call them at (408) 940-5215 or email them at contact@agiga.ai Like them on Facebook, subscribe to their YouTube channel. To connect with the Agiga community join their Google Group, and Facebook Group. We hope you have enjoyed this interview. If you would like to learn more and contact us, you can follow us on Twitter @Blind Abilities On the web at www.blindabilities.com Get the Free Blind Abilities App on the App Store and Google Play Store Give us a call and leave us some feedback at 612-367-6093. We would love to hear from you! Check out the Blind Abilities Community on Facebook, the Blind Abilities Page and Career Resources for the Blind and Visually Impaired group. To contact Simon directly, send him an email at sbonenfant2@gmail.com
Send us a textWe are here today with Dr. Gregg Gonsalves to discuss ways forward to defend public health. Dr. Gonsalves is an epidemiologist focused on substance use and infectious diseases. He is also an expert in policy modeling on infectious disease and substance use, as well as the intersection of public policy and health equity. In the past he worked in non-governmental organizations (NGOs) for 25+ years, in HIV/AIDS, global health and human rights, in the US and Southern Africa. He started a grassroots coalition - Defending Public Health - on LinkedIn in November 2024 in response to the nomination of RFK Jr. to lead HHS.We discuss the tragic battle of the billionaires, the strength of people power, what we can learn from the global HIV/AIDS pandemic, the way doctors and scientists can reach the communities they care for and translate our work in ways that communities can digest, and advocate for policy changes that can strengthen the health of the public in the current political climate and beyond. The persistence of a few people is enough!!The article he mentioned below:How Public Health Took Part of its Own Downfall. Ed Yonghttps://www.theatlantic.com/health/archive/2021/10/how-public-health-took-part-its-own-downfall/620457/Dr. Aimee's favorite podcast besides ours LOL:Unbiased ScienceAnd learn more about the movement to defend public health by reaching out to the below!EMAIL: defendingpublichealth@gmail.comWEBSITE: coming soon!GOOGLE GROUP: need to 'ask to join' - go to Google Groups, search for defendpublichealth (lowercase, no spaces) and request to joinThanks as always to Jeff Jeudy for providing our music! And don't forget to check out our youtube channel https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zY4BNZEI5dk.Send us your questions and comments to drtonianddraimee@gmail.com
✏️ Suscribirse https://youtu.be/F1he8naPJSQ Bienvenidos a un nuevo episodio de "Negocios y WordPress", el podcast donde exploramos el mundo de los negocios digitales con un enfoque especial en WordPress. En este episodio 221, Yannick y Elías nos llevan a un viaje a través de las últimas tendencias en automatización, inteligencia artificial, diseño web y mucho más. Si estás buscando optimizar tu negocio digital, este es el lugar perfecto para ti. Google Groups: Una Herramienta Clásica para la Comunicación en Equipo En este episodio, hemos hablado sobre Google Groups, una herramienta que, aunque lleva muchos años en el mercado (desde 2001), sigue siendo útil para ciertos contextos de trabajo. Google Groups permite crear listas de correo y foros de discusión, lo que facilita la comunicación en equipo, especialmente cuando se trata de coordinar a varias personas a través del correo electrónico. ¿Qué es Google Groups? Google Groups es un servicio de Google que permite crear y participar en foros de discusión y listas de correo electrónico. Es una herramienta versátil que puede ser utilizada tanto para discusiones públicas como privadas, y es especialmente útil para equipos que necesitan coordinarse y compartir información de manera eficiente. ¿Cómo Funciona? Creación de Grupos: Puedes crear un grupo en Google Groups y añadir a los miembros del equipo. Cada grupo tiene su propia dirección de correo electrónico, lo que facilita el envío de mensajes a todos los miembros del grupo con un solo correo. Foros de Discusión: Los grupos pueden funcionar como foros de discusión donde los miembros pueden iniciar nuevos temas o responder a temas existentes. Esto es útil para mantener las conversaciones organizadas y accesibles para todos los miembros. Listas de Correo: Además de los foros, Google Groups también permite crear listas de correo. Esto significa que cualquier correo enviado a la dirección del grupo será reenviado automáticamente a todos los miembros del grupo. Ventajas de Usar Google Groups Centralización de la Comunicación: Al tener un único punto de contacto (la dirección de correo del grupo), se facilita la comunicación y se evita la dispersión de información. Accesibilidad: Los miembros pueden acceder a las discusiones y correos desde cualquier lugar y en cualquier momento, siempre que tengan acceso a Internet. Organización: Las conversaciones se mantienen organizadas en hilos, lo que facilita el seguimiento de temas específicos. Casos de Uso En el episodio, Elías mencionó cómo utilizó Google Groups para coordinarse con varias personas en un proyecto de una carrera en su pueblo. En lugar de gestionar múltiples correos y mensajes de WhatsApp, centralizó toda la comunicación en un grupo de Google, lo que facilitó la coordinación y evitó la pérdida de información. Conclusión Google Groups puede no ser la herramienta más moderna o con la interfaz más atractiva, pero su funcionalidad y simplicidad la hacen una opción viable para equipos que necesitan una solución eficiente para la comunicación y coordinación. Si estás buscando una manera de mantener a tu equipo en la misma página sin complicaciones, Google Groups podría ser la solución que necesitas. Herramientas de Automatización: Make vs. n8n La automatización y la inteligencia artificial (IA) están revolucionando la forma en que gestionamos nuestros negocios digitales. Desde la programación y el diseño hasta el marketing y el branding, estas tecnologías están integrándose cada vez más en nuestras vidas profesionales. En este episodio, Yannick y Elías nos presentan herramientas clave como Make y n8n, y nos muestran cómo pueden transformar la productividad y eficiencia de nuestros proyectos. Make: La Solución Integral para Automatizaciones Make, anteriormente conocido como Integromat, es una herramienta poderosa para conectar aplicaciones y automatizar flujos de trabajo. Con una interfaz intuitiva y una amplia gama de integraciones, Make permite a los usuarios crear automatizaciones complejas sin necesidad de conocimientos avanzados de programación. Ventajas de Make: Interfaz Intuitiva: Fácil de usar, ideal para usuarios que buscan una solución rápida y eficiente. Amplia Gama de Integraciones: Compatible con una gran cantidad de aplicaciones, lo que facilita la conexión de diferentes servicios. Flexibilidad en Flujos de Trabajo: Permite crear flujos de trabajo complejos con bifurcaciones y condiciones. n8n: La Alternativa Open Source n8n es una herramienta de automatización open source que ofrece una flexibilidad y control sin precedentes. A diferencia de Make, n8n puede ser alojado en tu propio servidor, lo que proporciona un mayor control sobre tus datos y procesos. Ventajas de n8n: Open Source: Totalmente personalizable y adaptable a tus necesidades específicas. Alojamiento Propio: Mayor control y seguridad al poder alojar la herramienta en tu propio servidor. Integración con IA: Capacidad para crear agentes de IA y flujos de trabajo avanzados. Copias de Seguridad en WordPress: ¿Qué Opción Elegir? La seguridad de tu sitio web es crucial, y tener copias de seguridad regulares es una parte esencial de cualquier estrategia de mantenimiento. En este episodio, discutimos varias opciones para realizar copias de seguridad en WordPress, desde plugins hasta servicios de mantenimiento. Plugins de Copias de Seguridad UpdraftPlus: Uno de los plugins más populares, permite realizar copias de seguridad automáticas y almacenarlas en servicios en la nube como Dropbox o Google Drive. BackupBuddy: Ofrece una solución completa para copias de seguridad, restauración y migración de sitios web. Servicios de Mantenimiento ManageWP: Un servicio que no solo realiza copias de seguridad, sino que también ofrece actualizaciones automáticas, monitoreo de seguridad y mucho más. ModularDS: Una opción recomendada por Yannick y Elías, que ahora incluye copias de seguridad incrementales, lo que ahorra espacio y mejora la eficiencia. Novedades en Elementor: Hacia un Diseño Más Profesional Elementor sigue evolucionando y en este episodio, Yannick nos presenta algunas de las últimas novedades que están por llegar. Desde la gestión de clases y estilos hasta la integración con herramientas de IA, Elementor está dando pasos significativos hacia un diseño web más profesional y eficiente. Hello Peace: Un Nuevo Tema Base Hello Peace es un nuevo tema base gratuito de Elementor que facilita el despliegue rápido de sitios web con prediseños y personalización sencilla. Site Planner con IA Una herramienta innovadora que utiliza IA para generar un briefing, un sitemap y wireframes, facilitando el proceso de diseño web desde cero. Conclusión: La Clave Está en la Automatización y la Innovación La automatización y la inteligencia artificial están aquí para quedarse, y herramientas como Make y n8n están liderando el camino. Ya sea que estés buscando optimizar tus flujos de trabajo, mejorar la seguridad de tu sitio web o llevar tu diseño web al siguiente nivel, estas tecnologías ofrecen soluciones poderosas y flexibles. ¡Únete a la Conversación! ¿Qué herramientas de automatización utilizas en tu negocio digital? ¿Has probado Make o n8n? Déjanos tus comentarios y comparte tu experiencia. No olvides suscribirte a nuestro canal de YouTube y unirte a nuestro grupo de Telegram para estar al día con las últimas novedades en negocios digitales y WordPress. Enlaces Internos y Externos: La Máquina del Branding Elías Gómez Negocios y WordPress en YouTube Grupo de Telegram de Negocios y WordPress ModularDS Preguntas frecuentes ¿Qué es el tema "Hello Peace" de Elementor? "Hello Peace" es un nuevo tema base gratuito de Elementor diseñado para facilitar el despliegue rápido de sitios web con plantillas prediseñadas y opciones de personalización. ¿Qué es el "Site Planner" de Elementor? El "Site Planner" de Elementor es una herramienta que utiliza inteligencia artificial para ayudar a planificar y diseñar sitios web. Genera un briefing, un sitemap y wireframes basados en las respuestas del usuario. ¿Qué es Make y N8N? Make y N8N son herramientas de automatización que permiten conectar diferentes aplicaciones y servicios para crear flujos de trabajo automatizados. Make es conocido por su amplia colección de integraciones y facilidad de uso, mientras que N8N es una opción open-source que permite una mayor personalización y control. ¿Cuál es la diferencia entre Make y N8N? Make es una plataforma de automatización basada en la nube con una interfaz fácil de usar y una amplia colección de integraciones. N8N, por otro lado, es una herramienta open-source que puede ser auto-hospedada, ofreciendo mayor control y personalización, especialmente útil para proyectos que requieren inteligencia artificial y flujos de trabajo complejos. ¿Cómo puedo aprender más sobre automatización y herramientas no-code? Puedes aprender más sobre automatización y herramientas no-code siguiendo el podcast "Negocios y WordPress", uniéndote a su canal de Telegram y explorando los recursos y tutoriales disponibles en los sitios web de Yannick y Elías Gómez.
If your organization uses Google Workspace you have access to Google Groups. Kind of like a listserv but so much better.What are Google Groups?If your nonprofit uses Google Workspace, you can use Google Groups to manage tasks via an email group, with granular controls and monitoring if you need it. Google Groups can improve security for email addresses like “donate@mynonprofit” or “info@mynonprofit” if that email directs to a group and is not its own account that's credentials could be hacked. Director of IT Consulting Steve Longenecker explains the ins and outs of using Google Groups and some issues to consider including Google's Fedramp certification if you are trying to use Google Groups with federal workers. Since few MSPs can help nonprofits using Google Workspace, please contact us if you have more questions we can help with. We know that so many nonprofit startups start using Google Workspace because it is easy. Some Key Takeaways:Google Groups works like a listserv, allowing multiple people to view and respond to group emails right from their inbox. No new tools needed like slack or discord. Keeping it simple can help your team or volunteers engage easily.Google Groups allows granular permissions and allows a manager to assign certain email threads to specific team members, so you can make sure all donation inquiries get a quick response, for example. Managers can get valuable insight into email thread status and team members can easily collaborate without checking and back-checking to see who is taking which inquiry.Google Groups can be useful in keeping volunteer groups organized and engaged. You can assign any email to Google Groups, making a partly external volunteer team more functional and making it easier for busy volunteers to participate, right from their inbox.Google Groups has many security features that make it preferable to listservs. And Listerv tools are becoming harder to find and manage. Everyone uses email – if you already use Google Workspace you have a listserv tool already available to you, for free, that has many features and security that listservs just don't have.Google Groups is relatively easy to set up and manage, and Google provides lots of helpful how-to tutorials and advice that are accessible to non-technical managers.If you are trying to use Google Groups with federal employees and encountering resistance, be aware that Google has Fedramp certification. This means your federal friends are allowed to use it from a security perspective.Google Groups is a tool you should consider if you are struggling to manage a team or volunteer group. It is easy to get started and easy to expand as you learn the capabilities. We know that few MSPs serving nonprofits are experts in Google Workspace. Community IT has developed expertise in Google Workspace support since we serve nonprofits exclusively, and so many nonprofits use this platform. _______________________________Start a conversation :) Register to attend a webinar in real time, and find all past transcripts at https://communityit.com/webinars/ email Carolyn at cwoodard@communityit.com on LinkedIn Thanks for listening.
