Podcasts about master inventor

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Best podcasts about master inventor

Latest podcast episodes about master inventor

IBM Expert Radio
New to Z: Road to SME Podcast - From Genes to Code: Joe Winchester's Unconventional Path to Mainframe Innovation

IBM Expert Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 15, 2025 36:44


About the PodcastThe road from junior professional to Subject Matter Expert (SME) is a long but rewarding journey, paved with learning, mentorship, and strategic career moves. This podcast serves as a guidepost for early-career professionals, tackling key challenges such as finding mentors, gaining visibility, and building expertise. Through engaging discussions and actionable strategies, we aim to help individuals stay on course and accelerate their journey on the road to becoming SMEs.Join us on our first episode of the New to Z: Road to SME Podcast, where Joe shares his insights and expertise on the latest developments in mainframe innovation.Joe Winchester is a Senior Technical Staff Manager and Master Inventor at IBM, known for his leadership in open-source mainframe innovation. A core contributor to Zowe since 2019, he serves on its Technical Steering Committee and helps guide the project's evolution and community engagement. In 2024, he helped launch Zowe 3.0 and the IBMz AIOps Corner podcast, spotlighting voices across the mainframe industry. As an Open Mainframe Project Ambassador, Joe brings topics like quantum-safe encryption and resilience to global open-source and academic forums.

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts
Design. AI Method. Music. Drop in on some smart watercooler conversation with Distinguished Engineer Greg Hintermeister

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 32:46


Send us a textA watercooler talk with the incredibly smart, Greg Hintermeister, IBMDistinguished Engineer, Master Inventor, and AI+ EnterpriseTransformation Lead. From Design, the AI Method, to Music.00:40 What Are You Singing?03:09 Meet Greg Hintermeister06:16 The Role of Design09:19 Becoming a Distinguished Engineer11:33 The Game Changer12:47 Monolithic Applications to Cloud17:34 Avoiding Egress Charges19:05 The AI Method22:34 Reference Architectures26:59 High Quality Data Sets28:50 Finding Greg29:04 Proving Musical TalentLinkedin: linkedin.com/in/greg-hintermeisterWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple? Reach out to usat almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next. TheMaking Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP TechnicalSales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation,and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun.Greg Hintermeister NotesTuesday, September 10, 2024 5:33 PMWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple? Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next. The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun.

Making Data Simple
Design. AI Method. Music. Drop in on some smart watercooler conversation with Distinguished Engineer Greg Hintermeister

Making Data Simple

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2024 32:46


Send us a textA watercooler talk with the incredibly smart, Greg Hintermeister, IBMDistinguished Engineer, Master Inventor, and AI+ EnterpriseTransformation Lead. From Design, the AI Method, to Music.00:40 What Are You Singing?03:09 Meet Greg Hintermeister06:16 The Role of Design09:19 Becoming a Distinguished Engineer11:33 The Game Changer12:47 Monolithic Applications to Cloud17:34 Avoiding Egress Charges19:05 The AI Method22:34 Reference Architectures26:59 High Quality Data Sets28:50 Finding Greg29:04 Proving Musical TalentLinkedin: linkedin.com/in/greg-hintermeisterWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple? Reach out to usat almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next. TheMaking Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP TechnicalSales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation,and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun.Greg Hintermeister NotesTuesday, September 10, 2024 5:33 PMWant to be featured as a guest on Making Data Simple? Reach out to us at almartintalksdata@gmail.com and tell us why you should be next. The Making Data Simple Podcast is hosted by Al Martin, WW VP Technical Sales, IBM, where we explore trending technologies, business innovation, and leadership ... while keeping it simple & fun.

The Burnt Chef Journal
Dr Reiner Kraft - The Mindful Leader

The Burnt Chef Journal

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2024 54:07


In this episode, Dr Reiner Kraft discusses the importance of becoming more aware of both the mind and the body to increase body awareness. He explains this as a foundational principle for making upgrades to both the mind and the body, emphasizing that limited awareness keeps people trapped in their thought activity without reflection. This lack of awareness, he suggests, is a significant barrier for many people, limiting their ability to recognise and address the imbalance between their mental and physical states. By becoming more aware, people can begin to observe and manage their thoughts and physical sensations more effectively, leading to better overall health and well-being. Reiner is a seasoned technology leader, engineer, scientist, technical advisor, trainer, executive leadership, micronutrients expert, human potential coach, and teacher who shares transformative principles of presence, mind-management, and biohacking using the latest science of epigenetics. ​ During his tech career, he spent 20 years in the Silicon Valley and the past 6 years in Berlin, Germany, working for top high-tech companies (e.g., IBM Research, Yahoo, Zalando) and startups while exploring novel approaches to leadership and new work methodologies to build purposeful and impactful organizations. ​ He is considered a top innovator with more than 120 U.S. patents, making him one of the most prolific inventors in Silicon Valley. Both IBM Research and Yahoo recognized him as a Master Inventor. The prestigious MIT Technology Review (TR 100) in 2003 also nominated him as a top innovator under the age of 30 to shape the world.   Thank you Dr Reiner Kraft for sharing this with us - we hope you all find this episode insightful. Find out more here: https://www.themindfulleader.net/

Screaming in the Cloud
Empowering Economic Growth Through Tech Innovations with Angie Jones

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2024 37:41


Technology meets economic empowerment in this episode featuring Angie Jones, Global Vice President of Developer Relations at TBD, a Block division. Angie sheds light on the role of decentralized technologies in shaping the future of digital identity and cross-border payments. Her journey from software engineering to a leadership role in tech innovation illustrates her profound impact on the industry. This episode offers valuable insights into how technological advancements are driving economic growth and changing the financial landscape. Angie's expertise and unique perspective make this a must-listen for anyone interested in the cutting-edge intersection of technology, finance, and innovation.About AngieAngie Jones is the Global Vice President of Developer Relations for TBD, Block's new business unit focused on decentralized technologies. She is an award-winning teacher and international keynote speaker who shares her wealth of knowledge at software companies and conferences all over the world.As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style which has resulted in 27 patented inventions in the areas of metaverses, collaboration software, social networking, smarter planet, and software development processes.Show notes:(00:25) Introduction to Angie Jones and Her Role at TBD(01:25) Angie's Recognition in a USA Today Crossword(02:50) Career Journey and Transition into Developer Relations(06:04) Block's Mission and Services in Economic Empowerment(10:09) Convenience vs. Decentralization in Technology(16:49) Innovations in Cross-Border Payments(25:01) Decentralized Tech Stories and Reflections on Tech Innovation(30:22) Challenging Tech Industry Norms and Global PerspectivesLinks Referenced:TBD: https://www.tbd.website/Twitter: https://twitter.com/techgirl1908LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/angiejones/

Open at Intel
Istio and Ambient Service Mesh

Open at Intel

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2024 21:47


Lin Sun, Director of Open Source at Solo.io, is an influential figure in the cloud-native world. We spoke at All Things Open and she shared insights into her experiences and contributions in the open source community. Discussing her prominent role in the Istio project, she shares how Istio fits into the landscape of cloud-native service mesh, offering connectivity, security, and observability. She also highlights the launch of Istio Ambient Service Mesh, which reduces the complexity of Sidecar. Venturing into the world of AI, Lin envisions a future where AI assists in coding and improves software security while predicting a transition to a more conversational interaction with technology. She emphasizes the importance of human supervision in AI's development and its usefulness in making developers more efficient. 00:00 Introduction and Guest Welcome 00:29 Discussing Open Source Contributions and Community 01:53 Deep Dive into Istio and Service Mesh 02:49 Roles and Responsibilities in the Istio Community 04:24 Journey into Open Source Contributions 06:52 Advice for New Open Source Contributors 09:36 Exciting Updates in Istio 14:14 Exploring the Potential of AI in Open Source 19:33 Closing Remarks and Future Expectations Resources: Istio Ambient Service Mesh Made Easy Guest: Lin Sun is the Director of Open Source at Solo.io and an ex-CNCF ambassador. She has worked on Istio service mesh since 2017 and serves on the Istio Technical Oversight Committee. Previously, she was a Senior Technical Staff Member and Master Inventor at IBM for 15+ years. She is the author of the book “Istio Ambient Explained” and has more than 200 patents to her name.

Mind Love • Modern Mindfulness to Think, Feel, and Live Well
The Multiverse and Alternate Timelines: A Quantum Perspective Shift to Unlock Infinite Possibilities with Clement Decrop • 331

Mind Love • Modern Mindfulness to Think, Feel, and Live Well

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2024 76:20


We will learn: The universe's most intriguing illusions The Mind's Enigma: How to Break Free from the Known Unknowns and Unknown Unknowns the Mind-Bending Theory of the multi-verse and Infinite Timelines Have you ever considered the existence of multiple realities? And if you have, what would this look like? Our beliefs are both our limits and our wings. But remember, it all starts with those beliefs. So, what if this year we just blew the lid off our conventional ideas of what is and what could be? What if we embraced the idea that life is an endless playground for creation and expression? This episode is the perfect jumping-off point. We're diving into real, tangible evidence of a universe that operates in ways most people can't even fathom. And who knows? In the process of breaking and expanding these beliefs, maybe you'll unlock some incredibly empowering truths about yourself and the endless possibilities that await you. Our guest is Clement Decrop. He is an Author, Master Inventor, Zen Architect, & Spacetime Revolutionist. He has a Mechanical Engineering degree and over 130 patent disclosures. His groundbreaking book, "The Idea Space," gives consciousness a real scientific foundation. He actually simplifies Einstein's field equation, guiding readers to understand their thoughts and life's purpose. Links from the episode: Show Notes: https://mindlove.com/331 Become a Mind Love Member for high-value Masterclasses, Growth Workbooks, Monthly Meditations, and Uninterrupted Listening FREE 5-Days to Purpose Email Course Sign up for The Morning Mind Love for short daily notes to wake up inspired Support Mind Love Sponsors Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Coffee and Open Source
Angie Jones

Coffee and Open Source

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 9, 2024 60:23


Angie Jones is the Global Vice President of Developer Relations for TBD, Block's new business unit focused on decentralized technologies. She is an award-winning teacher and international keynote speaker who shares her wealth of knowledge at software companies and conferences all over the world. As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style which has resulted in more than 25 patented inventions in the areas of metaverses, collaboration software, social networking, smarter planet, and software development processes. You can find Angie Jones on the following sites: Website Twitter GitHub YouTube LinkedIn PLEASE SUBSCRIBE TO THE PODCAST Spotify Apple Podcasts Google Podcasts Amazon Music RSS Feed You can check out more episodes of Coffee and Open Source on https://www.coffeeandopensource.com Coffee and Open Source is hosted by Isaac Levin --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/coffeandopensource/support

OpenObservability Talks
KubeCon NA Highlights and Istio Spotlight with Lin Sun - OpenObservability Talks S4E06

