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Hey, Alex here, just got back from the sunny Shoreline Theater in Mountain view, so let me catch you up! This week was definitely Google heavy, we are covering Google's IO conference for the third year in a row, and today we have a special guest, Logan Kilpatrick, is joining to discuss the announced Gemini 3.5 Flash, Google Omni model, and the new Managed Agents offerings. Plus, this week, for the first time, OpenAI announced that AI solved a Math problem that humans couldn't solve for 80 years, Cursor is showing off Composer 2.5 which is partly trained on XAI data, Karpathy joins Anthropic and much more! Let's dive in! P.S - We've announced our upcoming hackathon, Weavehacks-4, June 6-7, I'll be there, we're expecting the seats to run out very soon so register nowThursdAI - We'd love to have your subscription, and if you're already subscribed, please hit that bell on YT to never miss an episode!Google I/O 2026 - Google goes agentic everywhereI went to cover Google I/O for the third year in a row, shoutout to the DeepMind team for inviting ThursdAI again, and folks, this one felt different.Last year, Google I/O was still very model-centric. This year, the story was not “here is another benchmark chart.” The story was: Google is putting Gemini into everything, and the agentic layer is becoming the product layer. Search, Gemini app, Android, Workspace, YouTube, AI Studio, Cloud, Antigravity, Flow, managed agents, smart glasses, all of it is now orbiting around one pretty clear strategy: Gemini is the intelligence, Antigravity is the agent harness, Google's products are the distribution. I saw many reactions that were milquetoast, as in, “we expected more” and those seem to dominate the X feed. But I think the distribution is the part that many folks on X are missing. Yes, we can argue about Gemini 3.5 Flash pricing. Yes, we can argue whether “Flash” still means what Flash used to mean. But when Google says the Gemini app itself has 900 million monthly active users, before even counting Search, Gmail, YouTube, Docs, Drive, Android, and the rest of the Google surface area, that's massive! OpenAI ChatGPT is supposedly stagnated at ~900M, I don't remember them crossing a 1B. Meanwhile Google is gaining traction. And they just updated all those folks with a new model!Wolfram said it really well on the show: his mother is not sitting there reading model cards. She just uses her Pixel, voice unlocks Gemini, asks for help, and suddenly the default intelligence available to her goes up. Antigravity 2.0 - the agent harness takes center stageThe biggest strategic signal from Google I/O for me was Antigravity.Remember, Antigravity was an IDE that came from the Windsurf acquisition saga. Part of the Windsurf team went to Google, part went to Cognition, and now Google is very clearly putting Antigravity in the middle of its agentic future. And I mean very clearly. Sundar mentioned it. Demis mentioned it. Varun Mohan the co-founder was on stage immediately after them! If you've ever watched a Google I/O keynote, you know how carefully every minute is allocated. Google has YouTube, Search, Gmail, Android, Cloud, Ads, Workspace, and a thousand VP-level products that could be on stage. The fact that Antigravity was that prominent should tell you everything.Logan Kilpatrick joined us and framed this in a way I loved: Gemini became the through-line across Google products, and now the Antigravity agent harness is becoming the through-line for agentic experiences.The new Antigravity 2.0 is a complete overhaul, showing only an agentic interface (which was previously just a separate window called Agent Manager) and separating the IDE layer completely into its own app and showing a Codex like agent-first interface, which got a few folks furious. This move may be weird to some folks, but if you follow along where everyone's going, this seems to be the way of the future, coding is no longer about lines of code, it's about managing fleets of agents. The new Gemini 3.5 absolutely shines inside the new Antigravity, the model was trained with this harness in mind, and is currently offered at an incredible speed (12x), so I'm definitely going to try it! Gemini 3.5 Flash - fast, determined, and maybe not the old “Flash”The most debated model release of the week was Gemini 3.5 Flash.Some folks saw the pricing and token usage and immediately went “this is not Flash.” I get that reaction. Flash used to mean cheap, fast, lightweight chat model. But Logan's framing on the show was important: Flash is now being built for the agentic era.In a chat era, you optimize for one user message and one model answer. In an agentic era, the real token volume is in tool loops, intermediate reasoning, retries, file reads, web searches, code execution, and self-correction. That's a different product profile.Wolfram already ran Gemini 3.5 Flash through WolfBench, and the results were fascinating. With the Hermes agent harness, Gemini 3.5 Flash hit an 87% ceiling on Terminal Bench 2.0, meaning across runs it could solve more of the benchmark than even GPT-5.5 extra high in that setup. The variance was higher with the simpler Terminus harness, but with a real agent harness, the model looked much stronger.That tracks with what Nisten saw in his “Martian railgun from Olympus Mons” test. Gemini 3.5 Flash went extremely detailed, almost too determined, kept correcting itself, overcorrecting itself, and built a whole game-like simulation. Logan laughed and basically said: yeah, this model is very determined, possibly an overcorrection from the “Gemini is lazy” feedback. It also tracks with the mismatch in other benchmarks, in some, Gemini 3.5 flash shines (like the above Apex-agents from AA) and in some, it doesn't match the other frontiers. In my tests, it was definitely over-eager to use a million and a half tool calls, read tons of files, to just help me review this draft inside antigravity. It's like a super eager robotic golden retriever! Gemini Omni - Nano Banana for video, but actually more than thatThe biggest update from last year IO was Veo 3! This year, the biggest wow factor was also visual, but it wasn't VEO 4, it was a new model that is multimodal, trained end-to-end they call Omni. Google is calling this their first “create anything from anything” model, and the first version, Gemini Omni Flash, starts with conversational video editing. The easy description is: Nano Banana for video. You upload or create a video, then talk to it. Change this character. Replace this person. Add an object. Make this scene claymation. Keep the scene, but change the environment.I played with it live and showed a few examples. I asked for a claymation explainer of protein folding, then gave it my face and asked it to replace the character with me. It did it. I uploaded pictures of Sonia, my cat, and it generated a talking cat video with the right kind of cat teeth, which is weirdly important because so many pet generations accidentally add human teeth and become nightmare fuel.The failure modes are still there. I asked it to make Sonia a Russian-speaking female cat, and it only partly switched languages and didn't really change the voice. Audio upload support is also not fully productized yet, even though the