Tiff Parker is an expert in Google Workspace support, having used Google Workspace herself throughout her career and developing a practice as an in-house expert to our clients who use Google Workspace. Carolyn asked Tiff for her tips on features to use and things to know about Google Workspace at the office.The takeaways: Know the difference between My Drive and Shared Drives, and set up Shared Drives for anything that you will want access to after a staff member leaves your organization. Step by step instructions to set up Shared Drives can be found in the Google knowledge center and can be done by “non technical” staff. Be thoughtful about creating the Shared Drives architecture and assigning access. Train your existing and new staff on your expectation for saving and collaborating on files using Shared Drives. Google uses the acronym “2SV” for second factor verification. Similar to Multi-Factor-Authentication (MFA,) you can use any authenticator (including Google's) or have a text or call sent to your phone. Whatever you use, the important thing is to REQUIRE 2SV for any account that your staff log into.Use Google Groups to save money on licenses and make it easier for teams or committees to collaborate. You can set up Google Groups with a single email address such as “contact@yourdomain” and all the members can see and respond. Groups has a lot of great use cases at nonprofits.Google Calendar has an option for “rooms” that you can use for many resources you may want to be able to reserve, like projectors and other AV equipment if you are still using a physical office. Thank you, Tiff, for these useful tips! If you have more Google Workspace questions, or have a great tip to share, get in touch! Presenter: Tiff Parker joined Community IT Innovators as an IT Business Manager (ITBM) in October 2023. She brings over 17 years of experience working in nonprofit technology.As an ITBM, she guides clients through implementation of effective technology investments and utilizing efficient IT services in direct support of their missions. She also assists clients with long-term planning, budgeting, and strategic goals.The Community IT ITBM service provides an outsourced IT manager to clients at a reduced cost to hiring and having an IT manager on staff. These managers are a resource dedicated to matching technology solutions to clients' business needs. The ITBM makes recommendations on IT investments, training programs, maintenance, and licenses. They help the client be forward-looking, and act as a vendor-agnostic, trusted advisor with deep knowledge of the nonprofit IT software and platforms available. Because Community IT works in partnership with clients to manage long-term IT needs, the ITBM relationship with the client makes them a true asset.Prior to coming to Community IT, Tiff was the IT Director for an environmental nonprofit where she was responsible for the overall vision, planning, implementation, management and support of their various information systems, data, policies, and processes. Tiff graduated from Virginia Tech in 2007. She holds the Microsoft 365 Fundamentals MS 900 certification. _______________________________Start a conversation :) Register to attend a webinar in real time, and find all past transcripts at https://communityit.com/webinars/ email Carolyn at cwoodard@communityit.com on LinkedIn Thanks for listening.
Taylor's Colorado bike trip included electronic shifting; also, practicing bike salutes. Can we sue cities over blocked bike lanes? Attorney James Pocrass answers in his Legal Moment. 6:54 What's more philosophical, road biking or commuting? Nick comes to Jesus Ilundáin, co-editor of Cycling: Philosophy for Everyone, for a tour of the mind. 17:10 The Conservative Heritage Foundation's outline for a Trump presidency, Project 2025, would mean no federal money at all for bike/ped or transit projects. Caron Whitaker, Deputy Executive Director of the League of American Bicyclists, reports. 35:26 How do we know Middle Aged Men In Lycra aren't bike advocates? A listener asks, and it sends Taylor, Anne Marie, and Nick on a wild ride. 44:00 The Term Middle Aged Men In Lycra is both ageist and body shaming, Anne Marie concludes. 57:37 Bike Talk Stories, our Google Group and In Memoriam: George Christensen, Dr. Barbara Friedes, Jacob Ramirez, Rob Jenner 58:30 Stacey's "Deep" Bike Thought 1:02:22
In this episode of the Thinking Elixir Podcast, we dive into the exciting new Metal support in Nx, thanks to Paulo Valente's hard work, and discuss Chris McCord's impressive demo on deploying a distributed Elixir app with YugabyteDB. We also cover Paraxial.io's new free tier, the release of the REST client Polo, and the latest updates from the Peep library. Plus, a special collaboration with the Elixir Wizards crew previews ElixirConf 2024 with insights on training classes, talks, and strategies to make the most of the event. Tune in for tips on networking, keynotes, and all the reasons why this conference is a must-attend for Elixir enthusiasts! Show Notes online - http://podcast.thinkingelixir.com/212 (http://podcast.thinkingelixir.com/212) Elixir Community News - https://x.com/polvalente/status/1811268492580024511 (https://x.com/polvalente/status/1811268492580024511?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Paulo Valente has done the work to make Nx work on Metal. - https://developer.apple.com/metal/ (https://developer.apple.com/metal/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Metal is Apple's graphics and compute API and implementation layer for working with the AI/ML features of their M-series chips. - https://groups.google.com/a/openxla.org/g/openxla-discuss/c/DnPUmpyk4y0 (https://groups.google.com/a/openxla.org/g/openxla-discuss/c/DnPUmpyk4y0?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Google Groups discussion that covers OpenXLA's overall architecture & components. - https://x.com/chris_mccord/status/1811055874930028870 (https://x.com/chris_mccord/status/1811055874930028870?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Chris McCord was a guest on the YugabyteDB YouTube channel demonstrating deploying a distributed Elixir app and distributed YugabyteDB from scratch. - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YugabyteDB (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YugabyteDB?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – YugabyteDB is a distributed SQL database that aims to be strongly transactionally consistent across failure zones (i.e. ACID compliance). - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_utOXl3eWoA (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_utOXl3eWoA?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Chris McCord's demonstration video on deploying distributed Elixir app and YugabyteDB. - https://www.youtube.com/live/_utOXl3eWoA?si=Si04BP4WnqPk5vcs&t=877 (https://www.youtube.com/live/_utOXl3eWoA?si=Si04BP4WnqPk5vcs&t=877?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Video timestamp where Chris joins the show. - https://paraxial.io/blog/paraxial-free (https://paraxial.io/blog/paraxial-free?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Paraxial.io now has a free plan for non-commercial use, no credit card required. - https://rfp.dev/blog/a-rest-client-for-browsers?utm_source=elixir-merge (https://rfp.dev/blog/a-rest-client-for-browsers?utm_source=elixir-merge?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Blog post about Polo, a new REST client. - https://github.com/readyforproduction/polo (https://github.com/readyforproduction/polo?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Polo, a REST client similar to Postman but built in LiveView. - https://x.com/germsvel/status/1813160145557283263 (https://x.com/germsvel/status/1813160145557283263?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – German Velasco's tip of using :timer.minutes(5) for a more readable way of setting a timer value in milliseconds. - https://github.com/rkallos/peep (https://github.com/rkallos/peep?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Peep is an alternative OpenTelemetry metrics reporter that supports StatsD and Prometheus. - https://elixirforum.com/t/peep-efficient-telemetrymetrics-reporter-supporting-prometheus-and-statsd/55901 (https://elixirforum.com/t/peep-efficient-telemetrymetrics-reporter-supporting-prometheus-and-statsd/55901?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Peep 3.0 released with minor change to use maps instead of keyword lists. - Personal Update from Mark - recently left working at Fly.io to pursue a full-time project. Do you have some Elixir news to share? Tell us at @ThinkingElixir (https://twitter.com/ThinkingElixir) or email at show@thinkingelixir.com (mailto:show@thinkingelixir.com) Discussion Resources - https://ti.to/elixirconf/2024 (https://ti.to/elixirconf/2024?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Use code ELIXIRPODCAST at checkout to get a $50 discount on your tickets to ElixirConf in Orlando August 27-30, 2024 - Favorite moments and experiences from previous ElixirConf events - How to network and make the most of your conference attendance - Training classes and talks we're looking forward to this year - Keynotes from prominent Elixir community figures - Chris McCord's keynote - TBD (Could it be a LiveView 1.0 announcement?!) - Benefits of attending ElixirConf - learning, networking, community immersion - Virtual attendance options for those unable to attend in person - Why you should step out of your comfort zone and engage with others - Passion and energy of Elixir community members at ElixirConf - Mentorship opportunities - connect with experienced Elixir developers - Exploring Orlando attractions during ElixirConf 2024 downtime - An invitation to join us at ElixirConf 2024 and immerse yourself in the Elixir community - https://2024.elixirconf.com/ (https://2024.elixirconf.com/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://hexdocs.pm/ecto/Ecto.html (https://hexdocs.pm/ecto/Ecto.html?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://fly.io/ (https://fly.io/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://www.meetup.com/austin-elixir/ (https://www.meetup.com/austin-elixir/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://grox.io/ (https://grox.io/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://hexdocs.pm/phoenixliveview/Phoenix.Component.html (https://hexdocs.pm/phoenix_live_view/Phoenix.Component.html?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://opentelemetry.io/docs/languages/erlang/ (https://opentelemetry.io/docs/languages/erlang/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://ash-hq.org/ (https://ash-hq.org/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/ (https://alembic.sqlalchemy.org/en/latest/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrpQHZcy3CI (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mrpQHZcy3CI?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Functional IoT with Elixir and Nerves - Justin Schneck | Craft 2019 - https://docs.nerves-hub.org/ (https://docs.nerves-hub.org/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://nerves-project.org/ (https://nerves-project.org/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://getoban.pro/ (https://getoban.pro/?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://hexdocs.pm/broadway/Broadway.html (https://hexdocs.pm/broadway/Broadway.html?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://developer.farm.bot/v15/docs/farmbot-os.html (https://developer.farm.bot/v15/docs/farmbot-os.html?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2WciH6rAFg (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u2WciH6rAFg?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Leaving Everything Behind For Elixir - Theo's video - https://youtu.be/aOk67eT3fpg?si=MTxtIv-xmuJZYbup (https://youtu.be/aOk67eT3fpg?si=MTxtIv-xmuJZYbup?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Phoenix LiveView Is Making Me Reconsider React... - Theo's other video - https://podcast.thinkingelixir.com/206 (https://podcast.thinkingelixir.com/206?utm_source=thinkingelixir&utm_medium=shownotes) – Podcast - Thinking Elixir 206 - BeamOps - DevOps on the BEAM Find us online - Message the show - @ThinkingElixir (https://twitter.com/ThinkingElixir) - Message the show on Fediverse - @ThinkingElixir@genserver.social (https://genserver.social/ThinkingElixir) - Email the show - show@thinkingelixir.com (mailto:show@thinkingelixir.com) - Mark Ericksen - @brainlid (https://twitter.com/brainlid) - Mark Ericksen on Fediverse - @brainlid@genserver.social (https://genserver.social/brainlid) - David Bernheisel - @bernheisel (https://twitter.com/bernheisel) - David Bernheisel on Fediverse - @dbern@genserver.social (https://genserver.social/dbern)
It feels like only a year ago that Doctor Who underwent a strange and cataclysmic soft reboot, and it looks like it's happening again this week. Or is it? Notes and links Paul Cornell's negative review of Terror of the Autons was originally published in DWB Issue 112, way back in April 1993. Here it is republished in the old Usenet forum rec.arts.drwho (or at least the version of it to be found on Google Groups right now). Jeremy Bentham (yes, a relation) was the co-founder of the Doctor Who Appreciation Society back in the 70s. To us, he was more famous for contributing a section to Peter Haining's 1983 coffee-table book Doctor Who: A Celebration, a section which briefly covered every Doctor Who story up to the final story of Season 20, The King's Demons. We mentioned it last week; it...
