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I'd write more here, but I've got places to be. Becky, Jeremy, and I are going to engage in some holiday festivities. We have a couple gingerbread houses to make and a tree to trim. And no nog to speak of. Really, that's all you get by way of show notes this time as a result, deal with it. Send your complaints to podcast@searls.co and they will be read on air. Some bullet points below the fold: My 90-minute, outdated guide to setting up a Mac Aaron's puns, ranked Jim Carrey is 62 and can't even retire I bought my 8 year old a switch and didn't realize how much games cost Teen creates memecoin, dumps it, earns $50,000 Startup will brick $800 emotional support robot for kids without refunds Install the Mozi app (manifesto here | app here) Vision Pro getting PSVR2 controllers The 2024 Game Awards news roundup Intergalactic: The Heretic Prophet looks badass, but is it too inclusive for The Gamers? We don't talk about Luigi An invisible desktop app for cheating on technical interviews (HN comments) Sora is out, but it's not good yet Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is out, and it is good yet Emudeck is so great it shouldn't be legal, and some people probably think it isn't Pikmin Stay tuned to my YouTube channel for upcoming LIVE streams Transcript: [00:00:00] Thank you. [00:00:29] Good morning, internet. [00:00:32] I started speaking before I realized, as an asynchronous audio production, it's actually pretty unlikely that it's the morning where you are. [00:00:43] Although, if it is the morning, coincidentally, please feel free to be creeped out, check over your shoulder. [00:00:51] Today was, I woke up with Vim and Vigor this morning, super excited to take on the day, thinking maybe I've got what it takes to record an audio production today. [00:01:07] And then we have an elderly coffee pot. [00:01:11] I don't want to completely put the blame on it because we were using it wrong for several years. [00:01:24] And it's a long story that I will shorten to say, any piece of consumer electronics or appliances in America, the half-life keeps decreasing. [00:01:37] And so when I say elderly coffee pot, I mean that we bought this coffee pot post-COVID. [00:01:42] And it's already feeling like, oh, we should probably get a new coffee pot, huh? [00:01:45] What happens is, from time to time, heat will build up in the grounds dingus. [00:01:55] I'm just realizing now that I'm like, you know, I'm not a coffee engineer. [00:01:58] Some of you are. [00:02:00] But, you know, of course, we all know that the dingus is connected to the water spigot, which is above the craft. [00:02:09] And what happens, as far as I can tell, is once in a while, you get all that hot water and grounds swirling around. [00:02:20] And if it clogs at all, like if it doesn't release just so, the whole little undercarriage, again, this is a technical term, just stay with me. [00:02:30] And we'll pop forward like three millimeters, which is just enough for the water to kind of miss its target on the craft and then spray all who's he what's it's, as well as for the spigot to start just kind of like splurring, you know, this water coffee slurry everywhere. [00:02:49] And so I went after, you know, but then you still get the triumphant ding dong sound that the coffee is ready. [00:02:56] So I walked over to the coffee expecting like, yes, it's the best, best way to start my day or whatever. [00:03:06] Pull out the coffee. [00:03:07] And the pot is too light. [00:03:10] And I had a familiarity of like what that means. [00:03:13] It means like there is water somewhere. [00:03:17] And it's not in this pot. [00:03:19] And so it's just like, you know, this big, big machine we actually have we've put because of our Mr. [00:03:26] Coffee's, you know, elderly onset incontinence. [00:03:33] We have we have put the entire coffee pot on a tray, like a rimmed silicone tray that you would use for like, I guess, a dog feeding bowl, right? [00:03:45] A dog, you know, messily eats food and slaps water around and stuff. [00:03:49] And you don't want it all over your hardwood. [00:03:50] Like you'd put this underneath that and it would catch some of the water. [00:03:53] So we I spent the first 30 minutes of my waking life today getting my hopes up that I was going to have coffee, followed by, you know, painstakingly carrying this entire cradle of of of coffee pot full of hot brown liquid. [00:04:10] That would stay in all of my clothes and, you know, get on the cabinets and stuff with a silicone underbelly thing. [00:04:18] And just kind of like, you know, we've got one of those big we're very fortunate to have one of those big farmers, farmer house, farmhouse. [00:04:25] I never know what to call it. [00:04:27] Steel, basically a double wide sink. [00:04:30] So what's nice about a double wide sink is that if you've got a problem in your kitchen and you're only a few steps away, whether it's the coffee pot part of the kitchen or the fridge or the freezer or the God forbid, the range or the oven, you can just sort of strategically hurl whatever it is you're holding just about into the into the sink. [00:04:51] And then once it hits the sink, it's, you know, the the the potential damage is limited. [00:04:57] So I gently hurled my coffee apparatus. [00:05:02] Is that the plural of apparatus? [00:05:04] One wonders into the into the into the sink and then spent the next 20 minutes, you know, scrubbing them and all to make another pot. [00:05:13] And Becky, of course, walks down the minute that the second pot is about to be finished. [00:05:18] And I'm like, I've already seen some shit and I'm going to go record a podcast now. [00:05:22] And that swallow you just heard was me having a sip of coffee that was not disgusting, but not great. [00:05:31] But I'll take it over where I was an hour ago. [00:05:39] Thank you for for subscribing as a as a true believer in breaking change. [00:05:47] We're coming up on one year now. [00:05:49] It's hard to believe that it's already been a year, not because this has been a lot of work or a big accomplishment, but just because the the the agony of existence seems to accelerate as you get older. [00:06:03] It's one of the few kindnesses in life and so as we whipsaw around the sun yet again, we're about to do that. [00:06:11] This is the 26th edition version 26 of the podcast. [00:06:17] I've got two names here to release titles and I haven't picked one yet. [00:06:22] So as a special. [00:06:24] Nearing the end of the year treat. [00:06:29] I'm going to pitch them both to you now, right? [00:06:31] So so we're in this together. [00:06:33] I like to think this is a highly collaborative one person show. [00:06:37] Version 26 rich nanotexture. [00:06:42] And that's a nod to the MacBook Pro has a nanotexture anti-glare screen coding option. [00:06:52] It's a reference to the rich Corinthian leather that was actually it's a Chrysler reference. [00:06:58] It's a made up thing. [00:06:59] There is no such thing as Corinthian leather, but like that's what they called their their seating. [00:07:03] And Steve Jobs referenced that as being the inspiration for I think it was the iPad calendar app. [00:07:13] With the rich Corinthian leather up at the top during the era of skeuomorphic designs back in 2010, 2009, maybe I can't remember exactly when they I think it's 2010 when he had his famous actually leather chair demonstration of the iPad. [00:07:28] Maybe the reason that that stood out to me was the car reference because it is it is an upsell. [00:07:34] The nanotexture $150 if you want to have a don't call it matte finish. [00:07:41] The other one, so that's option one, rich nanotexture. [00:07:46] And I didn't love it because I couldn't get texture. [00:07:49] I couldn't get the same Corinthian, right? [00:07:53] Like you want that bite, the multisyllabic bite that adds the extra, you know, the gravitas of a luxury good. [00:08:04] Yeah, texture just didn't have it for me. [00:08:06] But then if you change that word, it doesn't make sense. [00:08:08] So I mean, the other option two that came to mind version 26 don't don't by the way, don't think I'm going to edit this in post and fix it. [00:08:19] I will not. [00:08:20] I will ultimately land on one of these and that will be the title that you saw on your podcast player. [00:08:25] Or maybe some third thing will come to mind and then this conversation will be moot. [00:08:29] I do not think of this collaborative exercise. [00:08:32] Just imagine it's a it's a it's a quantum collaboration. [00:08:37] So by observing it, that's you actually took part. [00:08:41] You opened your podcast player and then the yeah, the entangled, you know, bits just they coalesced around one of these two names or some third name. [00:08:58] It's all just statistics version 26 Luigi's Mansion, which is a nod to two things at once. [00:09:05] I'm going to talk a little bit about GameCube, but also I'll probably not escape mentioning Luigi Manjoni Manjoni man. [00:09:15] You know, I haven't been watching the news. [00:09:17] I don't know how to pronounce his name, but it looks enough like mansion that I was like, oh, man. [00:09:21] I bet you there's a Nintendo PR guy whose day just got fucking ruined by the fella who is a overnight folk hero. [00:09:30] More attractive than most assassins, I would say. [00:09:35] Great hair. [00:09:36] Good skin. [00:09:37] Apparently, skincare Reddit is all about this fella who murdered in cold blood the CEO of UnitedHealthcare. [00:09:45] If you haven't caught the news, if you're even less online than I am. [00:09:51] And yeah, so I'm trying to decide. [00:09:53] I think Luigi's Mansion is probably going to win. [00:09:56] It's more timely. [00:09:57] It's the first time the name Luigi has come up in the last year. [00:10:00] And I may have mentioned nanotexture before when discussing Apple's very compromised studio display. [00:10:11] So I'm leaning Luigi's Mansion, but, you know, don't tempt me. [00:10:15] I might switch. [00:10:18] I'm going to just keep drinking coffee because I got to power through this. [00:10:21] Let's talk about some life stuff. [00:10:24] I so when we last talked that way back in the heady days of version 25, I had just gotten off a plane from Japan. [00:10:34] I was still a little bit jet lagged. [00:10:36] I recorded later in the evening. [00:10:38] I was tired. [00:10:39] You know, I was still overcoming. [00:10:41] I listened to the episode, realized I was overcoming a cold. [00:10:44] You know, then Becky shortly thereafter, after recording, she developed a pretty bad cough. [00:10:51] And so we've both been sleeping relatively poorly. [00:10:53] And I can't complain about this cough because her having a cough for four nights is nothing like me snoring on and off for over a year. [00:11:02] And I think the fact that her cough is consistent is actually a kindness compared to the sporadic nature of my snoring, where it's like I might go a week without it. [00:11:11] And then all of a sudden there's like, bam. [00:11:14] So she doesn't, you know, it's like sneaks up on her and that's not fair. [00:11:17] So so she's got a cough and I haven't been sleeping particularly well. [00:11:20] Maybe that's it. [00:11:22] I also, you know, I wanted to dry out because I was living on shoe highs, you know, canned cocktails in Japan for way too long. [00:11:30] Just drinking, you know, five whole dollars of alcohol