underlying model is multimodal. But the direction is very clear.This is not just “Veo with a chat model glued on.” I asked Jeff Dean - Google's chief scientist about this at I/O, and he explained that Omni is trained end-to-end. The intelligence and the generative media capabilities are part of the same model family, not a hacky two-model pipeline. He also said the intelligence is around a recent Flash-level model, which is a big deal when you think about video editing as reasoning over physics, identity, scene continuity, and intent.A lot of people compared Omni to Seedance 2.0, and I think that's the wrong comparison. Seedance is amazing at cinematic generation (lkaregly due to lack of copyright concerns from Bytedance). Omni's unlock is iterative editing on real footage and coherent multi-turn creative control. Other Google IO 2026 releases I found notableThis was a concentrated effort of a huge company to insert AI into every product surface they have so of course I can't cover ALL of it here, but the most notable things for me were: * Gemini Spark - a new agentic experience from Google, to help you with tasks across Gmail, Drive and more. It should support skills, and is a de-facto OpenClaw/Hermes alternative from Google for regular folks. It's not “yet” live so we'll talk more about it when I can test it out* Managed Agents in the Gemini API - We chatted with Logan about this one, Google is re-imagining how agents are going to get built, and are offering 1 api call to spin up an agent in a full Linux env, with security and sandboxing in mind. I'll expand more on this in a next episode, as I recorded a complete conversation about this with Ali Çevic, a PM for Google APIs* AI overhaul of Google Search - AI Overviews will not expand into AI mode, and the iconic Google search box itself will change, for the first time in 25 years to include AI mode! * SynthID expantion and OpenAI collab - Google showed off that OpenAI is joining in marking all AI generate imagery and video with an invisible SynthID watermark. I think this is amazing and more companies should adopt this standard* AI Glasses! We got Google Glasses demos - Together with Warby Parker and Gentle Monster, Google finally showed off their answer to Meta Raybans/Oakleys. They look like regular glasses too, but can hear and talk to you, with the full power of Gemini multimodality. Available in the fall sometime! * Demis Hassabis “we're on the cusp of the singularity” closer - CEO and Co-Founder of DeepMind, Demis Hassabis, closed the show with his remarks about the positive future and that we are nearing this Singularity point after which the future is very uncertain. I found it to be very inspiring and closed our show with that clip as well! * Personally, I got to chat to: Demis Hassabis, have breakfast with Jeff Dean, ask Josh Woodward a bunch of questions, and pester about 20 other great folks on a live stream, and had a lot of fun! Huge thanks to the DeepMind folks, Lucie, Dimple, JD and many others for the continued belief in ThursdAI and invite me to cover this great event. OpenAI LLMs solve an 80yo math problem - Erdős Unit Distance ConjectureOutside of Google I/O, the biggest story of the week was OpenAI announcing that a general-purpose reasoning model made progress on the Erdős planar unit distance problem.This problem goes back to 1946. For nearly 80 years, mathematicians believed the best constructions looked roughly like square grids. OpenAI's model found a new family of constructions with a polynomial improvement, using algebraic number theory ideas that humans apparently had not explored in this context. The above is a representation of it! Important caveat: this does not fully solve every version of the asymptotic Erdős conjecture. Some mathematicians are pushing back on the framing, and fair enough. Precision matters. But even with the caveat, this is still a huge moment.The reason it matters is not that I personally understand the math. I absolutely do not. The reason it matters is that this was not a special-purpose IMO model fine-tuned only for math competitions. This was a general-purpose reasoning model exploring a real open problem, generating candidates, verifying them, and finding a path humans hadn't taken. Extrapolate this to other sciences, Physics for example? This means an amazing future. LDJ pointed out that mathematicians have been skeptical because there have been previous false alarms. But this one landed differently. When Fields Medalist-level mathematicians verify the proof, the discourse changes from “lol stochastic parrot” to “wait, what does this mean for my PhD?”My answer is: yes, still study math. Please study math. The mathematicians who use these tools will do much more than people who don't understand the domain. Same with software engineering. Senior engineers with Codex, Claude Code, Hermes, Antigravity, Cursor and other agents are becoming dramatically more effective because they can steer, evaluate, and recover the work.This being published a day after Demis's “foothills of the singularity” is a great conjecture. Cursor Composer 2.5 - Opus 4.7 performance model from Cursor, at 10x better efficiencyCursor dropped Composer 2.5, and folks, this is a serious release.Composer 2.5 is built on Moonshot's Kimi K2.5 base, like Composer 2, but Cursor scaled the post-training dramatically. They used 25x more synthetic tasks and introduced targeted textual feedback during RL rollouts, where the model gets hints inserted at the point of failure instead of only getting a noisy final reward.The benchmark story is strong: around 69.3 on Terminal Bench 2.0, basically neck and neck with Opus 4.7 in Cursor's chart, and strong results on SWE-bench multilingual and CursorBench. The pricing is the part that makes this especially interesting: $0.50 per million input tokens and $2.50 per million output tokens, with a faster variant at $3 / $15. That is much cheaper than the frontier models it is trying to replace for day-to-day coding work.Cursor engineers are reportedly dogfooding Composer 2.5 heavily and rarely switching away. That matters more to me than any single benchmark. If the people building Cursor can use it as a daily driver, that is a very real signal.The wild part is what comes next. Cursor is partnering with SpaceXAI to train a much larger model from scratch using 10x more compute on Colossus 2. Cursor has the workflow data. xAI has enormous compute. If this works, Cursor stops being just the IDE company and becomes a coding-model lab.We've been saying for months that coding agents are the path toward general agents. Anthropic has Claude Code. OpenAI has Codex. Google has Antigravity. xAI has Grok Build. Cursor has Composer. I'm looking forward to seeing how well it performs on our own benchmarks! Anthropic, xAI, Karpathy, and the compute warsThe compute story this week was bonkers.The SpaceX IPO filing reportedly revealed that Anthropic is paying SpaceXAI $1.25B per month for AI compute at the Memphis Colossus facility. Per month. That's about $15B a year, through May 2029, for access to more than 220,000 NVIDIA GPUs including H100s, H200s and GB200s.This is apparently inference compute for Claude Pro, Max and API users, not training. And it explains a lot of the recent quota changes. Anthropic