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Es sind vor allem die Aktien von Microsoft und Chipotle, die von den Ergebnissen profitieren können. Obwohl auch Google die Ziele schlagen konnte, mit einer deutlichen Ausweitung der Aktienrückkäufe, tendiert die Aktie kaum verändert. Gleiches sehen wir bei Texas Instruments. Hilton, Visa und PacWest profitieren von den Quartalszahlen, mit Enphase Energy und Juniper Networks unter Druck. Deutlich schwächer starten die Aktien von Activision Blizzard in den Tag. Die Regulatoren in Großbritannien haben sich Gründen des Wettbewerbs, gegen eine Übernahme durch Microsoft ausgesprochen. Selbst wenn beide Unternehmen in Berufung gehen, stehen die Chancen eines Deals schlecht. Seit 2019 wurden bei sieben solcher Ablehnungen eine Berufung eingelegt, schätzt die UBS. In vier dieser Fälle wurde die Berufung umgehend abgelehnt. Abonniere den Podcast, um keine Folge zu verpassen! ____ Folge uns, um auf dem Laufenden zu bleiben: • Facebook: http://fal.cn/SQfacebook • Twitter: http://fal.cn/SQtwitter • LinkedIn: http://fal.cn/SQlinkedin • Instagram: http://fal.cn/SQInstagram
Ellie Balk is an artist obsessed with color, pattern, data and mathematics. She creates large scale data visualization public artworks using paint, glass, sound and most recently ceramics. Community engagement and interaction is at the core of her work. Ellie lives in Brooklyn, while working internationally. Her public artwork can be experienced across the United State, extensively throughout New York City and St. Louis, Missouri and Internationally in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Mae Rim, Thailand in Saint Louis, Senegal and Marrakech, Morocco. Ellie has worked with High schools students across the United States in creating public art that visualizes mathematics and her ideas have been adapted for use in elementary and high school mathematics curriculum. Her work developed with her teaching partner Tricia Stanley (Brooklyn) in Visualizing Mathematics has been published nationally and internationally through the Bridges Conference (Sweden) and the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics (Connecticut, Chicago, New Orleans). She loves when she can use data as a tool to bring people together. Her visualization workshops have strengthened groups with the Kemper Museum (St. Louis), teams within Google (New York), KOC school (Istanbul, Turkey) and with the National Academy of Design (New York). Ellie holds a Bachelors of Fine Art from Bowling Green State University in Ohio and a Masters of Fine Art from Pratt Institute. Episode Notes Ellie | Website | Instagram | Twitter Related Episodes Episode #232: Stefanie Posavec and Sonja KuijpersEpisode #187: Stefanie Posavec & Miriam QuickEpisode #2: Dear Data iTunes Spotify Stitcher TuneIn Google Podcasts PolicyViz Newsletter
Mercury Retrograde is upon us!In today's podcast, we talk about Mercury Retrograde in Gemini on May 10.In the spirit of Mercury Retrograde, we are revamping and reimagining the podcast as we close our chapter from Unity Radio. We move forward with the podcast's new name, Mainly Moonology. We bring you a renewed focus on the Moon, Moon manifesting, and everything in between!And in fact, in this first episode, we ARE in between because we're addressing the three main things you need to know about ... Mercury Retrograde.Is it bad luck, does it cause health concerns, or is it simply an often misunderstood event that we perhaps need to address differently?Read more on Mercury Retrograde here:Your Mercury Survival Guide [FREE!]The Mercury Retrograde Book Show Transcript:(00:01):Today, we are talking about the top three things you need to know about Mercury retrograde. Why? Because guess what may 10 sees another Mercury retrograde Mercury retrograde is gonna start off in the sign of Gemini and move back into the sign of TAs. But guess what? That affects you, no matter what star sign you are or what rising sign you are, we all have Gemini and Taurus in our charts somewhere. And by the way, if you're wondering about a planet moving from one sign to the next, I will explain that as we go along. But before we get into that, let's just define our terms a little bit mercury, obviously, planet, actually the planet closest to us planet earth in astrology, Mercury represents communications. So symbolically when Mercury appears to go backwards in the skies, as it does up to four times a year, it's been noted by people paying for thousands and thousands of years that communications and transport and electronics and all other things connected to Mercury can go a little haywire.(01:14):In fact, if you Google New York times Mercury retrograde airport luggage, you will find an art where they actually tested. Does Mercury retrograde lead to more luggage being lost, which actually you would expect it to just because Mercury retrograde is a time of confusion. And it really does relate a lot to transport as much as it does to communications, which is what it's more famous for. And, uh, somebody somewhere did this, uh, test and they, they monitored were more pieces of luggage lost under Mercury retrograde and a statist. Let me say that again. A statistically valid number of extra suitcases went missing during the survey. So there you go. It's not just hearsay. Mercury retro really is a time for things, getting confused, things, getting lost, misunderstandings and miscommunications. However, all that said kind of brings me to the first of the three things I wanna tell you about Mercury retrograde.(02:20):So the first thing I wanna tell you about Mercury re retrograde is this guess what? It's not bad luck. Okay. People get the wrong idea. They hear about things like, oh, you know, more luggage goes missing when Mercury's retrograde or, oh my gosh, there's so much confusion or misunderstandings. Sure. All that is possible. As I said, Mercury in particular killer governs communications, short trips, transport situations. Okay. It, it is a little bit chaotic at times there can be misunderstandings and you might sometimes feel like, well, hang on a minute. I explained that really well to you. What part of what I said, didn't you understand when Mercury is retrograde, misunderstandings are more likely, but guess what? That is, where it finishes. It doesn't get more sinister than that. It is not bad luck. One of my favourite ways to illustrate this is to tell you about a comment I had on social media.(03:21):Once upon a time when I was talking about Mercury
Principal Strategy and Insights Manager at Google Hong Kong, Iris Yang, talks about her journey of moving across fields and countries to find herself and her roots. Never having lived in Asia before, Iris shares how she overcomes the cultural and language barrier and fear of moving alone, as well as insights on moving out of your hometown and cultivating space for yourself.