OpenObservability Talks

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2023 60:12


Have you missed KubeCon North America in Chicago? This one's for you! In this episode, we explored the latest and greatest highlights from the event that every tech enthusiast is talking about. From cutting-edge innovations to industry insights, we've got the broad spectrum covered.  But that's not all! We'll also zoomed in on Istio, the popular service mesh open source project that has just recently reached CNCF graduation. Join us as we map out the service mesh universe, and then dive into Istio's galaxy, unraveling its architecture, features, and the roadmap direction with Ambient. And you'll get to hear it from the Istio authority, Lin Sun. Lin is the Director of Open Source at Solo.io and a CNCF ambassador. She has worked on the Istio service mesh since the beginning of the project in 2017 and serves on the Istio Steering Committee and Technical Oversight Committee. Previously, she was a Senior Technical Staff Member and Master Inventor at IBM for 15+ years. She is the author of the book "Istio Ambient Explained" and co-author of “Istio Explained”, and has more than 200 patents to her name. The episode was live-streamed on 15 November 2023 and the video is available at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bxnDH6LH-cA You can read the recap post: https://logz.io/blog/kubecon-na-2023-recap/?utm_source=devrel&utm_medium=devrel OpenObservability Talks episodes are released monthly, on the last Thursday of each month and are available for listening on your favorite podcast app and on YouTube. We live-stream the episodes on Twitch and YouTube Live - tune in to see us live, and chime in with your comments and questions on the live chat.https://www.twitch.tv/openobservabilityhttps://www.youtube.com/@openobservabilitytalks   Show Notes: 01:27 - Episode and guest intro 06:34 - KubeCon Highlights: Fluent Bit 09:16 - OpenTelemetry Logging, OTLP is GA 12:53 - OpenTelemetry project journey report 13:43 - WASM Day and Istio Day updates 16:18 - Keynote: the future of Kubernetes 18:51 -Crossplane latest release v1.14  19:24 - Kyverno supports non-Kubernetes workloads 20:12 - Vitess 18 is now GA 20:43 - AI is nascent in CNCF 22:56 - CNCF's GitOps microsurvey  23:56 - eBPF documentary released 27:08 - Service Mesh architecture and landscape 31:36 - Envoy proxy  33:48 - maturity of the projects 39:36 - Istio unique value proposition and adoption 43:55 - Kubernetes released native sidecar support 47:02 - The GAMMA initiative in Kubernetes Gateway API  50:04 - Istio updates: Ambient, multi-claster, Gateway API GA impl. For N-S  53:40 - CNCF Training & Certification Launch Istio Certification 54:56 - Istio roadmap 56:50 - how to follow Istio and Lin Sun and episode wrapup Resources: KubeCon Updates: https://www.cncf.io/blog/2023/11/07/opentelemetry-at-kubecon-cloudnativecon-north-america-2023-update/ https://opentelemetry.io/blog/2023/http-conventions-declared-stable/ https://www.cncf.io/reports/opentelemetry-project-journey-report/  https://blog.crossplane.io/crossplane-v1-14/   https://www.cncf.io/blog/2023/11/06/kyverno-expands-beyond-kubernetes/  https://planetscale.com/blog/announcing-vitess-18  https://www.cncf.io/blog/2023/11/07/cncf-gitops-microsurvey-learning-on-the-job-as-gitops-goes-mainstream/  Istio Spotlight: https://istio.io/latest/blog/2023/native-sidecars/ https://istio.io/latest/blog/2022/introducing-ambient-mesh/ https://gateway-api.sigs.k8s.io/concepts/gamma/ https://www.cncf.io/announcements/2023/07/12/cloud-native-computing-foundation-reaffirms-istio-maturity-with-project-graduation/  https://istio.io/latest/get-involved/ https://training.linuxfoundation.org/blog/istio-certification/  https://www.oreilly.com/library/view/istio-ambient-explained/9781098142698/ Socials: Twitter:⁠ https://twitter.com/OpenObserv⁠ YouTube: ⁠https://www.youtube.com/@openobservabilitytalks⁠

Tech Unlocked
77 | Test Automation with Angie Jones (Throwback)

Tech Unlocked

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2023 46:27


For this week here's a throwback episode from Season 2 with Angie Jones!   Angie Jones is a Java Champion and Senior Developer Advocate who specializes in test automation strategies and techniques. She shares her wealth of knowledge by speaking and teaching at software conferences all over the world, writing tutorials and technical articles on angiejones.tech, and leading the online learning platform, Test Automation University.   As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style which has resulted in more than 25 patented inventions in the US and China. In her spare time, Angie volunteers with Black Girls Code to teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech.   In this episode, I chat with Angie Jones who is a Senior Developer Advocate specialized in test automation strategies & techniques about how she discovered her niche in tech. Angie shares how she got her patents, teaches us her secret to fighting imposters syndrome, and shows us how having a personal brand can help you level up in your career.   Key takeaways from this episode: What is test automation? The skillsets needed to become an effective test automation engineer One simple exercise you can do to combat imposter syndrome The # 1 type of testing everyone should know about Misconceptions about being a test automation engineer The importance of speaking up and sharing your ideas How developing your personal brand can level up your career 3 major keys for getting into tech as a developer Connect with Angie : YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/angieluvboo?sub_confirmation=1 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/angiejones Website: https://angiejones.tech/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/techgirl1908 Free Courses: https://testautomationu.applitools.com/instructors/angie_jones.html Connect with Grace: Twitter: https://twitter.com/GraceMacjones LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gracemacjones/   Follow the podcast: Twitter: https://twitter.com/techunlockedpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/techunlockedpod/ LinkedIn: Tech Unlocked   Thank you so much for listening to this podcast! If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Use the hashtag #Techunlocked to ask questions and share your thoughts. Have a tech-related question? Shoot us an email techunlockedpod@gmail.com

Language of God
156. Joanna Ng | Data, Truth, & AI

Language of God

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2023 58:57


Joanna Ng has worked on many projects which have been turned into tools we use everyday. In the episode she talks about the journey to become a Master Inventor and some of the highlights of her career and then discusses some of the risks that come from putting too much trust in computers and artificial intelligence. Glossary of Terms: Groundtruth: The information or data that acts as a reference point against which we can measure the performance of computer programs or algorithms. Compiler: A special computer program that turns the code that programmers write into something a computer can understand and run. It's like a translator between humans and computers. Parsing: Parsing in computer science is like grammar-checking a sentence. It looks at the code to make sure all the parts are in the right order and make sense together, so the computer can understand what to do. Black box: A system or device where you can see what goes in and what comes out, but you don't know exactly how it works on the inside.  Bootstrap: The initial push that gets a computer or program running so it can do more complicated tasks on its own. Just like you need that first push to start pedaling a bike, a computer needs a bootstrap to get going. Take our survey! Theme song and credits music by Breakmaster Cylinder. Other music in this episode by Titan Sound, courtesy of Shutterstock, Inc. Join a conversation about this episode on the BioLogos Forum.

Inside Out Health with Coach Tara Garrison
DR. REINER KRAFT, PhD: A Scientific Approach to Measuring Mindfulness

Inside Out Health with Coach Tara Garrison

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2023 62:43


Dr. Reiner Kraft, PhD, is a seasoned technology leader, engineer, scientist, technical advisor, trainer, executive leadership, micronutrients expert, human potential coach, and teacher who shares transformative principles of presence, mind-management, and biohacking using the latest science of epigenetics.  During his tech career, he spent 20 years in the Silicon Valley and the past 6 years in Berlin, Germany, working for top high-tech companies (e.g., IBM Research, Yahoo, Zalando) and startups while exploring novel approaches to leadership and new work methodologies to build purposeful and impactful organizations.  ​He is considered a top innovator with more than 120 U.S. patents, making him one of the most prolific inventors in Silicon Valley. Both IBM Research and Yahoo recognized him as a Master Inventor. The prestigious MIT Technology Review (TR 100) in 2003 also nominated him as a top innovator under the age of 30 to shape the world. ​As a founder of The Mindful Leader, he published the 12 Mindful Leadership Principles along with practical teachings that cultivate presence in leaders and let them define their own unique leadership style and increase their leadership effectiveness.  Furthermore, he incubated the Fellowship of Mindful Tech Leaders, a global community of diverse business and tech leaders who are passionate about applying mindful leadership to build purposeful and impactful tech orgs. He also co-founded The New U, a global community to attract like-minded people to live healthier and more consciously. He is the host of the The Mindful Leader podcast, where he interviews experts and thought leaders in the area of mind-management, leadership, and biohacking.  ​Reiner works also in the role of a scientific & tech advisor for Onvy to introduce more innovation into the emerging field of health tech. As a scientist he has tenaciously applied the results of his field research and used them to not only completely transform his own life but also the lives of many business and tech leaders, along with thousands of fans and followers through his various media channels, and speaking engagements. In this episode, Dr. Kraft shares his insights into measuring mindfulness and how he achieves it with his clients, as well as the importance of measuring and balancing minerals in your body. Learn more about Dr. Kraft, PhD, here: themindfulleader.net Instagram: @themindfulleader  IN THIS EPISODE YOU WILL DISCOVER: 00:03:03 - Why Dr. Kraft got interested in studying the mind 00:06:00 - what allopathic medicine does and how it's different from a holistic approach to health 00:22:00 - how many mindful minutes do you have daily? 00:39:11 - how to bypass your ego when it resists your mindfulness efforts 00:53:50 - what Dr. Kraft finds out about magnesium deficiency in his clients    

Pitch Masters
S1E06: Doug Hall, Master Inventor, best-selling author, and TV personality

Pitch Masters

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 13, 2022 75:04


Doug Hall talks about his unique system for coming up with ideas, why he gets senior people to say dumb things, the blueprint for a winning pitch, how to tap into your subconscious, judging some of the best and worst pitches on TV, and creating custom bourbon in under 5 minutes.   If you enjoy the show, please share it with someone else who might appreciate it, and if you can, leave a review. Follow me on social media for video clips of the episode, or visit the website for more information.  Website: http://pitchguy.co.uk/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dannyfontaine/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@pitchguy YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@pitchguy/ Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dannyfontaine/  

MineWarp
068 - Trustworthy AI: Achievable goal or pipedream?

MineWarp

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2022 34:22


"Trustworthy AI does not happen accidentally - it takes deliberate work to thoughtfully expose the internal workings of an AI system to various stakeholders. " So says Stefan van der Stockt, Lead Data Scientist, Master Inventor at IBM Data & AI. You won't want to miss this episode as we discover cognitive biases of AI agents, ethics in AI, and the surprising practical applications already on hand.

Artificial Intelligence in Industry with Daniel Faggella
AI in Law, Current and Future Applications - with Neil Sahota of UC Irvine

Artificial Intelligence in Industry with Daniel Faggella

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2022 28:15


Today's guest is Neil Sahota, CEO of ACSI Labs and Chief Innovation Officer at the UC Irvine School of Law. Neil previously worked with IBM for 12 years as a Master Inventor focused on developing new patents with a particular emphasis on big data and analytics. In this episode, we are focused on the legal space. In the first part of this episode, Neil dives into specific use-cases that highlight where AI is impacting law today. He discusses several applications that lawyers, law firms, and legal departments at large enterprises use today with high traction. In the second part of this episode, Neil shares his perspective of the areas in the legal world that he believes are most likely to be disrupted by AI in the next five years. Regardless of industry, Neil provides critical insights about what the future might hold for certain kinds of processes and workflows that are most likely to be automated.

