Podcast appearances and mentions of mac ii

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Best podcasts about mac ii

Latest podcast episodes about mac ii

The American Junglist
AJS#108 Jaybee

The American Junglist

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2025 74:13


I shouldn't have to say anything about this weeks guest. His back catalogue of releases and the forthcoming ones speak for themselves. He's a bonafide American legend. Seeing him releasing on proper UK dnb labels with a career spanning decades now has always been really inspiring for me. He's a low-key OG and a badboy selector. Please welcome Jaybee. With releases on Liquid V, Chronic, Mac II, Good Looking, Innerground,Rubik, and a slew of other labels his music keeps going from strength to strength. Born to a radio DJ father he was raised listening to slew of different music genres that led him to hip hop and later on, drum and bass. Always fascinated with watching the dj's in hip hop videos, Jaybee obtained his first set of turntables at the age of 13 and started playing hip hop. A few years later he was intrigued by a friends "techno" compilation and wore out the hit the decks megamix series tape and found his love in breakbeats which led him to a outlaw Jungle party thrown by Digital Konfusion. It was at this event that Jaybee first discovered Jungle while witnessing DJ ODI double set ray Kieth's "terrorist", discovering it was possible to incorporate hip hop skills into Jungle. Flash forward 20 years and you can find him djing a weekly show on bassdrive.com every other Sunday from 10AM to 12PM EST. or in the studio working on whatever idea may roll through his head that day. His music is currently getting support by the likes of Bryan Gee, LTJ Bukem, Marky, D Bridge, A-Sides, PFM and Random Movement amongst a host of others. Tracklist below. Please enjoy❤️ back next week -Thomas Tracklist: The Sauce - Tales Of The Expected Alternative Medicine - Smacking Clowns NC17 & Philth - Burnout Melysma - No Surrender feat. Oracle MC Ben Soundscape & Collette Warren - Remember You Conrad Subs - Sun Beams Jaybee,Zere & Dave Owen - Ay Plair >>>Level 2 - Bite The Bone VIP LOG1N & Order Up - From The Bronx Molecular - Cold Hands Rider Shafique & Business As Usual - World In Trouble SUV - Booby Trap Dr. Meaker - Drift Away feat. Fizzy Gillespie & Celestine Rends - War Song VIP Tweakz & Teej - Loud Pack Undecentum - 9 Taurus L Side feat Fats - High Times VIP Do The Math - Falling Into Place Crystal Clear - Selector feat. Bryan Gee Crystal Clear & Kathryn Brenna - Slow It Down Serpnt, JG:MC - 2024 Teej - Silencio Benny L - Shadow People Do The Math - Mind Control Zero T, MANNY, Onj - Forget It RMS & Jaybee - Heard Cool Hand Flex - Omni RMS & Jaybee - Breached Do The Math - Run Leaf - Dis Style Watch The Ride - Shake The Foundation >>T>I & The Sauce - Grits & Jam  CrucifyMe - Prank Caller Undecentum - Ethyl KY - Own Way DJ Trace & HLZ - Raptor Randall - Spacebug XTC Nottingham & Jaybee - One More Chance

V Recordings Podcast - Drum and Bass / Jungle
V Podcast 158 - Hosted Bryan Gee - Randall Tribute Show

V Recordings Podcast - Drum and Bass / Jungle

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 3, 2024


In V Podcast 158, Bryan Gee honors the late DJ Randall, a true legend in the drum and bass scene. Known for his precision mixing and pioneering sound, Randall was instrumental in shaping the genre since its inception. As part of the trio Watch The Ride alongside DJ Die and Diemantle, he crafted some of the biggest tracks of recent years, as well as numerious releases on his own Mac II imprint and beyond. This episode features a host of Randall's productions and collaborations like "Sound Control" with Andy C and "2 Worlds" with Benny L and many many more, showcasing his profound influence. Bryan also delivers fresh tunes from L-Side and Makoto, Carlito, Lynx, Adam F, Break, and more. A heartfelt tribute to a drum and bass icon. Stay connected with us on social media and subscribe to the V Podcast on your favorite platform to stay updated on all the latest episodes. 01. Carlito - Hold Me Close 02. Makoto and DJ Marky feat. Sola - Poetry (Remix) 03. DJ Marky and Makoto - Groove Thang 04. L-Side, Makoto and Frank H. Carter III - What You Won't Do For Love 05. Riya and Frank H. Carter III - Confessions (Unreal Edit) 06. Mako and Marcus Intalex - Keep Your Cool 07. DRS, L-Side and Simplification - Protection 08. Bcee - Generation (L-Side Remix) 09. Break - Something 10. Sl8r - The Pillar VIP 11. Sl8r - Tomorrow Night 12. Zoro and Azfm - Once Again 13. Randall and Andy C - Sound Control 14. Randall - The R 15. Randall and Shimon feat. Fatman D - Twang 16. Randall - Song and Dance 17. Randall and Die - Skematics 18. Randall - Make It Happen 19. Randall and NV - BS4 20. Randall - C Locerz 21. Project 2 - Well Well Well 22. Randall and Benny L - 2 Worlds 23. Randall - Going Home feat. Kathy Brenen 24. Project - Understand 25. Randall - Bionic Ran (L-Side Project) 26. D Double D - Watch Da Ride 27. Watch The Ride - Retrograde 28. Watch The Ride - Abyss 29. Watch The Ride - Out The Gate 30. Watch The Ride - Maximum Tribute 31. Watch The Ride - Good For You 32. Watch The Ride - Stop Lights (L-Side Remix) 33. Watch The Ride feat. Gardner - Ready 4 Dem 34. Watch The Ride feat. Nia Archi - Mash Up Da Dance 35. Sigma feat. Doktor - Trouble You (Watch The Ride Remix) 36. DJ Die - Morro Dud (Watch The Ride Remix) 37. Watch The Ride - Times Up 38. London Electricity - Billion Dollar Gravity (Watch The Ride Remix) 39. Watch The Ride - Shake The Foundation 40. Watch The Ride - Wicked Man 41. Watch The Ride feat. Scorpio MC and D Double - Raw 42. Total Science - Gangsta (Watch The Ride Remix) 43. Watch The Ride - Mad Mad Mad 44. Paul T and Edward Oberon feat. MC GQ - Kamakazie 45. The Sauce feat. Fox - First Class 46. Alibi and LowQui - On Course 47. Icicle - Dreadnaught (Break Remix) 48. Level 2 - Nas 49. Acuna and MC Fava - Unseen VIP 50. Alibi and Yatuza - Foundations 51. Carlito feat. Holly - Ah Who 52. Chimpo and Sl8r - Respect 53. Lynx - Fyah 54. Adam F - Aromatherapy (Paul T and Ed Oberon Remix) 55. Crystal Clear and Sweetpea - Dreamstate 45 - Alibi and LowQui - Happy Shopper

Pod To Me Nice
The Return Of Fred Mac II

Pod To Me Nice

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2024 87:58


OG Member Fred Mac II HAS RETURNED!!! Social Media Hijinks has us reacting to the fallout of the 2024 Olympics, Johnathan Majors crying at the awards & Simone Biles vs The Internet. Plus we get into one email! Black Woman who wants opinion on dating a white man who knowingly isn't HIS type. Email or send us a Voice Message at AskThePointPod@gmail.com Please like, share and subscribe to Billie's R&B Youtube channel: youtube.com/@rnbvibesnfinds -Thanks for Listening!- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/podtomenice/support Don't forget to rate, review, listen on Apple Podcasts, Google, Spotify, Stitcher or your favorite podcast app. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/podtomenice/support

Diary of a Serial Hostess  Podcast (private feed for victoriadelamaza@icloud.com)

I have been thinking lately as I continue with my New Year's resolution of all-white tables - I know, I know… but sometimes I do think things through! That style, real style, is all about repetition. It is doing some things over and over again. From dressing the table to dressing ourselves and our houses, repetition solidifies a look, a combination of colors, and style. I have always been a fan of “uniforms” and love to wear the same thing over and over. I subscribe to the mantra of a few good clothes rather than trends. Not that I don't like to wear something fun once in a while and update a certain look, or mix and match in my closet, it is just that my blue blazer, the one I have been wearing for about 30 years, is still totally fine. Fashion is a trend; style is making it your own. Trends and fashion come and go. But even then, once you find your style, it is hard to let it go in the name of fashion. Is style expensive? Yes and no. What can I say: Zara is not the same as Dior, no matter how much we try. And don't confuse style with trendiness. Right? Grunge, goth, mob wife… Well-cut clothes (that enhance my physique) make me feel like I can conquer the world. Essentials in the closet are a great white blouse (these have to be replaced all the time, they become yellow… and there is nothing to do about that!), a perfect pair of slim trousers, a great tweed jacket, J.Crew jeans, and a few good dresses. Great accessories also help. A good pair of shoes, a great handbag, and decent jewelry elevate the essence of style. Well, and a great black suit that can take you to the most fabulous dinner party all the way to a funeral. Even at home, repetition is what makes rooms flow into each other. I once decorated an entire house using one fabric. With the help of Mac II and Mica Ertegun, the concept was to use one patterned fabric that worked with solids to create one of my favorite styles of decor. Each room was different but they all had a common thread. On the table, sticking to one color, in my case white, has made setting the table over and over again a fun exercise of layering and texture and height, rather than mixing colors differently every single time, thus putting the focus on the food, flowers, and guests….The three pillars of ancient wisdom are goodness, truth, and beauty. I am sure there are many ways of analyzing this, but these three principles are the essence of how I want to live my life. Goodness is about being kind and compassionate to others, of doing good, of being altruistic and generous. Truth is not just about not lying; it is about being honest and honorable privately and at work and, most importantly, not lying to myself. And yes, even though beauty is in the eye of the beholder, it is not about living in a museum but surrounding myself with balance and order. It is about appreciating the beauty around us and the richness of life. And with these deep thoughts, I leave you.Sincerely, The Serial Hostess Thank you for subscribing. Leave a comment or share this episode.

