Podcasts about Grooveshark

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Best podcasts about Grooveshark

Latest podcast episodes about Grooveshark

Chubby Behemoth
Everyone Here Was Hatched

Chubby Behemoth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 61:28


SPONSOR: MyBookie: Use promo code CHUBBY to double your money on your 1st MyBookie deposit. Head to https://www.mybookie.website/CHUBBY   BONUS EPISODES: https://www.Patreon.com/chubbybehemoth   This week the boys are coming to you from Bentonville Arkansas after the Big Diamond Comedy Festival. Ricky Spiderbites stops by, Sam and Becker have Italian legs, and Sam doesn't believe in screens. Patrick gives Nathan his Clandestine Apostles name. The weed too loud. He said all of them! Nathan got a cool shirt at his Jop Jop show. Do you remember GrooveShark? We'll never be alone. Planking on the toilet.   Nathan Lund and Sam Tallent are Chubby Behemoth   Mutiny Coffee: mutinyonmainstreet@gmail.com

Und dann kam Punk
108: Fine (NO GOD ONLY TEETH, KŸHL, Trace in Maze Records) - Und dann kam Punk

Und dann kam Punk

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2023 191:07


CONTENTWARNUNG: Wir sprechen im Podcast auch über Tod, Kidnapping und psychische Erkrankungen. Betroffene oder Menschen, die das potentiell belastet, sollten diese Episode eventuell nicht hören. Claude und Christopher sprechen mit Fine über das Wohnen in einer 1,5-Zimmer-Wohnung zu viert, Tränen bei INVSN, ihre frühe Lieblingsband Refused, christlicher Punk im Musikunterricht bei Herrn Schröder, Schülerbandcover von „Rape Me“, Entenküken vom Fischmarkt, prägende Jahre in Italien und eine schöne Kindheit bis zum 9. Lebensjahr, sehr viele Umzüge, einen Vater, der wie Sylvester Stallone aussah und nicht treu sein konnte, ihr eigenes „Kidnapping“ bei Nacht- und Nebel, Zugang des Vaters zum Frauenhaus und familiäre Spaltung, über einen Onkel mit Sportwagen im Wohnzimmer, Bananensirup im Hefeweizen, Manipulation durch Mutter und deren Verbandelung mit neuem Partner nach 25 Jahren Haft, Finch, New Found Glory, Comeback Kid, Hatebreed, Grooveshark, Myspace, die erste Band Never Friday, Handyaufnahmen mit Motorola, das Subrosa in Tuttlingen, Wohlfühlen in der Subkultur in jeder Stadt, Schüler VZ, Alias Caylon, Turbostaat und Escapado, 10 Jahre keinen Kontakt zur Mutter, Rauswurf mit 17 Jahren, ältere Schwester in Hamburg, das Tommyhaus in Berlin mit 18 Jahren, Dark Ambient und eine ablehnende Haltung gegenüber Drogen. Wir sprechen auch über ihre erste Schwangerschaft mit 19, den plötzlichen Kindstod von Pepe im Alter von nur 3 Monaten als schreckliches Naturereignis und die lähmenden Folgen davon. Außerdem Tackleberry, Smoke Blow, Essstörung, Hamburgs Girls Skate Posse, die Rote Flora & den Flora Bowl, Birds In Row, Kim Gordon, Signs in der Störte, Oathbreaker im Hafenklang, Rolo Tomassi, Trespasser, Anfänge im Black Metal, ihre Band No God Only Teeth, Willkommen sein bei Kÿhl, Hawaii, Brachiosaurus, ein Dachboden voller Bücher & Dostojewksis „Der Traum eines lächerlichen Menschen“, die Bedeutung ihres zweiten Kindes, die Bedeutung von Familie, das Leben als Sinuskurve und viel mehr. Außerdem gibt es ein Quiz zu Claude. Es wird (ohne Christopher) gesungen und am Ende gibt es ein musikalisches Easter Egg für die Skate Punks unter den Hörer*innen.

No Name Music Cast
Episode 104 - The Streaming Music Episode

No Name Music Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 70:52


Here in Episode 104 of the No Name Music Cast, it is Tim's turn to pick the topic and he chooses to talk about streaming music!We cover Spotify, Napster, Pandora and Grooveshark and talk about the origins of music on the internet.We also talk about Def Leppard, Joni Mitchell and Garth Brooks to name but a few.We also remember the late David Crosby.https://www.facebook.com/NoNameMusicCast/And Follow us on Twitter!https://twitter.com/NoNameMusicCast

Fundadores:  Startups | Emprendimiento | Venture Capital

Hoy estoy con Andrés Barreto, director de Techstars Miami.Hablamos de su pelea con las disqueras para democratizar la música en internet, cuando co-fundó Grooveshark con solo 17 años. Nos cuenta sus aprendizajes fundando varias startups, como Onswipe y Pulso Social, dándonos tips para levantar capital y hablando sobre su experiencia manejando el programa de techstars de MiamiEs un episodio lleno de anécdotas de golpes de humildad, espero que disfrutes esta plática, tanto como yo Libros recomendados:El Hombre en Busca de Sentido - Viktor Frankl Sobre el invitado:Conecta con Andrés en LinkedinVisita el sitio web de Techstars Follow Us:NewsletterEscribe una ReseñaEncuesta de AudienciaTikTokInstagramTwitterLinkedinWeb 

The Network
#125 - Andres Barreto, Managing Director en Techstars Miami. "Sobrevive a toda costa"

The Network

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2022 64:02


Nuestro invitado de hoy es Andrés Barreto, director general de Techstars Miami. Andrés ayuda a los fundadores a acelerar Product Market Fit, levantamiento de capital y contratación de programadores. Actualmente es fundador de Socialatom Group y Coderise.org. Anteriormente cofundó Grooveshark y OnSwipe, empresa con la que entró a Techstars Nueva York en el 2011. Con Socialatom Group, ha invertido en más de 85 empresas y ha fundado la organización sin fines de lucro Coderise.org, dedicada a la enseñanza de la informática. Ha sido incluido en la lista de los 25 mejores menores de 25 años de BusinessWeek, los 10 mejores innovadores menores de 35 años de MIT Tech Review y los 30 mejores menores de 30 años de Inc Magazine. Hablamos de su vida como emprendedor, de la importancia de encontrar product market fit, la ventaja de levantar capital viviendo en Estados Unidos vs. en Latinoamérica, sus mayores logros y sus mayores errores como emprendedor, y su visión de Techstars Miami. Una historia increíble y una conversación muy interesante. No te lo pierdas! Agradecemos a nuestros sponsors: Farmacéutica La Santé: Tu Generico, Tu Vida. www.lasanteecuador.com Pardux: Simplifica tu operación e-commerce en www.pardux.com Facturero Movil: Con Facturero Móvil podrás crear documentos electrónicos autorizados por el SRI, sin contratos y desde 10 dólares. www.factureromovil.com

WHOA GNV Podcast
E158: The Startup That's Asking You To Turn Off Your Adblocker | Will Richardson of Admiral

WHOA GNV Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2021 62:11


Will Richardson moved to Gainesville in 2011 to work at Grooveshark. But when Grooveshark went under, he found himself - and a bunch of other talented web developers - unemployed. They banded together to rise from Grooveshark's ashes and create Admiral, a visitor relationship management company that helps online publishers stay profitable. Will is such a forward thinker, from remote work to company culture to the future of the internet! I loved sitting down with Will and learning about his vision for online content creators! Not only is he a visionary, but he's so open-minded and great to talk to as well. I didn't know what “visitor relationship management” was before now, but I'm so excited that its future is starting right here in Gainesville! -- These awesome sponsors make this podcast possible! When you support these businesses, you support the show. Make sure to tell them you heard it on WHOA GNV! Call on Colliers when you're looking to manage, buy, lease, or sell commercial property. Learn more about all they have to offer at http://colliers.com/gainesville! A meal from Leonardo's feeds the whole family, and you might even have some leftovers. On your next busy night, give Leonardo's a call at (352) 376-2001 or order online at https://www.leonardosmillhopper.com/. Big moves, small moves, last-minute moves - these guys are ready to help! They're available 7 days a week to take the stress out of moving. Call them at (352) 415-0886 or visit their website at https://www.ufmoverguys.com/. Be sure to connect with all of the sponsors that support our podcast at https://www.whoagnv.com/sponsors! -- Subscribe to my channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW1tLSw2Z5MB6Yebj_2pDJA?sub_confirmation=1 You can purchase custom WHOA GNV gear by visiting us here! - https://www.whoagnv.com/whoa-gnv-shop CHECK OUT OUR LAST EPISODE: E157: A Shoe Experience That Comes to You! | Betsy Suda of Suda's FitFoot https://youtu.be/Ccu0hKVDTFI CONNECT WITH OUR GUESTS: Will Richardson https://www.facebook.com/GetAdmiral https://www.getadmiral.com/ will@getadmiral.com CONNECT WITH OUR PODCAST & NOMINATE A GUEST: www.whoagnv.com/ Instagram: instagram.com/whoagnv Facebook: facebook.com/whoagnvpodcast Twitter: twitter.com/whoagnv Know someone that would be PERFECT for our show? Nominate them here! www.whoagnv.com/nominate-a-guest/ Join us on the journey and listen on... iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/whoa-…&i=1000410719480 Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/whoagnv/ Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/whoa-gnv-podcast Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/3vZ0Bg4FJmd…jXRtqIDUTp_Dau7w --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whoa-gnv-podcast/support

WHOA GNV Podcast
The Secrets of Company Culture | Will Richardson of Admiral

WHOA GNV Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2021 5:11


Podcast Fam! I got to sit down with Will Richardson of Admiral, a Visitor Relationship Management Company. This entrepreneur got his start at Grooveshark, a music streaming service that had roots in Gainesville. As a fan of Grooveshark, I wanted to know what lessons he took from that company into his own business. Take a listen... This Side Hustle Podcast Preview is made possible by The UF Mover Guys. They have a professionally trained team that will move anything in your home or business. Plus, you won't pay for your move until you're 100% satisfied. Give them a call at (352) 415-0886 for a free, no-obligation estimate, or visit them at https://www.ufmoverguys.com/. Learn more about all of our sponsors at https://www.whoagnv.com/sponsors! ------ Subscribe to my channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCW1tLSw2Z5MB6Yebj_2pDJA?sub_confirmation=1 You can purchase custom WHOA GNV gear by visiting us here! - https://www.whoagnv.com/whoa-gnv-shop CHECK OUT OUR LAST EPISODE: E157: A Shoe Experience That Comes to You! | Betsy Suda of Suda's FitFoot https://youtu.be/Ccu0hKVDTFI CONNECT WITH OUR GUESTS: Will Richardson https://www.facebook.com/GetAdmiral https://www.getadmiral.com/ will@getadmiral.com CONNECT WITH OUR PODCAST & NOMINATE A GUEST: www.whoagnv.com/ Instagram: instagram.com/whoagnv Facebook: facebook.com/whoagnvpodcast Twitter: twitter.com/whoagnv Know someone that would be PERFECT for our show? Nominate them here! www.whoagnv.com/nominate-a-guest/ Join us on the journey and listen on... iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/whoa-…&i=1000410719480 Soundcloud: soundcloud.com/whoagnv/ Stitcher: www.stitcher.com/podcast/whoa-gnv-podcast Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/3vZ0Bg4FJmd…jXRtqIDUTp_Dau7w --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whoa-gnv-podcast/support