every day, which is an irresponsible amount of alcohol. [00:11:36] It turns out. [00:11:40] Yeah, that's one nice thing about living in Orlando and theme park Orlando is that the average price of a cocktail here is seriously $20. [00:11:49] I think it is. [00:11:51] I am delighted and surprised when I find a cocktail under $20. [00:11:55] That's any good. [00:11:55] In fact, the four seasons right around the corner, their lobby bar has a some of the best bartenders in the state of Florida. [00:12:05] Like they went all kinds of awards. [00:12:06] And so when you say a lobby bar, you think it sucks. [00:12:09] But it's actually it's like it's a it's a restaurant with a room if you're ever around and they still do a happy hour with like $4. [00:12:18] It was $4 beers. [00:12:19] I think they finally increased to $5 beers draft beer. [00:12:23] And it's all craft. [00:12:25] You know, it's all fancy people stuff. [00:12:27] And they do it's I think it's $10 margaritas, French 75s, and they got some other happy hour cocktail. [00:12:37] It was highballs for a while. [00:12:39] Whiskey highballs was like probably centauri toki or something. [00:12:43] I gotta say like that $10 margarita. [00:12:47] They'll throw some jalapeno in there if you want some tahini rim, you know, they do it up. [00:12:52] They do it well. [00:12:54] But that might be the cheapest cocktail I've had in all of Orlando is at the Four Seasons. [00:13:01] Famous for that TikTok meme of the Four Seasons baby, if you're a TikTok person. [00:13:06] Anyway, all that all all this drinking talk back to the point. [00:13:11] I've been not drinking for a week. [00:13:12] And I, you know, I'm back to tracking my nutrients every day. [00:13:17] The things that I consume and adding up all of the protein and carbohydrate and realizing [00:13:21] if you don't drink, it's actually really easy to blow past one's protein goals. [00:13:25] And so I had one day where I had like 240 grams of protein, which is [00:13:28] enough protein that you'll feel it the next morning if you're not used to it. [00:13:34] And I still was losing weight. [00:13:38] I lost like five or six pounds in the last week. [00:13:43] And to the point where it was like, you know, I was feeling a little lightheaded, [00:13:47] a little bit woozy because I wasn't drinking enough is the takeaway. [00:13:52] So so thank God we got to go to a Christmas party last night. [00:13:57] It was it was great Gatsby themed. [00:13:58] And I dressed up like a man who wanted to do the bare minimum to not get made fun of at the party. [00:14:05] So I had some some suspenders on instead of a belt, which was the first time I ever put on suspenders. [00:14:13] They were not period appropriate suspenders simply because they had the, you know, the [00:14:18] little class B dues instead of how they had some other system for I don't I don't fucking know. [00:14:25] Like I, I had chat GPT basically helped me through this. [00:14:28] And it's like, hey, you want these kinds of suspenders? [00:14:30] I'm like, that sounds like an ordeal. [00:14:31] How about I just get some universal one size fits all fit and clip them in? [00:14:36] I also had a clip on bow tie. [00:14:37] So that worked. [00:14:39] When you think clip on bow tie, I guess I'd never used one before, but like it, I always [00:14:45] assumed it would just be like, you know, like a barrette clip that would go in front of the [00:14:49] front button and look silly for that reason. [00:14:51] And maybe that's how they used to be. [00:14:53] But it seems these days, if you want to spend $3 on a fancy clip on bow tie with a nice texturing, [00:14:58] I'll say, uh, it's just pre it's a pre tied bow with a still wraps around your neck. [00:15:04] It's just, it has a class mechanism, which seems smart to me, right? [00:15:08] I don't know what. [00:15:09] Look, if you're really into men's fashion, uh, there's this weird intersection or this tension [00:15:19] between I'm a manly man who, who ties my own shoes and, you know, kills my own dinner and [00:15:25] stuff. [00:15:25] And I, I, for fuck's sake, tie my own bow tie from scratch every day. [00:15:29] Right? [00:15:29] Like there's a toxically masculine approach to bow ties, but at the same time, it is such [00:15:35] a foofy accoutrement. [00:15:37] It's like an ascot, um, that the idea of like a manly man, like a man trying to demonstrate [00:15:43] his manliness by the fact that he doesn't use a clip on bow tie, uh, came to mind yesterday [00:15:50] when I was, uh, struggling even with the clasping kind. [00:15:54] I was like, man, I wish I could just get this to anyway. [00:15:58] Um, I had a vest at a gray vest. [00:16:03] This is all brand new territory for me. [00:16:05] Uh, yeah, I, I've, I've leaned pretty hard into the t-shirt and shorts and or jeans life [00:16:10] for so long. [00:16:12] Uh, the, the fella in front of us when we, when we were checking in, cause they took little [00:16:16] photos of you, uh, all of the women had the same exact flapper dress from Amazon, you know, [00:16:22] with the, the, the, the hairband thing with the, you know, fake, the polyester peacock tail. [00:16:28] Becky's looked the best. [00:16:29] I'm not gonna, I'm not even lying. [00:16:32] Uh, uh, her dress actually fit. [00:16:35] He had some, uh, very ill fitting flapper costumes that these women couldn't even move in. [00:16:40] Um, it was interesting. [00:16:42] Uh, but the, the fella in front of us at check-in was wearing a, a, a full blown, you know, tuxedo [00:16:48] get up that he brought from home. [00:16:50] And he was talking about, Oh yeah, well he's got two of them and his wife, you know, ribbed [00:16:54] him a little bit that he could only fit in one. [00:16:55] I was like, man, owning a tuxedo, that's nuts. [00:16:58] Like, and then it like turns out he's like got all these suits and these fancy clothes and [00:17:02] he's an older gentleman. [00:17:05] Uh, but my entire career only the first few years did I have to think about what I was [00:17:10] wearing and, and it never really got beyond pleated, you know, khakis and a starched shirt. [00:17:18] And, and I had, I had to wear a suit maybe on two sales calls. [00:17:22] Um, and they were always the sales calls that were just, uh, there were certain sales demos [00:17:30] when I was a, a, a baby consultant, these really complex bids. [00:17:39] I remember we were at cook County once, uh, uh, the, the county that wraps Chicago and it [00:17:44] has a lot of functions and facilities that operate at the county level. [00:17:48] So, but of course we're in Chicago in some, you know, uh, dystopian office building. [00:17:54] That's very Gothic, I should say. [00:17:57] And the, the solution that we were selling was a response to a bid around some kind of [00:18:05] document, electronic document ingestion and, and, and routing solution. [00:18:09] And so what, what that meant was it was like a 12 person team. [00:18:14] It was a big project working on this pitch. [00:18:18] And most of the work and most of the money came from the software side at the end of the [00:18:23] process. [00:18:23] It's like, you're going to get IBM file net and you're going to get all these different, [00:18:26] uh, enterprise tools. [00:18:28] And we're going to integrate, uh, with all your systems and, and build these custom integrations [00:18:32] that you've asked for here and here and here. [00:18:33] But the, the, the hard part is the human logistics of how do you get all of their paper documents [00:18:41] into the system. [00:18:42] Uh, and that was my job was I had to get paper and then scan it, uh, with a production, big [00:18:50] Kodak funkin fucking scanner. [00:18:52] Uh, and then use, what was it? [00:18:54] Kofax capture or something like a, like an OCR tool of the era. [00:18:59] And the thing about it is that scanning is not, was not ever a science and neither is [00:19:07] OCR, the OCR stuff and OCR stands for optical character recognition. [00:19:10] So you'd have a form and you'd write on the form, like, you know, uh, uh, uh, uh, some, [00:19:15] some demo address and name and all this. [00:19:19] I spent. [00:19:22] So like the people doing the software, like they, they could just like click a button and [00:19:26] like, they could even just use fakery, right? [00:19:29] Like, Oh, the API is not really there, but I'll always return this particular, like, let's [00:19:33] call it an XML soap message. [00:19:34] And so the, the software guys clocked in, clocked out, got back to their billable work. [00:19:39] I, because the stakes were so high in this particular, uh, and I'm here right now explaining [00:19:46] all of this nonsense because I had to wear a suit and that was also really bad, but I [00:19:51] was in Chicago late at night with a group of like, at that point it was like 9 PM and it [00:19:54] was just me and two partners. [00:19:56] Cause the partners had a sickness called avoid family, stay at work. [00:20:02] And, uh, I, I was just running over and over and over again where I'd like, you know, [00:20:09] I'd take the paper, I'd put it through the scanner and it would get 90% of the OCR stuff [00:20:13] done, or I'd get it perfect. [00:20:15] And it would scan everything just right, which would result in the downstream, you know, after [00:20:21] the capture, like all of my integrations, like would route it to the right thing. [00:20:24] So that like, it was basically a game of mousetrap or dominoes where like my task was both [00:20:29] the most important to being able to demonstrate, but also the most error prone, but also the [00:20:37] least, uh, financially like, um, valuable to, to our services company. [00:20:42] And so I had no support, uh, on top of that, they, the, our fucking it people pushed out some [00:20:49] kind of, um, you know, involuntary security update security and bunny quotes that, that [00:20:57] slowed my system down dramatically in the course of just like a day. [00:21:01] And I had, I had no way to test for this. [00:21:04] So I remember I was up at like 11 PM at that point, trying to make this work consistently [00:21:10] and realizing that the only way to get it to run it all required me to, um, install a virtual [00:21:16] machine, put windows in the virtual machine, install all this software inside that virtual [00:21:22] machine, and then run it there because only in the black box of an encrypted virtual machine [00:21:27] image or, uh, you know, a virtual machine, like disc image, could I evade all of the accountant [00:21:33] bullshit that was trying to track and encrypt and, and, and muck with files and flight and [00:21:38] so forth. [00:21:39] And so it was only around like probably one 30 or two that I got to bed and our, our demo [00:21:46] was like at seven in the morning and I had to wear a suit. [00:21:47] So if you ever wonder, Hey, why is Justin always just in a, a t-shirt and shorts? [00:21:54] Uh, I would say childhood trauma, fuck suits. [00:21:59] The only, the only time I associate like nice clothes, you know, having a lot of [00:22:03] having to dress up is church shit. [00:22:05] I didn't want to go to. [00:22:06] And usually it's like the worst church shit. [00:22:09] Like there's some cool church shit out there, you know, youth group where everyone's a horny, [00:22:14] right. [00:22:15] And singing pop songs to try to get people in. [00:22:17] That's as church shit goes, that's above average. [00:22:21] But