Diary of a Serial Hostess  Podcast (private feed for victoriadelamaza@icloud.com)

I have been thinking lately as I continue with my New Year's resolution of all-white tables - I know, I know… but sometimes I do think things through! That style, real style, is all about repetition. It is doing some things over and over again. From dressing the table to dressing ourselves and our houses, repetition solidifies a look, a combination of colors, and style. I have always been a fan of “uniforms” and love to wear the same thing over and over. I subscribe to the mantra of a few good clothes rather than trends. Not that I don't like to wear something fun once in a while and update a certain look, or mix and match in my closet, it is just that my blue blazer, the one I have been wearing for about 30 years, is still totally fine. Fashion is a trend; style is making it your own. Trends and fashion come and go. But even then, once you find your style, it is hard to let it go in the name of fashion. Is style expensive? Yes and no. What can I say: Zara is not the same as Dior, no matter how much we try. And don't confuse style with trendiness. Right? Grunge, goth, mob wife… Well-cut clothes (that enhance my physique) make me feel like I can conquer the world. Essentials in the closet are a great white blouse (these have to be replaced all the time, they become yellow… and there is nothing to do about that!), a perfect pair of slim trousers, a great tweed jacket, J.Crew jeans, and a few good dresses. Great accessories also help. A good pair of shoes, a great handbag, and decent jewelry elevate the essence of style. Well, and a great black suit that can take you to the most fabulous dinner party all the way to a funeral. Even at home, repetition is what makes rooms flow into each other. I once decorated an entire house using one fabric. With the help of Mac II and Mica Ertegun, the concept was to use one patterned fabric that worked with solids to create one of my favorite styles of decor. Each room was different but they all had a common thread. On the table, sticking to one color, in my case white, has made setting the table over and over again a fun exercise of layering and texture and height, rather than mixing colors differently every single time, thus putting the focus on the food, flowers, and guests….The three pillars of ancient wisdom are goodness, truth, and beauty. I am sure there are many ways of analyzing this, but these three principles are the essence of how I want to live my life. Goodness is about being kind and compassionate to others, of doing good, of being altruistic and generous. Truth is not just about not lying; it is about being honest and honorable privately and at work and, most importantly, not lying to myself. And yes, even though beauty is in the eye of the beholder, it is not about living in a museum but surrounding myself with balance and order. It is about appreciating the beauty around us and the richness of life. And with these deep thoughts, I leave you.Sincerely, The Serial Hostess Thank you for subscribing. Leave a comment or share this episode.

Diary of a Serial Hostess  Podcast (private feed for victoriadelamaza@icloud.com)

I have been thinking lately as I continue with my New Year's resolution of all-white tables - I know, I know… but sometimes I do think things through! That style, real style, is all about repetition. It is doing some things over and over again. From dressing the table to dressing ourselves and our houses, repetition solidifies a look, a combination of colors, and style. I have always been a fan of “uniforms” and love to wear the same thing over and over. I subscribe to the mantra of a few good clothes rather than trends. Not that I don't like to wear something fun once in a while and update a certain look, or mix and match in my closet, it is just that my blue blazer, the one I have been wearing for about 30 years, is still totally fine. Fashion is a trend; style is making it your own. Trends and fashion come and go. But even then, once you find your style, it is hard to let it go in the name of fashion. Is style expensive? Yes and no. What can I say: Zara is not the same as Dior, no matter how much we try. And don't confuse style with trendiness. Right? Grunge, goth, mob wife… Well-cut clothes (that enhance my physique) make me feel like I can conquer the world. Essentials in the closet are a great white blouse (these have to be replaced all the time, they become yellow… and there is nothing to do about that!), a perfect pair of slim trousers, a great tweed jacket, J.Crew jeans, and a few good dresses. Great accessories also help. A good pair of shoes, a great handbag, and decent jewelry elevate the essence of style. Well, and a great black suit that can take you to the most fabulous dinner party all the way to a funeral. Even at home, repetition is what makes rooms flow into each other. I once decorated an entire house using one fabric. With the help of Mac II and Mica Ertegun, the concept was to use one patterned fabric that worked with solids to create one of my favorite styles of decor. Each room was different but they all had a common thread. On the table, sticking to one color, in my case white, has made setting the table over and over again a fun exercise of layering and texture and height, rather than mixing colors differently every single time, thus putting the focus on the food, flowers, and guests….The three pillars of ancient wisdom are goodness, truth, and beauty. I am sure there are many ways of analyzing this, but these three principles are the essence of how I want to live my life. Goodness is about being kind and compassionate to others, of doing good, of being altruistic and generous. Truth is not just about not lying; it is about being honest and honorable privately and at work and, most importantly, not lying to myself. And yes, even though beauty is in the eye of the beholder, it is not about living in a museum but surrounding myself with balance and order. It is about appreciating the beauty around us and the richness of life. And with these deep thoughts, I leave you.Sincerely, The Serial Hostess Thank you for subscribing. Leave a comment or share this episode.

Mac Folklore Radio
1988: Apple's Year In Review (1989)

Mac Folklore Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2023 25:09


The Macintosh's year in review for 1988: some reached milestones, some threw stones, and some wished they'd stayed at home. Original text by the late Charles Seiter, Macworld, January 1989. Macworld: In Memoriam. Charles was just 58 when he passed. If you ever spotted a heavy math, science, or programming and development tool-related article in Macworld, you could be certain to find Charles' name nearby. I believe this particular article was, unfortunately, his only excursion into humorous editorials. I had a little contact with Charles back in 2004 after I thanked Macworld's team of contributing editors for teaching me that, contrary to what I had been taught in school, writing could be fun. Clip of Jean-Louis Gassee's story about having dinner with John Sculley from the 2011 “Steve Jobs' Legacy” event at the Churchill Club. Even the Newton marketing team acknowledged people sort of looked down upon John Sculley's technical background. Gassee's new book “Grateful Geek” is out now. His old book is too. nVIR clip from Don Swaim interview with Cliff Stoll, author of The Cuckoo's Egg. The WayBack Machine does not have the source file but I do. The Computer Chronicles' whirlwind tour of Boston Macworld Expo 1988. Bill Gates' observation about borrowing ideas from Xerox. On the DRAM crisis of 1988. Mainframe and VAX connectivity makes up a fairly large percentage of the marketing material coming out of Apple in the late ‘80s, as you can see from The ReDiscovered Future and the Apple User Group VHS Archive. As told by Bob Supnik and many others, DEC was already thoroughly doomed by the late 1980s. Pre-QuickTime Video production on the Mac II was, by today's standards, weird and expensive. WordPerfect 1.0 and 2.0 weren't heralded as very Mac-like, unlike v3.5, which shipped around the time Microsoft Word 6 ate everyone else's lunch. Not all early CD-ROM titles were as compelling as Myst: About Cows v3.09, $40USD. How AutoCAD was ported to the Macintosh II–with a dirty hack. Apple and Stephen Wolfram pushing Mathematica 1.0. The first few years of fax software on the Macintosh were a bit of a disaster. Apple'e entry was particularly embarrassing. Macworld even called the AppleFax software/hardware package “beleaguered”. 1989 was the year John Norstad's Disinfectant began to spread like wildfire. We usually received a new version every 3-6 months via my father's employer. It's remarkable software distribution at that scale happened at all when you think about how few people people had modems back then.