Radio Cade
CEO 101: Rick Carlson and SharpSpring

Radio Cade

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021


When Rick Carlson founded SharpSpring in 2012, he didn’t think of himself as a CEO. “My co-founder and I were doing whatever it took to survive,” Carlson says, and they were responsible for everything from software development to buying office supplies. In the early days of the automated marketing software company, “there were so many failures it was hard to name them all,” according to Carlson. “There was an immense amount of wasted effort in figuring out what customers wanted. Over the years we think we’ve gotten smarter about how we make those decisions.” The company went public in 2014, after being acquired by SMTP, and is currently listed on the NASDAQ. TRANSCRIPT: Intro (00:01): Inventors and their inventions. Welcome to Radio Cade, a podcast from the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention in Gainesville, Florida. The museum is named after James Robert Cade, who invented Gatorade in 1965. My name is Richard Miles. We’ll introduce you to inventors and the things that motivate them, we’ll learn about their personal stories, how their inventions work, and how their ideas get from the laboratory to the marketplace. Starting and running your own company: it’s not for everyone, but for those who have done it, it can be exhilarating, exhausting, and easily the hardest thing they’ve ever done. So we decided to go out and talk to some of those people and find out what they’ve learned, what they’d repeat, and what they’ll never do again. We’ll hear stories from their first year, then from the period when they realized they’re going to survive, and how they intend to position their companies for the future. We’ll find out what a CEO’s normal day’s like, how they build and manage their teams, what it’s done to their personal lives. And finally, when is the time to move on? Join us for CEO 101, a limited series of deep looks at people who are their own boss for better or for worse. This episode’s guest is Rick Carlson, CEO of SharpSpring, a comprehensive sales and marketing automation platform. Richard Miles (01:25): Rick, welcome to the show. Glad to have you on to get your experiences as CEO of SharpSpring. We’re going to start by talking about the very beginning. So if you could take us back literally to your first year, really your first few days as CEO, and let’s get a snapshot for people who’ve never done this before, what that is like. And obviously, you put in work before you probably became a CEO into the company, the idea, but let’s start with the first 30 days. You’ve got your company, it started, maybe it’s just you, maybe you have a handful of employees. What was that experience like? Rick Carlson (01:56): First off, thanks so much for having me, appreciate the opportunity and I’m glad to be here. So when I heard you pose the question, your first day as CEO, actually what immediately came to mind is during that first year or even two years, or maybe three years, I certainly did not think of myself as a CEO. CEO is what I am now managing a very large team with managers and a couple of hundred people. When I think about that first year, I think about struggling with a fledgling team where I am just another team member, and that’s exactly what it was like. I was a founder of a business, much more than a CEO, what somebody thinks of as a CEO today, and that means everything that you think it means. My co-founder and I, Travis, who was really the technical side (he remains our CTO today), we’re doing anything and everything that it took to survive, from raising money to making the coffee, to go buying the office supplies fortuitously. Just a week ago, Travis celebrated his ninth year with us and dug up one of his first emails to me about buying office supplies as he moved over from his previous company to start things. So very literally in that first year, it’s about being a team member and forming a team and doing whatever it takes to survive. Richard Miles (03:17): So at this stage, you can afford to tell great anecdotes about the early days, including maybe some early failures or things that didn’t work out, right? Do you have any stories–again, go back, limit yourself to maybe the first month or first few weeks–of something that you look back and smile now, but at the time you considered it a disaster or failure, or just a really bad day? Rick Carlson (03:37): Depending on which lens you think about SharpSpring, my business, in some senses, it feels like we had a straight line to success. Like we did not have to pivot our business model. Once we got to market, we started selling and I think it’s even more common that a business pivots once or twice before it really finds its footing. Through that lens, SharpSpring was pretty straightforward, but being more on track to the question that you asked, there are so many failures that it’s too hard to name one in every sort of micro way. There are more failures than you can count. It’s a winding road. So I have put our development teams and the early days through so many useless development features projects that never took off and meant anything to any one of our customers. And over the years, we think we’ve gotten a little bit smarter about how we make those decisions, but an immense amount of wasted effort on this sort of winding road to figure out what customers want and how our business is supposed to work. Again, though, if you backed up, it would look like a straight line for us. So I hope that paradox makes sense to your listeners. Richard Miles (04:51): So all the management books, or most of them, focus on one of the most important things you do as a founder, CEO, is who you hire. So again, going back to this first few weeks, did you have sort of a template in mind already of like, this is the person that my co-founder and I want to work at this company? Did you have, literally, a list of qualifications, or did you just sort of figure it out as you went along? What constituted a good employee for SharpSpring and a bad employee for SharpSpring? Rick Carlson (05:18): Yeah, great question. Like everything in a startup, my vision of what I wanted was almost immediately thrown out the window, and we were left with reality. But the specific story there is that I left a great job in internet security to start SharpSpring and intended to found it with somebody different than the person I ended up founding it with. So I quit the job. I moved back to Gainesville, I’m in it, up to my neck, and I get a call from the original co-founder who said, “Guess what? I can’t do this. My wife is having twins and I just can’t take the risk with you. I’m so sorry, Rick.” So yeah, I had exactly the right guy in mind and before we could even really get started, the best laid plans as they were, right? I think that there’s a lesson there though, which is press forward, and I found a lot of luck involved in this. So pressing forward is not always enough to be very clear, but it is required. And so I press forward and was lucky enough to find Travis Whitten, who founded the company with me ultimately. And we found a third person in the early days. And between the three of us, we had a super complimentary skillset. Travis backend architecture, fantastic developer, could really build anything we imagined. I sort of brought the business model and product vision to the company. And then we had another gentleman, Joe Kelly, who came from Grooveshark. Some of your listeners probably are very familiar with Grooveshark. Between the three of us, we were able to build a product and get to market. And so it was a super powerful team. And I’ve read a lot about this, a lot of companies are founded with three. That’s, sort of a magic number. It feels rare that two people can cover all the ground to make things work out of the gates, and four starts to become a crowd if you will, and in essence, three doesn’t appear to be a crowd when it comes to starting a business. Richard Miles (07:16): Good answer. Okay, final question on the early days: I’m sure you’re at the stage in your career, having succeeded as you are, that you’re probably asked for advice a lot by people wanting to do something similar. What sort of advice do you give to people who say, “Okay, I’m ready to jump out the window. I’m quitting my good job, and I’m going to go out on my own, start my company.” Or what wisdom would you have given yourself now, looking back, talking about everything from the completely mundane to the inspirational. So like, “hey, make sure you buy a fire extinguisher” or “believe in yourself,” whatever. What are a key piece of advice you would give to somebody, let’s say tomorrow, that was about to start their own company? Rick Carlson (07:52): Yeah, so, I think that answer depends on the experience of the person who’s wanting to start the business. So yes, you’re right. I do get people, different experience levels, asking, “Hey, I’m thinking about doing this.” In my mind, there’s a magic window, and that window is bigger for some people than others. That the magic window I’m talking about is where you have enough experience. You have enough knowledge of the market that you’re trying to get into, or problem that you’re trying to solve for your customers, that’s a whole other conversation. Incidentally, being able to solve a customer’s problem is not enough to start a business. But, anyway, you’ve got enough experience, and yet at the same time, you haven’t gotten bogged down with life, family, children, mortgages, all the things that mean you’ve got to find security and so forth. And so there’s a window there that it feels like gives you the best chance to succeed with the experience, and yet allows you to take the risks that you need to take. And sometimes, people wait too long and they realize it’s just impractical to start a business. I mentioned my original co-founder all of a sudden having twins. It’s a perfect example of that. And then I see people who are maybe starting a business a little bit too early, before they’ve gotten into the market that they’re trying to attack and participate in. It’s not to say that they can’t succeed. People succeed all the time, but we’re talking about giving yourself the best chance and having that experience to put to bare, I think is a really important thing. So that’s the framework I like to think about these things. Also, you should have a fire extinguisher. Richard Miles (09:26): No, it was good advice, right? So Rick, I’m literally going to go off script here. I’m going to ask you a question we hadn’t thought about, but something you said triggered it when you decided, okay, I’m going to do this. I’m going to go try to start my own company. What was the most common reaction from friends and family? Did they go, “All right, Rick, go get them!” Or were they like, “Whoa, uh, what are you doing?” What sort of reactions did you get from those who knew you best? Rick Carlson (09:50): For most people, it wasn’t a surprise at all. For me, and anybody who is listening to this that knows me, knows this to be true, very difficult for me to work underneath somebody else. It was almost a requirement that I go and start my own thing, because working for 40 years for somebody else, with my personality, probably not going to work. Richard Miles (10:10): So this sounds like it was part of a plea deal, right? Rick Carlson (10:14): [Laughter] Well put, well put, exactly right. I think it was just a foregone conclusion. But even before I figured that out, when I was a teen, I knew that I had no idea what business–I mean, it could have been a restaurant at the time, but I just knew I wanted to start my own business. And so, I don’t think it surprised anybody. I still think people, parents and so forth, it’s not to say they weren’t worried. They weren’t surprised, but not to say they weren’t worried at the same time. Richard Miles (10:43): I’m sure you did no complaining whatsoever, so they probably didn’t even know if you’d had a bad day, right? Rick Carlson (10:48): Yeah, that’s right. Well, just in terms of generational changes, my father was somebody who worked for an electric company for his entire career. And what you sought at the time was security and a pension. And so even before I started a business, what’s commonplace today, switching jobs every couple years and trying different things was just foreign to them. And so, yeah, there was a complete lack of understanding. And it’s only just in the last few years where people go, “okay, you knew what you were doing,” so. Richard Miles (11:20): Let’s talk a little bit about the middle years, and I know that’s a relative term, depending on what company we’re talking about, but let’s start as a discussion point. Let’s say a year or two. So you’ve been doing this for a year, and presumably at that point you had more than three employees, your personal priorities in terms of how you spent your day as the founder slash CEO were probably starting to change. Maybe the original team was starting to change. You’re beyond the, “okay, we may fail tomorrow stage,” but you haven’t quite hit the big time yet either. Was it a surprise in terms of the new challenges or did it just seem like this is day 366, it’s not really any different than day five? Rick Carlson (11:54): There are absolutely stages to the thing, where everything felt different. For me, again, I was the guy that the first year and a half, two years, pretty fantastic for me. I raised some money. I knew how to do that–again, I had some experience–and so I was able to raise some money, and a lot of the burden was on Travis and the dev team to actually build the product. And I remember distinctly, it took us a couple of years, even though we were building an MVP product and trying to get to market quickly, because our product category in many ways had already been defined by the market, took us a while to build our version of it and the layering on the new things. And I remember distinctly, after two years of hard work from my teammates, not to say that I wasn’t working hard during that time doing my thing, but the burden shifted over to me. I promised these guys we can sell, I promised these guys we could market, and all of a sudden we had to go and do that. And I remember the first month we went to market, we sold exactly nothing, and that was because we had unrealistic expectations of the sales cycle. And thankfully in the second month we started to do some things, but I definitely remember a stressful period during that time. Then I remember a third phase, in what I would call those middle or teenage years, where all of a sudden we had enough customers and gosh, it became even harder. So first it was like raising money, which is actually sort of the easy part, then it’s your initial sales, and then you’ve got this customer base. Now you’ve got to keep selling, you probably have to keep raising money, and now you’ve got to support customers. So it just layers on these incremental obligations and complexities and difficulties as time goes on, which doesn’t paint a very beautiful picture. But I think running a business can be pretty messy. It’s not to say it’s also not fun and rewarding and that you learn things, but that’s how I remember the years, two and three and those earlier years. Richard Miles (13:55): It’s almost more of a challenge to grow and succeed, right, than to decline and fail because decline and fail, your world keeps getting smaller, but the growing and succeeding you’re now, like you said, adding layers of complexity that somebody’s got to manage, and somebody’s got to think about it. Rick Carlson (14:10): That’s a fantastic way to put it. I think that’s exactly right. Mentally, clearly the opposite is true when you’re not succeeding. And sometimes even when you are and when you’re marginally successful, it can take a real mental toll on you. It’s really tough to work that hard and not succeed, which is the case with a lot of businesses. And if you’re in that situation, you have to remember that that’s okay, and that’s part of the thing and that most businesses don’t succeed. But I think that’s exactly right on the operational side of things; you get to the next level, and there’s a whole new set of complexity that you’ve got to figure out how to manage. And I could keep going into stage four and five. I think I described three of them so far, but I’ll stop there. Richard Miles (14:48): That’s a perfect segue into the next topic. Now, we’re bringing you up to the present day. So if this were a movie, the flashback would be over, the characters back in the present day. So I can only imagine that your duties may be significantly different than they were when you first started. Maybe you’re further detached from the actual production of the product, so to speak and even sales. So what are you spending most of your time on now in the company? And then, describe some of those additional challenges that you have to take on at this level. I imagine dealing with the media, dealing with public opinion, dealing with a lot more employees is a bit more of a challenge. So what is that like today? Rick Carlson (15:27): I think I left off where we’re all of a sudden, we were selling and then we had all these customers to manage and so forth. Along the way you hire a bunch of people, and there’s a phase when we first started our conversation today, I said, I didn’t feel like a CEO. I felt like a member of a team, a founder, a part of a team. Somewhere along the line, you become a CEO, and there’s a difference, and what was striking to me was when people started to treat me–when we had enough employees–where people started to treat me as a CEO, and I struggled with it, actually. There were things that I could say to a teammate in even an abrasive way, because that person knew that we were on the same team and they knew what I meant, and they knew we were all going in the same direction. And it was no big deal because, you know, we’re just onto the next thing, and we’re all pressured. But as a CEO, saying exactly the same thing to somebody who doesn’t know you as well, who thinks of you as a, not a teammate or a founder, but as a CEO, even the smallest things you say could really ruin someone’s day. So there’s this transition that takes place. I can’t pinpoint it, but it’s part of the detachment that you mentioned. You’re right. Like I used to know everybody on the team, and I used to be able to spot talent personally and see somebody who’s making a mark. And now, you are separated by a layer or sometimes even two layers of management, and you’re not intimately involved in really any process. You try to dabble in everything, but you’re not as deep in any process. And I think you know this, but we’re actually public, and so there’s a strange story to how we became public, but we’re a public company. So a lot of my time now is dealing with analysts and banks in New York and everywhere, and key investors, and new potential investors, and our public company board. And that carves out a big chunk of time that would, in the early days, be a hundred percent focused on the business. So it’s a pyramid with your customers sort of at the bottom of the pyramid, and the bigger the organization gets, the taller the pyramid, the further you are away from those customers and what’s happening sort of at the ground level, if you will. I think I just described a multilevel marketing company. I hope, I hope I didn’t do that. Richard Miles (17:47): That’s what, that’s how I will describe in the show notes, exactly [laughter]. I think the transition comes when everyone starts laughing at all your jokes and you win all your golf games, then you know, you’re really the CEO, right? Rick Carlson (17:57): That is required from day one, Richard, that was day one where we just, everybody knew that about me. You got to laugh at the jokes. It’s the uncomfortable laugh. Richard Miles (18:06): And they laugh when you know the joke wasn’t funny. But it’s interesting what you say, just the limited experience I’ve had with running the Cade Museum and starting it, is in a way, you have to keep reinventing yourself, right? Because you keep having to redefine, how do I add value? And it’s not the same way as you did in week one or year one, when, as you said, you may be down there with the floor level programmers and workers and you no longer really add value to the company doing that anymore. You’ve got to do, like you said, talk to the Wall Street analysts and talk to the media and that’s how you add value. But in a sense, it’s a shifting target, right? As a company gets bigger and bigger, and as you said, you have other layers of management, even those things, eventually, maybe somebody else will do, right? Rick Carlson (18:46): Yeah, you are a hundred percent spot on, that you have to reinvent yourself. You can cause more harm than good actually by, by not doing that, not evolving, which isn’t to say as I sit here and proudly declare that I’ve figured that out. It’s not to say. I know it to be true, and yet it’s a work in progress for me, constantly trying to evolve and figure out how I can be the least disruptive and add the most value, right? I would actually go further since we’re on the topic, that is true of every person in the company and every process, every process in the company. So one of the things that I’ve talked about with the nucleus of people that have worked together 5, 6, 7 years now, and we have constantly built up processes, they’ve worked and then somehow 12 or 18 months later, because of the size of the company, because of other changes in the company, they no longer work. So there’s a process of tearing down the processes that worked yesterday and rebuilding them. The obvious examples, when you’re 20 employees and you need to communicate something, you yell it out because you’re all in the same room, right? There’s that sort of thing. When all of a sudden you’ve got departments, it’s a totally different communication style. When you’ve got enough departments of enough size where the interaction between departments and coordinating two, three departments, almost like they’re people. Each department has a personality, it has their own needs and goals and ambitions, and trying to coordinate that, it requires different processes. And so going back to the original question you posed, it’s absolutely, as a CEO, tearing down my idea of the value that I create and rebuilding it, but it’s also true of, I think every process in the business, by my estimation. Richard Miles (20:44): I like the way you put it. It almost gives you a sneaking sympathy for large bureaucracies, right? Because you can understand how bureaucratic processes get put in place to coordinate ever larger and larger companies or government agencies and so on. But then of course, you’ve got to be careful because that also tends to sort of throttle creativity and make people risk averse and all those things. So it’s a real challenge, right? How to get bigger, stay coordinated yet without killing the dream with all your employees, so to speak. Rick Carlson (21:09): Yeah, that’s exactly right. I could talk about that one point for a while, frankly. I remember with a certain amount of hubris and this is true today, by the way we, this is part of our corporate culture. We’re extremely proud of how nimble we are versus our competition. But I remember almost laughing about it and thinking about these much larger companies and how slow and cumbersome they were. In reality, we’ve taken a couple steps closer to those companies out of necessity. And guess what? Turns out when you’ve got 10,000 businesses using your software, you darn sure better have better QA than you had in the early days, right? And so there are definitely things that necessitate slowing down and communication and so many things. So it’s just one of the many things that, that changes over time with a business Richard Miles (21:57): Yeah, and when you’re publicly traded, best not to talk to the press after three martinis, right? Rick Carlson (22:01): Ah, a lesson, I’m still trying to learn [laughter]. No, that’s not true. Richard Miles (22:04): So let’s talk about, a little bit philosophical here, and I understand since you’re publicly traded, you can’t give me any secrets, and we don’t want any of our listeners to be indicted for insider trading here. But tell us a little bit about the model and strategy that maybe you had from day one or maybe you developed it. What was your strategic true north? Did you know, from the very beginning, okay, this model, this strategy we think is going to position us so that we beat our competitors. And if so, has that model and strategy changed or you just had to maybe tweak it? Is it still essentially, the model and business strategy that you have, is essentially the same as when you began with modifications? Rick Carlson (22:41): So, what I would say is the mission has been consistent, and the strategy has shifted once. And now we’re at an interesting stage forth with our business where the strategy isn’t shifting, but we’re layering on other concepts. So let me bring some of that to life. For our business, we’ve always had a mission of bringing what we call today, a revenue growth platform. Our product is traditionally known as marketing automation, but has grown well beyond that set of functionality now to basically being anything in, an SMB needs to manage their sales and marketing processes, s,o CRM and social media management and marketing automation and email. So that was always our mission to bring an affordable, easy to use solution to SMBs, of which there are millions of them. And as we spent all that time building our first version of the product, when we started the business, we saw it as greenfields because everything was up at the enterprise. Large businesses were using this and maybe medium-sized businesses, but SMBs were not. And over those years that we were feverously building, we saw other competition enter that space, and they were better brands with at the time better products and more well-funded, and by the way, really sophisticated marketers. So one of the strategic decisions we made and it’s less important to think about the decision itself and more about the impetus for the decision we had to figure out a way not to compete. And so often you hear people talk about figuring out ways to compete. Well, the thing to do is to figure out how not to compete. If you can find a place not to compete, it’s a much easier path to go down. And so early on, we decided to work with digital marketing agencies because we found that they were the path to get to these SMB businesses. And when we looked around, nobody was focused on them, and so that has been something we’ve done since we launched the business six years ago. Now we’ve got a brand that is becoming nationally known, that people are aware of. And we can potentially, in addition to working with agencies, approach businesses directly and so forth as we move forward. But I think for the listeners, for us, it was staying true to our mission of going after SMBs while figuring out that space in which we could avoid competition for as long as possible. That’s what I think we did successfully. Richard Miles (25:14): I read or heard, or maybe I just made it up, this idea of embrace your weaknesses in so far as the earlier, you understand what you’re not good at–and I’m not saying that your company wasn’t good at theirs–but it allows you to focus on their strengths and reach out and find somebody else to help you do this stuff that maybe you’re not as good at or interested in or whatnot. And I’ve always thought that’s pretty good advice, that the people or the companies that decide they’re going to be everything a to Z soup to nuts. Usually they’re just a can’t be, right. There are going to be certain aspects that they do better than others. And sometimes it just makes sense to think, like you said, choose not to compete in a certain area. Rick Carlson (25:47): Yeah, no, I think that’s right. Look, at least metaphorically, companies are a lot like people, and they’re going to have their strengths and weaknesses in their products and their people. I’m never going to be a weightlifter. Richard Miles (25:58): That was my next question, Rick. Rick Carlson (26:01): Yeah [laughter]. Anyway, there are things I’m not going to do. And there are things that our business is not going to do and being realistic about those things and working with what you have, applying your skills efficiently, is the key to everything. Richard Miles (26:14): So Rick, one final question, and I know you may have to plead the fifth amendment on this one, but coming back to you as a CEO, Rick Carlson, do you have an internal endpoint where you think, or, you know, you’ve accomplished pretty much everything you set out to do with this company and you know, it’s time to move on or have you not even thought about that? Rick Carlson (26:31): Well, the question is a multi-part question. First off, when you’re starting a business, like I was, which is hard to believe, but nine years ago now, we’ve been in the market roughly seven, but nine years ago, we chose to start the business. I’ve far surpassed what I set out to do back then. We thought we’d build something with a few million dollars of revenue and sell. It was the idea, and that would be the end of it. Maybe we go to another startup, that sort of thing. So by that measure, I have far surpassed it, but what I would say is still a lot of fun, still a lot of challenges. We’re lucky to be in a market that there’s no ticking time bomb in terms of we’re missing a wave or something where the market’s going to disappear. And it’s constantly, there’s new things that are coming out of the product to make it even more valuable to customers. And there’s new lessons to learn with how to manage an ever growing business. And so our folks know I’m prone to say, I’m always going to keep it interesting. Being in SharpSpring is always interesting. Sometimes it’s fun. Sometimes it’s not fun. Sometimes it’s challenging, but always interesting. And that I think has got me amped up for the next couple of years, for sure. Richard Miles (27:39): Isn’t that what Don Corleone said in the Godfather too, right? The mafia is always interesting, right? Rick Carlson (27:44): I actually don’t remember that quote. I think it keeps sucking me back in, right, or something like that. That’s exactly right, Richard Miles (27:51): Rick, that was great. I really appreciate having you on the show. You’re doing tremendous work, keep doing it. It’s inspirational on all sorts of different levels and wish you the best. Rick Carlson (27:59): Thanks so much for having me. Outro (28:00): Radio Cade is produced by the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention located in Gainesville, Florida. Richard Miles is the podcast host and Ellie Thom coordinates inventor interviews. Podcasts are recorded at Heartwood, soundstage and edited and mixed by Bob McPeak. The Radio Cade theme song was produced and performed by Tracy Collins and features violinist Jacob Lawson.

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com
¿Netflix y Spotify mataron a eMule?

