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Master of Search - messbare Sichtbarkeit auf Google (Google Ads, Analytics, Tag Manager)
Sun, 31 Mar 2024 22:35:00 +0000 https://master-of-search.podigee.io/210-warum-ist-die-klickrate-in-meiner-pmax-so-gering 11bf4680d0f54d677bbb1ff8bbbe2572 Hintergründe einfach erklärt Hast du dich je gefragt, warum die Klickrate in deinen maximalen Performance-Kampagnen (PMAX) so niedrig ist? Du bist nicht allein mit dieser Frage! In dieser Podcast-Episode taucht Christoph von Master of Search tief in dieses Rätsel ein. Wir unterstützen Unternehmen dabei, ihre Google-Kampagnen nicht nur messbar zu machen, sondern diese Messungen auch in profitable Ergebnisse umzuwandeln. Heute nehmen wir uns die Zeit, einen der häufigsten Stolpersteine im Performance Marketing zu entwirren: die mysteriös geringe Klickrate bei PMAX-Kampagnen. Christoph erklärt, dass eine maximale Performance-Kampagne eine Mischung aus allen Werbenetzwerken ist, die Google zu bieten hat. Von Suchanzeigen über Display und YouTube bis hin zu Google Mail und dem Discover-Feed auf Android-Geräten – PMAX fasst all das zusammen. Doch warum führt diese breite Abdeckung zu einer geringen Klickrate? Mit anschaulichen Beispielen zeigt Christoph, dass nicht jede Anzeigenplatzierung gleich ist. Eine Suche in Google kann eine hohe Klickrate haben, weil sie die direkte Intention des Nutzers trifft. Im Gegensatz dazu sind die Klickraten im Display-Netzwerk oder bei YouTube oft deutlich niedriger, da die Nutzer dort nicht aktiv nach deinem Angebot suchen. Diese Episode ist gespickt mit wertvollen Tipps, wie du die verschiedenen Komponenten deiner PMAX-Kampagnen verstehst und optimierst. Erfahre, wie die Verteilung deines Budgets über verschiedene Netzwerke die Klickrate beeinflusst und wie du mithilfe von Google Ads Scripts noch tiefere Einblicke in die Performance deiner Kampagnen erhältst. Wenn du mehr über die faszinierende Welt der Google Ads und wie du deine Kampagnen messen und optimieren kannst, wissen möchtest, bist du hier genau richtig. Lass dich von Christoph durch die Komplexität von PMAX-Kampagnen führen und entdecke, wie du deine Werbeausgaben noch effizienter gestalten kannst. Verpasse nicht diese Chance, dein Wissen zu erweitern und deine Google Ads Kampagnen auf das nächste Level zu heben. Hör jetzt rein! Du brauchst mal einen Blick auf deine Google Ads Kamapgnen? Du möchtest dein Werbebudget in Google Ads sinnvoll und zielführend einsetzen? Möchtest du selbst verstehen und steuern können, was im Suchmaschinenmarketing wichtig ist? Vereinbare jetzt dein gratis Strategiegespräch: https://Master-of-Search.de Webinar-Anmeldung: https://master-of-search.de/webinar-anmeldung Mail: podcast@master-of-search.de Abonniere unseren YouTube-Kanal: https://www.youtube.com/@MasterofSearch Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christophmohr/ Impressum: Master of Search GmbH Eiswerderstr. 20 13585 Berlin Tel: 030 - 956 23 510 Handelsregister: HRB 237495 B, Amtsgericht Charlottenburg (Berlin) Geschäftsführer: Christoph Mohr, Jörg Ullmann 210 full Hintergründe einfach erklärt no pmax,maximale performance,ctr,klickrate Christoph Mohr, Jörg Ullmann, Master of Search GmbH 459 210
There are times when a new password is what you need. Here's how to change it.
A must listen, this episode goes through all you need to know about the email marketing software and tech updates that have happened over 2023 and some important changes coming in early 2024.From minor campaign edit capabilities to major pricing & plan structure changes, I have you covered.First is the most important part where I explain some big changes coming to the requirements Google Mail and Yahoo Mail have regarding authentication - and the steps you need to take now to make sure you don't end up in spam jail. Then I look at the way the different email marketing software providers are utilising AI and if it is actually helpful or not.Finally, I get stuck into the below 5 email marketing software providers to discuss specific changes and if they are actually important or just something that you kinda, maybe, might want to use someday.Timestamps for each software: 14:32 ActiveCampaign 21:03 Klaviyo 26:25 MailerLite 31:56 ConvertKit 36:03 MailChimp 40:21 Wrap up If you want help setting up your software check out the below courses: How to… ActiveCampaign How to… MailerLite How to… Klaviyo How to… ConvertKit More helpful podcast episodes: The ActiveCampaign Episode The MailerLite Episode The Klaviyo Episode The ConvertKit Episode The MailChimp Episode Email Deliverability Demystified Using ChatGPT for your Email Marketing Want to see more of what I get up to when I'm not podcasting? Hang out with me on Instagram @yaelkeon Get my freebie: 80+ Fill in the Blank Email Ideas Shop The Email Marketing Superstore Join The Email Experience Have my team get your email software setup via Email Automation Co See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Falls ihr Android auf eurem Handy habt, nutzt ihr sicherlich auch die Google eigenen Apps für Browser, Google Chrome, E-Mail, Google Mail, Kalender, Google Kalender usw. Allerdings gibt es an fast jeder App etwas auszusetzen: Chrome ist für eine mobile App viel zu überladen und gerade ein Teil der Funktionen, die das Paket so überladen machen, laufen auch nicht richtig. Oder Mail, gute Benutzerführung ist anders. Der Kalender hat sich in den vergangenen Jahren, von ein bisschen farblichem Anstrich, um nicht eine Funktion oder endlich sinnvollen Neuerungen, wie einfachere Einladungen und schnellere Terminerstellung erweitert. Und so geht es weiter und weiter mit den Google Anwendungen. Somit könnte hier schon Ende sein. Aber dann - schickt Google leise ein Update für die App Rekorder auf die Geräte - und wenn auch nicht ganz fehlerfrei, hat es diese Funktion doch faustdick hinter den virtuellen Ohren! Leider ist die maximale Zeichenanzahl für die Shownotes dank einer neuen Norm auf 4.000 Zeichen begrenzt. Daher kann ich den kompletten Blogtext und auch die Bilder nicht mehr in voller Länge in die Shownotes bringen. Daher ist hier mit dem Text bedauerlicherweise schon Schluss. Aber auf... https://ibdnhubzs.de ...geht es auf meinem Blog direkt weiter mit dem Text und in vielen Fällen auch mit begleitendem Bildmaterial - viel Spaß! Und wöchentlich eine neue Anregung mehr! Meinen Podcast abonnieren: | direkt | iTunes | Spotify | Google | amazon STOLZ PRODUZIERT UND AUFGENOMMEN MIT ULTRASCHALL5! Folge direkt herunterladen
In den Online-Nachrichten berichtet Achim Killer über künstliche Intelligenz in Hollywood und vor dem UN-Sicherheitsrat. Phisher greifen Google-Mail- und iCloud-User an. Und Facebook präsentiert die zweite Version seines Sprachmodells.
Eine ganz besondere Folge für uns, denn unser erster Gast war am Start: Lara Schmidt. Aufmerksame Hörer wissen natürlich, dass sie seit inzwischen fast vier Jahren die Titelstimme unseres kleinen aber feinen Podcasts ist. Grund genug, ihr einmal gründlich "auf den Zahn" zu fühlen, was eine soloselbstständige Künstlerin so macht, wie man überhaupt diese Idee in die Tat umsetzt und was für tägliche Herausforderungen im Alltag zwischen Synchronsprechen, Werbetexten, YouTube-Videos, Twitch-Streaming, Social-Media-Management und Podcasting so anstehen. Wir waren jedenfalls so begeistert von diesem Gespräch, dass diese Folge einfach mal länger geworden ist. Lara, wir sind froh, dass wir Dich haben! Wer weitere Infos über Lara Schmidt haben möchte, findet unten im Text weitere Infos. Außerdem Updates zum Thema blauer Haken - jetzt auch bei Google Mail, die nervigen Momente von LinkedIn, und TADAAA: eine neue Bäckergeschichte. Abzocke bei der Kartenzahlung und TWIX wird wieder RAIDER. Dieser Podcast wird technisch realisiert durch SQUADCAST und ULTRASCHALL Intro-Sprecherin und Infos zu unserem heutigen Gast: Lara Schmidt VA
Freitag: Dena Zarrin hat am 4. November alle News aus dem Internet für euch. Google Mail hat ein Update angekündigt, mit dem Pakete leichter verfolgt werden können. Das Album '' Her Loss'' von den Drake und 21savage wurde nach vielen arbeitsintensiven Promo-Aktionen gedroppt. Im französischen Parlament wurde ein Abgeordneter von einem Mitglied der rechtsnationalen Fraktion rassistisch beleidigt. Hier kommt ihr zum Wakanda Forever - Music From and Inspired By Soundtrack. Und die Fake-Kampagne von Drake und 21 Savage gibt es auf deren Instagram Channels zu sehen. Seid ihr auf die Promo-Aktionen von Drake und 21 Savage reingefallen? Schreibt's uns an fomo@spotify.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
UK Prime Minister of the Month Club has a new featured member, Google is sued over biometric data collection that took place without consent, and financial guru Robert Kiyosaki says the US dollar is “toast”. The Dogechain token price has tripled over the last week, women remain bullish on crypto in spite of bear market, and Polkadot hits an all-time high in on-chain development. Talk.. talk.. It's only talk. Babble, burble, banter, Bicker, bicker, bicker, Brouhaha, balderdash, ballyhoo. It's only talk. And it's what we do as we put the spotlight on current events in the blockchain world. Pay careful attention and you'll find out how to get an original Bad Crypto US dollar toast NFT dropped into your wallet on our “a toast to the bear market” Bad News episode #637 of The Bad Crypto Podcast. Full Show Notes at: http://badco.in/637 Bad Crypto Nifty Club: http://badcrypto.uncut.fm SUBSCRIBE, RATE, & REVIEW: Apple Podcast: http://badco.in/itunesGoogle Podcasts: http://badco.in/googleSpotify: http://badco.in/spotify FOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA: Twitter: @badcryptopod - @joelcomm - @teedubyaFacebook: /BadCrypto - /JoelComm - /teedubyawFacebook Mastermind Group: /BadCryptoLinkedIn: /in/joelcomm - /in/teedubyaInstagram: @BadCryptoPodcastEmail: badcryptopodcast[at]gmail[dot]comPhone: SEVEN-OH-8-88FIVE- 90THIRTY BE A FEATURED GUEST: http://badco.in/apply TIME STAMPS 00:00 - Intro 04:15 - UK Prime Minister of the Month Update - Rishi Sunak 06:30 - Robert Kiyosaki says US Dollar is toast 09:30 - Chinese intelligence officers paid $61k in BTC to bribe US gov't officials to steal documents 11:15 - Google being sued over biometric data collection without consent; get off Google Chrome and use Brave browser; get off Google Mail and go to ProtonMail 14:05 - Warren Buffet backed neobank has selected Polygon for web3 token; waiting for $MATIC to pump 14:45 - Axie Infinity dropped another 22%; once an exclusive form of income for players during COVID-19, now dumping 15:30 - Polkadot hits an all-time high in development activity with more than 500 contributions each day in September to the chain's GitHub 17:08 - Ripple launching testing sidechain; could Ripple fly once their SEC lawsuit clears? 18:17 - Apple metaverse applications coming to life; if you want to brush up on our recent metaverse conversation with Cathy Hackl, tune in to http://badco.in/319 19:50 - Women remain bullish on crypto despite bear market 20:05 - NFT royalties top $1.8 billion; royalties is money programmed into the smart contracts and is transferred back to the creators and artists 21:33 - A free NFT; Bad Crypto US Dollar is Toast NFT 23:20 - Closing Remarks DISCLAIMER:Do your own due diligence and research. Joel Comm and Travis Wright are NOT FINANCIAL ADVISORS. We are sharing our journey with you as we learn more about this crazy little thing called cryptocurrency. We make NO RECOMMENDATIONS. Don't take anything we say as gospel. Do not come to our homes with pitchforks because you lost money by listening to us. We only share with you what we are learning and what we are investing it. We will never "pump or dump" any cryptocurrencies. Take what we say with a grain of salt. You must research this stuff on your own! Just know that we will always strive for RADICAL TRANSPARENCY with any show associations.Support the show: https://badcryptopodcast.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
UK Prime Minister of the Month Club has a new featured member, Google is sued over biometric data collection that took place without consent, and financial guru Robert Kiyosaki says the US dollar is “toast”. The Dogechain token price has tripled over the last week, women remain bullish on crypto in spite of bear market, and Polkadot hits an all-time high in on-chain development.Talk.. talk.. It's only talk. Babble, burble, banter, Bicker, bicker, bicker, Brouhaha, balderdash, ballyhoo. It's only talk. And it's what we do as we put the spotlight on current events in the blockchain world. Pay careful attention and you'll find out how to get an original Bad Crypto US dollar toast NFT dropped into your wallet on our “a toast to the bear market” Bad News episode #637 of The Bad Crypto Podcast.Full Show Notes at: http://badco.in/637Bad Crypto Nifty Club: http://badcrypto.uncut.fmSUBSCRIBE, RATE, & REVIEW:Apple Podcast: http://badco.in/itunesGoogle Podcasts: http://badco.in/googleSpotify: http://badco.in/spotifyFOLLOW US ON SOCIAL MEDIA:Twitter: @badcryptopod - @joelcomm - @teedubyaFacebook: /BadCrypto - /JoelComm - /teedubyawFacebook Mastermind Group: /BadCryptoLinkedIn: /in/joelcomm - /in/teedubyaInstagram: @BadCryptoPodcastEmail: badcryptopodcast[at]gmail[dot]comPhone: SEVEN-OH-8-88FIVE- 90THIRTYBE A FEATURED GUEST: http://badco.in/applyTIME STAMPS00:00 - Intro04:15 - UK Prime Minister of the Month Update - Rishi Sunak06:30 - Robert Kiyosaki says US Dollar is toast09:30 - Chinese intelligence officers paid $61k in BTC to bribe US gov't officials to steal documents11:15 - Google being sued over biometric data collection without consent; get off Google Chrome and use Brave browser; get off Google Mail and go to ProtonMail14:05 - Warren Buffet backed neobank has selected Polygon for web3 token; waiting for $MATIC to pump14:45 - Axie Infinity dropped another 22%; once an exclusive form of income for players during COVID-19, now dumping15:30 - Polkadot hits an all-time high in development activity with more than 500 contributions each day in September to the chain's GitHub17:08 - Ripple launching testing sidechain; could Ripple fly once their SEC lawsuit clears? 18:17 - Apple metaverse applications coming to life; if you want to brush up on our recent metaverse conversation with Cathy Hackl, tune in to http://badco.in/319 19:50 - Women remain bullish on crypto despite bear market20:05 - NFT royalties top $1.8 billion; royalties is money programmed into the smart contracts and is transferred back to the creators and artists21:33 - A free NFT; Bad Crypto US Dollar is Toast NFT 23:20 - Closing RemarksDISCLAIMER:Do your own due diligence and research. Joel Comm and Travis Wright are NOT FINANCIAL ADVISORS. We are sharing our journey with you as we learn more about this crazy little thing called cryptocurrency. We make NO RECOMMENDATIONS. Don't take anything we say as gospel. Do not come to our homes with pitchforks because you lost money by listening to us.We only share with you what we are learning and what we are investing it. We will never "pump or dump" any cryptocurrencies. Take what we say with a grain of salt. You must research this stuff on your own! Just know that we will always strive for RADICAL TRANSPARENCY with any show associations.Support the show: https://badcryptopodcast.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The development of new technologies has quickened the pace of living in every corner of the world. As a result, it is impossible to prevent lawyers from becoming interested in technology. However, if attorneys want to provide the highest level of service to their clients while simultaneously simplifying their work lives, they need to improve their technology skills. This week, we are joined by Lindsey Corbin to discuss how she applies technology in her professional life and how it has contributed to her success. Lindsey is the Chief Executive Officer of Delegate.legal. It is a leading provider of virtual paralegal services that can easily incorporate itself into existing law firms and businesses. Delegate.legal has more than 25 years of combined experience in the field of trademarks. It works with attorneys to develop its trademark practices by providing outsourced paralegal offerings, coaching, and consultation on practice development and additional products. Delegate.legal also works with attorneys to build different products. In addition, those who require other administrative services can also take advantage of Lindsey and her team's provision of virtual assistants. Join Lindsey and me as we talk about the following three questions and more! What are three security measures solos and small firms should keep in mind when working with virtual paralegals? What is a tech stack and what three ways attorneys can set up some basic tech stack? What are three ways attorneys can use technology to make sure their virtual staff are all on the same page at work? In our conversation, we cover: [01:15] Tech Setup - Lindsey discusses her current technological setup and her relationship with Microsoft and Apple products. [06:31] Security Measures - Lindsey shares three security measures that small firms should keep when working with virtual paralegals. Furthermore, she mentions her favorite antivirus software and why she likes it. [09:51] VPN – Lindsey provides a thorough explanation of how she makes use of VPN. [14:00] Tech Stack – Lindsey explains what a tech stack consists of and three ways attorneys can set up simple tech stacks. [17:40] Email - Lindsey discusses her email preferences for business, including whether she prefers Google Mail, Outlook, or owning her own domain. [19:12] Practice Management Software – Lindsey talks about her favorite practice management software. [20:35] Calls – Lindsey expresses her view on using a cell phone and Google Voice for business-related matters. [22:44] Cybersecurity Insurance – Lindsey provides her perspective on why an attorney needs cybersecurity insurance. [24:52] Laptop – When asked about her preferred second monitor to utilize while traveling, Lindsey raves about how much she adores her laptop. [26:14] Third-Party Docketing Software - Lindsey describes the third-party docketing software she utilizes. [27:22] Tools for Virtual Work – Lindsey explores three ways attorneys may utilize technology to guarantee their virtual workforce is on the same page, evaluating Slack, Trello, and Microsoft Teams and explaining why she enjoys each. [31:34] Shifts – We dive into the shifts in the legal business due to the pandemic's democratization effect and how innovation in the legal services arena provides help and its efficacy. [36:48] Transfer of Information Issues - Being a Windows user, Lindsey discusses the difficulties she encounters in transferring data to her Mac-using team and how she overcomes them. Resources: Connect with Lindsey: LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/lindsey-corbin/ Website: delegate.legal/ Equipment Mentioned in the Podcast Dell Vostro Desktop: dell.com/en-us/work/shop/scc/sr/desktops-n-workstations/vostro-desktops Microsoft Surface Pro: microsoft.com/en-us/surface/devices/surface-pro-models iPhone 12: apple.com/iphone-12/key-features Apple Watch: apple.com/watch iPad: apple.com/ipad Cannon Inkjet Printers: asia.canon/en/consumer/products/search?category=printing&subCategory=inkjet-printers Epson Scanners: epson.com/For-Home/Scanners/c/h2 Software & Services Mentioned in the Podcast Windows 11: microsoft.com/en-us/windows LastPass: www.lastpass.com McAfee Anti-virus: www.mcafee.com Clio Practice Management: www.clio.com Gravity Legal: gravity-legal.com Lawpay: www.lawpay.com Slack: slack.com Trello: trello.com Alt Legal: www.altlegal.com WebTMS: www.webtms.com
Good news for Chromebook users, Google announced last week that one of the most popular video editing software apps will soon be available on ChromeOS - LumaFusion is a real hit with iPhone and Android users but until now hasn't run on Chromebook which have lacked a real serious video editing system, this would be a great step forward and make Chromebooks more useful for content creation and creative tasks. Google has also announced a new Pixel smartwatch coming later this year. The company owns FitBit and this could be a powerful integration between a quality mobile device, mass appeal apps like Google Mail, search and calendar and one of the best known names in health and fitness. A friend of mine broke his wrist last week and been trying to type with one hand ever since…it's given him a whole new perspective on the accessibility of our technology - something many of us never really think about. If you find yourself in a similar situation, typing WIN-H on any Windows programme opens up the Voice to type feature which means you can dictate whatever you want to say, instead of typing it out. Get the same on a Mac through System Preferences, Keyboard and click ‘dictation'
Do you work in an environment where there are lots of presentations and PowerPoints? One way to liven it all up is to explore the world of Pecha Kucha. This is a Japanese presentation technique where the speaker is limited to 20 slides which display for 20 seconds each and autoplay. This forces the presenter to be extremely well organised and to keep up otherwise they'll get entirely tied in knots. For the audience, it's great fun and means meetings are highly focussed with only the absolute priority information coming across. Well this coming Saturday is International Pecha Kucha Day. A diverse range of special guests will be taking part from around the world - organisers are calling it a 24 hour worldwide celebration of creativity, optimism and love - find out more at pechakucha.com It's free to watch the sessions and you're even invited to share your own Pecha Kucha through social media using the hashtag ipk2022 Zoom and Teams get much of the attention when it comes to webinars but Google Meet might be worth another look. It integrates very easily with Google Mail and Calendar, there's nothing to download and if you've got files already stored on Google Drive it's seamless to share them with participants through the life chat or to drop them into the presentation itself. The system looks deceptively simple which leads some users to think it doesn't have the more advanced functions of its competitors - but it often does - even down to the virtual backgrounds and generating captions.
Bei Google wird gerade an einem neuen Aussehen für Google Mail (Gmail) gearbeitet. Im Mittelpunkt steht die Verzahnung mit weiteren Diensten des Konzerns. Google Chat, Meet und Spaces sollen noch präsenter werden. Die Suche des Mail-Dienstes wird umfassender gestaltet.
Google arbeitet an einem neuen Design für Google Mail (Gmail). Im Mittelpunkt steht die Verzahnung mit weiteren Diensten des Konzerns. Google Chat, Meet und Spaces sollen noch präsenter werden. Auch die Suche des Mail-Dienstes wird umfassender.
WE'RE BACK!LATE CHRISTMAS DINNER! RETURN OF VHS!MICHELLE BIRTHDAY! SUIT! CROSS COUNTRY!MUSIC! PEDRO THE LION! TELLY! EUPHORIA!BOOK OF BOBA FETT! JACKASS! PARKS AND RECS!MOVIE! SPIDER-MAN! FINCH! WATER LILLIES!GAMES! MAN OF MEDAN! SPIDER-MAN! FAR CRY!6 GOLDEN COINS! MARVEL VS. CAPCOM! BANJO!YOUR EMAILS! PLANTS! CHAIR MAN! GEORGE!POINTLESS FORTUNES QUIZ RETURNS!WRESTLING! AEW! THE ROYAL RUMBLE!AND MUCH MUCH MORE!