PodFast FoodCast
Big Mac II

PodFast FoodCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 29:45


It's the one year anniversary of the PodFast FoodCast! Join Steven and Ryan as they take a trip down memory lane, and visit their old friends over at the Golden Arches. Back to where to it all began.Intro Music: "Happy Birthday Jazz Piano Logo" by Music_For_Videos from PixabayOutro Music: "For Food" by ComaStudio from Pixabayburger pic: Emoji One, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia CommonsTwitter: @podfastfoodcastInstagram: @podfastfoodcastYouTube: PodFast FoodCastTwitch: podfastfoodcast

DoctorApple NEWS
DoctorApple NEWS 136

DoctorApple NEWS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2022 18:41


04/03/22 - Homebrew Computer Club, demissões Apple, Mac II, MacMini Intel, Evento Apple 8 de março, Novos Apple Watch, Reparo FaceID, Apple Online suspensa na Russa, Safari Dark Mode, OneDrive para Apple Silicon, iPhone 14 tela mais brilhante, App Saude iPad, https://www.doctorapple.com.br

Mac para todos - HD
383.- Pon en forma tu Mac (II) - Trailer

Mac para todos - HD

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2021 3:01


Hoy te traigo el segundo vídeo sobre cómo mantener nuestro Mac en forma de cara a la instalación del nuevo sistema operativo. Te cuento cómo puedes hacer que Spotlight realice búsquedas mucho más rápidas y cómo evitar que las aplicaciones que no estés usando consuman memoria del Mac. Al ser un capítulo premium lo que vas a ver a continuación es tan sólo un trailer. Para acceder a este y muchos otros más puedes probar GRATIS "Mac para Todos" durante dos días desde aquí: https://www.macparatodos.es/prueba

RetroMacCast
RMC Episode 533: BOOTI TIME!

RetroMacCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2020 33:48


James and John discuss eBay finds: Apple iPod poster, Apple gym bag, and RWB Porsche 911 model in Apple livery. John demos his Apple II BOOTI USB Hard Drive Emulator card , and news includes Mac II development for Linux, big collection for sale, and Mac SE/30 modification. To see all of the show notes and join our website, join our Facebook page and visit us at RetroMacCast.

RetroMacCast
RMC Episode 529: Crystal Quest

RetroMacCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 14, 2020 31:52


James and John discuss eBay finds: Mac II, TAM prototype, and Mac 5400.  They talk about the classic Mac game Crystal Quest, and news includes upcoming WWDC and OpenCore's Velociraptor. To see all of the show notes and join our website, join our Facebook page and visit us at RetroMacCast. Catch us streaming live on YouTube!

Warm Ears Music - Drum & Bass Podcast
Warm Ears Podcast #23 - Elementrix & Jaybee

Warm Ears Music - Drum & Bass Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2020 101:24


Welcome to the Warm Ears Podcast! This month Elementrix hosts Jaybee. Get comfy for an extra long session as another legend joins us for this month's episode. Jaybee has been an integral part of the scene for over 2 decades, with releases on a wide range of labels such as Flight Pattern, Liquid V, Chronic, Mac II, Good Looking to name a few. Full tracklist in the description below: Stream on Spotify / Apple Podcasts / Tunein Radio → hyperurl.co/fxg4ld Follow Elementrix: Facebook → www.facebook.com/elementrixsound/ Mixcloud → www.mixcloud.com/elementrix/ Follow Jaybee: Facebook → www.facebook.com/Jaybeednb Soundcloud → @jaybee Follow Warm Ears Music: Facebook → www.facebook.com/warmearsmusic Instagram → www.instagram.com/warmearsmusic Twitter → twitter.com/warmearsmusic Listen to all our releases: Spotify → spoti.fi/2mHUPal Deezer → bit.ly/2HBeRjg Elementrix: DJ Marky & Dirtbag - Hard To Find [V Recordings] Legion & Logam - Afterthought (Gerra & Stone Remix)[ProgRAM] Skuff - Empty Pots [Rebel Music] Loxy & Ink - The Herald [Hospital Records] ??? Conrad Subs - Oceanic [???] Kidsonic - Run Away [Impact Music] MI-KH - Dreamscape (Command Strange Remix)[Live History Records] Sevin - swings and Roundabouts [Fokuz Recordings] Sikey & Speedwagon - Right About Now [Fokuz Recordings] --- Jaybee: Trex feat. Fox - What I Say(Jaybee Remix)[???] Teej & Jaybee - Bring The Gargon [???] Chopstick Dubplate feat. Natty Cambell & Jago - Whah Gwan (DJ GAW Remix)[Chopstick Dubplate] DJ Hybrid - Bonebreaker [???] Kumo - Elephant Dance [Born On Road] KY - Powertrip [???] Zero T - Move & Flow [V Recordings] Kumo - Education [Born On Road] Lupo - Rude [???] Alibi - Sentinel [???] L-Side feat. T.R.A.C. - Killer Transmission (Alibi Remix)[V Recordings] Kumo - This Is How I Like It [Born On Road] Gravity - Sound of Eden Booty [???] Vital - Acid Rocker [Liondub International] Alibi - Big Man Jungle [V Recordings] Kumo - Top Boy [Born On Road] Bladerunner - Rollers Movements [???] Compiler - Python [???] Gravit-E - Static Shock [???] Kumarachi - Old School Style [???] Objective - Ray Gun Soldier [Lost The Plot] Synged - Ombra [???] Sub Killaz - Block Party [Liondub International] Jaybee & Terraform - Rollin' Heights [???] Jaybee - Spit [???] Stompz - Chained Up [???] Sl8R - Roundabout [???] Dark Ops - Warlock [Locked Up Music] AI - Uprising (2020 Re-Visit)[V Recordings] Degs feat. LSB & Phoebe Freya - Trade Places [Hospital Records]

RetroMacCast
RMC Episode 496: Downsizing

RetroMacCast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2019 44:29


James and John discuss eBay finds: Mac 128k in box, Mac Classic II in box, and lot of Mac II cases. They discuss the Macs they would keep if they had to downsize, and news includes HyperCard, new MBP, WWDC coming, and Mac-related Kickstarter updates. To see all of the show notes and join our website, visit us at RetroMacCast.  

Mac para todos - HD
280.- 10 cosas que tienes que saber si pasas de PC a Mac (II) - Trailer

Mac para todos - HD

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2019 2:48


Hoy seguimos con la segunda parte de este vídeo (puedes ver la primera desde aquí) y te cuento cómo encontrar tus archivos, acceder a ellos de forma más rápida, mostrar las barras de desplazamiento en las ventanas, entrar al panel de control, abrir aplicaciones y desinstalarlas y también cómo guardar archivos. Al ser un capítulo premium lo que vas a ver a continuación es tan sólo un trailer. Para acceder a este y muchos otros más puedes probar GRATIS “Mac para Todos” durante dos días pinchando aquí: https://www.macparatodos.es/prueba

Fight Disciples Podcast
EPISODE 174: MAY MAC II

Fight Disciples Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018 41:03


The trolling is gathering momentum.  At first it seemed that it was all a bit of fun but there's real substance in the message. We fully expect a second hybrid fight between Mayweather and McGregor to happen and discuss its possibilities on this weeks show. We also look back on UFC Perth and that devastating Yoel Romero Knock Out of Luke Rockhold. *Please leave a review on iTunes http://apple.co/2wijpC1 *Follow us on Facebook www.facebook.com/fightdisciples *Follow us on Twitter www.twitter.com/fightdisciples *Follow us on Instagram www.instagram.com/fightdisciples We are pleased to announce our new clothing partnership with www.luke1977.com Please use DISCOUNT CODE FDLR15 in the checkout to receive 15% off your total purchase. #UFC #UFCPerth #UFCAustralia #RomeroRockHold #Mayweathyer #McGregor #MMA #MayMac

Proyecto Macintosh
#43 Fundamentos de seguridad en el Mac (II)

Proyecto Macintosh

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2017 63:16


En el episodio de hoy hablaremos de las últimas noticias sobre hardware y software para macOS. El tema principal del podcast será de nuevo la seguridad de nuestros Mac, pero todavía nos quedará tiempo para atender la consulta de un oyente. (ADVERTENCIA: el paquete de apps profesionales de Apple para Educación del que hablamos YA está disponible en España).Busca los enlaces de este episodio en http://emilcar.fm/proyectomacintosh donde también esperamos tus comentarios.

Proyecto Macintosh
#43 Fundamentos de seguridad en el Mac (II)

Proyecto Macintosh

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 11, 2017 63:16


En el episodio de hoy hablaremos de las últimas noticias sobre hardware y software para macOS. El tema principal del podcast será de nuevo la seguridad de nuestros Mac, pero todavía nos quedará tiempo para atender la consulta de un oyente. (ADVERTENCIA: el paquete de apps profesionales de Apple para Educación del que hablamos YA está disponible en España).Busca los enlaces de este episodio en http://emilcar.fm/proyectomacintosh donde también esperamos tus comentarios.

Mac para todos - HD
130.- Pon en forma tu Mac (II) - Trailer

Mac para todos - HD

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2015 2:31


Programas que te ayudarán a acelerar tu Mac. Onyx y CleanMyMac.