Add Dot
Service Mesh

Add Dot

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2022 52:14


Lin is the Director of Open-Source at Solo.io. She has worked on Istio service mesh since 2017 and serves on the Istio Technical Oversight Committee and Steering Committee. Previously, she was a Senior Technical Staff Member and Master Inventor at IBM for 15+ years. She is the author of the book "Istio Explained" and has more than 200 patents to her name. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

The Jake Dunlap Show
Never Stop Learning: Choosing the Path of Most Resistance with Neil Sahota

The Jake Dunlap Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 60:00


This episode of The Jake Dunlap Show features Neil Sahota, a professional speaker, lecturer at the University of California, and Chief Innovation Officer at the UC Irvine School of Law, and Master Inventor.An openness to learning, troubleshooting problems, and continuously growing are just some of the values that Neil's story offers. This is evident in the incredible wealth of experience he has gained studying and working in a diverse array of fields and industries.  For Neil, money is not the not goal. He has always explored the opportunities around him and did not close doors simply because they seemed too different from his current track. Quite the opposite, he always sought the path of most resistance because it offered a challenge to learn important lessons in his diverse field of interests.Many of Neil's successes started out as accidents. But true to his nature, he would take moments like this, turn them around, use them as opportunities for incredible growth. This would thrust him into the world of AI where he would gain immense success and earn the title of Master Inventor, a fitting name for a man who is always looking forward.The value of giving back is also a core part of Neil's identity. This was ingrained in him since he was a child and translates directly to his volunteer work as a mentor to several organizations. His passion for working in the United Nations is also tied directly to creating an impact that matters in education and healthcare.Listen to the full podcast on Neil's journey of turning accidents into opportunities, finding fundamental satisfaction in work, and volunteering for community development.QUOTES:29:46 "I've learned that the experience and skills you can gain are actually probably more important (than money). And sometimes that means even taking a step backwards... to actually get that under your belt."30:03 "I was never about the title. I wasn't quite about the paycheck... I managed to escape school without much debt and I don't live an opulent lifestyle. So I was very much able to focus on the rewards of a job rather than just the paycheck itself."37:19 "Honestly, I think it's because in my life I've always kind of sought the path of most resistance because I felt that's actually a great way to learn and add value."37:55 "I wasn't content with the status quo. I'm not saying things are bad, but you can always improve things. And so I was always kind of looking for that value add change."39:49 "If you keep looking for differences, you're not going to have a good experience. And unfortunately a lot of people, they didn't have a good experience."53:22 "You always try to help your community or your neighborhood, right? You don't help them to help yourself, you help them so they can help other people."More about NeilNeil is an incredibly brilliant man who wears several hats, most notably as an innovator and mentor whose goals include changing the educational and healthcare landscape for the better. He helps the United Nations create AI for the Global Good ecosystem, speaks publicly to help others overcome fears of public speaking and writing, works with Fortune 500 companies create products for nascent markets and industries.Neil also spends a lot of his time today helping organizations disrupt themselves before others disrupt them.  Neil is an IBM Master Inventor and patented more than 18 technologies. He is a seasoned author who creates content on diverse topics that impact the world, including AI, innovation, law, climate change, diversity, and inclusion, just to name a few.  He has won dozens of awards including the President's Volunteer Service Award and the Outstanding Achievement in Artificial Intelligence, which speak to his expertise and altruistic nature at the same time.Find out more about Neil and connect with him in the following links:LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/neilsahota/Learn more about Jake Dunlap and Skaled by visiting the links below:Jake Dunlap:Personal Site - http://jakedunlap.com/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/in/jakedunlap/Twitter - https://twitter.com/JakeTDunlapInstagram - http://instagram.com/jake_dunlap_Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/JakeTDunlap/Skaled:Website - https://skaled.com/LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/skaledYouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCsw_03rSlbGQkeLGMGiDf4Q