Welcome back to another episode! In this week's episode, Mr. Shovekraft and I discuss time, the justice system, society, the archons, government, mental health, and even some Aleister Crowley... you know how much I hate that fuck! So sit back and enjoy the show! Make sure to check out Shovecraft's work: IG: @h.p_shovekraft Twitch: Twitch.tv/invaderdaggett_ttv Please shoot us a comment, rating, and follow us on social media! Check out our website at www.thejuanonjuanpodcast.com IG: @thejuanonjuanpodcast TIKTOK: @thejuanonjuanpodcast YT: "The Juan on Juan Podcast" Stake your Cardano with us at FIGHT POOL at fightpool.io! Thank you for tuning in! Full transcript: 00:00:13Welcome back to another episode of the 101 podcast on your whole swan. 00:00:47Hiwan. 00:00:49Today, we're probably going to talk about some shit. So welcome to the first. First time ever, going to call you by your by your government name, or you want me to call you by something else. I don't ever go by my government name fucking government. So HP shove crafts. 00:01:08What's up, dude? Not much, man. How you doing stuff? Drink some fucking coffee. Yeah, I was going to say h piece of crap from The Strange Brew podcast, but not really tired. You know what I mean? It's like, do you have a potty? Come here. Going to start getting everybody together for the schedule. Day is like the same problem. I have with getting a consistent D&D match together as it's like, oh, everybody commits and then just walks off. So, yeah, that's the thing about Dungeons & Dragons, bad that it's hard enough. That's why I wanted to start my own podcast, and do my own type of thing versus would like a co-host. And if I have to, the reason I like having other people on, cuz I can do solo episode, but that's the reason I like having people on so that you can bounce ideas off each other. You know what I mean? It's over. It just makes the conversate in embellishes, the conversation a little bit versus a one-sided monologue. 00:02:08Nothing, you know what I mean? More people and you have multiple people talking. Just I don't know if it's like the total differences in the boys or what have you. But I at least for me, like, I'd much rather listen to something, where there are multiple people talking than one person rambling on the exception being like, I'm not going to listen to like Dan Carlin or mythical monsters, or anything like that. Those are great and it's only one person but they're great before we get deeper into. You want to share your social media with people or a twitch stream. I mean, I'm always, you know, goofing on that. That's twitch.tv. Invader underscore Daggett to g-suit. He's social media HP Lovecraft on Instagram. That's about it right now, for a positive mental health, in West, fucking social media. So, 00:02:55Yeah. Yeah, I need to follow me on social media at the Horn podcast on Tik Tok Instagram, YouTube show some love on there. And then I was his check out strange ones to show that I do with with Tom Thompson from The Strange Brew podcast. All the links will be in the description. You can also take your car down with us on fight pool websites, fight pulled that I owe, and I think everybody should have some sort of exposure to cryptocurrency. Because, listen, this is all the simulation. It's all being run by the same people, and we're just playing thin in the sea of Wales. And I think if you can just ride any sort of wave that you can fuck it. Why not right, you know, getting to the fucking stream. Yeah, man, I did an episode or I told you with Mandy Lopez and she brought up this. This idea that's been bugging me as if they. I'm, like, she said, are we? 00:03:52We are the reptilians. We are the negative energies that there's always the the yin and yang, right? You have the good and the evil and when the one that comes to go, cuz as of lately, there's been a lot of animosity. And I don't know if you've noticed time is different. Like, literally time itself is. I feel like time has been 00:04:20Off lady slower, or I don't know if it's like this Darkness, you know what I mean? Like the energies off. I don't know if you felt it. So like if you get elaborate a little further on that and what regard do you mean? Things been different? Obviously, yes, one hundred percent but time is is little more than subjective as far as we're concerned. I mean, like anyone has ever done hallucinogens or psychedelics of any sort can tell you that that, you know, in your head a fucking 5 minutes can feel like 5 days given the right set of circumstances. So I mean, to say the time is is feels different. Absolutely. Cuz if you think about it, we've been in and out of lock downs and shit for what two years now going on. 00:05:03So course you can feel different. Yeah it is. And that's that's what they've been doing from the start and it's like I will let you get back to normal like there is no going back to normal from this like this is what it is now and you know compliance allows it to become that way. I'm not so I'm not at all devaluing anything cuz I mean, I know you and Tom have a slightly more hard core beliefs on the subject and I do but you know, I don't know dude. It's like what I had brought up yesterday. Yeah, that you were like going to the print. I personally think it would be different if you're going to save that ramp for today, but I mean, I don't know. I'm so fucking tired of talking about the stupid ass virus in the back seat and shit. And it's just like 00:05:48It is all-consuming at this point. It's you know, it shouldn't be cuz I feel like it goes deeper than just having me some tin foil hat on, right? And that's what I've been trying to like thinking about lately and trying to figure out what is the final objective. Because, yeah, it's money. And I brought up the, the point of wall, if they want money. 00:06:12When you're, when you know, you're in a video game when you play Grand Theft Auto on you and you unlock the cheat code to get a bunch of money. 00:06:20That's all it is. You just create more money, right? And you know, you're in a video game. So you're going to have a good time in that casino while you're in the video game, regardless of what the fuck happens to people around exactly. The point is knowing that you're in some virtual reality, which 100%, I feel. 00:06:43I listen to a lot of manly P hall in when I say a long talk about a lot, every send me links to the lectures and what have you do to win that guy talks? 00:06:56I pooped, and it sounds fucked up, but it's like he's possessed by something when he talked because home boy would sit down in his little thrown by his little chair. 00:07:08And he would talk for hours on end with no notes. No stuttering. No, nothing just straight-up, just talk. Like, if you, if you was able to tap into some sort of of broadcast and it sounds like the strands like state that he's in and everything is talkin about, I I just finished one up the dimensions Beyond Death, right, where he talks about the archons and talks about the he, he refers to them as the governor's is another name for the archons. 00:07:48Tai Chi. That's a, that's a Pulaski. They write the Secret Chiefs in Crowley. What's the duck's name? Aleister Crowley change my mind about him because I can't I can't get behind it, bro. What's your, what's your, what's your main beef with the limited law, simply is no fucking kid stuff in Crowley ship. So, all of that is, is Christian propaganda for lack of a better term. The child support thing. You know, what is in a sexual magic working ritual and fluids from male and female genitalia. It's a mixture of male and female fluids, because that is the life fluid that is a child. That is a creative fluid to make it. That's what they used. 00:08:42Supposedly obviously room for error, not part of the Abbey of thelema. I've never been there. I don't know, but that's the way that I had heard. It explained by many thelemite and whether or not they're foolish it and protecting, you know that the estate of Crowley's is one thing. But that can be said for anyting, you know, all I know. Is that like 00:09:02It is crazy. How 00:09:05Things that have been being talked about for 40 plus years. If not longer seem to have a way of just coming out and popping up. Now with the with situations like that, where it's like I had a fucken example, it's totally spaced it. 00:09:22Call. 00:09:25Have you been have you looked into the the ritual workings of a drama island? Have you heard that. Yeah, I would never do that to you root for it. I believe. So, something along those lines. Each section of the ritual, take something like six months to complete and that's the one that supposed to put you in touch with your guardian. Angel. I believe that's the one that Crowley I had allegedly fucked up in Crowley. Can't do it with all this money and shit. I'm not going to fucking try it. Well, I just find it so weird that he was doing that ritual and he bought the house on Loch Ness. And what are the chances that there is a Loch Ness Monster. 00:10:04Oh, man. I love my Cryptids. I hope you know what I mean. It just happens to be to buy a house facing a certain way at a certain degree at a certain time of the day, the sun to shine through XYZ and then he fucks it up, doesn't finish it and it was around like the forties right that he had that he was, he was working on it or when was, when was Roswell 48, right? Yeah, but so, the Abram Allen ritual and all that stuff? We could probably died. I want to say like in 45 or in like 50 to 8. He was not around very long. He was doing most of the stuff that he was doing somewhere around World War II. What I'm what I'm getting at is at that time was like a weird time and in the world like a very heavy theory that Crowley open the portals that allowed to graze through. If you looked at the, the the picture of Iowa's or lamb, it looks like a grave. Oh, yeah. Yeah. That's the big-headed aliens. 00:11:04Yeah, what do you mean looking guy that supposedly The Entity that he was in contact with? 00:11:10That's a wild, right? But what are your thoughts on that? Because I was I listening to I think it was unable to accept this esoteric guy on YouTube where he talks about demons. And and and there's a lot of Dogma behind demons and end these entities because we can't deny the fact that they give people Powers, right? But it's about what you want to give up to be able to work with XYZ. And that's a big thing behind you call. I don't, I don't fuck with it personally, but I know of people who have and it hasn't ended well for them, right? I how, I, how I mentioned to you earlier. When a conversation that we're having. I've met people to where they've told me, like, hey, don't look into that, or be careful because I've literally reach out to people who 00:12:03Awesome. Sounds right and the day off themselves because of what and it's always by hanging. You know what I mean? It's always by hanging. It's sending a message. I hate, they killed themselves and, and you see it in Hollywood all the time at all. These guys, what hanging themselves didn't, the guy from from Linkin Park as well. Hang himself to, he hung himself a Robin Williams. Hang himself a name. 00:12:35Bourdain hung himself and it's all got to do with a gun. 00:12:39There's something dark and Sinister going on. And that's why I don't like Crowley because I feel that he contributed to that. Because just as you know, what the gnostics with the Knights Templar, with the bubble Mills with the cathars. I feel like there's always One Bad Apple spoils the rest. So within that organization, you might have separate sex of organizations that break off a branch off of that naturally. And some of those people will corrupt the ideas and just like the Gnostic, there's so many different sects of gnostics. They all had their separate beliefs and eventually they were all in dilated by the by the Catholic church for reasons that I feel that they were on to something. They were onto the same idea of being able to achieve some sort of divinity. Through gnosis, through sacred knowledge, how you got that sacred knowledge. That's, that's, that's the tricky. Part is all these rituals. 00:13:39The gnostics had that they don't know of how they worked and it all had to do with like language in and vowels, had a lot to do with it to just as the Kabbalah where the secret letters that created the universe that I brought up earlier episode where the Aztecs they literally Drew, like they had a model of the universe. These people were so in touch. 00:14:05If anybody was in touch with aliens, maybe it wasn't the Egyptians. Maybe it's South America, and South America. There's a lot of places down there where 00:14:15Dude, I had a buddy of mine, Luke Wilson on the park, as he talked about how they wouldn't let certain people. I think it was by Puma punku or something, somewhere over there, where they have all these gateways in these doors, that lead to nowhere. And there are certain pyramids. Were there like how you can't go in there? The locals, why not? Will the ascended masters are sleeping in there? 00:14:39Wait, what the fuck? Did you just say to me? There are they dead? They're just they're in their there. They're sleeping at what the fuck are they sleeping or sleeping? Or are they like Cthulhu sleeping not dead, but dreaming. 00:14:53That's exactly what, that's what we get into like the there's a lot of, a lot of ancient stories that we are. For example, in Hindu cosmology. We are the dream of what's the guys at Krishna or want one of those. Then, what have you? But we're we're one of their dreams, right? The Aboriginal people as well. They talked about the Dreamtime about how we're in this. Can I send you that video? Like these NPCs are glitching hard. Weird shit like that that you see like going about your day, sir is on the fucking cops. Do that shit was just weird as hell. We were going to go fine. Go ahead. 00:15:42I bet that's on par with the the dude that Rick got away from the cops by yelling. Yahweh at the top of his lungs. And he started late on YouTube. That shit man. There was some dude that was like, getting arrested by the cops and he just started like just screaming, Yahweh and then let got up and ran off on here. Yeah, Tim ilysm. Is it? 00:16:08It can be argued that it really only affects us on the level that were predisposed to it affecting us. Because if you start yelling that shit around random people that have no idea what the fuck this stuff is. Probably not going to affect him that way. But now we're tipping into like Carl Jung territory where it's like, is it just Collective unconscious? Is it just deeply embedded symbols in us that mean something to us when we know what they are, you know, like how to do it. And Magic is supposed to only work if you believe in it and what have you? And I think it was certain extent. That's very true whether or not it could influence you in other ways by chance hidden symbols. And what have you like many conspiracy theorist, like the like the say, where it's like all the the fucking Google Mail logo with Masonic apron or fucking the Google Chrome logo is, do you know who died of Horace. So the Google mail icon in a little white envelope with the red Freemason apron next to it. 00:16:59Licking the aprons that they wear in ceremony. 00:17:01Yeah. 00:17:03I mean, you can you can make a connection. Yeah, but how much of that is his Matrix and how much of that is our brains doing what human brain is doing. Look for patterns, and inputs in there. And as I know is Robert, Anton Wilson said what the finger things to prove her will prove. So if you go looking for something, it's the same thing that I was being told of the kid words. I can. You go looking for God, you'll find it. 00:17:25What it is. Probably do. You make mushrooms 5 trigrams in silent are fast enough mushrooms. You'll meet got two pillars. Got to do. It was at the what to do while that you don't have. I haven't actually had any Freemasons on the show that I know of at least two closet Freemasons. I probably. Yeah, maybe maybe I probably should get a Freemason on to talk about it because there's so many different again. Different sects of masonry wall, these believe this, either believes this, and this and Matt 00:18:02In the end, you know, they say that the G is God. And I like that. What was that? It was that the guy from the Satanic, the Satan, the luciferian. You said Anton, Anton LaVey said that if you look for God, you'll find out or whatever. That was just something that I was told, was allegedly a staunch atheist. That's the whole principle of laveyan Satanism. If there is no God, it's just, it's a hedonistic group for people to be. No meeting share like-minded. Me no fellowship with one another. For lack of a better word. I was reading them or Christian. It's a fucking book club for hedonist, which I'm fine with your not hurting anybody. I don't give a fuck, do whatever you want, man. I'm give a shit. But like, but then again, you got perverted with the book that I've read. 00:18:51And I'm reading it again for the second time in audio book, the the, the astral plane its inhabitants and the scenery and they talk about in that where the reason that they target charges because their Aura is different, right? We always talk about how everyone has an aura on an energetic fields around them. And after before certain age, we know that indoctrination sets and the reason I think target them for the original, call him and all that other bullshit is because they're under, who was the prince that just died recently. Was it Harry or one of the like 90 something years old. It wasn't Andrew wasn't, I am still fucking kicking that pedal asshole. Hundred percent of reptile. You can't either, there is nothing. You can tell me that these people are lizards. There's there is nothing that you can tell me in the well going to change my fucking mind. They are. 00:19:51And look how far do look, how far that dude went. How do you think they kept up? You eat? All the weird that they do behind closed doors and all the course. I was telling my fiance on all the, the, the dollar bills and and all the currency that the symbolism that's in it at the Capitol. What is it? What is a? What is a monolith have to do with, with my government? You know what I mean? What is the height of the Washington Monument? What does that have to do with with, you know what? I mean? The Eye of Horus behind the Dollar Bill Withers have to do with anything. And then, all this weird symbolism that they use, 00:20:38The little hidden owl, open the dollar bill corner and proved seen that one. You know, what I tried to recreate is that the famous Unsolved Mysteries, picture of the other dollar bill folded up to look like a gray on the back and I I fuck with like lighting and contrast and all that shit and it's 00:20:55If you can make it, but it takes some alterations to do like, it's it's, it's definitely a close image, but it's not as it makes it look like, I like light tricks, you got to do with it. But I mean, you can make almost anything look like anything with the proper editing. So, 00:21:12I mean, I don't see exactly was very clearly and anyone that, you know, Dives any deeper than surface-level history, which was founded by Freemasons and thugs, for lack of a better term people that just basically told the British government, fucking suck my dick. You can come over here and get the money. I'm not giving you a dime bitch and let you know, as much as I like drug dealers and fucking Gun Runners and like America was founded by badasses. What can I say? It's invaluable. But what's going on right? Now, it blows my mind, that that the reason that we are this country, the reason not to let you know that the American flag is what it is. Because in 1776 day. They said that be said, fuck you and we're not doing it anymore. And then the rest is history. Don't want to become a nation of over pacified, you know warmonger is for lack of a better term. 00:22:09Did exactly what I said. Howard told us not to do and then you you mix in all of the Bucking brainwashing in the mk-ultra shit and you know, just just the desensitization and the brainwashing of the masses through media in general. Just one TV came about like you no longer had to get your public opinion or your, you know, information from a group of people that lived in a community. We're not communities anymore. Now, we're now just people that go online and barely pay attention to people that walk past them on the streets. So, 00:22:39It is that, is that the next step in human evolution and human consciousness of the unified world. I mean, you could make the argument than in one way that like 00:22:50That would be the natural progression of any civilized society that hopes to become a spacefaring, your group is that you you're going to have to unite in some way shape or form globally in order to make that a reality because everybody has to stop fighting over resources and all that other bullshit and just kind of focus on one task. 00:23:10But that atrocity. That's that's the main question that I have most of time where it's like, what if say the Illuminati is real say it's it's doing what it's doing. What if it is quote-unquote for the greater good, is it better to let Humanity devolve into a back in the tribalist, you know, destroying each other for resources every 5 seconds, or is it better to like take a sample and be like, no, we're going to grow out of our adolescence weather be through Force, you know, or through Freedom. It's it's I don't know, man. It's kind of confusing part of it. 00:23:47But how chaotic would that be having some sort of unification? You know, you know what, I'm trying to get out of having like everybody being unified how chaotic that would be like, living in some perfect world. Hello neighbor. Hi, how we seeing the dystopian? Movies and books, right? You know it, you know what? I mean, like like some the shit that happens before fall out and the games where everybody's like, oh, yes, welcome. His father knows best bullshit. That was, you know, that that's a myth of an era like cuz that's how d'you remember. That's what he was supposed to be in the 50s would have your honey. How you doing? I'm back from the job, sweetie. I didn't mean everything's fine. That's not fucking reality of the situation. It's not how the decade was. 00:24:33It was a dark decade was in his like right after World War II. 00:24:42Nnn people were coming back from War by killing themselves because a lot of a lot of these bets, they kill themselves that the dark, you know, because that you got shoved to the side, you you serve your country, you do all this shit and then that's what I never understood how you can willingly go do that and they just chew you up and spit you out and you see all these bats with. I feel mental mental health is just as important as physical health and I think I will. Yeah, we've demonized having some sort of mental issue because every but when your stomach hurts or your arm hurt, so you get sick. When you do you go to the doctor, but if you're feeling 00:25:25Mentally unstable, for whatever reason. It's a going out shit you you know, you got to your fucked you got you got Dementia or schizophrenia or something like that with your fucked, right? And I feel like that's the wrong way to go about it. I've never personally, really, I mean, I know people who have battled with mental issues, but I mean, I think we've all been there, right? Everybody gets a little bit for whatever reason sadness with a cause is not depression, depression to sadness with. No,. It's like like clinically. That's what it is that you're just when you wake up and your brains like a fuck, this it is and everything else to be going right around you and everything can be, you know, smooth. And then you just you're not okay. I mean, I do a mental health mental illness is something that I'm I'm far more familiar with and I've ever wanted to be. It runs deeply in my family and there's 00:26:23Many stores. I can get a new but I'm not going to, but 00:26:27The thing is that we don't understand. Why can't you talk to most doctors whenever we don't really understand the way that the brain works and understand what causes these things? And I think there's something to be said for the way that we live and for some people are just, you're not able to be fulfilled. Working a job for somebody else, just to pay your bills and get by on the days that you want you. There's some people that some people called me lazy cuz when I call you don't you don't want to go to work, you know, cuz 95 blah, blah, blah. So but those people would probably be extremely happy if they had just a little piece of land for their own that they could raise, you know, their food be self-sufficient. I think a lot of those people don't want to be Reliant upon. I got to go to the grocery store and I got to do that, don't do that. It's like but at the same time there's a reason that we grew out of that. 00:27:14And it's it's can you can you blame it exclusively on the Industrial Revolution? 00:27:20Partially not exclusively. No, but 00:27:25There's so much about human kind, that is just baffling to me. Joe. And I think that it's often manipulated and used against us by people that hold power. 00:27:37And you know, I mean what why wouldn't they they don't want to lose the power didn't want to lose the group that they have on on civilization. They want to increase that if anything because they don't view themselves as it ain't there. Those are the people that are in the super high level secret societies that are attempting to reach this God had by any means necessary and it's so you know that unfortunately causes atrocities of all kind is not always going to look like, you know, work will set you free. It's not always going to look like 1940s, Germany. It's not going to look like Cambodian. She like that. It's going to sometimes look like the extreme brainwashing of brainwashing of the masses and you know, just turning people into nothing more than a consumer estate. Cuz it's like Tom and I were talking about it's like what we do in the west we can soon. That's what we're here for. We're here to buy, we're here to buy all the shit and you know it live as comfortably as possible and the rest of the world, fucking hate them for it. 00:28:31We don't manufacture shit anymore. No. And other than drugs, it's like that. Well, what drugs do we manufacture here? Other than obviously the one going around now? 00:28:45And really think about it. What is it? A hundred percent of the insulin comes from overseas. There hasn't been an insulin Factory here in the States since with the 90s. Really? I didn't know that. Yeah, that's why, that's why? When all this went down there was a shortage of insulin here in the state because we're being too, we're dependent on another country to an account. Correct me if I'm wrong on that, you want to fucking send me an email. Send me an email about that. Don't send me an email about how your God is real and how I'm wrong and going out cuz I've got another female. 00:29:17That is so not. What I was going to say was, I don't know, you listen to suicideboys but one of their latest songs was let me look it up here. It's I think it's like materialism and means to an end or some shit like that. We see here goes 00:29:34Are there song is materialism as a means to an end yet? And that's so true. Right? Because at the end of the day, 00:29:42I know somebody, I know of somebody who decided to like sell their house and in turn, a school bus into a house and just live on playing me personally. I can't live the minimalist lifestyle, and there's two reasons for that one. I like buying shit to. I work hard to buy shit. You know what I mean? I work every single day and, hey, there's nothing, there's nothing in any sort of book because how you were talking about work were programmed to think of the American dream of some sort of 00:30:16Some sort of attainable thing, when in reality. 00:30:21What is the American dream? What what has that become? What? Live your life in debt? Always and just always be at the, you know, under the foot of some. 00:30:33Some some system know which is essentially what this is, right? Because at the end of the day, 00:30:42It's all it all comes down to you known in the beginning of the Matrix when they opened up that book simulacra and simulation by John. I like to cam bald ruler, but he does know how you say some French philosopher. I don't know how to say it. Did. I never learn how to say. I just know the shit far as I'm concerned is Bold Ruler from now on. 00:31:05What he talks to a simulacra and simulation when we were giving these empty symbols value. 00:31:13At the end of the day. 00:31:16A dollar. What is it? Really symbolize? What MP symbol. If it's a Death Note is what it was originally created to be. It was because we had to have something that made more sense in the barter system because it was great until, you know, put it on a mass scale and you're like well how many coconuts does this cow worth inside? But how do you judge what those coconuts are worth? How long did it take you to grow those in the ultimate? Those, how long does it take to grow and cultivate that cow like? But this gives you more shit in. This is only this thing and it's like it doesn't work on the same level. Hence. The reason we created currency, you know, and I think there's, there's definitely something to be said for what we have done with the Federal Reserve which is you know, all the gold standard gun you want, just continue to make that notes in the 70s that went out with that. But 00:32:08It's you know, who you know, who created the original system of here, take this note and go over there. You can cash it out and go wherever it is. That one wasn't thinking, which is the, you know, going in between we will take your gold key here and we will take it from a cash when we get to the Jerusalem and you will be able to take your money out. And this is a note that says how much money you have because people are getting robbed every fucking time. They were going to the Holy Land, you know, it's like we're more or less, the first security guards. 00:32:40In the way, they say that idea. Sprouted is the is the most ludicrous thing to me that they that it came from when they were worshipping bathroom, have you have that? There's an it an ancient Egyptian Theory or idea that if you have the head of a prophet it can prophesize to and that's what they did. They said that they had the head of John, the Baptist. 00:33:02And that was, that was Baphomet. The one that was because John, the Baptist has always portrayed as like this wild man, right? From the wild. And, and you always have that idea. Like, what did I tell you that? When you post something about the Epic of Gilgamesh, the Wildman enkidu, right? He's like, yeah, this this Bigfoot kind of guy that just Harry and he wants to tame the whatever the other guys there. So many stories Gilgamesh basically sent out a prostitute to tame him and to civilize him because he wanted, you know, his name to be a friend and an ally because he's the only person that ever was like, kind of almost whooped gilgamesh's ask that as the as kind of the story of how we went from being, just a bloodthirsty group of Pinot, tribalistic, pseudo fucking hominid. 00:33:56Are not talk to Hamid pseudo album. 00:34:00Fuck the word for Apes. 00:34:02The scientific work. 00:34:04Whatever you regardless, regardless. 00:34:08The Taming of mankind into civilization is what I was trying to say that as an allegory more for that forces, you know, or maybe the dualistic side of humans where we still have that Primal animalistic rage about us. And, you know, that that hole because of race in the Hedonism kind of go hand in hand. Cuz if you're just living a lifestyle that Ray is going to save your life sometimes because, you know, you you're getting attacked by a leopard. You're going to get attacked by some Beast. It's much bigger than you and you need to tap into that. Like, don't think the fact, you know, and at the same time, on the other hand, you'll just be lounging in a field. When you're not hungry. You're not in danger or just hanging out and things are just coming here by and checking you out and shit. And 00:34:54yeah, it's like they said that that 00:34:58The type of safety in that we are eventually won against the Neanderthals and denisovans, and all these other branches of homo sapiens, I guess because we invented language, we were able to communicate that much more efficiently never be able to that's like being in some Call of Duty Lobby, where everybody's has a mic and they're all talking versus some other Lobby where nobody has them. I don't know what the fuck is going on at the same thing. And essentially we were able to kill them all off and genocide, right? That's that's almost because they talk about monkeys being in like some sort of stone age because they're using tools and all this shit. Do you subscribe to that direct the? So, you know, Darwinism where we came from like this, what do they call it? The 00:35:45Some of the puddle with how they got primordial in Memorial Pool, because that wouldn't make sense. Because if you noticed all animals were bigger back then and then everything got smaller, but then we went from smaller to bigger like that makes no sense. That's why we have the Anunnaki Theory. And you have the, the, the mushroom Terence McKenna's, mushroom Theory, where they Theory have her eating. And I had Tom hatsis on my show and he talked about that theory would make sense except it's placed in the wrong era. Give me some places in like the this other are forever. Forgot what he said, but check out that episode of psychedelia in religion. 00:36:29Where he said take that idea and put in some other era and then that would make sense to the art. Cuz everything always. Let you know that the paintings of the bee man where I was like all this colorful shit. And Dennis McKenna says that, that was what expanded our brain. I like to think of the Anunnaki they came and they genetically altered us, and they made her brain bigger and wear some sort of slave race, which we still are today. And we were used to mine gold for hundreds of thousands of years then. Yeah, for sure did. The ancient alien theory has got to give you a certain. Okay. So here's the biggest thing that I find with the Evolution versus. So, whatever. Creation myth, you want to go with Evolution presents the world as an uncaring unfeeling chaotic organism. It's like it, just whatever happens fucking happens. I've noticed it. A lot of people have a very, very hard time even dealing 00:37:29Because so many people, especially Us in Western Society, whether you're brought up religious or you're brought up with those doting parents, that are like you're special and everything that you do is special and there's a purpose for you and you're going to figure it all out someday. 00:37:43That's going to create a certain psychological. 00:37:47Mindset, you know where you're like, okay, well know, there has to be a point to this. And I know a lot of us do go or are, you know, around our whole lives looking for that point and seeking that point. And I think there's a certain amount of wisdom and comfort and embracing the chaos and being like, man, if there isn't much meaning that anything other than what we put on it, then let's try and put a good meeting on things. Let's try and, you know, do things that are for the betterment of all of us and not be exclusively selfish, like like separating the animalistic from the Divine lack of a better term, the Divine being the okay. I'm not thinking of just myself and my needs in my hierarchy. I'm thinking the other people around me in the long-term Ripple effects of what I'm doing. I think that is what separates us on the most part from animals are on the biggest part. I should say. 00:38:33Anna. 00:38:35That's my biggest beef with us. When I was younger. I was raised in the church, like heavily in the church if you like Baptists and Pentecostals and I fucking hate it. I hated every moment of it. So naturally, what are you? Do you fucking gravitate towards Satanism isn't wearing like a lot of solid points, but then you reach a point in life where you've lived enough and experienced enough that you understand that that level of selfishness. 00:39:00While it is helpful and certain points is ultimately destructive in my opinion. And that's why I tried that and why I think a lot of the few know the clinic ideas in Crowley should run like, no I get that. You're like, I appreciate what he did by taking magic out of the hands of a select group of elite people, because regardless of of flame, and in those highly ritualistic left hand path, magic things, he gave us chaos magic more or less base of being like yourself was a DIY magician. That spent his entire fortune on just decadence. So say what you want. Nobody. Nobody holds this man up to like look at Messiah. This man was so selfless and pure. 00:39:43You getting ripped and getting railed in the desert constantly, but I think there's a certain power in taking the Embrace of the chaos and being like, you know, what, I'm going to attach meetings. This, I'm going to find what I need to find for the purpose of my existence and inform me. It's a, you know, how can I, how can I live in a way that it's, it's harmonious with things and I think that is, that is the wisdom in that side of things versus the religious side of things which is like, no, this is how it is. These are the guidelines that you were here too. And if you don't, you know, some fucking angry. Father figure is going to spank you and say stop it bad. I'll go burn forever. I hate I can't stand it and I think it turns off a lot of people who otherwise would agree with many portions of you know that message. 00:40:31that's what that's what I love about gnosticism because it's almost just that the big fuck you to the to the, the the 00:40:41Not the corporations, but the institutions because that's what, that's what it all is at the end of the day, right? It's all how much control can we have? How can we monetize this? Come up with a new? Probably like, well, that's a great idea. But how can we know the Lizard Lick in their eyeballs and shit, how can we make some money off of it? What's that? What's the evil guy in The Simpsons? What's his name? Mr. Burns Burns. 00:41:08And then you see it. Did you see the real life? When who was it, when Jeff Bezos launched into space on some big dick. 00:41:18But who came up with that design? The like fucking looks good to me. But I feel that you know, that they say that the the Obelisk and Egypt. They're all symbolic for what horses like the dick in the end, the end, the end, the end of womb that they're fucking mother earth. And I feel like that's what these guys are doing. Their, symbolically, all these phallic symbols in a 10, in all these things that they're using their symbolic for other things. That's why I tell people symbols are the language of the soul and what they do, nowadays in the medical tourism, where they use propaganda, to talk to people on a spiritual that what's why? You see so much anger. Will your Democrats will my fucking Republican and fuck you. Because you, you voted for buying a voted for Trump. You, you see that? Cuz it makes their speaking to people on such a mud on a much deeper level and people fall in love with these symbols. 00:42:18And these these politic. They worship these politicians, they worship these these head figures, which is completely wrong. And that's why I love Plato's The Republic. If we could just do what he said in there that we could just 00:42:33Hey, you're going to be a servant, a public servant. You're going to be a public servant, 100% motherfuker. You're not going to have any kids. You're not going to have any land. You're not going to have any money. You're not going to have shit. You're going to be a public servant. In your whole job is going to be to serve society. And that's it. Because they explain to me. How when a president gets out of office. He's instantly worth 1500 million out of nowhere. A motherfuker was making $400,000. A year. Was a Senator before that. 00:43:02Well, I mean you got you know, your your lucrative appearance fees, you get all of your book deals. You get all that shit. You have your, your Presidential Library. Get to do Presidential Library, really curious, what everyone can be coloring books? Probably making the green cat. Nobody draws cats like I do ever seen, you know, so he agreed, I invented I made it out of money. Did you know that in Disney that use a shade of? I think it's a green actually to like block out. They invented their own shade of, I think it's a either green or blue to where you don't notice that it's there, but it's there and they use it for like maintenance buildings and different things that they don't want people to really focus on the paint. Whatever it is. So Dallas storage room or or like this light post or something that they don't want people to really focus on the paint it. And it's almost 00:43:58Like we can't see it because either it's got something to do with with, with, you know, the mentality. Like, you know, Christmas is white and red and all these different cuz that they use for 00:44:10These different things and I got to talk to people. What's the weirdest ship. But again, you dealing with motherfukers that, that can that can transcend dimensions and speak to people on. 00:44:24They can speak to people without saying any word, which is the the the craziest part, right? If you take propaganda you really break it down. 00:44:33And that's all it is really because I say don't defund, the police defund the media because the media has become. 00:44:42The, you know, that the people that what are they called, the judge the Executioner. And when, you know, you know, I'm talking about the, they become all that before anything happens. They just show one angle of it.