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 12:12


Hace 10 años ya estábamos en el Siglo 21 y eran super populares las plataformas P2P para compartir archivos Una red P2P o peer-to-peer es una red de pares, entre ordenadores iguales en la no hay clientes ni servidores fijos, sino una serie de nodos que se comportan como iguales entre sí. Una máquina en el mundo comparte archivos que son divididos en pequeñas partes y otras máquinas del mundo pueden conectarse directamente a esa computadora para descargar los archivos, que luego se alojan en más máquinas de la red.Después de eMule fue popular el BitTorrent, un protocolo diseñado para el intercambio de archivos entre iguales en Internet. Sigue siendo uno de los protocolos más comunes para la transferencia de archivos grandes. El programador Bram Cohen diseñó el protocolo en abril de 2001 y publicó su primera implementación el 2 de julio de 2001.¿Se parece esto a los nodos del Blockchain? Bueno, es posible que sin la “piratería” de música del primer Napster, sin eMule y sin BitTorrent no hubiéramos llegado al Blockchain que ahora permite la existencia de las criptomonedas como el Bitcoin o el Ethereum y también la tecnología de NFT.NFT es un “token no fungible” o también un TNF es un tipo especial de token criptográfico que representa algo único; los tokens no fungibles no son, por tanto, mutuamente intercambiables. Esto contrasta con las criptomonedas como el bitcoin, y muchos tokens de red o de utilidad que son fungibles por naturaleza.Pero lo de compartir música y películas de manera libre en Torrents y en eMule puede que haya pasado ya a “mejor vida” aunque nunca se hubieran cerrado como pasó con las plataformas Grooveshark y Napster en las que se podía compartir música. Spotify y Netflix ¿son los nuevos estándares para compartir música y películas? Pero ¿y qué hacemos si lo que buscamos no está ahí? ¡Buscar en todas las plataformas! En alguna habrá de estar lo que buscamos. Pero ¡Cuánta falta nos hace un cliente que pueda buscar en todas y encontrarnos lo que buscamos!Músicas:AnaCaptainslogue - Noir Et Blanc VieCampfire_SongThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyA Quiet ThoughtThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyAt OddsRussian River - Dan Henig Scarlet FireOtis McDonald

El Siglo 21 es Hoy
¿Netflix y Spotify mataron a eMule?

El Siglo 21 es Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2021 12:12


Hace 10 años ya estábamos en el Siglo 21 y eran super populares las plataformas P2P para compartir archivos Una red P2P o peer-to-peer es una red de pares, entre ordenadores iguales en la no hay clientes ni servidores fijos, sino una serie de nodos que se comportan como iguales entre sí. Una máquina en el mundo comparte archivos que son divididos en pequeñas partes y otras máquinas del mundo pueden conectarse directamente a esa computadora para descargar los archivos, que luego se alojan en más máquinas de la red.Después de eMule fue popular el BitTorrent, un protocolo diseñado para el intercambio de archivos entre iguales en Internet. Sigue siendo uno de los protocolos más comunes para la transferencia de archivos grandes. El programador Bram Cohen diseñó el protocolo en abril de 2001 y publicó su primera implementación el 2 de julio de 2001.¿Se parece esto a los nodos del Blockchain? Bueno, es posible que sin la “piratería” de música del primer Napster, sin eMule y sin BitTorrent no hubiéramos llegado al Blockchain que ahora permite la existencia de las criptomonedas como el Bitcoin o el Ethereum y también la tecnología de NFT.NFT es un “token no fungible” o también un TNF es un tipo especial de token criptográfico que representa algo único; los tokens no fungibles no son, por tanto, mutuamente intercambiables. Esto contrasta con las criptomonedas como el bitcoin, y muchos tokens de red o de utilidad que son fungibles por naturaleza.Pero lo de compartir música y películas de manera libre en Torrents y en eMule puede que haya pasado ya a “mejor vida” aunque nunca se hubieran cerrado como pasó con las plataformas Grooveshark y Napster en las que se podía compartir música. Spotify y Netflix ¿son los nuevos estándares para compartir música y películas? Pero ¿y qué hacemos si lo que buscamos no está ahí? ¡Buscar en todas las plataformas! En alguna habrá de estar lo que buscamos. Pero ¡Cuánta falta nos hace un cliente que pueda buscar en todas y encontrarnos lo que buscamos!Músicas:AnaCaptainslogue - Noir Et Blanc VieCampfire_SongThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyA Quiet ThoughtThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyAt OddsRussian River - Dan Henig Scarlet FireOtis McDonald

• El siglo 21 es hoy •
¿Netflix y Spotify mataron a eMule?

• El siglo 21 es hoy •

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2021 12:12


Hace 10 años ya estábamos en el Siglo 21 y eran super populares las plataformas P2P para compartir archivos Una red P2P o peer-to-peer es una red de pares, entre ordenadores iguales en la no hay clientes ni servidores fijos, sino una serie de nodos que se comportan como iguales entre sí. Una máquina en el mundo comparte archivos que son divididos en pequeñas partes y otras máquinas del mundo pueden conectarse directamente a esa computadora para descargar los archivos, que luego se alojan en más máquinas de la red.Después de eMule fue popular el BitTorrent, un protocolo diseñado para el intercambio de archivos entre iguales en Internet. Sigue siendo uno de los protocolos más comunes para la transferencia de archivos grandes. El programador Bram Cohen diseñó el protocolo en abril de 2001 y publicó su primera implementación el 2 de julio de 2001.¿Se parece esto a los nodos del Blockchain? Bueno, es posible que sin la “piratería” de música del primer Napster, sin eMule y sin BitTorrent no hubiéramos llegado al Blockchain que ahora permite la existencia de las criptomonedas como el Bitcoin o el Ethereum y también la tecnología de NFT.NFT es un “token no fungible” o también un TNF es un tipo especial de token criptográfico que representa algo único; los tokens no fungibles no son, por tanto, mutuamente intercambiables. Esto contrasta con las criptomonedas como el bitcoin, y muchos tokens de red o de utilidad que son fungibles por naturaleza.Pero lo de compartir música y películas de manera libre en Torrents y en eMule puede que haya pasado ya a “mejor vida” aunque nunca se hubieran cerrado como pasó con las plataformas Grooveshark y Napster en las que se podía compartir música. Spotify y Netflix ¿son los nuevos estándares para compartir música y películas? Pero ¿y qué hacemos si lo que buscamos no está ahí? ¡Buscar en todas las plataformas! En alguna habrá de estar lo que buscamos. Pero ¡Cuánta falta nos hace un cliente que pueda buscar en todas y encontrarnos lo que buscamos!Músicas:AnaCaptainslogue - Noir Et Blanc VieCampfire_SongThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyA Quiet ThoughtThe Curious Kitten - Aaron KennyAt OddsRussian River - Dan Henig Scarlet FireOtis McDonald

Most Xtreme Podcast
iPods with Micah Iverson

Most Xtreme Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2021 63:02


The Voice finalist Micah Iverson joins us for a comedic discussion on Apple's take on the digital music revolution. We also chat Tower Records, Apple commercials, and our favorite music of the 2000's!SUBSCRIBE to our PODCAST FEED and leave us a REVIEW on Apple Podcasts!TWITTER - https://twitter.com/mostxtremepodINSTAGRAM - https://www.instagram.com/mostxtremepod/WEBSITE - https://mostxtremepodcast.simplecast.com/EMAIL - mostxtremepodcast@gmail.com

Thunder Pop
Ep 141: Justin Kirchhoff- Award-winning director

Thunder Pop

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 106:44


Returning guest Justin Kirchhoff is an award-winning director and director of photography whose been shooting broadcast, commercial and corporate spots professionally for over a decade. Clients include HBO, Logitech, Verizon Wireless, A+ Federal Credit Union, Sweetwater Living, Grooveshark, LHP Hospital Group, Fuddruckers, Ducati, BarkBox, Tally, Keller Williams Realty, University of Texas School of Education and the University of North Texas, among others. Additional credits include productions featuring Ferrari, Coors Light, and Home Depot. Justin's latest project has four walls and a roof. And that's not the title to an HBO doc series at least not yet! --Co-Production House was founded by Justin Kirchhoff, Kristina Smith, and Keller Davis who saw a need for a creative space that also supports community growth. This one-of-a-kind studio and coworking space is a place where professionals can grow their businesses through collaboration with the added benefits of creative community support, business development, and networking events designed to improve the growth of the creative film and media community.

Innovación Sin Barreras
#027: ¿Cómo conseguir tu co-fundador técnico? con Andrés Barreto

Innovación Sin Barreras

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 40:36


En el episodio de hoy tenemos como invito a Andrés Barreto, Managing Director de Techstars Boulder Accelerator, el programa original de la aceleradora Techstars fundado en el 2007 y que ha ayudado a más de 150 empresas a llevar sus negocios al siguiente nivel, las cuales sumadas han logrado levantar más de mil millones de dólares en capital. Antes de esto, Andrés ha sido inversionista y emprendedor en Firstrock Capital, Socialatom Group, Grooveshark, PulsoSocial y Onswipe. A través de Socialatom Group, ha construido e invertido en más de 85 compañías. También es fundador de Coderise, una organización sin fines de lucro que enseña a jóvenes de entre 14 y 18 años a programar en países emergentes. Además, ha sido reconocido por BusinessWeek como un top 25 menor a 25, por MIT Tech Review como un Top 10 Innovador menor a 35 y por Inc Magazine como un Top 30 menor 30.En este episodio hemos conversado con Andrés sobre cómo encontrar un co-fundador técnico para una startup. Una temática que frecuentemente surge en conversaciones que tengo con emprendedores. A través de la experiencia emprendedora e inversionista de Andrés, compartiremos los mejores consejos para atraer este tan importante talento hacia las startups.¡Espero que el episodio de hoy sea de tu agrado!EnlacesLinkedIn de Andrés Barreto.Página web de Techstars Boulder AcceleratorEntrevista: “Por qué es mejor iniciar una empresa con un problema y no con una idea”, en Pulso SocialTemasEl “Give first” mindset (05:59)¿Cómo consigo a mi Co-fundador técnico? (09:43)La importancia de fijar tiempos de fundraising (18:10)Criterios para conseguir un o una co-founder (19:10)¿Dónde conocer a un co-fundador? (19:56)¿Cómo convencer a una persona que sea tu Co-Founder? (23:37)La importancia del timing para comprometer a un potencial cofounder (28:44)¿Te gustó este episodio? Compártelo

Patrick's Green Tea Podcast
Patrick's Green Tea Podcast Ep 7-29-2020: The Grooveshark Origins

Patrick's Green Tea Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 42:05


Patrick talks about his friends' opposing music tastes, his New York side quests, and the confusing camera turn terms.  ////  www.patricksgreentea.com  patricksgreentea@gmail.com  https://www.patreon.com/patricksgreentea  Available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, YouTube, Stitcher, SoundCloud, & TuneIn  Instagram: @patricksgreenteapodcast  Twitter: @patrickgreentea  Twitch & Bandcamp: patricksgreentea  Discord Server: https://discord.gg/b8cr4Ax  /r/PatricksGreenTea 

Rebuild
282: We Need More C++ Programmers (hak)

Rebuild

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2020 157:10


Hakuro Matsuda さんをゲストに迎えて、Apple Watch, iPad Air, PS5, RTX 3080, Facebook Connect, TENET などについて話しました。 Show Notes SAMURAI Defender Apple Events - September 2020 Apple Watch Series 6: First Run Accuracy & SpO2 Sensor Data Fitbit SpO2 face makes tracking blood oxygen level easy Peloton 4K YouTube videos still not compatible with tvOS 14, picture-in-picture removed from website YouTube Music to allow casting uploads to smart speakers Rebuild: 258: Sushi is Fundamentally Scalable (hak) The all-new Xbox Series S | Xbox PlayStation 5 showcase GeForce RTX 3080 Graphics Card Nvidia is acquiring Arm for $40 billion Facebook Connect John Carmack Unscripted Live Keynote John Carmack - Special Horizon Chat || Facebook Connect iOSDC Japan 2020 Amazon Music now has podcasts Grooveshark SportCount スポーツカウント TENET ナガの映画の果てまで Christopher Nolan’s Tenet, explained by the Sator square 人麻呂の暗号 Violet Evergarden 『山本さほ展』 – VOID LG 48型 OLED 48CXPJA

ProColombia
Andrés Barreto, CEO y Fundador de SocialAtom Group, Embajador de Industrias 4.0

ProColombia

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2020 6:20


En este episodio les presentamos a Andrés Barreto Campo, colombiano CEO y fundador de SocialAtom, una empresa de asesoría e inversión privada que ha invertido 8 millones de dólares y apalancado 90 millones para su portafolio de emprendedores. Andrés es también fundador de Grooveshark- un servicio para escuchar música, de Pulso Social - el primer blog de emprendimiento y tecnología de América Latina y de Onswipe,- una plataforma de publicación y publicidad en tabletas. La revista technology review de la universidad MIT reconoció a Andrés Barreto como uno de los 10 mejores emprendedores menores de 35 años de Colombia.

Aquí & Ahora (El TecnoLatino Habla)
Andrés Barreto (Socialatom, Grooveshark, PulsoSocial) & Juan Pablo Cappello (PAG Law)

Aquí & Ahora (El TecnoLatino Habla)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2020 37:07


“Aquí y ahora con Juan Pablo Cappello y Andrés Barreto.   Andrés ha participado en TecnoLatino desde todos los ángulos.   Un inversionista semilla y fundador de Firstrock Capital, Socialatom Group, Grooveshark, PulsoSocial y Onswipe. Con Socialatom Group, ha construido o invertido en más de 45 empresas diveras.  Ha sido reconocido como” Los primeros 25 menores de 25 de BusinessWeek y los 10 principales innovadores menores de 35 de MIT Tech Review.Dentro del mundo de la tecnología Juan Pablo es conocido como uno de los socios de Patagon.com, compañía que fue comprada por el Banco Santander por más de de US$700 millones.  Juan Pablo publica una reconocida columna sobre el TecnoLatino https://latamlist.com/author/jpcappello/ y sigue asesorando emprendedores de la región desde el estudio jurídico PAGLaw https://www.pag.lawAquí y ahora pregunta: Qué están haciendo y qué hacen y qué piensan los líderes del TecnoLatino “aquí & ahora” sobre los cambios que estamos viviendo?  Aquí y ahora ofrece tips para los emprendedores, los inversionistas y los hinchas del TecnoLatino.  Auspiciado por PAG.Law

Troca o Disco
Troca o Disco #31: Assinar ou não um serviço de streaming?

Troca o Disco

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2019 74:40


Os serviços de streaming vem crescendo e ganhando cada vez mais espaço no mercado de música digital no mundo inteiro. Aclamados por uns e odiados por outros, o fato é que esses serviços nos oferecem uma praticidade nunca antes experienciada, chegando a convencer até mesmo os mais conservadores colecionadores de álbuns a assinarem. Por um valor que cabe no bolso, milhares e milhares de músicas podem ser reproduzidas tanto em seu computador quanto em seu smartphone pelo mundão afora. Entrando em uma briga feia contra a pirataria, esses serviços contribuem para que os artistas também embolsem uma parcela dessa grana referente aos direitos autorais por cada reprodução.Neste episódio João Paulo, Henrique Machado e Bruno Hiago bateram um papo sobre os serviços mais populares de streaming no Brasil, quais as principais diferenças entre eles e o que cada um traz de melhor, tentando responder assim a pergunta que com certeza está na cabeça de muitos musiqueiros por aí: Assinar ou não um serviço de Streaming?

Grammar Matters and Stuff That Isn't Funny

All units, be on the lookout for this fugitive ep! After an art heist gone wrong, Mat and Tim are on the run, so they have some advice to share on how to avoid the cops (4:30). Then they seize the moment to discuss anti-Irish sentiment that persists even in 2019 (23:15), before diving into chapter 4 through 6 of "Girl, Wash Your Face" (39:10)! Perception is reality, baby!BOOK CLUB BUDS: We invite you to read chapters 7, 8, and 9 in preparation for next week's episode.Today's sponsor: GrooveShark

Setlist
20 years of CMU - The rise and fall of Grooveshark

Setlist

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2018 28:30


To celebrate CMU’s 20th birthday, over the next year we will present 20 special editions of Setlist, between them reviewing the 20 biggest stories CMU has covered over the last two decades. This week, the rise and fall of Grooveshark, which had big plans to take on the streaming market by becoming "the YouTube of audio", but ended up being sued into oblivion by the major labels. Setlist is sponsored by 7digital.

Zack Miller Says
JD Graffam :: Simple Focus :: 083

Zack Miller Says

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2018 52:07


JD Graffam is a builder and a buyer. Graffam built Simple Focus from the ground up helping brands like Grooveshark and the US Air Force become stronger through better user experience. After years of building up his Memphis-based agency, Graffam began buying software businesses and putting his Simple Focus swing on them. http://simplefocus.com/ In this episode: What you can leverage from McDonalds in your business The elements involved in an elevator pitch Before creating anything new follow these steps: Articulate the goals before you start Did you hear the news? I got a book deal with a New York Publishing House. The book is called, Anomaly: How To Finally Stand Out From The Crowd. If you want the best deals and early access head to our Kickstarter campaign and grab a level: https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/zackmiller/anomaly-how-to-finally-standout-from-the-crowd/ Welcome to the 1000 Four Show, where Zack Miller gets to the heart of what really makes successful entrepreneurs and business community leaders tick. Hang on for this non-scripted, deep dive on how people succeed. Whether you're a company starter or community builder, learn from the best on the 1000 Four Show and get results. http://www.startwithhatch.com/1000-four-show

The Creative Hustler Podcast
Using Quizzes in Online Marketing

The Creative Hustler Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2018 26:24


Today, Steven, Melissa & Alan recap Tuesday's interview with Josh Haynam, the Co-founder of Interact Quiz Builder.   [00:33] What's up Creative Hustlers! [00:54] We're in the Creative Hustler World Studio! [01:22] Going forward, Steven may be doing more interviews solo! [02:08] Now we're doing recaps digitally, instead of in person! [02:44] A little about Josh Haynam. [03:28] Coding is like a learning a language. [04:25] What should we name our Consulting business? [04:56] Boston Latin is one of the oldest in the country. [05:23] Josh was 19 and building websites and coding. [05:55] 30,000 businesses were using Interactive Quiz Builder now. [06:40] Best ideas come from solving a problem. [07:50] Quizzes are as important as memes these days! [08:38] Where is the benefit of quizzes in the online strategy? [09:40] Quizzes boost interaction on facebook! [10:35] Quizzes are good for brand awareness campaign. [12:00] Using quizzes for retargeting campaigns. [13:00] Josh is very purposeful with his day. [13:40] What happens when the shit hits the fan? [14:37] Josh's tips for when the shit hits the fan! [15:00] Tip 1: Transparency. [15:22] Alan's thoughts on transparency. [17:00] Story about GrooveShark. [18:00] If you have loyalty, you have good employees. [19:20] When you are transparent, it can be a rally call! [19:47] Tip 2 from Josh: Talk to people smarter than you! [21:00] Everyone needs someone to talk to and get advice from. [22:30] Josh takes the time to know the world around him. [23:00] New Quiz: What kinda sauce are you? #MomentofItalian [24:30] Sauce or Gravy? [25:05] Check out Peter Scincotti's episode! [25:26] Check out Josh's website! [25:30] Visit the Creative Hustler on Facebook, Instagram, Twitter and leave a review! [25:57] Melissa's Moment of Hustle Contact: Twitter.com/jhaynam https://www.linkedin.com/in/jhaynam/ Website: tryinteract.com

StartUp Podcast
Dear Music Fans… (REBROADCAST)

StartUp Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2017 54:51


When a group of college kids in Florida set out to change the music industry, they did not anticipate how disruptive they would be. Their mission was a noble one: bring an end to online piracy by offering cheap, convenient, and legal access to music. Their execution, however, was less than thorough. And when you’re dealing with protective music labels, forgetting to dot an “i” or cross a “t” can mean being one lawsuit away from the swift and unceremonious collapse of your company. This is the story of Grooveshark, the people who built it, and the relationships that were tested during its rocky road to growth—and its eventual demise.