doubled some Claude usage limits, and suddenly the product feels less constrained.Also, can we just acknowledge the comedy here? Elon Musk publicly called Anthropic “misanthropic,”, went off against every competitor to XAI, is now selling spare GPU time to Cursor and Anthropic? Who's next, OpenAI? The bigger point is that the AI capex story is no longer just NVIDIA. It's also whoever owns the data centers, power, cooling, networking, and GPU clusters. Compute is becoming the land under the AI economy.Also, Andrej Karpathy joined Anthropic. Karpathy could work anywhere. He co-founded OpenAI, led Tesla Autopilot vision, taught half the AI world how neural nets work, and now he's going back into frontier LLM R&D at Anthropic.Open source LLMs - Cohere, Qwen, NousOpen source had a strong week too.Cohere released Command A+, a 218B total parameter sparse MoE model with only 25B active parameters per token, under Apache 2.0. This is their first model that unifies reasoning, vision, multilingual, tool use and citations in one package.The hardware story is great: W4A4 quantization can run on 2 H100s or a single B200. Cohere says it supports 48 languages, 128K input context, 64K output, and gets big jumps over Command A Reasoning, including Tau-squared Bench Telecom from 37% to 85% and Terminal-Bench Hard from 3% to 25%.Cohere is one of those labs that doesn't always chase the loudest consumer hype, but they are very serious on enterprise and multilingual. Apache 2.0 makes this one especially useful.Alibaba also dropped Qwen 3.7-Max, positioned as an agentic frontier model. The headline from their testing is wild: 35 hours of continuous autonomous operation with more than 1,000 tool calls. They also showed it controlling a physical robot inside Alibaba offices and finding an umbrella after about 20 minutes of agent interaction.This digital-to-physical bridge is where things start feeling very real. An agent loop that can write code and use tools can also navigate physical tasks if you give it the right robotics stack.And our friends at Nous Research released Lighthouse Attention, a sparse attention method for long-context pretraining. At 512K context, they report a 17x faster forward+backward pass than standard attention on a single B200, and the recovered checkpoints actually beat dense-from-scratch final loss at the same token budget.The clever part is that the selection logic sits outside the attention kernel, so you still use regular FlashAttention on a gathered dense subsequence. No custom sparse kernel nonsense. If this holds up, this could matter a lot for long-context training.Tools and agentic engineering - X subscriptions, Grok Build, Codex MobileOne really practical tool update: Hermes and OpenClaw can now use your X subscription directly.This is more important than it sounds. You can connect your X Premium subscription and get access to semantic X search and Grok-related tooling without using sketchy browser automation or unofficial APIs that might get you banned. Wolfram already used this to have his agent go through his likes and bookmarks from the past week and send me news items for the show. That is exactly the kind of “small but real” agent workflow that becomes addictive.xAI also launched Grok Build, their agentic CLI coding tool, in early beta for SuperGrok Heavy subscribers. Early users are already running parallel Grok Build agents through tmux supervisors and using it for more than coding: fleet data triage, security patching, training label work, and general automation.The pricing being discussed is aggressive, around $1 per million input tokens and $2 per million output tokens for the API. The model version is grok-build-0.1, and folks have already wired it into Hermes with a 256K context window.And then there's Codex Mobile, which OpenAI shipped inside the ChatGPT mobile apps. This is one of those releases that sounds small until you start using it. You can control Codex sessions remotely from your phone, connected to your machine, and because Codex has native connectors to Gmail, Calendar and other surfaces, it sometimes feels faster and more reliable than local CLIs duct-taped to third-party integrations.I ported Wolfred into Codex with skills and everything, and I've been comparing the same tasks in Hermes and Codex. Codex is often faster, not necessarily because the model is always smarter, but because the connectors and harness are cleaner. Harness matters. We keep coming back to this.This Week's Buzz - W&B, CoreWeave, WolfBench and roboticsThis week in the Buzz, Wolfram walked us through a few things from the Weights & Biases / CoreWeave world.CoreWeave is a gold sponsor at ICRA 2026 in Vienna, the International Conference on Robotics and Automation. NVIDIA is also going big there with a keynote on generalist humanoid robots, 17 accepted papers and workshops around sim-to-real, robot foundation models, autonomous driving, manipulation, and physical AI.Wolfram will be there later in the week, after speaking at the AI Developer event in Cologne about WolfBench. If you're in Europe and into robotics or agent evals, find him.We also looked at WolfBench results for Gemini 3.5 Flash, which honestly became one of the more interesting empirical points of the episode. The model looks variable in simple harnesses, but very capable in better agent loops. That's the whole thesis of measuring model + harness together instead of pretending the model card tells the whole story.The water discourse, almonds, and data center realityWe also got into the data center water discourse, because this talking point is everywhere right now.There are real infrastructure questions around AI. Power, land, cooling, grid capacity, permitting, local impact, all of that matters. But the “AI is stealing drinking water” version of the argument is often wildly detached from scale.The stat I brought up on the show: California almonds use roughly 3 to 5.5 million acre-feet of water per year, multiple times more than all North American data centers combined in 2025. Nisten and LDJ added the important cooling nuance: many large data centers use closed-loop cooling, and evaporative cooling is not universal. Some data centers can avoid water use almost entirely, but at the cost of higher electricity usage.This doesn't mean “no concerns are valid.” It means if we're going to regulate or pause data centers, let's be honest about the actual tradeoffs. AI compute is becoming the substrate for medicine, robotics, science, logistics, software, education and every other productivity layer. We should build responsibly, but not based on viral fear math.Closing thoughts - foothills of the singularityDemis closed I/O saying we're in the foothills of the singularity, and I know how that lands when you write it down. But I was in the room, and after the keynote he told me something I haven't been able to shake: he thinks AI is going to be 10x as impactful as the Industrial Revolution, and 10x as fast. Basically 100x. This is the AlphaFold guy. Not someone loose with his words.Then look at the week. A general reasoner cracked an 80-year-old math problem. Cursor is training near-frontier coding models on a fraction of the big-lab budget. Anthropic is paying Elon $15B a year for inference. Karpathy left education to go back into