#67 iOS 15 Will Drastically Change Email Marketing. Here's What to Do. Apple's upcoming iOS 15 update is going to change the way in which ecommerce owners communicate with their customers. And us email marketers need a change of strategy. Valentina Rasello is an absolute champion at email marketing. With extensive experience in outreach strategy, lead generation, content creation, building marketing campaigns, and more, we're very fortunate to have her as an Account Manager at Budai Media. Valentina always has her eye on the ever-changing world of ecommerce, so has she done her research on the upcoming iOS changes. We're delighted to welcome Valentina to The Ecom Show for an expert's guide to iOS15 and how it affects email marketing. Valentina and our CEO and podcast host, Daniel Budai discuss: ✔️ Valentina's Psychological Approach to Marketing ✔️ What is the iOS 15 Update ✔️ How Should Ecommerce Owners Prepare for this Update Valentina's Psychological Approach to Marketing Aside from her linguistic interest and prowess in Italian, Spanish, English, and Chinese, Valentina has always been interested in psychology. How the brain works, and why people make some choices and not others. This evolved into an exploration into why people choose to buy and why they don't. Always one for learning new things, Valentina took a deep dive into the world of marketing, taking online courses on content creation, lead generation, outreach…you name it! So began Valentina's journey into marketing, eventually leading to her current position as Account Manager at Budai Media. Valentina loves what she describes as her “dynamic” job, especially enjoying the many opportunities it provides to analyze customer behaviour. What is the iOS 15 Update? Apple's iOS 15 update is set to be released this Fall. It's going to impact two main areas: email marketing and ecommerce. iOS 15's Mail Privacy Protection feature will allow users to hide their IP address. This means that senders will not be able to see whether Apple Mail users have opened their email or not, impacting the effectiveness of A/B testing in all areas. Valentina warns against catastrophizing, however. This change only applies to those with Apple devices, who use Apple Mail, and have decided to opt in to Mail Privacy Protection. Mail Privacy will not be in effect on other email apps, such as Google Mail, even if accessed on an Apple device. The next iOS feature to think about is ‘Hide My Email'. Users can use ‘Hide My Email' to direct marketing emails to an Apple generated randomized email. In other words they can create a ‘burner' email. So How Should Ecommerce Owners Prepare for this Update? Focus especially on open rates, as they will be most affected by iOS 15's Mail Privacy Protection Feature. Also test subject lines, previews, send times, pretty much everything before the update is implemented. A/B test like there's no tomorrow. Also make sure to clean that email list! When the iOS 15 updates arrive, it will be more difficult to know who is opening emails and who isn't. We generally recommend list cleaning once a month, but now is a better time than any to remove unengaged customers from your list. Following A/B tests and list cleaning, ecommerce owners need to begin shifting their focus to other metrics. Valentina recommends closely analyzing click rate and shipping recency and frequency. Get a microscope on customer behaviour. How often they buy, how they interact with your brand, what their favourite products are. All the good stuff. This will be instrumental in creating targeted campaign plans TL;DR - Don't panic! But make sure to A/B test, clean your list, and focus on click-through rate and customer behaviour. Connect with https://www.linkedin.com/in/valentina-rasello-770954168/Valentina on LinkedIn if you're looking for digital marketing or linguistic expertise. Follow Daniel Budai: Daniel's LinkedIn Daniel's Facebook
Episode 00020 beginnt wie gewohnt mit den News! Wir updaten ein paar bekannte Themen wie StarLink, NeuraLink und die Chipknappheit. Aber wir schnacken auch etwas über Änderungen im Büro durch die Pandemie. Im ersten Thema erzählt uns dann Chris davon, ob Traumata eigentlich vererbt werden. Geht sowas? Oder ist es doch nur anerzogenes Verhalten? Und falls es geht: wie funktioniert es? Im zweiten Thema beleuchtet Pati dann die Definition von Cloud-Computing. Was ist eigentlich eine Cloud? Und vor allem: Was ist keine? ;) Im dritten Thema bringt Chris Nostalgie hoch und wir quatschen darüber wie es war als es Google Mail nur per Einladung gab. Was war damals der Vorteil? Lacht man heute darüber? Und im vierten Thema erzählt Pati von einem Blogartikel der sich mit der Frage beschäftigt warum es eigentlich so viel schlechte Software gibt? Und vor allem: Warum gibt es z.B. so viel mehr schlechte Software als instabile Brücken? Zum Schluss schnacken wir noch etwas über Gaming-Schuhe, Mediacenter im Wohnzimmer und bringen euch unseren neuen "Ja sia!"-Discord und unseren Amazon-Affiliate-Link nahe! :) Sharing is caring! B-) Aber sharen und "not caren" ist auch ok! :P Bis denn. :) Kapitel: 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:53 Vorgeplänkel und News 00:27:30 Themenvorstellung 00:28:37 Thema 1: Sind Traumata vererbbar? 00:54:50 Thema 2: Sind wir schon auf Wolke 5? :P 01:20:03 Thema 3: GMail nur mit Einladung! 01:40:55 Thema 4: Warum hat die Brücke keinen Bluescreen? 02:08:50 Dummschnack 02:35:02 Zusammenfassung Shownotes: Traumata sind vererbbar: https://www.planet-wissen.de/gesellschaft/krankheiten/stress/stress-vererbung-100.html#:~:text=Ein%20Attentat%2C%20eine%20Vergewaltigung%2C%20Folter,werden%2C%20sondern%20auch%20durch%20Vererbung. https://www.swr.de/odysso/transgenerationale-vererbung-von-traumata/-/id=1046894/did=20237846/nid=1046894/extmr9/index.html https://www.mdr.de/wissen/vererbte-traumata-100.html Links: Unser Discord-Server: http://discord.ja-sia.de Unser Amazon-Affiliate-Link: http://amazon.ja-sia.de Folge direkt herunterladen
Пропустили новости недели перед праздниками? Не проблема, мы расскажем их вам сегодня. В новом выпуске подкаста Telegram-канала ForGeeks Сергей Кузнецов и Вахтанг Махарадзе обсудили падение сервисов Google и Telegram, индустрию супераппов и новое приложение Mail.Ru, рекорды цен на биткоин и многое другое.
The one about Yorkshire Tea, Elgato Screen Link, Your data and The Lost Boys - TG19 00:00:00 Introduction Here are your hosts, Roger and Pascal. 00:01:09 In the News A selection of announcements and news releases from the world of marketing and technology that caught our attention. 00:07:38 Content Spotlights ROGER: Why aiming for perfection will make you a worse marketer. By Molly Fleming, Marketing Week. https://www.marketingweek.com/nationwide-cmo-perfect-marketer-plan/ (https://www.marketingweek.com/nationwide-cmo-perfect-marketer-plan/) PASCAL: Self-proclaimed underdog Yorkshire Tea finding its brand voice by Rebecca Stewart, Trends Editor at The Drum https://www.thedrum.com/news/2020/10/29/self-proclaimed-underdog-yorkshire-tea-finding-its-brand-voice (https://www.thedrum.com/news/2020/10/29/self-proclaimed-underdog-yorkshire-tea-finding-its-brand-voice) 00:19:43 Marketing Tech and Apps ROGER: Driver Easy. Update and fix PC driver issues. https://www.drivereasy.com/ (https://www.drivereasy.com/) Elgato Screen link: https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/screen-link (https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/screen-link) PASCAL: it's all about data storage CC Cleaner – find and delete all junk and unused files from your pc computer https://www.ccleaner.com/ccleaner (https://www.ccleaner.com/ccleaner) mac version is also available https://www.ccleaner.com/ccleaner-mac (https://www.ccleaner.com/ccleaner-mac) Google Mail - Top tip to clear old emails: type has:attachment larger:10MB in the search box at the top of the Gmail window on your desktop or laptop web browser. 00:28:18 This Week in History Our selection of historical events and anniversaries from the world of science, technology and popular culture. 00:34:08 Creator Shout Outs PASCAL: Deepa Natarajan – Executive Coach and Speaker about rethinking leadership and achieving your goals with ease and peace of mind. MeetMyPotential is a coaching programme, a podcast show and now a YouTube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVEL7SP0kECX1ucjxhnyITg (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVEL7SP0kECX1ucjxhnyITg) ROGER: Alex Curtis | PODCAST | Advisers Assemble: https://theleadengine.co.uk/lead-generation-financial-services-podcast/ (https://theleadengine.co.uk/lead-generation-financial-services-podcast/) 00:38:46 Film Marketing This week we talk about The Lost Boys. Joel Schumacher set out to make the coolest Vampire film ever made and it became a 1980 icon. Great costumers, hairstyles, motorbikes and 80s hit songs create an unbeatable package of horror film entertainment. Didn't we all want to be a vampire after watching this? About Two Geeks and A Marketing Podcast Hosted by the two geeks, Roger Edwards and Pascal Fintoni, to keep you up to date with the latest news, tech, content and wisdom from the world of marketing. Roger is a man on a mission to keep marketing simple. He is the voice of the Marketing & Finance Podcast and the host of the RogVLOG series. Pascal is also on a mission to demystify digital marketing. He's the host of the Content Marketing Studio video podcast and many other video series. Every week we'll bring you the following segments. In the News. Content Spotlight Marketing Tech and Apps This Week in History Creator Shout Outs Film Marketing Please subscribe and leave comments and suggestions in the usual places. Watch the show on video: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChv7HnP_ZqGoFQbzqkeaKA (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCChv7HnP_ZqGoFQbzqkeaKA)? Pascal Fintoni: https://pascalfintoni.com/ (https://pascalfintoni.com/)
Google: Mail, Kalender und weitere Produkte bekommen neue Logos Apple verkauft keine Lautsprecher und Kopfhörer von Drittanbietern mehr in den Stores Apple lädt zum Special Event am 13. Oktober Twitter-Konten des BAKOM gesperrt FRITZ!OS 7.21 Update für die FRITZ!Box 7590 und 6890 LTE
For well over the last 10 years Google have been leaders in cloud computing applications. Their suite of offerings including Google Mail, Drive, Calendar, Docs and Sheets are used the world over in education, business and at home. In this session we're looking at accessibility within the Google suite, as we focus specifically on Mail, Calendar and Drive. You’ll learn lots of handy shortcuts and will develop an awareness of how you can harness your assistive technology to work optimally with Google’s many services.
Smartphoneblogger - Der deutsche Technik- und Smartphonepodcast
Zugegeben, diese Podcastepisode haben wir vor einer Woche schon aufgenommen. Das ist aber nicht schlimm, warum? Wir diskutieren mehr denn je und haben interessante Themen für euch. Wir sprechen über die schnellsten Möglichkeit das Smartphone zu laden und da hat Oppo mit dem Flash Charge Lineup einfach die Messlatte für die nächsten Jahre sehr hoch gehangen. Warum? Mit 125W konnte man bis jetzt noch kein Smartphone laden. Ohne Kabel ist das jetzt sogar mit 65W möglich, sprich der aktuellste Bestwert, den wir sonst nur mit Kabel erreichen. Aber halten das die Geräte aus und sollte die EU vielleicht einen Deckel auf das Thema legen? Beim Wechsel zum Apple iPhone XR ist nicht alles so leicht wie Oliver sich das vorgestellt hat. Da gibt es Probleme mit der ESim, dann mit dem Backup von Android zu Apple und irgendwie sind auch die Passwörter noch bei Google gespeichert. Ein einfacher Wechsel zwischen den Welten kommt so nicht zu Stande, das muss diskutiert werden. Google Mail schmeißt bei der gmail App einfach alle Dienste in einen Pot und möchte damit die Nutzer in ihrer Welt halten. Welche Vorteile hat so eine All in One App wirklich und sind wir bereit alles mit nur einer App zu lösen? Es gibt ein Nearby Share Update und die Zeichen verdichten sich, dass wir endlich, wie bei Apple Air Drop bereits bekannt unsere Daten direkt verschieben können. Egal ob Apple mit Air Drop oder auch Huawei auf ihrem Huawei Matebook. Unkompliziertes Verschieben von Daten ist der Trend der Zeit und nicht mehr wegzudenken. Endlich arbeitet auch Google daran und möchte die Arbeitsschritte effizienter gestalten. Über euren Support freuen wir uns natürlich immer in Form von iTunes Bewertungen und Sternen. Ihr findet uns auf Spotify, bei iTunes oder auf unserer Webseite. Folgt uns auch auf YouTube und bei Instagram. Danke für euren Support und freuen uns auf viele weitere Episoden mit euch..... www.dersmartphoneblogger.de YouTube: Oliver: Smartphoneblogger Thorsten: ITNRG Instagram: Oliver: Smartphoneblogger Thorsten: ITNRG Amazon: Oliver: https://amzn.to/3bfdLnE Thorsten: https://amzn.to/379RdUh --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/smartphoneblogger/message
Sometimes an opportunity comes along that’s too good to pass up. For Matt Hulett, that happened when a friend approached him about a job at Rosetta Stone. The famous language-learning company was stuck in the analog world and they wanted Matt to be the guy to bring them into the digital future. It was no small feat, but Rosetta Stone has made progress on the digital transformation and Ecommerce journey, including introducing a subscription model and overhauling its tech stack and app. On this episode of Up Next in Commerce, Matt discusses the challenges of transforming a world-famous brand, including how he chose a free-trial subscription model over going freemium, what it was like to achieve buy-in from investors, and the future of Ecommerce and why he thinks social selling still hasn’t reached its full potential. 3 Takeaways: Even the most well-known brands need to earn their stripes when entering a new space. When a previously offline product starts playing in the digital world, it has to prove to customers that their investment in this new space is worth it AR and VR are tools that Ecommerce platforms will be exploring more in the coming years. If you can provide a more immersive experience, you differentiate yourself from the competition and create more value to your customers Stay true to the brand and don’t try to compete on business models that don’t fit For an in-depth look at this episode, check out the full transcript below. Quotes have been edited for clarity and length. --- Up Next in Commerce is brought to you by Salesforce Commerce Cloud. Respond quickly to changing customer needs with flexible Ecommerce connected to marketing, sales, and service. Deliver intelligent commerce experiences your customers can trust, across every channel. Together, we’re ready for what’s next in commerce. Learn more at salesforce.com/commerce --- Transcript: Stephanie: Welcome back to Up Next In Commerce, this is Stephanie Postles, co-founder of Mission.org and your host. Today, we're going on a digital transformation journey. Matt, how's it going? Matt: Oh, really good. A little cooped up here like we all are, but I'm hanging in there. How are you doing? Stephanie: I'm doing well. Yeah, same hot, very hot. It's 92 here and the places in Silicon Valley usually don't have air conditioning so just a little sweaty in the studio. Stephanie: So I must admit, I have not checked in on Rosetta Stone in a while and when I started browsing through you guys' website, I was like, "Whoa, you all have come a long way from CD-ROMs and everything that I was used to when I was growing up and thought of Rosetta Stone." So I'd love to hear a little bit about what brought you to Rosetta Stone and your background before you joined. Matt: Yeah. It's interesting, just before I dive in, it's rare to join a company where everyone knows your brand and your product like just about everyone in the United States does Rosetta Stone. Matt: And so actually, it's an interesting story because there's not many ed tech companies that are a public companies, you could count them on your hand and the company has been a public company for over 10 years. Matt: It's been around for 27 years and it's a really interesting backstory on how the company was founded and so some of that came into play with what got me attracted to the business. Matt: So a friend of mine who's a recruiter talked to me about this opportunity and I typically do restarts, pivots as they are [crosstalk] for startups. Matt: And even the startups that I join are typically pivots. So there's kind of this pivot transformation story that typically is a draw for me for whatever weird reason why I attracted to these things and when he said, "Oh, it's Rosetta Stone." Matt: I was like, "Oh, the CD-ROM company, the yellow box." I was like, "Yeah, but they're trying to be digital." I'm like, "They're not digital yet?" Matt: And so the draw for me was typically, I take on jobs and assignments that are very difficult where I have to either completely change the strategy or get new financing on a new idea. Matt: There's generally something really, really wrong and Rosetta Stone was so intriguing to me on the surface for the intellectual reasons why they brand the product, people love it. Matt: It's not one of those iconic brands that people are afraid of. It's not like saying, "Matt, do you want to restart Myspace? I was like, "Oh my God, it's Rosetta Stone, of course." Stephanie: That's your next project. Myspace. Matt: Yeah. Stephanie: Just bring it back. Matt: Making it great again. Too soon. But what personally drew me, that's kind of the intellectual business level, what personally drew me into the company was and is the fact that I'm dyslexic, and a third of the revenue for Rosetta Stone is actually one of the fastest growing. Matt: We sell software into K-12 schools primarily in United States that help kids learn how to read, better learn how to read which is a problem. I've seen my own youngest son struggle with his dyslexia as well. Matt: And so on a personal level, it's very emotional when you can kind of tie that emotional tie to a company to its mission and vision. It's really intriguing. So it's been one of the best career decisions I've ever made. Stephanie: Yeah, that's great. Were there any universal truth that you discovered as you are kind of pivoting from different companies and trying out different roles and turning them around? Was there anything like yeah, universal truths that you saw while doing that? Matt: Well, that's a great question. Yeah, a couple things. One is it's so crazy to me, when I step into a company how basically from week one, maybe day one, no one really understands how the business works, like truly understands it. Matt: The key insight, what makes the business special, what can you do to apply capital or a time or attention to improve your strategy or your outcomes? It's just so, it's so weird when you go to a business that's operating, and maybe these are the only businesses I look at where it's not quite tight inside around the strategy and what makes the kind of the economic engine run. I think that's the biggest one that I see off the top of my head. Stephanie: Yeah, that's interesting. I can definitely see a lot of companies struggling there especially as they grow bigger and they have many business units and everyone's kind of chasing a different path, I can see people losing sight of what's important and what's actually driving this business like you're talking about and making it profitable or maybe it's not, but it's the lost leader, something that we still need. So yeah, that's really interesting. Stephanie: So when you joined Rosetta Stone, it hadn't been digital. I mean, only a few years, right? I think it stopped, maybe it didn't stop doing CDs, but it went online. Wasn't it in 2013? Matt: Yeah, I would say it was like half digital. What that means is we were selling one of the most expensive products in the App Store at the time and we didn't really have the concept of really effective sales funnels, a well thought out pricing and packaging strategy based on the type of customers that we're going after. Matt: We didn't have a lot of mobile native features and capability. So I would say it was kind of a port of the CD product in the mobile environment and that was kind of the approach. Matt: And also the approach was really not to focus on the consumer business. So not only did we make this kind of business model and digital transformation move, but also when I came into the business, the big focus was for the language side of the business was to focus on enterprise customers. Stephanie: Mm-hmm (affirmative). Matt: I thought that was actually the wrong move because enterprise is difficult, it's a smaller market, yet consumers where everyone knows Rosetta Stone, everyone likes the product. They actually remember the CD products in many cases and want to use them again, but they want to use them on your phone. Matt: So I thought, "Well heck, everyone knows who I am from a brand awareness perspective, I'll have an easier time deploying less capital against the consumer space and enterprise space." So there was not only just a business model shift, but also a strategy shift. Stephanie: Did you end up sticking with that business model shift to focus on enterprises or did you kind of make it a mix of 50/50? Matt: Oh, good question. So it is about 50/50 today, although consumers now are growing fast. I mean, we're a public company so I can only speak to our public company numbers, but in Q4 of last year, we grew the consumer business about 20% year over year and this is from a business step was growing at single digit. Matt: And then our last reporting earnings quarter, we grew the consumer business around 40% year to year and the enterprise business has struggled more primarily because of the C-19 impacts this year because obviously, we're in a never before seen macro economic headwind, but generally, it's the right decision to make and I view the enterprise business as more of an extension of what we want to do for all adult learners versus creating as a separate entity. Matt: That's a long answer to say consumer turned out to be the right move. It was not clear when I joined the company that even joining Rosetta Stone was a smart move. Matt: I had a lot of folks that I know, acquaintances more so than friends say, "Good luck. There's a lot of error in this company." And I just think it's just a really exciting problem and it's a ... Sorry to keep going because I've had maybe 80 cups of coffee today and just, I don't know. Stephanie: No, keep it up. Matt: It's like the two big verticals that are the most expensive that increased their prices to consumers over the last 50 years are healthcare and education and they have the lowest penetration of digital, and like, "Well, those are hard problems to solve. Why wouldn't you want to be involved?" So anyways, I think it's really fun. Stephanie: Yeah, that's fascinating. So when you came in, what were expectations for your role? What did people want you to do? Did you have a 90-day plan? How did that look? Matt: Oh yeah, if anyone thinks these are scripted questions, these are not scripted questions. These are very good questions. So during the interview process and I'm sure you've had this experience before, when you meet with somebody in a company, you're like, "I'm going to do whatever it takes to get this job." Stephanie: Yup. Matt: And I had one of those experiences with Rosetta Stone. I knew I wanted this job and so I came into maybe the first or second interview with a 90-day plan before I even started, this is the first or second interview. Matt: And the 90-day plan did change slightly because then I knew a little something, but I've done enough of these transformation projects, these pivots where I knew there's these basic building blocks in a format, I have a toolbox of things that I do that really didn't change. Matt: The inevitable strategy didn't know before I started, I didn't know the team members, were they the right fit or not, I didn't know any of that, but the basic building blocks I definitely put together. Stephanie: Got it. So what was on your roadmap, did you have to think about how to re-platform to support your commerce journey and shifting into enterprise and then consumer? What was on that plan that you laid out? Matt: Yeah, and I kind of learned some of this years ago when I was ... Sometimes I think my best work, I can't speak for you or anybody else, but my best work is when I'm completely ignorant of the challenges in front of me and so when I was younger, I worked for ... Well, actually, we sold our company to Macromedia and they had a division called Shockwave. Matt: And Macromedia at that point was not bought by Adobe, and this is Web 1.0 bubble, so I'm dating myself which is not legal in Washington State and these jokes have all jail time. Stephanie: [crosstalk] get us in trouble. Matt: I know. And so we step back through that experience and I learned a lot from the Macromedia Adobe kind of M&A folks about how to approach a problem. And that plus some other work experience over time really got me to the point of thinking through things from I call it the insight, the math in the heart. Matt: And no one framed it that way to me, but that's kind of how I framed it and so when I think about the insight, I think about the addressable market, the position that we are in the marketplace, so supplier's demand competitors. Matt: Then I think about what value we're driving to consumers, what value are you driving to your suppliers if you have them. And then what are the decisions you're going to make based on the strategy that you're laying out for the best outcome? Matt: So you want to grow market share, you want to grow revenue share. Do you not have enough capital? Do you actually need to raise capital and buy companies in order to get size and scale that's the outcome? Matt: So it's kind of a process that I've done over time and I want you to figure all that out, and it takes a while, maybe 90 days, maybe a little bit more, then it's really like how do you put a process together and dashboard is a little trite, but how do you actually run the business so you understand what things are working, the unit economics, what key layers of the business are you looking at, and then figure out an organization to support that and then you find the right team. Matt: And it sounds kind of exhaustive in terms of an answer, but I think too many people come in situations and they say, "Okay, I started this job, I got to restart it. What's my team look like?" Matt: And it's always I think the tail wagging the proverbial pivot dog and I typically, you can find startup people that are good at startups and sometimes, you find startup people that are good at later stage. Matt: You can find every dynamic possible, but until you do the work on, "I need this type of person for this type of growth stage, it's the right person the right time." Matt: If you don't do the work upfront, then you end up having a team that isn't the right team for the outcome that you want. Stephanie: Yup. Yeah, I've heard ... I forgot who said that startup advice where a lot of startups especially around here, are looking to hire that VIP level person, you have to pay a bunch of money to and someone was making the point of like, "Well, will they help you right now where you're at?" Stephanie: And it's okay to kind of grow out of people, but it's not okay to hire someone who's way above that actually can't get their hands dirty and do the work of what needs to be done right now. Matt: That's right. There's lots of people that have different approaches. I actually like to be pretty data driven in terms of how I think about people so I use like employee satisfaction studies and I use different personality profile tests. Matt: Obviously, you're not trying to like ... Hopefully, no one is like applying an AI filter looking at my reactions on this live video, but you can go overboard with data, but I do feel like you need to get the right alchemy talent for your team. Matt: And I've made mistakes where you have that senior person that doesn't want to get their hands dirty when you're like, "Look, I'm in build mode, I'm painting the fence, and I'm the CEO and I'm painting the fence and then I'm talking to the neighbors and driving Uber ..." Matt: The alchemy of that is hard to do, but that's a long winded answer to say there's there's a process and I think it's figuring out what's special about your company, how do you improve it, how do you run it? How did the inputs become the outputs and then what team is required for that? Stephanie: Yeah, very cool. So with the company having to shift as they did to go online and create mobile experiences, what kind of challenges did you see come up when you guys were going through that shift? Matt: Yeah, so there's multiple. So I always think about kind of the four constituents in most businesses, its investors, its customers, it's your internal employees and society. Matt: Not in that order. The order depends on lots of different things and so when I kind of checked down all those boxes, I think the big one, the first one I pick is investors because you're having to explain a model where the CD is purchased up front, it's very expensive versus you don't get all the revenue upfront, you amateurize that revenue and recognize it over 12, 24 whatever terms of the span of the subscription. Matt: So it's a change in terms of how you're reporting revenue, explain it in a consistent way, explaining the new metrics of subscription is challenged one I think from an investor perspective explaining why we have a language business, the Lexia business that I mentioned that focused on literacy is a 20 to 25% growth business, it's growing pretty nicely and language was declining. Matt: So then explaining to investors why do you still have this business and why are you changing the direction from enterprise to consumer, I think for employees. Matt: I always like to think through the employee piece, get the employee piece right, you can do anything and so getting the employees reason to believe, I was the first president to actually run the language business. Matt: It had multiple owners of the P&L and I was the first person probably since the CEO, we had one CEO that that started Rosetta Stone and took it public 20 plus years ago. Matt: I was the first single leader to ... I also tried creating a reason to believe a compelling vision, mission and culture and then when I think through kind of the customer piece, it wasn't as hard to be honest because there was so much brand equity that was good brand equity that doing little bit of things in a way that was kind of planful and data driven actually generated a lot of great outpouring of support. Matt: So the customer side of what we were doing wasn't as difficult as I would have thought and we also had an enterprise business that had already integrated things like digital tutoring with the software and demanding Fortune 500 companies. Matt: So there was some DNA in the company where we knew, "Boy, you can earn every interaction with every interaction." So that was that piece and then later, I started building more hooks into society as part of that and so I kind of view it as a self-fulfilling positive effect of you take care of your employees, they take care of your customers, the investors get great outcomes, and society benefits and you keep kind of turning this crank and you start getting much more reflective about it. Matt: And it does have, it does pay off. It takes I think, in general, I think people brag about how fast they can turn around companies. I don't know why people brag about that. Matt: I don't know, my experience is two years and taking a business from bad to like growing, at least, believing in itself is very hard and so I look at those four factors and I think the society piece is one that's super important that a lot of companies