when you're talking about like, Hey, you know, this aunt you've never heard of died and [00:22:27] we got to go all the way to goddamn Dearborn to sit in a Catholic mass, that's going to [00:22:32] be in Latin. [00:22:33] And they're going to, you know, one of those, you know, you should feel bad for him because [00:22:39] he's abused. [00:22:39] But one of the altar boys, he's going to be waving that little like incense thingy, [00:22:43] the jigger back and forth and back and forth like a metronome. [00:22:46] And, uh, you're going to get all this soot in your face, all of that, you know, frankincense [00:22:51] and myrrh and whatever the fuck they burn. [00:22:52] And, uh, yeah, then they're going to play some songs, but they're not going to be songs you [00:22:57] want to hear. [00:22:57] And you're going to be uncomfortable because I bought you this suit at JC Penny when you [00:23:01] were like nine and you're 12, you're 12 now, and you've gained a lot of weight, but [00:23:06] here we are. [00:23:07] And then you got to go and, you know, like, don't worry because after the service, there's [00:23:12] a big meal, but it's mostly just going to be, you know, styrofoam plates and plastic forks [00:23:16] and, uh, cold rubbery chicken. [00:23:19] And then a whole lot of family members who want to pinch your cheeks, uh, had an aunt that [00:23:24] always wanted to, um, put on a bunch of red lipstick and kiss me and leave kiss marks. [00:23:30] And she thought that was adorable and everyone else thought it was funny. [00:23:33] And for whatever reason, I wasn't a fan, uh, that's the kind of, uh, yeah, so anyway, moving [00:23:45] right along the, uh, the, the other than having to dress up, the, the Christmas party was really [00:23:50] nice because it had an all you can drink martini bar. [00:23:52] So that, that helped that took the edge off a little bit since I hadn't been drinking for [00:23:57] the previous week. [00:23:57] Uh, and it was, you know, uh, they, they had a great bartender, the, the, I assume that [00:24:07] that people drank gin martinis back in the day of Gatsby, but it seemed to be a vodka forward [00:24:12] martini bar, which I appreciated. [00:24:15] Uh, as I get older and my taste buds start dying, uh, I found myself going from dry martinis [00:24:23] to martinis with an olive to martinis with two olives to me asking for like a little bit of [00:24:30] olive juice and then drinking the martini and realizing that wasn't quite enough olive juice. [00:24:34] So that's just disgusting, but, um, it's where, uh, it's one of the signs of age, I guess. [00:24:43] Uh, so the martini bar was good. [00:24:46] Uh, they also had an aged old fashion that they'd made, you know, homemade, um, with like nutmeg [00:24:51] and cinnamon in there. [00:24:52] That was impressive. [00:24:53] Uh, so yeah, had a, had a big old Christmas party last night, had a couple of drinks, uh, [00:25:00] and, and, uh, because of the contrast, whenever I go, you know, go a week without any alcohol [00:25:06] and then I have some alcohol and then I wake up the next morning and I'm like, oh yes, I [00:25:11] know what people mean now that alcohol is poison. [00:25:13] And it's a mildly poisonous thing because I feel mildly poisoned. [00:25:19] Um, and, and I just usually feel that most days until I forget about it. [00:25:23] So it's a data point, uh, to think about, uh, uh, I, I, I had a good, good run for, [00:25:30] for a while there, just cause like when you live in a fucking theme park and there's nowadays [00:25:34] alcohol everywhere that I go and every outing, I had a good run for a few months. [00:25:40] Um, not last year, the year before where I just didn't drink at home as a rule to myself. [00:25:46] I was like, you know, I'm not going to pour any liquor for myself at home unless I'm entertaining [00:25:49] guests. [00:25:50] And, uh, even then go easy on it because I I'm, I'm, I'm going to just the background radiation [00:25:56] of existence in when you live in a bunch of resorts. [00:25:59] Uh, I'll, I'll get, I'll get, I'll get plenty of alcohol subcutaneously. [00:26:05] Um, a contact tie. [00:26:07] So maybe I'll, maybe I'll try that again. [00:26:10] I don't know. [00:26:11] It's the stuff you think about in mid December when you're just inundated with specialty food [00:26:17] and drink options, uh, do other life stuff that isn't alcohol or religion or clothing [00:26:27] related. [00:26:28] Oh, uh, uh, I've been on a quest to not necessarily save a bunch of money, not necessarily. [00:26:35] Uh, I was going to say, uh, tighten my belt, but, uh, I don't know what the suspender equivalent [00:26:43] is because I did not wear a belt last night. [00:26:45] I just wore suspenders. [00:26:46] Uh, I've been interested in, in not budgeting either. [00:26:52] Just, I think awareness. [00:26:54] Like I want, I know that a lot of money flies through my pockets every month in the form of, [00:27:01] um, SAS software subscriptions and streaming services. [00:27:05] I mentioned this last, uh, last go round that I was recommending, Hey, let's say, go take a [00:27:11] look at like our unused streaming subscriptions of those. [00:27:14] Uh, yesterday I did cancel max. [00:27:16] Cause I realized that, uh, if I'm not watching a lot of news, I'm not going to watch John Oliver [00:27:20] and, and they frankly, a lot of HBO's prestige shows haven't been besides they cut a Sesame [00:27:28] street and it just so happened that I canceled that day. [00:27:31] So maybe there's a, some data engineer at HBO who's like, Oh man, people are canceling because [00:27:37] we got rid of Sesame street. [00:27:38] Uh, that would be good. [00:27:40] That would be good for America to get that feedback. [00:27:43] Uh, yeah. [00:27:44] I just want awareness of like, where's the money going and in what proportion and does that sound [00:27:50] right to me? [00:27:50] Uh, and I've, there are software tools for this. [00:27:53] Uh, they are all compromised in some way. [00:27:57] For example, we just, uh, we'd used lunch money in the past, which is a cool app. [00:28:02] And it has the kind of, you know, basic integrations you would expect. [00:28:06] I don't know if it uses plaid or whatever behind the covers, but like you, you connect your, your, [00:28:11] your checking accounts, your credit card accounts. [00:28:14] It lists all your transactions is very, um, customizable in terms of rules that you can [00:28:21] set. [00:28:21] It has an API. [00:28:22] Jen is a solo co-founder and she seems really, really competent and lovely and responsive, [00:28:27] which are all great things. [00:28:29] But the UI is a little clunky for me. [00:28:32] I don't like how it handled URLs. [00:28:33] It was like, once you got all the transactions in there and, and set up, it didn't feel informative [00:28:41] because there wasn't like a good reporting or graphs that just kind of at a glance would [00:28:45] tell you, this is where your money's going. [00:28:46] At least for me. [00:28:47] Uh, additionally, like it, it can't do the Apple card. [00:28:51] That's the, that's become the crux for a lot of these services is that, um, Apple card [00:28:55] only added support for reading. [00:28:59] Uh, well now you can read, uh, uh, so I, Apple added away on iOS and specifically iPhone [00:29:07] OS to read, uh, transactions from Apple card, Apple savings and Apple cash. [00:29:14] And this was like nine months ago, if that, but copilot, uh, money is one of two apps maybe [00:29:22] that supports this. [00:29:23] And so if you, if you have, we have, we each have an Apple card and we use it for kind of [00:29:29] our silly stuff whenever we're, you know, using a tap to pay. [00:29:33] So, so if, if you want to track transactions and you don't want to manually export CSVs [00:29:40] from your wife's phone every 30 days, which is the process that I'd fallen into with, with [00:29:44] lunch money, then you, you basically have copilot money. [00:29:50] And then there's another one, maybe Monarch, uh, the copilot money. [00:29:53] People are always talking about this other app called Monarch. [00:29:55] I haven't checked it out. [00:29:55] I don't know if that's why they like it or if it's just the other one that's being developed [00:29:59] right now in this post mint apocalypse, as we all grapple with the fact that mint was [00:30:04] always bad, uh, but people got into it and I don't copilot money is like nice, but like [00:30:11] it, like, for example, like if I'm, uh, if I buy a, uh, if I put $10, the equivalent of [00:30:19] $10, so 1000 yen on my Starbucks card in Japan, which is totally separate because of course it [00:30:25] is there's two Starbucks cards. [00:30:27] There's the one in Japan and then the one in the rest of the world. [00:30:30] So you open the Japanese only app, you put a thousand yen on it. [00:30:33] Uh, you pay for that with Apple pay. [00:30:36] So which goes to my Apple card and copilot money will read that transaction. [00:30:40] But if you read like the text in the merchant description, it's literally like [00:30:44] staba day and it's like all no spaces. [00:30:47] It's just like 40 characters in a row to, and if you really squint, you can kind of see [00:30:52] Starbucks, Japan, um, you know, app store payment, which is, you know, like I want to [00:31:00] change that to Starbucks, Japan, and then set up a rule to just like always change that. [00:31:05] So I don't have to like memorize these random ass merchant names. [00:31:08] Uh, apparently like after, after two hours of setting up copilot money yesterday, I realized [00:31:13] that there's like both no way to set up that kind of rule. [00:31:16] The only rule that it supports is categorization of, of spending fine, but then if you set [00:31:22] up a rule and you don't like it, there's no way to edit the rules cause there's no UI for [00:31:25] rule editing. [00:31:26] And so then, you know, where do you go, but read it and you're like, okay, well there's [00:31:30] a subreddit. [00:31:30] And then like, what's half the post in the subreddit? [00:31:32] It's about, Oh, of course it's a bunch of dads who are like, I can't see my rules and I have [00:31:36] to contact support. [00:31:37] And it's been nine months. [00:31:38] And I was like, Oh God. [00:31:39] So that's, uh, if anyone's got any great budgeting software that supports Apple card, you let me [00:31:46] know. [00:31:47] Uh, and also isn't a part-time job. [00:31:50] I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna spend all day on this. [00:31:52] I'm not, I'm not gonna, I'm gonna check in on this, uh, the four times a year that I, that [00:31:58] I wake up in a cold sweat wondering, Oh my God, how many subscriptions do I have? [00:32:02] Which is, uh, I, I really missed my calling by not being a dad, I guess. [00:32:07] But it did land me on looking at rocket money. [00:32:11] Uh, so, so, so there was an app called true bill that marketed heavily with like a lot of [00:32:19] other DTC apps where the pitch was, we will negotiate your bills for you. [00:32:26] And by bills, I think that one of the reasons why this, this, this business probably struggled [00:32:31] is that there's really only two that they could reasonably negotiate on your behalf. [00:32:37] You know, you, you imagine they've got a call center or they've got people who've, who [00:32:40] are trained, who have scripts that they follow, who, who will