pre-training. Google rolled out an intelligence uplift to a billion people who don't even know a model dropped.If you put that on a whiteboard in 2023, it reads like a sci-fi pitch.LDJ's mathematician friends are asking if they should keep doing their PhDs. My answer hasn't changed: yes, please keep going. The people who combine domain taste with these tools are going to ship more in 5 years than the previous generation did in 50. The tool doesn't replace the taste. It just removes the bottleneck.That's the whole reason ThursdAI exists. Not to hype every drop, not to dunk for engagement, but to give you a shot at being one of the people who knows what's happening, with the receipts.This week, a lot changed.See you next Thursday.TL;DR and Show Notes* Hosts and Guests* Alex Volkov - AI Evangelist at Weights & Biases / CoreWeave, @altryne* Co-hosts: @WolframRvnwlf, @nisten, @ldjconfirmed* Guest: Logan Kilpatrick, MTS at Google DeepMind / AI Studio, @OfficialLoganK* Google I/O 2026* Google went all-in on agents across Search, Gemini, Antigravity, Workspace, Android, Cloud and YouTube (I/O site, Alex thread)* Antigravity 2.0 became the central agentic coding harness across Google (Sundar, Google OS demo)* Gemini 3.5 Flash launched as a fast, determined workhorse model for agentic loops (Logan, Noam Shazeer, Jeff Dean)* Gemini 3.5 Flash is rolling out across the Gemini app, Search AI Mode, Gemini API, Google AI Studio, Antigravity and Gemini Enterprise Agent Platform (Koray Kavukcuoglu)* Google Search is getting new Gemini 3.5 Flash-powered agentic capabilities, including a new AI-powered Search box and background information agents (Sundar)* Gemini Spark was announced as a 24/7 personal AI agent that can proactively work across Google surfaces (News from Google)* Google teased Gemini-powered Android XR smart glasses with eyewear partners Gentle Monster and Warby Parker (Google, Alex live reaction)* Google AI Studio and the Gemini API got major agentic developer updates, including Managed Agents (Google AI Developers)* Vision & Video* Google DeepMind launched Gemini Omni, a “create anything from anything” multimodal model starting with conversational video editing (DeepMind, Google DeepMind on X)* Omni is available in the Gemini app, Google Flow and YouTube, with API support coming soon (Logan, Gemini App, Sundar)* Key distinction: Omni is not just text-to-video, it is an iterative multi-turn video editing model that combines Gemini intelligence, world knowledge, multimodal inputs and generative media (Google)* Big CO LLMs + APIs* OpenAI announced a general-purpose reasoning model made progress on the Erdős planar unit distance problem, challenging an 80-year-old mathematical belief (OpenAI, X)* Cursor launched Composer 2.5, built on Kimi K2.5, with Opus-class coding performance at much lower cost (Cursor blog, X)* Alibaba released Qwen 3.7-Max, an agentic frontier model with long autonomous runs and robotics demos (Qwen blog, X, robot demo)* Andrej Karpathy joined Anthropic to work on frontier LLM R&D (X)* SpaceX IPO filing revealed Anthropic is paying $1.25B/month for AI compute at the Memphis Colossus facility (Axios, Sawyer Merritt)* The jury in Musk v. Altman found Musk's OpenAI claims barred by statute of limitations, with Musk saying he will appeal (Elon Musk, Sawyer Merritt, Max Zeff)* Open Source LLMs* Cohere released Command A+, a 218B MoE model with 25B active parameters under Apache 2.0 (Cohere, Nick Frosst, HF W4A4, HF BF16)* Nous Research released Lighthouse Attention, a sparse attention method for long-context pretraining with major speedups (Blog, X, arXiv, GitHub)* Tools & Agentic Engineering* Google launched Managed Agents in the Gemini API, letting developers spin up hosted Antigravity agents with Linux sandboxes and persistent state (Docs, X)* xAI launched Grok Build, an agentic CLI coding tool in beta for SuperGrok Heavy users (xAI CLI, X)* Hermes and OpenClaw can now use X subscription auth for semantic search and Grok tooling (Alex)* OpenAI Codex Mobile is now available in the ChatGPT mobile apps for remote agent workflows (OpenAI)* Anthropic doubled Claude usage outside peak hours for a limited period, including Claude Code and other Claude surfaces (Claude)* This Week's Buzz - W&B / CoreWeave* Weights & Biases by CoreWeave is at ICRA 2026 in Vienna, with robotics and automation taking center stage (ICRA, W&B event page)* NVIDIA heads to ICRA 2026 with robotics work around generalist humanoids, physical AI and sim-to-real systems (NVIDIA Robotics, NVIDIA ICRA)* Wolfram is speaking about WolfBench at the AI Developer event in Cologne before heading to ICRA in Vienna (Wolfram)* Other Topics* Data center water usage discourse came up again, including why comparisons need real scale and context rather than viral fear math* The broader theme of the week: coding agents are becoming general agents, and the major labs are now competing on the full stack of model, harness, tools, context and compute This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit sub.thursdai.news/subscribe
Está no ar o último FIAP Decode do ano trazendo a retrospectiva das notícias tech que sacudiram 2025. André David, Mayumi Shingaki e Bruno Germano relembram a chegada do DeepSeek, o lançamento do Nintendo Switch 2, o megavazamento de dados da Google e os apagões da AWS e da Cloudflare, além de deixar suas apostas sobre o que está por vir em 2026. Decodifique novas conexões André David: Linkedin e InstagramMayumi Shingaki: Linkedin e Instagram Bruno Germano: Linkedin e Instagram NOTÍCIAS: DeepSeek chacoalha o mercado de IA Lançamento do Nintendo Switch 2 Megavazamento de dados da Google Os apagões da AWS e Cloudflare
No episódio 243 falamos sobre o terceiro trimestre da Google, os Moments no Netflix e a nova política do Telegram.
The Android Faithful team breaks down the major Android 15 release, foreshadows Android 16 features, examines Google's legal troubles, and reviews new devices from Vivo and Walmart.Note: Time codes subject to change depending on dynamic ad insertion by the distributor.NEWS00:04:18 - Big day for Android 15 as it rolls out to Pixels along with an October Pixel Drop00:24:58 - Last week was a big day for the DOJ as indicators of a Google breakup may be looming00:34:17 - Some neat new features coming to Android 1600:38:54 - Linux apps are coming to Android!00:42:25 - PATRON PICK: Google Photos will soon be able to identify images that are AI generatedHARDWARE00:53:53 - Extreme performance is promised by MediaTek with the Dimensity 940000:58:31 - Jason reviewed the ONN 4k Pro TV streaming device01:00:00 - George from NYC advocates for the ONN 4k Pro TV01:06:10 - and meanwhile, the NVidia Shield Pro is still getting updates01:10:10 - And with the Dimensity 9400 comes the Vivo X200 Pro and X200 Pro mini01:15:47 - We got a glimpse of the Oppo Find X8 Quick Capture buttonINTERVIEWS01:19:27 - Recorded at Droidcon NYC, Sam Greenberg from Capital One and Matt McKenna from Square discuss developing for accessibility01:22:11 - Matt Ramotar from Uber chatted about the feedback loop from users01:24:12 - Roy Cohen and Brian Reed from Appdome talk about why the accessibility layer of Android is targeted by malicious actorsAPPS01:29:40 - Circle to Search is coming to the HONOR Magic V3 and HONOR 200 series01:32:20 - There's a bunch of new features coming to YouTube01:38:32 - Gemini users rejoice, Imagen 3 is now available to everyone Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