Screaming in the Cloud
The Mythos of Testing with Angie Jones

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2021 36:36


About Angie Angie Jones is a Java Champion and Senior Director who specializes in test automation strategies and techniques. She shares her wealth of knowledge by speaking and teaching at software conferences all over the world, writing tutorials and technical articles on angiejones.tech, and leading the online learning platform, Test Automation University.As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style  which has resulted in more than 25 patented inventions in the US and China. In her spare time, Angie volunteers with Black Girls Code to teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech.Links: Applitools: https://applitools.com Black Girls Code: https://www.blackgirlscode.com Test Automation University: https://testautomationu.applitools.com Personal website: https://angiejones.tech Twitter: https://twitter.com/techgirl1908 TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by CircleCI. CircleCI is the leading platform for software innovation at scale. With intelligent automation and delivery tools, more than 25,000 engineering organizations worldwide—including most of the ones that you've heard of—are using CircleCI to radically reduce the time from idea to execution to—if you were Google—deprecating the entire product. Check out CircleCI and stop trying to build these things yourself from scratch, when people are solving this problem better than you are internally. I promise. To learn more, visit circleci.com.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Thinkst. This is going to take a minute to explain, so bear with me. I linked against an early version of their tool, canarytokens.org in the very early days of my newsletter, and what it does is relatively simple and straightforward. It winds up embedding credentials, files, that sort of thing in various parts of your environment, wherever you want to; it gives you fake AWS API credentials, for example. And the only thing that these things do is alert you whenever someone attempts to use those things. It's an awesome approach. I've used something similar for years. Check them out. But wait, there's more. They also have an enterprise option that you should be very much aware of canary.tools. You can take a look at this, but what it does is it provides an enterprise approach to drive these things throughout your entire environment. You can get a physical device that hangs out on your network and impersonates whatever you want to. When it gets Nmap scanned, or someone attempts to log into it, or access files on it, you get instant alerts. It's awesome. If you don't do something like this, you're likely to find out that you've gotten breached, the hard way. Take a look at this. It's one of those few things that I look at and say, “Wow, that is an amazing idea. I love it.” That's canarytokens.org and canary.tools. The first one is free. The second one is enterprise-y. Take a look. I'm a big fan of this. More from them in the coming weeks.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. If there's one thing that I have never gotten the hang of, its testing. Normally, I just whack the deploy button, throw it out into the general ecosystem, and my monitoring system is usually called ‘customers.' And if I don't want to hear from them, I just stopped answering calls from the support desk. Apparently, that is no longer state of the art because it's been about 15 years. Here to talk about testing from a more responsible direction is Angie Jones, a senior director and developer at Applitools. Thanks for joining me.Angie: Hey, Corey. [laugh]. I am cracking up at your confession there and I appreciate it because you're not unique in that story. I find that a lot of engineers [laugh] follow that same trend.Corey: There are things we talk about and there are the things that we really do instead. We see it all over the place. We talk about infrastructure as code, but everyone clicks around for a few things in the Cloud Console, for example. And so on, and so forth. We all know we should in theory be doing things, but expediency tends to win the day.And for better or worse, talking about testing, in many cases, makes some of us feel better about not actually doing testing. And one of these days, it's one of those, “I really should learn how TDD would work in an approach like this.” But my primary language has always been, well, always been a crappy version of whatever I'm using, but for the last few years, it's been Python. There are whole testing frameworks around all of these things, but I feel like it requires me to actually have good programming practices to begin with which, let's be very clear here, I most assuredly doubt.Angie: [laugh]. That's a fair assessment, but I would also argue, in cases like those, you need testing even more, right? You need something to cover your butt. So, what are you doing? You're just, kind of, living on the edge here?Corey: Sort of. In my case, it's always been that I'll bring in an actual developer who knows what they're doing to—Angie: Ah.Corey: —turn some of my early scripts into actual tools. And the first question is, “Okay, can you explain what this is doing for me?” “Great. So, we're going to throw it away and completely replace it with—so what are the inputs, what are the outputs, and do you want me to preserve the bugs or not?” At which point, it's great.It's more or less like I'm inviting someone to come in and just savage my code, which is apparently also a best practice. But for better or worse, I've never really thought of myself as an engineer, so it's one of those areas where it's it doesn't cut to the core of my identity in any particular way. I do know it would be nice that, oh yeah, when I wind up doing an iterative deployment of a Lambda function or something, if it takes five minutes to get updated, and then I forgot to put a comma in or something ridiculous like that. Yeah. Would have been nice to have something—you know, a pre-commit hook—that caught something like that.Angie: Yeah, yeah. It's interesting. You said, “Well, maybe one of these days, I'll learn.” And that's the issue I find. No matter what route you took to learn how to become—whatever you are, software engineer, whatever—testing likely wasn't part of that curriculum.So, we focus—when teaching—very heavily on teaching you how to code and how to build something, but very little, if any, on how to ensure you built the right thing and that it stands the test of time.Corey: My approach has always been well, time to write some code, and it started off as just, as a grumpy systems administrator, it was always shell scripts, which, okay, great. Instead of doing this thing on 15 machines, run upon a for loop and just iterate through them. And in time, you start inheriting other people's crappy tooling, and well, I could rewrite the entire thing and a week-and-a-half, or I could figure out just enough Perl to change that one line in there, and that's how they get you. You sort of stumbled your way into it in that direction. Naive questions I always like to ask around testing that never really get answers for because I don't think to ask these when other people are in the room and it's not two o'clock in the morning and the power is gone out.You have a basic linter test of, do you have basic syntax errors in the code? Will it run? Seems to be a sort of baseline, easy acceptance test. But then you get into higher-level testing of unit tests, integration tests, and a bunch of others I'm sure I'm glossing over because—to be direct—I tend to conflate all these in my head. What is the hierarchy of testing if there is such a thing?Angie: Yeah, so Mike Cohn actually created a model that is very heavily used within the industry, and it's called the ‘Test Automation Pyramid.' And what this model suggests is that you have your unit tests; you have some kind of, like, integration-type tests in the middle, and then you have these end-to-end tests on top. So, think of a pyramid divided into three sections. But that's not divided equally; the largest part of that pyramid, which is the base, is the unit test. So, this suggests that the bulk of your test suite should comprise of unit tests.The idea here is that these are very small, they're very targeted, meaning they're easier to write, they take less time to run, and if you have an error, it kind of pinpoints exactly what's wrong in the system. So, these are great. The next level would be your integration. So, now how do two units integrate together? So, you can test this layer multiple different ways: it might be with APIs, it might be the business logic itself, you know, calling into functions or something like that.And this one is smaller than the unit test but not as large as the final part, which is the end-to-end test. And that one is your smallest piece, and it doesn't even have to be end-to-end. It could be UI, actually. That's how it's labeled by Mike Cohn in his book: UI tests. So, the UI tests, these are going to be your most fragile tests, these are going to take the most time to write as well as the most time to execute.If something goes wrong, you have to dig down to figure out what exactly broke to make this happen. So, this should be the smallest chunk of your overall testing strategy.Corey: People far smarter than I have said that in many cases—along with access—testing, and monitoring—or observability, which is apparently a term for hipster monitoring—are lying on the same axis. Where in the olden days of systems administration, you can ping the machine and it responds just fine, but the only thing that's left on that crashed machine is just enough of the network stack to return a ping, so everything except the thing that tells you it's fine is in fact broken. So, as you wind up building more and more sophisticated applications, the idea being that the testing and the ‘is everything all right' monitoring ping tends to, more or less, coalesce into the same thing. Is that accurate from your view of the world? Is that something that is an oversimplification of something much more nuanced? Or did I completely misunderstand what they were saying, which is perfectly possible?Angie: You kind of lost me somewhere in the middle. So, I'm just going to nod and say yes. [laugh].Corey: [laugh]. No, no, it—the hard part that I've always found is… I lie to myself, when I'm writing code: “Oh, I don't need to write a unit test for this,” because I'd gotten it working, I tested it with something that I know is good, it returns what I expect; I tested with something bad and well, some undefined behavior happens—because that's a normal thing to happen with code—and great, I don't need to have a test for that because I've already got it working. Problem solved.Angie: Right. Right.Corey: It's a great lie.Angie: Yeah.Corey: And then I make a change later on that, in fact, does break it. It's the, “But I'm writing this code once and why would I ever go back to this code and write it again? It's just a quick-and-dirty patch that only needs to exist for a couple of weeks.” Yeah, the todo: remove this later, and that code segment winds up being load-bearing decades into the future. I'm like, “Yeah, one of these days, someone's going to go back and clean up all of my code for me.” Like, the code fairies are going to come in the middle of the night with the elves, and tidy everything up. I would love to hire those mythical creatures, but can't find them.Angie: This mythical sprint, where it's, “Oh, let's only clean up this entire sprint.” You know, everybody's kind of holding out and waiting for that. But no, you hit the nail on the head with the reason why you need to automate your tests, essentially. So, I find a lot of newer folks to the space, they really don't understand, why on earth would I spend time writing code to represent this test? Just like you said, “I implemented the feature. I tried it out, it worked.” [laugh]. “And hey, I even tried a non-happy path. And when it broke, I had a nice little error message to tell the user what to do.”And they feel really good about that, so they can't understand, “Why would I invest the time—which I don't have—to write some tests?” The reason for that it's just as you said: this is for regression. Unless that's the end of this application and you're not going to touch it ever again for any reason, then you need to write some tests [laugh] because you're going to constantly change the application, whether that be refactoring, whether that be adding new features to it, it's going to change in some way and you cannot be sure that the tests of yesterday still work today because whenever you make the change, you're just going to poke around manually at that little area not realizing there could be some integration things that you totally screwed up here and you miss that until it goes out into prod.Corey: The worst developer I've ever met—hands down—was me, six months before I'm looking at whatever it is that I've written. And given that I do a lot of my stuff in a vacuum and I'm the only person to ever touch these repositories, I could run Git blame, but I already know exactly what it's going to tell me—Angie: “It's me.” [laugh].Corey: —so we're just going to skip that part. Like it's a test. And, “Yeah, we're just going to try and fix that and never speak about it again.” But I can't count the number of times I have looked at code that I've written—and I do mean written; not blindly copy-and-pasted out of Stack Overflow, but actually wrote, and at the time, I understood exactly what it did—and then I look at it, and it is, “What on earth was I thinking? What—what—it technically doesn't even return anything; it can't be doing anything. I can just remove that piece entirely.” And the whole thing breaks.I've out-clevered myself in many respects. And I love the idea, the vision, that testing would catch these things as I'm making those changes, but then I never do it. It's getting started down that path and developing a more nuanced, and dare I say it, formal understanding of the art and science of software development. Always feels like the sort of thing I'll get to one of these days, but never actually got around to. Nowadays, my testing strategy is to just actually deploy things into someone else's account and hope for the best.And, “Oh, good. Well, everyone has a test account; ideally, it's not their own production account.” And then we start to expand on beyond that. You have come to this from a very different direction in a number of different ways. You are—among other things—a Java Champion, which makes it sound like you fought the final boss at the end of the developer internet. And they sound really hard. What is a Java Champion?Angie: Yeah. So, a Java Champion is essentially an influencer in the Java ecosystem. You can't just call yourself this; like you say, you got to fight the guy at the end, you know? But seriously, in order to become one, a current Java Champion has to nominate you, and all of the other Java Champions has to review your package, basically looking at your work. What have you contributed to the developer community, in terms of Java?So, I've done a number of courses that I've taught; I've taught at the university level, as well; I am always talking about testing and using Java to show how to do that, as well as talks and all of this stuff. So apparently, I had enough [laugh] for folks to vote me in. So, it is an organization that's kind of ordained by Oracle, the Gods of Java. So, it's a great accomplishment for me. I'm extremely happy about it. And just so happens to be the first black woman to become a Java Champion. So, the news made a big deal about that. [laugh].Corey: Congratulations. Anytime you wind up getting that level of recognition in any given ecosystem, it's something to stop and take note of. But that's compounded by just the sheer scale and scope of the Java community as a whole. Every big tech company I know has inordinate amounts of Java scattered throughout their infrastructure, a lot of their core services are written in Java, which makes me feel increasingly strange for not really knowing anything about it, other than that, it's big and that there are—this entire ecosystem of IDs, and frameworks, and ways to approach these things that it feels like those of us playing around in crappy bash-scripting-land have the exact opposite experience of, “Oh, I'm just going to fire up an empty page and fill it with a bunch of weird commands and run it, and it fails, and run it again, and it fails. And it finally succeeds when I fixed all the syntax errors, and that's great.” It feels like there is a much more structured approach to writing Java compared to other languages, be they scripts or full-on languages.Angie: Yeah. That's been a gift and a curse of the language. So, as newer frameworks have come out, or even as JavaScript has made its way to the front of the line, people start looking at Java, it's kind of bloated, and all of these rules and structures were in place, but that feels like boilerplate stuff and cumbersome in today's development space. So, fortunately, the powers that be have been doing a lot of changes in Java. We went for quite a while where releases were about, mmm, every three years or so.And now they've committed to releases every six months. So, [laugh] most people are on Java 8 still, but we're actually at, like, Java 16, now. So, now it's kind of hard to keep up but that makes it fun as well. There's all of these newer features and new capabilities, and now you can even do functional programming in Java, so it's pretty nice.Corey: Question I have is, does testing lend itself more easily to Java versus other language? And I promise I'm not trying to start a language war here. I just know that, “Well, how do I effectively test my Python code?” Leads to a whole bunch of? “Well, it depends.”It's like asking an attorney any question on the planet; same story. Like, “Well, it really depends on a whole bunch of things.” Is it a clearer, more structured path in Java, or is it still the same murky there are 15 different ways to do it and whichever one you pick, there's a whole cacophony of folks telling you you've done it wrong?Angie: Yeah, that's a very interesting question. I haven't dug into that deep, but Java is by far the most popular programming language for UI test automation. And I wonder why that is because you don't use Java for building front end. You use Java scripts. I don't know how this ca—I—well, I do know how it came to be.Like, back in the day, when we first started doing test automation, JavaScript was a joke, right? People would laugh at you if you said that you were going to use JavaScript. It's, you know, “I'm going to learn JavaScript and try to enter the workforce.” So, you know, that was a big no-no, and kind of a joke back then. So, Java was what a lot of your developers were using even if they were only using it for the backend, maybe.You didn't really have a [unintelligible 00:16:32] language on the client-side, back then. You had your PHP on the back end, you just did some HTML and some CSS on the front end. So, there wasn't a whole lot of scripting going on back then. So, Java was the language that people chose to use. And so there's a whole community out there for Java and testing.Like, the libraries are very mature, there's open-source products and things like this. So, this is by far the most popular language that people use, no matter what their application is built in.This episode is sponsored by our friends at Oracle Cloud. Counting the pennies, but still dreaming of deploying apps instead of "Hello, World" demos? 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Visit https://snark.cloud/oci-free that's https://snark.cloud/oci-free.Corey: If I were looking to get a job in enterprise these days, it feels like Java is the direction to go in, with the counterpoint that, let's say that I go the path that I went through: I don't have a college degree; I don't have a high school diploma. If I were to start out trying to be a software engineering today, or advising someone to do the same, it feels like the lingua franca of everything today seems to be JavaScript in many different respects. It does front end; it does back end; people love to complain about it, so you know it's valid. To be clear, I find myself befuddled every time I pick it up. I'm not coming at this from a JavaScript fanboy perspective in any respect.The asynchronous execution flow always messes with my head and leaves me with more questions than answers. Is that assessment though—of starting languages—accurate? Are there cases where Java is absolutely the right answer, as far as what to learn first?Angie: Yeah. So, I first started with C++, and then I learned Java. Well, what I find is, Java because it's so strict—it's a statically typed language, and there's lots of rules, and you really need to understand paradigms and stuff like that with this language—it's harder to learn, but once you learn it, it's much easier to pick up other languages, even if they're dynamically typed, you know? So, that's been my experience with this. As far as jobs, so the last time I looked at this, someone did some research and wrote it up—this was 2019—and they looked at the job openings available at the time, and they divided it by language. And Java was at, like, 65,000 jobs open, Python was a close second was 62,000, and JavaScript was third place with 39,000.So, quite a big difference. But if you looked at tech Twitter, you'd think, like, JavaScript is all there is. Most of my followers and folks that I follow are JavaScript folks, front-end folks. So, it is a language I think you definitely need to learn; it's becoming more and more prevalent. If you're going to do any sort of web app, [laugh] you definitely want to know it.So, I'm definitely not saying, “Oh, just learn Java and that's it.” I think there's definitely a need for adding JavaScript to your repertoire. But Java, there does seem to be more jobs, especially the big enterprise-type jobs, in Java.Corey: The reason I ask so much about some of the early-stage stuff is that in your spare time—which it sounds like you have so much of these days—you volunteer with Black Girls Code to help teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech. Which is phenomenal. Few years ago, I was a volunteer instructor for Year Up before people really realized, “Oh, maybe having an instructor who teaches by counterexample isn't necessarily the best approach of teaching folks who are new to the space.”But the curriculum I was given for teaching people how Linux worked and how to build a web servers and the rest, started off with a three-day module on how to use VI, an arcane text editor that no one understands, and the only reason we use it is because we don't know how to quit it.Angie: [laugh].Corey: And that's great and all, but I'm looking at this and my immediate impression was, “We're scrapping that, replacing it with nano,” which is basically what you see is what you get, and something that everyone can understand and appreciate without three days of training. And it felt an awful lot like we're teaching people VI almost as a form of gatekeeping. I'm curious; when you presumably go down the path of teaching people who are brand-new to the space? How do you wind up presenting testing as something that they should start with? Because it feels like a thing you have to know first before you can start building anything at scale, but it resonates, on some level, with feeling like it's, ah, you must be able to learn this religion first; then you'll be able to go and proceed further. How do you square that circle?Angie: Yeah. So, I had the privilege of being an adjunct professor at a college, and I taught Java programming to freshmen. This was really interesting because there's so much to teach, and this is true of all the courses. So, when I say that they don't include it in the curriculum, that's not really that much of a slight on them. Like, it's just so much you have to cover.So I, me, the testing guru, I still couldn't find space to devote an entire sitting, a chapter, or whatever on testing. So, I kind of wove it into my teaching style. So, I would just teach the concept, let's say I'm teaching loops today, and I'll have a little exercise that you do in class. So, we do things together, and then I say, okay, now you try it by yourself. Here's a problem; call me over when you're done.And as they would call me over when they're done, I would break it; I would break their code, right? I'd do some input that they weren't expecting and all of a sudden is broken. And they started expecting me to do this, you know? “She's going to come and she's going to break my stuff.” So, they start thinking themselves, “Let me test it before I give it to my user,” who is Professor Angie, or whatever.So, that's how I taught them that. Same with homework assignments. So, they would submit it, I would treat it like a code review, go through line by line, I didn't have any automated systems to test their homework assignments. I did it like a code review, gave them feedback on how to improve their style, but also I would try to break it and give them, “Here's all the areas that you didn't think of.” So, that was my way of teaching them that quality matters in how to think about beyond the requirement.The requirement is going to say, “Someone needs to be able to log in.” It's not going to give you all of the things that should happen, you know if there's a wrong password, so these are things, as an engineer, you need to think beyond that one line requirement that you've got and realize that this is part of it as well.Corey: So, it's almost a matter of giving people context beyond just the writing of the code, which frankly, seems to be something that's been missing for many aspects of engineering culture for a while, the understanding the people involved, understanding that it is not just you, or your department, or even your company in some cases.Angie: Exactly. And I tried to stress that very heavily in each lecture: who is your end-user? And your end-user cannot see your code, they cannot see your comments in the code that's telling them, “Make sure you input it this way,” or whatever. None of that is seen so you have to be very explicit in your messages, and your intent, and behavior with the end-user.Corey: One last area I wanted to cover with you, when I was doing some research on you before the show, is that you are an IBM Master Inventor, which I had no idea what that was. Is that a term of art? Let me Google it. And it turns out that you have, according to LinkedIn at least, 27 patents in your name. And it's, “Oh.”Yeah, it's one of those areas where you look at something like, what gives someone the hubris to call themselves—or the grounds to call themselves that? And, “Oh, yeah. Oh, they're super accomplished, and they have a demonstrated track record of inventing things that are substantial and meaningful. I guess that would do it.” I'd never heard the term until now. What is that? And how are you that prolific, for lack of a better term?Angie: Yeah, so I used to work at IBM and they're really big on innovation. And I haven't kept track in a while, but for many, many years, they were the number one producer of patents [laugh] of this year or whatever. So, it was kind of in the culture to innovate. Now, I will say, like, a very small percentage of people—employees—there would take it as far as I did to actually go and patent something—[laugh]—Corey: Oh, it's the ‘don't offer if you're not serious,' model.Angie: Yeah. [laugh]. But I mean, it was there; it was a program there where, hey, you got an idea for a software patent? Write it up, we'll have our lawyers, our IP lawyers review it, and then they'll take your little one-page doc and turn it into a twenty-five-page legal document that we submit to the USPTO—United States Patent Trademark Office—who then reviews it and decides if this is novel enough and grants it, or dismisses it. And, “Hey, we'll pay you for these patents. We'll pay for the whole process.” And so I thought, “Heck, why not?”And I kind of got hooked. [laugh]. So, it just so happens that I got a lot of good ideas. And I would collaborate with people from other areas of the business, and it was an excellent way for me to learn about new technologies. If something new was coming out, I would jump on that to explore, play with it, and think about, are there any problems that this technology is not aimed to solve, but if I tweak it in some way, or if I integrate it with some other concept or some other technology, do I get something unique and novel here?And it got to the point where I just started walking through life and as I'm hit with problems—like, I'll give you an example. I'm in the grocery store, right, and this inevitably happens to everyone, what, you choose the wrong line in the grocery store. “This one looks like it's moving, I'm going to go here.” And then the whole time, you're looking to your right, and that line is moving. And you're, like, stuck.Corey: Every single time.Angie: Every time. So, it got—[laugh]—Corey: Toll booths are the same way.Angie: —it got to the point where I started recognizing when I'm frustrated, and say, “This is a problem. How can I use tech to solve this?” And so I, in that problem, I came up with this solution of how I could be able to tell which one of these is the right line to get into. And that consisted of lots of things like scanning the things in everyone's cart. On your cart, you have these smart carts that know what's inside of them, polling the customers' spending or their behavior; so are they going to come up here and send the clerk back to go get cigarettes, or alcohol, or are they going to pull out 50 coupons? Are they going to write a check, which takes longer?So, kind of factoring in all of these habitual behaviors and what's in your cart right now, and determining an overall processing time. And that way, if you display that over each queue, which one would be the fastest to get into. So, things like that is what I started doing and patenting.Corey: Well, my favorite part of that story is that it is clearly a deeply technical insight into this, but you've told the story in a way that someone who is not themselves deeply technical can wrap their heads around. And I just—making sure you're aware of exactly how rare and valuable that particular skill set is. So, often there are people who are so in love with a technology that they cannot explain to another living soul who is not equally in love with that technology. That alone is one of the biggest reasons I wanted to have you on this show was your repeated, demonstrated ability to explain complex things simply in a way that—I know this is anathema for the tech industry—that is not condescending. I come away feeling I understand what you were talking about, now.Angie: Thank you so much. That is one of the skills I pride myself on. When I give talks, I want everyone in that room to understand it, even if they're not technical. And lots of times I've had comments from anyone from, like, the janitor to the folks who are working A/V who, they don't work with computers or anything at all and they've come to me after these talks like, “Okay, I heard a lot of talks in here. Everybody is over my head. I understood everything you said. Thank you.” And yet it's still beneficial to those who are deeply technical as well. Thank you so much for that.Corey: No, it's a very valuable thing and it's what I look for the most. In fact, my last question for you is tying around that exact thing. You have convinced me. I want to learn more about test automation, and learn how this works and with an eye toward possibly one day applying it to some of my crappy nonsense that I'm writing. Other than going on Google and typing in a variety of search terms that will lead me to, probably, a Stack Overflow thread that has been closed as off-topic, but still left up to pollute Google search results, where should I go?Angie: Yeah. So, I've actually started an entire university devoted to testing, and it's called Test Automation Universityand I got my employer, Applitools, to sponsor this, so all of the courses are free.And they are taught by myself as well as other leading experts in the test automation space. So, you know that it's trusted; I vet all of the instructors, I'm very [laugh] involved in going through their material and making sure that it's correct and accurate so the courses are of top quality. We have about a little over 85,000 students at Test Automation University, so you definitely need to become one if you want to learn more about testing. And we cover all of the languages, so Java, JavaScript, Python, Ruby, we have all of the frameworks, we have things around mobile testing, UI testing, unit testing, API testing. So, whatever it is that you need, we got you covered.Corey: You also go further than that; you don't just break it down by language, you break it down by use case. If I—Angie: Yeah.Corey: —look at Python, for example, you've got a Web UI path, you've got an—Angie: Exactly.Corey: API path, you've got a mobile path. It aligns not just with the language but with the use case, in many respects.Angie: Mm-hm.Corey: I'm really glad I asked that question, and we will, of course, include a link to that in the [show notes 00:31:10]. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me. If people want to learn more, other than going to Test Automation University, where can they find you?Angie: Mm-hm. So, my website is angiejones.tech—T-E-C-H—and I blog about test automation strategies and techniques there, so lots of good info there. I also keep my calendar of events there, so if you wanted to hear me speak or one of my talks, you can find that information there. And I live on Twitter, so definitely give me a follow. It's @techgirl1908.Corey: And we will, of course, include links to all of that. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time and insight. I really appreciate it.Angie: Yeah, thank you so much for having me. This was fun.Corey: Angie Jones, Java Champion and senior director at Applitools. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with a long, ranting, incoherent comment that fails to save because someone on that platform failed to write a test.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