doggedly keep calling back until [00:32:44] they get what, you know, the discount, the, just the steps that you would have to go through [00:32:48] if you wanted to call Comcast or Verizon, they, they, they, they can basically could basically [00:32:57] only really negotiate your ISP and your cell phone carrier. [00:33:01] Cause those are the two sort of, you know, that are, that are transactional enough that [00:33:08] are regionalized or nationalized enough that they, that they could train on. [00:33:11] And then of course, like they, they're the ones that like get you in with a teaser rate and [00:33:15] then gradually turn up the heat over the course of a couple of years. [00:33:19] Well, Quicken Loans bought, they rebranded as rocket and then rocket fill in the blank [00:33:26] with other products. [00:33:26] And they bought true bill around the same time. [00:33:29] And I, my understanding from a distance is that true bill, uh, uh, that became rocket money [00:33:36] in order to be an entree into other rocket star services. [00:33:41] So like you, you now, when you install rocket money, it's still got the negotiation thing. [00:33:46] Cause that's what they market it on, but you have to slog through so much like, no, I'm actually [00:33:52] all set with credit and, and, and, and debt repayment services. [00:33:57] And I'm, I'm already all set with financial advisors and retirement goals. [00:34:00] I just get me to the, to the thing where I can pay you 35% of whatever you save me on [00:34:06] my ISP bill. [00:34:07] And so of course, you know, like I, I, I signed up for the first time, went through the app [00:34:12] onboarding. [00:34:13] I was not impressed with the bugginess of the app, but I was able to soldier on through [00:34:19] it. [00:34:19] And where I landed was I was, uh, following its little setup wizard for first. [00:34:27] Spectrum, which is my internet provider. [00:34:28] And I was, I'd initially paid a hundred dollars when I moved here in 2021, uh, a month for, [00:34:36] for one gig down, call it 30 megabits per second up. [00:34:40] And I can't get a, another ISP here. [00:34:43] They had an exclusive agreement. [00:34:44] They're building neighborhoods bullshit. [00:34:47] Uh, and I, I, so I can't get higher upstream and that really gets in my crawl. [00:34:53] Nevertheless, they have increased prices about $15 a year. [00:34:59] Each time I'm here to the point now where I think my monthly, you know, debit is like $150, [00:35:05] $145 and you fill it out and you give them your pin number. [00:35:11] You got this customer pin that like, you know, is secures your account. [00:35:14] I'm like, eh, all right, well, that's four digits, you know? [00:35:17] And besides I'm already on like this one dead simple plan. [00:35:20] It's just their normal plan. [00:35:22] And it's, you know, like I'm paying top dollar for it. [00:35:26] So what's the worst that they could do if they, if somebody else were to call and change [00:35:30] my plan up, you know, like it, it wouldn't cause that much lasting damage. [00:35:34] Cause it's not like I'm on some teaser rate. [00:35:36] It's not like I've got a great deal as it is. [00:35:38] So I let them do it. [00:35:39] And three days later, I had low expectations, right? [00:35:42] Cause you go on Reddit, speaking of Reddit, you go on and you, you search other people's [00:35:46] experiences and people will say, oh yeah, well like the, you know, I, some of them are [00:35:52] pretty hyperbolic. [00:35:53] It's like, you know, like they, they changed my plan to this and now I'm stuck with this, [00:35:57] you know, TV subscription for the next four years. [00:35:59] And then they charged me a thousand dollars in imagined savings that never materialized. [00:36:03] I'm like, shit. [00:36:04] All right. [00:36:04] Well, that's, that's not good. [00:36:06] But I, I gave them a shot. [00:36:08] They came back three days later and they said, congratulations. [00:36:12] We saved you $859. [00:36:14] I was like, what the, excuse me over the next 12 months. [00:36:18] And it turned out that they got me from $142, $145 down to 70 flat. [00:36:25] You multiply that by 12 and then indeed comes out to eight something. [00:36:28] And I was like, damn. [00:36:29] All right. [00:36:30] And so I've been, I've been looking for the other shoe to drop like ever since, like something [00:36:36] is fishy here. [00:36:37] Like I, they didn't sign me up for other services. [00:36:39] I did receive, I'm looking over at it now. [00:36:43] I did receive a relatively large box that has a, you know, one of those wifi modem router [00:36:50] combo units in it. [00:36:51] That was partly like apparently part of the deal. [00:36:54] I don't know if they canceled my service and then in one fell swoop also signed me up for [00:36:58] service. [00:36:58] But now I've got this gigantic fucking wifi thing that wouldn't even fit in my patch box [00:37:02] if I wanted it, which I don't. [00:37:04] So I'm, I'm, I'm currently in this ether of like, well, if my modem that I rent is still [00:37:11] going to work, I rent for $0. [00:37:14] It's one nice thing about spectrum. [00:37:15] If my modem that I rent is still going to work, uh, maybe I can just keep this wifi thing in [00:37:20] the box and not call anyone. [00:37:22] And maybe everything will keep working and I'll pay the $70 a month, or maybe I should send [00:37:27] the other one back, but then that might trigger some other thing. [00:37:30] Right. [00:37:30] I, so look like, do I recommend the service? [00:37:36] I don't really, I don't, we'll see. [00:37:38] Right. [00:37:39] Like call me in a year. [00:37:40] I should set a reminder. [00:37:41] Oh, I'm sure if something bad happens, I'll, I'll be right on the airwaves screaming about [00:37:47] it. [00:37:47] Like I, like I do, but even after this experience, saving me a lot of money, like what I trust [00:37:53] them with my T-Mobile account, right. [00:37:54] Where I have been grandfathered in on what was called the one choice plus plan in 2014 [00:38:01] or whatever. [00:38:02] And it's genuine, honest to God, unlimited data without any real throttling. [00:38:08] As far as I can tell, until you get to some absurdly high number where you can watch your [00:38:12] videos in HD on your, you know, like, like it's, it's, it's a good one. [00:38:16] It's better than their magenta crap. [00:38:18] Um, and a lower price than their magenta max thing. [00:38:21] Well, we got three lines. [00:38:22] You got, you know, the watches and I would love to pay less for that, but I just don't [00:38:27] try like you, you, you fill out the rocket money form, uh, with the, uh, the, the, it wants [00:38:34] your T-Mobile, like login information. [00:38:36] And that's, that was a bridge too far for me. [00:38:40] I got there and I was like, you know, I could just imagine this going poorly. [00:38:44] You know, these plans are so complicated and feels like even when I call T-Mobile and I [00:38:48] ask, Hey, how's the weather? [00:38:49] Like they click a button and it fucks up my shit for two weeks. [00:38:52] So I'm, I'm, I'm good. [00:38:55] I can probably afford a cell phone bill. [00:38:57] Uh, I just, I just would prefer not to have to pay it. [00:39:01] Only one other life item in the last week, I was given a special opportunity. [00:39:11] Um, I've talked about massages a couple of times on this program and the, uh, I mentioned, [00:39:15] uh, the one I went, uh, the one I had most recently in a previous episode, I, I, I was, I was wrapping [00:39:29] up my massage with a human like you do. [00:39:31] And the human said, have you, have you tried our robot massage? [00:39:36] And, uh, I didn't know how to take that. [00:39:38] And I said, I, I've heard of it. [00:39:41] I know Becky tried it. [00:39:43] If you check Becky's, um, Becky Graham, you'll see, uh, there's a video of her, uh, getting [00:39:48] felt up by a robot. [00:39:50] Uh, I forget the name of the company, but it's, it's, uh, it's like a robot that tries to simulate [00:39:59] the experience of a human massaging you. [00:40:02] So it's, uh, you're on a bed, you're face down. [00:40:06] It's, uh, got arms that kind of go back and forth, uh, on a track and they, they push and [00:40:13] whatnot. [00:40:13] And it kind of reminds me of the white birthing robot from star Wars episode three at the end [00:40:21] when, when Luke and Leah are being born, it does everything short of make the cooing [00:40:26] sounds to get the babies to calm down. [00:40:28] You know, like I, you do have a tablet and you can, you can pick out these pre-baked Spotify [00:40:34] playlists while it's pushing on you. [00:40:36] Anyway, all that to say, I signed up, um, mostly cause it was free. [00:40:41] So I had a 30 minute trial and, uh, the fact is trying to imitate humans was really interesting [00:40:49] to me because I had just spent a month in Japan, uh, getting, uh, what'd you call it? [00:40:54] Uh, massage chairs, our hotel chain that we stay at has always has massage chairs and even [00:41:01] bad massage chairs in Japan are pretty intense. [00:41:03] Uh, uh, but, but good ones are just like, you know, you go in there and it's just like, [00:41:09] I'm sure there's been, you've probably seen a horror movie image, right? [00:41:13] Where it's like, you sit in a chair and then like 25 hands grab all the parts of your body [00:41:18] simultaneously and that is meant to be horrific. [00:41:20] But if those hands, if there was some nice music playing and it was illuminated and those [00:41:25] hands were massaging you simultaneously all over your body, maybe it would be pretty, pretty [00:41:29] great. [00:41:29] And so that's what a Japanese massage chair is like. [00:41:33] Cause they, they don't have this arbitrary conceit that a massage must happen in a format [00:41:39] that resembles how it would happen if a single human on a bed surface was rubbing your tiddly [00:41:45] bits, which is what this robot is. [00:41:49] Right. [00:41:49] And so it's trying to think of another analog, right? [00:41:55] Like where we, we kind of retain the artifice of the way that it used to be before we automated [00:42:00] it. [00:42:00] And, and in some, sometimes we do that to keep people being comfortable like that rich [00:42:05] Corinthian leather. [00:42:06] It's like, we wanted to look like a traditional calendar. [00:42:08] So people know what they're looking at instead of just a bunch of boxes. [00:42:11] It's like, Oh yeah, this looks like a placemat style calendar that I would have had on my desk. [00:42:15] And then eventually that ages out. [00:42:16] And the younger people are like, I've never seen a calendar on a desk, even though my dad [00:42:20] grew up with one, you know? [00:42:24] So maybe that's it, right? [00:42:25] Like, like sometimes that's why we would have a robo massage that like, you know, pressures [00:42:31] and needs you, you know, kind of with just the two arms up and down in particular points, [00:42:35] sometimes at the same time, sometimes just one arm, you know, it's, it's, it's less efficient [00:42:41] is my immediate frustration. [00:42:43] Cause it's like, you could have 45 fucking arms going to town all over my body and I'd [00:42:49] get way more work done in 30 minutes. [00:42:52] Right. [00:42:52] Cause I'm just trying to min max my existence, but instead by, by, by, by imitating a human [00:42:59] massage, like nothing is really