On this week's show we have an AppleTV and a native GoogleTV comparison from a listener. We also read your emails and take a look at the week's news. News: Samsung is helping to bring AirPlay to more hotel rooms NBCUniversal to Offer 400+ Hours of 4K HDR Olympics Coverage on USA Network, a Record Turns out Netflix makes more money if it just acts like regular TV Other: Handcrafted in the USA - Vintage Reclaimed Maple & Elm Speakers Doitforme.solutions Apollo Group TV Apple TV vs Google TV - John Lyman Around Thanksgiving the finance committee allowed me to purchase a new Hisense U7K 75” 4K TV. However, once I got the TV setup and ready to go, something weird happened with my Apple TV that I had been using on the TV in that room. Max just stopped working. I did all the troubleshooting to no avail. I decided that I would give the built in Google TV a shot to see if that could be a long-term solution. Over the course of six months I went back and forth with the two platforms and took notes. I thought I would write up my findings for everyone. A few caveats: This is my first experience with Google TV The Google TV is the built in version on my TV I live in the Apple ecosystem and I have owned every Apple TV from the 1st gen to the current. So, I do know the Apple TV a lot better, but I did my best to be fair. User Interface Apple TV: The user interface is very nice, it seems lighter, crisp and clean. You can easily design the Home Screen the way you would like it laid out and create folders. I have a folder for my main TV/Movie apps, then one for sports, another for movies, etc. Because you can customize the Home Screen it is very easy to navigate to where you want to go. Google TV: When you open it, you are at the top of google TV page with their offerings and everything is laid out in rows. The App icons seem smaller than apps on the Apple TV and smaller than the “Google Recommended” apps. You must scroll past those to get to your apps. I have not found a way to rearrange the main page so I can move my apps above the recommended offerings. You can move your apps in the order you would like but it is not as nice. I did try to find out if you can use folders on Google TV and it does not look like you can. The interface is what it is. Remotes: Apple TV: The metal Siri remote in my opinion is one of the best remotes out there. I can control 98% of what I need to use from that one remote. The other 2% is for those times I can't find a digital copy of a movie I own and need to use the Blu-Ray or tweak the picture of the TV. Very quick to navigate with the remote around the Apple TV. Also, the iPhone companion remote is really good too. Google TV: The remote that came with the TV controls my HT gear and if I used Google home I'm sure the remote's mic would give me voice control of lights and thermostat similar to the Apple remote. Additionally, I find swiping over the touch-enabled clickpad much easier than clicking up/down/left/right buttons on the TV's remote. I didn't have luck setting up the iPhone remote with the TV, this is probably a me item and I didn't spend a lot of time worrying about it. Apple TV+ vs Google TV's Home app: Both apps have a lot in common, like Movie/TV suggestions, an area for your purchased content, etc. Apple's implementation is self-contained and can be placed anywhere on your home screen. Google's version is fixed at the top of the screen and you must scroll down the screen to get to your apps. Picture quality, audio and App Responsiveness: So the last test was to actually watch some video to see if there was any difference. The setup: Internet – AT&T 1.0 GPS fiber, using a TPLink Mesh router – delivering 300 Mbs to the TV Denon AVR-X3200W receiver – running Dolby Atmos Speakers – RSL home theater package, 12” RSL speedwoofer and mirage omni-directional Atmos speakers I set up both the TV and my Apple TV for Dolby Vision and started watching content on both services. One thing I couldn't do was turn on Dolby Vision for the Google TV which shocked me. The TV did auto switch and even though HBO Max said the movie was in Dolby Vision it would only do HDR. I tried to figure out the issue but couldn't quickly find an answer. I quickly realized that any movie purchased from the Apple store was of higher quality than those from any of the streaming companies both in picture and sound. I watched a few scenes from the latest Aqua man as there were some really dark scenes with good color and then some Star Wars. With the Google TV setup to use HDR and the TV in the Movie preset, the picture was good. The AppleTV produced a little bit better picture with the same TV preset. The AppleTV sounded better too. I could hear some additional sounds on the AppleTV that I couldn't hear while using GoogleTV. The biggest difference was App responsiveness. When opening an app on the AppleTV, its click and it opens. GoogleTV took a few seconds. Then clicking the play button would buffer for about 10-20 seconds before playing and the picture was lower resolution for a few seconds. The video on the AppleTV started right up and I didn't notice any picture issues. Built in vs Stand Alone Box Built in OS strengths: Built into the TV Pretty easy to setup right out of the box Integrated into the TV and remote Stand Alone Strengths: Both hardware and software designed for a singular purpose Not TV dependent You can take it with you when you travel If new features are not supported due to hardware limitations you can buy a new STB Built in OS weakness: If new features are not supported due to hardware limitations you are stuck Hardware more likely designed for the TV and the OS a secondary If you have multiple TVs with different OSes you will have an inconsistent experience May cause you to stay within a manufacturer's product line to keep the same OS within the home Can become slower than the stand-alone devices over time Stand Alone weakness: They cost extra Hard to switch eco-systems due to cost of devices if you wanted to Summary: I was really surprised by a few things after doing the comparison. The first being the lack of Dolby Vision on the Google OS built into my Hisense TV. The option was not available for the Google Home app. I usually leave the TV in Dolby Vision on the Apple TV as I find the picture pretty good with all content and I'm not a fan of my TV's auto switching (going black for a few seconds). The second was the difference in app responsiveness and picture start up times. The Apple TV was quicker in both aspects. The last was the difference in the quality of purchased movies from Apple versus the streamers and purchases from Amazon. Streamers and Amazon were inferior to the same content from Apple. I did not compare streamers and Amazon versus Google using native apps on the GoogleTV. Bottom line I believe an Apple TV is like a well-made German car, over engineered, nice looking with features you didn't know you wanted until you lose them. Google OS is your typical mid-range SUV that everyone makes, most people drive and they all look similar and they get the job done of getting you from here to there.