Jeffrey Mosher welcomes Ryan Fewins-Bliss executive director MCAN - Michigan College Access Network. Topic: FAFSA Week of Action - April 15-19 In their discussion they cover several points including: Objective: MCAN supports school counselors and college advisers as their students and families navigate shortened FAFSA timelines. MCAN actions: ● Compiled an Evolving FAFSA spreadsheet that tracks institutional changes in enrollment deadlines ● Offered Certified FAFSA Specialist Training for select school counselors, educators, and others who work directly with students ○ This training is offered at no cost to the participants ○ All training sessions are recorded and available to the public ○ A list of Certified FAFSA Specialists is available to support people who work with students. This is not for students and families. Contact Jeneen Hatoum for details ● Hosting a variety of webinars to keep school counselors and other professionals up to date on FAFSA changes and offer strategies for dealing with this year's shortened timeline ○ School counselors and educators can earn State Continuing Education Clock Hours for attending live webinars or by watching recorded webinars and completing a quiz ○ Webinars are offered at no cost to the participants ● Maintaining an up-to-date resource hub for schools participating in our College Bound Michigan initiative ○ While designed to be used in the context of CBMI, all resources are public and available to anyone ● Using our network of college advisers serving in AdviseMI and MSU College Advising Corps to disseminate accurate information in schools across the state ● Worked with a coalition of higher education institutions to create a student/parent letter encouraging students to continue completing college-going steps despite unexpected delays ● Using social media to celebrate high schools who are making good progress in FAFSA submissions ● Using our email and social media channels to share valuable updates on the FAFSA process with our network of school counselors, community-based organizations, higher education admissions staff, and other college access professionals ● Maintaining a Google Group for school counselors to discuss FAFSA hurdles and work collaboratively to find solutions ● Advocating with both state and congressional legislators to increase funding for FAFSA completion efforts and improve accountability around this year's delayed and rocky FAFSA launch ● Offering guidance on the effective use of the Department of Education's FAFSA Challenge Grants ● Created a comprehensive FAFSA Action Plan to help schools and organizations strategically plan their FAFSA completion efforts. » Visit MBN website: www.michiganbusinessnetwork.com/ » Watch MBN's YouTube: www.youtube.com/@MichiganbusinessnetworkMBN » Like MBN: www.facebook.com/mibiznetwork » Follow MBN: twitter.com/MIBizNetwork/ » MBN Instagram: www.instagram.com/mibiznetwork/
Microbiology in high school ? Must people take biology in high school, but microbiology is not typically an option. Those of you that are microbiology lovers, would you have taken it had there been an option? Well, check out this episode where Meredith Townsend, a high school teacher joins the podcast to talk to Luis about teaching microbiology to her students. She talks about the curriculum, grading, how does it help the students, and more. Want to reach out to Meredith Townsend? See below:mertownsend34@gmail.com --- contact me and we can get you in the Google Group!https://mertownsend34.wixsite.com/mrstownsendteaches --- here is my teaching blog!https://a.co/d/4Q3X3VK --- ABC's of Microbiology: A coloring book for future science nerds@Mer_Townsend - X usernamemrs_townsend_teaches --- InstagramWant to support the podcast? Here's how:Buy me a Ko-fi : https://ko-fi.com/letstalkmicroVenmo: https://venmo.com/u/letstalkmicro
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Bitcoin monthly is a show hosted by Max, Bitcoin QNA and Antomous. We cover important updates in the world of bitcoin and open source software.We do this monthly to keep listeners informed without having to dedicate hours every day to keep on top of developments. We break things down in a simple and fun way and we welcome questions or topic suggestions via podcasting 2.0 boosts. In this episode of bitcoin monthly we talk about the importance of using bitcoin in a private and freedom focused way as well as covering the list of topics below. - Max BBB - Antomous - Bitcoin QnANitter Is Shutting Down Following Changes to X Guest Accountshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/nitter-is-shutting-down-following-x-changes-to-guest-accounts/Samourai Atomic Swaps to XMR Are Now In Public Betahttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/samourai-swaps-0-0-17-beta/Boltz Web App v1.3.0 & Backend v3.4.0: Taproot Swapshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/boltz-web-app-v1-3-0-backend-v3-4-0/Mutiny Wallet v0.5.7: Payjoin Support, NWC Improvementshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/mutiny-wallet-v0-5-7/Zeus v0.8.1: Nostr Contact Import, Standalone PoS & Morehttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/zeus-v0-8-1/Nunchuk Updates: Byzantine Improvements, Cancel via RBF, Other Fixeshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/nunchuk-desktop-v1-9-28-android-v1-9-40-ios-v1-9-37/News: Bitcoin Developer Mailing List Migrates to Google Groupshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bitcoin-developer-mailing-list-migrates-to-google-groups/Spiral Awards Grant to Plebhash (stratumV2)https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/spiral-plebhash-the-charlatan/European Bitcoin Energy Association (EBEA) Launched to Inform Policy Makers About Bitcoin Mininghttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/european-bitcoin-energy-association-ebea-launched-to-inform-policy-makers-about-bitcoin-mining/Update: Trezor Warns of Unauthorized Email Impersonating Trezor Sent via Its Third-Party Email Providerhttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/trezor-warns-of-emails-impersonating-trezor-sent-from-a-its-third-party-email-provider/Bitwise Becomes First U.S. Spot Bitcoin ETF to Disclose BTC Holding Addresseshttps://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bitwise-becomes-first-u-s-spot-bitcoin-etf-to-disclose-btc-holding-addresses/https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bitwises-bitcoin-etf-addresses-updated-to-native-segwit-p2wpkh/Show Sponsor - Foundation Devices Foundation builds Bitcoin-centric tools that empower you to reclaim your digital sovereignty. As a sovereign computing company, Foundation is the antithesis of today's tech conglomerates. Returning to cypherpunk principles, they build open source technology that “can't be evil,” Thank you Foundation Devices for sponsoring the show. Use code: Ungovernable at check out for 3 months free VPN usage with IVPN. https://foundationdevices.com/ungovernable Want the best opensource node in the world?Ronindojo Here's some money off and you can help support the show at the same time. Use code: Ungovernablehttps://shop.ronindojo.io/?coupon=ungovernable(00:00:00) Intro(00:02:06) SPONSOR: Foundation Devices (CODE: Ungovernable)(00:03:11) Help the Show, Get a RoninDojo (CODE: Ungovernable)(00:03:48) Ungovernable Misfits is LIVE
Bitcoin Developer Mailing List Migrates to Google Groups https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bitcoin-developer-mailing-list-migrates-to-google-groups/ Bitwise's Bitcoin Spot ETF Addresses Updated to Native SegWit P2WPKH https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bitwises-bitcoin-etf-addresses-updated-to-native-segwit-p2wpkh/ European Court of Human Rights Rules Backdoored Encryption Illegal https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/european-court-of-human-rights-declares-backdoored-encryption-illegal/ v2 Opens aka Dual Funding Officially Merged into Lightning Network Specifications BDK v1.0.0-alpha.5 https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/bdk-v1-0-0-alpha-5/ 10101 v1.8.7: Show DLC Channels in Settings, In-app Surveys https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/10101-v1-8-6/ Gordian Seed Tool v1.6.0 https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/gordian-seed-tool-v1-6-0/ Lightning Loop v0.27.0-beta: Sweep Batcher https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/lightning-loop-v0-27-0-beta/ Clams Remote v2.1.0: Spanish Language & Fixes https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/clams-remote-v2-1-0/ Breez SDK Core v0.3.0 https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/breez-sdk-core-v0-3-0/ Blitz Wallet Beta Is Now Available for Testing https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/blitz-wallet-beta-is-now-available-for-testing/ Minibits v0.1.6-beta: Fixes & Improvements https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/minibits-v0-1-6-beta/ Umbrel Introduces New Umbrel Home, Teases UmbrelOS v1.0 https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/umbrel-home-update-umbrelos-v1-0-teaser/ Stacker.news Implements NWC & LNbits for Sending, LND for Autowithdraw https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/stacker-news-implements-nwc-lnbits-for-sending-lnd-for-autowithdraw/ Satcom: A Collaborative Layer for Internet Browsing Experience https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/introducing-satcom/ NDK v2.4: ‘Safely Embrace the Chaos' https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/ndk-v2-4/ Whynostr: Proof-of-concept for Collaborative Document Editing on Nostr https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/whynostr-collaborative-doc-editing-on-nostr/ Nsec.app: Web-based Nostr Signer https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/nsec-app/ noStrudel v0.38.3: OAuth Flow, Offline Mode & More https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/nostrudel-v0-38-3/ Nostur v1.12.0: UI & Performance Improvements https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/nostur-v1-12-0/ Holepunch Unveils Open-Source P2P App Development Platform Pear Runtime https://www.nobsbitcoin.com/holepunch-unveils-pear-runtime/ Joe Kernen is the best bitcoin podcaster https://primal.net/e/note1j842m5plwjnyvu08dgac62a70xjnypr5gv60z5v96tl4ml5430ksueu3c4 3:41 - Opening riff 9:22 - Dashboard and mempool 15:41 - Halving conditions 30:16 - Bitwise ETF 32:32 - Bitcoin Dev mailing list 34:37 - EU rules backdoor encryption illegal 38:32 - Dual funding merged by NiftyNei 40:39 - Boosts 44:11 - Bitcoin Takeover 47:14 - Joe Kernan 58:31 - Coldcard Q 1:00:43 - Software updates 1:23:34 - Taxes 1:27:21 - Wrapping Shoutout to our sponsors: Unchained Capital https://unchained.com/concierge/ Coinkite https://coinkite.com/ TFTC Merch is Available: Shop Now https://merch.tftc.io/ Join the TFTC Movement: Main YT Channel https://www.youtube.com/c/TFTC21/videos Clips YT Channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCUQcW3jxfQfEUS8kqR5pJtQ Website https://tftc.io/ Twitter https://twitter.com/tftc21 Instagram https://www.instagram.com/tftc.io/ Follow Marty Bent: Twitter https://twitter.com/martybent Newsletter https://tftc.io/martys-bent/ Podcast https://tftc.io/podcasts/ Follow Odell: Twitter https://twitter.com/ODELL Newsletter https://tftc.io/the-sat-standard/ Podcast https://citadeldispatch.com/
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: Introducing the Animal Advocacy Forum - a space for those involved or interested in Animal Welfare & related topics, published by David van Beveren on February 6, 2024 on The Effective Altruism Forum. Summary Farmed Animal Strategic Team (FAST) is thrilled to announce the launch of our Animal Advocacy Forum, a new platform aimed at increasing discussion and enhancing collaboration within the animal advocacy movement. We invite everyone involved or interested in animal welfare, alternative proteins, animal rights, or related topics to participate, share insights about their initiatives, and discover valuable perspectives. Thank you! What is FAST? For more than a decade, FAST has operated as a private Google Group list, connecting over 500+ organizations and 1,400+ individuals dedicated to farmed animal welfare. This network includes professionals from pivotal EA-aligned organizations such as Open Philanthropy, Good Food Institute, The Humane League, Animal Charity Evaluators (ACE) - including a wide range of smaller and grassroots-based groups. Why a forum? In response to feedback from our FAST survey, members expressed a strong interest in deeper discussions and improved collaboration. There was also considerable dissatisfaction with the 'reply-all' feature, which led to unintentional spamming of 1,400 members - as a result, FAST decided to broaden its services to include a forum. While the FAST List continues to serve as a private space within the animal advocacy movement, the FAST Forum is open to the public to foster greater engagement, particularly from those involved in the EA and other closely-aligned movements. What should be posted there? Echoing the EA Forum's Animal Welfare topic's role which provides a space for organizations to announce initiatives, discuss promising new ideas, and constructively critique ongoing work - FAST's platform serves as a dedicated hub for in-depth discussions on animal advocacy and related topics. It aims to enable nuanced debates and collaboration on key issues such as alternative proteins, grassroots strategy, corporate campaigns, legal & policy work, among others. What shouldn't be posted there? Discussions related to ongoing investigations or internal strategy, especially regarding campaigns or initiatives not yet public, should not be shared on the forum to safeguard the confidentiality and security of those efforts. Why not use the EA Forum? While the EA Forum is a valuable resource for animal advocacy dialogue, the FAST forum is designed to foster a more focused and close-knit community. The EA Forum's broad spectrum of topics and distinct cultural norms can be intimidating for some, making it challenging for those specifically focused on animal advocacy to find and engage in targeted conversations. This initiative mirrors other communities such as the AI Alignment Forum, which serve to concentrate expertise and foster discussions in a critically important area. With that in mind, we strongly encourage members to continue sharing key content on the EA Forum for visibility and cross-engagement within the broader EA community.[1] Where do I start? Feel free to join us over at the Animal Advocacy Forum and become an active participant in our growing community.[2] To get started, simply register, complete your profile, and start or contribute to discussions that match your interests and expertise. This is also a great opportunity to introduce yourself and share insights about the impactful work you're doing. Thank you! Thank you to the organizations and individuals who have provided invaluable feedback and support for the forum and FAST's rebranding efforts, including Animal Charity Evaluators, Veganuary, ProVeg International, Stray Dog Institute, Animal Think Tank, Freedom Food Alliance, GFI, and the AVA Summit. Also, a big...