gained because I can't see it. [00:43:03] I'm facedown. [00:43:04] I'm looking at a silly tablet and watching imagery, imagery of forests and, and, and ocean waves [00:43:10] and whatnot, and I'm kind of getting a, you can look at a weird overhead view of what [00:43:14] your body is looking at, looking like right then, you know, like it scans your body and [00:43:19] then has like a little illustration of like, here's where I'm pushing you. [00:43:21] Here I go. [00:43:22] It's, it seems more to me like they designed this, you look at this unit and it's just like, [00:43:31] this has got to cost at least 15 grand. [00:43:34] This is an expensive, complicated piece of equipment. [00:43:38] It feels like a lack of imagination, uh, to, to somebody had the idea, let's take human [00:43:47] masseuses out of the equation and just make a robo masseuse thing that we could put in spas [00:43:53] when, uh, you'd actually have a better experience. [00:43:56] It would be cheaper. [00:43:57] And there's like more prior art at Panasonic or these other companies in Japan. [00:44:01] If you just made a, you know, massage chair, but that would be boring, I guess. [00:44:08] Uh, and massage chairs, like you, you hear the word massage chair right now as you're listening. [00:44:13] And if you haven't had like a real one, you know, at a Japanese Denki-yasan on the third [00:44:17] floor, where all the salary men on their way home tell their wives, oh, I got a, I got a big meeting [00:44:24] with the boss and then they go to, they go to Yamada Denki or they go to Yodabashi camera. [00:44:28] And then they just, you know, they take their briefcase and they set it down next to one of the [00:44:33] trial units of the massage chair. [00:44:34] And then they, they, they, they, they go into this little like sensory deprivation pod and [00:44:39] they get all their bits smushed simultaneously and they got a remote control and they can [00:44:45] say, just do it hard. [00:44:46] And then they can forget their worries for, for 15 minutes until, uh, one of the staff has [00:44:52] to remind them that, uh, they don't live there and that they have to go home now. [00:44:56] If you haven't had that experience, uh, you probably, when you hear a massage chair, think [00:45:02] of like those $2, you know, leather chairs that are, you know, just like our just normal [00:45:08] fucking chairs that may be vibrate, like the vibrating bed equivalent that you see at an [00:45:12] airport. [00:45:12] Um, this is not what I'm talking about. [00:45:15] So get your head out of there and, and go Google, you know, for high end Japanese massage [00:45:22] chair, and you might get some idea. [00:45:24] Uh, also I, uh, in the course of a 30 minute massage, I encountered so many fucking Android [00:45:32] tablet bugs. [00:45:33] I, I didn't, I gave them a lot of feedback cause they, this is sort of a trial that they're [00:45:37] doing. [00:45:37] They wanted to want to know how, what I thought. [00:45:40] And I gave them a lot of this perspective and feedback about like, well, you know, this [00:45:44] skeuomorphic design, yada, yada. [00:45:45] But I didn't even touch any of the software stuff. [00:45:49] Cause like there's an absolutely nothing that they're going to be able to do with that much [00:45:52] less like they won't even be able to communicate this back to the company in a way that's helpful, [00:45:55] but it was, you know, it would freeze or the display would become non-responsive. [00:46:01] One time I had the music just turn itself all the way up. [00:46:05] The, um, the, so many things about this design are meant to make you feel comfortable are [00:46:13] meant to make you feel safe. [00:46:14] Like if, if you, it moves at all, or if it detects anything is off at all, it basically [00:46:20] like will, will disengage entirely and reposition itself. [00:46:23] And then you have to actively resume the massage. [00:46:26] And then it's got to put the little flappy doos back over you. [00:46:30] Like it's really worried about people flipping out about this robot pressing up against them. [00:46:36] And it extends to, to like, you know, you pick your firmness, like light, medium firm. [00:46:41] And I clicked firm. [00:46:42] And then there, you could see there was like a little like pressure bar on the right. [00:46:47] And that even though I'd clicked the firm preset, I wasn't at a hundred percent pressure. [00:46:52] And I was like, well, that, that won't do. [00:46:54] And so I jacked it up to a hundred percent right out of the gate. [00:46:56] And the whole time, 30 minutes, like you could, uh, [00:46:59] Hmm. [00:47:01] It, I knew that a massage was happening. [00:47:05] Like I knew when contact was being made, but like, it was not a massage. [00:47:08] It was, it was somebody kind of like, like, like back rub would be generous. [00:47:14] It was like somebody like took an open palm hand and just pressed it. [00:47:18] Just, just, just an obnoxiously against different parts of my body and no firmness beyond that. [00:47:26] So you got a robo massage. [00:47:29] It's limited in what it can do. [00:47:33] Cause it's trying to imitate a human. [00:47:34] It's very worried about liability, which is why I imagine the max firmness is light pressure. [00:47:39] Uh, and it's fussy and it's buggy. [00:47:42] And of course it can only do very limited regions of the body. [00:47:45] Like if I was a massage therapist, I'd be like, Hey, sweet. [00:47:49] You know, I'm going to keep having a job longer than all these programmer juckle fucks. [00:47:52] You're going to get replaced by a Claude and open AI. [00:47:56] So I'm, I'm, I'm, I'm confident that a massage therapist is going to be a, a lucrative, you [00:48:03] know, going concern as a career for a little while programming. [00:48:08] I'm not so sure of, but most of us listening have already made our choice, whether we're [00:48:14] going to be massage therapists or programmers. [00:48:16] So we're just going to have to see how this, how this plays out. [00:48:19] All right. [00:48:20] Well, that's all, that's everything going on in my life. [00:48:23] So let's, uh, well, let's follow up on stuff that had been going on in my life and is now [00:48:30] continuing or is once again, I started to realize that there's a, there's a certain theme to this [00:48:37] show. [00:48:37] Hmm. [00:48:38] All right. [00:48:46] There's basically two major areas of follow-up today. [00:48:51] Um, but somehow the two of them take up 11 bullet points in my notes. [00:48:59] So I'll try to be expeditious. [00:49:02] The first is I bought a, uh, M4 pro MacBook pro, I guess an Apple nomenclature, a MacBook pro [00:49:13] left parentheses, 2024, right parentheses with M4 pro. [00:49:19] I think is probably maybe the 2024 is at the end. [00:49:22] Maybe they don't put the date now that they have the chip name. [00:49:25] In any case, I needed a computer that was built for Apple intelligence, which is how they also, [00:49:32] they crammed that in the fucking name. [00:49:34] Um, and like the, every subheader says Apple intelligence on it, which, you know, I mean, [00:49:40] if you're, if you're a marketing dude, it's the thing that, you know, like you gotta, every [00:49:48] year is a struggle to goose people into, to buying computers. [00:49:51] And, uh, it's been a while since they've had anything new to say that your computer can do. [00:49:56] So it makes sense, but come on. [00:49:59] It can't even make Genmoji yet. [00:50:02] Uh, just if you've, if you've downloaded it, used 18.2 iOS or iPadOS, uh, go turn on the, [00:50:13] um, you know, the AI feature, if it's available in your region and language, and then you open [00:50:19] the image playground app and you click through there and let it download all of the image [00:50:24] playground shit, uh, in particular, the image playground itself, where you can take a person [00:50:30] and a place and kind of like, you know, create sort of a, uh, a witch's brew of bad imagery [00:50:35] and then, and then have a keep swiping to the right as, as they just all look bad that I have [00:50:43] no, no need for, but Genmoji, or at least the promise of Genmoji, I like quite a lot. [00:50:49] I enjoy, you know, um, typing in little like name, like, so we were at the parks, uh, with [00:50:57] our friends last week and it was a Jollywood Knights event, which is also Gatsby themed. [00:51:06] There's a reason why ordering 1920s era costumes on Amazon in Orlando was like not an overnight. [00:51:13] It was like a two, three day leg because this, this Jollywood Knights 1920s era themed, uh, [00:51:21] ticketed event at Hollywood studios has been going on. And it was one of those nights. And so some [00:51:26] flapper lady in line, she had a purse that had a phone handle on it. And her husband, who now that [00:51:34] I think back on this was dressed very similarly to how I dressed myself last night. So something tells [00:51:39] me he was sort of a long for the ride in this, she picked up the phone handle off of her purse and [00:51:46] handed it to Becky. And then he, you could sort of see him on the phone being a bad ventriloquist [00:51:53] and talking to her on the phone. So like his cell phone was somehow communicating to the purse phone. [00:51:59] It was very, it reminded me of get smart, you know, like that spy TV show from the sixties that was on [00:52:05] Nick at night in the eighties or nineties when I would have watched it. Uh, of course it didn't [00:52:10] work. And then we were just in line and it was like, sorry, we're in line. It didn't work. And then, [00:52:14] and then of course the way that lines work, right. As you turn left, turn right. And now it's up, [00:52:18] here's the same people again. And so they're like, all right, try again. So she picks up the purse [00:52:23] phone and here's the guy talk. And she's like, yes, this is indeed a telephone. That is a purse. [00:52:28] My reaction, my contribution to this experience was to try to generate a Genmoji for the group [00:52:35] that I was with. That was like purse phone. And, uh, wouldn't you know it, uh, it struggled to like, [00:52:43] I was like purse with a phone handle on top. And it was, it gave me like one with like a, [00:52:49] like a locker combination lock instead of a rotary dial in the middle. It was all, it was not, [00:52:54] not good. And, and I think like a lot of these Genmoji, in addition to being bad and not good, [00:53:01] they are when they, there's, they have to be so detailed because usually it's people mashing up [00:53:07] different concepts. They have to be so detailed that when in line with texts, you have to squint [00:53:12] and you can barely see what they are. And then if they're as a tap back, you have no hope of knowing [00:53:16] what they are. Like if it's of a person, for example, like it's, you're going to get like 80% shirt [00:53:21] and then like 10% head. So you're not going to be able to tell who's what. Uh, so those need work [00:53:27] and no one wants my Genmoji. My, my brother has formally requested. I stopped sending them and, [00:53:32] uh, I will, I will take that request under advisement. Anyway, uh, bought a MacBook pro. Um, [00:53:42] Oh, I've got a, I've got a parenthetical as a C notes. All right, well, here's eight more bullet [00:53:50] points. I'm going to rattle through these. So Becky, actually, it was her idea. She wanted to [00:53:54] get me this. We were