We're in the midst of one of the most significant transformations in the history of marketing. As we transition from traditional media like TV and radio to the digital era, and now face the dawn of AI-driven strategies, many marketers find themselves grappling with the pace of change. Understanding these shifts is crucial, not only to keep up but to stay ahead in a highly competitive field. Today's marketing landscape is characterized by precision and prediction, powered by advanced AI technologies that offer unprecedented opportunities but also bring new challenges. How do we navigate this rapidly evolving terrain? What do marketers need to know to leverage AI effectively and avoid being left behind? To help us answer these critical questions, we're joined by Asavari Moon, a trailblazer at the forefront of AI in marketing. Moon's career spans from traditional marketing to digital innovation, including pivotal roles at Uber during the industry's early digital days. Currently, she is leading EMEA Product Marketing for Google OS, where she creates sustainable marketing strategies ingrained in consumer insights and market dynamics. In addition to her impactful role at Google, Moon is the founder of Future Female Marketers, a global community of women shaping the future of marketing. She also leads educational initiatives, including a comprehensive AI in Marketing course designed to equip professionals with the skills needed to navigate the AI revolution. Her deep understanding of both the strategic and technical aspects of AI makes her uniquely qualified to guide us through this transformation. AI in Marketing: Unpacked host Mike Allton asked Asavari Moon about: ✨ Navigating the AI Transformation: Understand the transition from traditional to AI-driven marketing and its impact on the industry. ✨ Practical AI Applications: Learn how AI can enhance efficiency and effectiveness in marketing strategies through real-world examples. ✨ Preparing for AI's Future: Discover the essential skills and tools marketers need to thrive in the evolving AI landscape. Learn more about Asavari Moon Connect with Asavari Moon on LinkedIn Resources & Brands mentioned in this episode Future Female Marketers Paving The Way: Strategies for Integrating AI in Marketing with Chris Penn Copy.ai Jasper.ai Sephora: Beauty and the Bot Create Real Magic Campaign Heinz AI Campaign Jen AI Campaign AI in Marketing: Are We Addressing Its Ethical Dilemmas? Mitch Jackson AI in Marketing Course Explore past episodes of the AI in Marketing: Unpacked podcast SHOW TRANSCRIPT & NOTES: https://www.thesocialmediahat.com/blog/from-traditional-to-predictive-navigating-marketings-ai-transformation/ Brought to you by The Social Media Hat - When One More Hat Is One Too Many. Powered by Magai - why choose one AI tool when you can have them all? And Descript, the magic wand for podcasters. Produced and Hosted by Mike Allton, Strategic Marketing Leader in AI and Data-Driven Solutions, international keynote speaker & author at The Social Media Hat. He has spent over a decade in digital marketing and brings an unparalleled level of experience and excitement to the fore, whether he's delivering a presentation or leading a workshop. If you're interested in helping marketers with AI in an upcoming episode, reach out to Mike. Music by Tokay.
Quantas vezes você usou o ChatGPT nesta semana? Uma, duas… Nenhuma? Agora é realidade: as pessoas estão usando inteligência artificial para economizar tempo e ser mais eficiente na vida pessoal ou no trabalho. O ChatGPT mudou o cenário global de I.A, trazendo uma ferramenta que é capaz de entender o contexto e manter conversas. Agora, o Google e Microsoft (uma das investidoras da OpenAI, vale adicionar!) concorrem pela liderança neste mercado em ascensão. Neste episódio do podcast Agora em 10, nós trazemos os principais destaques desta tecnologia e das empresas. Um spoiler? Satya Nadella, CEO da Microsoft, disse em uma reunião na companhia que "nós iremos liderar a era da inteligência artificial, sabendo que o maior valor das empresas é criado durante a mudança de plataformas”. Além disso, trazemos também os outros fatos mais relevantes da semana no ecossistema de inovação e startups. Aperte o play para conferir! Ainda neste episódio... Ok, Ok: funcionário esquece de desligar sistema em bolsa de valores de NY e cancela milhares de negociações Termômetro: Quente: M&M's Morno: Amazon lança serviço de assinatura de remédios Frio: demissões no Spotify, Betterfly, Movile e Google --- Os episódios do Agora em 10 estão disponíveis toda sexta-feira, às 11h. A apresentação é de Tainá Freitas, com roteiro do time de Conteúdo da StartSe e edição de Aerolitos. StartSe, a plataforma da educação do agora.
The Automotive Troublemaker w/ Paul J Daly and Kyle Mountsier
The landing gear on YEE presented by Orbee is coming down this Friday as the pieces move in place for our annual end-of-year livestream event. But first some news about Ford's F150 Lighting price hike, Honda's announcement of their first car running on a Google OS, and some automakers are pressing into the metaverse.Check out the Year End Extravaganza here: https://www.asotu.com/yeeLearn More about #ineedatruecar: https://www.truecar.com/ineedatruecar/If you were once excited about that $41k base F150 Lighting when the truck was originally announced, you're in for more pain as Ford announced this week the vehicles 3rd price hike in several months. According to the company's website, the price has increase another 9% now ringing in at $55,974Rising supply cost continue to push several automakers to make price adjustmentsFord seems to be selling every Lighting they can make, however, and just this week announced the addition of a third shift at the assembly plant near Detroit that produces the Lighting. Honda announced this week that their 2023 Accord Touring model will be their first integrating a Google operating system built inIn addition to the standard controls of the OS, this will allow Honda to step into over the air updating of the vehiclesThis announcement comes amidst an OS arms race including Amazon Alexa and AppleSenator Elizabeth Warren has called for an investigation into Big Tech's expansion into the automotive industry, expressing concern that companies like Google may stifle competition through bundled services and a lack of support for third-party apps.Nvidia predicts that many automotive companies will begin integrating their operations with the metaverse in 2023, using it to monitor production processes and improve design processes through the use of "digital twins" in factories and virtual collaboration space.Design processes will also benefit from virtual collaboration spaces in the metaverse.The metaverse can also be used to enhance customer experiences with full-fidelity real-time car configurators, 3D simulations, augmented reality demonstrations, and virtual test drives.Some automotive brands, such as Fiat and Ford, have already begun using the metaverse to showcase their products to potential customersGet the Daily Push Back email at https://www.asotu.com/ JOIN the conversation on LinkedIn at: https://www.linkedin.com/company/asotu/ Read our most recent email at: https://www.asotu.com/media/push-back-email Share your positive dealer stories: https://www.asotu.com/positivity ASOTU Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/automotivestateoftheunion