ConvoLIFE
Episode 6 - Stepping Into The Future.

ConvoLIFE

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2017


Dave and David looking for their DeLoreanLooking into the future can be daunting - but is unavoidable for the leader.ReferencesRomans 8:19 talks about the creation waiting with eager longing for the revealing of the sons of God. It provides an orientation towards the future of eager longing rather than that fearfulness that so often comes first to mind.The foundation of confidence can be found in Malachi 3:6 which simply starts with “I the Lord do not change.” - God's faithful character underlying whatever it is that we encounter. Our God is like a great Greek unmoved mover – he has a great reliable constancy of character. He is not capricious.He is not playing with us.God has got purposes in mind and he is moving things to accomplish. And in that there is a constancy of loving faithfulness that we can count on and that's a really foundational resource that believers can respect when they're looking at questions of leadership, innovation and entrepreneurship: the resource of a faithful God leading us into the future.Trumps Tweets distil the quintessence of volatility. One man's tweets. A hundred forty four characters at 2:00 a.m. in the morning can bring the world to perilous times around nuclear war.I can lie in my own bed at some wee hours of the morning sleepless because I'm reading feed from a person on the other side of the world. You know it's all connected and it's fast and that is a key contributor to the complexity of what we faceAmbiguity: there are so many possible ways of interpreting the unfolding of the future, or the unfolding of the present into the future, or how many ways you can read the present and what it might possibly portend the future.In this complex world, how do I lead in and feel any confidence that going down this route will be fruitful and life giving for the system that I'm working in, be that a church context or a business contex?The future is the next assured piece of God's story of his unfolding purposes. Future is a lot like history because God has shown us who he is and how he works. Does that mean it's predictable. No. But it is nevertheless a place of safety and of confidence for those who travel along with God.“Underneath are the everlasting arms. The eternal God is your refuge”. Not just hang onto it by your fingernails,  but let Him be the centre and font from which we work.Dietrich Bonhoeffer knew he had to keep proceeding as God's man in a mad situation. And he took great comfort from the fact that he knew that he could never act without sin and without grace being a necessary part of the way that he was accepted in in God.Future Shock - Alvin Toffler (1970)VUCA - volatility, uncertainty, complexity, ambiguity. That's a shorthand that is used routinely now in business literature about the nature of the change context that we face.The story of GrooveShark and Spotify (Start Up Podcast from Gimlet Media)Listen here

Café debug seu podcast de tecnologia

Música: New Radicals - you get what you give Assuntos abordados: Quais são os serviços Streaming ? Streaming vídeo (Netflix, Amazon Prime Video, HBOGo e Youtube)? Streaming música (Spotify, Deezer, GrooveShark, Rara, Rdio e Soundcloud)? Streaming cursos online (Alura, Udemy, Udacity etc)? Infraestrutura e custos para empresa Lei sobre Imposto Sobre imposto Serviço para straming Links: https://aws.amazon.com/pt/streaming-data/ ttp://sao-paulo.estadao.com.br/noticias/geral,doria-cria-imposto-para-netflix-spotity-e-outros-servicos-online,70002009054

El Siglo 21 es Hoy
YouTube no será copiado a MP3‬

El Siglo 21 es Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2017 15:35


‪** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com

• El siglo 21 es hoy •
YouTube no será copiado a MP3‬

• El siglo 21 es hoy •

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2017 15:35


‪** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com
YouTube no será copiado a MP3‬

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2017 15:35


‪** Consejo: acelera la velocidad del reproductor para oír este podcast más rápido ** http://ElSiglo21esHoy.comLa RIAA es la Asociación de la industria de la grabación en Estados Unidos, Recording Industry Asocistion of America. Y han demandado hasta presionar el cierre del motor de copias en Internet YouTube-MP3.orgEso no es nada para lo que puede hacer esa asociación que defiende los intereses y derechos adquiridos por las discográficas, que siguen en el negocio de obtener ganancias de cada vez que oímos una pieza musical. RIAA también demandó en 2004 a cientos de usuarios particulares que descargaron música por aquella época de Kazaa, de Gnutella y servicios de archivos compartidos vía P2P. No hace mucho, en 2015, lograron cerrar la plataforma Aurous y de Grooveshark. Se calcula que en la época más fuerte de miles de demandas individuales al año, entre 2004 y 2008 RIAA pagó 64 millones de dólares a los abogados que lograron recaudar 1,4 millones de los demandados. Una plataforma más cierra entonces. Otra muy importante, Keepvid, ahora cobra suscripción para descargar MP3. Y quedan estas otras para extraer los audios:Peggo TheYouMP3VidToMp3Anything2Mp3ClipConverterSaveFromYTMP3Óyelo en el episodio podcast. __________________Esta publicación aparece primero en ElSiglo21esHoy.com __________________Sígueme en:*TWITTER* http://Twitter.com/LocutorCo*INSTAGRAM* http://Instagram.com/LocutorCo*APPLE PODCASTS* http://apple.co/2p0Ob09*BLOG* http://ElTiempo.ElSiglo21esHoy.com*WEB* http://ElSiglo21esHoy.com

Listing Bits
Tyler Gordon, Agent Inbox CEO, talks Building the Real Estate Messaging Infrastructure

Listing Bits

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2017 20:45


Henry Ford is credited with saying, ‘If I had asked people what they wanted, they would have said faster horses.’ True innovation provides you with the tools you didn’t even know you needed. Today’s guest understands the challenges of the real estate industry, and he created a platform that provides a unique solution tailored to the work we do. A solution that will make you wonder how you ever did without!   Tyler Gordon is the CEO and Founder of Agent Inbox, an all-in-one communications platform that empowers MLSs to launch a market-wide platform that allows every agent to communicate with every other agent about any listing, from any device, within any product. Agent Inbox seeks to build the messaging infrastructure so that everyone involved in the real estate transaction (including vendors) can effectively communicate via one system.   After graduating from the University of Florida with a degree in finance, Gordon went to work for Grooveshark, an on-demand streaming music service, where he built their data products and market research team, boasting a research panel of over 300,000 participants. From there, he joined the family business, a real estate brokerage in south Florida. Realizing just how difficult it was to be a real estate agent, Gordon set out to solve some of the problems he encountered – and Agent Inbox was born. Today, Gordon explains the nuts and bolts of Agent Inbox, sharing how the tool works with any app under the MLS umbrella. Listen and learn the benefits of a single communication system that connects all the stakeholders involved in the real estate transaction! What’s Discussed:  The shift in how people communicate Agents have migrated away from phone/email The idea behind Agent Inbox Create market-wide messaging platform Every agent can communicate with every other agent The installation of Agent Inbox Integrated directly into MLS link App is available to download, but not necessary to use the service How to access Agent Inbox How the Agent Inbox infrastructure might be used to include other industry stakeholders MLS Association Vendors The benefits of Agent Inbox Sits on top of any product in MLS Allows for live, contextual conversation How Agent Inbox was conceived The trend toward specialized products Where Agent Inbox is already up and running The user-friendly nature of Agent Inbox The benefits of messaging (vs. email) 99% of people open, 95% respond Socially acceptable to wait several days before responding to email   Resources: Intercom Customer Messaging Platform Slack Team Messaging Connect with Tyler Gordon: Agent Inbox Email tyler@agentinbox.com

The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life
He Quit Google To Invent Smart Way to Recruit, Doing Around $50k/mo in Sales, EP 272: Troy Sultan

The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2016 18:48


Troy Sultan, founder and CEO of Resource, a company that’s trying to automate the recruitment process. Troy was the first recruitment officer at Grooveshark, and later left Google to return to his passion: startups. Listen as Troy and Nathan talk about Troy’s career path, managing co-founders, and why you shouldn’t rely on venture capital. Famous 5 Favorite Book? – The War of Art What CEO do you follow? — Gary Swart What is your favorite online tool? — Mixmax Do you get 8 hours of sleep?— No If you could let your 20 year old self know one thing, what would it be? — Slow down to speed up. And think about what you’re really good at. Time Stamped Show Notes: 01:10 – Nathan’s introduction 01:30 – Welcoming Troy to the show 01:47 – Troy founded a startup out of college, then joined early Grooveshark 02:10 – Grooveshark got sued for $17 billion 02:40 – Troy went into hiring at Google in 2013 03:00 – Built a startup in the last year of college - “we made every mistake” 04:00 – Decided to work with Grooveshark to learn about startup success 04:30 – Google was the next stage: seeing how a big company worked 05:00 – Lessons from Google? - “A lot of delegation is happening” 05:13 – The quality of your experience at a big company depends on your manager 05:26 – Troy then started Resource 05:54 – Part of the 500 Startups accelerator 06:06 – 5% equity; $125k investment 06:20 – 3 team members 06:33 – Trying to split equity equally, but people came on at different stages 07:00 – If everyone’s going to provide equal value, try to keep it equal 07:30 – “I don’t want to co-found a company with someone who’s not picking up where I’m weak” 08:05 – Charge a monthly flat rate of $5-8.5k for services. Month-by-month opt-in model 08:38 – Doing tens of thousands in revenue per month 09:10 – Customers “in the low double digits” 09:30 – Creating a hiring solution that’s part-human, part-software 09:54 – Most acquisitions are coming through social credibility 10:20 – No spending on marketing at the moment 10:40 – Not a SaaS company - they’re not looking at churn 11:00 – MRR varies depending on when people are hiring 11:50 – “If we do a good job, we get rid of customers...but hopefully they come back” 12:25 – Troy’s trying to hack his way to the next checkpoint 12:50 – In a good month Resource makes $50k in revenue 13:00 – Operating profitably - margins are good 13:30 – “We don’t want to rely on venture capital early on” 13:50 – Connect with Troy on Twitter or through his blog 15:20 – Famous Five 3 Key Points: Slow down to speed up. It can be worth putting your short-term goals on hold to go corporate for a while and learn from the masters Be certain that your business can make a profit on its own terms. If you rely on venture capital early on, you can go a long way with a bad idea. Choose your co-founders carefully. If they’re not going to bring serious value, they’re probably not who you want to start a company with. Resources Mentioned: Freshbooks - The site Nathan uses to manage his invoices and accounts. Host Gator – The site Nathan uses to buy his domain names and hosting for cheapest price possible. Leadpages – The drag and drop tool Nathan uses to quickly create his webinar landing pages which convert at 35%+ Audible – Nathan uses Audible when he's driving from Austin to San Antonio (1.5 hour drive) to listen to audio books. Show Notes provided by Mallard Creatives  

Lost & Rewound
Extras - Estrogen

Lost & Rewound

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2016 10:11


A little something that didn't make it to broadcast! Claire came on the show initially to talk about some mixes via Grooveshark that she and her husband Alan made for each other when they first started dating. Though she did record a lot of them on tape, the playback on one in particular she meant to share didn't quite work. Luckily though, if you're on Spotify, you can download it: https://play.spotify.com/user/cmeyer89/playlist/5pqIyPwffdqNkhlWQq87TF Open question: If you had to make a Seven Deadly Sins mix, what songs would you put on it?

StartUp Podcast
Dear Music Fans...

StartUp Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2016 54:35


When a group of college kids in Florida set out to change the music industry, they did not anticipate quite how disruptive they would be. Their mission was a noble one: bring an end to online piracy by offering cheap, convenient, and legal access to music. Their execution, however, was less than thorough. And when you're dealing with protective music labels, forgetting to dot an "i" or cross a "t" can mean being one lawsuit away from the swift and unceremonious death of your company. This is the story of Grooveshark, the people who built it and the relationships that were tested during its rocky road to growth—and eventual demise.

Los Imparables | Para que te motives | La increíble historia detrás de los emprendedores

Un joven que a sus 18 años, en su primer año de universidad, nunca se imaginó que estaba creando uno de los portales de streaming de música más importantes del mundo. El es Andrés Barreto, uno de los creadores de Grooveshark y varias empresas más que han sido un éxito en el mundo de la tecnología.

The Drill Down
386: Space Invaders

The Drill Down

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 24, 2015 108:03


This week, Reddit lays down the law, drones hinder rescue efforts, a cheating site gets hacked, an exploit to hijack a car remotely, Prof. Stephen Hawking joins the search for ET ... and much much more What We're Playing With Andy: Amazon Prime Day Dwayne: Ubuntu Headlines New Reddit rules will crack down on some hate communities, leave others standing Reddit CEO Steve Huffman: Let's talk content. AMA Nothing Ever Changes At Reddit Grooveshark co-founder, 28, found dead in home Drones interfere with wildfire-fighting efforts in Los Angeles Audible Book of the Week Bonk: The Curious Coupling of Science and Sex by Mary Roach Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: It Wasn't Me by Shaggy (ft. Rik Rok) Hot Topics Hulu Explores Adding Ad-Free Option to Its Service With Ad Blocking Use On The Rise, What Happens To Online Publishers? Online Cheating Site AshleyMadison Hacked Hackers remotely gain partial control of a Jeep Cherokee on the highway using vulnerability found in 1000s of Chryslers Music Break: Rapture by Blondie Final Words Stephen Hawking announces $100 million hunt for alien life The Drill Down Videos of the Week Star Wars: The Old Republic mini movie (all cinematics) PIXELS by Patrick JEAN Drill Bits 23 Movie & TV Subplots That Were A Total Waste Of Your Time Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan.

Canaltech Podcast
Drops Canaltech - 20/07/15

Canaltech Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2015 5:17


Suporte de 10 anos no Windows 10; Lançamento do Galaxy Tab S2; Cortana deve chegar no W10 em 2015; PayPal passa eBay na bolsa; Novo personagem de Street Fighter V; Morte do cofundador do Grooveshark.

SuicideByStar
SuicideByStar #02: Post PS15, futuros lanzamientos y plataformas de streaming

SuicideByStar

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2015 108:19


Lo prometido es deuda, y aquí está el segundo capítulo de nuestro podcast. En este capítulo hablamos de: - Lo que más nos gustó del Primavera Sound 2015. - Que esperamos de algunos lanzamientos futuros: Tool, Deftones, Refused, Explosions In The Sky, Mutoid Man, Brand New, etc. - La actualidad de las plataformas de streaming: Tidal, Spotify, Apple Music, Grooveshark, etc. Además con temazos de Death From Above 1979, Faunts, Mutoid Man, Brand New, Chelsea Wolfe, etc. ¡A disfrutar!

Bobby Owsinski's Inner Circle Podcast
Episode #58 – Grooveshark, Pop Music Study, and Musician and Entrepreneur Scott Page

Bobby Owsinski's Inner Circle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2015 56:24


News: - Grooveshark shut down but came back as Grooveshark.io - New study on Billboard Top 100 discovering the 3 eras of pop music. Interview: - Musician and entrepreneur Scott Page.  Find out more about Scott here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Page

Bobby Owsinski's Inner Circle Podcast
Episode #58 – Grooveshark, Pop Music Study, and Musician and Entrepreneur Scott Page

Bobby Owsinski's Inner Circle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2015 56:24


News: – Grooveshark shut down but came back as Grooveshark.io – New study on Billboard Top 100 discovering the 3 eras of pop music. Interview: – Musician and entrepreneur Scott Page.  Find out more about Scott here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scott_Page The post Episode #58 – Grooveshark, Pop Music Study, and Musician and Entrepreneur Scott Page appeared first on Bobby Owsinski's Inner Circle Podcast.

JoeRess Podcast
JoeRess Podcast #11

JoeRess Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2015 74:03


Ex Machina and existentialism Subscribe to the podcast RSS feed   News & discussion points Grooveshark arms race. Somewhat alive for now. Would you take a pill that allows you to live to 10000? 3D printed skin Ex Machina Computer AI passes Turing test in ‘world first’ (Kryten’s opinion)   Isaac’s podcast list Linux Luddites … Continue reading "JoeRess Podcast #11"

Piratas de Tierra del Fuego
Versión 1.2: Home Alone

Piratas de Tierra del Fuego

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2015 35:49


Dedicamos unos minutos del comienzo para homenajear la memoria de Grooveshark y los hermosos momentos que pasamos juntos #Blessed. Seguimos adelante con una extensa charla sobre domótica: tecnología aplicada al hogar que nos acerca cada día más a las casas inteligentes. También discutimos sus exhorbitantes precios y, de paso cañazo, Andrés aprovechó para recomendar la app m8 desarrollada por Appricot Germany para controlar los gastos. 