pay lip service to and there's a lot of discussion especially in Silicon Valley about some large companies that are controversial there. Matt: But I'll give you a for instance why if you can tie together the vision, mission, culture values to society, how that's self-reinforcing, we had a obviously horrible global pandemic that we're still pulling ourselves out of and everyone's kind of living through this experience at the same time. Matt: And we basically took just two days to decide that we're going to give away our software for free for three months for students. And we run a current business and selling software to enterprises and adults and we said, "You know what? We know that parents are actually going through hell because there's kind of a make your own adventure right now and schooling." Matt: [crosstalk] and I can feel it myself and we are like, "Oh my God, this is so stressful and the anxiety I heard from our own employees about it was overwhelming and I'm asking them to work harder." Matt: And so we said, "You know what? We're going to give away three months subscription and we're going to just do it and you just have to ... The parents have to put their email address in the school and that's it." Stephanie: Mm-hmm (affirmative). That's awesome. Matt: And we're not a free ... We're a paid subscription product. We're not, there are other competitors that have a freemium model and as you know, changing models or mixed models generally don't have a long history of working and we said, "You know what? We're just going to do it." Matt: And so the team decided to do it, I just said, "Yeah, let's do something." They said, "Here's exactly what we're going to do." And it was live, and then the amount of positive benefits, we got that from pure impressions. Matt: It actually helped our adult business to ... Adult language learning business. That's just one quick example of when those things all start working together. Matt: It's transparent, it's engaged and it's consistent. It becomes kind of operating leverage as well. So it's fun. It's fun to see how that work. Stephanie: Yeah, that's great. It's definitely a good reminder of do good things and good things will come back to you. Did you have any struggles with maybe like surges and people logging in and trying to get on the platform that maybe you hadn't experienced in the past? Because it was maybe a bit more predictable since it wasn't free? Matt: That's a really good question. Not on the system, the system's basis, but certainly from a support basis because we had a lot of, we outsource most of our customer support, and we debated for a while whether we we're going to continue phone support, we still do and I still debate that one, but a lot of our service providers were in outside United States and they all of a sudden had to work from home and then some facilities shut down and so we are just constantly playing whack-a-mole with our support organizations. Matt: And then also, I would say to our frontline heroes were our tutors and we employ a lot of highly educated tutors that have degrees in language learning and they all work from home primarily, they're part-time employees. Matt: And they turn out to be like our heroes because they took some support calls in addition to one-on-one digital tutoring. And so there was unique ways in which we had to adapt with the demand, but I would say more on the demand side regarding the support elements and we definitely saw a surge do the work from home trend as well, but that didn't impact kind of service levels and general software. Stephanie: Okay, cool. And I could see it being a bit tricky to develop and maintain a platform that has so many different layers to the business. I'm thinking about the enterprises who are going on there and buying seats for employees, and I'm thinking about the school is going on there for students, and then the individual consumer like me who's maybe like, "Hey, I'm going to Italy and I want to learn Italian." Stephanie: I don't know, but like it seems like it would be pretty tricky creating a platform that does all of that. How do you think about creating that so everyone gets a good experience and also being able to monitor and measure it in a successful way? Matt: Yeah, I've never seen the complexity Rosetta Stone before at the smallest scale, but what I mean by that is we have three businesses and we're a small cap public company. So that's unusual and the business was run on the language side ... Well, let me step back. Matt: So the literacy business is a business that was acquired seven, eight years ago and that's a 30-year-old company that was acquired, it's called Lexia and it works as a distinct operating unit from my business and is run by an awesome gentleman. Matt: And I use that word loosely and if he's listening, sorry Nick, he's a great guy and so passionate and his team is so good and it's ... I've never seen before a product that's built with like academic research combined with awesome data product engineering that gets results. Matt: It's just, I've never seen anything like it and they had the time to build this product over these many years, it was always digital first and so they're run separately. Matt: My language business was run on two different tech stacks. Actually, it was like five and when I started, I was like, "Well, wait a minute, why is this product that looks the same running off this underlying architecture? Why don't we move everything to react?" Matt: As I kind of went through this morass of tech stacks, it was a lot of M&A that generate a lot of complexity and a lot of tech debt. And so I would say majority of our innovation was not innovation, it was just keeping these old tech stacks up. Matt: So from an R&D perspective, in addition to all the other complexities we just talked about in this interview, I was trying to grow the consumer business, trying to change the business model, swapping out new team members for more growth orientation and doing a huge tech migration. Matt: And the complexity around that is mind boggling. We finished that late last year like de-flashing like old weird services, moving to a services architecture. All that stuff we end up doing and inevitably, the goal is to have one learner experience, just like you use Google, Google Mail for your enterprise, or personal. Matt: There were some admin privileges and other things that are associated in the back end, but in general, the product kind of looks and feels the same and that's, the inevitable goal which we're very close to execute on. Stephanie: Got it. Were there any pitfalls that you experienced when going through all those different pieces to the business or anything where you're like, "When we implemented this, or we move to this type of tech stack, this is when we saw a lot of improvements with conversions or anything around the consumer or enterprise business." Matt: Yeah, just on conversions, yeah, one thing on that is interesting is the amount of improvement we saw just with like putting different team members with specific goals and this is going to sound kind of crazy because everyone is going to like, "Yeah, he's talking about agile." Matt: Just getting very specific about areas in the funnel to improve and how to adjust the trial experience at certain times, and experiencing and showing customers different things at different times. Matt: That had like a crazy amount of upside for us. And I would say less architecturally that we see an improvement other than we had just less stuff that wasn't moving the innovation forward, but just these small things have big impacts and get and I must say like if any one of my team members is listening to this and say, "You haven't solved all that yet is." Matt: It's very difficult to take a business that is so complex, and then all sudden kind of say, "Look, we're going to reduce all the complexity, networks are innovating again." I think there's still a challenge of like, faster, smaller teams, we use a safe framework which is kind of scrum like. Matt: I don't think we figured all that out yet, but it's way different than when I came in and felt very waterfally to me. We're going to issue a press release, what this release is going to look like in one year and we're going to work back from that, I'm like, "Yeah, that's very Amazon." Stephanie: Yeah, yup. Matt: I'm like, "Well, how do you even know this is the right thing if you don't have any customer?" So there was there's a whole evolution of trying things, validating them, making sure that you're deploying enough capital against that makes sure it gets a fair shake, but not too much where you're, you're in over your head and we've had some public black eyes on some of our tests, and I don't care. Matt: We were trying some things internationally with tutoring, it didn't work out, it didn't have the capital honestly to support some of it and I kind of feel like those are good experiences to understand whether you're going to invest more in something or not. Matt: And so I think the fact that we can start doing those things now because we simplified the platform or if possible. Yeah, I think it's hard to say no to things and yes to things. And some of that discipline is easier when you're a startup because you just don't have people to outsource to. Stephanie: Yup. There's always an excuse. Nope, no one else can help us with that. Can't do it. Matt: Yeah. There's never like I'm a product manager by training and I've used every product manager tool under the sun and now I've kind of just resulted in my using Google Sheets again and what I'm trying to triage like epics and themes and stories, and I still like to play around with those types of planning elements, I just always look at all these people in these points available. I'm like, "You guys have no idea the luxury we have." Stephanie: I'm sure they like hearing that. Matt: Yeah, there's nothing more pure than a startup and it's like five people, five engineers and like a product manager that codes and the seat goes, doing UI, UX and it's ... Stephanie: Yeah, that's really fun. So you mentioned earlier a free trial which I actually went on Rosetta's website and I ended up going through the entire trial of learning Spanish. How did you all think about creating that free trial and actually convincing people to do it? Stephanie: Because a lot of times, I think I would see something like that and I'd be like, "Oh, that's too much time and I don't want to start that process right now." Stephanie: And I eagerly jumped in and started doing the lesson plan because it was engaging and fun, and it kind of felt like the real world with the person walking around and you're stopping and talking to them. How did you think about creating that? So it actually converted users into paying customers? Matt: Oh, thanks for saying that. Yeah, I think we have a long ways to go. I think in terms of what we could be doing is we're just, I just feel like we're sprinting to the start line because of the late start, but I think the core piece is for most companies and they think about like what business do you want to be in a lot of people will default to like whatever their venture capitalists said they should do from their other companies they manage or whether they read on TechCrunch or whatever, or listen to on this program is I think you have to be very specific once you figure it out the approach to the product that you're going after. Matt: Are you going to be freemium? Are you going to be paid trial? Or are you going to be for lack of a better term I call it force-trial or upfront trial and there's elements of this that change, there's kind of nuances. Because that's more of a nuanced discussion is the freemium players in the language space for instance would be Duolingo. Matt: How do you get the most amount of MAUs, Monthly Active Users and get enough of them to convert? Or the Spotify example, and you're using basically cap ex as cap, you're using your R&D to drive user and usage and that's kind of Slack-like. Matt: Slack is slightly different obviously. Then the paid trial is, "Well, I have enough of something that's good that I want a lot of people to use it, but I want the conversion to be pretty good." Matt: And so for the first one with freemium, you have to say, "Okay, it's going to be so fun and compelling and I'm going to actually invest in growth that isn't there yet because I think I have scale effects —I can crowd out everyone else." Matt: The second one is I actually have a pretty good product, I need enough people to use it and then feel like I use it enough to want to use more of it. And that's what I decided to do and I'll explain why. Matt: And then on the upfront paid thing is typical like for low ACV, Annual Contract Value SaaS companies you'd see, please just call my ... Just call us and we'll walk you through it with one of my sales reps. Matt: And we'll do a guided tour through the demo or whatever and the decision why we did the second one was it was a good decision and is people knew enough about what the Rosetta Stone brand was like that we knew people would want to try it and that for people that remember what it was like, they definitely would want to use it again and we felt like the pinch was more compelling if we gave everyone a little taste of that. Stephanie: Mm-hmm (affirmative). Matt: We could have said, "Please pay up front." And we're the gold standard and giddy up, but we felt like we needed to earn our stripes a little bit into proving to people that we weren't just like a port of a CD product. Matt: And so that's why we decided to do that and we've played along different roads before. We've never done full freemium and I would argue at this point in the market, we would not be better served to do that because Duolingo has done a really good job of growing their monthly active users and have built some advantages there and we're not trying to play that game. Matt: I'm trying to play the game of being a really good, effective language learning product and I'm trying to set the tone in the trial experience that when you're using the product, it's not going to be like a game. Matt: It's not going to be like Clash of Clans. I guess Clash of Clans is a bad example, or the jewel or like Candy Crush I guess is what I was thinking of. Matt: Every day, I collect coins and I'm collecting coins to benefit my gameplay. It's kind of how I think about Duolingo a little bit and it's ... I think they're masterful of what they do, but I think they're designed to do something different than what I'm trying to do. Matt: And if you're serious about learning a language, and you stick to what I'm doing and you do a couple tutor sessions that we offer, you're going to get there. Matt: And so the business model and what we're trying to do in terms of posture, not market share, but revenue share really drove kind of the philosophy on the trial experience. Stephanie: Yeah, it definitely, it felt more serious especially where you could speak in the language and it would tell you I guess if the tonality was right, and if you were saying it correctly, and it would keep kind of advising you on it, once I saw it had that feature, that to me was when I was like, "Whoa, this is really serious, and I better be ready to learn this language because it's not like a game, it's not just saying random words." Stephanie: You're actually kind of conversating and having to hear yourself which I think is really important. That seems like a big first step to getting people to try it. Matt: It's an interesting observation because we are very oral first in our pedagogy. We want people to engage with the product and speaking is actually just in general a really good way to learn and then the key outcome of speaking well is not sounding stupid. Matt: And so if you're trying to learn a language, you want to sound somewhat authentic. So for Rosetta Stone, I would say, for anyone that really wants to learn a language, we'll get you there, but if you're just kind of trying to build like, it's like counting your calories kind of. Matt: If you wanted to do something like that, then I would say, pick a freemium product over ours and yeah, it's not like super intense scary, but it's like, "Yeah, you better do your lessons before you do your group tutoring session." Stephanie: Yeah. No, that's, I mean, that's great to incentivize people like you're paying for this, you might as well get the best out of it. Is there, so one thing I was thinking when I was interacting with the free trial was, "Wow, this would be really cool if there was like a virtual world where you could be walking around and talking to other students who are learning." Stephanie: Are you all thinking about any technologies like that to implement or is there anything on your radar where you're like, "We're moving in this direction or planning on trying this tech out or this digital platform out?" Matt: Yeah, we've played with VR in the past. I've been kind of like bearish every time someone says, "Let's go into VR." I'm like, "This is [crosstalk 00:39:27]." Stephanie: It's a hot word for a while. VR everything, it doesn't matter to the problem. Matt: Yeah, I know and I have a lot of friends. One really good friend of ours, she has a pretty successful, his definition of success and I think it is honestly successful VR games company, but like I have a lot of other friends that went into VR that gaming or especially verticals that just had a hell of a time just because there's not enough handsets that are available. Matt: Well, we have dabbled in in terms of immersive experience. I think what you're saying is is there a way to since we're immersive, use technology to make it even more immersive and what I really want to do is enable more AR in our experience. Matt: And we have like a little feature called seek and speak where you can ... It's like an almost a sample app where you can use your phone, we use ARKit to do a treasure hunt for things around your house like fruits, objects around your house and incorporate that in your speech practice. Matt: And I always thought that was like a really cool thing for us to expand into and if we ever get the Apple visor, some AR HoloLens or whatever, it'd be cool to start interacting with your world around you, not just with translation, but also to see if you can actually interact with folks that are kind of ambient around that experience. Matt: I personally and maybe this we're going too deep here, but I always thought it'd be cool if like I can visit another country and just decide how much of the spoken language am I going to generate myself, how much am I going to have my device do it because I'm not going to spend the time. Matt: And then how can I phone a friend? How could I have my tutor or my guide integrated experience where I'm going to sound really authentic if I do this or here's an experience that I could do here. Matt: I think the goal for language learning inevitably is different based on where you are in the world, but if you're from the United States or one of ... Maybe some European countries like the UK, it's kind of like this is a cool way to get engaged with a culture. Matt: If you're not in those countries, learning English primarily is a necessity and so I think some of these AR ideas that you just mentioned would be really good and speaking more frequently to other folks that are even not native speakers, but just trying to generate language is a very good way to teach. Matt: We have a product coming out called Rosetta Stone English this summer, literally like a couple months and it is a version of Rosetta Stone for EL kids or English Learners K through six. Matt: And this product is an oral first product and this blew me away. The stat if you're trying to teach a kid English primarily from lots of different countries is written communication. Matt: It's like 20% spoken and so our product is like 70, 80% spoken because this ... And so it's just really interesting. What could you do that's more immersive using AR or VR? Matt: I think there's, I'm with you. I think there's a lot of cool things you could do and I think you could enhance the travel experience quite a bit. I think you could enhance the young learner experience quite a bit. I think there's so many cool things you could do. Stephanie: Yeah, I completely agree and there seems like a lot of opportunities there. So what kind of disruptions do you see coming to the world of ecommerce and online learning? Matt: Yeah, it's a weird market and it's weird because like depending on what we're talking about in terms of overall commerce, it's like a $6 trillion education market, 6 trillion. Matt: Consumer is probably the largest out of that and then obviously, there's higher ed, there's middle school, high school, there's elementary, and then there's adult education and then where it's coming from, is the consumer paying, is the government paying. Matt: And so take all this aside, less than 10% is digital right now and I think there's going to be this massive realization and awakening because of the C-19 pandemic of everything that I do has to be digital. Matt: And it's not that we're replacing teachers, it's how do we integrate digital curriculum and conductivity between the teacher and the student, how do I build a data layer that personalized that experience. Matt: I think that can happen between, language learning, it can happen in lots of different curriculum like reading and writing. And not having a digital enabled kind of curriculum I think is going to be like if you don't have a solution for that, if you're an education system, if you're a college, if you're whatever, and if you don't offer these types of products in the future, you're going to go the way the dodo bird. Matt: I think higher education has a wake up call. J.Crew, I like J.Crew, they're in bankruptcy now. Hertz, I used Hertz. They're in bankruptcy now and I think there's this massive pull forward right now that's happening because the product that we've been using in education hasn't changed in like 40, 50 years. Stephanie: Yup. Matt: It's the same problem. If I time warp myself from 50 years ago into most classrooms, it would look the same. Stephanie: Yup. Yeah, I've always kind of thought that a disruption was definitely coming around higher education, but this seems to have moved everything forward by many years and especially around K through 12 where that felt like it would be much harder to change. Stephanie: For colleges, it's like, "Okay, now it's changing pretty quickly with all the boot camps coming out and company's not really always requiring degrees, at least in this area." Stephanie: But K through 12 felt hard to change and it feels like this is going to be an interesting forcing function now that like you said, a lot of kids are home and parents are figuring out how to be a part of their education more in the online learning process. Stephanie: It just seems like there's going to be a lot of opportunities that come up because of this. Matt: Yeah, I agree. And I also think that now I'm sounding like the tech utilitarian, but I would say that ed tech and I'm not from the ed tech space, but I am in it now. Matt: I would say that the ed tech providers that ... We're now entering the third wave I guess is how I think about it. The second wave which is typical of most other businesses that you and I have seen before, like ecommerce or sales ops tools, now you can talk about those and go, "Remember Omniture and it was badass?" Matt: Yes, it's now part of Adobe Cloud Matt is when you talk about these generational shifts in how we think about things, I think a lot of the ed tech players, people who are selling software to schools or directly to the parents or kids or whomever, they've definitely oversold or oversold the efficacy of some of those products. Matt: And when I talk about digital transformation, I'm not talking about the ability to do things self serve, and have the teacher look at some flat experience. Matt: Right now and this is not against teachers. Teachers, they're like little mini MacGyvers to me. I mean, they're like doing amazing things streaming together curriculum on the fly. Stephanie: Yeah, both my sister and my mom are teachers and I do not know how they're doing it and how they had to pivot so quickly to being in the classroom and my sister is actually a ESL, English as a Second Language teacher. Yeah. Matt: Oh my gosh, okay. Stephanie: Yup, because I have a twin sister and she always tells me about the difficulties that she's experiencing right now trying to bring her students online and develop curriculums online and a lot of them don't have internet access and it's just very interesting seeing how they kind of develop workarounds to make it work for their students. Matt: Yeah, my criticism of education isn't the teacher clearly, a lot of it is kind of the cost basis in the bureaucracy and when I talk about ed tech, it's like I think it comes down to and this is not a Matt Hulett Rosetta Stone specific thing is educating a group of young individuals or even old individuals, it doesn't matter the same way at the same time makes zero sense. Matt: And so building in the ability for the student to do some things themselves, having a data layer so that a teacher understands the areas in which that student is struggling, and so that the instruction becomes very personalized. Matt: It is generally what I'm talking about and it's right now, I think we have a billion and a half young kids around the world that don't have access to computers. Matt: And if they do have access to computers, they're scanning in their Math homework and sending it to a teacher. Well, who knows if I struggle for five minutes on this problem versus long division versus multiplication? The teacher doesn't know. Matt: And so I think the ed tech software that I'm more in favor of what I'm speaking about is how do you build curriculum-based, efficacy-based software, not unlike what your mom and your sister think about because they have degrees and know how to actually educate someone, they're not software [inaudible 00:49:10]. Matt: And if they're wanting to provide very explicit instruction, my guess is they're really swamped. They've got other things they need to do, they're probably paying for materials that are [crosstalk 00:49:22]. Stephanie: Yup. Matt: And so I think about all these stresses and we're asking them to provide excellent education, it's just, it's too much. And so I really feel like this third wave of technology, and I think it's going to happen is it's going to integrate this we call AI and HI, how do you integrate the best of what software can do and integrate that into the lesson planning of the teacher versus let's try to create AI for the sake of AI and disintermediate teachers which I think is ridiculous is and that's what I'm talking about. Matt: Because I see a lot of tech companies playing the game of ed tech versus education companies that are actually trying to be technology companies. Matt: I think the latter will be the software and the providers that will end up actually being the most successful and the most adopted, but obviously, I'm passionate about this because I've seen this with our Lexia software. Matt: And we have like 16 plus academic studies that show that the software works and I'm like, "How is this possible that two-thirds of kids still today by the time they're a third grade or reading below their grade level that continues through eighth grade?" Matt: Two-thirds are reading below level. How is this possible? And I'm not here to tell my own software. I'm just like, "Why is this possible?" Well, it turns out we don't train teachers to teach kids how to read. Matt: There's an approach to it, and we don't do real time assessments of kids struggling, the teachers swamped, they don't know what's going on. Matt: Anyways, I could talk about this for hours, but I do think there's this world where at some point, the $6 trillion business of educating all these kids and adults and young adults will be digitized. Matt: And I think that will be an interesting space. Ed tech is that one space where most VCs wouldn't want to touch. Stephanie: Yup. Yeah, I know. It's a hard ... I mean, health care and education. It's a hard space. So yeah, I completely agree. I know we're running into time and I want to make sure we can jump into the lightning round. Matt: Okay. Stephanie: Is there any other high level thoughts that you want to share before we jump into that? Matt: Nope. I think I hit the verbose button when I answered that question, but I didn't realize you have some familiar background on education which got me going so I [crosstalk] Stephanie: Yeah, no, yeah. Matt: I will be [crosstalk] lightning round. Stephanie: Yeah, we need a whole other podcasts where we can just talk education stuff and I can have my family be the call-ins and they can give us a little advice and ideas. Stephanie: All right, so the lightning round brought to you by our friends at Salesforce Commerce Cloud is where I ask a few questions and you have one minute or less Matt to answer. Are you ready? Matt: I'm ready. Stephanie: All right. What's up next on your reading list? Matt: Words that matter. I don't know the author. Stephanie: Cool. What's up next on your podcast list? Matt: This podcast of course. Stephanie: Hey, good. That's the right answer. Matt: And then Masters of Scale. There's a new podcast actually with one of my competitors from Duolingo. Stephanie: Oh-oh. Very cool. Yeah, that's a good one. What's up next on your Netflix queue? Matt: God, it is embarrassing. Do I have to say it? Stephanie: Yes you do. Matt: Too Hot to Handle. Stephanie: Oh my gosh. I can't believe you're watching that. I'm judging a little bit, but I've also seen a few episodes. So if you were to choose a company right now to turn around, not Rosetta Stone, some brand new company, not a brand new one, but maybe one that's in the industry right now where you're like, "I could jump in and help." What company would you choose? Matt: That's a great question. WeWork. Stephanie: Woo, that would be an interesting one to try and turn around. Matt: Yeah. Stephanie: All right, next one. What app are you using on your phone right now that's most helpful? Matt: I listen to a lot of podcast, I love Overcast. I don't know if anyone ever mentions that. I just love it because I listen to things 2x. Stephanie: Yup, yeah, I know. I agree. I like that app as well. What language are you or your family working on right now to learn? Matt: Well, it's funny. I'm kind of barely competent in Spanish. My 16-year-old is actually I would say pretty intermediate level Spanish and my 10-year-old is oddly learning Japanese. Stephanie: Oh, go. Go him. A boy, right? Yeah, that's great. All right and our last, a little bit more difficult question. What's up next for ecommerce professionals? Matt: Oh boy, ecommerce professionals. I think to me it's a lot of the same topics in ecommerce have been discussed for so many years and I think that the interesting one is how do we actually make social commerce really good. Matt: And I think I spend a lot of time just, I'm not serious with it, but playing with like, TikTok and Twitch, and I think there's some elements to the social selling piece that I think are super interesting that no one's really figured out and I buy actually a lot of products off Instagram, and it's still too much friction and it's not quite working right for me. Matt: So I think there's some ... How do you integrate ecomm and then TikTok in a way that's native to that audience? I think there's some things there. Stephanie: Oh, that's a good answer. Well, Matt, this has been yeah, such a fun interview. Where can people find out more about you and Rosetta Stone? Matt: Rosettastone.com for the company and I'm matt_hulett on Twitter and it was a pleasure to talk to you today. Stephanie: All right, thanks so much. Matt: Thank you.