in Japan. She's like, Hey, you know, I heard you talking about the nanotexture [00:53:57] display. And like, of course, you know, the, the, the brighter screen and us being in Orlando, [00:54:01] you never use a computer outside or out of the house. So she wanted to buy it. And she said, [00:54:06] it was just really complicated. I didn't want to fuck up. I didn't want to get you the wrong set of [00:54:09] options. I asked Aaron and Aaron didn't know either. He said he hadn't really been on top of it. [00:54:16] Uh, and I was like, honey, that's so I didn't say like, bless your heart. I, it was a such a sweet [00:54:23] gesture. And it is true that I've been curious about it. Um, but I didn't feel like, uh, I had [00:54:30] to get one right this minute. Uh, and, and honestly, the, the, the 14 inch MacBook pro is still too heavy. [00:54:36] I, I, I, I lifted tonal my, my weightlifting robot, uh, reported in my tonal wrapped because [00:54:46] everything has to do a goddamn wrapped dingus to try to share in social media as if like, you know, [00:54:52] one assumes that all these wrapped posts just go to the goddamn bottom of every algorithm because [00:54:57] they're all the same. But in any case, it showed me a little wrapped video and it said, I wait, [00:55:02] I, I lifted one and a half million pounds last year or over the course of 2024. And I was like, [00:55:07] that's a lot of weight that I lifted. I, yesterday I did the equivalent of like, you know, 250, [00:55:12] 275 pound deadlift barbell deadlift. And that was hard, but not too hard. It's the max weight that, [00:55:20] that tonal can do. Um, I, I, I, I like to think I'm pretty strong now. Uh, that four pound fucking [00:55:31] MacBook pro is backbreakingly heavy, no matter where I am, I'll pick it up and like, that is denser than [00:55:40] it looks. It's a, it's like when you pick up a baby, that's like a little bit too dense, you know, [00:55:46] and you're just like, Oh wow. I was expecting this to be more fun. This is just going to give [00:55:51] me pelvic floor problems. If I do this for more than exactly 30 seconds and then hand it back to [00:55:57] its mother who surely has pelvic floor issues. Um, I don't want to be carrying around this MacBook pro. [00:56:05] I don't want to carry it with my arms. I don't want to carry it in a bag. I don't want to carry it [00:56:09] into the car. I don't want to carry it, you know, uh, in a Starbucks. I want to hire a Porter to [00:56:16] bring it around to me, you know, from place to place. Maybe, maybe they could also saddle up and [00:56:23] have a, uh, vision pro. So that's what I really want. Uh, at least until, and unless Apple releases [00:56:30] the 12 inch MacBook pro, uh, that we were promised in our early years. [00:56:34] Anyway, when Becky said that it was hard to configure and figure out what she'd want to order [00:56:43] or what I would want her to order. And as a result would have made a pretty lousy gift because [00:56:49] the likelihood of her getting it right. Where if you look at the number of configurations for these [00:56:53] seeing this thing, like astronomically small, I actually spent, I sat down, I look, I, I said, [00:57:01] I didn't need the thing. And then I come home and then within a day and a half, uh, my MacBook air is [00:57:07] crying because it's out of storage to the point where like I composed an email and I hit send on the email [00:57:12] and then Apple mail reported, yo, we just barfed on all this and just deleted all your shit. Cause we [00:57:17] ran out of disk space, no warning. And in modern day Mac OS, you don't get to know how much disk space [00:57:23] you have because all of it is like optimized storage. So like whether it's your iCloud drive [00:57:29] or it's your Apple photos, once the system is under any sort of, um, storage stress, it'll, [00:57:35] it's supposed to detect that and start deleting shit. Your phone does this too. So sometimes like [00:57:41] you're like, like I was importing a bunch of raw images on the phone and it said, Oh, you're out of [00:57:45] storage. And then I knew, because I know how it works under the hood, even though it exposes zero [00:57:49] controls or visibility as to what is going the fuck on. I knew that when it ran out of storage, [00:57:54] the right solution was sit and wait for 30 seconds while it deletes shit in the background and then [00:57:59] just hit import again. Right. Well, I, that didn't work in this case. Like I actually went and deleted [00:58:05] like a hundred gigabytes of garbage. It's a small SSD. It's a 512 gigabyte MacBook air. I deleted all this [00:58:11] stuff, but, um, from my iCloud drive on another computer, because this one was finder was completely [00:58:17] unresponsive. Uh, and it never got better because it had suspended all iCloud drive syncing as a, [00:58:24] probably like some sort of like memory safeguard or storage safeguard to like make sure I didn't, [00:58:27] it didn't fuck up anything in the cloud. And so like even going, I'm not going to, [00:58:33] most of that storage was in my iCloud drive, which is how it got full while I was overseas. [00:58:38] And when I came back, I, I didn't have like, I could, I could have gone through and like run [00:58:47] RM dash RF from the terminal and deleted stuff from the iCloud drive to like as a, as an emergency break, [00:58:52] like get, get this SSD empty enough that the operating system can run and then figure it out. [00:59:00] But then of course it would have synced all of those deletions up to the cloud and deleted the [00:59:03] same things off of my other computers. So this is a tractable problem. And I, I, I ultimately did solve [00:59:10] it, but I, I realize now why Apple markets so much of its pro devices to photos and video people, [00:59:20] because photos and videos take up a shit ton of space. Uh, they have different performance [00:59:26] characteristics than programming and, and the, their needs in many ways are higher than what you need. [00:59:33] If you're just writing Ruby code, right? Uh, it just so happens that Swift, the programming language [00:59:38] that they wrote is also like, we'll, we'll take advantage of all of these cores during compilation [00:59:42] in a way that like a lot of local development in other languages won't. [00:59:45] But in my last year of doing a lot more video work, doing a lot more audio work, I can definitely [00:59:52] understand now like, Oh yeah, like the, the MacBook air actually is inappropriate for a lot of the [00:59:57] workflows of the things that I do. So that experience, I came to Becky and I was like, look, I know I said [01:00:05] I didn't need this, but I think I might need this. Um, where need is in very, you know, very gentle [01:00:12] text. It's, it's a thin font variant to say, I need this. What I mean to say is like, I, it would save [01:00:19] me a lot of time and stress and headache and, uh, uh, rework to have a better computer, a more [01:00:26] capacious computer. And of course you can't upgrade the storage and your existing max. So here we are. [01:00:32] Um, but anyway, I was in the configurator for the new MacBook pro. And the first decision you got to [01:00:36] make is do I want a regular M4 chip, which I did not, or one of the pro ones, which is a, you know, [01:00:43] 12 or 14 core. I want to say a chip, uh, which is a huge upgrade over the M3 pro the M3 pro had a way [01:00:53] more efficiency cores and the M4 pro has more performance score. So it's like a, it's doing [01:00:57] much better in synthetic benchmarking that that's impressive. It's a big year over year change or the [01:01:02] M4 max, which is, you know, uh, an incremental improvement over the M3 max, but to the extent [01:01:10] that it's better than the pro it's like, you know, got another meat and quote unquote media [01:01:14] e
Fri, 04 Oct 2024 17:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/automators/165 http://relay.fm/automators/165 Moom and Window Management 165 David Sparks and Rosemary Orchard In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. clean 2515 In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. This episode of Automators is sponsored by: Notion: Try the powerful, easy-to-use Notion AI today. Links and Show Notes: Get Automators Max: a longer, ad-free version of the show Submit Feedback Moom · Many Tricks Announcing Moom 4, the next-generation window manager · Tales of a Running Bird Moom 4.1 adds ultra fast drop zone access and more · Tales of a Running Bird Access Moom's custom actions via pop-up menus · Tales of a Running Bird Moom: Release Notes · Many Tricks Open Feedback AssistantOpen applefeedback:// to file feedback on Apple devices. Mac window tiling icons & keyboard shortcuts – Apple Support (UK) Tile windows on Mac – Apple Support (UK) Change window tiling settings on Mac – Apple Support (UK) How does Moom work when Stage Manager
Fri, 04 Oct 2024 17:30:00 GMT http://relay.fm/automators/165 http://relay.fm/automators/165 David Sparks and Rosemary Orchard In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. clean 2515 In this episode David and Rosemary explore Moom 4 and other window management tools for macOS. This episode of Automators is sponsored by: Notion: Try the powerful, easy-to-use Notion AI today. Links and Show Notes: Get Automators Max: a longer, ad-free version of the show Submit Feedback Moom · Many Tricks Announcing Moom 4, the next-generation window manager · Tales of a Running Bird Moom 4.1 adds ultra fast drop zone access and more · Tales of a Running Bird Access Moom's custom actions via pop-up menus · Tales of a Running Bird Moom: Release Notes · Many Tricks Open Feedback AssistantOpen applefeedback:// to file feedback on Apple devices. Mac window tiling icons & keyboard shortcuts – Apple Support (UK) Tile windows on Mac – Apple Support (UK) Change window tiling settings on Mac – Apple Support (UK) How does Moom work when St
It's the summer of Apple beta software. We chat a bit about the Music app, new operating systems, and how Apple's AI could affect Apple Music. Help support The Next Track by making regular donations via Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/thenexttrack). We're ad-free and self-sustaining so your support is what keeps us going. Thanks! Show notes: macOS Sequoia Preview (https://www.apple.com/macos/macos-sequoia-preview/) Moom (https://manytricks.com/moom/) Soulver (https://soulver.app) How to Install Apple Beta Software for macOS Sequoia, iOS 18, iPadOS 18, watchOS 11, and tvOS 11 (https://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/how-to-install-apple-beta-software/) Install macOS Sequoia Beta in a Virtual Machine on an M1, M2, or M3 Mac with UTM (https://www.intego.com/mac-security-blog/install-macos-ventura-beta-in-a-virtual-machine-on-an-m1-or-m2-mac-with-utm/) "By saying, “Hey Siri, I like this song,” HomePod and Apple Music become the perfect musicologist..." (https://www.apple.com/uk/newsroom/2017/06/homepod-reinvents-music-in-the-home/#:~:text=By%20saying%2C%20“Hey%20Siri%2C,tastes%20are%20shared%20across%20devices) The Music Genome Project (https://www.pandora.com/about/mgp) Our next tracks: Reformation: Mishka Rushdie Momen (https://amzn.to/3Szv6j5) Leon Russel: Carney (https://amzn.to/3SxhnJz) If you like the show, please subscribe in iTunes (https://itunes.apple.com/podcast/the-next-track/id1116242606) or your favorite podcast app, and please rate the podcast.