Bits & Pieces
15 - Come On Now Deepak Chopra, Make A Stand

Bits & Pieces

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2015 42:45


Grooveshark is back! Apple might be out to kill free music streaming, the Z-Tar is a strange midi guitar and much laughter is had about drugs at festivals and a curious lazy music generator.

Sunrise Robot - All Shows
Bits & Pieces #15 - Come On Now Deepak Chopra, Make A Stand

Sunrise Robot - All Shows

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2015 42:45


Grooveshark is back! Apple might be out to kill free music streaming, the Z-Tar is a strange midi guitar and much laughter is had about drugs at festivals and a curious lazy music generator.

The Drill Down
375: I've Got the Power

The Drill Down

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2015 81:40


This week, Grooveshark & Secret shut down, the Oculus Rift has a ship date, Tesla revolutionizes home energy, and a hostage situation defused by a pizza ... and much much more. What We're Playing With Andy, Dwayne, Tosin: Ready Player One Headlines Grooveshark Music Service Settles with Labels After Court Loss Social Networking App Secret Is Closing Down Fitbit files for $100 million IPO, shows big profits Oculus Rift virtual reality headset will ship in early 2016 Audible Book of the Week Elon Musk: Tesla, SpaceX, and the Quest for a Fantastic Future by Ashlee Vance Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: The Power by SNAP! Hot Topic: Tesla Energy Tesla launches Tesla Energy, new line of PowerWall and PowerPack batteries for homes and businesses Elon Musk Debuts the Tesla Powerwall Music Break: Electric Feel by MGMT Final Word Hostage saves herself via Pizza Hut app: “Please help. Get 911 to me.” The Drill Down Videos of the Week The Creator of "Ryan Gosling Won't Eat His Cereal" Died, and Ryan Gosling Ate Cereal in Tribute Black Widow (2016) Trailer Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan.

Esteri
Esteri di mercoledì 06/05/2015

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2015 29:36


1-Gran Bretagna: vigilia delle elezioni legislative. ..Tra Cameron e Miliband il perdente sicuro sarà lo stato sociale. ( Reportage di Roberto Festa) ..2-Nel 2014 raggiunta la cifra 38 milioni di sfollati...Sono le persone fuggite all'interno del proprio paese ..a causa di guerre e violenze. ..3-Ucraina: nuovo vertice a Minsk per salvare la tregua...Nelle ultime 24 ore, 5 soldati uccisi nel Dombass...4-Fronte nazionale, un partito pericoloso per il 60 % dei francesi. Ma le sue idee continuano ad avanzare. ..Il 52 % favorevole alla pena di morte. ..5-la Grecia paga i suoi debiti. ..Oggi rimborsati 200 milioni di euro al fondo monetario. ..Attesa per l'Eurogruppo di lunedì prossimo. ..6-Nepal: fuori Kathmandu la popolazione paga il prezzo della corruzione e della disorganizzazione..( Lorenza Ghidini – Lorenzo Cremonesi) ..7-Progetti sostenibili: logistica a basso impatto ambientale. Il caso olandese. ..8-Musica e nuove tecnologie: risorge la piattaforma ..Grooveshark. La chiusura era stata annunciata pochi giorni fa dopo un azione legale delle case discografiche. ....

Digital Strips
Episode 401: The Grooveshark Is Dead

Digital Strips

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2015 41:53


Sunrise Robot - All Shows
Bits & Pieces #14 - Gotta Lean In To That Signature

Sunrise Robot - All Shows

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2015 45:41


A new study suggests you will stop discovering new music around age 33, another company wants in on the premium cable snake oil game, we fly flags at half mast for the passing of Grooveshark, and how have orchestras been used to enhance songwriting in the past and today?

Bits & Pieces
14 - Gotta Lean In To That Signature

Bits & Pieces

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2015 45:41


A new study suggests you will stop discovering new music around age 33, another company wants in on the premium cable snake oil game, we fly flags at half mast for the passing of Grooveshark, and how have orchestras been used to enhance songwriting in the past and today?

Esteri
Esteri di mer 06/05

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2015 29:36


1-Gran Bretagna: vigilia delle elezioni legislative. ..Tra Cameron e Miliband il perdente sicuro sarà lo stato sociale. ( Reportage di Roberto Festa) ..2-Nel 2014 raggiunta la cifra 38 milioni di sfollati...Sono le persone fuggite all'interno del proprio paese ..a causa di guerre e violenze. ..3-Ucraina: nuovo vertice a Minsk per salvare la tregua...Nelle ultime 24 ore, 5 soldati uccisi nel Dombass...4-Fronte nazionale, un partito pericoloso per il 60 % dei francesi. Ma le sue idee continuano ad avanzare. ..Il 52 % favorevole alla pena di morte. ..5-la Grecia paga i suoi debiti. ..Oggi rimborsati 200 milioni di euro al fondo monetario. ..Attesa per l'Eurogruppo di lunedì prossimo. ..6-Nepal: fuori Kathmandu la popolazione paga il prezzo della corruzione e della disorganizzazione..( Lorenza Ghidini – Lorenzo Cremonesi) ..7-Progetti sostenibili: logistica a basso impatto ambientale. Il caso olandese. ..8-Musica e nuove tecnologie: risorge la piattaforma ..Grooveshark. La chiusura era stata annunciata pochi giorni fa dopo un azione legale delle case discografiche. ....

Discologist
Episode 115: Axis Mundi - Brown Bird / Never Were The Way She Was - Colin Stetson & Sarah Neufled

Discologist

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2015 81:32


This week on the podcast, we’re still talking about TIDAL, questionable streaming service Grooveshark bites the dust, and DC finally has their very big-time music festival. Will Landmark save the mall or unleash hordes of angry custies upon our nation’s capital? PLUS!!! We review the heartbreaking final album from Rhode Island’s Brown Bird, and take a trip into the surreal with the latest from sax-man Colin Stetson and Sarah Neufeld (Arcade Fire). It’s the only podcast you’ll hear this that features a Henrietta Porkchop – it’s Episode 115 of ChunkyGlasses: The Podcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Esteri
Esteri di mer 06/05

Esteri

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2015 29:36


1-Gran Bretagna: vigilia delle elezioni legislative. ..Tra Cameron e Miliband il perdente sicuro sarà lo stato sociale. ( Reportage di Roberto Festa) ..2-Nel 2014 raggiunta la cifra 38 milioni di sfollati...Sono le persone fuggite all'interno del proprio paese ..a causa di guerre e violenze. ..3-Ucraina: nuovo vertice a Minsk per salvare la tregua...Nelle ultime 24 ore, 5 soldati uccisi nel Dombass...4-Fronte nazionale, un partito pericoloso per il 60 % dei francesi. Ma le sue idee continuano ad avanzare. ..Il 52 % favorevole alla pena di morte. ..5-la Grecia paga i suoi debiti. ..Oggi rimborsati 200 milioni di euro al fondo monetario. ..Attesa per l'Eurogruppo di lunedì prossimo. ..6-Nepal: fuori Kathmandu la popolazione paga il prezzo della corruzione e della disorganizzazione..( Lorenza Ghidini – Lorenzo Cremonesi) ..7-Progetti sostenibili: logistica a basso impatto ambientale. Il caso olandese. ..8-Musica e nuove tecnologie: risorge la piattaforma ..Grooveshark. La chiusura era stata annunciata pochi giorni fa dopo un azione legale delle case discografiche. ....

Geeks and Beats
The Bank Awakens

Geeks and Beats

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2015 41:05


Star Wars: The Bank Awakens — the film is expected to rake-in as much as 2-billion at the box office. Got a cat and an iPod? We’ll look at the science of music for your kitty cat. Grooveshark goes down the tubes — we’ll look at how a 730-million dollar lawsuit can put a crimp in your piracy plans. Plus — Leisure Suit Larry in the Land of the Lounge Lizards returns from the 80s and why you might want to hit control-alt-delete before your next flight. The post The Bank Awakens appeared first on The Geeks and Beats Podcast with Alan Cross and Michael Hainsworth.

Geeks Interrupted
Episode #105: 4th May 2015

Geeks Interrupted

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2015 121:51


Phil Edwards and Daniel Olivares are back in the studio with this week's look at all things Geek. Show Notes: What is The Button? And will it ever not be pressed? [The Guardian] Me and my metadata: How I beat Telstra after my 22-month legal battle [The Age] TPG pipes in a winner against NBN in court case [iTWire] Victorian govt to encrypt all police radios [iTnews] Dave Goldberg, Head of Web Survey Company and Half of a Silicon Valley Power Couple, Dies at 47 [The New York Times] Elon Musk unveils Tesla Powerwall batteries to 'change the world' [Mashable] Music streaming service Grooveshark shuts down [VentureBeat] Controversial anonymous networking app Secret to close down [The Guardian] Twitter's Stock Tanks After Its Earnings Leak... on Twitter [Wired] Meerkat adds Facebook support as it moves away from Twitter [The Verge] Google wants to buy your patents before the trolls get to them [Quartz] Watch John Oliver make fun of patent trolls on 'Last Week Tonight' [Business Insider Australia] Microsoft: With Windows Continuum, any phone can be your PC [CNET] Apple Confirms Tattoos Can Interfere With Apple Watch's Heart Rate Sensor [Re/code] Apple didn't top its record profit, but business continues to roar [The Verge] Apple now makes more money from Macs than iPads [The Verge] What's the deal with Seinfeld and Hulu? [Laughspin] UK Sci-Fi Comedy Red Dwarf Gets Not One, But Two New Seasons [Gizmodo Australia] Stan is first streaming service in Australia to commission local series with No Activity [SMH] Logies 2015: The Project's Carrie Bickmore wins Gold Logie, uses speech to call for greater awareness of brain cancer [ABC News] Logies 2015: Live Logies still fails in the ratings [SMH] Something we mentioned in the show but missing in the Show Notes? Let us know via our Contact Page. Songs We Played: Vance Joy - "Riptide" [iTunes] Hozier - "Take Me To Church" [iTunes] Catatonia - "Mulder And Scully" [iTunes] Propellerheads - "Spybreak!" [iTunes] Jamiroquai - "Virtual Insanity" [iTunes] Cherlene & Kenny Loggins - "Danger Zone" [iTunes] Questions, Comments, Feedback and Suggestions are all welcome. Website - http://geeksinterrupted.fm Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/GeeksInterrupted Twitter - https://twitter.com/GeeksOnAir Voicemail - http://www.speakpipe.com/GeeksInterrupted If you enjoyed this episode head on over to iTunes and kindly leave us a rating, a review and subscribe.

FrequencyCast UK Tech Radio Show
FrequencyCast UK Show 111: Gadget Show Live 2015, Apple Watch and Grooveshark

FrequencyCast UK Tech Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2015 30:48


For Show 111, Kelly and Pete travel to Gadget Show Live in Birmingham, where we explore HP Sprout, powered paper planes and a 3D pen. Kelly also gets musical with fruit, we find a free home security app and try to end lag with a NETDUMA router. Plus your questions on voice recording and home smart meters. Details at https://www.frequencycast.co.uk/cast111.html

Hagamos una Podcast
Episodio 027

Hagamos una Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2015 23:21


Asustin y Eduardo hablan de la muerte de Grooveshark, mods de paga en Steam, Dragon Ball, Tesla energy y cómo Microsoft es cool otra vez (hologramaaaaaas)

Entertainment Law Update
A honeybadger and a grooveshark went to band camp …

Entertainment Law Update

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2014 67:37


  Entertainment Law Update is brought to you by Clio, the best way to manage your practice online. Clio allows you to manage your  matters, clients, time, bills, trust accounts and more all through a a secure, easy-to-use, web-based interface. … Read the rest The post A honeybadger and a grooveshark went to band camp … appeared first on Entertainment Law Update.