各路西斯資料顯示: 「他戳不進去,無套。」 「她會痛、不舒服,無套。」 「他噴之前出來,無套。」 「她沒受孕,繼續無套。」 「她安全期,就無套!」 「她月經來,無套⋯」 「他觸感不好不適,那無套。」 「他尺寸不同不舒服,無套。」 「他用完了,只好無套。」 「買不到,只好無套。」 「忘了帶,也是無套。」 「他不喜歡戴,無套。」 以上皆為無套藉口。 為什麼都是藉口? 因為⋯ 自己Google自己說。 OS: 我真的是很故意,還裝各種聲音。哈! Powered by Firstory Hosting
Smartphoneblogger - Der deutsche Technik- und Smartphonepodcast
00:00:14 Begrüßung 00:02:40 Google kauf Fitbit Google darf endlich Fitbit kaufen und bekommt den Segen von der EU. Knapp ein Jahr hat es gedauert bis Google Fitbit kaufen durfte und endlich an einer Google Watch mit Google OS oder WearOS arbeiten kann. 00:08:20 Cyberpunk und Stadia Cyberpunk startet mit vielen Problemen zum Release. Bugs und Fixes stehen an, trotzdem hat Sony Cyberpunk aus dem PlayStation Store geworfen. Für Stadia ist CD Red Projekt mit Cyberpunk 2077 hingegen ein guter Schritt und zeigt, das man es endlich geschafft hat große Titel zu Google Staida zu locken. 00:16:55 Huawei P50 mit HarmonyOS Huawei möchte mit dem eigenen OS im Jahr 2021 durchstarten und plant das erste Spitzenmodel damit auszustatten. HarmonyOS auf dem Huawei P50 könnte ein großer Schritt sein und wegweisend zugleich. Mit Honor versuche man aber Google und deren Google Dienste zurückzugewinnen. Das Honor V40 wird das erste Smartphone mit Google Diensten 00:25:10 Thema der Woche - Xiaomi Mi 11 Pro, die große Lüge zum Release Xiaomi stellt am 29.Dezember das Xiaomi Mi 11 und das Xiaomi Mi 11 Pro vor. Zwar erscheint das Xiaomi Mi 11 als erstes Smartphone mit dem Snapdragon 888, leider werden wir dieses Gerät aber erst im Februar in den Händen halten können. Wie viel Fake ist also bei der Präsentation dabei? 00:39:10 Samsung Galaxy S21 Ultra Am 14. Januar wird die Samsung Galaxy S21 Serie vorgestellt. Heute wissen wir aber schon alles zum Galaxy S21 und Galaxy S21 Ultra, wie viel Magie haben Präsentationen heute noch? 00:47:50 Apple iPhone 13 Das iPhone 13 wird endlich das 120Hz Display bekommen, aber brauchen wir es und war der Schritt zu 5G beim iPhone 12 nicht viel wichtiger? 00:54:00 Parcello bringt ein App Update 00:59:00 Vivo X60 Pro Modelle Am 28. Dezember stellt Vivo das Vivo X60 Pro in China vor. Es handelt sich dabei um das zweite Smartphone mit einem Gimbal in der Hauptkamera. Das Video dazu findet ihr auf meinem Youtube-Kanal. 01:05:00 OnePlus 9 mit Leica OnePlus möchte beim OnePlus 9 an der Kamera arbeiten und sichert sich die Dienste von Leica. Auch Huawei arbeitet bereits mit Leica zusammen und konnte damit bei den Kunden punkten. 01:06:00 OnePlus Watch Patreon ► https://www.patreon.com/smartphoneblogger www.dersmartphoneblogger.de YouTube: Smartphoneblogger Instagram: Smartphoneblogger Amazon Support - Kaufe normal ein und spende ohne Zusatzkosten https://amzn.to/3bfdLnE --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/smartphoneblogger/message
Googleマップの進化が止まらないのです。Googleの最終の目的は何なんだろうと考えた。 たどり着いたのは、自動運転の自動運転OS(車載OS)の開発です。実際にはすでに2019.11より自動運転タクシーがアメリカで始まっていました。 Googleマイビジネスはその手助けもしていることになる。
What is Competence Porn? Did good email legislation get passed? Also, thoughts on the news industry, Vivaldi, Google OS, Star Wars, and much, much more... Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: Amazon selling "Prime-only" items, AsteroidOS, Play Store coming to Chrome OS, Elon Musk says a SpaceX Red Dragon will launch for Mars in 2018. --"Competence Porn" Link: bit.ly/21d2Rnw Hacksec:--"Email Privacy Bill Passes House Unanimously" Link: bit.ly/21fBOrR Important Messages:--”Gareth Thomas? zog.ninja? Vivaldi?” First Choice:--"Your Media Business Will Not Be Saved" Link: bit.ly/1SNv693 The Climax:--"Star Wars Update" APPENDIX:--"Roberts & Roberts Brokerage" Link: rrbi.co --"CoolTrade" Link: smartmarketshow.com/sovryn--"FreeBSD Operating System" Link: freebsd.org--"SeaMonkey Internet Suite" Link: seamonkey-project.org--”Sovryn Tech Solutions” Link: solutions.zog.ninja --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntechAnd you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.meSovryn Tech is powered by Namecheap! Get a website today with Bitcoin!Donate with Bitcoin! BTC: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d Donate with PayPal! Link: donate.zog.ninjaDonate with our Amazon Wish List! Link: wishlist.zog.ninja----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.comAlso on Telegram: @SovrynFollow content updates on Telegram: @DarkAndroidBitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovNetOr just go to: irc.zog.ninja ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------sovryntech.comquitter.no/sovryntwitter.com/sovryntechsteamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram
What is OneDriveGate? Zerocoin/ZeroCash is back? Also, BitMessage developments, a new way to stay healthy, VR, and much, much more... Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: The Amazon bookstore, the Starbucks red cup, Comcast data caps, Facebook responds to 80% of DOJ requests (Google responds to 63%), ASUS is releasing their own HoloLens supposedly in 2016, Firefox for iOS and Signal for Android, and Google OS.--"OneDriveGate" Link: bit.ly/1MOONxj Hacksec:--”The Return of Zerocoin” Link: bit.ly/1Ooxx2h Important Messages:--”A new BitMessage? The Batelle DroneDefender disappeared? Robot sex for intros? Best computer to buy? GamerGate?" First Choice:--"Oral Health" Link: bit.ly/1HqTZ2XThe Climax:--"Google Cardboard" APPENDIX:--"LibertyMemes.com" Link: libertymemes.com --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew --”Complete Liberty: Inside and Out” Link: amzn.to/1IRm5Jg--”The Open Wireless Movment” Link: openwireless.org--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntechAnd you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.me --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2 NAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFaLITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9WBITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.comI’m also on Telegram: @SovrynFollow content updates on Telegram: @DarkAndroidBitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------sovryntech.comtwitter.com/sovryntechplus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/liberty.me/members/briansovryn/facebook.com/BrianSovryninstagram.com/Bsovryn/steamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram/