3 hommes et un podcast
Épisode 10 : GGGG, finance et oldies but goodies

3 hommes et un podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2013 153:56


Bienvenue dans cet épisode 10, qui est donc... Oui ?.. Le 11ème, bravo à ceux qui suivent. Dans ce nouvel opus, nos 3 comparses vont vous parler du trublion des télécoms, Free Mobile, qui vient d'annoncer son offre 4G. Que faut-il attendre de cette technologie et de ces annonces ? Faut-il y passer ? Puis, ils essaieront, brièvement, de vous expliquer avec des mots simples, les leurs, les implications économiques et financières du remue-ménage provoqué par Carl Icahn et les rachats qu'a effectué Apple dernièrement avec l'acquisition de Prime Sense et de Topsy. Vont-ils réussir à ce sortir de cette mission qui sort légèrement de leur zone de confiance de connaissance habituelle ? Il est à noter que cet épisode a eu une petite exclusivité, nous avons pu annoncer en direct, pendant l'enregistrement, la sortie sur l'Apple Store en ligne de l'écran 4K Sharp qui a depuis été retiré. Enfin, annoncé depuis des mois, Guillaume, Laurent et Mourad vont enfin consacrer du temps à parler des nouveautés d'Apple, enfin, seulement si elles ont plus de 10 ans. Ils vous parleront PowerMac G4, Newton, PowerBook Duo et autres Mac LC... Malheureusement, nous avons eu un petit incident technique (Guillaume vous donnera tous les détails dans l'épisode pour ceux que ça intéresse) et à la fin de l'épisode nous avons perdu l'enregistrement de Guillaume sur la partie Courrier des lecteurs, il a pu enregistrer en post-production quelques interventions mais elles ne sont pas aussi bien calées que lors de l'enregistrement initial. Nous sommes désolés de ce petit problème, nous allons prendre toutes nos précautions pour que cela ne se reproduise plus à l'avenir. À bientôt pour de nouvelles aventures ! Liens épisode 10 : Carte couverture 4G Free Carl Icahn (Wikipedia EN) Braeburn Capital (Wikipedia EN) Prime Sense (Wikipedia EN) Topsy Vieux Mac : PowerMac G4 450 AGP (EN) PowerBook 1400 CS 166 (EN) iMac G4 (EN) Pub iMac G4 (EN) PowerBook Duo et Duo Dock (EN) LC III (EN) Performa 6200 (EN) BeOS (Wikipedia EN) The BeOS File System - An OS geek retrospective (EN) Apple Network Server 700 (EN) Quadra 650 (EN) Mac II FX (EN) Quadra 840 AV (EN) PowerMac 8600 (EN) Newton eMate 300 (EN) Newton MessagePad (EN) Newton SOUP file system (Wikipedia EN) MacTracker (EN)

National Center for Women & Information Technology
Interview with Gillian Muessig