Al-Minahu-l Miskiyyah المنح المسكية في الخوارق المبكية Di téere boo xamne Sëriñ Muhammadu-l Amiin Joob Dagana, moo ko bind, jagleel ko lenn ci kéemaane Sëriñ Tuubaa yi mu fekkee, ak yi mu jëlee ci nettali yu wér. Tekki ak jottali gi : Abdu Xaadir BA Majalis --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/librairie-majalis/message
Being an emotional wreck, experiencing irritable moods, cravings, breakouts, bloating, and more is basically the rollercoaster women experience every month. We tend to ride the hormonal roller coaster during naturally occurring points like menstruation, pregnancy, or menopause. But it doesn't stop there – our day-to-day choices and health can throw those hormones into a spin too! In this episode, the Hush girls and their guest, Maya Kale, one of the founders of Moom Health, will empower us women on how to take control of our beauty and mood from the inside out, starting with our health. This journey is essential for reaching our full potential in happiness and beauty. This podcast is also available on YouTube, watch it at https://www.youtube.com/@itsclarityco See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ok so Vreverie has basically fallen apart. That's no bueno. Past that though we've got lots of little tidbits of good news this week with some big 3D lives thrown in. We managed to catch some real quality streams, I accidentally became a gacha addict, Kam talks about the time he met Bae, and watched a ton of quality content. Let's chat about it. Oh. And we got some new merch in :3 Each week we aim to bring together the biggest events in Vtubing and talk about what's been going on. Stop by, hang out, and let's catch up with us! Join this discord : https://discord.gg/wFMcTGHWGJ Follow here for updates: https://twitter.com/SuperChatsPod Shorts over here: https://www.tiktok.com/@superchatspod 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:43 Vreverie is Vfalling to pieces 00:09:29 Mozzu's still on break 00:11:34 Subaru's 5th Anniversary LIVE 00:26:42 Okayu's 3D Birthday LIVE 00:37:15 Special Segment: We Open Boxes 00:45:15 That time Kam met Bae 00:48:11 News Bits - FuwaMoco moving to Japan 00:50:09 Bae Announces 3D Live 00:51:21 Moom is sad and it's not a phase, mom 00:56:37 Koe Cosplay 00:58:26 Mom's a goth 01:04:12 Local Shark Wins Award 01:05:03 Mio Fan Wins Tournament 01:08:57 Raden gets to collaborate with a cool artist she likes 01:11:50 Idol Corp Update 01:21:26 Ironmouse updates! 01:22:45 Dokibird gets a silver play button! 01:23:38 Quick Music Updates! 01:29:21 Mumei and Fauna's Wikipedia Disagreements 01:35:15 Bao's merch company woes 01:37:43 Holo EN and ID Crab Game Collab 01:45:12 Haachama's pp game stream 01:47:24 Panko's pineapple on pizza experience 01:52:23 Airi's nostalgia stream 01:54:12 Kokoromo's world is your weapon stream 01:56:07 Palworld Twitch Rivals 01:57:01 Bri played Mortuary Assistant with punishments 01:59:18 OBKatieKat's made me play Nikke 02:02:22 Giri cosplayed Frieren 02:06:54 Peo played ROCK AND STONE 02:09:21 Here's where we shill for ourselves 02:14:30 Indie Focus BiscuitRoseVtuber 02:16:11 Birfdays
Dimension X - Destination Moom
Artificial intelligence is coming for us all.Zoom's new terms of service raised some concerns.Prosecraft, an AI that was scanning published books without permission, has shut down.Apple Music has launched a new music discovery feature.Lex's family likes these Apple Watch bands.Nomad now has a glow in the dark band.Congrats to Casey Liss on shipping Callsheet.Welcome to Macintosh, Anže Tomić.Magnet and Moom are two window managers for the Mac.The Pac 10 is Pac but not 10.Our thanks to CleanMyMac X from MacPaw. CleanMyMac X includes 49 tools to find and delete invisible computer junk, organizes disk space and frees up tons of space so your Mac never runs into issues with storage. Get CleanMyMac X today with 5% off at macpaw.app/rebound.If you want to help out the show and get some great bonus content, consider becoming a Rebound Prime member! Just go to prime.reboundcast.com to check it out!You can now also support the show by buying shirts, iPhone cases, hats and more items featuring our catchphrase, "TECHNOLOGY"! Are we right?!
Quelles sont les meilleures applications pour Mac ? La fine équipe d'On refait le Mac a sélectionné pour vous nos 100 apps chouchou ! Photos, graphismes, utilitaires, best of des alternatives aux programmes standards du marché, facturés de plus en plus chers, quand on ne vous force pas à souscrire un abonnement. A ce propos, les éditeurs historiques ne sont-ils pas des rentiers ? Est-il possible d'innover - encore - en matière logiciel ? Débats ! Avec Christophe Degraeve, Laurent Pantanacce, Stéphane Zibi & Olivier Frigara Rendez-vous chaque vendredi sur YouTube pour découvrir une nouvelle émission ! #ORLMac #applications #Mac #Apple #Apps Notre boutique en ligne enfin ouverte ! orlmtv.myspreadshop.fr Rejoignez le Club ORLM pour bénéficier d'avantages exclusifs : / @onrefaitlemac Les 50 applications cités dans l'émission : 1- Pixelmator Pro : https://www.pixelmator.com/pro/ 2- Luminar Neo : https://skylum.com/fr/luminar-g 3- Picktorial :https://www.picktorial.com/#home 4- PhotoScape X : https://apps.apple.com/fr/app/photosc... 5- Autodesk Pixlr : https://pixlr.com/fr/editor/ 6- Affinity Designer : https://affinity.serif.com/fr/designer/ 7- Graphic Converter : https://www.lemkesoft.de/en/products/... 8- Peakto : https://cyme.io/fr/peakto-logiciel-or... 9- PDF ELEMENTS : https://bit.ly/3oeOCoV 10- Blender : https://www.blender.org/download/ 11- DiffusionBee : https://diffusionbee.com 12- Tripmode : https://tripmode.ch 13- Image2icon : https://img2icnsapp.com/ 14- QBlocker : https://github.com/steve228uk/QBlocker 15- Amphetamine : https://apple.co/3ofvneZ 16- Sirimote : https://bit.ly/3KXbaTZ 17- ExpressVPN : https://www.expressvpn.com/ 18- WiFI explorer : https://bit.ly/3MMREL8 19- Netspot : https://bit.ly/40dvJzQ 20- Lighweight PDF : https://lightweightpdf.com/ 21- PopClic : https://pilotmoon.com/popclip/ 22- Dozer : https://github.com/Mortennn/Dozer 23- Memory Clean 3 : https://bit.ly/3zVGWdM 24- Displays : https://bit.ly/419N9ie 25- Coconut Battery : https://bit.ly/3UBhHXy 26- Zuriweb : https://apple.co/419S8zt 27- SetApp : https://bit.ly/413NFy9 28- Magnet : https://magnet.crowdcafe.com/ 29- Moom : https://apple.co/3mxymia 30- Rectangle : https://rectangleapp.com 31- Oversight : https://bit.ly/3GKUWdY 32- Skitch : https://evernote.com/intl/fr/products... 33- iStat menus : https://bjango.com/mac/istatmenus/ 34- GrandPerspective : https://grandperspectiv.sourceforge.net/ 35- AppZapper : https://www.appzapper.com/ 36- Lingon : https://www.peterborgapps.com/lingon/ 37- SwitchResX : https://www.madrau.com/ 38- Sync Folders Pro : https://www.greenworldsoft.com/ 39- Imazing : https://bit.ly/3KXCGR8 40- Apple Configurator : https://apple.co/3KWinnb 41- MoneyStats : https://apple.co/3mBuZGU 42- Bartender : https://www.macbartender.com 43- Gemini : https://macpaw.com/gemini 44- Cleanshot : https://cleanshot.com/ 45- Yoink : https://apple.co/3o4PhZM 46- Jump Desktop : https://www.jumpdesktop.com 47- Pareto Security : https://paretosecurity.com 48- Onyx : https://www.titanium-software.fr/en/o... 49- CLEANMYMAC : https://bit.ly/3zZgBLH 50- MacTracker : https://mactracker.ca/ Les coups de cœur : Stéphane : Succession saison finale Trailer : • Succession Season... Laurent : Victrola Stream https://stream.victrola.com Christophe : “Art de cinéma” est un fanzine cinéma et un collectif de passionnés du septième art. Page Facebook et Tipeee : https://fr.tipeee.com/art-de-cinema/ Olivier : « Make Something Wonderful, Steve Jobs in his own words » https://books.apple.com/fr/book/make-... 902