Je li vam inbox neugodno pun (41 novi email!), toliko da vam se okrene želudac kad ga morate u ponedjeljak ujutro otvarati? Nedavno smo unutar Netokracije održali radionicu iz korištenja i organizacije emaila. Zašto? Email je uz sve moguće alate i dalje ključno sredstvo poslovne komunikacije. Sredstvo koje nas nitko ne uči koristiti pa su nam inboxi puni, glave frustrirane, a osobe s kojima se dopisujemo često frustrirane. U ovoj epizodi Netokracija Podcasta Mia i Ivan dijele svoje prakse i savjete u korištenju emaila temeljene na stotinama emailova koje dobivaju svakodnevno u Netokraciji, a sa preporukama im se pridružuje i predsjednik uprave Pevexa Jurica Lovrinčević poznat po tome što iako je direktor jedne velike tvrtke na emailove odgovara unutar 24 sata: ► Što je inbox zero i kako dovesti nove emailova na nulu; ► Kako koristiti tagove i kategorije za organizaciju emailova - i trebate li; ► Zašto sa "snoozanjem" više ne morate pamtiti je li vam netko odgovorio; ► Kako Ivan koristi multiple inbox za postizanje inbox zero; ► Kako organizirati projekte kroz email, jer da - za manje projekte - email je idealan; ► Trebate li odgovarati na emailove izvan radnog vremena; ► Kako napisati odličan out-of-office email; ► Što je email intro? Svi savjeti o kojima govorimo (osim Gmailovog Multiple Inboxes) primjenjivi su u svim email aplikacijama, od Gmaila do Outlooka. __________ PRIMAJTE NETOKRACIJA NEWSLETTER Besplatno u vašem inboxu ► https://netokracija.com/newsletter DOJAVITE VIJEST Imate prijedlog ili želite dojaviti vijest ► info@netokracija.com PRATITE NETOKRACIJU NA DRUŠTVENIM MREŽAMA Pratite nas na Twitteru ► http://twitter.com/netokracija Pratite nas na Instagramu ► http://instagram.com/netokracija Lajkajte nas na Facebooku ► http://www.fb.com/netokracija PRATITE SVOJE NETOKRATE Ivan Brezak Brkan (IBB) https://www.instagram.com/ivanbrezakbrkan https://linkedin.com/in/ivanbrezakbrkan Mia Biberović http://www.twitter.com/cyberkoza https://www.instagram.com/cyberkoza https://www.linkedin.com/in/miabiberovic/
30 марта Google пообещал направить более 800 млн. долларов на поддержку малого и среднего бизнеса, который пострадал во время карантина. Также обещал помочь организациям здравоохранения и правительственным организациям. Как они распределятся? 340 млн будут предоставлены в качестве кредитов в Google.Ads.
Googlemail, Walsprengung, Prince Andrew, Sekten, Poschfonso, Uiguren, Succession, Mandalorian, Watchmen, American Horror Story, Roast Of Shahak Shapira, Jumanji, Sopranos S01E11, Bundesliga Frauen/Herren, Trainerwechsel, BVB, Bayern
This is Episode 94. Today, again, it's just you, me, and the microphones. So please, please please let me know if you like this format. I'd love to know if you prefer these or prefer interviews or coaching type strategy sessions. Without your feedback, I'm going to go off of the latest feedback from whoever came before you right now. People tell me to just educate, educate, educate and that's what I'm trying to do. So today's episode is really inspired by my own business. I've shifted using my tech tools to be able to be more mobile available. And when I say mobile available, I mean that I still primarily do my work at my desk with my laptop, which is connected to a nice big huge screen with a separate mouse and separate keyboard. So I have two screens, and that's where I do most of my work. Then, there's also the times where I take my laptop with me and I go sit at a coffee shop or the library, or I go and sit somewhere that I don't necessarily even need WiFi. And in those times, I sit in front of just the laptop and don't use the external mouse or external keyboard. Maybe I'll use the mouse depending on what I'm doing. But I never take my keyboard with me. That was a long way of saying that my laptop is very portable. My laptop is the crutch of what I use for my business. And on my laptop, I have a variety of tools. Most of the tools that I use, I use within my Chrome browser. So I use Slack for communication within my team. And I use Trello for project management. I use GSuirte, so I use my Google Mail for my inbox. And I use Google Docs and Google Sheets for spreadsheets and documents and things like that. What I have found is that sometimes when I'm out, I just don't want to get out my laptop. And I am so glad that those tools that I just shared with you, Slack, Trello, all of the Google Suite products, all have apps that I can use on my phone and continue to be productive to move my business forward and continue to work even if I haven't pulled out the laptop. But in the past week or so, I have been really watching my daughter at gymnastics, rather than going to a coffee shop. And balancing the laptop on my lap while I'm watching gymnastics isn't always the most convenient. So I've gone to my phone. I can easily use Trello from my phone. I've been using that for several years it feels like, but I've been using Trello on my phone pretty regularly to stay in touch with client projects and other things like that. I use Slack pretty regularly on my phone as well so that I can communicate with my team. But what I hadn't done is writing or a lot of spreadsheets. So I hadn't really explored the value of Google Docs and Google Sheets from the perspective of using them on my phone. I am working on a brand new funnel, a new summit, and a bunch of other new stuff that I cannot wait to share with you. And these are the things that I worked on from my phone. It was so amazing that I could just sit there, write my emails for the funnel, and then go and look up and see my daughter flipping and doing whatever she was doing at the time, and then look back down and write something else. So what I have done is, I have created myself a little bit of a system as to how I use Google Docs, in particular, to actually create an entire flow. It's really funny because most of the time when I work with clients, they will provide me with a Google Doc that they're cutting writer has created with all of the copy. It's got a beautiful table of contents, headings, and it's really clear and really easy for me to navigate as the tech implementer, getting those pieces into the software where it needs to be. But I had never been the creator of those. And when I went to Google Docs to create this for myself, I had started it on my laptop. So I had started the Table of Contents by using the different headings. And I went to my phone and said, “Okay, so how do I create headings?”. It was so, so easy! You just scroll down a little bit and you get a menu bar at the top, you click a button, and you have all sorts of options for formatting. I was won over by that. And it's so funny because here I am such a tech nerd and someone who wants to just make technology work for myself and for my clients and for anybody who's listening, and I had resisted using Google Docs on my phone. I was worried that I wasn't going to be able to do enough. I took a step back. And I opened up the application and saw what I was able to do. So again, that just won me over. So I'm really, really excited about the potential for drafting content from my phone. And I hope that you are too. Just because you run a business doesn't mean that you can't do a huge amount of work or pre work from your phone. I'm going to go back to Trello a little bit. Trello is a very different experience on the phone versus on the desktop. On the phone, you obviously have much less real estate. So they've consolidated things. And things are in a few different spots. When I was first using Trello on my phone, I would use it just to kind of see what had been sent over. But I wouldn't actually make a whole lot of action or do a whole lot of work with the Trello board with the project and moving pieces forward, because I just felt that it wasn't as intuitive. I would go back to the browser version in Chrome and look at it on my screen with my laptop open and I would do the work there. Even simple things like moving a card. Now, I'm at the point where it's not a matter of just moving a card that I do only on the computer. I actually do everything, I'll set up brand new boards for clients. I will create checklists and copy this from that and all sorts of other really functional things that helped me move my business forward. And I'll do that from my phone. I'm going to talk about one more thing that I do on my phone that I actually prefer to do on my phone than on the desktop or on the browser version. That is to process the promotional emails. So you know, we all sign up for newsletters and information and things like that coming from email. And I've mentioned it before on the podcast that I generally read through my emails when I'm on my phone. I love how the Gmail app works where all you have to do is swipe to get rid of something to delete it. I am subscribed to a lot of newsletters. Which is a good thing because I like to stay on top of things for my own business for my clients businesses. But sometimes there are emails that come in that are wrap up emails that I don't need to read. Or there's emails that come in that are in conjunction with a podcast. And I've actually listened to that podcast and I don't need to read it. So I can easily swipe them away. I find that that is a very effective way of staying on top of those promotional update emails and not feeling like they're bogging me down. And I find that it's actually faster to do it on my phone versus on the desktop browser. Another application that I just started using on my phone is my Adobe Acrobat Reader. I pay for Adobe Acrobat so that I could have signing and a few other functions on there. And I connected the app with my Adobe account. Now I have access to all of the documents that I send out for signature right there on my phone. I'm able to easily check the status of things or reset or add on or things like that. So that's another app that I never really thought was going to be practical to us from my phone. But I embraced it. And I am so so glad that I did. That brings me to apps that may not work as well as you'd like them to. I use Photoshop pretty regularly on my laptop. And I use it for creating artwork and for editing things that I need to put on websites. A lot of times they use it for resizing images. There are Photoshop apps that are available for the phone. I don't use any of those because I haven't found a way to translate what I do on my phone with those pictures or graphics into something that is tangible. I'd rather take a time block, use Photoshop on that time block, and do it on my laptop. It's just one of those things that sometimes the apps work really, really well and I wanted to share with you that not every app is going to do something and help you move your business forward. We're getting close to Thanksgiving, Black Friday, and the holiday season. You know, Christmas and New Year's is right on our doorstep. I would encourage you to understand and embrace the business of this time of year and look at the apps that you use on your browser or on your laptop or on your desktop and say, “Which one of these can I leverage the mobile version of, so that I can be productive in times that I just can't get my laptop out?” I encourage you to play with it. See where you can go! Definitely hit me up on Instagram and let me know what you're using. You know what snap a picture of your screen when you're using one of these apps and tag me in your story. I would love that. Hit me up, I am @Techofbusiness. I will be back with an interview next week. So if you are interested in more interviews, let me know. If you love these solo episodes where I share just how I do my business, how clients do their business, or how to use a specific software tool, let me know that as well. Thank you so much for being part of the Tech of Business community. If you haven't already joined us inside the Facebook group, which you can access at techofbusiness.com/community join us now. There we talk all about expanding your business. Thanks for listening to the Tech of Business podcast. If you enjoyed the show, please subscribe, share, rate, and review on Apple podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Overcast, or wherever you download your favorite shows. You can also check out the show notes and learn more about me at techofbusiness.com. I'll see you next week. Connect with Jaime: Instagram: @techofbusiness Twitter: @techofbusiness Facebook: @yourbiztech LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaimeslutzky/ Email: jaime@techofbusiness.com
This is Episode 94. Today, again, it's just you, me, and the microphones. So please, please please let me know if you like this format. I’d love to know if you prefer these or prefer interviews or coaching type strategy sessions. Without your feedback, I'm going to go off of the latest feedback from whoever came before you right now. People tell me to just educate, educate, educate and that's what I'm trying to do. So today's episode is really inspired by my own business. I've shifted using my tech tools to be able to be more mobile available. And when I say mobile available, I mean that I still primarily do my work at my desk with my laptop, which is connected to a nice big huge screen with a separate mouse and separate keyboard. So I have two screens, and that's where I do most of my work. Then, there's also the times where I take my laptop with me and I go sit at a coffee shop or the library, or I go and sit somewhere that I don't necessarily even need WiFi. And in those times, I sit in front of just the laptop and don't use the external mouse or external keyboard. Maybe I'll use the mouse depending on what I'm doing. But I never take my keyboard with me. That was a long way of saying that my laptop is very portable. My laptop is the crutch of what I use for my business. And on my laptop, I have a variety of tools. Most of the tools that I use, I use within my Chrome browser. So I use Slack for communication within my team. And I use Trello for project management. I use GSuirte, so I use my Google Mail for my inbox. And I use Google Docs and Google Sheets for spreadsheets and documents and things like that. What I have found is that sometimes when I'm out, I just don't want to get out my laptop. And I am so glad that those tools that I just shared with you, Slack, Trello, all of the Google Suite products, all have apps that I can use on my phone and continue to be productive to move my business forward and continue to work even if I haven't pulled out the laptop. But in the past week or so, I have been really watching my daughter at gymnastics, rather than going to a coffee shop. And balancing the laptop on my lap while I'm watching gymnastics isn't always the most convenient. So I've gone to my phone. I can easily use Trello from my phone. I've been using that for several years it feels like, but I've been using Trello on my phone pretty regularly to stay in touch with client projects and other things like that. I use Slack pretty regularly on my phone as well so that I can communicate with my team. But what I hadn't done is writing or a lot of spreadsheets. So I hadn't really explored the value of Google Docs and Google Sheets from the perspective of using them on my phone. I am working on a brand new funnel, a new summit, and a bunch of other new stuff that I cannot wait to share with you. And these are the things that I worked on from my phone. It was so amazing that I could just sit there, write my emails for the funnel, and then go and look up and see my daughter flipping and doing whatever she was doing at the time, and then look back down and write something else. So what I have done is, I have created myself a little bit of a system as to how I use Google Docs, in particular, to actually create an entire flow. It's really funny because most of the time when I work with clients, they will provide me with a Google Doc that they're cutting writer has created with all of the copy. It's got a beautiful table of contents, headings, and it's really clear and really easy for me to navigate as the tech implementer, getting those pieces into the software where it needs to be. But I had never been the creator of those. And when I went to Google Docs to create this for myself, I had started it on my laptop. So I had started the Table of Contents by using the different headings. And I went to my phone and said, “Okay, so how do I create headings?”. It was so, so easy! You just scroll down a little bit and you get a menu bar at the top, you click a button, and you have all sorts of options for formatting. I was won over by that. And it's so funny because here I am such a tech nerd and someone who wants to just make technology work for myself and for my clients and for anybody who's listening, and I had resisted using Google Docs on my phone. I was worried that I wasn't going to be able to do enough. I took a step back. And I opened up the application and saw what I was able to do. So again, that just won me over. So I'm really, really excited about the potential for drafting content from my phone. And I hope that you are too. Just because you run a business doesn't mean that you can't do a huge amount of work or pre work from your phone. I'm going to go back to Trello a little bit. Trello is a very different experience on the phone versus on the desktop. On the phone, you obviously have much less real estate. So they've consolidated things. And things are in a few different spots. When I was first using Trello on my phone, I would use it just to kind of see what had been sent over. But I wouldn't actually make a whole lot of action or do a whole lot of work with the Trello board with the project and moving pieces forward, because I just felt that it wasn't as intuitive. I would go back to the browser version in Chrome and look at it on my screen with my laptop open and I would do the work there. Even simple things like moving a card. Now, I'm at the point where it's not a matter of just moving a card that I do only on the computer. I actually do everything, I’ll set up brand new boards for clients. I will create checklists and copy this from that and all sorts of other really functional things that helped me move my business forward. And I'll do that from my phone. I'm going to talk about one more thing that I do on my phone that I actually prefer to do on my phone than on the desktop or on the browser version. That is to process the promotional emails. So you know, we all sign up for newsletters and information and things like that coming from email. And I've mentioned it before on the podcast that I generally read through my emails when I'm on my phone. I love how the Gmail app works where all you have to do is swipe to get rid of something to delete it. I am subscribed to a lot of newsletters. Which is a good thing because I like to stay on top of things for my own business for my clients businesses. But sometimes there are emails that come in that are wrap up emails that I don't need to read. Or there's emails that come in that are in conjunction with a podcast. And I've actually listened to that podcast and I don't need to read it. So I can easily swipe them away. I find that that is a very effective way of staying on top of those promotional update emails and not feeling like they're bogging me down. And I find that it's actually faster to do it on my phone versus on the desktop browser. Another application that I just started using on my phone is my Adobe Acrobat Reader. I pay for Adobe Acrobat so that I could have signing and a few other functions on there. And I connected the app with my Adobe account. Now I have access to all of the documents that I send out for signature right there on my phone. I'm able to easily check the status of things or reset or add on or things like that. So that's another app that I never really thought was going to be practical to us from my phone. But I embraced it. And I am so so glad that I did. That brings me to apps that may not work as well as you'd like them to. I use Photoshop pretty regularly on my laptop. And I use it for creating artwork and for editing things that I need to put on websites. A lot of times they use it for resizing images. There are Photoshop apps that are available for the phone. I don't use any of those because I haven't found a way to translate what I do on my phone with those pictures or graphics into something that is tangible. I'd rather take a time block, use Photoshop on that time block, and do it on my laptop. It's just one of those things that sometimes the apps work really, really well and I wanted to share with you that not every app is going to do something and help you move your business forward. We're getting close to Thanksgiving, Black Friday, and the holiday season. You know, Christmas and New Year's is right on our doorstep. I would encourage you to understand and embrace the business of this time of year and look at the apps that you use on your browser or on your laptop or on your desktop and say, “Which one of these can I leverage the mobile version of, so that I can be productive in times that I just can't get my laptop out?” I encourage you to play with it. See where you can go! Definitely hit me up on Instagram and let me know what you're using. You know what snap a picture of your screen when you're using one of these apps and tag me in your story. I would love that. Hit me up, I am @Techofbusiness. I will be back with an interview next week. So if you are interested in more interviews, let me know. If you love these solo episodes where I share just how I do my business, how clients do their business, or how to use a specific software tool, let me know that as well. Thank you so much for being part of the Tech of Business community. If you haven't already joined us inside the Facebook group, which you can access at techofbusiness.com/community join us now. There we talk all about expanding your business. Thanks for listening to the Tech of Business podcast. If you enjoyed the show, please subscribe, share, rate, and review on Apple podcasts, Stitcher Radio, Overcast, or wherever you download your favorite shows. You can also check out the show notes and learn more about me at techofbusiness.com. I'll see you next week. Connect with Jaime: Instagram: @techofbusiness Twitter: @techofbusiness Facebook: @yourbiztech LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaimeslutzky/ Email: jaime@techofbusiness.com
Die Top-Funktionen von Android 10 - und welche davon in der Praxis wirklich nützlich sind Android 10 ist seit ein paar Wochen verfügbar, ich hatte, unmittelbar nach der Installation, schon mal meine ersten Eindrücke von Alpha zu Beta über Release für Euch zusammen gestellt. Nun bringt dieses neue Upgrade eine Menge Neuerungen mit, die natürlich als der Nabel der Welt beworben werden - stellt sich nur die Frage: Hat es das wirklich gebraucht? Und was davon ist in der Praxis wirklich so gut, wie Google es sich am Reißbrett ausgedacht hat? Android 10 ist da - und hier die (angeblichen) Top Funktionen... /Bild-Quelle Google/Android10 Die größte Crux mit Android ist gleichzeitig der größte Vorteil: die Offenheit. Es gibt nicht nur einen stillen Hersteller, der Technik, Software und Entwicklung in quasi einer Person vereinbart. Nein, Android ist ein offenes System, und jeder der Ahnung und Lust hat, kann ein Gerät entwickeln und Android darauf installieren und es in den Vertrieb geben. Und hier ist der ganz große und leider immer noch unvermeidliche Nachteile: Android ist also ein Sammelsurium von Treibern und Hardware-Spezifikationen, bevor oben drauf das System und dann die Nutzerschnittstelle folgt. Was ich damit sagen möchte: leider ist es aktuell nur für Googles eigene Pixels und eine Reihe von Nokias verfügbar, bei dem Rest basteln und testen die Hersteller noch, ob ihr unnötiger aber konkurrenzloser eigener Aufsatz und die diversen eigenen Apps das vertragen, bevor sie auch auf Samsung und LG, Huawei und wasweißich das Update freigeben. Und für alle von Euch, die es auf einem Telefon installiert haben, auf dem es schon läuft oder noch darauf waren, stelle ich mal die von Google als Top-Funktionen herausgestellten Funktionen auf den Praxis-Prüfstand! Die Liste ist, auch wenn ich sie nummeriere, kein Ranking! Ich habe in dieser Reihenfolge die Funktionen entdeckt und gebe sie Euch so weiter. Entscheidend ist bei jedem Feature mein Abschlusskommentar. Also, da wären...: Neue App-Berechtigungen Für mich immer noch das Top-Feature, da es Datenschutz, Tracking und Zugriffsberechtigung in einem vereint und schon bei der Installation prominent angezeigt wird. Auch im laufenden Betrieb kommen immer wieder Meldungen wie "Twitter greift auf Deinen Standort zu" - und mit einem Fingerzeig kann man dies von "immer" auf "nur wenn die App geöffnet ist" oder "aus" stellen. Eine super Funktion für die Batterie und auch für die Privatsphäre. Aber Achtung: nicht alle Apps sind bereit für diese Funktion und nerven dann gerne penetrant mit Meldungen, dass der Standortdienst deaktiviert wurde. Für mich ein klares Zeichen, sich von dieser App mit sofortiger Wirkung zu trennen - und nein, ich rede nicht von GoogleMaps - das man übrigens wunderbar auf "nur wenn App offen" umstellen kann, ohne Probleme zu bekommen...Dark Mode Das zweite, was im Installationsprozess von Android10 prominent angezeigt wird - und für mich eine der aktuell nutzlosesten Funktionen. Während viele diese Funktion zu programmieren, dass sie sich Tageszeit-abhängig ein- und ausschaltet, kennt Android10 hier nur manuelles "an" oder "aus". Finde ich sehr enttäuschend, aber hier sieht man den Hochdruck, unter dem es noch hopplahopp ins OS eingepflegt werden musste. Klar, dunkel spart Batterie - wenn auch nicht so viel, wie immer jeder immer so tut, es ist kein Wundermittel für die Batterie! Und ohne den Automatismus beim Umschalten ist die Funktion für mich restlos wertlos!Smart Reply An sich eines der geilsten Features, die Google in letzter Zeit schon in Google Mail stückchenweise - sei es nur als Beta - ausgerollt hat. Wenn ich englische Mails schreibe, total Wahnsinn, was das Teil erkennt und zielstrebig empfiehlt! Und das soll jetzt auf Android kommen? Machen wir es kurz: Auf deutsch definitiv nicht, bei allen englischen Sachen wurde mir bisher noch kein Satz vervollständigt... mal sehen, wann das wirklich ankommt!WiFi mit QR-Code teilen Eine Funktion für Faule wie mich - aber mit Vorsicht zu genießen! Der QR-Code übernimmt im Klartext das von Euch vergebene WiFi-Passwort bei dem, der den Code scannt. Damit kann er es einsehen und somit potentiell Schaden anrichten. Ist also nicht ganz so clever, wie man denkt, mal sehen, wann Google hier nachbessert!"Smartes" Teilen So smart ist es nicht, Google aht nur weitere Optionen und noch mehr Apps in das Teilen-Menü aufgenommen. Nett und vereinfacht das "Kollaborieren" ein wenig... aber keine Sensation!Focus Mode Habe ich nur mal probeweise, quasi für Euch, angeworfen. Ist auch die logische Weiterentwicklung des mit Android 9 eingeführten Digital Wellbeings: nicht nur SEHEN, dass ich zu viel am Handy mache, nein, nun aktiv eine Sperre von Apps, damit ich für eine gewisse Zeit in Ruhe arbeiten kann. Social Media Junkies, seid vorsichtig - es könnte Euch wirklich, wenn auch leicht zu überwinden, für eine Konzentrationsphase "offline" werfen...Neue Gesten Ich habe die mal auf den letzten Platz genommen, aus zwei Gründen:Mir ist gar nicht aufgefallen, dass ich die nicht aktiviert hatte, sondern das Update die neue Android-9-Navigation einfach weiter betrieben hat undIch finde sie, auch wenn ich sie aktuell immer noch nutze, ähnlich nervig und Produktivität-killend wie die neuen Reiter in sämtlichen Microsoft-Produkten: Wer den fehlenden zurück-Button "nutzen" möchte, streiche nun wahlweise vom linken oder rechten Bildschirm mit vorher kurzen gedrückt-halten Richtung Bildschirm-Mitte. Klappt nie, wenn es soll - und wenn man in einer App, wie dem Kindle oder dem Handelsblatt weiter blättern möchte, springt 100%-ig die neue Funktion an und man fliegt aus dem Lesefluss.Auch nervig, der viel zu sehr von der unfassbar schlechten ios-Funktion kopierte lange und letzte Navigationsbalken unten mittig im Display: Nach oben schieben zeigt Liste der Apps. Klappte bei Android 9 zuverlässig, bei Android10 habe ich in den meisten Fällen dann die komplette App-Icon-Liste aufgeschoben. Nur wenn man die Funktion unbeabsichtigt betätigt, klappt es auf Anhieb. Schön, dass der dicke Balken nun auch zwischen den Apps wechseln kann - und zwar nicht nur in einer "links"-Richtung, sondern in beide. Damit kann ich von Chrome zu GMail springen mit links wischen, und von GMail zurück zu Chrome mit rechts. Also, an sich logisch. Und praktisch. In der Praxis aber heilloses Chaos, da es nun mal nicht immer so reibungslos und logisch funktioniert. Und dann kann man die Funktion auch besser ignorieren. Wer also gar keine Lust auf Experimente hat, blende die Dreier-Buttons Menü, Zurück und Home ein. Wer sich an Android 9 gewöhnt hat und nicht glaubt, dass die neuen Buttons überleben werden, bleibe dabei - es ist immer noch der beste und schnellst-zu-nutzende Kompromiss zwischen alt und neu. Wer Bock auf "Experimente", ein bisschen Enttäuschung und viele doppelte Handgriffe wegen Fehlfunktionen am Tag haben möchte, nutze Android10 - den schlechtesten Abklatsch von ios Dummbalken, nur, dass Android ihn grafisch ein wenig ansprechender gestaltet hat als Apple.Es gibt noch weitere Änderungen, ein bisschen künstliche Intelligenz und Powermanagement hier, Jugendschutz und grafische sowie schrifttechnische Updates da. Android10 klappert an einigen Ecken noch ganz gewaltig, ist nicht durchgehend komplett durchdacht, aber immerhin ein stabiles Upgrade, mit dem man einfach gut, mit einigen Workarounds, je nach Einstellung z.B. der Menübuttons, arbeiten kann. Seit Veröffentlichung zählen wir schon zwei weitere Updates, für Fehlerbereinigung und Sicherheit - immerhin ist hier Google noch in der Mache, also bleibt zu hoffen, dass auch die letzten Fehler nicht erst mit Android11 ausgebessert werden. Also nun, hier meine Werte zu Android10 nach ein paar Wochen und noch ein paar tieferen Spielereien: Juhuuuu: Nicht überall, aber größtenteils den Brick-of-Death in den Griff bekommen. Wohl auch mit dem vorletzten Update einige weitere Fehler bereinigt und aus der Welt geschaffen, zumindest hört und liest man auf Social Media nichts mehr. Aber auch in meiner Wahrnehmung nun ein fast fertigen und dafür auch stabiles Android. Buuuuh: Schade nur, dass die Verbreitung wohl wieder Monde dauern wird. Bis es auch der letzte aktuelle Androide haben wird, könnte Android11 schon wieder ein paar Monte verteilt worden sein. Hier muss, auch beim Hardware-seitigen Wildwuchs, dass identische Geräte intern unterschiedliche Micros, Chips und Speicherchips nutzen, Google endlich durchgreifen und mehr Standards setzen! Dann würde das, trotz dem heute als fast alleinigen Schuldigen ausgemachten, "Herstelleraufsatz" auch endlich flüssig und schnell klappen! Clou: Man sieht sich rasch satt, aber das neue Startbild und auch die neue klarere Schrift und die schärferen Grafiken bei den Apps und auf dem Startbildschirm sind geil. Was die Navigation durch Menüs und Apps geht, muss Google dringend nachbessern und sich weniger an gerade den schlechtesten ios-Funktionen orientieren - und hier wieder was flüssigen, was durch ähnliche "Gesten" fehlerhaft ausgeführt werden kann, vermeiden. Flüssig und schnell, das sollte im Mittelpunkt stehen. Von ein paar Ungereimtheiten und sinnlosen Kleinigkeiten abgesehen, aber ein gutes Upgrade für aktuelle Telefone! Wenn es verfügbar ist, gerne installieren. Und bei Euch so? Liest hier eine Horde ios-ler mit und findet das ganz schön langweilig und uninteressant? Oder hast Du Dein Huawei oder Samsung in der Hand und testest immer mal, ob das Update schon für Dich da ist. Oder ist Dir der neue Schnickschnack nicht geheuer? Oder nutzt Du es auch schon ab der ersten Sekunde - so oder so, ich freue mich auf Dein Feedback hierzu und Deine Meinung zu Android 9, 10 oder was für 11 so alles auf Deinem Wunschzettel steht... immer her damit: email, Kommentar, Sprachnachricht! Na denn... Meinen PodCast abonnieren: | direkt | iTunes | Spotify | Google |
Nach eine Pause trafen wir uns in Darmstadt und diskutierten über den Vorwurf an Google. Gmail durchsucht die elektronische Post. Wie bekommt man das unter Kontrolle? Zerschlagung und Regulierung. Ist Zerschlagung und Regulierung ein Ausweg?