National Center for Women & Information Technology

Play Episode Listen Later May 9, 2011 31:23


Audio File:  Download MP3Transcript: An Interview with Gillian Muessig President and Co-founder, SEOmoz Date: May 9, 2011 NCWIT Entrepreneurial Heroes: Interview with Gillian Muessig [intro music] Lucy Sanders: Hi. This is Lucy Sanders, the CEO of the National Center for Women in Information Technology, or NCWIT. I know our listeners know about our "Entrepreneurial Heroes" interview series, which is a great interview series with women who have started IT companies. This is another in that series. With me is Larry Nelson from w3w3.com. Hi, Larry. Larry Nelson: Hi. I'm happy to be here, of course. We really enjoy the fact that everybody from parents as well as employers and leaders and managers, as well as teenage girls, listen to this show. Lucy: I think the person we're interviewing today is just an expert in search optimization. Everybody knows how important the Internet is, and how important it is to have your business, your organization, your personality, found by the most possible people. The person we're interviewing today is a real pioneer in that field, sometimes called the "Queen of Search Optimization." Larry: You betcha. Gillian Muessig: No, I think I'm called the "mom." I'm known as "SEO Mom." Lucy: SEO Mom? OK. Also a queen. We are very lucky to be interviewing today Gillian Muessig, the president and co-founder of SEOmoz. SEOmoz provides one of the world's most popular search marketing applications. The community it serves is huge, over 300,000 search marketers around the world. She also has a weekly radio show, "CEO Coach." This is really interesting to the people who listen to these interviews, because as part of that show, she's covering really important entrepreneurial issues around funding and finance and staffing and marketing and brand development. Welcome, Gillian. We're really happy to have you here today. Gillian: I'm delighted to be here. Thanks for asking. Lucy: What is happening with SEOmoz? Give us the latest. Gillian: The latest and greatest at SEOmoz. Well, I guess we're taking social signals much more seriously, as are the search engines these days. We are the creators of something called "Linkscape." It is a fresh web crawl of the World Wide Web. In other words, we have code known as "Bots" that run out along the Web itself and catalog the pages, just like Google or Microsoft or Yahoo! And so on, in this case Bing, it would be called these days. Similarly, we have a bot that goes out and crawls the Web. It's called, as I said, "Linkscape." It gives us the link graph of the Web. This means how all the pages are connected together with links from one page to the next. It's interesting stuff. It does not make us a search engine. A search engine can also give back answers when you say, "Gee, I'm looking for something. Where is it?" You could also give that back to somebody. That's what makes a full search engine. So if you think of Linkscape, you might think of it as kind of half a search engine. We know what is. Now, we are taking a look at the social graph. So while we crawl the Web for information about links running from here to there, we know that the social signals, which means the noise or the signals we hear on Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, Cora, Yahoo! Answers -- just thousands of other sites where people gather and talk to each other on the Web. Those are the social sites. When they get busy, the search engines notice, and that kind of information shows up in the search engine results pages, known as SERPs, Search Engine Results Pages. So that's what's new at SEOmoz. We're looking at the social signals and incorporating them into our platform. Lucy: That's amazing. There's so much information going on out there. Absolutely amazing. And great technology. The kinds of algorithms you're doing under the hood there just have to be really fascinating. Gillian: Yeah, they're pretty exciting stuff. If you think of the Google algorithm, I usually say, "Well, it starts somewhere in central Asia and it ends in Sunnyvale, California." It's really large, and it links 1's and 0's. That means it's changing constantly. What is it? 2,500 to 3,000 brilliant engineers are working on it at any given time. What they're trying to do is say, "Gosh, there's a lot of info out there. How would we catalog it and organize it to be on the Web?" And that's the world we deal in. Lucy: I know. Who would have thought it, even 10 years ago? Just amazing. Larry: Whew, not me. [laughter] Gillian: It's a very new industry, and that is one of the interesting things about the world of search. While some technology industries have been around for maybe 30 or 40 years, or much more, the Industrial Age certainly giving way to the Technological Age toward the end of the 20th century. The world of search is pretty much the oldest folks would have been practicing some '97, '98, '99, something like that, when the search engines became of age and became more important, and people began to find things on the Web using a search engine as opposed to using business card that sent them to a specific place. Lucy: It's really changed quite quickly. The historical perspective is fascinating and I think our first question is a little bit of a historical question. How did you first get into technology, Gillian, and what kinds of technologies do you see today that are really interesting to you? Gillian: When I opened my company, it was in 1981, I had one young child a two-year-old at the time. I subsequently raised three children under my desk. The youngest will tell you the color of the blanket he slept on under that desk, so I'm talking literally. I think in 1984, I was doing a consultancy basically, so glorified and employed. I was a consultant. I did traditional media marketing, everything from print media to a little bit of radio and television and so on, but regional stuff. In terms of print media, the first pieces of technology that we really saw came in the late '70's already, when type was no longer moved by pieces. Little slugs of type, and made out of lead, would be moved into place in big wooden boards, and that's how the articles of newspapers were created for advertisements and so on. When it moved from that manual process to something called code type, because the first one was Hocks type. You would actually move the little slugs into place and then melt them together. You would use heat to make sure that they were held together, and then you would break them apart for the next day's news. In this case it was called Cove type, and that was the first computerized type. Maybe that was the first time I got into technology, or really saw it affecting my industry. In 1984, I put a Mac II on my desk. I had more self-control than this advertisement that was coming out of Zenith said I would. It said, "We'll give you one of these Macs for two weeks. You pay us for it, but you can just bring it back and we'll give you your money back if you don't want it." I thought, "Well, I've got more self-control than that. I'm just going to take a look at this thing." Within two hours, of course, it owned me, body, soul and mind, and I never gave it back. [laughter] Gillian: The ad worked, and I bought a Mac. I used Mac for many years. I changed to PC I guess in the '90's. Just recently, we're talking within the last couple of weeks, one of my staff handed me a Mac Air, it's called the MacBook Air, and said, "You're going to love this! It's so lightweight." And I thought, "Really? Back to Mac? I'm an old dog. This is new tricks." [laughs] But yes, I do enjoy carrying it around, because I travel so much that having a very lightweight computer at my fingertips is really nice. So first technology would have been 1979. The First time I owned a real piece of it, if you will, in about 1984. The Web showed up in 1993. Perhaps what you were referring to before, kind of the Grand Dame of Internet marketing, because I was there six seconds before the next guy. In other words, it was just a wild and wooly time, and I was happy to be at ground zero. We had a great deal of excitement and ideas around it. I continued my business for a number of years, but certainly we were beginning to do things like offer websites to our clients, in which we were doing general graphics or advertisements, or perhaps annual reports and logos and that sort of design. We were now adding websites to that, and then we were adding better websites, because we had Flash. Then it was realized that the search engines were becoming more important, and search engines could not read Flash. A search bot is blind and deaf. It cannot see pictures, it cannot hear sound. So we had to go back to HTML and maybe incorporate elements of images and so on, and identify them. With that, search began. As a search engine became more important and required text to be able to find out what a document was about, we had to optimize a page. It meant you couldn't just put a picture on a page, because a search engine cannot see it. You had to tell it what that picture was. That, perhaps, was the very first piece of optimization. How we'd label pages, we'd say, "This page is about something. It's my website.com." Then you would put in a subject, you know, red cars. [laughs] And, "Oh! That page must be about red cars." The very beginnings of search engine optimization were very simple. Today it's a highly complex field. We don't even think of it as SEO. So answering the second half of your question, what do I find interesting in moving forward now? Certainly, we are deep into the information society, where information is power. It always has been, but it's just become more in the forefront. The concept of marketing has changed, both online and offline. It's changing the way we do business and the way we communicate. From governments to private corporations and individual human beings, we think of things now as inbound marketing, as opposed to push marketing. It used to be that I would make an ad, and I would kind of take a megaphone in whatever field I was in, whether it was print or radio or TV or whatever, and shout out to the world what I needed them to know. That's no longer acceptable. People don't like it. They never really did like it, but now they have choices. Now people want me to give them information when they want to see it, when they want to learn about it and when they are ready for it and in the way that they wish to see it. That means multiple-size screens such as iPhones, little phones, Android and things like that, cell phones, web-enabled cell phones, to iPad and similarly-sized screens to the next size, which is Netbooks and then laptops, to the huge screens that sit on our walls at home and sometimes cover entire walls. That would be 55-, 60-, and 70-inch television screens that also serve as interactive, Internet-capable products. I find that kind of technology fascinating and I think that's where we're headed in the future, a multi-sized delivery of information just when the consumer wants it. Larry: Gillian, thank you for sharing all that history. In fact, we are going to make sure that if people want to understand the history, they should come back and listen to this interview. Now why is it that you are an entrepreneur and what is it about an entrepreneurship that makes you tick? Gillian: [laughs] Entrepreneurship is a hereditary disease, not a profession. [laughter] I say to people often (I do a lot of coaching about entrepreneurship and I serve on the board of advisors of companies on four continents now) that entrepreneurship is something that you have to want, and you have to want it so desperately that you are willing to walk through what I call "the Dip." I know Seth Cotton talks about it. There's a fine little book called The Dip. But I see it slightly differently. The very short version is that in order to get to the other side of a chasm of all of the folks who are trying to do what you're doing and overcoming all of the impediments to success, you have to walk through this valley of the shadow of death. After that, we don't get quite that translation correct. It's not that "Yet I fear no evil". It's "If you fear no evil, you will not walk out." [laughter] So understanding entrepreneurship is: You have a great idea, and you decide you want to bring it to the marketplace, but you must walk through this chasm of impediments to success. And sometimes it gets very, very dark. I help entrepreneurs through that space quite often. It is not just that there are financial qualifications. For instance, one needs funding and that can be very difficult. Or perhaps one can fund it oneself, but are you willing to put at risk all of the monies required to do so? People will put their homes at risk. They will mortgage things and sell their vehicles and live with their parents and do all kinds of things in order to afford to make this thing fly. It's like throwing money at a passion. But in some ways it's very analogous to being addicted. You must do this thing once you get it going, right? Now the second piece is not financial stuff necessarily, but how everybody else looks at you. There are a number of entrepreneurs, some of them very amusing, who are radio personalities as well who will say things like the whole world will tell you that you are stark, raving mad. That there's no way you can do this, that it's not possible, and so on. And when all of that volume of voice and noise comes at you, do you have the fortitude to continue to walk and to say, "No, I know in my gut what I've got is right and I'm going to make it happen." Then the last piece would be the strength of this idea you have. If you're building it, for example, in technology and software, will this code hold up to what you need? If you have some kind of success, do your servers crash, do things begin to fall apart, can you do the customer service part, and can you do the company part and not just the idea part? What I say is that every truly brilliant company in the world has two parts. It has a technologist, a wizard, the brilliant idea person. And it has a business person. The business person's responsibility is to protect the wizard. If the wizard is thinking about anything else except what's next, you're losing money. Now any business person can make themselves a business. They can go sell shoes. They can go sell office furniture. They can do whatever they want. They make a decent business and sometimes they make quite a good one. Many, many technologists have brilliant ideas, but cannot for the life of them do the business piece of it. There are far more technologists who cannot succeed in business than there are business people who somehow cannot succeed at all because they don't have the brilliancy. But if you put the two together, you get something that is an explosion, an extraordinary universe of stuff that happens. And that's when you have these brilliant companies like Yahoo, Google, and so on. I was fortunate in my time to have such a technologist and to be able to work with him. I'm really in the end a business person. The technologist is Rand Fishkin, arguably the most famous name in search marketing today. I could build a brand around a human being. I could then build a brand around the company, and then the company has become very powerful in its field. Again, knowing your playing field is an important piece. But I have walked through that dip, that "valley of the shadow of death" when people told us this could not be done. I often say people who say that a thing cannot be done are often interrupted by those who are doing it. So, on October 6, 2008, SEOmoz interrupted a whole lot of people when we created this thing called Linkscape, which is a crawl of the World Wide Web. A whole lot of people said you have to be Google or Bing or whatever to do something like that. It cannot be