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Most Top News Sites Block AI Bots. Right-Wing Media Welcomes Them Don't Fuss About Training AIs. Train Our Kids Sports Illustrated Thrown Into Chaos With Mass Layoffs Is it time to give up on old news? Instagram's new 'nighttime nudges' aim to reduce teens' time on the app The Quiet Death of Ello's Big Dreams The FTC orders Intuit to stop promoting its products as "free" unless they are actually free for all consumers, after an FTC judge found TurboTax ads misleading An online pastor indicted in a $1.3 million crypto scam releases video explaining that God told him to sell crypto and spend proceeds on home remodel The TikTok 'Tunnel Girl' Is Not Alone Rat selfies Disney offers an elegant solution to VR's movement problem Starting Feb 22, you can no longer use Google Groups to post to Usenet, if you were still doing that The Traitors (on Peacock) is actually quite good Herman Miller power boxes Hosts: Leo Laporte, Jeff Jarvis, and Paris Martineau Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-google. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: kolide.com/twig
Right before the New Year, the Google search results volatility spiked big time. I posted the Google webmaster report for January 2024 this week. I published a big list of feature requests for Google Search Console...
In this episode, Glenn Wilson, Google Group Product Manager, unveils the artistry of product management in the face of chaos. Join us as Glenn shares the secrets of ruthless prioritization, the importance of stepping back for high-level planning, and the strategic mindset needed to play the long game in a dynamic environment."Get the FREE Product Book and check out our curated list of Product Management resources here.
Vor Weihnachtliche Sendung mit Markus, Felix und Ingo. Blast from the Past der l33tname redet nächstes mal über FreeBSD Kommentar Android Insulinpumpen PS4 exploit webkit / kernel exploit nicht ohne USB-Stick Toter der Woche Google Groups is ending support for Usenet Ingos Google Account Untoter der Woche Zug-Reparatur in Polen Rolltreppen Uni Stuttgart defekt Techniker ist Informiert (Uni Mainz) AI der Woche Facebook hat endlich einen neuen weg gefunden eure Bilder zu monetarisieren Writer.com with indirect prompt injection ChatGPT wird faul, OpenAI weiss nicht warum News ext4 data corruption in 6.1.64 issue in ext4 with data corruption Debian 12.4 »Bookworm« behebt Kernel-Bug AtomicJar is now part of Docker! 5Ghoul Original Website 4 von 5 auf der Binärgewitter Security Skala terrapin 3 von 5 auf der Binärgewitter Security Skala Excel World Championships 2023 Finals (videos) 2v2 exceln verschiedene wertungskriterien Graphen Kartenspiel (Supertrumpf) Themen Congress Ticketverfügbarkeit Fahrplan Congress App Mimimi der Woche Medium - don’t publish there! (and the bad thing that blogs like angular.io are using it) Lesefoo Pipe Dreams: The life and times of Yahoo Pipes Picks fsfe podcast mixxx PragmaticVersioning https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mitteleurop%C3%A4ische_Zeit
The Google search results have been very volatile the whole past week, and most SEOs think Google will confirm another algorithm update before 2023 comes to a close. Google Groups is no longer ranking as well in Google Search. Google said it has taken...
On this episode of The Association Podcast, Angela Mell, Senior Director of Communications and Education at the Louisiana Credit Union League, shares her journey in the credit union space, the transition from Google Groups to a new community platform, and the challenges faced in adopting new technology. We also discuss the importance of listening to member needs, prioritizing technology initiatives, and delegating responsibilities.
First in a series on collaborative learning environments. Please visit the website for the livestream replay & to post your questions & experiences!In this episode, we discuss discussing collaborative learning projects with education innovators and Peeragogy members Steve Yost and Karl Hakkarainen, who share their experiences in collaborative learning in the hopes of catalyzing new conversations and new collaborations. "Whether learning for work or for personal interest, we need ways to entangle our ideas with others who are on the same journey. Learning is rarely a solitary experience. We need to share what we've learned in order to make it complete," says Karl.IN THE BOOTH: HOST: Joe Corneli, Oxford Brookes University & the Peeragogy Project CREW: Charlie Danoff, Charlotte Pierce, Ray Puzio, Mary Tedeschi EPISODE LINKS: The Peeragogy Project Pierce Press Productions What does Peeragogy mean to you? Join the discussion on Mondays at 9 am UTC -5 (US Eastern Time) & join our Google Group (links at peeragogy.org).
Transcript: Joe Krebs 0:00 2023 marks the beginning of the second decade of agile and for the past 10 years, I've been releasing podcast episodes with a variety of speakers and topics to you. And I hope you enjoy the ride so far. I don't know how many of you guys actually know the beginning of agile, and how it all started. While I started, the idea of a podcast actually started after a visit with Jean Tabaka in New York City, where we recorded again, a audio segment for the New York City community. After the recording, she pointed out that this was a really interesting conversation. And she really enjoyed it. And she thought, why am I only releasing this content to the New York City crowd and not on a world level as a podcast? So I began thinking about it, produced a podcast, and eventually it turned into agile FM, something you'll hopefully enjoy today. So as a tribute to Jean Tabaka, which left us way too soon, in 2016, I decided to re release that original content from 2013 with her. And what's amazing after I really listened to that audio segment with her is how much she already talked about organizational agility, somehow business agility, and some collaboration issues that are still valid today. So thank you, gene for, you know, helping me to get into the podcasting. And, you know, having me indirectly meet so many people on this podcast recordings. But I also wanted to make sure that everybody out there knows how influential Ginger Baker was in a variety of ways, and how valid her books and contents still are today, in 23. So I hope you enjoy this one. And in memoriam here is Jean Tabaka. Agile New York City 2013. Joe Krebs 1:56 I am your host Joe Krebs, and today I'm here with Jean Tabaka. Welcome to the podcast. Thank you so much, Joe. Jean, you're in town for a very special event to the edge on New York City community. We're celebrating our fifth birthday. Today, actually here at Pace University in beautiful, sunny New York City today. So thank you "A" for coming to the podcast. And "B" more important is actually speaking tonight to the edge on New York City community. That's a that's a wonderful thing for you.Jean Tabaka 2:26 Thank you. Thank you so much for inviting me. And I guess I could take a little bit of credit for the wonderful weather I brought from Colorado. What the heck. Yeah. And to be part of the fifth anniversary. Wow, what an honor. So seriously, thank you so much. This is great.Joe Krebs 2:45 Well, thank you, Jean, when I was when I was researching a little bit around your book, actually, in preparation for this podcast, I realized that, although we're turning five years, your book is older than five years. Yeah. Well, your book prior to the creation of agile in New York City. Wow. And it's still up to date. No, no. Should we say the book is timeless? It is it's still valid. I mean, people still read it. It's still a topic of conversation. It's not like a programming language has been outdated. The book is still very relevant. It's collaboration explained.Jean Tabaka 3:23 Right. Interestingly enough. About 2003. I think it was, I'll be talking about this in my talk this evening. But I'd like to really bring it up now. So thank you very much. And I was approached by the executive editor of the Agile Software Development series that was being run by Alistair Cockburn and Jim Highsmith. And he said, someone told me to talk to you. Wow, that was a bit frightening right there. And he said, I gathered that you have a great passion around collaboration, and specifically about how to facilitate collaboration. And I said, Yes, because I believe in the human aspect of agile, I read about it. And I don't see in the books, clear guidance about how to bring about self organization, how to make sure all the voices are heard, and how you can gather the greatest pools of insight. And he said, well, then write a book about it. I said, I could do that. But I think these sorts of things are much better transferred in person. And he said, well write the book. And it took me a long time to write the book, because very honestly, I didn't believe in it. I kept saying to him, but no one will read it. And he said, No, I believe in this book. And in fact, back to your point, Joe, he said, This is material, I believe will live on fact beyond many of the other books and he said if it doesn't, I promise su I'll work with you. I won't publish it if we really don't believe in it. And shoot. It's, it got published. It's gone beyond my wildest expectations. I am blown away, truly humbled by the people who still come to me worldwide and say, Thank you. Thank you for this book. I seriously never would have imagined and the gentleman who urged me to do this. Well, he was right. Yeah.Joe Krebs 5:40 Being persistent, right, and making you believe in, in what you're doing? Yes, even though you might not be seeing it at that point. But I did.Jean Tabaka 5:49 And I think you and I were talking earlier about our technical backgrounds. And I kept thinking, my book really isn't technical. Is it going to allow others to see that I have a technical background? Will it look like soft, fuzzy skills. And that was a part of the challenge for me as well to publish the book. And it's, again, just humbling that it's been welcomed into the community as it has.Joe Krebs 6:18 Well, the the other part of your title collaboration explained is actually facilitation skills for software project leaders. Yes. So what I actually like about this, two aspects of it, which are actually more important than ever, in our Agile community facilitation skills. And in 2006, when he was published your you talked about leadership?Jean Tabaka 6:40 Yes. In fact, that's the first chapter in the book. Wow. Thank you, Joe. Yeah, the first chapter of the book is on servant leadership, and what it takes. And there were people who had told me, Well, first of all, get rid of that chapter. And I just wouldn't, I refused. I believe that as we not just inform the Scrum Masters and the Agile coaches within our agile world, that is, we scale and have agile move outside development organizations, we move out what I'll call the value stream, that organizationally, we have to invite the notion of servant leaders, and people who believe in the insights of the teams as they bring forth their visions. That was very important to me. And that's why I lead the book off with that.Joe Krebs 7:39 So you have been doing this since 98. Yeah, the actual communityJean Tabaka 7:42 I am one of the Agile grandmothers.Joe Krebs 7:47 Since 98, there was also the word software in your book with would that be a word we could almost now like years later, almost eliminated, like because so many people do Agile outside of software development?Jean Tabaka 8:00 That yeah, I think that at the time, because my background was strictly software. I have a graduate degree in computer science learn. And that's all I've ever known about the world. And there's been this slow transformation of how I've gone from being analytical, to be more aware of the creative and humane side of how we create software. When the book first came out, I remember I had a gentleman contact me six months to a year afterward and say, he was from New Zealand. So right then and there again, I was blown away. Wow, my book was selling in New Zealand. And he wrote to me to say, why didn't you put the word software in this title? This book is not about software. It's about how to help organizations really be collaborative, how to facilitate collaboration. I knew about that, only in the software world at the time. And as I now look farther out, and around me, I see that and hear from people. This really isn't just about software. And thank you for helping software people understand the value of it.Joe Krebs 9:18 Why do you think it is that we have seen so many technologies come and go. And the topic of collaboration, facilitation is still very much a coot. I would actually say like it. It's important, more important than ever. What do you think is why technology can't solve specific problems in human behavior? We have all these tools will be now and but it seems like the projects are still not more successful from a from a collaborations perspective. Did you agree or do you do you think just been done some progress?Jean Tabaka 9:54 It's interesting. Originally, my target audience was For people who felt that more control would provide more success in the software world. And so I was trying to help command and control environments move to more collaborative environments. Some stuff I've been reading lately, interestingly enough, is pushing back on the agile movement saying, no people need to be able to work on their own to be truly creative. And I've been responding to that and a couple of posts here and there saying, I all the more believe in facilitation as a role because in this world where creativity needs to come both from the group, the the team, as well as the individual where creativity comes from both spaces. A really well informed and well seasoned facilitator is also sort of paid to be an observer, and to bring out the strengths of the team and the individual. So we raise the overall wisdom of the team, by individual contribution, and by overall team contribution. I don't know if that really answers your question orJoe Krebs 11:14 not? Well, yeah, I've seen like teams, distributed teams primarily, there was like, honestly, Cyril collaboration. They were assigning tickets to each other, talking. And that's not the collaboration I have in mind right?Jean Tabaka 11:29 Now it's not and and thank you for bringing that up. I've worked with a lot of distributed teams teams distributed within the same city within the same same state within the same country within the same continent, and then across three different continents. And again, the assumption is, well, we need to add more and more control. And I recognize that the scaffolding around these environments does require a bit more work than when the team is co located, we lose so much of the communication and the implicit versus explicit communication flow. The the tacit versus tribal knowledge. At the same time, when I've been traveling in India, and China, and Texas, sorry, I had to throw that in there. Talk about three different cultures. And what I have been doing is trying to help leaders in these types of environments understand good facilitation is all the more important. Because what I discovered that is that without good strong facilitation, in each of the remote areas, or distributed areas, as well as across the distributed teams, we can't really be reap the benefits of agile at all. In fact, people will start to become very alienated. And assume, frankly, sabotage by the other people. The only commitment the only communication device you have is a ticket. it for some reason, carries a little, little seed of blame and shame with it. Yes, that's not the intent. But boy, do I see shame and blame flying, you know, transcontinental.Joe Krebs 13:37 It's true. It's true. It's really true. Yeah. Well, you mentioned the Agile. I don't know exactly what you say as a movement or agile. You want to push back a little bit. You actually seeking a lot of advice outside of the Agile community. In your talk tonight, tell me why the Golden Circle of Agile? You you actually outline on our website, which is on www agile nyc.org. You actually say? Simon's you were very much influenced by Simon Sinek actually by a TED talk. Yes. So you're actually reaching out to totally other communities, tribes, so forth for for advice, and you map that to, to agility. Is that right?Jean Tabaka 14:24 Yes. Yeah, I want to clarify that I'm not pushing back on agile. What I'm doing is I'm inviting in and pulling in more resources into my technical world than I ever would have imagined. So initially, I was proud and eager to read as many agile books as I possibly could, and seek out the Agile