Der Übercast
#UC014: Faul und Doof

Der Übercast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2014 88:26


Während dieser ausgedehnten Flugstunde widmet das Trio sich dem Problem der Faulheit beim Bedienen einer Computer-Tastatur. Was käme da gelegener als den hervorragenden und emsigen Herrn TextExpander die Arbeit für sich machen zu lassen. Unsere drei Piloten geben Einsteigertipps und tauschen sich aus über Tipps und Kniffe im Umgang mit der App. Aber zu allem Unglück wäre diese Episode fast das endgültige Ende des Übercasts geworden. Doch am Ende soll ein sportlicher Wettkampf in der nächsten Folge wieder alle Engel auf derselben Wolke tanzen lassen. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Die heutige Episode von Der Übercast wird exklusive unterstützt von: LearnOmniFocus.com – LearnOmniFocus.com bietet ausführliche Artikel, Video-Tutorials und auch live Web-Learning Sessions für OmniFocus 2 auf Mac und iOS. Benutzt den Code “DERUBERCAST” um 20% Rabatt zu bekommen. Überbleibsel Andreas widmet sich noch einmal den akustischen Strömungen und hat sich in der letzten Woche gefragt: “Wie sieht’s eigentlich mit ‘deutscheren’ Alternativen aus?” Sein Bummelzug durchs Internet hat ihn irgendwie zu Grooveshark gebracht, die wiederum verweisen auf Simfy. Dazu fragt sich Andreas noch, ob die Telekom auch irgendwas eigenes in der pinken Hinterhand hat, und, ob Simfy oder Telekom überhaupt was taugen. Sven betrachtet den Service als Anwohner des “dritten Untergeschosses” was Streaming-Dienste angeht. Ob das so stimmt kann keiner wirklich sagen, die Redaktion verweist deshalb einfach mal auf die bestehende Statistik: Simfy gibt an über 20 Millionen Songs im Angebot zu haben, was durchaus an das Liedgut in den Angebotskatalogen der größeren Anbieter rankommt. Apropos Telekom. Sven ist heute ein klitzekleines bisschen in Meckerlaune und verkündet freimundig die “Bankrotterklärung” der deutschen Telekom… zumindest was Streaming-Dienste und Co. angeht, denn der rosa Riese hat gerade über die Hälfte der hauseigenen “Innovations”-Abteilung gekündigt und bekanntgegeben, dass nichts eigenes mehr gemacht wird, sondern verstärkt Kooperationen - wie auch aktuell mit Netflix - eingegangen werden. Überschallneuigkeiten Viel ist passiert. Die Zeit hat wieder ein paar Haare mehr auf den Zähnen bekommen. Einmal verbeugen bitte – die neuen Geräte und Updates sind da Um nicht aus dem Rhythmus zu kommen, was das Meckern und Kleckern angeht, fasst Pilot F. das Thema HASHTAG BENDGATE zusammen (Randnotiz: Wir sind modern beim Übercast, auch wenn die Flugmaschine alt ist, so kennen wir die vier Linien die die Herzen der Generation X höher schlagen lässt. Als Antipol der Alten schreiben wir das aus Protest aus… natürlich per Snippet). Er schüttelt den Kopf über die jugendlichen Bender und die Technikpresse, denn im Grunde sind keine 10 Leute davon betroffen. Die heiße Luft die durch die Presse hätte wohl auch ein Jahr lang gereicht, um die Perückensammlung der Redaktion trocken zu föhnen. Patrick als inoffizieller iPhone 6 Plus Tester verweist noch einmal auf die Seifenoper mit Apple und der Bildzeitung, welche nach ihrem sauber recherchierten Bentgate-Video von Apple keine Testgeräte und Event-Einladungen mehr bekommt. Um alles rund zu machen und zurechtzubiegen wird diese Neuigkeit offiziell von Berlin abgeschlossen, denn zu dem letzten Statement gibt’s auch noch das passende Webcomic aus der Hauptstadt: Link zum Bild: Comic von Vincent Kunert (aka lolnein.com) Ebenso dramatisch: Das iOS 8.0.1 ‘Updategate’, welches von uns zum Glück keiner miterlebt hat. Tipp hier von Sven, immer vor einem Update kurz die Twitter Timeline checken. Datenkraken-Alarm am Keyboard-ExtenSee… “ion” Diese Überschrift ist nicht nur der Platzhalter für die bisher schlechteste Tagline in den Show Notes, sondern auch die Überleitung zur nächsten fechnerischen Gewitterfront auf dem Radar: 3rd Party Keyboards in iOS 8 penetrieren/zerstören/betatschen eure Privatsphäre. Gut… der letzte Satz sollte zu 1/3 nach Bild klingen – mal will ja mit einer gewissen homogenität schreiben (siehe ↑). Zugegeben, ganz so heftig ist es nicht, aber man kann sich seine Gedanken machen und im besten Fall vor der Installation oder dem käuflichen Erwerb ja mal ein wenig nachbohren und recherchieren. So hat Sven sich aufgemacht und ein paar Datenschutzerklärungen der diversen Anbieter durchgelesen. Gerade bei Keyboards die versuchen euer Geschreibsel zu erraten werden oft Keylogger-Techniken angewandt und somit wandern die Daten an fremde Server weitergeben. Sven ist im Übrigen mit seinen Bedenken nicht alleine. Die Redaktion sieht’s jetzt salopp gesagt nicht ganz so drastisch, klar ist Vorsicht geboten, aber wenn das Keyboard der Knüller ist, kommt es auf das iPhone 2 und gut ist’s. Bei kritischen Passwort-Feldern werden die Drittanbieterkeyboards so oder so umgehend deaktiviert. Wer allerdings öfters nach “Kamelen in Netzstrümpfen” sucht, und wem genau das peinlich ist vor den ganzen digital-stalkenden Groß- und Kleinkonzernen, der darf noch einmal vor dem Gebrauch einer Extension fröhlich drauf losmeditieren, also forschen ob’s was zu beanstanden gibt am Objekt der Begierde. ♡♡♡ Unser Lieblings-Feature in iOS 8 ♡♡♡ Andreas sein Herzchen ist die Document Provider Integration für Dropbox, Box und Co. Es gibt zwar bisher kaum Anbieter, welche die Schnittstelle offiziell unterstützen, aber da wo es funktioniert sieht das ganze gut aus und macht Lust auf mehr – zum Beispiel bei Transmit oder bei Readdles Documents und PDF Expert app. Patrick als Ex-iPhone 5 Besitzer ist begeistert vom “Berühr-mich-sanft” Knopf seines neuen mobilen Handtelefons. Noch verzückter ist der Großgrundbesitzer einer 1920x1080 Pixel messenden digitalen Plantage von der neuen Touch ID Schnittstelle. Diese fordert nämlich nun öfters zum (ab)Segnen mit dem Daumen auf, da populäre Apps wie 1Password, Day One, Evernote und Screens (← Anmerkung Patrick: Es war Screens, nicht der Tumblr-Client) sich nun offiziell mit dem Segen von Apple um mehr Tuchfühlung bemühen dürfen. Lifehacker hat sogar noch ein paar Anwendungen mehr in Petto, welche die Geschichte bereits unterstützen. Touch ID und 1Password mögen sich auf Svens iPhone 6 nicht so oft wie er das gerne hätte. Es gibt wohl hier und da mal Probleme… und das trotz korrekter Einstellungen (Master-Passwort auf 30 Tage gesetzt = √). Andreas wittert da als passionierter Kritiker vor dem Herren seine Chance und erwähnt ganz am Rande mal die mangelnde Verschlüsselung beim zuvor von Sven hochgelobten Day One. Das alles hält Patrick nicht davon ab trotzdem Happy zu sein mit der Integration an sich. Das Parken von Email Entwürfen am unteren Bildschirmrand ist Svens ungeschlagener Favorit. Andreas gibt noch einen Tipp zum alten iOS zum besten, welchen sonst keiner hier kannte: Lange auf den “Neue Email” Knopf drücken und man bekommt automatisch seinen letzten Entwurf angezeigt. Die Redaktion hält sich da komplett raus, denn wer lieber Mail.app statt Dispatch nutzt, mit dem redet man ja am besten gar nicht…. Der Tipp von Andreas war so unbekannt, dass Sven nachschiebt, dass man eigentlich bei jeder neuen iOS Version mehr Sachen ausprobieren muss (fünffach tap, 10 Stunden halten, etc.), um so auch alle neuen Kniffe zu entdecken, die das nigelnagelneue OS so kann. Die Redaktion nimmt das zum Anlass, hiermit für die nächste Folge TEIL 2 unserer Lieblingsfeatures anzukündigen. Da das nun offiziell und unsterblich “auf der Linie” steht (sprich Online… den heute ist Tag der tollen Wortspiele), kann sich darum auch kein Pilot mehr drücken. Tschaka-Boom. NIXIE – Das Tor zur Hölle Patrick stöbert ja immer gerne nach Gadgets die es noch nicht gibt oder die neue Ideen zu Tage fördern. Heute im Programm, so unnötig es ist: Das erste tragbare Kamera die fliegen kann. NIXIE YouTube: Make It Wearable Finalists Wie schon angekündigt, hat Sven heute ein saures Hirse-Bonbon im Mund und mutmaßt, dass der Name wohl Programm ist. Und das hier fällt ihm auch noch aus der Lippe: Was ein grandioser SCHEIßDRECK! Sven Fechner Was der Hörer nicht weiß, an dieser Stelle wurde die Aufnahme unterbrochen, denn wüste Beleidigungen wurden aufgerufen und beide Piloten drohen dem jeweils Anderen an, aus dem Cockpit zu springen (ohne Fallschirm) und einen Podcast namens der ‘Uber-Ubercast’ beziehungsweise ‘Noch-Besser-Als-Der-Uber-Ubercast’ ins Leben zu rufen. Beide neuen Podcast sollen natürlich ebenfalls mit Andreas als Co-Pilot gesendet werden. Wutentbrannt wird gemeinsam die Entscheidung gefällt, das Projekt Ubercast umgehend einzustellen und nur noch diese Episode so halbwegs zu Ende zu bringen. Doch selbst dazu kommt es nicht, als Andreas einwirft, dass die Drone ja wenigsten thematisch zum Übercast passt, platzt Sven endgültig der Kragen. Er wirft Patrick an den Kopf, dass er seine Fluglizenz wohl im Lotto gewonnen hat und verlässt das Studio. Weit nach Mitternacht klingelt es in Berlin an Patricks Haustür und ein tränenüberströmter Andreas steht vor der Tür, welcher Patrick überzeugt, dass der Klügere nachzugeben hat, eben genau so wie es schon die Deutsche Nationalelf damals tat, als Nutella zum zwanzigsten Mal eine Sponsoringanfrage gestartet hat. Gemeinsam mit genügend Erdnussbutter und Schrippen ausgestattet schwingen sich beide auf das Tandem von Andreas und machen sich auf zurück ins Schwabenländle. Es ist mittlerweile 3:33 Uhr in der Früh und in der Villa Fechner wird Sturm geklopft an den Rollläden. Mit dicken aufgequollenen roten Augen, einer leeren Flasche Rotwein in der Linken, sowie einer fast leeren Flasche Port in der rechten Hand macht ihnen Sven auf. Alle drei Fallen sich um den Hals und beschließen das Der Übercast wieder fliegen muss. Happy End. … denkste… den an einem der Folgenden Tage postet Patrick unschuldig auf Twitter ein weiteres Fundstück, welches er sich als interessantes Automatisierungsutensil vorstellen könnte (… gerade auch als Bluetooth-Kopfhörer-Besitzer). Das ganze endet in folgendem Schlagabtausch: [View the story "Kollisionskurs – Teil 2"] Die Geweihe wurde also wieder gestoßen, am Ende hat man sich dann offline bei einem 8-stündigen Telefonat noch einmal ausgesprochen und wieder wiedervertragen², denn… am Folgetag soll die reguläre zuvor so harsch unterbrochene Aufnahme weitergeführt werden. Man einigt sich zähneknirschend, dass man ja Andreas nicht enttäuschen wolle. Muh! Fast eine Woche später darf Andreas also die letzte Neuigkeit des Fluges verkünden, und zwar dass der Markdown Editor Mou nun offen für Crowdfunding ist und so die Version 1.0 erreichen will. Da er so lange Zeit hatte sich eine grandiose Überleitung zu überlegen, ist diese auch entsprechend gut geworden. Respekt dafür (siehe Titel dieser Sektion). Wohin? Giveaway Na dahin: Lars (apfelartig) on App.net Andreas Harms (@harmsi79) @funtomic Herzlichen Glückwunsch ihr drei. TE SPACE SPACE => TextExpander »Schatz, wir müssen expandieren!« Nachdem Sven erklärt hat, was das Objekt der heutigen Begierde - TextExpander von Smile Software - so grundlegend macht, nämlich Textschnipsel die man eingibt zu manipulieren, korrigieren oder zu wahren Skriptfeuerwerken umgestalten, steigen wir mit einer kurzen Historie zu TextExpander und seinen deutschen (beziehungsweise schwäbischen) Wurzeln ein. Andreas verrät uns, dass “Textpander” ursprünglich von einem unserer Lieblingstüftler unter den Entwicklern stammt, und zwar Peter Maurer von ManyTricks. Wer lieber erst einmal direkte Hands-on time mit TextExpander verbringen will, der drückt nun auf Pause und klickt den Link oben an, lädt sich die Trial-Version runter und danach geht es bitte wieder zurück zum Übercast. Hit Play. Einstieg – Party auf der Snippetconvention [SNIP-CON] So, nun aber los (Timecode 00:24:00). Zum Einstieg auserkoren wurde die allseits beliebte Diskussion um die Snippet-Konventionen. Wie also starten wir unsere Snippets, ist es der doppelte Anfangsbuchstabe, ein Punkt, Komma, Semikolon oder gar der Vorname vom eigenen Opa? Andreas nutzt gerne .. am Ende als Auslöser. Das soll besonders bei Abkürzungen wie z.B. und bsp. sehr angenehm von der Hand rollen, da man lediglich noch einen Punkt zusätzlich nachschieben muss. Patrick holt weiter aus. Früher waren es bei ihm die Doppelbuchstaben am Anfang die alles regiert haben von eemail für die eigene Emailadresse über ddiv, um ein DIV-Element in HTML (…Krimskrams…) schneller zu erstellen. Für CSS und HTML hat er dann Punkt und Komma verwenden. Ab irgendeinem Punkt in seiner TextExpanderlaufbahn hat Patrick dann der App den Rücken zugekehrt und hat alles mit diesem Skript nach Keyboard Maestro exportiert. Da er das für die Show Notes vorab noch einmal recherchiert hat, dachte er Andreas wollte es ihm gleich tun (siehe Kommentarsektion im vorangegangenen Link), was aber wohl nicht der Fall war wie Andreas in der Show souverän erklärt. Das Experiment mit Keyboard Maestro fand jedoch ein jähes Ende, da der Maestro einfach nicht so zuverlässig expandieren kann wie TextExpander. Nichtsdestotrotz wird TextExpander hier und da noch in Einklang mit Keyboard Maestro benutzt… und mittlerweile wohl auch wieder in der Standalone Version. Seit Patricks Rückkehr zur App wurde an TextExpander geschraubt. Und das nicht zu knapp; nun geht auch sein Lieblings-Trigger SPACE SPACE am Ende des Snippets – das ging wohl vorher nicht… aber halt in Keyboard Maestro. Freude pur. Glückshormone wie beim Inhalieren von Kamillientee werden ausgeschüttet. Des weiteren sind bei den Piloten sinngemäße Abkürzungen geschätzt, zum Beispiel: uc SPACE SPACE für “Der Übercast” km SPACE SPACE für Keyboard Maestro of SPACE SPACE für OmniFocus me@ für die eigene Email Adresse hello@ für die Email Adresse von Patrick’s Blog site SPACE SPACE öffnet eine Fill-In-Popup List mit Patricks Webseiten, sozialen Accounts und Open-ID wwtumb für Andreas sein Tumblelog zett@zc für Andreas Firmenemailadresse lb.. für LaunchBar og.. für “Omni Group” und dann noch ähnliches für die sämtlichen anderen Produkte dieser klasse Firma Wenn wir schon beim Thema Email sind, so denkt sich Sven, kann er die Wogen des vorangegangenen Eklats glätten, indem er auf Patricks ”@@” Shortcut als Text Expander für Emails hinweist. Der funktioniert zwar nur mit Apples eigenem Texterweiterer, dafür aber auch überall ohne Keyboardextensions und “Bäumchen wechsel’ dich” Spiele auf der Tastatur. Ganz heißer Tipp. Auch Sven ist in seiner Lebenszeit durch etliche Kürzelklassen gegangen, da war alles dabei von Punkt, Komm, Strich bis hin zum ausgeschriebenen π. Doch neulich ist er dann über einen einfachen, fast schon viel zu offensichtlichen und doch gerade deshalb genialen Ansatz von Zach Holmquist gestoßen, welcher seine TextExpander Snippets wie “Klassen” wie in einigen Programmiersprachen üblich strukturiert, z.B. me.email me.adress char.apple char.command emoji.poop Zachs Ansatz dürfte selbst Gedächtnis-Grobmotorikern wie Patrick gefallen. Da er aber im Zwist mit Sven liegt, merkt er an, dass genau dieser Ansatz bei Entwicklern ein wenig für Aufruhr sorgte, da es dann zu unbeabsichtigten Ergebnissen beim Coding kommt. Gerade wenn man die Stabilität eines 30-stöckigen Wolkenkratzers einprogrammiert, sollte man die zachinspirierten Snippets deaktivieren. Andreas spielt wieder den Vermittler und weißt darauf hin, dass TextExpander per Hotkey auch eine Suche für Snippets aufrufen kann. Bei ihm ist der Shortcut ⌥F12, bei Sven ⌘⌥⌃+T und bei Patrick ⌘⌥⇧+T. Weitere Hotkeys nutzt keiner der drei Piloten. Allgemeines: Seine Snippets kann man syncen per Dropbox und man kann ebenfalls einstellen, ob man Snippet-Gruppen nur für eine bestimmte Anwendung aktivieren will, in einigen Apps nicht, doch lieber in allen oder oder oder…. Also einfach mal in die Einstellungen schauen und beispielsweise Coding Snippets nur im Code-Editor der Wahl zulassen, OmniFocus Snippets auch wirklich nur in OmniFocus und so weiter – alles je nach Bedarf und eigenem Gusto. Tipp: Zu diesem Thema empfehlen wir auch gerne den hauseigenen Blog von Smile Software, welcher sich diesem Thema auch schon gewidmet hat. Ebenso empfehlenswert ist der Newsletter, welcher im Vergleich zu anderen Firmen echt guten Inhalt/gute Tipps mitbringt. Des weiteren sollen die sehr guten und umfangreichen Hilfeseiten von Smile für TextExpander (in Englisch) nicht unerwähnt bleiben. Kritik auf Abwegen Es ist nicht alles Gold was glänzt. Bevor es nun ans Eingemachte geht - also die Laudatio anklingt - möchte Patrick noch einmal Kritikpunkte ansprechen, welche ihm bitterlichst aufstoßen. Ihm gefallen die vorhandenen Organisationsmöglichkeiten gar nicht gut. Sprich, ihm sind es zu wenige. Er könnte sich vorstellen, dass in dieser App Tags und Smart Folder Sinn machen könnten. Dadurch könnten Snippets auch in mehreren Gruppen zu Hause sein. Alternativ kämen für ihn noch Unterordner in Betracht, um mittels Überkategorien mehr Ordnung reinzubringen. Andreas stimmt zu, dass die UI nur eine bessere Listenansicht ist, dass war’s aber auch schon zum Thema Kritik, denn ihm ist da noch ein super Feature eingefallen, welches bisher noch keine Erwähnung fand und welches im speziellen für die Arbeit in Teams taugt: Snippet-Gruppen sind teilbar. Importiert werden diese gesharten Gruppen dann wie gewohnt, aber (z.B.) von der eigenen Dropbox-URL (also im Finder die Snippetgruppe anwählen und im Kontext sich einen Dropbox-Link generieren lassen. Diesen Link dann in TextExpander importieren). Somit kann dann ein Verwalter für das komplette Team die Snippetgruppe bereitstellen und jederzeit updaten. Da Patrick in der Show nicht die Sau rauslassen wollte, kommt hier noch etwas Senf auf den Keks. Anbei seine weiteren Kritikpunkte in einer formschönen Liste: Auf iOS: Textexpansion hat in anderen Anwendungen Apps immer gut funktioniert, aber in der eigenen TextExpander App war der Wechsel zwischen dem Notizblock und der Snippetverwaltung immer buggy/langsam – egal ob iPhone oder iPad. Es hat ewig gedauert bis gewisse Neuerungen kamen, z.B. die deutsche Autokorrektur, die “ignore on iOS” Funktion, das SPACE SPACE Kürzel am Ende von Snippets. Größter Kritikpunkt überhaupt, da es das beste Feature nach Patrick ist: Fill-in Popup Menu’s. Bei diesen kann leider kein Titel für Listeneinträge vergeben werden wie es unter Anderem bei Launch Center Pro möglich ist. Dort sieht man die vergebenen Name in einer Liste. Die App nutzt dabei folgende Syntax von der sich Smile gerne eine Scheibe abschneiden darf: [list:Telefon|Sven=110|Zettt=112|Ottmar=01906666] Die Verwaltung von Snippets wurde schon erwähnt, aber es wäre auch nett, wenn eine einfachere Deaktivierung von Snippet-Gruppen für einen schnellen Moduswechsel vorhanden wäre (z.B. von Schreiben auf Coden, auf Übersetzten, auf Matheformeln, etc.). Was würde besser in die Kritikersektion passen, als ein Konkurrenzprodukt zu TextExpander. Nichts. Deshalb sei an dieser Stelle der Typinator von Ergonis erwähnt (für den es leider keine iOS App mit der entsprechend ausgereiften API gibt). Basic-Snippets Zu aller erst einmal die “einfachen” TextExpander Snippets (Timecode 00:40:00). Dazu verlinken wir auch sofort auf dem direktesten Weg zu einer sehr übersichtlichen Einführung in eben diese Gefilde von Enrico Schlag (@iEnno_de). Weitere Anwendungsbeispiele bei denen wir immer wieder gerne auf TextExpander zurückgreifen: Email Adressen, Telefonnummern, … Web-Formulare ausfüllen (Wir raten dringend davon ab TextExpander Snippets zum ausfüllen von Logins, bzw. Passwörtern zu nutzen! Kauft euch 1Password dafür.) Sonderzeichen Datum- und Uhrzeiten Korrekturen, bzw. Ausschreibung von klassischen Abkürzungen wie “bzw.” Programmiersprachen-Snippets und Auto-Closing von Klammerpaaren oder Anführungszeichen Sven erinnert sich bei den Abkürzungen von Produktnamen an Shawn Blancs “A Quick Guide to Common Miscapitalizations of Tech Names” und Patrick empfiehlt ebenfalls den Download, sowie seine kleine Sammlung, die mit vielen anderen Goodies in unserer Downloadsammelung am Ende dieses Posts eine Heimat gefunden hat. Außerdem hat Sven noch sein eigenen Set für Email Signaturen: Email Signature pro Account Interne/Externe, bzw. formelle & informelle Signaturen Gruß Formeln (MfG) Des weiteren nutzt er TextExpander wie der Rest der Crew für Namen und andere peinliche Tippfehler, so auch um lange Fachausdrücke und andere Abkürzungen einmal komplett auszuschreiben. Tipp: Das ganze lässt sich auch gut temporär (Snippet-Gruppe ‘Temp’) nutzen, wenn man aktuell an einem Projekt arbeiten in dem diverse komplexe und lange Formulierungen genutzt werden. TextExpander und OmniFocus Selbstredend muss Sven auch oft genug delegierte Aufgaben nachverfolgen. Das macht er natürlich mit OmniFocus und TextExpander, denn simplicity is bliss. In einem seiner älteren, aber immer noch gültigem Screencasts zeigt er, wie man mit ein paar einfachen TextExpander Snippets die Aufgaben-Nachverfolgung in OmniFocus (oder anderen Task Management Tools) vereinfacht: Using TextExpander and OmniFocus from SimplicityBliss on Vimeo. Seine wesentlichen Snippets: wf` ==> Waiting for tcb` ==> to come back re ,rem` ==> Reminder sent %snippet:,hdate% Andreas Version davon: co..` ==> check out lu..` ==> lookup upd..` ==> update Patrick reiht sich dort nahtlos ein und nutzt folgendes: ..co ==> Check out -- (zwei Punkte nur wegen iOS) .ao ==> Act on -- .cr ==> Conduct research -- .pp ==> Plan new project to .sd ==> (see details) [aka schau dir die OmniFocus Notizen an] .ta ==> Think about -- .wf ==> Waiting for -- Von wem er diese Snippets geklaut hat, das weiß er nicht mehr. Deshalb hier die drei Hauptverdächtigen inklusive Links zu den TextExpander-Suchergebnissen auf deren Webseite: David Sparks, Eddie Smith oder Sven selbst. Kourosh Dini und Tim Stringer sind im übrigen auch noch zwei die OmniFocus und TextExpander am liebsten miteinander verheiraten würden. Weitere Einfachheiten Sven verwendet beim bloggen für Anweisungen wie zum Beispiel Pfade zu OmniFocus Menüeinträgen TextExpander: ofview ==> “(Menu > View > Show View Bar or Command-Shift-T)”. Auch Andreas nutzt sowas und hat *→ für “File → Edit” vergeben (oder auch *tea → für “