done. It'll take ten thousand brilliant engineers and millions of dollars and you haven't got that. We did it. And when it was done, it powered all of our tool sets. So why am I an entrepreneur? It's because it's in my blood. It's because I see ideas. I can kind of put together a meal of products out of groups of intellectual properties, if you will. It's like throwing a bunch of ingredients on the table in the kitchen and coming up with a meal. It's like what Iron Chefs do. The same idea happens with entrepreneurship and it's what I do. I look at this collatinus collection of clattering junk and from it comes a product that is saleable. So that is what I think makes entrepreneurs what they are. It's the fortitude to move forward. It's the ability to see a jumble of ideas and possibilities and to create real product out of it. And brilliant companies or really brilliant entrepreneurs, those who have that partner technologist [inaudible 17:05. Lucy: So as an entrepreneur, Gillian, who supported you along this path? Do you have particular mentors or role models? What might you be able to tell the listeners about that? Gillian: Well, I think that's why I became a CEO coach, because there were precious few when I came through this path. I see that Rand, for example, who is now the CEO of SEOmoz, has a number of mentors who are coming to his aid and whom he has been able to seek out. But as we walked the very earliest days, there were things that I would have given my left arm to have known about. There were times when I would call practically a hundred people and not one of them could give me the answer I needed. So in a sense, I was not well-connected and I didn't have entrepreneurs who had been successful on at least one level larger than I was. I think there are very few when you are in the very, very early stages who will reach that hand out. You have to get through a certain barrier first. You have to reach some kind of critical mass before it gets recognized as a viable business and then you get those kinds of mentors beginning to take notice. So I decided that if I ever walked out of that valley, that's what I would do, that's what I would give back. That's why I do CEO coach every week. I don't get paid for this or anything. I promised that I would give answers, that I would name names and give numbers and tell people what to expect and help them to leverage the assets they had and to walk through that very difficult time when you are proving your concept and making it through to the other side. Of course, the scarcity is what makes success. If it were easy, if there were no chasm of all of these impediments-and I only mentioned three, but if it were easy to get from one end to the other, from brilliant idea to successful marketplace for everybody, then there would be no scarcity. Trust me when I say to people who are considering entrepreneurship, it's worth it. [laughter] Larry: I love it! Yes. Gillian: It is so worthwhile on the other side. The answer is, it is all the things that you would dream it would be. There is a certain amount of exclusivity. There is a satisfaction beyond anything else that comes from knowing you did it. Larry: Wow. With all the things you've been through, what's the toughest thing that you've had to do in your career? Gillian: Possibly two pieces and I think they're related. The very first one I had to learn to do was to move from being a consultant, a sole consultant, to being a real entrepreneur, somebody who had a company, who had people working with them, in other words, a team. I used to walk out, shake hands with somebody, and say, "Yes sir, I can do that," and go back and do it. That was easy. Whatever it was, it was easy. It meant I did it. I could rely on me and I knew my own mettle and I could trust me. The first time I walked out and said, "Yes sir, I can do that," and went back to the office and said, "I sure as shooting hope you folks can do that, because I can't," that was scary. To be able to rely on a team of people to do it as well as you would hope them to do because you cannot do a thing, that's entrepreneurship. That's really moving from being a sole proprietor to being a full-size company. The second piece was saying no to a customer, understanding that there are clients and client wannabes. They wannabe a client but they don't wanna pay. Client wannabees. Learning to recognize client wannabes in your business sector is terribly important, because otherwise they will suck the blood out of you and never pay for what they take. Generally they pay very low amounts, the lowest you will charge, and they take the most time. The less a client pays, the more hand holding they generally need. So understanding that you need to fire the bottom four clients on your list every year and make way for new ones who will pay you more, respect you more, understand the value of your service more and so on, that's a critical piece of success in moving forward in being a company. People who cannot let a client go regardless of how much this client fusses and complains and makes it a personal thing as opposed to a business thing and so on, doesn't recognize the value of the service, on and on and on. All of these complaints about the client, if they cannot let that client go they will forever be an individual consultant that's not terribly successful. Those who can get through it and understand the process become successful companies. Lucy: Along our discussion there have been so many characteristics that come across in your answers to these questions that I think make you a great entrepreneur. You're very thoughtful, very persistent. I think you're very funny, you have a great sense of humor and have a great sense of history and analytical, but what other kinds of personal characteristics do you think have given you an advantage as an entrepreneur? Gillian: I think that perhaps that is the most important question. I espouse and I truly believe that people should bring their personal values to the corporate marketplace. Separating them is not possibility and that we kid ourselves when we do it. It also makes for a, not just lesser, but a really foul business environment and I think for centuries we've experienced it. I hope that what I build is not perhaps the world's finest search marketing software company and this and that and the next thing, but another way to do business. Often it's known as theory X and theory Y management. Theory X management being all about the fix, about fear, about worrying about whether the boss is going to dislike this or deduct that or reduce your pay or fire you and so on and so forth. That's theory X stuff, screaming, yelling and so on. Theory Y is somehow coddling, if you will. All about the positive but I think there is more to theory Y than simply coddling or supporting and so on. I think it has to do with bringing your personal values to the corporate marketplace. As an entrepreneur I can't have a company unless I have people doing the things that my company produces whether it's product, service, consulting, whatever it is. They don't work for me, they work with me. Without me they have no job and without them I have no job. It's not that it's really different at all, it's just different roles within an organization. I recognize that there is no complete, flat equality. There is no such ideas, communism if you will. It is a hierarchy and certainly it was my money on the table, it was on my back that this thing got started, it was Rand's ideas and so on that made it happen. All of those things, so it does put a couple of founders in its place that is different than the employee status, if you will. On the other hand, we feel that we work with a team, it's not that the team works for us. When I didn't have two nickels to rub together, when we were having conversations that said things like, 'What will it take to keep body and soul together this week?' Like, who shall take a paycheck this week? When we were having those kinds of conversations, it was that bad, I would pay the medical insurance 100% in full first. I never even thought to give somebody a salary and let them choose whether or not they wanted medical insurance. It's part of the salary, it's part of the package, there is no choice because many of the people who work for me are very young and when you're very young you think you're invincible. Nothing is ever going to happen to you and you will live forever and life is good until somebody gets glioblastoma or somebody gets hit by a bus riding a bicycle to work in the afternoon, that's when things go wrong. It was incumbent upon me to say, "No. I know better, I've lived longer, I'm a parent." Never mind anything else and many of these people are young enough to be my kids, hence the word SEO mom but there were a number of reasons why I got called SEO mom but as a result it was my responsibility to do those kinds of things. So we pay 100% of medical insurance. We do kind of what they call platinum level medical insurance. we don't skimp on those kinds of things. Certainly we do things like tech companies to all over the place like the Googleplex will do and so on. We offer lunch here and breakfast there and something else and we celebrate things and it's a lot of fun But we actually walk the talk, if you look at the SEOmoz website there's something called TAGSEE, T-A-G-S-E-E. The first one stands for transparency, second letter, authenticity, the third, generosity and so on down the road, you can read all about it. We don't just say it we actually live it. We hire for personality first and then we look for skill sets which makes it difficult to find people because you can find a set of skills it's just, does it also come with the right kind of personality? I was talking about it with one of my staff this morning and I said, "You know, I think what happens here is very childlike or perhaps like going to the movies." We suspend belief when we go into the movies. We suspend belief every time we walk into this office. We are complete optimists. We should all have our own [inaudible 26:30] chapter here. We walk in and pretend that it's possible, that nothing is impossible and we do it every single day. We work and live and play with the people here, and they certainly do, they have all kinds of activities around the office and outside the office and just get together because they're friends as well. Because it's like souls, if you will, we all agree that you step into this room there is nothing we cannot do and doggone, we do it. Imagine what you can accomplish. I think that because we spend so much of our time at our workplaces, I know that we change jobs much more frequently than we did a generation or two ago but even still, for the time that we are all together it's much more than just a job. This is about fulfilling the soul as well as the business career requirements of the people who work here. I think of my job as giving everyone here wings to fly and then watch them fly. Larry: Gillian, with all the things that you've done, what do you do to bring balance to your personal and professional lives? Gillian: I guess that's kind of the answer I gave at the last question. Larry: Yeah. Gillian: I bring my personal life to life to the office. I don't think of it as work, I think it was Thomas Edison who said, "'I never worked a day in my life, it's all fun." When I was a little girl of three or four years old and I could turn the pages of a book I wanted to see this big wide world. I am the most fortunate person in the world. I get to run around the world as what's now known as corporate evangelist for SEOmoz. This is what happens by the way when they put you out to pasture. Before, I was the sole business person that was complementing the technologist that was Rand Fishkin. Rand is now the CEO, he has full reigns of the business, but there's only one strange relationship in business, and that's mother and son. You can't be a mommy's boy as a CEO so it was time for me to step way, way back. We have a COO here, we've got a CMO here, we've got a CPO, all of those C level executive places have now been filled and all of the things that I used to do, these eight and nine and ten hats, they're being worn by 10 and 12 and 14 people. If I was still doing all of them we would still be a tiny company. So it's important to seed the company, to let it grow and to let it expand. For me now, my job is to run around the world and make sure people say SEOmoz instead of SEO and so far so good, it's pretty cool. I get to be paid for this, what an extraordinary adventure. For me this balance of life and work and so on, it's fulfilling on so many levels. I'm, as I said, the most fortunate person in the world. Lucy: I noticed when we were researching for this interview that you have given lots and lots of keynotes and talks so you must be quite successful in your evangelist role. Gillian: Yes, I'd say so. I have somewhat of a reputation under SEO mom myself, if you will, under Gillian Muessig but I usually say, I don't go anywhere in the world, SEOmoz goes, it shows up in my body. Yes, I do a lot of keynote speaking, I do a lot of pro bono work and I support a tremendous number of entrepreneurs around the world and it's very gratifying. Lucy: Thank you very much for doing that. You've done so much with your career so far. I am suspicious that there's more to come so why don't you tell us a little bit about what's next for you. Gillian: Probably a book, a number of people are telling me it's time to do that so I have to knuckle down and do that but I think that's just in support of, if you will, a personal brand. I think the next thing, when I grow up, what do I want to be? The next thing that I will do is around entrepreneurship itself. I'm focusing more and more on it over the years. I have a serious interest in what you're doing essentially, in making sure that young women somewhere between the ages of 12 and 20 don't lose themselves and their souls in just societal expectations and norms, but do turn to the hard sciences, to technology, to science, to mathematics, to physics, all of those kinds of things and certainly to web related or intellectual property related fields. All of those things are terribly exciting. Women make very good mangers. They have traditionally not been part of it and I think whatever I do in the future will be helping to open the doors so that women can enter the marketplace in their rightful numbers if you will. We spend a tremendous amount of time in my childhood and youth as women working on those issues. It was the age feminism, it was the age of all of those kinds of rebellions and so on. We worked really, really hard guys but, gosh, we've got a long ways to go so rather than apologizing for the next generation, I think my next deal will be helping that next generation reach goals that we have only dreamed of. Lucy: Thank you for doing that and thank you for all of your hard work for entrepreneurship, in general. We'll look forward to staying in touch, it was great fun talking to you and I want to remind listeners that they can find this interview at w3w3.com and also ncwit.org. Larry: You betcha. Gillian: Thank you, it's been a great pleasure. If I have only one message for the young women listening, it's do it. Don't fear it, just do it. There's lots of women out there ready to extend a helping hand in making sure that you're successful, too. Lucy. Thank you. Larry: You betcha. Lucy: We really appreciate that. Larry: Thank you. Series: Entrepreneurial HeroesInterviewee: Gillian MuessigInterview Summary: Gillian Muessig, aka "SEOMom," is the President and Co-Founder of SEOmoz, providers of the world's most popular search marketing applications. SEOmoz.org serves a community of 300,000 search marketers around the world. Release Date: May 9, 2011Interview Subject: Gillian MuessigInterviewer(s): Lucy Sanders, Larry NelsonDuration: 31:22