The Tim Ferriss Show
#530: Sir James Dyson — Founder of Dyson and Master Inventor on How to Turn the Mundane into Magic

The Tim Ferriss Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2021 95:57


Sir James Dyson — Founder of Dyson and Master Inventor on How to Turn the Mundane into Magic | Brought to you by BlockFi crypto platform, Athletic Greens all-in-one nutritional supplement, and Theragun percussive muscle therapy devices. More on all three below.Sir James Dyson is the founder and chairman of Dyson. Through investment in science and technology and working alongside Dyson's 6,000 engineers and scientists, he develops products that solve problems ignored by others. Sir James was elected a Fellow of the Royal Society in 2015 and appointed to the Order of Merit in the 2016 New Year Honours. He was awarded a CBE in 1996 and a Knight Bachelor in 2007.James is the founder of James Dyson Foundation, inspiring the next generation of engineers through scholarships, engineering workshops, university partnerships, and the annual James Dyson Award, an international student design competition. In 2017 James established The Dyson Institute of Engineering and Technology, where undergraduate engineers pay zero tuition and earn a full salary while completing their degree studies and working on real-life projects alongside world-experts in Dyson's global engineering, research, and technology teams.James is the author of the new book Invention: A Life, the story of how he came to be an inventor himself and built Dyson, leading it to become one of the most inventive technology companies in the world.Please enjoy!*This episode is brought to you by BlockFi! BlockFi is building a bridge between cryptocurrencies and traditional financial and wealth-management products. I became excited enough about this company that I ended up becoming an investor.Their BlockFi Rewards Visa® Signature Credit Card provides an easy way to earn more Bitcoin because you can earn 3.5% in Bitcoin back on all purchases in your first 3 months and 1.5% forever after, with no annual fee. BlockFi also lets you easily buy or sell cryptocurrencies. For a limited time, you can earn a crypto bonus of $15–$250 in value when you open a new account. Get started today at BlockFi.com/Tim and use code TIM at sign up.*This episode is also brought to you by Athletic Greens. I get asked all the time, “If you could only use one supplement, what would it be?” My answer is usually Athletic Greens, my all-in-one nutritional insurance. I recommended it in The 4-Hour Body in 2010 and did not get paid to do so. I do my best with nutrient-dense meals, of course, but AG further covers my bases with vitamins, minerals, and whole-food-sourced micronutrients that support gut health and the immune system. Right now, Athletic Greens is offering you their Vitamin D Liquid Formula free with your first subscription purchase—a vital nutrient for a strong immune system and strong bones. Visit AthleticGreens.com/Tim to claim this special offer today and receive the free Vitamin D Liquid Formula (and five free travel packs) with your first subscription purchase! That's up to a one-year supply of Vitamin D as added value when you try their delicious and comprehensive all-in-one daily greens product.*This episode is also brought to you by Theragun! Theragun is my go-to solution for recovery and restoration. It's a famous, handheld percussive therapy device that releases your deepest muscle tension. I own two Theraguns, and my girlfriend and I use them every day after workouts and before bed. The all-new Gen 4 Theragun is easy to use and has a proprietary brushless motor that's surprisingly quiet—about as quiet as an electric toothbrush.Go to Therabody.com/Tim right now and get your Gen 4 Theragun today, starting at only $199.*If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. I also love reading the reviews!For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim's email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Discover Tim's books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferrissPast guests on The Tim Ferriss Show include Jerry Seinfeld, Hugh Jackman, Dr. Jane Goodall, LeBron James, Kevin Hart, Doris Kearns Goodwin, Jamie Foxx, Matthew McConaughey, Esther Perel, Elizabeth Gilbert, Terry Crews, Sia, Yuval Noah Harari, Malcolm Gladwell, Madeleine Albright, Cheryl Strayed, Jim Collins, Mary Karr, Maria Popova, Sam Harris, Michael Phelps, Bob Iger, Edward Norton, Arnold Schwarzenegger, Neil Strauss, Ken Burns, Maria Sharapova, Marc Andreessen, Neil Gaiman, Neil de Grasse Tyson, Jocko Willink, Daniel Ek, Kelly Slater, Dr. Peter Attia, Seth Godin, Howard Marks, Dr. Brené Brown, Eric Schmidt, Michael Lewis, Joe Gebbia, Michael Pollan, Dr. Jordan Peterson, Vince Vaughn, Brian Koppelman, Ramit Sethi, Dax Shepard, Tony Robbins, Jim Dethmer, Dan Harris, Ray Dalio, Naval Ravikant, Vitalik Buterin, Elizabeth Lesser, Amanda Palmer, Katie Haun, Sir Richard Branson, Chuck Palahniuk, Arianna Huffington, Reid Hoffman, Bill Burr, Whitney Cummings, Rick Rubin, Dr. Vivek Murthy, Darren Aronofsky, and many more.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

The 7investing Podcast
The Intrigue of Quantum Computing with Strangeworks CEO whurley

The 7investing Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2021 50:56


Quantum computing's has the world's attention, as investors turn a curious eye toward one of the semiconductor industry's most difficult-to-understand new trends. This is a completely different approach to computing that is built upon quantum physics principles like superposition and entanglement. Because of its different architecture and design, quantum computers can solve incredibly complex problems in a fraction of the time it would take for classical computers. Companies have been fascinated by this concept for decades. Large enterprises like IBM (NYSE: IBM) and Microsoft (Nasdaq: MSFT) have pledged tens of millions of dollars and several years of fundamental in their attempt to build a useful quantum computer. But we're now also seeing smaller companies join the race as well. IonQ is crashing into the public markets via a SPAC merger, and Honeywell (Nasdaq: HON) is spinning off its quantum group into a SPAC of its own. There's now a publicly-traded Quantum Computing ETF, and venture capitalists continue to pour money into entirely new approaches. The advantages of quantum could be incredible. A commercially-available, useful quantum computer would disrupt many industries. Materials companies could perfect their design of new superconductors. Logistics or travel companies could optimize their global fleets. Drug makers could use simulations to create new synthetic molecules. But there are concerns about quantum that are raising a few eyebrows as well. Several of the soon-to-be-public quantum companies have hardly any revenue, yet their multi-billion-dollar valuations have led some to believe there are too many expectations already baked in. There are geopolitical concerns as well, as an international arms race to reach Quantum Supremacy could challenge the internet's existing cryptography measures or even sovereign security. There's a lot going on right now. And there's a lot more at stake than just bragging rights that awaits those who claim and who use the world's fastest computers. So what should investors make of this new quantum race? Is quantum indeed about to disrupt everything? Or are some investing expectations still out of touch with reality? To answer those questions, we've brought in a quantum expert. Whurley is an international legend in the software development world. After working in R&D at Apple (Nasdaq: AAPL) and then as a Master Inventor at IBM, whurley went on to found and run several startups that innovated the fields of security, open source software, and even FinTech. He has 11 patents, has co-authored two books, and even personally hosted former President Barack Obama at Austin's SXSW conference. Now as the founder & CEO of Strangeworks, he is developing a software development tools that will help companies define their business problems and then harness the power of quantum computing to solve them. In this exclusive interview, 7investing CEO Simon Erickson chats with whurley about where the quantum computing industry currently stands. They describe what will drive its future adoption and in what applications it will serve most useful. They also discuss the recent popularity of quantum SPACs and where there could be opportunities for investors. The two then shift gears a bit, and whurley describes why open-source will continue to be the key for future software development. He also shares his thoughts about what's in store for cybersecurity and his expectations for virtual reality. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/7investing/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/7investing/support