I had to set up an email address in g suite that when an email was sent to it multiple people received the email. This is done by setting up a group, and making sure that the access settings are correct.https://thetalkinggeek.comhttps://www.podbean.com/thetalkinggeekhttps://www.spreaker.com/thetalkinggeek
I had to set up an email address in g suite that when an email was sent to it multiple people received the email. This is done by setting up a group, and making sure that the access settings are correct.https://thetalkinggeek.comhttps://www.podbean.com/thetalkinggeekhttps://www.spreaker.com/thetalkinggeek
Uvek se treba truditi biti u kontroli svojih resursa što je više moguće, ali u digitalnom svetu to je sve teže uraditi. Čak i kada imate kontrolu nad resursima, dešava se da zavisite od drugih servisa samo zato što nebrojeno korisnika koristi servis i da bi došli do njih i vi sami zaivisite od istih. Gmail je najpopularnija platforma za email, ali zna ponekad da bude nemilosrdan što se tiče neželjene pošte. I nama se desilo da smo postali SPAM, iako to nismo, pa pričamo o tome zašto se to desilo i kako to ispravljamo.
Gmail O Gmail, que também é conhecido como Google Mail, é um serviço gratuito de webmail criado pela Google em 2004. https://www.tecword.com.br/gmail/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tecwordcombr/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tecwordcombr/support
Man sieht es immer wieder auf Werbungen @t-online.de, @gmail.com oder @yahoo.de Adresse bei Firmen Kunden. Warum Sie das unbedingt lassen sollten, erfahren Sie hier.
Do you use or collect Bitcoin? Today we discuss some of the many problems that go along with all these Cryptocurrencies and Blockchain technology, and why it is a good idea to steer clear of them. Facebook is sharing your data and your friend's data. What Apple is doing to prevent this. Are you still using XP? There are companies who are. They have embeded systems that run XP. So what can they do. Craig tells you how he handles it for his clients. Craig is putting up a new membership site (Yes, it is free, but you have to sign up) On it will have all his special reports that he puts out and you will be the first to get them. These and more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Transcript: Below is a rush transcript of this segment, it might contain errors. Airing date: 06/23/2018 Cryptocurrency Downfall, Apple Closing a Loophole, Windows XP -What to do if you still need it Craig Peterson:[00:00:00] Hello Everybody, Good Morning, Craig Peterson here. Today we've got two major topics, I'm sure are going to interest you. If you or anyone you know has been buying and are using things like bitcoin, we’ve got a lot of news that we'll be talking about today. Also, we are going to be talking about a couple of major security issues here. Why the military can't quit, Windows XP and should you. If the military's not doing it, well they have a plan. We'll talk about that and what Apple is doing to help make sure that the problem that just happened with Facebook and their developers doesn't happen on the Apple platform. I think they're going to do a very good job of that. So welcome, and here we go. [00:00:50] So, we're going to start by talking about blockchain technologies. Now, these are the technologies that are used to make things, like bitcoin, work. The whole idea behind block change technologies is that you have well, to kind of think of it like, a regular ledger that you might have an accounting. You've probably heard of double entry accounting, where things are balanced, right, they're balanced back and forth between, you know, the receivables and payables. But even more, it gets right down into; this money showed up in the bank account, that completely negates this invoice. Therefore, we know everything's balance right, and you know if you want to know more code talk to an accountant right. Well, those types of ledgers can be copied. They can be shared. We've seen them in movies before, where they're used by bad guys to try and cheat people out of money. Let's, put it that way. [00:01:45] And that's a problem. But, when we're talking about bitcoin and blockchain here's how it works. How do you know a transaction is valid? How do you know someone has some of this money that's out there? Well, they do it through a system of ledgers, and there are a lot of ledgers. In fact, when it comes to blockchain technology, the idea is that every one that uses a blockchain technology at all, anybody has a copy of all the ledgers. Now you don't know who the people are, necessarily, all you have is a wallet number. So, you know I'm sending money from here to there, and then all of that information is then distributed and shared with everybody else on the blockchain. So, it's cool technology; banks are starting to use it now, where they are doing with the overnight lending they're sending money back and forth. And they need a way to verify that transactions occurred and who got the money and the overnight rate was it at etc. So, that later on, they can go back and get down to it and figure out all of the details. Well, when you're talking about a ledger like this, where everybody's copy of the ledger needs to agree. That's impossible. Some people are going to have a machine that's offline, some people's hard disks are going to crash, and they are going to lose their ledger. So, you can never have 100 percent of these ledgers agree with each other. So, how does it work. [00:03:26] Well, the idea here is that 50 percent plus one of the ledgers have to agree. And, that's pretty good when you think about a bitcoin, for instance, you're talking about having thousands. Ten of hundreds, of thousands, of ledgers that are out there and they all have to agree. Now, there is a problem with this, in a few different ways. One is the amount of time it takes, but we're not going to get into that, for the ledgers to become insane. And, even to distribute the data, well, that 50-plus-one-person percent is a problem because theoretically, you could have an attack where someone can somehow modify half of the ledgers that are out there. Well, guess what, here it turns out that this very well-known attack vector has been used. Look at the mono coin, Bitcoin Gold, and Cass Virge, and light coin cash. All of those have had, what's kind of the crypto equivalent of, a bank heist. It's interesting because there's another article that I have in front of me and we put up on the website, that looks at this and see, that in the last six months, there has been one-point-one-billion dollars worth of cryptocurrency stolen, oh think, about that for a minute. What was thought to be the strength or one of the major strengths to these cryptocurrencies, which is that you have to have all these ledgers, and the ledgers have to be pretty much in agreement? And all of that information can be hacked. Now, how is it getting hacked? You know are we talking about people breaking into hundred-thousand-million-plus machines, to manipulate those ledgers, and move that currency, that cryptocurrency, into the black hats bank account. [00:05:32] No, actually we're not, and it's kind of smart the way these guys are doing it, here. There's an article I put out from NYU computer science researcher, Joseph Bonneau, and he released research last year where he went through and came up with estimates of how much money it would cost to execute these type of attacks on the top. Blockchain that is out there right now by simply renting power, rather than buying all the equipment and he concluded that these types of attacks were likely to increase. Of course, as we're talking about right now, it turns out he was right. Here is a quote directly from him when he was talking to Koine desk, he said “generally the community thought this was a distant threat. I thought it was much less distant and I've been trying to warn of the risk even. I didn't think it would start happening this soon.” So, there is there is a huge problem. You know, I have never been a proponent of these cryptocurrencies, for a lot of reasons, or one of them is the fact that they're not secure enough, and this has now been proven many times this year with at least a half a dozen different cryptocurrencies, OK. So, it's pretty bad. There's also another problem. [00:06:56] You can't prevent someone from spending the same piece of data five or even a thousand times, at once, without trusting the third party to do all the dirty work. So, you've got miners who are the people who are using the machines that are running the blockchain software looking for these highly complex mathematical numbers. So, they are consuming electricity, making sure no one's getting money's stolen, and this article is interesting if you are or have been thinking about getting into it at all, have a look. Have a look at the report that came out in this case. These guys in this one case, they were able to amass more than half of the network's power. We're talking about computing power here. The Bitcoin Gold attacker was able to double spend to very expensive transactions, sent to an exchange. So, it goes on, and Cass explains Amol, how even small coins are at risk. This is huge, it's really, really, huge and it's called a 51 percent attack, although it's 50 percent plus one, and we've got to be careful of it. I have another one that's up there, right now, on my website called Healthcare Info security. It is the place that I grabbed this from, and it's showing again, evidence is continuing to mount, the cryptocurrencies seeking criminals are no longer bent, solely on boosting bitcoin or demanding rent, demanding ransomware, but in actually stealing it, directly by being able to get in showing in here from carbon black. The top 10 currencies that are out there right now, of course, this is not surprising to anyone, but bitcoins number one, the 3M RIPL bitcoin cash-like coin, etc. goes on and on. Now Carbon Black says it's found at least one-point-one-billion in cryptocurrency related thefts since December 2017, and right now when we're talking here, June 2018. So, the crypto thieves are black hats are leveraging malware phishing attacks, fake advertising campaigns, and they're just repurposing old tricks. People are falling for all kinds of cheap attack tools, you can get them from anywhere, from a buck to a thousand dollars. It goes on, Krypto Jack and attacks are continuing. [00:09:29] So, we've got a couple more here on the bitcoin stuff before we get into what Apple's doing to try and stop developers from sharing their data and also about Windows XP. Believe it or not, it is still in use today, and XP came out a very long time ago now. Bitcoins, price now, I mentioned this on the show about a year ago. I think we were talking about bitcoin and how there was a lot of fishy stuff going on when it was launched, and it looks like a couple of guys were involved, and they were able to get bitcoin up to 1000 dollars per coin very quickly, and it appears insider trading may have been happening. We talked about some of the rumors that were out there, and now we have a little bit more of a solid piece here. This is from the New York Times dated March 30. [00:10:27] And of course putting this all together today, because we are in a mode of talking about bitcoin, today we're going to kind of cover that thoroughly. So, this article was saying that a concentrated campaign of price manipulation may have accounted for at least half of the increase in the price of bitcoin, and other cryptocurrencies last year. Now, this is according to a paper released at the end of March. It's an academic; he has a history of spotting fraud in the financial markets his name is John Gryffen, finance professor over at the University of Texas. Isn't that interesting, here. So, the price the value was driven up artificially and remained artificial because once you get started, that way it just keeps going. Now, it was being manipulated, it looks like, by at least partially backed Livity at Phoenix, it's largest and one of the least regulated exchanges, in the industry register, in the Caribbean offices, in Asia, and it was subpoenaed by American regulators shortly after article started to appear. Talking about, but halted the digital flow of tokens, in and out of the exchange what was going on. Why were these tremendous price increases happening, last year, and, this paper indicates that manipulation played a large part, in those price increases? So, it's a very, very, big deal. [00:11:59] Yet, another reason to stay out of this, if you need another reason. [00:12:06] To tell your friends, your family, or yourself not to get involved with this. Bitcoin is selling off this year, and they're concerned that this decline. Could cause a lot of damage in the financial markets. So, Bitcoin is now, nearly a third, of its record high that was reached just six months ago. It's dropped by almost two thirds. Isn't that just crazy? So, they're worried that bitcoins, the bursting bubble could spill over into the equity market. Here's a quote from Matt Maylee. He's a strategist over at Miller Tabak, yeah. Miller Tabak, there are things to be concerned about regarding the stock market here with emerging markets and other issues, but I don't think bitcoin is going to be one of them. And he understands the fear or the steep rise and fall in bitcoin prices; it's very reminiscent of the 1990s dot-com bust, he said. But the difference now is everybody's investment wealth. It's a very, big deal. Everybody is talking about both of those things when they're in the bubbles. So, it's looking here, if you look at that article again, we have all of these up on the website, and this particular graph is from CNBC, but it's showing the correlation, between what happened with our tech bubble and what's happening with bitcoin. So, keep an eye out for that. This could be a very, very, bad thing. [00:13:43] Now, we all have heard about Cambridge Analytica and what they did with the Facebook data. They were getting information about friends of friends they were using it, they were manipulating it and, of course, before that eight years, well ten years ago now, the Obama campaign got the information on every Facebook user, worldwide, and of course, there are particularly interested in the United States. [00:14:08] So, we have a history now of abuse of your Facebook data, here, that stored in social media. So, Apple's been concerned. You know, they are probably one of the number one companies, out there, when it comes to trying to make sure you retain your privacy, right. So, Apple came out with new rules just last week for the developers. The idea is, to limit how developers use information about the iPhone owners friends and other contacts. So, there was a bit of a loophole, the lead app makers store shared data, without people's consent. That loophole is being closed. Now some of the apps that you might use, I use like a contact duplicate merger and things those should still work, but they have to keep the data on your iPhone. This whole practice of trying to get information about your contacts has been used for years. When you sign up for Facebook what does it ask for? Hey, is it OK if I help you find your friends on Facebook LinkedIn did the same thing, and now that Microsoft is running it, it is done even more. [00:15:18] Right. Double time here. So, this isn't new, but Apple's new strategy is new. Apple has, of course, the world's, well one of them right, the world's most popular smartphone operating system, Android is more popular. But sharing data, as in a friend's data, without consent is what got Facebook into trouble. They announced all of this at their developer's conference, a little bit earlier this year. Contact List abuse is what it's been called, and it's a huge ecosystem and this will make a very, very, big deal. Interesting article. Want to get into more detail, if you are a developer if you have an Apple iOS app, and a lot of businesses do, make sure you double track this. As far as businesses going with developing their apps, I have got to mention something here, and this is a little self-serving. OK, I'll say that up front. But we are, my company is the only one that can sell this particular software, and right now, anyways, and that's why it's self-serving. Apple and Cisco got together to try and solve a major, major, problem. [00:16:35] The problem is if you’re a business, how do you keep your data safe when it leaves the office? [00:16:45] So, if you have sales people they need access to your data. Don't you think if you have somebody, who has some financial information, they need access to your data? Not all of them, but some of them do. So, how do you control that? Well the way most companies have dealt with it is, they buy some software, and that software runs on that iOS device or that Android device and all of the company data stays within that one. App. One app. So, if you want to use company email, you are using that app to send and receive email. You cannot use any other app; if you want to get into your customer management system, you have to use that app. If you want to get financial data, you have to use that app. If you want to get at your files, you have to use that app, right. So, you're stuck in this one app, and people have hated that for a very, very, long time for good reason. However, the main reason they had to do that was there was no way to have a check and balance on the apps and what they were doing on the phone. [00:17:56] Now, with iOS, you can remotely manage, and we do remotely manage iOS devices for businesses. You can, too. There's even free mobile device management MTM. There's free mobile device management software out there that you can use, depending on who you are and what hardware you have and what vendor relationships you have. So, look into that. But, all that lets you do is control what apps can be installed. It doesn't control the flow of data, between the apps, including the flow of data between your apps and what's happening with your business data. All right, So, I said this was self-serving because we've got a got a solution with Cisco and Apple that's been developed and works great that allows us to control all of the flow of data. Think about the military type system. Think about the Orange Book in the old days, right. How have you compartmentalized the data? And how you don't have your private home server for Clinton e-mail dot com, right on. Now, we found out Comey did it too when he was investigating the Clinton e-mail scandal, where he was using Google Mail. It doesn't and does it. [00:19:10] It's nutty. So, that became a problem and more of a problem. It just goes on and on. So, with this, you can control everything. And, I think you have to I think we've got to start controlling the apps which don't know what the developers are doing. But you might have a look for this out there. It is available for iOS. It is not generally available right now. We're the only ones in the world that can sell it. I guess that means, we're just kind of cool. But, I guess the other side of that is, isn't it kind of cool that you have a guy, here, that is tied in that tightly, with the security market. [00:19:50] In fact, I've got to go as soon I get off the air, here because I'm doing an interview, that we're going to be airing, because I'm running webinars for the FBI. Infragard program, which is the infrastructure guard, if you will, for the businesses that have a critical infrastructure. So, I'm doing that right after this. We're talking about the dark web. In fact, that's who it will be. I'll be doing that interview here shortly. You can join InfraGard if you are involved in critical infrastructure. You can find them online InfraGard dot Org. There are chapters in, I think, every state. [00:20:32] Well, you know Windows XP should not be used, right, don't even have to repeat that. But the military still is using it. It's using it in our ships even though the British navy just launched a nuclear submarine a brand-new build from scratch running Windows XP. Now, why do they do that? Well, the bottom line is Windows XP is a known, well-known commodity, very well, known. So, they know where the bugs are for the most part. Microsoft is still supporting it for them at an incredibly high cost, here. But what that means is that the military computers running XP are stuck with legacy hardware. They're stuck with legacy software that runs on it. So, we've got to be careful about this. The rest of the government operations are moving to Windows 10. I think we've got all of our clients on to Windows 10 now that are using Windows, and we're keeping them up to date, obviously, with the patches and we do that all automatically. And we have people that hop on when there are problems, which there are, this week. I'm not getting to it on the radio, but check out my Web site Craig Peterson dot com because there are a bunch of Windows 10 updates and they are not all working. So, I've gotten instructions on how to install them which machines are having problems. [00:21:59] What that means for you and what you should do. So, check that out on my Web site, again, Windows 10 update problems this week. So, they are working on trying to get rid of it; they've got Windows XP 2003 other legacy Microsoft products that are out there and the problems just continue to pile up. Now one of the things we have done for companies that are running XP, and you might look at this as well, is we take that Windows XP machine we put it into a virtualized environment, and then we put special firewalls around it with full intrusion detection and prevention. So, you can do that as well, if you're a business and you're stuck with Windows XP. We're doing that for manufacturers, as well, where their hardware, their manufacturing hardware, is running Windows XP. So, we put it in a box, if you will, with all kinds of protection around that. So, keep an eye out, and that's what's happening. Make sure you join my mailing list, so you get my weekly e-mails. They come out on Saturday morning, and we have some special reports. Those people who signed up for my insider club here, there is a membership site. [00:23:13] It is closed but we've got some more special reports, we'll be sending them to you along with information on retrieving them. And that's something that we've offered for free. We shut down that Facebook group by the way because we just won't get in the activity. I think people are just used to me telling me what's going on and what should happen right as opposed to the interactive back and forth. [00:23:36] Although we had some interactivity, and we still have it, multiple times a week, usually it's via text. If you want to text me, if you want to sign up, if you have any questions, just text me directly 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53, 8 5 5 3 8 5 55 53 and I'll let you about any major alerts or other problems that come up, until then, have a great week and we'll see you online. You've been listening to Craig Peterson. --- Related articles: Critical Patches Issued for Microsoft Products – HIGH THREAT Microsoft Confirms New Windows 10 Cumulative Update KB4284835 Issue More Reports of Windows 10 Cumulative Update KB4284835 Failing to Install Unbreakable smart lock devastated to discover screwdrivers exist Cryptocurrency Theft: $1.1 Billion Stolen in Last 6 Months Blockchain’s Once-Feared 51% Attack Is Now Becoming Regular Bitcoin’s Price Was Artificially Inflated, Fueling Skyrocketing Value, Researchers Say Apple Tries to Stop Developers From Sharing Data on Users’ Friends Multiple Vulnerabilities in Microsoft Exchange Server Could Allow for Information Disclosure The big picture: We’re getting closer to AI doctors --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. 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Google held its I/O Conference last week, and artificial intelligence was the big theme. Amongst the headlines from the event was the introduction of Google Duplex, which will be able to automatically make phone calls to book restaurant tables and salon appointments, as well as the new version of Google’s Android OS – Android P. With updates also coming to Google Mail, News and new voice search devices, there is plenty for developers and digital marketers to get their teeth into from Google I/O 2018
Die Kombination von Googlemail und Netflix begünstigt Phishingmails Wenn eine Mail mit einer Zahlungsaufforderung von Netflix im Googlemail-Postfach landet, sollte man ganz genau hinschauen: Dahinter könnte ein Betrüger stecken, der auf der Jagd nach Kreditkartendaten ist. Dabei handelt es sich um keine klassische Phishing-Mail, schließlich sind Absender und Link in der Mail legitim. Klickt man auf den Link zum Aktualisieren der Abrechnungsdaten, landet man in den Zahlungseinstellungen eines Netflix-Accounts – unter Umständen ist dies jedoch nicht das eigene Konto. Fügt man dort die eigenen Kreditkartendaten ein, finanziert man gegebenenfalls einen fremden Account. Facebook-Anhörung im US-Senat Viel Asche streute sich Mark Zuckerberg bei einer Anhörung im US-Senat aufs Haupt. Bis Jahresende werde Facebook 20.000 Mitarbeiter für Inhaltskontrolle und Sicherheitsprobleme haben, versprach der Firmengründer. Gleichzeitig glaubt Zuckerberg, mit künstlicher Intelligenz unerwünschte Inhalte wie Terrorpropaganda oder die in Myanmar grassierenden Aufrufe zum Völkermord eindämmen zu können. Konkreten Fragen zu Daten- und Kinderschutz wich er aus. Gesichtssensoren ermöglichen sprachlose Rechnerkommunikation Mit einer um die Mundwinkel angebrachten Sensorik wollen MIT-Wissenschaftler neuartige Computer-Gehirn-Schnittstellen schaffen, bei denen eine sprachlose Kommunikation mit Rechnern möglich ist. Das Verfahren namens AlterEgo basiert auf der Tatsache, dass das Gehirn an die Muskeln im Mundbereich auch dann elektrische Signale sendet, wenn die Person einen inneren Monolog führt oder etwas liest, berichtet Technology Review. Dubai will smarte Kfz-Kennzeichen testen Dubai will ab Mai Autokennzeichen an das Internet der Dinge anschließen. Statt der bisherigen metallenen Schilder sollen "digitale Bildschirme" an Autos angebracht werden, die GPS-Technik enthalten und zudem mit der IoT-Plattform der Verkehrsbehörde des Emirats vernetzt sind. Im Fall eines Unfalls soll das Kennzeichen automatisch Polizei und Rettungskräfte benachrichtigen und auch Alarm schlagen, wenn das Auto gestohlen wird. Diese und alle weiteren aktuellen Nachrichten finden sie auf heise.de
Since we last did a podcast there have been two atrocious terrorist attacks in Britain, and several others around the World… our thoughts are with you. More on dropping Googlemail and some of the tribulations that gave Simon WWDC is nearly here... so we are just waiting to see what happens (we don't do rumours) This sounds positively ghastly:- Skype to get a “revamp” to compete with Snapchat and iMessage Cult of Mac Your next heat source could come from a server, if Nerdalize has its way - Digital Trends Poll: Would trackpad & mouse support be a good halfway house on an iPad? | 9to5Mac MacJim from our slack room makes an appearance. Nemo's Hardware Store (37:15) ProCable Shortz 3.5mm 4-Conductor Male to Female Extender Radtech - Amazon This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
In the show, we will look at how safe it is to travel with your gadgets on a business trip or for pleasure? Also, BlackBerry has a solution to visual hacking and we will talk about a technology that is being developed to charge your phone by using your friend’s phone. All this today, on WRLWND Radio. Tips for travelling with gadgets Our gadgets have become so integrated into our lives that we take them with us everywhere. And I mean everywhere. Even when we are travelling for work or even taking that vacation. There is an inherent risk in taking our corporate and personal information with us when we travel. In this part of the show, I would like to offer you a few tips to reduce this risk and what we need to take into consideration when we travel with our devices. First, consider whether you actually need to take a device with you, of course, if your boss is expecting you to take your work phone with you abroad, then there is no way out, but if not, then you should leave your employer's devices at home. Why? Think about the impact if that device is - lost or stolen – the data that will be exposed can have some serious ramifications to your company. Next consider if your laptop, phone, tablet, and even USB drives are encrypted? Are you using strong passwords? Is all your data backed up? Travellers should also minimise the potential risk of data exposure and loss of information. The way to do this don’t take too much information with you - it’s better to delete unnecessary the files or save to your home computer or external drive before going on that trip. For International travel there are a few additional considerations: The Border agencies in many countries, including Canada and the United States, have the right to examine and even make copies of electronic information. If you refuse to hand over passwords you can be in a lot of hot water, like having your devices seized, and being denied entry into foreign countries. Also, border officials can open an app on a phone or tablet when connected to a network which will not only grant them access to the data on your device but also remote data like on your cloud storage accounts – for example - Dropbox or One drive. So this is not limited to data stored on your device, but data on a remote server could be accessed as well. If you have sensitive data – like from work then it would be advisable to leave your device at home or consider purchasing another for travel. If that is not an option you can go with, then you can log out of all accounts on your device and then delete the applications that use them. Say for example you've logged out Facebook, Dropbox, or Google Mail app and leave it on your phone without deleting them, then this may lead to additional questions or even requests for your login credentials. So if you are going this route, remember to delete the apps. A more extreme option is to back-up the mobile device, reset it to factory defaults prior to travel, and restore it at the destination. If you want to go this far out to stay safe this is a good option as well. Also, don’t leave electronics unattended in hotel rooms. Most hotels offer in-room safes; some are reasonably secure, while others are not. So it is up to you if you want to take you laptop with you to the gym or the restaurant. The last thing to consider is locking bags that can help you protect your electronic devices. If you are interested in this please go to: http://itincanadaonline.ca/index.php/columnists/eric-jacksch/2064-traveling-with-tech In the end, when travelling with gadgets it all comes back down to good sound judgement, and always being vigilant. That I would say are the best suggestions for keeping personal data safe when travelling. Privacy Shade app Have you ever been in public and wondered if the person looking over your shoulder when you were entering your password was able to see it? This is considered visual hacking. Last year, I was at HP Discover in Boston and one of the speakers talked about visual hacking. Visual hacking is when other can view your device’s screen without your permission. So, say you are at your favourite coffee shop, you pull your smartphone or laptop and started to check your emails or social media accounts, now if someone is sitting behind you or to your left or right at an angle where they can see your screen, they are conducting a visual hack, they are acquiring information from your device. To avoid exposing your private information BlackBerry has recently released an app called Privacy Shade. Privacy shade allows you to view your phone messages in private, even in public places such as trains, bus stops, and restaurants. This app is only available to BlackBerry’s lineup of Android smartphones. So, if you have a BlackBerry Android phone like the Priv or DTEC then you can get this app from Google Play Store. What the app does is to block parts of your phone screen – or obscuring the parts you are not viewing or using while still allowing you to interact with the obscured parts. By allowing users to adjust the transparency of the filter to suit the surroundings like outside or even indoors. If you have a BlackBerry Android device then you can use Privacy Shade in four ways: If you are using Android OS 7.0 Nougat or higher, you can add BlackBerry Privacy Shade to your Quick Settings. If you are using a BlackBerry device with a Convenience Key, you can assign BlackBerry Privacy Shade to the Convenience Key. If you are using a BlackBerry device that supports Swipe Shortcuts, you make BlackBerry Privacy Shade one of your shortcuts. You can also toggle BlackBerry Privacy Shade on or off via an optional dedicated notification in the notification tray. That’s the update on Privacy shade, if you are a BlackBerry fan there are few other upgrades that BlackBerry is working on that might excite you: Hub Additional Hub Integrations: Support for Kik and Telegram Email Auto CC / BCC Setting: Users can now enable auto cc: or bcc: when sending a message. This setting can be applied to individual accounts. Android Wear Notifications (beta): Hub+ notifications and the ability to read and delete Hub items via Android Wear devices (i.e. smartwatches) Dual SIM support: Hub will support phones with dual SIMs. You can switch between them just like you would with multiple emails. Contacts Contact Linking and Cleanup: Improved support for finding and linking of duplicate contacts. DTEK OS Integrity Check: Users will now receive a notification if an OS Integrity issue has been detected. If you are concerned about someone looking at your smartphone screen when you are in the public, then Privacy Shade is a good app to use. Hopefully, BlackBerry will make this available to all Android phones and even their own BlackBerry operating system. Phone to Phone charging Wireless charging is the new buzz words for phones. Samsung and Apple are working on bringing wireless charging to their upcoming smartphones but as they are doing this Sony is working on a really super new technology that will bring us a phone to phone charging. What this means is your friend can change his phone off of yours. Sony recently filed a recently patent application, for power charging and data exchange between various consumer electronics like smartphones, computers and other smart devices. The technology that will be used for this will rely on “antenna systems” configured for both wireless data and power transfers, accompanied by a handy user interface that simplifies the process of connecting devices. In addition to selecting between power and data transfers, the interface will also make it easier to choose between various wireless exchange-enabled devices in your vicinity. As with patents, we don’t know how soon the technology will become available but it is a good sign to see that more and more the tech companies are looking at ways of bringing us the technology to make our tech engrained lives easier.