Panda Drum & Bass Mix Show: The Best DNB Tracks Mixed Weekly // Drum and Bass Podcast with Drum 'n' Bass Mixes by a DNB DJ

Panda presents Viper Recording's own NC-17. This Canadian Drum & Bass duo originating from Toronto started writing music in 2004 and have been steadily rising to prominence in the Drum and Bass scene. The duo consists of Peter who founded the group and Korosiv who joined in 2007. Inspired and taught initially by Corrupt Souls, NC-17 has developed their own hard style of Drum and Bass with a big cinematic influence. This comes as no surprise as Peter is a university educated film maker. Their music has been played by the biggest in the scene including Andy C, Futurebound, Ed Rush, Optical, Randall, Pendulum, Trace, Bad Company, Red One, Shimon and many more. Their tracks have appeared on an impressive collection of label outfits such as Viper, Hardware, Proximity, DSCI4, MAC II and Sudden Def. Their Just Heroes EP is out now, get it here http://j.mp/GET_JUST_HEROES_EP In this mix, NC-17 mixes 44 of their own tracks in over 2 hours. This length is a first for Panda D&B TV and probably YouTube as well. Now I don't want to hear any more complaining about there being no longer mixes! Lock in and leave your appreciation for the duo in the comments section! TRACKLISTING01 - NC-17 & Legion - Philidelphia Experinment - Sine Language 02 - NC-17 - Shocker - Big Riddim Recordings 03 - NC-17 - Attitude Era - Renegade Hardware 04 - NC-17 - Generation - Mix N Blend 05 - NC-17 & D-Struct - Susperia - Dub 06 - NC-17 & Nusense - Harlem Hangover - Mix N Blend 07 - NC-17 feat. Grimm - Hearts Of Darkness - Renegade Hardware 08 - NC-17 Nusense Basher - Heroes 4 Ever Vip - Viper 09 - NC-17 & Grimm - Insidious - All Sorts 10 - NC-17 & Grimm - Not The Devil - Zombie 11 - NC-17 & Nusense - Dirty - All Sorts 12 - NC-17 & Tyke - Untitled - Grid 13 - NC-17,Smooth & Nusense - Underwater - Viper 14 - NC-17 & Felon - Damage - Dub 15 - NC-17 - Slug Path - Dsci4 16 - NC-17 & Treo - Krot - Dub 17 - NC-17 feat. KC - Bug Spray - Big Riddim Recordings 18 - NC-17 feat. KC - Lars Von Triers - Dub 19 - NC-17 & Treo - Black Magic - Som 20 - NC-17 - Demonia - Vampire 21 - NC-17, Kinetik & Treo - Synthetic - Black Seed Recordings 22 - NC-17, Telekinisis feat. KC - Micronaps - Som 23 - NC-17, Advance feat. Ak-1200 - Transmissions - Dsci4 24 - NC-17 - Survival Of The Fittest - Mac Ii 25 - NC-17 - 80 Blocks - Proximity 26 - NC-17 feat. Corrupt Souls - Snail Trail - Circle 27 - NC-17 - Basket Case - Dub 28 - NC-17 feat. Nusense - Sour Milk - Dub 29 - NC-17 feat. KC - Zombi - Grindhouse Recordings 30 - Masheen & Cannon Boys feat. NC-17 - Menace - Sinuous 31 - NC-17 & Nusense - Wolfen - Grid 32 - NC-17 & Nusense - The Keep - Viper 33 - NC-17 & Nusense - Carnivorous - Dub 34 - NC-17 & Bladerunner - Dead Pit - Proximity 35 - NC-17 - Saboxin - Dub 36 - NC-17 & Cabbie - Dr.Butcher - Grindhouse Recording 37 - NC-17 feat. KC - Body Parts - Proximity 38 - NC-17 & Genr8 - Ogre - Dub 39 - NC-17,Legion & Treo - 98 Throw Back - Dub 40 - NC-17 - Freddy's Dead - Proximity 41 - NC-17 & BTK - Lost - Dub 42 - NC-17 feat. John & KC - Shockwaves - Dub 43 - NC-17 & Nusese - Twilight Of The Dead - Dub **Fade** 44 - NC-17 & Corrupt - Bug Juice - S

Panda Mix Show: The Best EDM Mixes Weekly // The Electro House Mix, Trap Mix, Drum n Bass Mix and Lounge Mix Shows

Panda presents Viper Recording's own NC-17. This Canadian Drum & Bass duo originating from Toronto started writing music in 2004 and have been steadily rising to prominence in the Drum and Bass scene. The duo consists of Peter who founded the group and Korosiv who joined in 2007. Inspired and taught initially by Corrupt Souls, NC-17 has developed their own hard style of Drum and Bass with a big cinematic influence. This comes as no surprise as Peter is a university educated film maker. Their music has been played by the biggest in the scene including Andy C, Futurebound, Ed Rush, Optical, Randall, Pendulum, Trace, Bad Company, Red One, Shimon and many more. Their tracks have appeared on an impressive collection of label outfits such as Viper, Hardware, Proximity, DSCI4, MAC II and Sudden Def. Their Just Heroes EP is out now, get it here http://j.mp/GET_JUST_HEROES_EP In this mix, NC-17 mixes 44 of their own tracks in over 2 hours. This length is a first for Panda D&B TV and probably YouTube as well. Now I don't want to hear any more complaining about there being no longer mixes! Lock in and leave your appreciation for the duo in the comments section! TRACKLISTING01 - NC-17 & Legion - Philidelphia Experinment - Sine Language 02 - NC-17 - Shocker - Big Riddim Recordings 03 - NC-17 - Attitude Era - Renegade Hardware 04 - NC-17 - Generation - Mix N Blend 05 - NC-17 & D-Struct - Susperia - Dub 06 - NC-17 & Nusense - Harlem Hangover - Mix N Blend 07 - NC-17 feat. Grimm - Hearts Of Darkness - Renegade Hardware 08 - NC-17 Nusense Basher - Heroes 4 Ever Vip - Viper 09 - NC-17 & Grimm - Insidious - All Sorts 10 - NC-17 & Grimm - Not The Devil - Zombie 11 - NC-17 & Nusense - Dirty - All Sorts 12 - NC-17 & Tyke - Untitled - Grid 13 - NC-17,Smooth & Nusense - Underwater - Viper 14 - NC-17 & Felon - Damage - Dub 15 - NC-17 - Slug Path - Dsci4 16 - NC-17 & Treo - Krot - Dub 17 - NC-17 feat. KC - Bug Spray - Big Riddim Recordings 18 - NC-17 feat. KC - Lars Von Triers - Dub 19 - NC-17 & Treo - Black Magic - Som 20 - NC-17 - Demonia - Vampire 21 - NC-17, Kinetik & Treo - Synthetic - Black Seed Recordings 22 - NC-17, Telekinisis feat. KC - Micronaps - Som 23 - NC-17, Advance feat. Ak-1200 - Transmissions - Dsci4 24 - NC-17 - Survival Of The Fittest - Mac Ii 25 - NC-17 - 80 Blocks - Proximity 26 - NC-17 feat. Corrupt Souls - Snail Trail - Circle 27 - NC-17 - Basket Case - Dub 28 - NC-17 feat. Nusense - Sour Milk - Dub 29 - NC-17 feat. KC - Zombi - Grindhouse Recordings 30 - Masheen & Cannon Boys feat. NC-17 - Menace - Sinuous 31 - NC-17 & Nusense - Wolfen - Grid 32 - NC-17 & Nusense - The Keep - Viper 33 - NC-17 & Nusense - Carnivorous - Dub 34 - NC-17 & Bladerunner - Dead Pit - Proximity 35 - NC-17 - Saboxin - Dub 36 - NC-17 & Cabbie - Dr.Butcher - Grindhouse Recording 37 - NC-17 feat. KC - Body Parts - Proximity 38 - NC-17 & Genr8 - Ogre - Dub 39 - NC-17,Legion & Treo - 98 Throw Back - Dub 40 - NC-17 - Freddy's Dead - Proximity 41 - NC-17 & BTK - Lost - Dub 42 - NC-17 feat. John & KC - Shockwaves - Dub 43 - NC-17 & Nusese - Twilight Of The Dead - Dub **Fade** 44 - NC-17 & Corrupt - Bug Juice - S

Panda Drum & Bass Mix Show: The Best DNB Tracks Mixed Weekly // Drum and Bass Podcast with Drum 'n' Bass Mixes by a DNB DJ