speakers. Go to Agile conferences. What I'm discovering is that over time for Our agile adoptions to move into Agile transformations to move into organizational transformation. I'm being pulled to seek new guidance back to the talk for this evening. Tell me why and the golden the Golden Circle of Agile. When I saw the TED Talk by Simon Sinek, let's start with I was watching TED Talks. What I've been doing that five years ago. No, is Simon's talk about agile. No. But I listened to it multiple times, and took my own interpretations around it. They're not specifically what Simon says, oh, that sounds funny. Sorry. And then I bought his book, start with why. And it gives so much wonderful humanity underneath this thing called the Golden Circle of why, how what. And I said to myself, that really speaks to me. And it falls in line with some other authors and their books that I've been looking at, again, to broad the value of Agile to reap more benefits of Agile. They're not agile books.Joe Krebs 16:24 You do want to you want to share them with the Agile New York City community, what's on your bookshelf right now? What do you what are you interested in?Jean Tabaka 16:30 Actually, you know, oddly enough, what's more, well, yes, I have a bookshelf full of books. But, okay, this is a little bit of a nod to the Kindle. Because I love these books so much, I bought a Kindle, so I can carry them with me wherever. And, frankly, seriously, I use a Kindle as my library, as my reference library. So if you come through what I have on there, you'll discover every one of these books, I think that one of the biggest influences on me with regard to being a change agent, and therefore someone who believes in Agile transformation has been Seth Gordon. And admittedly, I haven't read all his books. But I would say this was a transformative book for me, and it's linchpin. I don't know if you've read that one, it blows me away. And it he talks about being prepared to bring your gifts and your artistry into your work. And I was thinking about how agile asks so much of us, and that our organizations deserve and should value our gifts and our artistry, I think agile invites that but it never really used those words. And he also says that we with our sense of artistry should be prepared to lean in to do hard things. And as we lean in a true artist chips, there are a couple of other things, he adds him with that. But I'd have to pull up my library to tell you this. Boy have those meant a lot to me with regard to talking about what Agile and how we as individuals work within an Agile transformation, and how an organization should be inviting our artistry and our gifts should help us lean in and ship. A book very similar to that. Daniel Pink's drive, and that has a lot to do with how intrinsic motivation is far more compelling for individuals and teams than extrinsic rewards, or extrinsic. Punishment is too strong a term but if you don't get this done, then you're in trouble. So you have to go into this depth tomorrow. Yeah. Wow, another book, I've been doing a lot. I've been going back to time and time again. And in fact, excuse me. Pardon me, I'm using sort of my metaphor for the year is Dan Heath and Chip his book switch. Again, nothing to do with agile, but has to do with when we're prepared to preparing to be transformative, and they have three metaphors there which are, drive the rider so set a vision, motivate the elephant, which is look into the emotions and the heart of what it takes to go to transformation and then shape the path so ensure that that can occur. And again, I think about Wow, all these things I care passionately with regard to agile, agile teams, agile organizations. I want to give these gifts to people about I get how hard it is. And we're worth we're worthy of what we can get out of that. And then a bit more technical.Joe Krebs 20:14 How do you fight broadening that scope? By looking into other industries? What do you what do you think is going to happen to our community? Or where would you like to see the Agile community? Getting stronger getting? Or emphasizing certain topics? Is there anything based on what you're seeing around? Yeah, John community?Jean Tabaka 20:39 I think I wouldn't be telling you anything new with this answer, but I'll give it to you.Joe Krebs 20:43 Please give it to me. You can decide.Jean Tabaka 20:46 And I believe the original agile movement, had a wonderful focus on how to help development teams deliver, and how to protect them from the tyranny that tended to surround them that held them hostage, in some ways. What I'm hopeful about with regard to reading these new things, and the way that I would invite them into agile communities, is that we are broadening, agile scope. And its focus, and inviting, and we're broadening both into the individual values, and our quality of life. And we're broadening out to the organizational view, and organizational quality of life. This is a hard sell, when I go talk to large organizations, they'll still look at the bottom line. And the reading I've been doing is that the bottom line will take care of itself sounds pretty Frou Frou, whatever the bottom line will take care of itself. When you really believe in the people. Every one of these books says believe in the people care and the people and these other things will take care of themselves. I've also been reading Don Reinertsen must be so I feel sorry. That's okay, I keep interrupting you. So.Joe Krebs 22:21 But that has to be true, right? Like a truthful. You believe in your people? I mean, it has to be, it has to be done right. From an organizational perspective. A lot of people say that it's just like I believe, just take care of your department and takes care of itself. Just focus on the customer. Or other say just focus on the employees, like whatever your viewpoint is. But some organizations try that. And it's still not successful, because they might not be really meeting it. But they're saying, right, yeah, so I guess there's a hidden agenda.Jean Tabaka 22:54 Yes, yes. And again, thinking about some of the things I've been reading in the agile and Google Groups, etc. And talking with organizations is I wonderfully I get paid to go talk with and listen to people. How did I get this lucky? And I hear that agile still puts them on Death Marches instead of one death march at the end. Now we have a death marked every two weeks. Yeah, let's sign up for Agile. And and they're under the Agile tyranny. Yeah, they're they're under some sort of tyranny of time box.Joe Krebs 23:33 So torture. Yeah, every two weeks. And that was not the intent. No, that's that's not the intent. Yeah.Jean Tabaka 23:39 And so as we're trying to do the right thing with agile, I think it's valuable for us to look outside of agile and say, Can we reinforce ourselves of what the intent was? And can we actually have it grow through our nurturing of the intent through these through these other guides?Joe Krebs 24:00 I do want to come back to something very, very tiny, narrow topics is meetings, you said, we already had focus we have created we have created where we are delivering software. So you're doing all these good things with agile but I still observe and I just wanted to ask you, obviously you're sharing this battle Holly, Holly, anyone meetings, meetings, Ali run any in any kind of shape, they run in an effective way? Do you have any advice for the listeners out there? I do like one tip or something, how to run meetings, a little bit more effectiveJean Tabaka 24:39 Habits of Highly Effective facilitator. Okay. And sometimes I think people are looking at me and saying, Well, Jean, when you see everything is a nail, yeah, your hammer is the right tool. I would like to use my company rally software as an example this coming August 1, I'm celebrating my eighth anniversary with the company. Thank you. And I was the first consultant hired into the company. Here I was writing a book I was hired in in 2004. I was writing a book on collaboration and facilitation specifically. We were very small group at the time. And I approached the CEO, Tim and the founder, Ryan, and said, I think we could really benefit from having facilitated meetings, Agile has so many meetings. And they said, Okay, ceremonies that Yeah, show us what you've got eight, seven and a half years later, we do not have any major meetings without a facilitator. We are an organization of facilitation. And this has not been through me pushing it on people. It has been through groups pulling it. This is not just the development teams, it's every department in the company. We have retrospectives, we have planning meetings. And we now actually have a facilitators group. And we check in with one another about what are you running into? What are some more things you've been reading besides genes, but we truly believe now we are a facilitation driven organization. And when I can bring that message into other organizations, because they say, agile is killing us there are too many meetings, then what I talked about with them is how effective are your meetings? What are you doing to ensure that they meet a purpose that they don't go on forever and ever, that they don't suffer from what I call LV di D? Yeah, loudest voice driven development, loudest voice decision making driven decisions. The facilitator is there to protect everyone and make sure everyone's heard and understood in a safe environment that I believe is truly critical to Agile. And that's why I think facilitation is a isn't great and necessary tool in the Agile set of tools.Joe Krebs 27:11 How do you see like social media networks, influencing the focus of today's meetings? Do you think that's like with Twitter, with Facebook with all these technical capabilities of instant messaging? Do you think that has any influence negatively on an agile project?Jean Tabaka 27:31 Well, what I can say is that being the one of the grandmothers out there, figure template inish, initially, I put push back very hard on no electronics in meetings, what I've come to believe more valuable is our intentions in meetings, and how electronic service services again, I'll just use my own company. But I've seen it in other companies, where we make agreements with one another at the start of a meeting, we declare our intentions, and the use of electronics. For instance, recently, we had a meeting where we wanted a colleague engaged. And so we just put her in Google Chat, turned in video chat and turned around and sat in a chair and major part of our meeting. In almost every one of our conference rooms, we now have very large high def, panel screens on the walls, so that we can have people in the meetings. And people will also say I need electrons, I need to have my electronics on because I need to stay in I Am. Part of it is so that we make decisions very quickly that we remove the waste of if someone's not in the meeting, we bring in their information to make decisions more informed and faster than waiting until outside the meeting. So theJoe Krebs 29:02 technology is related to the meeting itself to the Yeah, no, it's not like just chatting with somebody about something totally unrelated to the meeting. WeJean Tabaka 29:10 have meetings that still suffer from that. Yeah. And we as facilitators are learning how to check in with people about the agreements, the intentions and the norms. And I'll ask very specifically, who knows right now that they need to be in email. Okay. Yeah, email. Well, yeah, tell me that. Yes. I I have a burning issue that I need to be engaged in and therefore the rest of the group understands why that person is doing email and the others aren't. Yeah. And we still struggle with that.Joe Krebs 29:44 You said you started as a consultant with a rally Yes, but your title now is fellow keen on finding out what a fellow does for rally. Ah, tell me a little bit about Your day. What are how does a typical day of gene debate look like? What I would ColoradoJean Tabaka 30:06 in Boulder, beautiful Boulder, Colorado? Believe it or not, this is something of an emotional question and answer for me. I have loved my work as an agile consultant. I have loved and continue to love working with rally. It is the best job I've ever had in my 30 plus years in the technology community. Well, as the first consultant I help define what we would look like as consultants. One of the big things being we would be highly facilitated. When I moved into the role of agile fellow, the intention was, this is going to sound a little self serving that I would travel less travel less. But now you know something about that. What, what has been so deeply rewarding to be agile fellow is that I actually travel more. And it has to do with the fact that I read a lot more and I blog more. And I work with different levels, higher levels in organizations. And how we came up with the word fellow was we brainstormed and said we don't know what to call this. Let's just call it an agile fellow for now. But it's not an untypical definition. I didn't want to be called an agile thought leader. I thought that was pompous. And yeah, a bit assumptive. But I did want to be someone in the rally community and then in the community at large that where I made an intention of I'm here to share ideas and bring in as we talked about earlier, ideas that aren't even necessarily from agile books.Joe Krebs 31:55 What do you do to relax during boredom? I do try to get a feeling of what is are you scared? Are you ski?Jean Tabaka 32:02 Oh, well, I'm an extremely bad skier. But you ski Yeah. I just went skiing a couple of weeks ago and suffered about five major bruises all over my body and knocked my noggin my head pretty badly. I've broken a leg skiing. I skied into a tree two very badly sprained ankles. And then this two weeks ago, the worst bruises of my life. And I still get out there. It's so beautiful. Wow, I it is so beautiful.Joe Krebs 32:40 You're a skier in training. Claiming like, as we discussed earlier, we still feel like we're in graduate school. Yes, right. And you're stillJean Tabaka 32:50 I'll be in kindergarten as king. And I do love. The other thing about living in Boulder. I chose to live there 12 years ago. It's a beautiful place. There is a lot of entrepreneurship. There's a lot of sense of sustainability, and social impact and giving back to the community. And I've had the deep honor of being engaged with some of the social initiative clubs at the University of Colorado, and also helping with some of the entrepreneur programs. I'm helping set up an agile conference at the University in September. That may not sound like leisure. Okay, let's back off. When when you're passionate about your work, it bleeds back and forth. It really does.Joe Krebs 33:43 You know, it's like, what weekday is it and you will realize how I work on Sundays. But you don't feel it.Jean Tabaka 33:49 And I am trying to move away from so much of my reading, feeding into my passion about work. And actually this summer part of the rally program for having been at the company seven years, I'll be celebrating my anniversary. We get six weeks of sabbatical. So I'm intending to truly take six weeks completely away from my passion around agile.Joe Krebs 34:17 Will that be New York?Jean Tabaka 34:19 It's going to it's going to be in an undisclosed location in France, okay for four weeks of intense language immersion. And I have reasons for doing that which go back to Seth Gordon, and my need to lean in and ship.Joe Krebs 34:39 Awesome. With Thank you, Jean, thank you for your time here. It's been a delight prior to your talk. I just want to highlight that one more time. Tell me why they go in so called Agile we're gonna hear your talk later. At Pace University at our fifth anniversary. It's not a lot. Yay, but it's five years and it's good moment for us to reflect. And we're happy to have an amazing speaker like you onstage. And not only onstage, but also on the ground, actually where we have food, drinks and we can stay for some drinks. That's aJean Tabaka 35:13 hobby. That's food and drinks. Yeah. And music,Joe Krebs 35:17 drinks music, and so we have a good time. Thank you again.Jean Tabaka 35:22 Well, I'll tell you that again. Thank you so much. And thank you for inviting my topic about tell me why that is a passion of mine. I don't think I understood it back when I was an agile neophyte, and learning just how to work within teams. I now look at how passion drives us and should drive the organization. And as Simon Sinek would stay, I would say start with why and that's start with your passion and your vision. That's what I'll be talking about this evening.Joe Krebs 35:55 Thank you, Jean. Thank you so much. Bye bye.