IBM Developer Podcast
Inventor of MQTT & IBM Distinguished Engineer | Andy Stanford-Clark

IBM Developer Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2021 31:51


Please join us for a conversation with Andy Stanford-Clark. Andy is an IBM Distinguished Engineer and Master Inventor with more than 40 patents. He is based at IBM's Hursley Park laboratories in the UK, and has a long background in the Internet of Things technologies.  Notably, he was the inventor of the lightweight publish-subscribe network protocol MQTT.  Links mentioned in this episode:Andy on Twitter:twitter.com/andyscAndy's website:stanford-clark.comMayflower Autonomous ship:ibm.com/industries/federal/autonomous-shipmas400.comHursley Park Laboratories:ibm.com/ibm/history/ibm100/uk/en/stories/hursley_innovations.html

Stroke of Genius
Diversifying the Future of Innovation

Stroke of Genius

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 28, 2021 18:33


Many of the problems we face for the future will be solved using machine learning and artificial intelligence. Artificial intelligence has the capability of personalizing our daily technological experience like filtering out spam in our email accounts or allowing our phones to recognize our faces and voices. It will help us to combat climate change, fight pandemics, and advance technology at a rapid pace. But despite all of its good, AI also has the capability to be incredibly biased. Senior technical staff member and Master Inventor at IBM, Tara Astigarraga talks with us about the challenges around AI and how inventors are looking to solve the problems of the future. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Quantum AI Institute
Quantum AI Series: Interview with Dr. John Martinis, master inventor and CEO of Quantala, by Maëva Ghonda

Quantum AI Institute

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2021 27:54


The Quantum AI Series features exclusive interviews of the global innovators shaping the future of quantum computing. In Episode 3, Maëva Ghonda, the founder and chair of the Quantum AI Institute, interviews Dr. John Martinis, master inventor and CEO of Quantala. Quantala's mission is to help build a fully functional quantum computer by identifying and solving technical roadblocks. Dr. John Martinis has been focusing on quantum computing since the late 1990s. He did pioneering experiments in superconducting qubits in the mid-1980s for his PhD thesis. From 2014 to 2020, Dr. John Martinis worked at Google to build a useful quantum computer, culminating in a quantum supremacy experiment in 2019. In 2014, Dr. John Martinis was awarded the London Prize in Low temperature physics for his work in this field. And, this year, Dr. Martinis was awarded the John Bell prize.

Ride The Tide Collective The Podcast
Staying Curious, Making Meaningful Connections, and Managing Over 350 Patents

Ride The Tide Collective The Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 58:03


Ride The Tide Collective, The Podcast is a weekly podcast that provides actionable advice and tips for ambitious professionals looking to advance, change, or take control of their career path. Season 6 is an interview format that brings on guests who are employed in real positions to share their career journey, experience, and tips.   Have you ever wondered what's it's like to be an inventor? Shikhar Kwatra has earned the title of Master Inventor with over 350 patents to his name! We discuss his love for inventing and how he got started, the work he primarily does in Artificial Intelligence (AI) for IBM, and how he is supporting female inventors, along with MUCH MORE.   For additional information and the links to all the resources mentioned in the episode, head over to the blog page for the episode, which can be found here: https://ridethetidecollective.com/2021/05/05/season6episode1/   If you have any questions, please connect with Ride The Tide Collective on Instagram, Facebook, or LinkedIn, and send a message.

Data on Kubernetes Community
DoK Community #44 DataOps // Vijay AB Kumar

Data on Kubernetes Community

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2021 61:22


Abstract of the talk… The talk will cover the various aspects of DataOps, why DataOps is important. It will also talk about some of the client experiences and how DataOps strategy is helping addresses some of the challenges. The talk will also cover the DataOps implementations, tools and technologies. Bio… IBM Distinguished Engineer, Master Inventor with 60+ patents, 23 years in IBM. Architect, Developer, Blogger, Author Key take-aways from the talk… Good understanding of DataOps, Why we need DataOps, Some understanding of the Technology advancements in the DataOps Area

The Art of Automation
Episode 11 - Automation and APIs with Rob Nicholson

The Art of Automation

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2021 15:30


Jerry is joined by IBM Distinguished Engineer, Master Inventor, and CTO for APIs and Integration, Rob Nicholson. They discuss the relationship between APIs, Integration, and Automation and why "you can't automate an enterprise, unless that enterprise is programmable through APIs." Rob describes how, in order for an enterprise to go faster, it needs quick and easy access to all relevant data and events, and how the best way to do this is to make APIs ubiquitous across the company. He also shares examples of how AI can be used as your "wingperson" in tough integration problems.  Art by Adaoha Onyekwelu.

Technically Speaking
Ep. 55 - Let's Chat It Up (Interview with Andrew Freed)

Technically Speaking

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2021


Episode 55 of Technically Speaking, a podcast all about technology, from smartphones, computers and televisions, to drones, virtual reality and Internet of Things.In this episode, Nate sits down with Andrew Freed, a Master Inventor at IBM and an expert on virtual assistants to how to create a chat bot.Freed's new book, Creating Virtual Assistants, is available from Manning Books at https://www.manning.com/books/creating-virtual-assistants.Technically Speaking fans can use the exclusive code "podtech19" at checkout to get 40% off.Intro and outro music composed by Daniel Bignault.Contact Nate:Twitter: https://twitter.com/nwithan8YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/NateHarris

Digital Conversations
A Conversation with Andrew Freed, Master Inventor at IBM and Author of “Creating Virtual Assistants”

Digital Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 19:38


After spending the past several years designing and building conversational digital assistants at IBM, Andrew Freed decided to share his learnings and experiences with the broader community. In his new book, Creating Virtual Assistants, Andrew explains the concepts involved in building effective conversational AI that can automate common inquiries and easily address your customers' most common problems.  In this episode of Digital Conversations, Andrew and Greg Kefer discuss the themes of the book and specifically how those concepts apply to healthcare. As the COVID-19 pandemic applies massive stress on global healthcare systems, can digital assistants help the industry rise to the challenge and provide the conversational scale necessary to engage the billions of people that need care? The discussion touches on how the principles of the book are front and center in the minds of the innovation community.  Creating Virtual Assistants is available at manning.com and Digital Conversations listeners can take advantage of a 35% discount by using the code poddigital21 during checkout.

Digital Conversations
A Conversation with Andrew Freed, Master Inventor at IBM and Author of “Creating Virtual Assistants”

Digital Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 10, 2021 19:38


After spending the past several years designing and building conversational digital assistants at IBM, Andrew Freed decided to share his learnings and experiences with the broader community. In his new book, Creating Virtual Assistants, Andrew explains the concepts involved in building effective conversational AI that can automate common inquiries and easily address your customers' most common problems.  In this episode of Digital Conversations, Andrew and Greg Kefer discuss the themes of the book and specifically how those concepts apply to healthcare. As the COVID-19 pandemic applies massive stress on global healthcare systems, can digital assistants help the industry rise to the challenge and provide the conversational scale necessary to engage the billions of people that need care? The discussion touches on how the principles of the book are front and center in the minds of the innovation community.  Creating Virtual Assistants is available at manning.com and Digital Conversations listeners can take advantage of a 35% discount by using the code poddigital21 during checkout.

The New Stack Podcast
Why IAM is a Pain Point in Kubernetes

The New Stack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 43:46


Prisma Cloud from Palo Alto Networks sponsored this podcast. Identity and access management (IAM) was previously relatively straightforward. Often delegated as a low-level management task to the local area network (LAN) or wide area network (WAN) admin, the process of setting permissions for tiered data access was definitely not one of the more challenging security-related duties. However, in today's highly distributed and relatively complex computing environments, network and associated IAM are exponentially more complex. As application creation and deployment become more distributed, often among multicloud containerized environments, the resulting dependencies, as well as vulnerabilities, continue to proliferate as well, thus widening the scope of potential attack surfaces. How to manage IAM in this context was the main topic of this episode of The New Stack Analysts podcast, as KubeCon + CloudNativeCon attendees joined TNS Founder and Publisher Alex Williams and guests live for the latest “Virtual Pancake & Podcast.” They discussed why IAM has become even more difficult to manage than in the past and offered their perspectives about potential solutions. They also showed how enjoying pancakes — or other variations of breakfast — can make IAM challenges more manageable. The event featured Lin Sun, senior technical staff member and Master Inventor, Istio/IBM; Joab Jackson, managing editor, The New Stack and Nathaniel “Q” Quist, senior threat researcher (Public Cloud Security – Unit 42), Palo Alto Networks. Jackson noted how the evolution of IAM has not been conducive to handling the needs of present-day distributed computing. Previously, it was “not exactly a security thing” nor a “developer problem,” and wasn't even “a security problem, he said. “[IAM] really almost was a network problem: if a certain individual or a certain process wants to access another process or a resource online, then you have to have the permissions in place to meet all the policy requirements about who can ask for these particular resources,” Jackson said. “And this is an entirely new problem with distributed computing on a massive and widespread scale…it's almost a mindset, number one, about who can figure out what to do and then how to go about doing it.”

The New Stack Analysts
Why IAM is a Pain Point in Kubernetes

The New Stack Analysts

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 43:45


Prisma Cloud from Palo Alto Networks sponsored this podcast. Identity and access management (IAM) was previously relatively straightforward. Often delegated as a low-level management task to the local area network (LAN) or wide area network (WAN) admin, the process of setting permissions for tiered data access was definitely not one of the more challenging security-related duties. However, in today's highly distributed and relatively complex computing environments, network and associated IAM are exponentially more complex. As application creation and deployment become more distributed, often among multicloud containerized environments, the resulting dependencies, as well as vulnerabilities, continue to proliferate as well, thus widening the scope of potential attack surfaces. How to manage IAM in this context was the main topic of this episode of The New Stack Analysts podcast, as KubeCon + CloudNativeCon attendees joined TNS Founder and Publisher Alex Williams and guests live for the latest “Virtual Pancake & Podcast.” They discussed why IAM has become even more difficult to manage than in the past and offered their perspectives about potential solutions. They also showed how enjoying pancakes — or other variations of breakfast — can make IAM challenges more manageable. The event featured Lin Sun, senior technical staff member and Master Inventor, Istio/IBM; Joab Jackson, managing editor, The New Stack and Nathaniel “Q” Quist, senior threat researcher (Public Cloud Security – Unit 42), Palo Alto Networks. Jackson noted how the evolution of IAM has not been conducive to handling the needs of present-day distributed computing. Previously, it was “not exactly a security thing” nor a “developer problem,” and wasn't even “a security problem, he said. “[IAM] really almost was a network problem: if a certain individual or a certain process wants to access another process or a resource online, then you have to have the permissions in place to meet all the policy requirements about who can ask for these particular resources,” Jackson said. “And this is an entirely new problem with distributed computing on a massive and widespread scale…it's almost a mindset, number one, about who can figure out what to do and then how to go about doing it.”