What is OneDriveGate? Zerocoin/ZeroCash is back? Also, BitMessage developments, a new way to stay healthy, VR, and much, much more... Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: The Amazon bookstore, the Starbucks red cup, Comcast data caps, Facebook responds to 80% of DOJ requests (Google responds to 63%), ASUS is releasing their own HoloLens supposedly in 2016, Firefox for iOS and Signal for Android, and Google OS.--"OneDriveGate" Link: bit.ly/1MOONxj Hacksec:--”The Return of Zerocoin” Link: bit.ly/1Ooxx2h Important Messages:--”A new BitMessage? The Batelle DroneDefender disappeared? Robot sex for intros? Best computer to buy? GamerGate?" First Choice:--"Oral Health" Link: bit.ly/1HqTZ2XThe Climax:--"Google Cardboard" APPENDIX:--"LibertyMemes.com" Link: libertymemes.com --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew --”Complete Liberty: Inside and Out” Link: amzn.to/1IRm5Jg--”The Open Wireless Movment” Link: openwireless.org--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntechAnd you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.me --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2 NAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFaLITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9WBITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.comI’m also on Telegram: @SovrynFollow content updates on Telegram: @DarkAndroidBitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------sovryntech.comtwitter.com/sovryntechplus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/liberty.me/members/briansovryn/facebook.com/BrianSovryninstagram.com/Bsovryn/steamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram/
What is Competence Porn? Did good email legislation get passed? Also, thoughts on the news industry, Vivaldi, Google OS, Star Wars, and much, much more... Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: Amazon selling "Prime-only" items, AsteroidOS, Play Store coming to Chrome OS, Elon Musk says a SpaceX Red Dragon will launch for Mars in 2018. --"Competence Porn" Link: bit.ly/21d2Rnw Hacksec:--"Email Privacy Bill Passes House Unanimously" Link: bit.ly/21fBOrR Important Messages:--”Gareth Thomas? zog.ninja? Vivaldi?” First Choice:--"Your Media Business Will Not Be Saved" Link: bit.ly/1SNv693 The Climax:--"Star Wars Update" APPENDIX:--"Roberts & Roberts Brokerage" Link: rrbi.co --"CoolTrade" Link: smartmarketshow.com/sovryn--"FreeBSD Operating System" Link: freebsd.org--"SeaMonkey Internet Suite" Link: seamonkey-project.org--”Sovryn Tech Solutions” Link: solutions.zog.ninja --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: patreon.com/sovryntechAnd you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.meSovryn Tech is powered by Namecheap! Get a website today with Bitcoin!Donate with Bitcoin! BTC: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d Donate with PayPal! Link: donate.zog.ninjaDonate with our Amazon Wish List! Link: wishlist.zog.ninja----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.comAlso on Telegram: @SovrynFollow content updates on Telegram: @DarkAndroidBitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovNetOr just go to: irc.zog.ninja ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------sovryntech.comquitter.no/sovryntwitter.com/sovryntechsteamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram
The Google OS has officially announced Apple has delayed the launch of their tablet The next generation flip cam New Outlook to be like Linkedin
Headset drama, Google OS, and StarCraft at the Olympics.
Au programme:Google OS, Bluray, Facebook et son film, Twitter Hacké, la tablette Apple, les comportements des djeuns, le routeur Hadopi, et bien plus encore ! Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.
Hvide skyer samler sig over IT-verdenen - klar til at skylde onskaben bort... Google Tasks - nu også i Gmail - nu "exchange complete" Google OS - hvordan forestiller vi os det? Google Wave Todoodlist - technology is great. Pencils are better. iPhone - nearest tube i London Chrome OS af the fake steve jobs. - lidt sjovt. http://fakesteve.blogspot.com/2009/07/mossberg-on-chrome-os-arrington-and_11.html http://fakesteve.blogspot.com/2009/07/lets-all-take-deep-breath-and-get-some.html Filmudlejning på iPhone - syret! Rumrejse 2001 - syret! Turn-by-Turn GPS til iPhone - Magnus har testet Vodtube - der mangler en god podcastklient Push, push, push - gi' os' mere push! Jeg downloader ikke længere programmer til min Mac... GoogleMaps streetview - hele England dækket - og tag til Disneyland Paris Hot og Not Hot - Google OS - Sky vs. MS - Iphone vs. Mac - http://theflip.dk Not - Google OS vs. Ubuntu - "Vi kan da selv drive det...." - Hillerød Kommune omsorgssystem i ruiner
Welcome to episode #162 of Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast. Life from New York City, it's Media Hacks #13. Recorded late one night last week at The Roger Smith Hotel, this episode if full of the latest news and views, including a very vocal Julien Smith (yes, that means that this show is not work safe). C.C. Chapman and I were simply room decor in this episode. Enjoy the conversation... Here it is: Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast - Episode #162 - Host: Mitch Joel. Running time: 38:19. Audio comment line - please send in a comment and add your voice to the audio community: +1 206-666-6056. Please send in questions, comments, suggestions - mitch@twistimage.com. Hello from Beautiful Montreal. Subscribe over at iTunes. Please visit and leave comments on the Blog - Six Pixels of Separation. Feel free to connect to me directly on Facebook here: Mitch Joel on Facebook. or you can connect on LinkedIn. ...or on twitter. Facebook Group - Six Pixels of Separation Podcast Society. In a perfect world, connect with me, directly, through Facebook. Live from New York, it's Media Hacks #13 featuring: C.C. Chapman "Managing The Gray" Advance Guard. Julien Smith "In Over Your Head" Co-author of Trust Agents. Not present: Chris Brogan "New Marketing Labs" - Co-author of Trust Agents. Hugh McGuire "LibriVox" The Book Oven. Christopher S. Penn "The Financial Aid Podcast" Marketing Over Coffee. Six Pixels of Separation live in New York City. Six Pixels of Separation the book is now available for pre-order. Is it possible for a hotel to be "Social Media". Live from the Money Pimp 2.0 Suite (so says C.C.). Status Quo Bias. Hmmmm bacon... Nothing Could Be Finer Than Being in Your Diner. Thoughts on Google OS. When computers work like electricity. Trust Agents Facebook Page. We tried not to talk about Twitter (it did not work). Who is most important in the Twitter conversation? Tracking links in Twitter with tr.im. TechCrunch - Bit.ly's Grand Plans, And Their Inevitable Clash With Digg: Bitly Now. Understanding how links and data spreads. Music from the Podsafe Music Network: The Shakes "Liberty Jones". Please join the conversation by sending in questions, feedback and ways to improve Six Pixels Of Separation. Please let me know what you think or leave an audio comment at: +1 206-666-6056. Download the Podcast here: Six Pixels Of Separation - The Twist Image Podcast - Episode #162 - Host: Mitch Joel. Tags: advance guard advertising blog blogging book oven cc chapman chris brogan christopher s penn digg digital marketing facebook facebook group facebook page financial aid podcast google os hugh mcguire in over your head itunes julien smith librivox managing the gray marketing marketing over coffee media hacks new marketing labs new york city online social network podcast podcasting roger smith hotel six pixels of separation social media marketing techcrunch trim trust agents twist image twitter url shortening web 20