#livemusic #unclefrank #goodbye2022Celebrating the end of the livestreaming year and the advent of Christmas Day, join us with Uncle Frank and Emma 'Belter' Williamson, both joining us live from the Algarve, for what we are sure will be a lot of fun.Get your voice ready for those high notes and belly laughs with a sing-song and a ding-dong of a show...Please support Emma, our favourite Algarve-based singer and performer, here - https://www.paypal.me/emmabelterStay in touch between shows in our Google Group - https://groups.google.com/g/good-morning-portugalFind out how we can help you move to and enjoy life in Portugal (as well as how you can help us) at www.goodmorningportugal.comContact Carl - carl@goodmorningportugal.com Signing up with Streamyard helps us (-: https://streamyard.com/pal/4668289695875072
Google Group Product Manager, James Smith, is here with us to give us the low-down on what it takes to build AI products. Check out this episode if you want to learn more about all the incredible things we can learn from AI and how it can help us build better in the future.Get the FREE Product Book and check out our curated list of free Product Management resources here.Want to see how users experience your website or app? FullStory's award-winning platform gathers data on user experiences in real time, allowing product teams to better understand issues and successes in aggregate. Get started at fullstory.com.
Dans cet épisode, nous discutons bonnes pratiques Java, Groovy, WebAssembly, Micronaut. Nous discutons également le changement de licence de Akka entre autre. La suite de cet épisode parlera de changement d'étage gratuit chez Heroku et des vagues de licenciement dans le monde technologique. Pour rester sous les 1h d'écoute, nous avons découpé les deux derniers épisodes nouvelles en 2 parties chacun. Qu'en pensez vous ? Donnez-nous votre avis sur Twitter ou sur le Google Groups des cast codeurs. Enregistré le 9 septembre 2022 Téléchargement de l'épisode LesCastCodeurs-Episode–284.mp3 News Langages Jonathan Giles, un principal architecte de Java chez Microsoft, a un site qui partage des bonnes pratiques Java http://java.jonathangiles.net/ il couvre des bonnes pratiques Java de manière générale, mais également plus spécifiquement pour les développeurs de librairies Java Des conseils sur la bonne utilisation des dépendances, des BOMs, des versions LTS de Java, des modules Java, de la surface des APIs publiées, de faire attention à null ou au boxing, et de comprendre les interfaces fonctionnelles il y a beaucoup de contenu donc faites par petites doses Certains sujets sont plus controversés comme les modules Java les recommendations sont assez succinctes Je suppose que ce sont les recommendations que les équipes du Azure SDK suivent et qu'il a ouvert. Donc merci à lui Project Leyden https://www.infoq.com/news/2022/06/project-leyden-delays-aot/ Leyden n'a pas progressé en deux ans Accepté que GraalVM a déjà achevé les objectifs initiaux Donc vont explorer un spectre plus faible de contraintes (et probalbment d'optimisations Prochaine LTS en Sept 2023 et Leyden ne sera pas mature, donc Leyden sera utilse ~ Sept 2027 (en terme d'adoption) au plus tôt. SpringBoot pensent que CRaC (snapshot de la memoire sur disque pour demarrage plus rapide) sera très utile module-info dans Spring pourn jlink est dans la roadmap Lead de CRaC a fourni un prototype pour Quarkus: ameliore temps de demarrage pour OpenJDK mais pas la consommation memoire jlink pour Quarkus, dans un context Kube, les gains d'espace disque ne sont pas si interessant vs un layered image Micronaut a des issues ouverst pour CRaC José Paumard couvre Loom et Structured Concurrency dans sa vidéo de la série JEP Café https://inside.java/2022/08/02/jepcafe13/ Et cet article explique les problèmes classiques de concurrence comme les thread leaks et introduit la Structured Concurrency https://howtodoinjava.com/java/multi-threading/structured-concurrency/ Paul King montre l'utilisation de différents frameworks de tests avec Groovy (Spock, JUnit5, Jacoco, Jqwik et Pitest) https://blogs.apache.org/groovy/entry/testing-your-java-with-groovy Paul couvre aussi dans un autre article les comparateurs, et l'utilisation de l'API GINQ https://blogs.apache.org/groovy/entry/comparators-and-sorting-in-groovy La matrice spot est intéressante mais pas avec des noms de variable à, b, c, d :) L.article est super didactique et explique via un example concret quand utiliser quoi Je trouve les property base testing pas si simple à utiliser et avec un coup de réflection >> au truc testé. Mais peut être le cas est super simplistique pour l'usage Paul King continue de publier régulièrement des articles sur Groovy - https://blogs.apache.org/groovy/entry/working-with-sql-databases-with — accéder à des bases SQL avec Groovy et GraalVM - https://blogs.apache.org/groovy/entry/detecting-objects-with-groovy-the — détection d'objet avec le machine learning avec Deep Java Library et Apache MXNet Sortie de Spock 2.2, première version GA avec le support officiel de Groovy 4 https://twitter.com/spockframework/status/1564999285250326529 Bah la seule info intéressante est déjà dans le titre, càd c'est le support officiel de Groovy 4 Google lance un nouveau langage, appelé Carbon, comme un successeur de C++, mais en plus sympa ! https://github.com/carbon-language/carbon-lang interessant, ils veut Ceyloniser ou Scalaizer Rust avec Carbon's Kotlin-like strategy. Not a bad bet Rust n'est pas assez compatible avec C++, c'est problématique, surtout pour des boîtes comme Google avec d'énormes code bases en C++. Donc pour du green-field, Rust c'est bien. Ou c'est bien aussi pour de l'intégration avec du C. Mais pas avec du C++. State of WebAssembly https://blog.scottlogic.com/2022/06/20/state-of-wasm–2022.html On peut peut-être aussi rajouter l'utilisation de WebAssembly chez Figma https://neugierig.org/software/blog/2022/06/wasm-notes.html rust reste le langage de prédilection Python monte JavaScript est maintenant un langage viable Wasmtime est le runtime le plus populaire L'utilisation de WASM pour Serverless et la containérisation et en tant que hôte de plugin a beaucoup émergé Les api non browser sont ce dont a besoin web assembly En fait compilent pas JavaScript mais un moteur JavaScript et faire l'interprétation fonctionnalités très demandées : threads, exceptions, GC, type réflection etc Graal VM 22.2 https://medium.com/graalvm/graalvm–22–2-smaller-jdk-size-improved-memory-usage-better-library-support-and-more-cb34b5b68ec0 GraalVM JDK plus petit Plus petite conso mémoire lors de la création de native images Un travail de Quarkus, Micronaut et Spring Native pour ûblier des métadonnées partagées https://medium.com/graalvm/enhancing–3rd-party-library-support-in-graalvm-native-image-with-shared-metadata–9eeae1651da4 Possibilité de générer des heap dump dans des native images Différentes améliorations du compilateur Support de Apple Silicon Côté autres langages, GraalPython démarre plus vite et avec support étendu de librairie, et GraalJS avec une meilleurs interopérabilité Alex Blewitt un Java Champion est décédé prématurément https://www.infoq.com/news/2022/07/alex-blewitt/ notamment un contributeur à InfoQ Librairies Sortie de Micronaut 3.6 https://micronaut.io/2022/08/04/micronaut-framework–3–6–0-released/ Nouveau module Micronaut Test Resources avec une intégration TestContainers qui permet d'avoir des ressources de test externes, par exemple pour un Redis, un Elasticsearch ou autre Cédric Champeau qui a travaillé sur cette fonctionnalité a écrit un blog post complet sur le sujet https://melix.github.io/blog//2022/08/micronaut-test-resources.html Intégration avec OpenTelemetry (après Open Tracing et autre) Micronaut Data rajoute Hibernate Reactive comme intégration et plein d'autres mises à jour des différents modules existants Utiliser des serialiseurs. / deserialiseurs de messages Kafka dans votre application Quarkus https://quarkus.io/blog/kafka-serde/ explique quand on a besoin d'un serialisateur custom (hors des types fondamentaux) Explique que le support JSON existe par défaut Explique comment utiliser Avro mais avec un schéma registry Et la version full custom Akka change sa licence de ASL vers BSL (Business Source License) https://www.lightbend.com/blog/why-we-are-changing-the-license-for-akka comme MariaDB, Cockroach Labs, Sentry, Materialized BSL is source available et usage dev mais pas prod Après 3 ans, les commits en BSL se convertissent en ASL (donc pas les nouveaux commits) license commerciale disponible pour 2000$ par coeur due au fait qu'avec la maturiote de Akka les contributions ont diminué et le support est revenu a LightBend de plus en plus meme si des societes grosse utilisent Akka dans leur infra critique Gatling impacté Mécontentement de la communauté Akka et Scala, par exemple cet article d'Alexandru Nedelcu https://alexn.org/blog/2022/09/07/akka-is-moving-away-from-open-source Nous contacter Pour réagir à cet épisode, venez discuter sur le groupe Google https://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs Contactez-nous via twitter https://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs Faire un crowdcast ou une crowdquestion Soutenez Les Cast Codeurs sur Patreon https://www.patreon.com/LesCastCodeurs Tous les épisodes et toutes les infos sur https://lescastcodeurs.com/
If you're the bottleneck in a service-based business, consider freeing your time by building your bench. That is what I've done with the Pivot and Free Time coaching teams, through partner contractors who I pass coaching clients to while taking care of the marketing and back-end operations. Today I'm sharing a walkthrough of the six Notion systems powering these programs. If you'd like more detail on exactly how to scale your business with a coaching team, sign-up to access the full workshop at http://itsfreetime.com/scalecoaching. Notion Boards We Use to Run Our Coaching Team: Potential Clients Active Clients Coach Bios Coach Payouts Resource Hub Client-facing Pages
In the summer of 1980, a beloved 30-year-old schoolteacher, wife, and mother was murdered with an ax in her Texas home while her husband was away on a business trip. This killing and the subsequent discovery of her killer were so shocking that both Hulu and HBO Max have shows based on the case, though the belief of what really happened that fateful day remains divided. This is the story of Betty Gore. BONUS EPISODES patreon.com/goingwestpodcast LUMI LABS MICRODOSE To learn more about microdosing THC just do a quick search online or go to Microdose.com and use code: goingwest to get free shipping & 30% off your first order. Disclaimers and Disclosures (to be included in the show notes/description) Note: The podcast ad for the IMPACT app is unscripted and being recorded live. It may contain some slight differences. Please visit https://impact.interactivebrokers.com/ for full details of products and services. Interactive Brokers, LLC member FINRA/SIPC. The projections or other information generated by IMPACT app regarding the likelihood of various investment outcomes are hypothetical in nature, do not reflect actual investment results and are not guarantees of future results. Please note that results may vary with use of the tool over time. The paid ad host experiences and testimonials within the Podcast may not be representative of the experiences of other customers and are not to be considered guarantees of future performance or success. The opinions provided within the ad belong to the host alone. CASE SOURCES 1. Betty's obituary: https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/42600363/betty-eileen-gore 2. Snapped on Oxygen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYKsybwh_qc 3. Fort Worth Star Telegram: https://www.newspapers.com/image/634968167/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 4. Corpus Christi Caller Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/758174700/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 5. Fort Worth Star Telegram: https://www.newspapers.com/image/634965411/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 6. Corpus Christi Caller Times: https://www.newspapers.com/image/758174700/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 7. Victoria Advocate: https://www.newspapers.com/image/437200570/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 8. Fort Worth Star Telegram: https://www.newspapers.com/image/635041442/?terms=%22betty%20gore%22&match=1 9. Texas Monthly Part 1: https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/love-and-death-in-silicon-prairie-part-i-candy-montgomerys-affair/ 10. The U.S. Sun: https://www.the-sun.com/news/4925911/where-is-candy-montgomery-now/ 11. Candy's Dirt: https://candysdirt.com/2014/06/13/run-story-june-13-2014-famous-house-wylie-34-years-later/ 12. CBS: https://www.cbsnews.com/dfw/news/living-links-infamous-texas-axe-murder-haunted-decades/ 13. Google Groups: https://groups.google.com/g/alt.true-crime/c/GZNXvibkgdc 14. Soapboxie: https://soapboxie.com/government/Betty-Gore-Candy-Montgomery 15. In & Around: https://inaroundmag.com/local/anniversary-of-an-ax-murder/#:~:text=According%20to%20Deffibaugh%2C%20and%20the,ironing%20board%2C%E2%80%9D%20he%20said. 16. Quora: https://true-crime.quora.com/The-Shocking-Murder-Of-Betty-Gore-In-A-North-Texas-Town 17. Texas Monthly: https://www.texasmonthly.com/news-politics/love-and-death-in-silicon-prairie-part-ii-the-killing-of-betty-gore/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
In this Green Light episode, Catherine is joined by Chante Harris, Director of Climate Investments & Partnerships at SecondMuse. SecondMuse is an impact & innovation company that builds resilient economies by supporting entrepreneurs & the ecosystems around them. Venture for ClimateTech is a non-profit global venture studio & accelerator program associated with SecondMuse, & it recently wrapped up its first year of supporting up & coming climate tech founders. Chante speaks about some of the exciting climate tech companies SecondMuse is investing in, including businesses like Voltpost, Climatize, Clean Ocean Coatings, Atrevida Science, and Alchemr through Venture for ClimateTech. She also speaks about her role as Venture Partner for both NextGen Venture Partners & Republic.Chante also shares how she co-founded & grew Women of Color Collective in Sustainability (WOC/CS) with Jordana V in order to provide a community for women of all backgrounds in climate tech. Through WOC/CS, Chante & Jordy eventually developed a job board; a mentorship program; a Google Group; a LinkedIn group; a newsletter; custom content; & the Collective Resiliency Summit that generated 400 attendees & 20 partners & sponsors.Are you looking for your next role in climate tech? Join the largest growing network of cleantech professionals and be the first to know about when industry-leading cleantech companies post new job openings. From development to finance to marketing, check out our website: dylan-green.com/latest-jobs.Dylan Green | Clean Energy Recruitment AgencyUS Phone: +1 (917) 287-6826UK Phone: +44(0)7538921422Email: catherine@dylan-green.com
Most people can't imagine a form of the Internet that doesn't involve the World Wide Web. In fact, the World Wide Web and the Internet are so deeply entwined that the majority of users don't even realize there's a difference. But that's only because the World Wide Web was the winning technology. In the early days of the Web – i.e. the early 1990s – it was competing with other, similar technologies. In fact, some of those other technologies were significantly more popular.The most popular of those competitive technologies was called Usenet. And, just like the Web, Usenet users needed a way to search. That's why Steve Madere built Deja. Deja was the search engine for Usenet, and had things gone a little different in Internet history, we might have been talking about "deja-ing" to find what we need instead of "googling."In this episode of Web Masters, you'll hear the story of how Steve built Deja and how it could have been as impactful as Google.For a complete transcript of the episode, click here.