Develomentor
Reiner Kraft - Master Inventor & CTO Turned Tech Coach #116

Develomentor

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2020 51:17


Welcome to another episode of Develomentor. Today's guest is Ruby ShresthaReiner Kraft has more than 15+ years of experience leading high-impact technological organizations both large and small, and has spent 20 years in the Silicon Valley. (Master Inventor)During his 20 years in Silicon Valley, Reiner was one of the most prolific inventors in the area, filing more than 120 patent applications with the US Patent Office. Both IBM Research and Yahoo recognize Reiner as a Master Inventor, and the prestigious MIT Technology Review (TR 100) in 2003 also nominated him as a top innovator under the age of 30. Alongside were other nominees including Larry Page (Google) and Jerry Yang (Yahoo).Reiner also has a proven track-record of building up and balancing long-term strategic research (Zalando Research) with short-term tactical product requirements. If you are enjoying our content please leave us a rating and review or consider supporting usA note from GrantReiner Kraft has spent 20+ years working in tech across companies big and small. During the span of his career, Dr. Reiner Kraft has held down roles like senior software engineer, director of engineering, assistant professor, VP of Engineering and Chief Technology Officer. Along his journey, Reiner earned his PhD in Computer Science from the University of California Santa Cruz and he’s also garnered the title of Master Inventor due to his prolific work in inventing new technologies. He filed more than 120 patent applications over his career while working at the likes of IBM, and Yahoo!. In 2003, MIT Technology Review named Reiner one of the Top 100 top innovators under 30. In 2016, Dr Kraft left Silicon Valley for his native home in Germany to help scale the fast growing fashion startup Zalando. These days, Dr. Kraft is based in Berlin Germany where he runs an executive coaching business called the Mindful Leader. This business is focused on helping technical leaders deepen their skills and scale their organizations. -Grant IngersollQuotes“If you’re interested in a particular research environment I think it can’t hurt to get a phd. It’s probably a necessity to have it to actually get in. Otherwise you can still work as a research engineer m ore on the practical engineering side. For that, a PhD is not necessary at all.”“I took a mindfulness based stress reduction class that was offered at Yahoo and it felt really good having more clarity, slow things down a little bit and reflect. Stress levels at that point were also decreasing and it made me more open to new things, new experiences.”—Reiner KraftAdditional ResourcesCheck out Reiner’s article ‘The 12 Mindfulness Leadership Principles’ You can find more resources in the show notesTo learn more about our podcast go to https://develomentor.com/To listen to previous episodes go to https://develomentor.com/blog/Connect with Reiner KraftLinkedInConnect with Grant IngersollLinkedInTwitterSupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/develomentor)

IT Career Energizer
Always Seek To Innovate And Be Clear About Your Career Destination with Sam Lightstone

IT Career Energizer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2020 39:49


Phil’s guest on today’s show is Sam Lightstone, IBM’s Chief Technology Officer for AI Strategy, an IBM Fellow and a Master Inventor in the IBM Data and AI group. He is also chair of the Data and AI Technical Team, the working group of IBM’s technical executives in the division. In this episode Sam joins Phil to discuss the power of innovation, and why we must always seek to first convince people that we have good ideas by allowing them to visualise, and innovate through creative thinking. Sam also talks about the importance of being clear when it comes to your career goals in IT, and why without a clear goal to aim for, we can never truly hope to arrive at our ideal destination Full show notes and links to related resources are available on the IT Career Energizer website - https://itcareerenergizer.com

Tech Unlocked
E17 | Test Automation Unlocked with Angie Jones

Tech Unlocked

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 20, 2020 48:36


“My difference are my superpowers” -Angie Jones   Angie Jones is a Java Champion and Senior Developer Advocate who specializes in test automation strategies and techniques. She shares her wealth of knowledge by speaking and teaching at software conferences all over the world, writing tutorials and technical articles on angiejones.tech, and leading the online learning platform, Test Automation University.   As a Master Inventor, Angie is known for her innovative and out-of-the-box thinking style which has resulted in more than 25 patented inventions in the US and China. In her spare time, Angie volunteers with Black Girls Code to teach coding workshops to young girls in an effort to attract more women and minorities to tech.   In this episode, I chat with Angie Jones who is a Senior Developer Advocate specialized in test automation strategies & techniques about how she discovered her niche in tech. Angie shares how she got her patents, teaches us her secret to fighting imposters syndrome, and shows us how having a personal brand can help you level up in your career.   Key takeaways from this episode: What is test automation? The skillsets needed to become an effective test automation engineer One simple exercise you can do to combat imposter syndrome The # 1 type of testing everyone should know about Misconceptions about being a test automation engineer The importance of speaking up and sharing your ideas How developing your personal brand can level up your career 3 major keys for getting into tech as a developer Connect with Angie : YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/angieluvboo?sub_confirmation=1 LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/angiejones Website: https://angiejones.tech/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/techgirl1908 Free Courses: https://testautomationu.applitools.com/instructors/angie_jones.html Connect with Grace: Twitter: https://twitter.com/GraceMacjones LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gracemacjones/   Follow the podcast: Twitter: https://twitter.com/techunlockedpod Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/techunlockedpod/ LinkedIn: Tech Unlocked   Thank you so much for listening to this podcast! If you enjoyed listening to this episode, please leave a rating and review on iTunes. Use the hashtag #Techunlocked to ask questions and share your thoughts. Have a tech-related question? Shoot us an email techunlockedpod@gmail.com 

The New Stack Podcast
IBM's Lin Sun - Master Inventor Compares Service Meshes to ‘Storage Boxes'

The New Stack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2020 38:33


Listen to All TNS podcast here: https://thenewstack.io/podcasts In this episode of The New Stack Makers podcast, we spoke with IBM's Lin Sun, whose official title is a senior technical staff member and “master inventor” for a comprehensive overview on what service meshes are for those not completely familiar with the topic, may have some familiarity and want to know more or want to also know more about emerging use cases. Sun's expertise in service meshes largely draws upon her role as an Istio project maintainer and is also on the Istio Steering Committee and Technical Oversight Committee. Sun's IBM title as “master inventor” may sound unusual or even arguably pretentious for some, or even “really cool,” as Sun describes it. But at IBM, the status as “master inventor” represents specific merits those who hold the title must first attain. “‘Master inventor' is a title for someone who demonstrates the mastery of the IBM inventor process and is able to mentor other people to be successful in the invention process, and to be able to be productive yourself,” Sun said. Among the other requirements, a “master inventor” must also first file about a dozen patents and to have at least one issued patent, Sun said. You must also have worked with a ‘review board to reveal any incoming patent disclosures on behalf of IBM

Industrial IoT Spotlight
EP058 - A conversation on AI, social responsibility, and future disruptions - Neil Sahota, Master Inventor, IBM

Industrial IoT Spotlight

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2020 70:05


In this episode of the IIoT Spotlight Podcast, we discuss the current state of AI in practice, the integration of AI and IoT, and the importance of new data sources designed for machine use. On a more human angle, we highlight the importance of measuring social impact while deploying disruptive technology. Neil Sahota is an IBM Master Inventor, United Nations Artificial Intelligence subject matter expert, and on the Faculty at UC Irvine. With over twenty years’ experience, Neil works with clients and business partners to create next generation products/solutions powered by emerging technologies. He is also the author of Own the A.I. Revolution, a practical guide to leveraging A.I. for social good and business growth.  IoT ONE is an insight and advisory firm focused on helping companies manage the threats and opportunities presented by the Internet of Things. https://www.iotone.com  

Boundless
EP13: Sarah Maninon and Andy Feltham: AI Beyond The Hype

Boundless

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2020 19:52


This is a conversation with Sarah Mannion of Nvidia and Andy Feltham of Filament AI.Sarah is a Tech Evangelist at Nvidia. Formerly with Microsoft and Apple, she has worked in the IT industry for over 20 years. Sarah has a breadth of knowledge across all NVIDIA solutions, from AI to deep learning, to remote graphics. Andy Feltham is a Master Inventor and former manager of IBM's UK Emerging Technologies team. He worked for IBM for 14 years before joining Filament as the VP of Innovation. Andy has a love for how technology can solve real problems. In this episode we talked about the problems with calling 'cognitive technologies' 'artificial intelligence'; the risks, the inference, the stories it conjures up and the hype. We compared AI hype to other technologies hype and discussed how enterprises are asking different AI questions this year. Finally, we spoke about how AI bias was potentially a paradox and how AI ethics remains front of mind for organisations deploying AI solutions.

Kubernetes Podcast from Google
Invention, IBM and Istio, with Lin Sun

Kubernetes Podcast from Google

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2020 44:18


What do you do next when you have over 150 patents to your name? Write a book, of course! Lin Sun is a Senior Technical Staff Member and Master Inventor at IBM, where she has spent the past 14 years doing software engineering in areas including cloud and open technologies. She has worked on the Istio service mesh since 2017, and is on the Istio steering and technical oversight committees. Lin joins Adam and Craig to discuss invention, making Istio easier to use, and how being a mother has impacted both. Do you have something cool to share? Some questions? Let us know: web: kubernetespodcast.com mail: kubernetespodcast@google.com twitter: @kubernetespod Chatter of the week Snow in Seattle News of the week Tanka, from Grafana Hacker News commentary Jsonnet ksonnet archived Configula, from Brendan Burns Caligula, from Rome Falco moves to the CNCF incubator Falco’s biggest hit, Rock Me Amadeus CKAD is now valid for 3 years Contour 1.1.0 Getting serious about open-source security by Dan Lorenc Episode 39, with Dan Lorenc Designing and Building HA Kubernetes on Bare-Metal AKS Latency and performance/availability issues due to IO saturation and throttling under load Kubernetes Networking Demystified by Karen Bruner at StackRox How to Give Developers Access to Kubernetes During Development by Daniel Thiry How to deal with computing resource cost for Kubernetes-based development Key metrics for monitoring Istio from Datadog Deploying multiple Istio Ingress Gateways by Peter Jausovec Big Prometheus by Clay Smith from Monitoring Monitoring Breaking Changes in Helm 3 (and How to Fix Them) by Jack Morris Security advantages of pull-based CD pipelines by Alex Kaskasoli Zero touch authentication on Kubernetes by Peter Wilcsinszky at BanzaiCloud Vault replication across multiple datacenters on Kubernetes by Nandor Kracser OpenStack’s Complicated Kubernetes Relationship by Mike Vizard of ContainerJournal Kubernetes 1.15 security changes in GKE KubeCon + CloudNativeCon NA 2019 Transparency Report Zendesk case study Links from the interview IBM Master Inventor Lin’s patents Her favorites: Analyzing email content to determine potential intended recipients Ensuring a desired distribution of content in a multimedia document for different demographic groups utilizing demographic information Istio announcement blog and GlueCon talk from 2017 Lin at the IBM Cloud CTO Office IBM Research IBM Cloud, formerly known as Bluemix Bluemix Service Proxy Amalgam8 Envoy Istio 1.1, the “9 months” release The Sidecar resource, which lets you scope which services are known by a given sidecar to reduce resource usage Release cadence Istio 1.4 Mutual TLS New 1.4 features: Auto-mutual TLS client-go library istioctl analyze Requirement to declare containerPort removed in 1.3, automatic protocol selection added User Experience working group istioctl add-to-mesh istioctl describe-pod istioctl install Steering committee Technical oversight committee istiod Istio as an Example of When Not to Do Microservices by Christian Posta Minion cluster mode Istio Explained, by Lin and Dan Berg kui and iter8 Lin Sun on Twitter

Reflecting on Achievements : Conversations with fascinating individuals
James Luke, Master Inventor and Distinguished Engineer at IBM talks about AI, Leadership and overcoming his fears.

Reflecting on Achievements : Conversations with fascinating individuals

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 28, 2019 40:33


James Luke is Chief Architect for Watson Tools at IBM a Distinguished Engineer and Master Inventor. In this episode James talks about his career in AI, his love of cognitive computing and how he makes the very best of his naturally extreme introvert personality to enable career and leadership growth.