What are you doing to become the best? In today's episode, Jim and Tyson discuss about becoming the best lawyer and acting like it. Lawyers have the ethical and moral obligation to be the best in their practice areas. You have got to be striving constantly to improve your practice, your knowledge base and your systems. If you are not doing this, you might be having a problem, but if you are, it's perfectly ok for you to use that in your marketing. If you are striving to be the best, you have a moral obligation to PROTECT your clients from those other attorneys who are not. If you don’t feel like you are delivering the best client experience and the best representation to your clients, then that’s going to impact your mindset when you are meeting with clients. It’s gonna telegraph that you feel shaky about what it is what you do. Be confident on your skills. Use your reputation as your favor. Don’t seem desperate. Don’t lower your fees. Hacking’s Hack: A Chrome extension for Google Mail. It allows you to compose while hiding all your inbox. Protect your focus. https://inboxwhenready.org/ Tyson’s Tip: Hy Fy. Also, a Chrome extension. It’s free and it records your chrome tab and your voice. http://www.hyfy.io/ The Maximum Lawyer Podcast. Partner up, and maximize your firm.
Many organizations use Google Apps, but there are very few tools available to compliantly and effectively manage this content. This presentation explains why organizations use Google Mail, Google Vault, and Google Drive. It describes the recordkeeping challenges, and explores solutions for managing business records created and maintained in Google Apps. We will explore proven and potential policies and technical solutions for managing records created, received and maintained in Google Apps.
Many organizations use Google Apps, but there are very few tools available to compliantly and effectively manage this content. This presentation explains why organizations use Google Mail, Google Vault, and Google Drive. It describes the recordkeeping challenges, and explores solutions for managing business records created and maintained in Google Apps. We will explore proven and potential policies and technical solutions for managing records created, received and maintained in Google Apps.
Unsere Flugmaschine nähert sich dem Polar um einen Zwischenstopp beim dort ansässigen Rauschebart und Liebhaber des roten Samts zu stoppen. Dem Guten gehen nämlich die Ideen aus und deshalb müssen die Piloten ihm wahnsinnig gute Geschenkideen ins Diktiergerät husten. Unsere Flugmaschine nähert sich dem Polar um einen Zwischenstopp beim dort ansässigen Rauschebart und Liebhaber des roten Samts zu stoppen. Dem Guten gehen nämlich die Ideen aus und deshalb müssen die Piloten ihm wahnsinnig gute Geschenkideen ins Diktiergerät husten. Nun, eigentlich hatten sie keine Wahl… denn sonst hätte es die Rute gegeben. Doch wie dem auch sei, daraus ist dann die Über-Mega-Pick-Show entstanden, welcher ihr heute andächtig lauschen dürft. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Übersicht Die folgende Tabelle ist nicht chronologisch sortiert, sondern… so wie’s da drunten steht… nach Picker. Die Mega-Pick Übersichtstabelle inklusive Timecodes Gadgets Mac Apps iOS Apps Web Services oder Skripte Verschiedenes Sven Logitech Keys-To-Go (00:17:00) SuperDuper (00:37:40) Newsify (01:01:10) Trello (01:23:20) Trove (01:36:15) Quadcopter Blade Nano QX (00:24:40) Mailbox (00:46:40) Space Age (01:08:15) Kirby 2.0 (01:26:00) Stelton Pure Black Messer (01:40:40) Jawbone UP3 (00:31:20) Desk (00:56:30) das Referenz (01:18:18) Slack (01:30:20) Soulra FRX3 Kurbelradio mit USB-Ladeausgang (01:44:00) Patrick Sennheiser MM-550 (00:19:15) Airfoil (00:42:20) Voice Dream Reader (01:03:20) FileBot (01:20:00) Reosmods Reo Grand (01:32:00) Tom Bihn Ristretto (00:26:45) iTerm 2 (00:48:25) Due (01:10:00) BitTorrent Sync (01:24:50) Walter Moers - Stadt der Träumenden Bücher (01:38:00) Maglus Stylus (00:32:30) Asepsis (00:54:30) Nuzzle (01:14:40) Pow/Anvil (01:28:40) Sunflex snakebyte power:cub (01:44:00) Andreas Merkur Progress (00:28:45) Highland (00:40:00) Pinnacle Studio (01:08:15) Appbot (01:21:40) Fully Present, The Science, Art, and Practice of Mindfulness (01:34:30) Türreck (00:34:00) Minecraft & Feed The Beast (00:44:40) Decim8 (01:11:15) Subtle Patterns (01:27:20) The War of Art - Steven Pressfield (01:42:30) Amadeus Pro (00:51:00) Outread (01:16:10) Neckar (01:49:30) ffmpeg (00:58:18) Link zum Bild: Aluhut Überbleibsel BEKANT Stehtisch Die elektrisch verstellbare Variante des von Patrick gepriesenen BEKANT sucht man leider — wie letzte Woche in den Show Notes schon angekündigt — auf der IKEA Website vergebens. Die Kommentare unter diesem Engadget Review sind da ganz aufschlussreich. Sieht so aus, als wenn ihr dieses Jahr keinen Weihnachtsbaum mehr auf den BEKANT Tisch stellen könnt. No notifications setup Andreas berichtet von seinem Zero notifications Experiment. Die Kurzfassung des Verlaufs: Er hat alle Notifications gelöscht, es dann doch nicht ganz ohne das geliebte Gebimmel ausgehalten und ist jetzt mit einer abgespeckten Variante Unterwegs. Die lange Version gibt es hier auf MOSX Tumblelog. Patrick hat nach dem Neuerwerb des letzten iPhones auch einmal ganz von vorne angefangen… aber mit der Minimalausstattung von 19 Notifications von Andreas kommt er bei weitem nicht mit. Omelette-Challenge Der amtierende und neue Omelette King sagt: … blubb, blubb, wabbel, wabbel, DANKE für euren Support. Omelette King Link zum Bild: Eierkopf Hier ist das stolze und durchaus eindeutige Ergebnis, welches gewisse Piloten in der Nacht immer noch schweißgebadet aufschrecken lässt. Nein Sven, es war kein Traum, das ist die bittere Realität. Link zum Bild: Wer ist der Omelette King? Nachspann: Da Andreas es nicht kennt mit der gewonnen Lebenszeit durch eingedampfte Benachrichtigungen 11 Minuten über hat ↓ Überschallneuigkeiten ScreenFlow 5 Ich kann ein bisschen über ScreenFlow 5 klagen. Das 5er ist schon gar nicht mal so gut. Andreas Zeitler Das ist die Quintessenz. Andreas als Profi-Bildschirm-Verdigitalisierer sieht die Bug-Tötungsliste und Wunschliste nicht erfüllt mit SF5. Sven findets’ trotzdem gut für den Hobbyhandwerker und Patrick stimmt da im Prinzip zu, auch wenn er sich mit den 10% Studentenrabatt schwer tut beim Erwerb… dürften gerne auch 20% sein von seinem Geldbeutel aus gesehen. Gadgets Hier gibt’s was zum anfassen. Logitech Keys-To-Go (Timecode 00:17:00) Klein, handlich, Spritzwasser-geschützt und in mehreren Farben erhältlich: Logitech’s Keys-To-Go. In Kürze für knapp 70€ im Handel. Link zum Bild: Keys-To-Go Alternative: myType™ Pocketable Bluetooth Keyboard for Phones & Tablets by myType™ Keyboard Sennheiser MM-550-X (Timecode 00:19:15) Sennheiser MM 550-X TRAVEL Nicht erschrecken da das Ding 350 € neu kostet. Denn ab 180 € gibt’s den schon gebraucht. Im übrigen hat sich kaum was zum Vorgänger Modell, dem MM-550 (ohne X), geändert. Hier noch einmal eine formschöne Tabelle mit den Hard-facts von Patrick: Der hat Klang! Selbst bei Bluetooth = Das Kaufargument schlechthin, wenn’s Bluetooth sein soll. ca 7m Reichweite Der ist komfortabel zu tragen – getestet gegen unzählige andere Kopfhörer. Patrick selbst hat daheim 3 Modelle und existiert quasi nur mit Kopfhörern auf dem Schädel (… auch Daheim). weich gepolsterten Kopfbügel + extra große Ohrmuscheln einen angenehmen Tragekomfort (trotz) geschlossene Bauweise Laufzeit: bis zu 20 Stunden Angegeben ein paar Jahre auf dem Buckel Hörbücher/Podcast ca. 12 Stunden Ersatzakku würde 40 € kosten hochwertige Haptik wireless oder Kabel widerstandsfähig, faltbar Spielereien: SRS WOW HDTechnologie - Räumliches Klangbild… bei Hörspielen ganz nett Aufgeladen wird über USB Nachteile Kann nicht parallel mehrere Bluetooth Verbindungen aufbauen. Mac abmelden, iPhone anmelden Noise Canceling gut, aber nicht top. Bose ist da der Chef. Quadcopter Blade Nano QX (Timecode 00:24:40) Die perfekte Einsteiger Drone: Quadcopter Blade Nano QX für ca. 80€ bei Amazon. Link zum Bild: Drone Im großen Wirecutter Review als Übungsgerät empfohlen, bevor man dann eine 800€ Drone auf das Kirchendach oder in den Teich setzt. Fast alle Einzelteile einzeln und günstig nachzubestellen (Rotoren, Motoren, Gestell). Sehr robust und gut zu steuern. Kommt als Ready-to-Fly (RTF) mit Fernsteuerung. Für alle Dronen-Einsteiger oder Interessierten empfiehlt sich noch dringend die Lektüre von Paul Stamatiou’s “Getting Started with Drones”. Tom Bihn Ristretto (Timecode 00:26:45) Eigentlich kann man alles von Tom Bihn bestellen – qualitätstechnisch sind die echt super. Nur die Liefergebühren und der Zoll bereiten einem Bauchscherzen. Sein 11″ MacBook Air hat Patrick nicht mehr, aber die passende Ristretto Messenger Tasche (ab $110) leistet ihm noch treue Dienste. Egal was man jedoch bestellt, das wichtigste Upgrade ist der “Absolute Shoulder Strap”. Und für Fahrradfahrer ist das superhelle Guardian DF Light eine echte Empfehlung von Patrick. Die Batterie hält übrigens eine gefühlte Ewigkeit. Link zum Bild: Licht Review für Leser: Tom Bihn Ristretto MacBook Air bag Mark II Review für Glotzer: Merkur Progress (Timecode 00:28:45) Link zum Bild: Merkur Andreas schwört auf den Merkur Rasierhobel Progress 500. Das Ding sieht zwar antik aus, kann aber leicht verstellt werden und die Stufen sind somit anpassbar an eure derzeitigen Vorlieben und Hautbegebenheiten. Die passende Slideshare hat Andreas dazu schon gehalten auf einem Barcamp, deshalb gibt’s hier für euch nun “Die perfekte Rasur”: Die perfekte Rasur from Andreas Zeitler … inklusive dem passenden Gist. Jawbone UP3 (Timecode 00:31:20) Der Puls wird einbezogen und dadurch gibt’s wohl auch sowas wie eine flexible Weckzeit, welche Sven be-geist-teeeeeert. Vorbestellt werden kann der Spaß für 180 €. Link zum Bild: Up Applydea Maglus Stylus (Timecode 00:32:30) Nach der Studie von The Verge entschied sich Patrick damals dazu seiner Freundin den Maglus zu schenken. Heute belegt er dort immer noch den Platz 1 unter den Allroundern. Das Ding ist so gut, das er es sich dann 2 Jahre später selbst einen eigenen gekauft hat. Highlights: Magnetisch auswechselbare Spitze Die Spitze ist übrigens das Beste an dem Stylus. Wie er in der Hand liegt das Zweitbeste. Adonit’s Jot Pro hat es bei Patrick keine 2 Wochen ausgehalten, dann ging das Ding “return to sender”. Die anderen Stifte die Patrick ausprobiert hat sind nicht der Rede wert. Der Pencil ist jedoch immer noch sein Backup-Stylus. Dieser hat aber einige gravierende Schwachstellen, so findet der Verbindungsaufbau oft einfach nicht statt und frustriert wird dann zum Lieblingsgerät gegriffen, was halt nicht die neuen Features des Pencil’s hat. Das andere Problem, wenn er denn mal Verbunden ist, ist die Wisch-und-Schmier Funktion. Die wird nämlich immer dann spontan ausgelöst, wenn man sie gar nicht braucht. Hier noch mehr Meckerei, aber von jemand Anderem: The prices are truly insane for such a shitty product, for that kind of money I’d say it’s worth to buy a Wacom bamboo and get a ton better performance on your coffeshop creative session. Serious cash for a stylish pen with quite a few quirks and a best case bulky-crayon sketch feeling. Either a Wacom bamboo digitizer or the Adobe ink kit. CRKT Türreck (Timecode 00:34:00) Link zum Bild: Türreck Ob @Zettt’s Kettler Türreck Multi oder Patrick’s Powerbar 2… dieser Pick sollte euch wieder hochziehen, wenn ihr gerade down seid. Powerbar 2 Demonstration from Innovation Fitness on Vimeo. Doch genug der schlechten Wortspiele, jetzt geht’s zu den… Mac OS X App Picks … und die sind einfach… SuperDuper (Timecode 00:37:40) Die kostenfreie Version von SuperDuper! ist echt gut… kann zum Beispiel auch bootbare Backups erstellen. Das wusste Patrick noch nicht. Der kennt nur 24,68 €, welche auch steuerbare Backups erlaubt. Highland (Timecode 00:40:00) “Distraction-free screenwriting” gibt’s mit Highland für 26,99 €. Andreas will damit eure kreative Ader fördern. Dazu passend ein 1½ Minuten langer Stummfilm: Highland Promo from Quote Unquote Apps on Vimeo. Airfoil von Rogue Amoeba (Timecode 00:42:20) Die Streaming-Wahl von Patrick, wenn es darum geht Sound vom Mac ans iPhone zu schicken oder umgedreht. Das ganze kostet $25 für den Mac, bzw. Airfoil Remote für iOS gibt’s schon ab $5. Warum das so cool ist für Podcasts hat Patrick hier beschrieben. Mittlerweile haben Pocket Casts und Overcast auch web player – weshalb Patrick’s Methode tendenziell weniger zum Einsatz kommt. Trotzdem, nur so kann er Smart Speed von Overcast auch am Mac nutzen ohne Kopfhörerwechsel. Minecraft bzw. Feed The Beast (Timecode 00:44:40) Von Puzzlern, bis überleben, bis… was weiß die Redaktion. Andreas spielt’s und sein Zockerherz lacht freudestrahlend. Minecraft Modpacks: Direwolf20 | Feed the Beast Mailbox for Mac (beta) (Timecode 00:46:40) Zur Zeit nur GoogleMail und iCloud. Mehr Protokolle und Provider sollen folgen. http://www.mailboxapp.com iTerm 2 (Timecode 00:48:25) Der Terminal-Ersatz names iTerm2 kann… 256 colors for vim slide-out shell Split views shortcuts für SSH Verbindungen suche (in der aktuellen session), selbst mit Regex hochgradig konfigurierbar themes für verschiedene Verbindungen iTerm2 supports user-defined triggers keybindings, regex-Magie ↓ iTerm2 supports user-defined triggers, which are actions that run when text matching a regular expression is received. You can use it to highlight words, automatically respond to prompts, notify you when something important happens, and more. PS: Über das Uberspace-Drama hat Nils K. hier was geschrieben. Amadeus Pro (Timecode 00:51:00) Das Urgestein schlechthin in Sachen Audio-Editing für $60. Vor- und Nachteile direkt im Podcast. Asepsis (Timecode 00:54:30) Asepsis (von Binary Age) ist ein System Helferlein, welches die Erstellung von .DS_Store Dateien unterbindet Funktionsweise: Installiert einen daemon und legt die .DS_Store in /usr/local/.dscage an. Ergebnis: Sauberer Finder (gerade als Path Finder Nutzer sehr angenehm. Auflistung: Was alles in .DS_Store Dateien gesammelt wird. Metadaten halt… Position der Icons, Ansichtseinstellungen vom Finder Fenster und noch ein paar Schmankerl aus dem Inspektor. Wollt ihr wissen warum .DS_Store ein Kacklösung ist, dann hier weiterlesen. Tipps: Löscht alle .DS_Store in einem Ordner (auch global auf die Root Partition anwendbar, einfach statt ./ nur / schreiben). sudo find ./ -name ".DS_Store" -depth -exec rm {} ; Aber… wir installieren ja so ein Tool, damit wir es einfacher haben. Statt löschen heißt es umziehe: asepsisctl migratein Danach könnt ihr per find . -iname .ds_store ob das auch gefruchtet hat. Übrigens könnt ihr das erstellen dieser Dateien auf Netzwerk Datenträgern (z.B. alles was per USB angeschlossen wird) komplett unterbinden: defaults write com.apple.desktopservices DSDontWriteNetworkStores true Klar gibt’s auch ne’ Warnung: 1x bei Binary Age 1x bei Apple: “Get Info Comments May Not Appear for Remote Volumes” Desk (Timecode 00:56:30) Für 26,99 € gibt’s Desk, einen minimalisitschen Blogging Client, von Sven empfohlen. Eine veritable Konkurrenz zu MarsEdit. Minimalistischer Desktop Writing und Blogging Client. Unterstützt folgende Plattformen: Wordpress (selbst gehosted und Wordpress.com) Blogger Tumblr Squarespace Movable Type Typepad Facebook Notes ffmpeg (Timecode 00:58:18) Nach dem Urgestein für Audio-Editing gibt es jetzt von Andreas das Gegenstück zum Video konvertieren auf der Kommandozeile. Ein echtes Schmuckstück, welches im übrigen fast jeder Video-Konverter nutzt. iOS App Picks Newsify (Timecode 01:01:10) Sven ist begeistert vom Zeitungslayout dieses RSS readers. Co-Pilot Patrick spamt derweil seine Meinung in den Chat. Link zum Bild: Newsify Fan Wer mehr Drama will, muss reinhören. Voice Dream Reader (Timecode 01:03:20) Quelle: Voice Dream für 8,99 € (eine Lite Version zum Testen gibt’s umsonst). Gute Stimmchen ((im Podcast auch live)): Deutsch: Julia (Acapela) 1,79 €/Hans (Ivona) 4,49 € UK Englisch: Emma (Ivona) 4,49 €/Brian (Ivona) 4,49 € Alternative die nicht wirklich Alternativen sind: NaturalReader for Mac $69.50 NaturalReader Cloud $99/Jahr für Web App, iOS & Android Apps naltatis/instapaper2podcast Pinnacle Studio (Timecode 01:06:45) Video Editing auf iOS. 8,99 € für’s iPhone und 11,99 € für das iPad vom Avid Ableger Pinnacle. Andreas’ Empfehlung für um schnell Mal Live-Dokumentationen zusammenzuschrauben. Space Age (Timecode 01:08:15) Patrick’ jauchzt-heult im Hintergrund als Sven seinen hervorragenden 3,59 € Pick vorstellt. Die Vorfreude ist groß bei ihm, denn Sven redet allen den Mund wässrig. Due.app (01:10:00) Der beste Timer unter iOS ist für 4,49 € erhältlich. Das Hammerfeature schlechthin - neben einem exzellenten Support von URL schemes: Die nervigen Erinnerungen die erst aufhören sich zu wiederholen, wenn man sich drum kümmert. Decim8 (Timecode 01:11:15) Decim8 kann für 1,79 € professionell eure Bilder zerstören. Wenn das kein Pick ist, dann weiß die Redaktion es auch nicht. Ein artverwandter Nachtrag von Patrick findet sich hier bei den Münchnern von Spektrum 44 (in Form von Wallpapers für’s iPhone 6). Nuzzle (Timecode 01:14:40) Nuzzle gibt euch ein personalisiertes Best of Retweets für euer Twitter. Kostenlos für iOS und im Web. Alternative web app: Vellum Outread (Timecode 01:16:10) Bei Outread sagt Andreas “Finally a Speed Reading App That Understands Speed Reading””. das Referenz (Timecode 01:18:18) Das Referenz: Wikipedia für 4,49 € für Sven die Wikipedia app. Web Apps oder Skripte FileBot (Timecode 01:20:00) FileBot - The ultimate TV and Movie Renamer / Subtitle Downloader. Der Name ist Programm, es gibt keine Gott, außer Bela, Farin, Rod FileBot. Appbot (Timecode 01:21:40) https://appbot.co Trello (Timecode 01:23:20) Super Listen-Organisierer mit dem nach noch suparara kollaborieren kann. Sven bevorzugt Trello gegenüber Asana und Co. Patrick findet die Touchsteuerung auf iOS sehr gelungen. BitTorrent Sync (Timecode 01:24:50) Sync ist Patrick’s neuster Held auf allen Plattformen: überall verfügbar schnell Ordern frei wählbar und ultra-konfigurierbar Kirby 2.0 (Timecode 01:26:00) PHP-Programmierer Sven F. nutzt Kirby um seine Blog rauszuhauen. Deshalb gibt’s das datenbanklose CMS auf Ordnerbasis empfohlen. Kostenlos testen, privat nutzen für 15 € oder geschäftlich für 79 €. Subtle Patterns (Timecode 01:27:20) http://subtlepatterns.com Dort gibt’s Hintergrundmuster für euch. Schlicht und einfach schön. Ein Photoshop-Plugin gibt’s auch gegen bare Münze. Pow (und/oder Anvil für den Mac) (Timecode 01:28:40) Zero-configuration Rack server for Mac OS X Kommandozeile: Pow GUI Version: Anvil for Mac - Run your sites locally Andreas wirft noch Vagrant mit rein, von dem er letztens gehört hat. Das kann allerdings noch viel viel mehr. Slack (Timecode 01:30:20) Slack ist der Hammer, wenn es um Anbindungen von anderen Web Apps und Co. geht. Das ganze ist unglaublich gut beim kollaborieren. Klare Pilotenempfehlung. Viel zu gut für kostenlos laut Patrick. Aber weil mehr Zahlen will hat folgende Optionen: Link zum Bild: Slack … über die er sich auf der offiziellen Webseite weiter informieren kann. Verschiedenes So… jetzt geht’s in zeitlerische Gefilde. Reosmods (Timecode 01:32:00) Dampfen ist teuer, weil man viel zu viel ausprobiert. Jeden Tag kommt was neues von irgendeinem Tüftler und wird gehypt ohne Ende. Zudem gibt’s noch jede Menge schlechter Tips. Damit will Patrick jetzt eine Ende machen, denn Reosmods ist der heilige Gral. Punkt. Satzende. Link zu größerem Bild: Reos Die Webseite ist ein Graus, aber ihr packt das schon: reosmods.com Den Mod gibt’s ab $146 … oder um die 80 € gebraucht. Anleitung zum bestellen: Auf “Shop > Mods” klicken Eine Low profile Reo grand und/oder eine Low profile Reo Mini raussuchen Auf “Shop > Rebuildable atomizer & supplies > Rebuildable atomizer & supplies” klicken Dort einen low profile Reomizer (2.0) nehmen und wohl fühlen. Kanthal A1 32 gauge mitbestellen und es glühen lassen. Vielleicht noch Ersatzmagneten für die Tür mitbestellen und ein paar Dichtungsringe. Bei Akkuteile eine VTC5 ordern. Warten auf die Post. Dampfen. Wer geduldig ist warten noch ein, zwei Monate, den dann gibt’s ein revolutionäres neues 510er Gewinde mit oben drauf vom Modvater Rob. Informationsbedürftige schauen bei Germanvapers im REO Talk vorbei. Hier Patrick’s Dampfer-Werdegang: Im Jahre 2010 war ich bereits 5 Jahre Nichtraucher. Aber habe so einiges vermisst: Rituale und Wolken pusten. Im Oktober 2010 stolperte ich über “Vaping”. Natürlich habe ich vorher schon einmal von der E-Zigarette gehört, aber die richtige Informationsflut habe ich erst dann auf mich einstürmen lassen, da mich Alternativen zu gängigen, super-teuren Vaporizern interessiert haben – ja, die Dinger die meistens zum Gras rauchen benutzt werden. Die Entscheidung viel positiv für’s Dampfen aus und ich ging von einer Totally Wicked Ego zur europäischen Ego, und dann immer weiter von Ego zu Ego. Vier Stück an der Zahl sollten es werden. Irgendwann kamen die ersten Tanks und ich habe eine Menge durchprobiert. Da die Ego’s nach einer Weile ziemlich ermüdend sind, wenn man viel dampft, bestellte ich mir rund ein Jahr später eine schwarze ProVari, welche mittlerweile - dank eines Defekts - auch einen V2 Chip drinnen hat und mich mit grünen LED’s anleuchtet immer wenn ich auf “FEUER” drücke. … okay nicht ganz die Wahrheit. Kurz nach der Ego hatte ich noch eine schwarze Silver Bullet die mir 6 Monate vor der ProVari treue Dienste leistete. Es folgten noch mehr Tanks, ein Versuch mit dem Bulli A1 und dann wieder Tanks. Letzten Endes war ich nie zufrieden mit Tanks…. Entweder der Geschmack ließ zu wünschen übrig (z.B. mag ich Carto’s überhaupt nicht) oder die Dinger sifften nach einer Weile. Frei nach dem Motto “Back To The Roots” wurde ich zum überzeugten Tröpfler und auf die ProVari kam ein eBaron The Dripper. Bis vor ein paar Monaten fand ich dieses 1-2-3 Setup relativ entspannt und gut. Doch dann… … dann entdeckte ich die Bottom-Feeder. Ich bestellte mir einen goldigen VV Reo Grand. Von der Benutzerfreundlichkeit und der Akkulaufzeit eine wahre Erleuchtung. Geschmacklich ebenfalls Oberliga. Auf das schmucke Stück kam dann ein eBaron The Spiral und gut ist…. Der Reo gefiel mir so gut, dass ich vor 2 Wochen überlegte, mir noch einen zu ordern, um nicht immer warten zu müssen, bis die 6 ml Flasche leer ist, bevor ich mal den Geschmack wechsele. Bevor ich aber noch einen in die Jahre gekommenen Mod bestellte, dachte ich bei mir: Informiere dich vorher noch einmal. Gesagt, getan. 