Devin: What do you think of as your superpower?Ben: I think I had a really interesting experience coming out of college. I grew up in, you know, upper-middle-class suburbs in New York of New York City. Then after college, my first job I got by happenstance was as an intern for the National Office of the NAACP. I was often the only white person in the room, which is just not an experience that I think a lot of my peers have ever had. I don’t know how to translate that into a superpower, but I think a level of empathy, a level of humility, understanding that while I have some great ideas, they’re just ideas.Devin: Meg, what do you think of as your superpower?Meg: I’m going to also say empathy, but I have a different life experience than Ben. I mean it in a slightly different way. I see my superpower as having the ability to help people tell their stories.Ben Wrobel, director of communications at Village Capital, and Meg Massey, a freelance journalist, have partnered to author a seminal new work called Letting Go: How Philanthropists and Impact Investors Can Do More Good by Giving Up Control.Meg summarizes the book succinctly: “We talk about how funders can and should integrate the people that they’re hoping to serve and support with their funding into the decision-making process.”There are two distinct audiences for the book, philanthropists and impact investors. While many do both, the two activities are treated mainly as two separate disciplines. Ben notes that the authors struggled about whether to include both but did because “a lot of the general principles are the same.”Village Capital is known for its unusual funding model. Ben explains:The model we have is called peer-selected investment, and we bring together 12 entrepreneurs that are working in the same sector, but not direct competitors. Twelve African entrepreneurs working on fintech, for instance. We put them through a training investment readiness program. Everyone gets a benefit out of it. But at the end of the program, the group engages in this very open, transparent ranking process and ultimately selects two of their peers to receive funding from our fund. Village Capital was formed to address a related problem in the venture capital community. “The reason village capital was created by Ross Baird and others early, early on was because venture capital, they argued, was a very closed off hegemonic sphere where a few people in a few cities are making decisions about our collective future,” Ben says.He notes, however, that Village Capital’s approach is different from the model he and Meg document in the book. “The mechanics of it are more about asking social entrepreneurs to make decisions rather than, let’s say, people living in a specific community or people with disabilities like we’ve seen with some other participatory funding models.” Meg notes that this has been a blind spot for impact investors. “Impact Investing has largely been about what you’re investing in and not how you’re doing it, that process. And there’s a lot of top-down.”The nonprofit arena has a similar problem, Ben says. “Philanthropy is largely male, largely white, largely based in a few places. Any sort of funding model where the people making decisions aren’t necessarily representative of the world at large is where participatory funding can be helpful.”Participating can be difficult, Meg notes. “If you haven’t taken the economics class, if you haven’t worked at a bank or just had any professional experience in finance, something—‘cap size,’ ‘market share’—like these are normal terms for investors, but they can be really intimidating to people who aren’t part—who don’t live and breathe that work.”Meg and Ben connected at the GIIN conference for impact investors in Amsterdam. Together, they saw a problem. “There’s a panel on support in sub-Saharan Africa that’s like five white guys from Europe,” Meg says.The book set out a nine rung ladder investors and philanthropists can climb to move from traditional to fully participatory models. Ben summarizes the process as three key steps.“At the very bottom there, you have a process that’s not participatory; it’s you simply make a decision and then move on with your life,” Ben says.“Up in the middle of the ladder is what we call consulting,” Ben explains. “Sometimes at its worst, it’s maybe token listening where you’re saying, ‘Hey, we’re going to hold a community meeting. We’re going to invite folks to join a zoom and weigh in on our investment strategy.’ But ultimately, there are no teeth to that.”“The top rung is true participation, and really the distinction there goes beyond listening,” Ben says. “It means that there is a mechanism in place for community members, for people who have lived experience to have a vote. In its purest form, it’s going to be a decision about who you invest in.”Meg provided an example. Mama Cash is a grantmaking organization that transitioned to becoming fully participatory. “They found that their staff, rather than kind of being grant analysts and making all these decisions, were facilitating the process of having their current and former grantees review applications and vote. They were given this role, and they were also trained in how to do it.” The participatory approach is snowballing, Meg says. “Ben and I were interviewing different participatory grantmakers around the world. They started a Google Group, which then turned into a Slack community, which went from those dozen people, now over seven hundred members around the world.”Empathy is a superpower both Meg and Ben use to enable their work.Superpowers for Good is a reader-supported publication. To support my work, consider becoming a paid subscriber.How You Can Develop Empathy As a SuperpowerBen sees empathy as being a radical step for investors and grantmakers. I think participatory grant-making and participatory investing, whether it's on the institutional level or on the personal level, is it's a really radical action to take. I mean, we try not to frame it as radical because, at the end of the day, it is just grant-making. It's not rocket science. But the empathy part of it is radical.Doing participatory funding “is a radical act of empathy,” he adds.Ben sees a foundational problem in his peer group. A lot of young people have the idea of wanting to save the world. There's a problem out there. It can be solved. And if it can be solved, it can be solved by the power of your own intellect. Just like a homework assignment at a liberal arts college, right? It's the perfect attitude for a generation raised on the like the optimism of the “West Wing” and the clean logic of “Freakonomics.”Ben sees this as arrogance that can impede finding more effective solutions, something he now recognizes in himself. “I’ll suddenly just get really into [a solution to a problem] and push and say, ‘This is what we need to be doing. This is it. Let’s go for it.’ And I forget that five days before, I knew nothing about this topic and still only have a third-hand understanding of it.”Humility and empathy enable a more inclusive approach that puts decision-making closer to the beneficiaries.Meg uses her empathy superpower to help other people tell better stories. She offers some storytelling advice. “You always have a beginning, middle and end, which seems obvious. You’d be surprised at how many stories are missing one of those components.”Then she notes that building tension is a critical element of a story. “What keeps us reading thrillers or watching TV shows is they build up what’s going to happen.”“The best writers for television, they’ve mastered managing that tension,” she adds.Grantwriters face significant challenges today. One complained to Meg about the labor-intensive forms and seemingly irrelevant questions. “We don’t speak the same language.”“Storytelling is a universal language,” Meg says.If you work at implementing steps to activate your empathy, like Meg and Ben, you can make it a superpower that can influence every other skill you have, enabling you to have more significant impact. Get full access to Superpowers for Good at devinthorpe.substack.com/subscribe
The one where we interview Bella Cosper a small business owner, writer, director and actress who has a vision impairment. She is a writer for the CBS Pipeline and mentee'd at Six Point Harness (Hair Love) for Animation Development. She has produced, directed, & written award-winning short films, scripted audio, TV, & stage productions. An alumni of UCLA's TV Comedy Writing & Development program, she also studied comedy at Upright Citizens Brigade, iO, & The Pack. You may recognize Bella's name from our outro credits as she runs her own production company, Egrollmedia.com and we hired her to master our first few episodes until we got our in-house editing staffed and trained! Bella is a terrific actress and talented business owner. I highly recommend her for your podcast production needs and she's a funny script writer too! Check out her latest project What the Braille? And follow her on IG @eggrollmedia and @realbellacosper and on Twitter at Bellacosper In this episode we mention a email group that no longer exists today. But fear not there are many resources online that offer a way to connect to other filmmakers, including the Alliance of Women Directors, Women In Media's Crew List, Ava DuVernay's Crew List called ARRAY Crew, Filmmakers groups on FB and Google Groups. Isn't the internet amazing! Bella also talked about a place where artists can tell their stories "Typewriter Dynasty" at the Hayworth Theatre is a theater and performing arts center at 2511 Wilshire Boulevard in the Westlake neighborhood of Los Angeles, California. Bella and I also talked a little about the Easter Seals Disability Film Challenge, a film festival that looks to make disability more visible! I encourage you to form a team and enter in 2022 - it usually happens in March/April. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/breakingbig/support
https://astralcodexten.substack.com/p/new-york-meetup-this-monday When: Monday, 9/6. I'll be arriving at 5 PM but some other people might get there earlier, around 3. Where: swung.shape.shows, aka Teardrop Park in Lower Manhattan Who: Anyone who wants. Please feel free to come even if you feel awkward about it, even if you're not “the typical ACX reader”, even if you're worried people won't like you, etc. Also, me! I'll be there on my meetups tour and hope to meet many of you. The New York organizers have asked me to link their LW event page and their meetup group's Google Group for organizing future events. If you're somewhere other than New York, check the spreadsheet to find the closest meetup to you.