Frontier Podcast by Gun.io
AI for everyone, AI ethics, and problem solving

Frontier Podcast by Gun.io

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2019 13:50


Yoav Rubin is a Senior Software Engineer at Microsoft working on Azure AI. Previous to that he was a Research Staff Member and Master Inventor at IBM Research. He’s a published author and self described “software guy” with a lot of interesting perspectives on the state of the art in AI.Yoav talks with Ledge about how AI, like other technologies, is being democratized through services like Azure AI such that any developer can take advantage of them. The Azure AI environment allows devs to design experiments, develop them, and move domain of AI from specialized experts to everyone. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Stroke of Genius
Lisa Seacat DeLuca - Master Inventor at IBM

Stroke of Genius

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2019 28:45


Join us as we get to know a Master Inventor at IBM, Lisa DeLuca. Lisa holds over 400 patents for her various inventions across the tech world. We'll hear what it's like to invent for a huge organization like IBM, get advice on patenting your own invention, and learn about some of the incredible projects Lisa has been a part of such as Digital Twin. This episode is sponsored by IBM Learn More About Lisa Seacat Deluca Her Website: https://lisaseacat.com/Twitter: https://twitter.com/LisaSeacatList of granted USPTO Patents: Watch her TED TalkThis episode was produced by At Will Media on behalf of Intellectual Property Owners Education Foundation See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

TechTopia
Techtopia 95: Internettets glemte kvinder

TechTopia

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2019 41:13


Historien om internettets skabelse er altid en historie om mandlige alpha-nørder i en garage, som kæmper længe for deres rigdom og berømmelse. Men hvor er kvinderne? Der var nemlig masser af kvinder i den historie. Den amerikanske forfatter og rockmusiker Claire Evans fortæller de glemte kvinders historie i bogen "Broadband", hvor hun har støvet en række fascinerende historier om kvindelige computernørder op. Techtopia sætter fokus på kvinder i teknologi i anledning af kvindernes internationale kampdag d. 8. marts. Derfor kan du også møde Lisa Deluca fra IBM, som ikke er glemt men yderst aktiv. I en alder af kun 35 har hun allerede en kometkarriere og et alenlangt CV, som en af techbranchens mest erfarne, yngre kvinder. Hun er bl.a. en af IBM's mest produktive kvindelige opfinder nogensinde med mere end 600 patentansøgninger til dato på verdensplan - 400 er godkendt. Medvirkende: Claire L. Evans, forfatter, journalist, musiker Lisa Deluca, Master Inventor og Director of IoT Building Insights, IBM Links: Claire Evans https://clairelevans.com/ Lisa Deluca https://www.ibm.com/blogs/watson-customer-engagement/author/lisaseacatdeluca/

HUB History - Our Favorite Stories from Boston History
Lewis Latimer, Master Inventor (episode 120)

HUB History - Our Favorite Stories from Boston History

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 17, 2019 32:47


African American inventor and draftsman Lewis Latimer’s parents self-emancipated to give their children the opportunities afforded to those born into freedom. A Chelsea native, Latimer’s career took him from the Navy, to a patent law firm, to the prestigious circle of Thomas Edison’s pioneers. Show notes: http://HUBhistory.com/120

Storage Unpacked Podcast
#84 – Discussing New NVMe Form Factors with Jonathan Hinkle

Storage Unpacked Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019 33:21


This week, Chris and Martin talk to Jonathan Hinkle, Principal Researcher – System Architecture and Master Inventor at Lenovo.  As solid-state storage and NVMe become more prevalent, the legacy 2.5″ HDD format is increasingly impractical for getting the best density, power and cooling in servers.  Jonathan explains how his work led to the founding of […] The post #84 – Discussing New NVMe Form Factors with Jonathan Hinkle appeared first on Storage Unpacked Podcast.

Making Data Simple
Kansas City Keynote - Making Data Simple [Season 3 - Episode 2]

Making Data Simple

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 78:10


Host Al Martin, IBM VP of Hybrid Data Management & Client Success, and Sam Lightstone, CTO for Data, IBM Fellow & Master Inventor, present their Kansas City Techweek keynote. They go over what it means to make data ready for AI, become data driven and acquire growth. They deliver key industry insights to drive performance in a way that is easily understandable, avoiding the jargon. Be sure to follow along with presentation slides attached below.-------------------00:00 - Download and follow along with the presentation slides here.00:00 - Check us out on YouTube and SoundCloud.00:10 - Connect with Producer Steve Moore on LinkedIn and Twitter.00:15 - Connect with Producer Liam Seston on LinkedIn and Twitter.00:20 - Connect with Producer Rachit Sharma on LinkedIn.00:25 - Connect with Host Al Martin on LinkedIn and Twitter.

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts
Kansas City Keynote - Making Data Simple [Season 3 - Episode 2]

IBM Analytics Insights Podcasts

Play Episode Play 30 sec Highlight Listen Later Jan 16, 2019 78:10


Host Al Martin, IBM VP of Hybrid Data Management & Client Success, and Sam Lightstone, CTO for Data, IBM Fellow & Master Inventor, present their Kansas City Techweek keynote. They go over what it means to make data ready for AI, become data driven and acquire growth. They deliver key industry insights to drive performance in a way that is easily understandable, avoiding the jargon. Be sure to follow along with presentation slides attached below.-------------------00:00 - Download and follow along with the presentation slides here.00:00 - Check us out on YouTube and SoundCloud.00:10 - Connect with Producer Steve Moore on LinkedIn and Twitter.00:15 - Connect with Producer Liam Seston on LinkedIn and Twitter.00:20 - Connect with Producer Rachit Sharma on LinkedIn.00:25 - Connect with Host Al Martin on LinkedIn and Twitter.

Hacks & Hobbies
E167 - Danny Dodge the Master Inventor and a Humble Hacker.

Hacks & Hobbies

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 28, 2018 28:20


I met Danny through a kickstarter project that had just successfully closed, so I reached out to see if I could still get in on the deal and he said yes and that it was going to take one day to get to my address in Colorado while he also lived there. I’ve been following his work and hours ever since and finally got to talk with him and learn about his story. You can find Danny on Facebook: Http://fb.com/dannydodgelive ——Sponsorship—— This podcast brought to you by our generous sponsors. It is hosted by Anchor and distributed to the many platforms available to you to listen on. If you’re interested in sponsoring this podcast please connect on the networks below. ——Connect Here!—— You can find Hacks & Hobbies on these popular social media networks: Facebook: fb.com/hacksandhobbies LinkedIn: linkedin.com/company/hacksandhobbies Instagram: instagram.com/hacksandhobbies Twitter: twitter.com/hacksandhobbies or through our website: hacksandhobbies.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/hacksandhobbies/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/hacksandhobbies/support

Roaring Elephant
Episode 109 – Open Metadata and Governance Masterclass with Mandy Chessell – Part 2

Roaring Elephant

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2018 52:10


In this GDPR world, Data Governance and Data Lineage are, or should be, very much top of mind for anybody in the Big Data world. We reached out to Mandy Chessell, who has been very active in this area and were delighted when she accepted to do an interview with us. In this second part, we discuss the ins and outs of good data stewardship and how companies can adopt, implement and contribute. Mandy Chessell Distinguished Engineer, Master Inventor, Fellow of Royal Academy of Engineering https://www.linkedin.com/in/mandy-chessell-a4989722/ ODPi Blog post on Egeria: First Release of ODPi Egeria is Here ODPi github projects: Egeria - Open Metadata and Governance https://github.com/odpi/egeria Data-governance companion project https://github.com/odpi/data-governance Please use the Contact Form on this blog or our twitter feed to send us your questions, or to suggest future episode topics you would like us to cover.

Roaring Elephant
Episode 107 – Open Metadata and Governance Masterclass with Mandy Chessell – Part 1

Roaring Elephant

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 41:50


In this GDPR world, Data Governance and Data Lineage are, or should be, very much top of mind for anybody in the Big Data world. We reached out to Mandy Chessell, who has been very active in this area and were delighted when she accepted to do an interview with us. In this first part, the focus is more on Mandy herself and we lay the groundwork for the second part that will go live in episode 109. Mandy Chessell Distinguished Engineer, Master Inventor, Fellow of Royal Academy of Engineering https://www.linkedin.com/in/mandy-chessell-a4989722/ ODPi Blog post on Egeria: First Release of ODPi Egeria is Here ODPi github projects: Egeria - Open Metadata and Governance https://github.com/odpi/egeria Data-governance companion project https://github.com/odpi/data-governance   Please use the Contact Form on this blog or our twitter feed to send us your questions, or to suggest future episode topics you would like us to cover.

Security Intelligence Podcast
How IBM Fellow and Master Inventor Rhonda Childress Learned to Thrive Outside Her Comfort Zone

Security Intelligence Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2018 19:41


Rhonda Childress has earned more than her share of "firsts" over her 25 year IBM career: She was the first woman in IBM Security to become an IBM Fellow as well as the first woman in IBM Services to be named an IBM Master Inventor. Rhonda is a force to be reckoned with, and these day she's using her influence to help inspire the next generation of women in the security industry. Today, she joins the podcast to share her story and remind us all of a simple but inconvenient fact: growth and comfort cannot coexist. To read about more remarkable security professionals like Rhonda, view the entire Voices of Security series at https://ibm.co/2MvwGlu.

All Things Data Podcast
Sam Lightstone, IBM Fellow and Master Inventor - IBM Analytics group

All Things Data Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2018 20:32


Sam Lightstone is an IBM Fellow and Master Inventor in the IBM Analytics group. He leads a number of technical teams in product development for relational databases, data warehousing & big data, cloud computing, analytics for IoT, data virtualization, ground to cloud data movement, and machine learning. He co-founded the IEEE Data Engineering Workgroup on Self-Managing Database Systems. Sam has more than 60 patents issued and pending and has authored four books and over 30 papers. Sam’s books have been translated into Chinese, Japanese and Spanish. You can follow Sam on social media. His Twitter handle is "samlightstone".

Security Intelligence Podcast
What You Need to Know about the Changes to the Australian Privacy Act

Security Intelligence Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2018 19:45


Beginning on Feb. 22 of this year, new data breach and response amendments to the Australia Privacy Act will impact thousands of organizations in Australia and around the world. In this podcast, Chris Hockings, Chief Technology Officer and Master Inventor for IBM Security Australia New Zealand, talks about the implications of the changes to the Privacy Act in Australia, how organizations can prepare, and what steps they can take to build a best practice incident response plan. To learn more about the Privacy Act in Australia and to book a complimentary review workshop, visit https://ibm.co/2EsKqXq. We also invite you to read Ponemon Institute’s 2017 Cost of Data Breach Study — Australia: https://ibm.co/2FBulOF.

Conversations with Dez
Pioneers Of Possible ep. 002 with Nick Fuller - IBM GTS, Watson Research & Master Inventor

Conversations with Dez

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2017 37:40


Dez gets up close & personal with Nick Fuller, Senior Manager, Cognitive Service Foundations, IBM Research, his role with IBM Services Platform & Watson cognitive computing, his 63 patents & 20+ years experience in scientific research & technology development/delivery in cloud technologies; IT service management; photovoltaics & semiconductor technology. Click here => http://bit.ly/ExpertAdvise to schedule a call with an IBM Expert

Conversations with Dez
Pioneers Of Possible ep. 001 with Mickey Iqbal - IBM GTS, IBM Fellow & Master Inventor

Conversations with Dez

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 2, 2017 38:18


Dez gets up close & personal with Mickey Iqbal, IBM Fellow, IBM Master Inventor & Global Lead for GTS Enterprise IT Transformation Advisors, with insights what it takes to be an IBM Master Inventor, his patents, how he has lead cloud transformation for some of the world's most impactful enterprise organizations, his personal life journey, mentorship, and amazing recovery from a life threatening accident. Click here => http://bit.ly/ExpertAdvise to schedule a call with an IBM Expert

Coffer
Chris Hawker: Ayahuasca Jungle Immersion, Dynamite Fishing and Peruvian Moonshine

Coffer

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2013 77:26


Studying Spanish in Ecuador wasn’t enough. Some people always take it to the next level. They leave the trodden path behind and journey deep into the jungle. Putting everything on the line for adventure and a changed life… Join us now with Master Inventor, Chris Hawker. “If you see things through different eyes you start to learn how … Continue reading "Chris Hawker: Ayahuasca Jungle Immersion, Dynamite Fishing and Peruvian Moonshine" The post Chris Hawker: Ayahuasca Jungle Immersion, Dynamite Fishing and Peruvian Moonshine appeared first on The Blog of Ian Robinson.