Panda presents Viper Recording's own NC-17. This Canadian Drum & Bass duo originating from Toronto started writing music in 2004 and have been steadily rising to prominence in the Drum and Bass scene. The duo consists of Peter who founded the group and Korosiv who joined in 2007. Inspired and taught initially by Corrupt Souls, NC-17 has developed their own hard style of Drum and Bass with a big cinematic influence. This comes as no surprise as Peter is a university educated film maker. Their music has been played by the biggest in the scene including Andy C, Futurebound, Ed Rush, Optical, Randall, Pendulum, Trace, Bad Company, Red One, Shimon and many more. Their tracks have appeared on an impressive collection of label outfits such as Viper, Hardware, Proximity, DSCI4, MAC II and Sudden Def. Their Just Heroes EP is out now, get it here http://j.mp/GET_JUST_HEROES_EP In this mix, NC-17 mixes 44 of their own tracks in over 2 hours. This length is a first for Panda D&B TV and probably YouTube as well. Now I don't want to hear any more complaining about there being no longer mixes! Lock in and leave your appreciation for the duo in the comments section! TRACKLISTING01 - NC-17 & Legion - Philidelphia Experinment - Sine Language 02 - NC-17 - Shocker - Big Riddim Recordings 03 - NC-17 - Attitude Era - Renegade Hardware 04 - NC-17 - Generation - Mix N Blend 05 - NC-17 & D-Struct - Susperia - Dub 06 - NC-17 & Nusense - Harlem Hangover - Mix N Blend 07 - NC-17 feat. Grimm - Hearts Of Darkness - Renegade Hardware 08 - NC-17 Nusense Basher - Heroes 4 Ever Vip - Viper 09 - NC-17 & Grimm - Insidious - All Sorts 10 - NC-17 & Grimm - Not The Devil - Zombie 11 - NC-17 & Nusense - Dirty - All Sorts 12 - NC-17 & Tyke - Untitled - Grid 13 - NC-17,Smooth & Nusense - Underwater - Viper 14 - NC-17 & Felon - Damage - Dub 15 - NC-17 - Slug Path - Dsci4 16 - NC-17 & Treo - Krot - Dub 17 - NC-17 feat. KC - Bug Spray - Big Riddim Recordings 18 - NC-17 feat. KC - Lars Von Triers - Dub 19 - NC-17 & Treo - Black Magic - Som 20 - NC-17 - Demonia - Vampire 21 - NC-17, Kinetik & Treo - Synthetic - Black Seed Recordings 22 - NC-17, Telekinisis feat. KC - Micronaps - Som 23 - NC-17, Advance feat. Ak-1200 - Transmissions - Dsci4 24 - NC-17 - Survival Of The Fittest - Mac Ii 25 - NC-17 - 80 Blocks - Proximity 26 - NC-17 feat. Corrupt Souls - Snail Trail - Circle 27 - NC-17 - Basket Case - Dub 28 - NC-17 feat. Nusense - Sour Milk - Dub 29 - NC-17 feat. KC - Zombi - Grindhouse Recordings 30 - Masheen & Cannon Boys feat. NC-17 - Menace - Sinuous 31 - NC-17 & Nusense - Wolfen - Grid 32 - NC-17 & Nusense - The Keep - Viper 33 - NC-17 & Nusense - Carnivorous - Dub 34 - NC-17 & Bladerunner - Dead Pit - Proximity 35 - NC-17 - Saboxin - Dub 36 - NC-17 & Cabbie - Dr.Butcher - Grindhouse Recording 37 - NC-17 feat. KC - Body Parts - Proximity 38 - NC-17 & Genr8 - Ogre - Dub 39 - NC-17,Legion & Treo - 98 Throw Back - Dub 40 - NC-17 - Freddy's Dead - Proximity 41 - NC-17 & BTK - Lost - Dub 42 - NC-17 feat. John & KC - Shockwaves - Dub 43 - NC-17 & Nusese - Twilight Of The Dead - Dub **Fade** 44 - NC-17 & Corrupt - Bug Juice - S

Drum&BassArena Podcast
D&BA: NC-17 -

Drum&BassArena Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2008 79:34


Signing their first two hard hitting tracks to Sinuous Recordings in 2004, thereís now no stopping this Toronto based duo who have lined up releases on DSCI4, MAC II, Circle, Sudden Def and just recently signing a single to Andy C Ram Sister label Frequency. Ed Rush & Optical - The Kindred [Virus dub] >> Sub Focus - Swamp Thing [Ram] BSE vs State of Mind - Red Velvet V.I.P [BSE dub] L-Plus - Middle East Sun [Viper] The Upbeats, Ewun & Evol Intent - Smash [Non Vogue] Chase & Status - Judgement [Ram] >> Jo - R-Type [Awesome] C4C - Catch 22 [Hardware dub] >> Sub Focus - Juno [Ram] Basher - Cosmos [Frequency dub] Brookes Brothers & Futurebound - Dawn Treader [BBK] Culture Shock & Brookes Brothers - Smoothie [Ram] Sub Focus - Join The Dots [Ram] Basher - Mitsubishi [Abstract] Rawtee - Foamparty [dub] >> Moving Fusion - Turbulence [Ram] NC-17 - Slug Path [DSCI4 dub] >> Capone - Friday DC Breaks - Romper [Viper] >> Roni Size & Krust - Hopscotch [Full Cycle] NC-17 & KC - Zombi [Frequency dub] Nphonix & Enei - Spacecraft VIP [Cynaide dub] Sub Focus - Timewarp [Ram] >> Shimon & Andy C - Body Rock [Ram] Rawtee - Mash Up Your Mind [dub] Krust - Kloaking Device [Full Cycle] DJ Vapour - One Fine Day RMX [36 Chambers dub] >> Omni Trio - Renegade Snares [Moving Shadow] Drumsound & Bassline Smith - Special [Technique dub] NC-17 & KC - Crystal Lake [dub] Subterra - Serengeti [Frequency dub] The Upbeats - Lick A Demon V.I.P [Virus dub] NC-17 & Locuss - The House [dub] Bad Company - Ladies of Spain [BC Recordings]

Drum&BassArena Podcast
D&BA: Mixmaster Doc -

Drum&BassArena Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2008 57:05


Mixmaster Doc has burst onto the scene almost overnight, swiftly gaining support from leading figures such as Doc Scott, Fabio, Bailey and Randall. With releases on 31 Records & Diverse Products and forthcoming tracks on Creative Source, Sonorous, Mac II, Brand Nu and Nu Directions the future is bright for the man coming straight out of South Carolina. His D&BA podcast takes you on a journey through deeper, cutting edge sounds from peers such as Spectrasoul, Icicle, Lynx, Nu Tone, Lenzman and the Doc himself. Essential listening. Tracklist: 1. Peyo ft sks - Without U 2. Spectrasoul - Adoration 3. Nymfo and Proxima - Knock Knock > Total Science - Make Me Feel 4. Lenzman - Caught Up 5. Hobzee and Zyon Base - Sad Song 6. Insight - Never Always 7. Lynx and Aaron Jay - Wait For Me 8. Spectrasoul - Submission 9. Nutone - Troopers 10. Icicle and Nymfo - Green Goblin > Zinc and Eksman - Drive By Car 11. Generic and Perpetuum - Medicina 12. Mixmaster Doc - My Tongue is Poison 13. Hobzee - What Else 14. Peyo - That's What You Do To Me (Random Movement Remix) 15. Random Movement - Psychodelic Drainpipe 16. Mixmaster Doc -Trip 17. Mixmaster Doc and Focus - Strike at the Wind 18. Mixmaster Doc - Macrophage 19. Mixmaster Doc - She Dances 20. Steluce and Addiction - Do What I Miss 21. Icicle - Nowhere 22. Mixmaster Doc - Never Loved You Enjoying the Drum & Bass Arena Podcast? Reckon you know who we should have next? Having issues downloading or playing them? Anything else Podcast related you want to tell us? Then please email: podcasts@breakbeat.co.uk with your feedback.

It Was 20 Years Ago Today
Episode #52 -- Macintosh II

It Was 20 Years Ago Today

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2007 5:59


Friday, March 2, 2007.  Twenty years ago today, Apple Computer introduced their newest computer, the Mac II.  I talk about that particular machine, compare the relative expense of top-of-the-line home computers then and now, and muse about the way technology has gotten progressively more powerful, yet less expensive.Today's music is "Press YES To Start Demo," by Aaron Derington.  Theme music composed and performed by Marc Rose.There's also a promo for Yog-Sothoth.com, a gaming website devoted to Call of Cthulhu.  They also do a delightful podcast, Yog Radio.If you're a podcaster and would like to swap promos, please email me!

twenty cthulhu call of cthulhu apple computer yog sothoth mac ii macintosh ii marc rose aaron derington