I speak to games historian and graphic designer Kate Willaert about her research and current projects, as well as her efforts to turn this work into a job. We also voice our complaints about Google's Usenet archives, discuss the horrible world of YouTube publishing, the struggles of getting your work seen/read/heard as a content creator today, the value of a good hook for getting people interested in history, how to structure a historical narrative, our font choices for writing draft scripts, and much, much more. Interview conducted 1 May 2021 Links: Kate has talked lots about her Carmen Sandiego research, both on Twitter and her blog. https://www.acriticalhit.com/infographic-evolution-carmen-sandiego-crest-logo/ (Here's one example). https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/27414415-tetris (Tetris: The Games People Play), a graphic novel about the history of Tetris https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CRyAjI1mXVY&pp=sAQA (The intro) to Kate's (eventually) 50-part video series on playable female protagonists https://www.mobygames.com/game-group/protagonist-female (MobyGames tag for female protagonists) (excludes games with multiple playable characters) http://www.hardcoregaming101.net/inventories/80sheroines.htm (Hardcore Gaming 101 feature) on 1980s video game heroines The rules governing her 50-part playable female protagonists series are laid out in the intro video and https://www.acriticalhit.com/video-dames-the-history-of-playable-female-protagonists/ (this article) http://www.ataricompendium.com/archives/magazines/magazines.html (Atari Compendium's collection of scanned magazines) The Internet Archive's https://archive.org/details/magazine_rack (Magazine Rack) The Usenet archives https://groups.google.com/search?q= (on Google Groups) are now mixed in with the other groups and not easily browsable, but search still works https://archive.org/details/utzoo-wiseman-usenet-archive (The UTZOO-Wiseman archives) on archive.org are a great resource for Usenet posts https://worldradiohistory.com/index.htm (American Radio History) https://newspapers.com/ (newspapers.com) https://newspaperarchive.com/ (newspaperarchive.com) https://www.acriticalhit.com/moonlander-one-giant-leap-for-game-design/ (Kate's Moonlander article) https://www.youtube.com/c/ACriticalHit/ (Kate's YouTube channel) I didn't go into specifics on the many significant games made in 1973, so here are several off the top of my head: Maze, arguably https://www.polygon.com/features/2015/5/21/8627231/the-first-first-person-shooter (the first first-person shooter) Spasim, one of the earliest 3D games Airfight/Airace, the first computer flight combat sim (http://lifeandtimes.games/episodes/files/2.html (covered on this show in ep2)) Moonlander Empire (the PLATO one) David Ahl's 101 BASIC Computer Games collection/book Lemonade Stand Kate's https://www.acriticalhit.com/origin-of-gamer/ (article/video) on the origin of the term "gamer" Kate's Moonlander article has good info and sources for the electro-mechanical Lunar Lander game, but those of you looking for more detail may appreciate https://allincolorforaquarter.blogspot.com/2016/06/the-ultimate-so-far-history-of-nutting.html (this article) that contextualises its place in early coin-op game history (the article is about Nutting Associates, but Lunar Lander is mentioned at the end) Kate's best social media posts are highlighted in https://criticalkate.substack.com/ (her newsletter). Two specific ones we mentioned: The https://twitter.com/katewillaert/status/1308881238145617920 ("City Boy Mario" Twitter thread) The https://twitter.com/katewillaert/status/1193611691633852417 (Comic Sans Twitter thread) As of August 9th, 2021, the best of these threads are available in an ebook that's part of a video game StoryBundle along with a bunch of other cool games books. https://storybundle.com/games (Check it out.)...
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goldedu.org --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gold-edu/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gold-edu/support
Vincent Wu, Google Group Product Manager, is going to talk about understanding how busy executives think, what is necessary to successfully motivate action, and how to structure your communication to maximize effectiveness. Get the FREE Product Book and check out our curated list of free Product Management resources here
In this episode, we are exploring how to prepare ourselves for the Google Certified Educator Level 2 Exam. Both of us need to complete our recertification this month so we're reflecting about our past experiences with this exam as well as our strategy for preparation. If you like what you hear, we would love it if you could share this episode with a colleague or friend. And make sure you subscribe so that you don't miss out on any new content! And consider supporting the show by buying us a coffee or two!We would love to hear from you – leave a comment on our website OR check out our FLIPGRID!Featured Content**For detailed show notes, please visit our website at edugals.com/52**Key Information:Cost of the exam: $25 USDTime: 180 minutesCertification is valid for 3 yearsSuggested time to spend on the curriculum: approx. 15 hours11 units total in the curriculumExam is comprised of two sections: A multiple choice, matching, etc section and a task based sectionThe majority of the exam is focused on the tasks/scenarios... don't spend too much time on the first section!Recertification exams are scenario-based onlyDon't stress... you've got this!Don't over analyze the questions - it's not as complicated as you thinkStrategies:Start with the unit reviews in the curriculum to test your current knowledgeTry out the tasks in the task cards linked below to test your skillsGoogle Sheets + YouTube = Pivot Tables :)Focus on the tools that you are unfamiliar with - Maps, Earth, Blogger, Groups, Add-ons, Books, Scholar, etc.Resources:Google Teacher CenterGoogle Certified Educator Level 1 Exam EpisodeGoogle's Advanced Curriculum Training for Level 2Mockaroo Random Data GeneratorLevel 2 Task Cards Google Workspace Skills ChecklistFundamentals and Advanced Course OutlinesEric Curts Level 2 Checklist Global GEG Bootcamp is coming!Google Arts & Culture EpisodeTeaching Resources in Google Arts & CultureEduGals YouTube Channel - Subscribe!Support the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/edugals)
Happy Valentine's Day! We both realized we'd already released some stories that hit the Valentine's Day sweet spot for us over on Patreon! Stacie has the creepy, kooky, mysterious and spooky story of cartoonist Charles Addams, whose decades of darkly screwball New Yorker cartoons became The Addams Family. Then, Alicia has perhaps the perfect distillation of Truman Capote's Swans, the actress and author Carol Saroyan Matthau, who may be the most direct inspiration for Capote's Holly Golightly character. Promo Betterhelp.com/trashy. Get 10% off your first month when you sign up at the link! The Oak Tree Group. Need help getting your financial house in order? This all-female financial planning firm is happy to help. Visit them on the web at theoaktreegroup.net. Stacie's Receipts The Cultural History of 'The Addams Family', Patrick Sauer, Smithsonian Magazine An Addams Family History, Dan Owens, Dan's Media Digest Charles Addams, Lambiek.net (Includes the "Downhill Skier" cartoon) Meet the New Addams Family: The weird brood from Charles Addams cartoons and '60s TV is back in a big-name, $30-million movie, Patrick Goldstein, Los Angeles Times (1991) When Alabama flourished as divorce mill, famous people flocked here to get unhitched, Kelly Kazek, Alabama.com Google Groups copy of the obituary for second wife Barbara Barb, later Lady Colyton Charles Addams Dead at 76; Found Humor in the Macabre (Published 1988) New York Times Alicia's Receipts Among the Porcupines: A Memoir, Carol Matthau (Amazon link) This Funny Valentine (washingtonpost.com) Object of Desire: Carol Matthau Has Devoted a Lifetime to Charming, Soothing and Inspiring Great, Sometimes Troubled Men (latimes.com) Carol Matthau, a Frank and Tart Memoirist, Dies at 78 (nytimes.com) Advertise with Hemlock Creatives We are growing our show offerings! To learn about advertising opportunities with Trashy Divorces, Done & Dunne, and other forthcoming projects, contact AdvertiseCast.
Happy New Year from all of us at tabGeeks! There is a ton in store for us this year, starting with a new podcast at workspacerecap.com so go and check it out! Our guest this week, Steve, is a wealth of knowledge on Google Workspace, runs the GSuite SubReddit, and is active in a number of different communities, always sharing his knowledge in SaaS management and Google Workspace specifically. He has quite a story and is just getting started! Join us as we explore some of the behind the scenes of Google Workspace back when it was Google Apps, and our chance meeting in person years ago at Google, and learn how Steve got into tech with a Tandy 1000 EX with an Intel 8088 processor and endless computer manuals and built his career from there. If you would like access to the folder of Google Workspace resources Steve has put together, Documents can be found in the Workspace Admins [Public] (https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/0ANkIXd3coZwTUk9PVA) shared drive which can be accessed by joining the Google Group (https://groups.google.com/a/workspaceadmins.org/g/workspace-admins-community-comment) which gives you comment access to all the files there. Continue the conversation and join our online community of IT professionals at www.tabgeeks.com/slack You can also find me on Twitter @MrJNowlin and Steve @larsen161 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tabgeeks/message
TensorFlow is a machine learning library that allows a user to program deep learning architectures. It is normally associated with backend programming languages like Python and is written in C++, but what if you can utilize it in Javascript to program deep learning models for frontend web applications. Guest Jason Mayes talks about doing this with Tensorflow JS. Sponsors Machine Learning for Software Engineers by Educative.io Audible.com CacheFly Panel Charles Max Wood Gant Laborde Guest Jason Mayes Links https://medium.com/google-developer-experts/improve-your-virtual-setup-sound-eee8c22036fc https://github.com/jasonmayes http://www.jasonmayes.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/creativetech Github Code Google Group codepen.io/topic/tensorflowGlitch glitch.com/@TensorFlowJS Picks Gant Laborde: Beginning Machine Learning with TensorFlow.js Charles Max Wood: https://podcastplaybook.co Legends (TV show) Jason Mayes: #MadeWithTFJS Follow Adventures in Machine Learning on Twitter > @podcast_ml
Sonya Jaquez Lewis has been active in LGBT and political issues for many years. In this interview, she shares her perspective on the challenges we've faced and looks to the future. Some of her involvement have included: Co-hosting the Creating Change Conference in Denver, CO, President of the Board for Boulder Pride (now Out Boulder), Delegate to the Democratic National Convention for the last three elections, and The Compete Diversity 2016 Female Athlete of the Year Award. With our new political climate, we need to stand strong. Listen to this interview for a look back to our wins and a strategy for the future. The left photo, Sonya and her partner Allison (right), celebrate her win at the Compete Diversity Awards. The right photo: Connie Waldman, Publisher of Compete Magazine and Sonya Jaquez Lewis, 2016 Female Athelete of the Year. If you enjoy the Lesbian Story Project, please subscribe to the podcast on I-tunes, Stitcher and Google Groups. Help get the word out by leaving a rating and a review on i-Tunes.
On this week’s WELSTech Podcast we wrap up our coverage of the recent Google Education Summit, sharing more discussion with conference attendees as well as some tips from the “rock star” presenters who graced the stage. The discussion: More Gooogling Out – Part 2 of Martin and Sallie’s coverage of Google Education Summit, recorded at Discovery World in Milwaukee, includes interviews with attendees and shout outs from conference presenters with some of their favorite tips. Also check out photos from the Summit posted in the WELSTech Flickr group pool. (0:54) Rachel Pierson from Trinity in Waukesha, WI (8:05) Pastor Dustin Yahnke from Faith in Sussex, WI (17:54) Molly Schroeder (@followmolly) from Flipped Education shares some tricks for inserting images in Google Drive content (19:19) Ben Friesen (@benjaminfriesen), Molly’s partner at Flipped Education, unveiled a new script, PageMeister, which turns Google Form data into auto-generated pages on a Google Site – perfect for busy teachers who want to create pages on their Site for each student! (21:02) David Chan (@chanatown) who presented at the Summit on a variety of topics and can be found online at davidschan.com talks about the power of Google Groups for classroom communication (22:23) Caleb Hundt (@hundtcaleb), half of The Ed Tech Gurus, shares the “Big 3” buttons you’ll want to know when editing Google Sites (23:54) Nick Bakke (@bakke3129), the other half of The Ed Tech Gurus, talks about the many uses of blogs in the classroom Coming up on WELSTech: (24:48) Episode 296 – We are back in the “Church and School Website Content” summer series swing next week. Join Martin and Sallie for a discussion of the next chapter in our developing eBook on the About & What to Expect sections of your site. (Release date – 07/02/13) Get involved: Add a comment Send us an e-mail welstech@wels.net Use the link on the right to leave us a voicemail Add to the WELSTech wiki welstechwiki.wels.net Contribute to the #WELSTech Twitter conversation Follow us on Twitter – welstech, mspriggs and salliedraper Share with the diigo group welstech Join the WELSTech community: WELSTech listserve WELSTech on Facebook WELSTech on Google+ WELSTech on Pinterest
Antivirus for smart phones, Google Groups revealed, fixing corrupted formatting in Word, using Office365 with Skydrive, cleaning browser cookies, safety of online banking over Wi-Fi, Profiles in IT (Miguel de Icaza, creator of GNOME and Mono), Dutch national arrested for Spamhous DDoS attack, LivingSocial hacked (50,000 names compromised, SQL injection likely attack vector, change your password), juror tossed in jail for texting during trial, and the Internet will be the future for video distribution(Netflix expanding rapidly, broadcasters trying to catch up, look for Amazon or Apple TV. This show originally aired on Saturday, April 27, 2013, at 9:00 AM EST on WFED (1500 AM).
[audio:http://media.libsyn.com/media/gspn/PodcastAnswerMan120-NamingSchemesAndEmailLists.mp3] Podcast Answer Man Episode 120 Naming Schemes And Email Lists Right Click Here To Download In this episode John called in to ask about Email Lists. I mention how I use Google Groups. While I've never used their service, I've heard a lot of good things about Constant Contact. Jonathan sent and audio recording […] The post 120 Podcast Answer Man – Naming Schemes And Email Lists appeared first on The Cliff Ravenscraft Show.