This week, Mark Mirchandani and Priyanka Vergadia learn all about Cloud Audit Logging with fellow Googlers Philip O’Toole and Oscar Guerrero. Our guests explain the importance of Cloud Audit Logs to keep track of your GCP resources so you know who, what, where, and when things were done. Our guests explain the types of logs GCP offers and why each is important for security. The interview continues with a discussion the various other benefits of audit logging, including proof of compliance and measuring of risk. Because audit logs have the ability to create more data than some businesses can use, Philip and Oscar help our listeners understand how to choose the correct logging services for their needs, and we learn how Cloud Logging can help users digest their data. Philip describes how audit logs and event driven systems can benefit businesses, explaining how event driven systems can be built and pushed with GCP. Oscar continues the conversation with audit logging in G Suite. The Cloud Logging team is continuing to expand offerings, so be on the lookout! Philip O’Toole Philip O’Toole is an Engineering Manager at Google Pittsburgh, leading development teams working on GCP’s Cloud Logging Platform, including Audit Logging. Prior to Google, he led development teams at InfluxDB, Loggly, and Riverbed Technology. You can find him on the web. Oscar Guerrero Oscar Guerrero is a Product Manager at Google New York, focused on Data Privacy and Compliance, in particular Audit Logging. Prior to Google, he consulted on Cloud based Financial Risk systems and was a Program Manager at Microsoft in Commerce, Xbox, and Cloud Recommendations. Cool things of the week The new Google Cloud region in Jakarta is now open blog Cloud SQL database instances now discounted blog Beyond Your Bill videos Understanding and analyzing your committed use discounts video Now available: Next OnAir ‘20 schedule, sessions, learning, and resources blog Interview Cloud Audit Logs site Cloud Audit Logs Documentation site Cloud Logging site Cloud Logging Documentation site BigQuery site Google Cloud Storage site Operations (formerly Stackdriver) site Chronicle site Splunk site G Suite audit logging information guide Google G Suite to Splunk HEC Configuration blog Anthos site Tip of the week This week, we have a tip from our Customer Engineering friend, Anthony Bushong, about audit logging in Kubernetes. You can find great documentation on this here and here. What’s something cool you’re working on? Cloud Bytes launched on Sunday and the 2nd episode of the Drawing Board launched late last week! Continuing to work on these.
H ανάγκη για επιβίωση δημιουργεί νέα δεδομένα για τις εταιρείες και την παραγωγικότητα των ομάδων τους. Μιλάμε με την Λιέν Τράν, η οποία τα τελευταία χρόνια εργάζεται στην Google (Nέα Υόρκη) και μας περιγράφει πως η εταιρεία προσαρμόζεται με τα νέα δεδομένα όσον αφορά την απόδοση, ψυχολογία, παραγωγικότητα και κίνητρο των Googlers
Bringing the funk to Cuban rhythms (and vice versa), Cimafunk embraces the piquant playfulness of timeless Cuban music with 21st-century style, referencing timba as well as trova, and continuing where '90s cult band Yerba Buena left off. Cimafunk, who was by all accounts Cuba’s 2018 revelation of the year, is poised for international discovery. Cimafunk visits Google New York to perform music from his latest album, "Terapia," and engages with Brett Perlmutter, Head of Google Cuba, to discuss the emerging creative class in Cuba and the role of expanded internet access. Visit https://cimafunk.com/ for more info on the band. Moderated by Brett Perlmutter, Head of Google Cuba. Visit http://g.co/TalksAtGoogle/Cimafunk to watch the video.