netflix apple internet man online service fall gold er mit team pilot berlin iphone blog hands plan leben protests os thema weg mail act app mac apps studio lust geschichte arbeit smile fill ios ab tipps ipads drones gedanken noch integration ob fallen bei gro newsletter kopf diese probleme statement ganz anfang dazu umgang beispiel ideen projekt emails freude suche andreas augen namen feature gut gemeinsam bild kritik stelle entscheidung unsere wahl leute herzen lange dort stunden hause seine menu maestro trio deshalb titel gerade extension radar punkt day one accounts aufgaben crowdfunding diskussion liste conduct luft api programm apples anlass einf angebot daten aufnahme vergleich produkte sachen gadgets punkte anderen heimat str coding ui sven tipp ordnung spiele beide einmal pixel dropbox bevor satz vimeo server kontext mund respekt ansatz ged kamera geh sturm engel alternativen schreiben gruppen die zeit screens segen linie wechsel historie ausl wurzeln firmen bender installation rande presse komm dadurch html alten haare keyboard lotto gusto anwendung generation x englisch rabatt herren ungl einklang kritiker dispatch vorsicht copilot stabilit nutella ebenso evernote css hals bedarf kn ergebnissen grunde erw weit abk ihm anbieter tandem somit effizienz rhythmus neuerungen redaktion sammlung bedenken daumen goodies snippet strich klassen happy end besitzer senf cockpit favorit anwendungen einstellungen knopf sau automatisierung lebenszeit kooperationen wettkampf stirn objekt komma piloten telekom privatsph kragen snippets alternativ kauft schnittstelle linken keyboards gebrauch wolke os x aufruhr sprich entwurf beleidigungen lifehacker mitternacht linien 1password telefonat scheibe faul syntax zugegeben nichtsdestotrotz doof anweisungen betracht faulheit anderem eingemachte streamingdienste riese skript touch id ios apps die app kniffe neuigkeit schlagabtausch bild zeitung tagline verschl anwohner vermittler keks tastatur formulierungen gefilde passw kritikpunkte hit play transmit fundst erwerb webcomic textexpander wortspiele entwicklern ausschreibung meckern omnifocus begierde das experiment sektion wogen verwalter petto video tutorials benutzt anbei zum einstieg fallschirm telefonnummern vorname segnen die redaktion zwist herzchen logins datenschutzerkl svens sorgenfalten laudatio tuchf muh kamelen e mail adressen bedienen skripte hinterhand fluges eddie smith notizblock plantage hauptverd kritikpunkt seifenoper keyboard maestro liedgut folgetag screencasts folge teil der tipp platzhalter openid krimskrams erdnussbutter tippfehler coden rolll grooveshark omni group peter maurer inhalieren bluetooth kopfh schwabenl pdf expert flasche rotwein thema kritik eklats flugstunde ios version einsteigertipps testger produktnamen launch center pro kleckern trial version lieblingst smile software launchbar deaktivierung konkurrenzprodukt kourosh dini bildschirmrand tim stringer da patrick fachausdr simfy dropbox link nachdem sven typinator geschreibsel zettt
The Drill Down
345: Windows 7 Ate 9

The Drill Down

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 3, 2014 81:14


This week, eBay splits with PayPal, your game console is your new TV, Windows 10 is the new Nine (or Eight)?, say hello to Ello, and Netflix wants to shake up movie distribution. What We're Playing With Tosin & Dwayne: iPhone 6 / 6 Plus Headlines Steam Music Player Launches with Free Game Soundtracks Judge Rules Against Grooveshark in Copyright Infringement Case Gaming Consoles are the biggest Cord Cutting Devices Audible Book of the Week Masters of Doom: How Two Guys Created an Empire and Transformed Pop Culture by David Kushner Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Quake Theme by Nine Inch Nails Hot Topics eBay to Spin Off PayPal With New CEOs for Two Publicly Traded Companies Microsoft Skips Windows 9, Heads Straight to Windows 10 Windows 10: Top 6 New Features Windows 10 Preview and OS X Yosemite Look More Alike Than Ever Before Inside Ello, the Invitation Only Social Network That Bills Itself as the Anti-Facebook The big problem with ‘Facebook-killer' Ello: It's hopelessly, irredeemably naive Social network Ello gets boost after Facebook boots drag queens Facebook Apologizes To LGBT Community For Controversial Name Change Policy Music Break: Night Fight from Crouching Tiger, Hidden Dragon by Tan Dun Final Word: Netflix / IMAX Day & Date Release With ‘Crouching Tiger' Sequel, Netflix Takes Aim at Hollywood AMC, Regal, Cinemark Theaters Refuse to Show Netflix's Crouching Tiger Sequel Why the Crouching Tiger Sequel Won't revolutionize the way movies are released The Drill Down Video of the Week Here's a look at Windows 10 Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan. Occasionally joining them is Startup Digest CTO Christopher Burnor.

The Drill Down
340: It's a Man's World?

The Drill Down

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 29, 2014 98:31


This week, Greg Davies from the Blendover & TARDISBlend podcasts joins Dwayne & Andrew as we discuss: Facebook fights clickbait, the NSA builds a Google to search your records, Amazon buys Twitch, and...is misogyny in games out of control? Podcast [display_podcast] What We're Playing With Dwayne: Circle of 6 / White House Council on Women and Girls Greg: gSyncIt (PC) and Metal (Android) Headlines Jawbone Up data shows how many people woke up during Sunday's Napa earthquake Documents and interviews reveal Uber's sophisticated, nationwide scheme to poach Lyft drivers Facebook shifts its algorithm to fight clickbait. Will it kill off Upworthy and Buzzfeed? SavedYouAClick ICREACH: How the NSA Built Its Own Secret Google Apple Said to Prepare New 12.9-Inch IPad for Early 2015 Apple iWatch could be real this time T-Mobile ‘Music Freedom' adds limitless data for Songza, Rdio, Grooveshark, & others Audible Book of the Week Lock In by John Scalzi Sign up at AudibleTrial.com/TheDrillDown Music Break: Video Games by Lana Del Rey Hot Topic Amazon to Buy Video Site Twitch for $970 Million Amazon Pounces On Twitch After Google Balks Due To Antitrust Concerns Final Word: Misogyny in Gaming Gaming Misogyny Gets Infinite Lives: Zoe Quinn, Virtual Rape, and Sexism The Drill Down Video of the Week Hyperlapse, Instagram's New App, Is Like a $15,000 Video Setup in Your Hand Subscribe! The Drill Down on iTunes (Subscribe now!) Add us on Stitcher! The Drill Down on Facebook The Drill Down on Twitter Geeks Of Doom's The Drill Down is a roundtable-style audio podcast where we discuss the most important issues of the week, in tech and on the web and how they affect us all. Hosts are Geeks of Doom contributor Andrew Sorcini (Mr. BabyMan), marketing research analyst Dwayne De Freitas, and Box tech consultant Tosin Onafowokan. Occasionally joining them is Startup Digest CTO Christopher Burnor.

Circuit & Anthems
Summer Edition 2K14 Volume 2

Circuit & Anthems

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2014 83:29


Play Pause DownloadShare var srp_player_params_67724d08c13c3 = {"title":"","store_title_text":"","albums":[],"hide_artwork":"true","sticky_player":"true","show_album_market":0,"show_track_market":"true","hide_timeline":0,"player_layout":"skin_boxed_tracklist","orderby":"date","order":"DESC","hide_album_title":"true","hide_album_subtitle":"true","hide_player_title":"true","hide_track_title":"true","show_publish_date":"false","show_skip_bt":"false","show_volume_bt":"false","show_speed_bt":"false","show_shuffle_bt":"false","use_play_label":"true","use_play_label_with_icon":"true","progressbar_inline":"true","spectro":"","hide_progressbar":"true","main_settings":"||"} var srp_player_params_args_67724d08c13c3 = {"before_widget":"","after_widget":"","before_title":"","after_title":"","widget_id":"arbitrary-instance-67724d08c13c3"} if(typeof setIronAudioplayers !== "undefined"){ setIronAudioplayers("arbitrary-instance-67724d08c13c3"); } So you say need some more tribalistic fun for your summer workouts?  No problem cause I'm sending up the Summer Ed. pt. 2 as promised and this is 20 degrees hotter than the first. Warning, users listening to this mix have been prone to serious bouts of sweaty glands, uncontrollable pelvic thrusts while grunting aye papi, aye papi …AYE PAPI SI! I do want to point out that the ultra HOT Carlos Gallardo remix of Rise Like A Phoenix by Conchita Wurst, was part of his submission to some remix contest for Eurovision and not officially released.  Consequently, you'll hear a few drops with his name throughout the song but I managed to eliminate most of them.  I wouldn't normally include a song in a mix that's laced with a DJ call-out, but this is just so damn good, I couldn't control myself [refer to line two of this post for additional warnings]. Tomorrow is Friday and as I had previously mentioned, I've got a special treat going up as I re-open a category on the site that's been inactive for some time.  If you want to get a sneak peek, it's already posted on my Grooveshark page.  Until then …ENJOY! Album : Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2Genre : Circuit, HouseYear : 2014Total Time : 01:23:29 1. DJ Mark One & Lizzie Curious - Bring The Joy (StoneBridge Mixdown) 2. Conchita Wurst - Rise Like A Phoenix (Carlos Gallardo Unstoppable Private Anthem Remix) 3. Blondie - Call Me (Joe Gauthreaux Summer of Love Mix) 4. John LePage feat. Niki Haris - Not Enough (Tony Moran & Warren Rigg Club Mix) 5. Lara Fabian - I Will Love Again (Division 4 & Matt Consola Club Mix) 6. Nikkole - Gonna Get It Right (Razor N Guido Vocal Remix) 7. Beyonce - Partition (DJ PAULO's Tom Stephan vs. Dave Aude Re-Edit) 8. Rita Ora - I Will Never Let You Down (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Remix) 9. Duke Dumont feat. Jax Jones - I Got U (Ranny's Club Mix) 10. Kylie - I Was Gonna Cancel (Guy Scheiman Club Mix) 11. Pris Maverick - What's Done Is Done (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Mix) 12. RuPaul - Sissy That Walk (Gustavo Scorpio Private Mix) 13. Fantine - Reservation For Two (Razor N Guido Vocal Mix) 14. Queen - I Want To Break Free 2014 (Julian Marsh Club Mix) 15. Amy Grant feat. Dave Aude - Baby Baby (Dave Aude Extended Mix) 16. Ariana Grande feat. Iggy Azalea - Problem (Cosmic Dawn Club Mix)

dj ariana grande eurovision desc club mix summer edition amy grant duke dumont love mix conchita wurst 2k14 grooveshark tom stephan rise like a phoenix john lepage warren rigg club mix queen i want to break free matt consola club mix tony coluccio main remix
Circuit & Anthems
Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2

Circuit & Anthems

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2014


So you say need some more tribalistic fun for your summer workouts?  No problem cause I'm sending up the Summer Ed. pt. 2 as promised and this is 20 degrees hotter than the first. Warning, users listening to this mix have been prone to serious bouts of sweaty glands, uncontrollable pelvic thrusts while grunting aye papi, aye papi …AYE PAPI SI! I do want to point out that the ultra HOT Carlos Gallardo remix of Rise Like A Phoenix by Conchita Wurst, was part of his submission to some remix contest for Eurovision and not officially released.  Consequently, you'll hear a few drops with his name throughout the song but I managed to eliminate most of them.  I wouldn't normally include a song in a mix that's laced with a DJ call-out, but this is just so damn good, I couldn't control myself [refer to line two of this post for additional warnings]. Tomorrow is Friday and as I had previously mentioned, I've got a special treat going up as I re-open a category on the site that's been inactive for some time.  If you want to get a sneak peek, it's already posted on my Grooveshark page.  Until then …ENJOY! Album : Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2 Genre : Circuit, House Year : 2014 Total Time : 01:23:29 1. DJ Mark One & Lizzie Curious - Bring The Joy (StoneBridge Mixdown) 2. Conchita Wurst - Rise Like A Phoenix (Carlos Gallardo Unstoppable Private Anthem Remix) 3. Blondie - Call Me (Joe Gauthreaux Summer of Love Mix) 4. John LePage feat. Niki Haris - Not Enough (Tony Moran & Warren Rigg Club Mix) 5. Lara Fabian - I Will Love Again (Division 4 & Matt Consola Club Mix) 6. Nikkole - Gonna Get It Right (Razor N Guido Vocal Remix) 7. Beyonce - Partition (DJ PAULO's Tom Stephan vs. Dave Aude Re-Edit) 8. Rita Ora - I Will Never Let You Down (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Remix) 9. Duke Dumont feat. Jax Jones - I Got U (Ranny's Club Mix) 10. Kylie - I Was Gonna Cancel (Guy Scheiman Club Mix) 11. Pris Maverick - What's Done Is Done (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Mix) 12. RuPaul - Sissy That Walk (Gustavo Scorpio Private Mix) 13. Fantine - Reservation For Two (Razor N Guido Vocal Mix) 14. Queen - I Want To Break Free 2014 (Julian Marsh Club Mix) 15. Amy Grant feat. Dave Aude - Baby Baby (Dave Aude Extended Mix) 16. Ariana Grande feat. Iggy Azalea - Problem (Cosmic Dawn Club Mix)

dj ariana grande eurovision club mix amy grant duke dumont love mix conchita wurst 2k14 grooveshark tom stephan rise like a phoenix john lepage warren rigg club mix queen i want to break free matt consola club mix tony coluccio main remix
Party Favorz
Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2

Party Favorz

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2014


So you say need some more tribalistic fun for your summer workouts?  No problem cause I'm sending up the Summer Ed. pt. 2 as promised and this is 20 degrees hotter than the first. Warning, users listening to this mix have been prone to serious bouts of sweaty glands, uncontrollable pelvic thrusts while grunting aye papi, aye papi …AYE PAPI SI! I do want to point out that the ultra HOT Carlos Gallardo remix of Rise Like A Phoenix by Conchita Wurst, was part of his submission to some remix contest for Eurovision and not officially released.  Consequently, you'll hear a few drops with his name throughout the song but I managed to eliminate most of them.  I wouldn't normally include a song in a mix that's laced with a DJ call-out, but this is just so damn good, I couldn't control myself [refer to line two of this post for additional warnings]. Tomorrow is Friday and as I had previously mentioned, I've got a special treat going up as I re-open a category on the site that's been inactive for some time.  If you want to get a sneak peek, it's already posted on my Grooveshark page.  Until then …ENJOY! Album : Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2 Genre : Circuit, House Year : 2014 Total Time : 01:23:29 1. DJ Mark One & Lizzie Curious - Bring The Joy (StoneBridge Mixdown) 2. Conchita Wurst - Rise Like A Phoenix (Carlos Gallardo Unstoppable Private Anthem Remix) 3. Blondie - Call Me (Joe Gauthreaux Summer of Love Mix) 4. John LePage feat. Niki Haris - Not Enough (Tony Moran & Warren Rigg Club Mix) 5. Lara Fabian - I Will Love Again (Division 4 & Matt Consola Club Mix) 6. Nikkole - Gonna Get It Right (Razor N Guido Vocal Remix) 7. Beyonce - Partition (DJ PAULO's Tom Stephan vs. Dave Aude Re-Edit) 8. Rita Ora - I Will Never Let You Down (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Remix) 9. Duke Dumont feat. Jax Jones - I Got U (Ranny's Club Mix) 10. Kylie - I Was Gonna Cancel (Guy Scheiman Club Mix) 11. Pris Maverick - What's Done Is Done (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Mix) 12. RuPaul - Sissy That Walk (Gustavo Scorpio Private Mix) 13. Fantine - Reservation For Two (Razor N Guido Vocal Mix) 14. Queen - I Want To Break Free 2014 (Julian Marsh Club Mix) 15. Amy Grant feat. Dave Aude - Baby Baby (Dave Aude Extended Mix) 16. Ariana Grande feat. Iggy Azalea - Problem (Cosmic Dawn Club Mix)

dj ariana grande eurovision club mix amy grant duke dumont love mix conchita wurst 2k14 grooveshark tom stephan rise like a phoenix john lepage warren rigg club mix queen i want to break free matt consola club mix tony coluccio main remix
Party Favorz
Summer Edition 2K14 Volume 2