2 Wochen Recherche und viele Rip Trippers Videos auf YouTube später viel die Entscheidung es noch einmal mit einem RDA zu probieren. Rip Trippers hat mir das schmackhaft gemacht und die Vorteile (in kurz: mehr Geschmack, mehr Dampf, mehr Rituale, mehr Optionen) aufgezeigt. Zudem ist mir die Nerdigkeit von dem Kerl sehr sympathisch - ich bin da genauso, wenn auch mit Computern und Skripten. Fully Present, The Science, Art, and Practice of Mindfulness (Timecode 01:34:30) Von Ω zu Ommm. Was für Körper und Geist gibt’s hier von Andreas empfohlen: http://marc.ucla.edu/body.cfm?id=60 Trove (Timecode 01:36:15) Minimalisten Geldbörse. So fern man nur mit Karten im klassischen Kreditkartenformat und ein paar gefalteten Geldscheinen klarkommt ist Trove nicht nur ein sehr kleines, sondern auch sehr cleveres “Geldbörs’chen”. Sven schwört jeweils darauf und hat sich mittels Kickstarter-Kampagne gleich eines der ersten Exemplare gesichert. Hergestellt von einer der letzten britischen Lederfabriken gibt es Trove ab 30 GBP/ca. 38 EUR. Walter Moers - Stadt der Träumenden Bücher (Timecode 01:38:00) Walter Moers - Stadt der Träumenden Bücher (Hildegunst von Mythenmetz) Genre: Fantasy Autor: Walter Moers Denkt sich allerlei Figuren und Charaktere fernab von Humanoiden aus, welche alle im Mikrokosmos Zamonien zu Hause sind. Gerade für Kenner der klassischen Literatur auch auf der Metaebene sehr geil. Vergleich: Jasper Fforde’s Thursday Next Serie wo in die Welt der Bücher hineingegangen wird. Hier genauso nur ganz anders. Protagonist: Hildegunst von Mythenmetz, ein fetter, arroganter, in sich selbst verliebter Autor, der keinerlei Kritik an seinem Werk duldet (Dinosaurier). Anbei ein Gedicht von einem anderen Schriftsteller in Roman selbst… als Meta… keine Angst… das Buch ist normal geschrieben. Bin schwarz, aus Holz und stets verschlossen Seitdem mit Stein sie mich beschossen In mir ruh’n tausend trübe Linsen Seitdem mein Haupt ging in die Binsen Dagegen helfen keine Pillen: Ich bin ein Schrank voll ungeputzter Brillen Danzelot von Silbendrechsler Stelton Pure Black Messer (Timecode 01:40:40) Sven schwört auf sein Stelton aus schwarzem Stahl. Die gibt’s zwischen 80 und 90 Euros. The War of Art (Timecode 01:42:30) Steven Pressfield’s Buch kämpft mit euch um Kunst und das Schreiben von Büchern gegen kreative Blockaden und Co. Creative work is not a selfish act or a bid for attention on the part of the actor. It’s a gift to the world and every being in it. Don’t cheat us of your contribution. Give us what you’ve got. Steven Pressfield, The War of Art Soulra FRX3 Kurbelradio mit USB-Ladeausgang (Timecode 01:44:00) So… es ist soweit… nach nur 17 Folgen kommt nun der erste Zeitler-Pick in Reinkultur… dieses Mal aber von SVEN. Mein Gott… es färbt ab. “K-U-R-B-E-L-R-A-D-I-O”. Das muss man sich auf der Zunge zergehen lassen. Sven’s Überleitung ist “BLACKOUT - Morgen ist es zu spät” von Marc Eisberg lesen. Danach ist nämlich ein Kurbelradio mit Solarpanel und der Möglichkeit der autonomen Geräteaufladung ein “Minimalinvestment”. Patrick zieht bei so viel Fnords direkt mal den Aluhut auf, um auf der sicheren Seite zu sein. Link zum Bild: ALU-SCHUTZ Währenddessen kramt Andreas sein Minimalinvestment aus dem Keller und sorgt für kurbelnde Erleuchtung. Link zum Bild: Kurbellicht Egal. Sven hat nach nächtelanger Recherche das Soulra FRX3 Kurbelradio als eines der Besten Minimalinvestements (dieses mal franz. betont lesen) herausgefiltert. Für schlappe 70€ gibt’s das bei Amazon und der nächste Blackout wird zur Gaudi… fehlt nur noch Dosenwurstsuppe im Zwölferpack… aber die pickt er bestimmt nächste Woche. Sven hat auch noch eine authentische Top-Bewertungen bei Amazon ausgegraben die ihn restlos vor dem Kauf überzeugt hat: ★★★★★ Tolles gäret Ich habe das gäret gekuaft uber shop hat super klang mit diesem gäret können sie handy aufladen mit aux ausgang können sie ihe mp3 oder handy verbinden und music horen und kann 3 fach aufladen mit usb uber strom mit solar und…. ja bei mir ein super gäret Patrick als alter Linguist sieht da eher seine nächste Mission. Und zwar den Bildungsauftrag seinem Co-Pilot einen der schönsten deutschen Dialekte näher zu bringen: .embed-container { position: relative; padding-bottom: 56.25%; height: 0; overflow: hidden; max-width: 100%; } .embed-container iframe, .embed-container object, .embed-container embed { position: absolute; top: 0; left: 0; width: 100%; height: 100%; } Kiezdeutsch - “Isch geh Prinzenbad” Sunflex snakebyte power:cub (Timecode 01:48:00) Ein schicker Verteiler in Würfelform. Sunflex snakebyte power:cube Extender Universal. Konkurrenz allocacoc PowerCube wurde von Patrick zurückgeschickt: 0,5 Ampere = zu wenig Most, der snakebyte liefert 2.1 Ampere. Alternative: Nur USB? Billig muss es sein? Anker® 40W 5V / 8A 5-Port USB Ladegerät mit PowerIQ Neckar (Timecode 01:49:30) So wie es sich anhört freut sich Sven mit seinem JAWOHL!! mehr über den Pick von Andreas als dieser selbst. Die Nachricht ist jedoch simpel: Geh’ mal an die frische Luft, oh Hörer. In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.
Das Warnsystem eines E-Mail-Anbieters entdeckt kinderpornographisches Material in einem Postfach – und lässt den dazugehörigen Mann verhaften. Ist das legal? >> Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/digital/googlemail-und-kinderpornographie-wem-gehoeren-meine-e-mails
Themen:Die Öffnungsrate: so wird Sie gemessen und diese Änderungen gab es vor kurzem bei Googlemail.Stefan Erlich von kritische-anleger.de im InterviewWelche Ziele er mit dem Newsletter verfolgt und welche Inhalte der Newsletter bietetDer Newsletter im Vergleich mit FacebookWas sind typische Fehler, die andere Versender machen?Tipps für zielführende InhalteTipps zur Platzierung des Newsletter-FormularsDer E-Mail Anbieter CleverReachBilder im Newsletter
Ein Griff und die Sucherei geht los. Man sucht im Mailprogramm , Google Mail , Google Drive , Yahoo Mail , in der Dropbox , auf Youtube usw. und man findet die Datei nicht die man gerade benötigt. Was wäre es wenn es ein Lösung gibt, die einen Einstiegspunkt hat und ALLE digitalen Information, Dokumente, Programme , PDF´s , e-Books, Bilder an einer einzigen Stelle zu finden sind? Sowas kann es doch gar nicht geben, oder doch ? Die Lösung wie immer im Podcast. Wer einen Demo-Zugang haben möchte, einfach Mail an mich schreiben unter: http://unixweb.de/kontakt
Ein Griff und die Sucherei geht los. Man sucht im Mailprogramm , Google Mail , Google Drive , Yahoo Mail , in der Dropbox , auf Youtube usw. und man findet die Datei nicht die man gerade benötigt. Was wäre es wenn es ein Lösung gibt, die einen Einstiegspunkt hat und ALLE digitalen Information, Dokumente, Programme , PDF´s , e-Books, Bilder an einer einzigen Stelle zu finden sind? Sowas kann es doch gar nicht geben, oder doch ? Die Lösung wie immer im Podcast. Wer einen Demo-Zugang haben möchte, einfach Mail an mich schreiben unter: http://unixweb.de/kontakt
Ein Griff und die Sucherei geht los. Man sucht im Mailprogramm , Google Mail , Google Drive , Yahoo Mail , in der Dropbox , auf Youtube usw. und man findet die Datei nicht die man gerade benötigt. Was wäre es wenn es ein Lösung gibt, die einen Einstiegspunkt hat und ALLE digitalen Information, Dokumente, Programme , PDF´s , e-Books, Bilder an einer einzigen Stelle zu finden sind? Sowas kann es doch gar nicht geben, oder doch ? Die Lösung wie immer im Podcast. Wer einen Demo-Zugang haben möchte, einfach Mail an mich schreiben unter: http://unixweb.de/kontakt
In Folge 8 haben wir Ihnen gezeigt, wie Sie sich in Google-Mail eine kostenlose Mailadresse einrichten. Google bietet Ihnen mit der Einrichtung auch die Möglichkeit den Kalender und die Kontakte kostenlos zu nutzen. In der heutigen Folge zeigen wir, wie Sie dieses Konto auf Ihrem iPod, iPad oder iPhone einrichten und somit alle Mails, Termine [...]
Google bietet zahlreiche kostenlose Dienste, u.a. auch einen kostenlosen Mail-Dienst. In dieser Folge zeigen wir Ihnen, wie Sie sich schnell und kostenlos eine eigene Mailadresse bei „Google Mail“ anlegen. Damit haben Sie dann auch die Möglichkeit Google-Kalender und Google-Adressen mit zu nutzen. Wie Sie den Dienst dann auch auf Ihrem Smartphone einsetzen und so [...]
В программе: — Китайское правительство берёт Интернет под контроль; — Google Mail увеличил лимит контактов до 25 тысяч; — Google тратит огромные суммы на маркетинг своих услуг в России; — Сервис Twitter официально "спамит" пользователей; — Видеосервис Netflix обещает 1 Гбит/с каждому через 10 лет; — Ресурс недели: Групон — скидки на красивую жизнь. По материалам internet.ru, lenta.ru, woolfs.ru, ruformator.ru. Donate: WM — R287676834635 // Z279697361175 ЯД — 41001795061576
Créez une signature originale avec Gmail.GOOGLE MAIL. Comme vous le savez certainement, il est plus que courtois de signer ses courriels. Si vous avez un compte Gmail, il vous est possible d’insérer automatiquement votre signature, mais également de la personnaliser à souhait.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Créez une signature originale avec Gmail.GOOGLE MAIL. Comme vous le savez certainement, il est plus que courtois de signer ses courriels. Si vous avez un compte Gmail, il vous est possible d’insérer automatiquement votre signature, mais également de la personnaliser à souhait.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Consultez simultanément plusieurs comptes Webmail.INTERNET EXPLORER 9. Avec des comptes de webmails, comme Google Mail, Yahoo, Hotmail, il n'est pas possible d'en ouvrir plus d'un à la fois d’une même messagerie en ligne. Or, si vous possédez plusieurs comptes Gmail ou autres, il vous serait peut-être agréable de les consulter simultanément. Grâce à la fonction Nouvelle session de la version 9 du navigateur Internet Explorer, c’est désormais possible.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Consultez simultanément plusieurs comptes Webmail.INTERNET EXPLORER 9. Avec des comptes de webmails, comme Google Mail, Yahoo, Hotmail, il n'est pas possible d'en ouvrir plus d'un à la fois d’une même messagerie en ligne. Or, si vous possédez plusieurs comptes Gmail ou autres, il vous serait peut-être agréable de les consulter simultanément. Grâce à la fonction Nouvelle session de la version 9 du navigateur Internet Explorer, c’est désormais possible.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Annuler l’envoi d’un courriel Gmail.Il arrive qu’on expédie sans le vouloir un courriel pas tout à fait terminé. Exemple typique, on oublie d’y joindre le fichier dont on parle dans son message! Sachez qu’il existe une option, dans les Labos de Google Mail, d’annuler l’envoi du mail dans un laps de temps d’environ 10 secondes.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Annuler l’envoi d’un courriel Gmail.Il arrive qu’on expédie sans le vouloir un courriel pas tout à fait terminé. Exemple typique, on oublie d’y joindre le fichier dont on parle dans son message! Sachez qu’il existe une option, dans les Labos de Google Mail, d’annuler l’envoi du mail dans un laps de temps d’environ 10 secondes.Eric OthonLe Matin Dimanchewww.astuces.lematin.ch
Für Thunderbird gibt es nun das Add-On Contacts. Mit diesem gibt es nun die Möglichkeit einfach alle Kontakte vom Computer, Twitter, GoogleMail, Facbeook & Co. auf einmal anzusehen. Mit Contacts! Download: http://www.chip.de/downloads/Contacts-fuer-Thunderbird_44169633.html Blog: http://www.tch-blog.com
Enregistre le 6 mai 2010 La mailing liste des cast codeurs http://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs Nouvelles Disquette 3,5 pouces, c'est fini http://www.geeksaresexy.net/2010/04/26/farewell-to-the-floppy VmForce http://www.vmforce.com/ http://sacha.labourey.com/2010/04/29/the-springforcevmforce-announcement/ (Sacha Labourey) http://blog.springsource.com/2010/04/27/vmforce-spring-cloud/ (Rod Johnson) http://blogs.vmware.com/console/2010/04/vmforce-and-vmwares-open-paas-strategy.html (Steve Herrod -- VMWare CTO) Steve Jobs contre Flash Gordon http://www.apple.com/hotnews/thoughts-on-flash/ (Steve Jobs) http://android-france.fr/2010/05/11/flash-sur-android-2-2-en-video-et-la-future-home-de-froyo/ (Flash sur Android 2.2) http://www.gamasutra.com/view/news/28410/Report_FTC_Examining_Possible_Antitrust_Violations_Involving_Apples_Flash_Ban.php (la Federal Trade Commission) http://www.businessmobile.fr/actualites/audience-du-trafic-internet-mobile-l-iphone-depasse-par-android-aux-etats-unis-39751237.htm Traffic internet des platformes android vient d'atteindre l'iPhone Appcelerator http://www.appcelerator.com/ JavaFX http://javafx.com/ HP rachete Palm http://www.euroinvestor.co.uk/news/story.aspx?id=11028725 NoSQL Xebia http://blog.xebia.fr/tag/nosql/ Hibernate Search 3.2 http://in.relation.to/Bloggers/HibernateSearch32ReleasedMappingMassIndexingClustering XWiki Entreprise 2.3 Oracle Data Center http://www.theserverside.com/news/thread.tss?thread_id=60096 Faille de securite JIRA https://blogs.apache.org/infra/entry/apache_org_04_09_2010 http://www.jboss.org/announcements/jira_security_incident_190410.html http://blogs.atlassian.com/news/2010/04/oh_man_what_a_day_an_update_on_our_security_breach.html Cross site scripting http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cross-site_scripting JUGs Paris Scala User Group http://groups.google.com/group/paris-scala-user-group Groovy and Grails user group http://www.meetup.com/Paris-Groovy-Grails/calendar/13379668/ Jazoon http://jazoon.com/ GeeCon http://2010.geecon.org/main/home Agile days http://conf.agile-france.org/ Sofia Conf 2010 http://sophiaconf2010.fr/ Universite du SI http://www.universite-du-si.com/ http://www.universite-du-si.com/fr/conferences/6-paris-usi-2010/sessions/859-il-est-frais-mon-java La video de promo des cast codeurs http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gGxWzVMRpHo Les outils de l'episode Command Center Apple Mail Adium http://adium.im/ NetNewsWire http://www.newsgator.com/individuals/netnewswire/ Google Mail http://gmail.com/ Google Reader http://google.com/reader Skype http://www.skype.com Psy http://psi-im.org/ Nambu http://www.nambu.com/ Thunderbird http://www.mozillamessaging.com/en-US/thunderbird/ iCal http://www.tweetdeck.com/ Tweetdeck http://www.tweetdeck.com/ Twhirl http://www.twhirl.org/ Twidroid http://twidroid.com/ Questions Independants malades Tuples LesCastCodeurs et Java 1.2 Java 5 vs 6 vs 7 Pourquoi on fait de l'open source Nous contacter Contactez-nous via twitter http://twitter.com/lescastcodeurs sur le groupe Google http://groups.google.com/group/lescastcodeurs ou sur le site web http://lescastcodeurs.com/
This episode we discuss solutions to three barriers that get in the way of playing RPGs: Learning the game, finding gaming space, and setting a time to play.Show mentions:Google MailGoogle DocumentsGoogle CalendarFreeMarketPrimeTime Adventures
This episode we discuss solutions to three barriers that get in the way of playing RPGs: Learning the game, finding gaming space, and setting a time to play.Show mentions:Google MailGoogle DocumentsGoogle CalendarFreeMarketPrimeTime Adventures
No episodio numero 17 o assunto e o Gmail, o servico gratuito de e-mails do Google, tambem chamado de Google Mail. Com inumeros recursos e atualmente sendo o mais usado do planeta o Gmail oferece hoje 7,3G de espaco para e-mails -- e crescendo a cada dia, sem parar. Ouca este episodio do Papo BJPnet e teste o Gmail, inclusive para receber seus outros e-mails e centralize tudo nessa que e a mais famosa ferramenta do Google, atualmente com mais de 34 milhoes de usuarios...
How to Set Up a Google Mail Account
Das Internet als reine Kommunikations- oder Informationsplattform zu benutzen ist nicht genug. Wenn schon Jeder mit Jedem und Allem vernetzt ist, dann will ich auch auf meine Daten und Programme zu greifen können ohne immer mein Laptop dabeihaben zu müssen. Heute wollen wir euch in die Techniken einführen, wie ihr jeden Browser überall zu eurem Desktop machen könnt. Web Applications wie GoogleMail machen es möglich.
TechByter Worldwide (formerly Technology Corner) with Bill Blinn
Firefox 2 will soon be ready for download and is currently available as release candidate 3. Google made a mistake in GMail that would probably have earned a failing grade in a freshman programming class. In Nerdly News, pump-and-dump stock schemes and Internet Explorer 7 is now available (if you have the right operating system).
10 Minuten Mail-Management mit Google Mail. (Sozusagen Folge 1)
Vortrag über Barrierefreiheit von Jens Meiert. Vergleich der Statistiken zwischen TheCounter.com und Webhits.de. Probleme mit Gravatar.com Google-Mail: wer braucht eine Einladung? Kölner Weblog-Treff Nr. 3. WeBuilder 2005: eine lange Suche hat ein Ende. “Der richtige Pfad”. Dateidownload: Podcast im MP3-Format (7,2mb). Podcast im Ogg-Format (5,8mb). Verwandte Beiträge: WordPress: WP-Camp am 13.10.2012 in Berlin Nicht vergessen: …