Manuel Lima is a designer, author, and speaker specializing in information visualization as well as a design lead at Google New York. He's taught data visualization at Parsons School of Design and is the author of the books, The Books of Trees, The Book of Circles, and Visual Complexity. In this episode, Manuel and I talk about his journey into design and interest in interaction design and information graphics as well as his career as both an author and practicing designer, writing outside academic discourses, and how to bring in other areas of study in design scholarship. Links from this episode can be found at scratchingthesurface.fm.
In this second episode of the year we'll talk Java! Ray Tsang and Rajeev Dayal tell your co-hosts Mark and Francesc everything there is to know about Java on Google Cloud Platform. You will learn about what you can currently as a Java developer on Google Cloud Platform, but also what to expect on the future. About Ray Ray is a Developer Advocate for the Google Cloud Platform. Ray had extensive hands on cross-industry enterprise systems integration delivery and management experiences during his time at Accenture, managed full stack application development, DevOps, and ITOps. Ray specialized in middleware, big data, and PaaS products during his time at Red Hat while contributing to open source projects, such as Infinispan. Aside from technology, Ray enjoys traveling and adventures. About Rajeev Rajeev Dayal is an Engineering Manager at Google New York that manages the Cloud SDK and Java on GCP efforts. He's been in the developer tools space for nearly 10 years, previously working on the Google Plugin for Eclipse and GWT (where he still has nightmares about browser quirks with Internet Explorer 6) at Google's Atlanta office. Cool thing of the week A 3-hour crash course on deep-learning, TensorFlow and more. blog post Build a Slack bot that uses the Cloud ML Natural Language API github Google Cloud Audit Logging now available across the GCP stack blog post Interview Java on Google Cloud docs Java on App Engine Standard docs Java and Dataflow docs Google Cloud Tools for Eclipse Documentation docs Google Cloud Stackdriver docs Using Stackdriver Trace with Zipkin docs Stackdriver Debugger docs Question of the week I want to move data from S3 to cloud storage - is there an easy way to do this? Yes! This is the best way to do it docs. You might also want to check out Minio. Were will we be? Mark will be at GDC and afterwards he'll be speaking at Cloud Next, both in San Francisco. Francesc is doing a European tour, after speaking at golab he'll speak at GolangBCN. The week after he'll be in Paris and right after he'll be in the Go Devroom at FOSDEM. A bit later he'll also be at Cloud Next.
In the first episode of Scratching the Surface, Jarrett talks with designer and writer Rob Giampietro. Rob is currently the Design Lead for Material Design at Google New York. In this conversation, we talk about how Rob approaches writing and designing, design as a critical activity, and the design writing he'd like to see more of. Links from this episode can be found at scratchingthesurface.fm.
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
Check out RailsClips on Kickstarter!! 00:58 - Andres Dominguez Introduction Twitter GitHub Blog Google: New York 01:47 - protractor Selenium WebDriver WebDriverJs JavaScript Jabber Episode #106: Protractor with Julie Ralph Julie Ralph 03:50 - elementor [YouTube] Elementor, an improved element explorer for protractor elementexplorer [YouTube] Protractor's element explorer IDEs WebStorm IntelliJ IDEA 09:54 - Use Outside of Angular 10:37 - The Name: “Elementor” 11:11 - Conception => Production Writing Tests Text Editors Sublime vim 12:42 - Implementing Elementor / Workflow TDD (Test-driven Development) 14:39 - Testing a Non-Angular Website 15:31 - Installing the Elementor Chrome Extention Google Developer Tools 18:45 - Running in Emacs 19:47 - Plugins (egghead.io) sjump ddescriber 20:47 - Debugging Picks Open Space Events and Conferences (Joe) Miracles and Massacres: True and Untold Stories of the Making of America by Glenn Beck (Chuck) DevDocs (Andres)
Were Our Prayers in Vain?Food for Thought with Rabbi Stuart Shiff at Google New York on July 10, 2014
Why the Jews? Understanding the Root of the World's Longest HatredFood for Thought with Rabbi Shiff at Google New York on May 1st
Days of Future Past: Time Travel and Jewish ConsciousnessFood for Thought with Rabbi Shiff at Google New York on April 3rd
Phew... That Was a Coincidence: How Purim Teaches Us That There's More to the StoryRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, March 6th
Super Flop 2014- Navigating Failure without Self Hatred and NegativityRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, February 6th
The Desolation of Smaug: Tolkien TorahRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, January 9th
Chana and Yehudit - The Unsung Heroines of HanukkahRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, December 5th
Thanksgivikkah- More Than Just a CoincidenceRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, November 7th
Obama Care: The Jewish PerspectiveRabbi Shiff - Food for Thought at Google New York, October 3rd