Party Favorz

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2014 83:29


Play Pause DownloadShare var srp_player_params_677258c13b086 = {"title":"","store_title_text":"","albums":[],"hide_artwork":"true","sticky_player":"true","show_album_market":0,"show_track_market":"true","hide_timeline":0,"player_layout":"skin_boxed_tracklist","orderby":"date","order":"DESC","hide_album_title":"true","hide_album_subtitle":"true","hide_player_title":"true","hide_track_title":"true","show_publish_date":"false","show_skip_bt":"false","show_volume_bt":"false","show_speed_bt":"false","show_shuffle_bt":"false","use_play_label":"true","use_play_label_with_icon":"true","progressbar_inline":"true","spectro":"","hide_progressbar":"true","main_settings":"||"} var srp_player_params_args_677258c13b086 = {"before_widget":"","after_widget":"","before_title":"","after_title":"","widget_id":"arbitrary-instance-677258c13b086"} if(typeof setIronAudioplayers !== "undefined"){ setIronAudioplayers("arbitrary-instance-677258c13b086"); } So you say need some more tribalistic fun for your summer workouts?  No problem cause I'm sending up the Summer Ed. pt. 2 as promised and this is 20 degrees hotter than the first. Warning, users listening to this mix have been prone to serious bouts of sweaty glands, uncontrollable pelvic thrusts while grunting aye papi, aye papi …AYE PAPI SI! I do want to point out that the ultra HOT Carlos Gallardo remix of Rise Like A Phoenix by Conchita Wurst, was part of his submission to some remix contest for Eurovision and not officially released.  Consequently, you'll hear a few drops with his name throughout the song but I managed to eliminate most of them.  I wouldn't normally include a song in a mix that's laced with a DJ call-out, but this is just so damn good, I couldn't control myself [refer to line two of this post for additional warnings]. Tomorrow is Friday and as I had previously mentioned, I've got a special treat going up as I re-open a category on the site that's been inactive for some time.  If you want to get a sneak peek, it's already posted on my Grooveshark page.  Until then …ENJOY! Album : Summer Ed. 2K14 pt. 2Genre : Circuit, HouseYear : 2014Total Time : 01:23:29 1. DJ Mark One & Lizzie Curious - Bring The Joy (StoneBridge Mixdown) 2. Conchita Wurst - Rise Like A Phoenix (Carlos Gallardo Unstoppable Private Anthem Remix) 3. Blondie - Call Me (Joe Gauthreaux Summer of Love Mix) 4. John LePage feat. Niki Haris - Not Enough (Tony Moran & Warren Rigg Club Mix) 5. Lara Fabian - I Will Love Again (Division 4 & Matt Consola Club Mix) 6. Nikkole - Gonna Get It Right (Razor N Guido Vocal Remix) 7. Beyonce - Partition (DJ PAULO's Tom Stephan vs. Dave Aude Re-Edit) 8. Rita Ora - I Will Never Let You Down (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Remix) 9. Duke Dumont feat. Jax Jones - I Got U (Ranny's Club Mix) 10. Kylie - I Was Gonna Cancel (Guy Scheiman Club Mix) 11. Pris Maverick - What's Done Is Done (DJ Escape & Tony Coluccio Main Mix) 12. RuPaul - Sissy That Walk (Gustavo Scorpio Private Mix) 13. Fantine - Reservation For Two (Razor N Guido Vocal Mix) 14. Queen - I Want To Break Free 2014 (Julian Marsh Club Mix) 15. Amy Grant feat. Dave Aude - Baby Baby (Dave Aude Extended Mix) 16. Ariana Grande feat. Iggy Azalea - Problem (Cosmic Dawn Club Mix)

dj ariana grande eurovision desc club mix summer edition amy grant duke dumont love mix conchita wurst 2k14 grooveshark tom stephan rise like a phoenix john lepage warren rigg club mix queen i want to break free matt consola club mix tony coluccio main remix
The Librocube
The Lackadaisical Librocubicularist Episode 300: Music

The Librocube

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2014 337:11


Hello! This description of the episode could simply read "Jordan gets drunk and listens to music"; However, it turned into so much more than that.  A stream of consciousness and memories floated languidly out into the ether and it turned into one of my favorite episodes.  If you have ever got drunk and listened to music with me a lot of this should trigger memories in you as well.  All that might explain why it is FIVE AND A HALF HOURS LONG! As promised here is "Jordan's Massive Playlist" available on Grooveshark so you can listen along: http://grooveshark.com/#!/slow_cheetah/collection Thanks to all who have joined me for some of these 300 episodes!  A special thanks to all those who have rated the podcast in iTunes as that helps podcast to grow and flourish...floouuurish. Lastly,  If you noticed that after episode 100 I took one week off, and after episode 200 I took two weeks off it will come as no surprise that I will be take a three week podcast hiatus after this, my episode 300. BAMF!  Don't worry though because my addiction to podcasting will mean I will just be recording and banking episodes while I am "away" just at a much more leisurely pace is all... The final thing to say, that has been my final word 300 times now, is of course: It's nice to be nice to the nice.

YMP Classic Feed – Yes Music Podcast
Episode 109 – Close to the Edge in Prog Magazine

YMP Classic Feed – Yes Music Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2013 18:11


Magazine purchased 2013 The one hundred and ninth episode of the Yes Music Podcast, featuring the Close to the Edge edition of Prog Magazine. What interesting items are there from Sid Smith's research to discover? What does this package contain? Is it worth buying physical magazines in the digital age? See if you agree with me and then let me know by contacting me via any of the methods below. Please subscribe! If you are still listening to the podcast on the website, please consider subscribing so you don’t risk missing anything. You can subscribe with an RSS reader, with iTunes, with the iOS Podcasts app, on your Blackberry, via email updates or via www.stitcher.com. Show links Prog Magazine website Sonic Seasonings on Grooveshark (not an endorsement!) YesWorld Close to the Edge re-issue details Progressive Nation at Sea 2014 (Jon Anderson headlining) Vote for Yes in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame nominations   Theme music The music I use is the last movement of Stravinsky's Firebird Suite. This has been used as introduction music at many Yes concerts. My theme music is not take from a live concert - I put it together from the following two creative commons sources: thanvannispen and archive.org

La Nube de BLU Radio
Conozca a Andrés Barreto, el genio detrás de exitosas empresas como Grooveshark

La Nube de BLU Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2013 8:55


Se trata de un motor de búsqueda de música online que permite a los usuarios subir música libre y gratis. Andrés Barreto, creador del buscador,... See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

El Siglo 21 es Hoy
Podcast sobre @CampusPartyCo #CPC06

El Siglo 21 es Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2013 9:28


@Mijel@Torrenegra@Voice123@TorrenegraLabs@GrooveShark @AndresBarreto

• El siglo 21 es hoy •
Podcast sobre @CampusPartyCo #CPC06

• El siglo 21 es hoy •

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2013 9:28


@Mijel@Torrenegra@Voice123@TorrenegraLabs@GrooveShark @AndresBarreto

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com
Podcast sobre @CampusPartyCo #CPC06

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2013 9:28


@Mijel@Torrenegra@Voice123@TorrenegraLabs@GrooveShark @AndresBarreto

@LocutorCo Blog / Podcast en ELTIEMPO.com

¿Usted todavía oye música en CD? Yo no, porque...

El Siglo 21 es Hoy
Un CD es un estorbo

El Siglo 21 es Hoy

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2013 8:11


¿Usted todavía oye música en CD? Yo no, porque...

• El siglo 21 es hoy •
Un CD es un estorbo

• El siglo 21 es hoy •

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2013 8:11


¿Usted todavía oye música en CD? Yo no, porque...

Podtrash
Podtrash 140 – MPTrash: Clipes Bizarros

Podtrash

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2013 114:43


Horror! Medo! Desespero! Sofrimento! Nesta semana Bruno "Gunfree" Gunter, Douglas "Exumador" Fricke, Demétrius "Anjo Negro" Santos e Almighty "o Estagiário do Mal" conversaram sobre músicos reconhecidamente excelentes que por motivos desconhecidos lançaram videoclipes tacanhos para músicas boas. Então aumentem seus iPods e embarquem nesta lista de músicas que gostamos e um bate-papo descontraído sobre as loucuras de alguns músicos. Duração: 104'43'' MIX DO ALMIGHTY Dio - Holy Diver Iron Maiden - Holy Smoke The Darkness - I Believe In a Thing Called Love MIX DO ANJO NEGRO Billy Squier - Rock me Tonite Dead or Alive - Come Home With Me Baby Milli Vanilli - Girl You Know It's True MIX DO EXUMADOR Bonnie Tyler - Total Eclipse of the Heart Kate Bush - Whutering Heights The B 52s - Private Idahoo MIX DO BRUNO GUNTER KISS - Lick It Up Soft Cell - Tainted Love David Bowie e Mick Jagger - Dancing in the Streets  Você quer ouvir a playlist deste programa sem nossos comentários? Não se acanhe! Acesse agora esta playlist no Grooveshark e se divirta! FEEDS E LINKS DO PODTRASH Podtrash na iTunes Store Feedburner do Podtrash Canal do Podtrash no Youtuner CONTATOS DO PODTRASH podtrash@td1p.com @podtrash Facebook do Podtrash Coluna do Podtrash no Cinemasmorra Caixa Postal 34012 – Rio de Janeiro, RJ - CEP 22460-970 CAPA DESTE PODTRASH

Programa Palitroche
Palitroche 09 Marzo, 2013

Programa Palitroche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2013


El día de hoy les presentamos un programa express puesto que las ocupaciones no permitieron acudir al programa completo. Hablamos un poco del FICG (Festival Internacional de Cine de Guadalajara).Avances del Revolution Fest, recuentos del día Internacional de la Mujer, y las secciones tradicionales del programa: Notas Idiotas, Recomendación de la Semana y mucho más.EscucharDescargarY aquí el playlist del programa: Palitroche Playlist 09 Mar 2013 by Angel De Angeles on Grooveshark

Programa Palitroche
Día Internacional de la Mujer

Programa Palitroche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2013


Este 8 de Marzo se conmemora el Día Internacional de la Mujer y para conmemorarlo les compartimos la historia de 10 mujeres que inspiraron 10 grandes canciones, que muy probablemente conocen.También les damos adelanto de los discos más esperados de 2013.Artista: FoalsNombre del Disco: Holy Fire                                 Fecha de Salida: 11 de FebreroArtista: Atoms For PeaceNombre del Disco: AmokFecha de Salida: 18 de FebreroArtista: Yeah Yeah Yeah'sNombre del Disco: MosquitoFecha de Salida: 16 de AbrilArtista: Queens Of The Stone AgeNombre del Disco: Por AnunciarFecha de Salida: Primavera 2013 Artista: Daft PunkNombre del Disco: No End (Aún no Confirmado)Fecha de Salida: ¿Primavera 2013?EscucharDescargarY como ya se hará costumbre el playlist del programa. Palitroche Playlist 08 Mar 2013 by Angel De Angeles on Grooveshark

Programa Palitroche
¡Regresa el Palitroche!

Programa Palitroche

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2013


Que tal Palitroche Nation, después de que nos robaron la identidad de la página, y peleamos por recuperarla, aquí estamos nuevamente ya con todo el poder.Ya seguiremos actualizando este sitio que tenía telarañitas, polvo y unos muchos cuantos recuerdos. Les presentamos la primera emisión sabatina de este presente año 2013, con.. ¡NUEVA LOCUTORA!Escuchar DescargarY como plus, también les presentamos el Playlist de reproducción del programa en Grooveshark.Palitroche Playlist 02 Mar 2013 by Angel De Angeles on Grooveshark

32pulgadas
1-'Espotifay' y sucedáneos

32pulgadas

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2012 43:08


32pulgadas: ESPOTIFAY Y SUCEDÁNEOS Ventajas e inconvenientes de las distintas formas de escuchar música online. Spotify, GrooveShark, Rockola.FM, Goear y alguno más.

The SoundCast
Ep. 47 - "Streaming Prometheus" & Soundtracking Best Practices

The SoundCast

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2012 102:10


Ep. 47 - "Streaming Prometheus" & Soundtracking Best Practices Composer Sascha Dikiciyan and Jeremy Meyers (Deeper Context) join the SoundCast crew to react to the "early" release of Marc Streintenfeld and Harry Gregson-Williams' score for PROMETHEUS on iTunes. The episode 0 release of TRON: UPRISING doesn't escape their critical gaze as well. "What Have You Been Listening To?" is back and finally, the crew discusses "SOUNDTRACKING: BEST PRACTICES" and dive into what sites, apps and tools they use to enjoy their soundtracks. Episode Highlights 00:00 Soundcastify 00:44 Intro and Welcome 04:11 SIDETRACKS: STAR TREk: THE MOTION PICTURE Score Supreme! 08:34 SIDETRACKS: Fox releases PROMETHEUS early on iTunes 27:01 SIDETRACKS: TRON: UPRISING Episode 0 "Beck" 34:16 WHYBLT: In Time, Avengers, Diablo III, Indy Game: The Movie 40:17 WHYBLT: The Matrix Trilogy, Men in Black 3, Ed Wood 49:59 WHYBLT: Avalon, Flight of the Navigator, Avengers, Catacomb Snatch 59:22 Soundtracking: Spotify, Grooveshark, Last.FM. Pandora, Rdio, Deezer, SoundCloud 85:44 Soundtracking: Tomahawk; Subscriptions versus Purchasing 89:20 Soundtracking: Bandcamp, CDBaby, Reverbnation, used CDs, emusic, amazon Music Selections 00:00 "Double Rainbow" via Songify by The Gregory Brothers 04:02 "The Enterprise" (Star Trek - The Motion Picture) by Jerry Goldsmith 09:54 "A Planet" (Prometheus) by Marc Streitenfeld 34:53 "Mother Times Out" (In time) by Craig Armstrong 35:53 "New Tristam" (Diablo III) by Russell Brower 39:21 "A Glow You Know" (Indy Game: The Movie) by Jim Guthrie 40:27 "Bow Whisk Orchestra" (The Matrix) by Don Davis 45:37 "Ed Wood" (Ed Wood by Howard Shore 50:11 "Nine Sisters" (Avalon) by Kenji Kawai 51:53 "The Ship Beckons" (Flight of the Navigator by Alan Silvestri 53:46 "Hellicarrier" (The Avengers) by Alan Silvestri 57:40 "Enforcer Brittanica" (Catacomb Snatch) by C418 and Anosou 99:15 "Mummy F--er" (Catacomb Snatch) by C418 and Anosou Support The SoundCast and purchase these soundtracks through Amazon! PROMETHEUS THE AVENGERS IN TIME THE MATRIX (DELUXE EDITION) MEN IN BLACK 3 ED WOOD AVALON Download the episode here Subscribe and more info here

Entertainment Law Update
Attack of the Little Trees!

Entertainment Law Update

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2011 72:11


Call us with your feedback: (310) 243-6231 In this Episode: PROTECT IP /SOPA CROWD FUNDING BILL Ghost Hunters – Cert Denied Rob Zombie Class Action moves toward class certification Viacom/ YouTube case sees extraordinary order Grooveshark sued by UMG Sound … Read the rest The post Attack of the Little Trees! appeared first on Entertainment Law Update.

Three InSight
73: Messy Internet Data

Three InSight

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2011


Grooveshark is being sued by Universal. Learn why it differs so much from Pandora, Spotify and other music services. Netflix even with great brand recognition, is struggling even after canceling the spinoff of Quickster. Which us to the best way do deliver video media to the masses. How many devices do you have hooked up to your TV?

Shelly Palmer Digital Living - Daily Video
The Story of How Grooveshark Came To Be

Shelly Palmer Digital Living - Daily Video

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2011 8:09


This segment from Shelly Palmer Digital Living shows how the streaming music company Grooveshark.com got its start. For more information visit shellypalmer.com

Estamos de fin de semana
Enchúfate: Música online

Estamos de fin de semana

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2011 18:27


Christian Camacho nos habla de los cambios anunciados por Spotify y nos recomienda otras alternativas para seguir escuchando música sin limitaciones como Grooveshark, Rockola.fm o Muziic. Además, nos trae el videojuego  'Homefront'

#PlanetaTIC
#PlanetaTIC: Alternatives a l’Spotify, YouTube i els drets d’autor, entrevista a Zapatero i el tancament de Google Video

#PlanetaTIC

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2011


A l’edició d’avui del #PlanetaTIC hem parlat extensament sobre les noves limitacions de l’Spotify, i hem proposat un parell de serveis alternatius (GrooveShark i Gatunes). A més hem comentat que YouTube farà un examen als usuaris que pengin vídeos sense … Continua llegint →

New Media Law Cast
Music Streaming with Grooveshark, Pandora, and Friends: Legal and Business Discussion

New Media Law Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2011 19:37


With more and more people moving music libraries from their personal computers to the cloud, companies are adapting with new business models and courts are facing tough decisions on how to handle a new era of music sharing. Andrew Mirsky and Jake Kring, co-founder of event discovery engine GetSpontaneous.com, discuss how platforms like GrooveShark and Pandora work from both a business and legal standpoint, and how services like them create new challenges for artists, record labels, and consumers.

New Media Law Cast
Music Streaming with Grooveshark, Pandora, and Friends: Legal and Business Discussion

New Media Law Cast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2011 19:37


With more and more people moving music libraries from their personal computers to the cloud, companies are adapting with new business models and courts are facing tough decisions on how to handle a new era of music sharing. Andrew Mirsky and Jake Kring, co-founder of event discovery engine GetSpontaneous.com, discuss how platforms like GrooveShark and Pandora work from both a business and legal standpoint, and how services like them create new challenges for artists, record labels, and consumers.