Quelles sont les meilleures applications pour Mac ? La fine équipe d'On refait le Mac a sélectionné pour vous nos 100 apps chouchou ! Photos, graphismes, utilitaires, best of des alternatives aux programmes standards du marché, facturés de plus en plus chers, quand on ne vous force pas à souscrire un abonnement. A ce propos, les éditeurs historiques ne sont-ils pas des rentiers ? Est-il possible d'innover - encore - en matière logiciel ? Débats ! Avec Christophe Degraeve, Laurent Pantanacce, Stéphane Zibi & Olivier Frigara Rendez-vous chaque vendredi sur YouTube pour découvrir une nouvelle émission ! #ORLMac #applications #Mac #Apple #Apps Notre boutique en ligne enfin ouverte ! orlmtv.myspreadshop.fr Rejoignez le Club ORLM pour bénéficier d'avantages exclusifs : / @onrefaitlemac Les 50 applications cités dans l'émission : 1- Pixelmator Pro : https://www.pixelmator.com/pro/ 2- Luminar Neo : https://skylum.com/fr/luminar-g 3- Picktorial :https://www.picktorial.com/#home 4- PhotoScape X : https://apps.apple.com/fr/app/photosc... 5- Autodesk Pixlr : https://pixlr.com/fr/editor/ 6- Affinity Designer : https://affinity.serif.com/fr/designer/ 7- Graphic Converter : https://www.lemkesoft.de/en/products/... 8- Peakto : https://cyme.io/fr/peakto-logiciel-or... 9- PDF ELEMENTS : https://bit.ly/3oeOCoV 10- Blender : https://www.blender.org/download/ 11- DiffusionBee : https://diffusionbee.com 12- Tripmode : https://tripmode.ch 13- Image2icon : https://img2icnsapp.com/ 14- QBlocker : https://github.com/steve228uk/QBlocker 15- Amphetamine : https://apple.co/3ofvneZ 16- Sirimote : https://bit.ly/3KXbaTZ 17- ExpressVPN : https://www.expressvpn.com/ 18- WiFI explorer : https://bit.ly/3MMREL8 19- Netspot : https://bit.ly/40dvJzQ 20- Lighweight PDF : https://lightweightpdf.com/ 21- PopClic : https://pilotmoon.com/popclip/ 22- Dozer : https://github.com/Mortennn/Dozer 23- Memory Clean 3 : https://bit.ly/3zVGWdM 24- Displays : https://bit.ly/419N9ie 25- Coconut Battery : https://bit.ly/3UBhHXy 26- Zuriweb : https://apple.co/419S8zt 27- SetApp : https://bit.ly/413NFy9 28- Magnet : https://magnet.crowdcafe.com/ 29- Moom : https://apple.co/3mxymia 30- Rectangle : https://rectangleapp.com 31- Oversight : https://bit.ly/3GKUWdY 32- Skitch : https://evernote.com/intl/fr/products... 33- iStat menus : https://bjango.com/mac/istatmenus/ 34- GrandPerspective : https://grandperspectiv.sourceforge.net/ 35- AppZapper : https://www.appzapper.com/ 36- Lingon : https://www.peterborgapps.com/lingon/ 37- SwitchResX : https://www.madrau.com/ 38- Sync Folders Pro : https://www.greenworldsoft.com/ 39- Imazing : https://bit.ly/3KXCGR8 40- Apple Configurator : https://apple.co/3KWinnb 41- MoneyStats : https://apple.co/3mBuZGU 42- Bartender : https://www.macbartender.com 43- Gemini : https://macpaw.com/gemini 44- Cleanshot : https://cleanshot.com/ 45- Yoink : https://apple.co/3o4PhZM 46- Jump Desktop : https://www.jumpdesktop.com 47- Pareto Security : https://paretosecurity.com 48- Onyx : https://www.titanium-software.fr/en/o... 49- CLEANMYMAC : https://bit.ly/3zZgBLH 50- MacTracker : https://mactracker.ca/ Les coups de cœur : Stéphane : Succession saison finale Trailer : • Succession Season... Laurent : Victrola Stream https://stream.victrola.com Christophe : “Art de cinéma” est un fanzine cinéma et un collectif de passionnés du septième art. Page Facebook et Tipeee : https://fr.tipeee.com/art-de-cinema/ Olivier : « Make Something Wonderful, Steve Jobs in his own words » https://books.apple.com/fr/book/make-... 902
This week, I speak to Mili & Maya Kale, the founders of Moom Health. Moom Health creates expert backed natural remedies for the modern Asian woman. So whether you're starting your own gut health journey, or you're looking for more natural ways to PMS symptoms, all of Moom's products and educational resources are designed to provide the quality, expertise and efficacy women have been looking for in the supplement aisle. It's so wonderful to see more female entrepreneurs blaze their trails here in Singapore, and how exciting that they are now expanding their reach to other markets around South East Asia! SUPPORT THE PODCAST ON PATREON I offer these podcasts freely, and any way you can support makes all the difference. To keep this podcast alive and well, show your support where you can! Get in touch with Stephanie www.stephaniebovis.com | @listeningwellpodcast Thank you for Listening Well! www.listeningwellpodcast.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The nation celebrates one blonde cinematic icon while tearing down another. Agnes and Bryan posit what it would be like covering Marilyn Monroe's lifestyle newsletter back in the day. We go G*nter H*ntin' to get to the bottom of the truly baffling and elusive "Adjacent." Plus, looking back at the two original Goop recipes, Goop Kitchen's new fall menu, aging into GoopGenes, natural anti-inflammatories, Gwyneth and Brad's podcast convo and more!To hear the full enchilada (and dozens more exclusive eps) , give us $5. patreon.com/goopyourself Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
MOOM'KICK (MIXE PAR JULIEN FREJAVILLE)
What happens when Andrew, Jason and Martin record at a different time of day? Well, someone submits a handwritten topic and craziness ensues.
Uppvärmning/uppföljning Apple säljer tomten i Kungstrådgården Christian har köpt AirFryer. Åsikter Christians HomePod-tips: För telefonen nära din HomePod för att, inte bara föra över musik eller telefonsamtal utan för att få reda på när näst alarm är inställt. Lyssnarfråga: MBA eller 14” MBP - svårt val?_ “känns som mba m2 med 16+512 kontra en 14” instegs för ‘bara' 2500 mer blir ett svårt val. Känns det värt det för du har väl tillgång till båda om jag förstått podden rätt?”_ Datormagazin Retro #6: 46% bokat per ikväll Jocke köper bok: Stora boken om SAAB Bil värd att hata: Honda Accord Ämnen Är du mer menybarminimalist eller maximalist? Film & TV SAS: Red Notice (kallas SAS: Rise of the Black Swan på Netflix). Helt ok action. 3,5 / 5 BMÅ (J) Kate: Pang-pang med Mary Elizabeth Winstead i huvudrollen. Spännande och välgjord. 4 / 5 BMÅ (J) Good Omens - mer Gaimanmys. 4/5 BMÅ (F) Only Murders in the building SE02. Disney+. 3,5/5 BMÅ (C) Breeders S01-03. HBO Max. 4/5 BMÅ (C) Länkar Apple ville bygga fin butik i Kungsträdgården Den nuvarande byggnaden på tomten Våfflor i air fryer Allra första Macbook air Teknikveckan om M2 Macbook air Boka Datormagazin retro #6 redan nu! AREXX Stora boken om SAAB Petra som bland annat gör urfina loggor Basic Apple guy's kvitter om sin menyrad Hocus focus Magnet Maestral Bartender Fuzzyclock Soundsource Airbuddy Moom Flycut Mullvad SAS: Red Notice Kate Good omens Only murders in the building Breeders LA story Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-322-grattis-stockholm.html
Three people, two Dragon Ball fans, one non anime movie goer. Will they enjoy the film for what it is? Will they have a lot to say about the epicness they just witnessed? Will they get a kick out of it for being in IMAX? Tune in this week on MOOM's new episode of Dragon Ball Super: Super Hero!
In this week's podcast episode, I share my favorite moon phase. Spoiler alert: It's not the new or full moon. Everyone is so excited and so attentive to the New & Full Moons but what about the other phases. This episode I give some shine to the lesser mentioned moon phase. Questions, comments, and praise ► chachanna@lightyourownpath.com Instagram ► https://instagram.com/lightyourownpath Website ►http://lightyourownpath.com/ Music Intro/Outro ► Cold Pizza by Pandaraps --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lightyourownpath/message
Moom co-founders Mili Kale and Maya Kale talk to Steph about how and why they started their supplement company Moom.
Mail Reviews to: podcasting@bartificer.net and zkarj@me.com LTA 106: June 2022 – Let's Talk Podcasts Keyword Search Video Tutorial on ScreenCastsOnline Curious Permissions Problem - notes are in post for NosillaCast Tiny Mac Tips Part 3 of X Moom macOS Window Management – Something for Everyone Join the Conversation: allison@podfeet.com podfeet.com/slack Support the Show: Patreon Donation PayPal one-time donation Podfeet Podcasts Mugs at Zazzle Podfeet 15-Year Anniversary Shirts Referral Links: Parallels Toolbox - 3 months free for you and me Learn through MacSparky Field Guides - 15% off for you and me Backblaze - One free month for me and you Setapp - One free month for me and you Eufy - $40 for me if you spend $200. Sadly nothing in it for you. Google Fi - $20 Credit to both of our accounts after 30 days active PIA VPN - One month added to Paid Accounts for both of us
MOOM
JOTAAYU KOOR 2022 | Oustaz Mor KÉBÉ 15 : YALLA du bokkoo dara, koko bokkalèl mu bayyilak moom.
Jeudi 24 mars 2022, SMART IMPACT reçoit Géraldine Poivert (Présidente et co-fondatrice, (RE)Set) , Olivia Guernier (Directrice des affaires publiques et de la communication, FEBEA) , Juliette Lasnon (Co-fondatrice, Moom) et Gonzague de Blignières (confondateur, RAISE)
Chris updates us on his new window manager of choice, Moom, and tells us what's good with it. He's also giving yet another task manager a go: OmniFocus. (Sorry Things.) Steph talks about defining test classes in RSpec and readdresses flaky tests to improve CI build time. Chris is worried about productivity. He's still not coding as much as he'd like to be. Steph lends an ear, and together, they discuss potential ways Chris could gain back a little bit of coding time at work. This episode is brought to you by ScoutAPM (https://scoutapm.com/bikeshed). Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy. Moom (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/moom/id419330170?mt=12) OmniFocus (https://apps.apple.com/us/app/omnifocus-3/id1346190318) Is It Worth the Time? (https://xkcd.com/1205/) Knapsack Pro (https://knapsackpro.com/) Shopify Monolith (https://shopify.engineering/shopify-monolith) Sacrificial Test Classes (https://blog.bitwrangler.com/2016/11/10/sacrificial-test-classes.html) rspecq (https://github.com/skroutz/rspecq) Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of The Bike Shed! Transcript: STEPH: Hello and welcome to another episode of The Bike Shed, a weekly podcast from your friends at thoughtbot about developing great software. I'm Steph Viccari. CHRIS: And I'm Chris Toomey. STEPH: And together, we're here to share a bit of what we've learned along the way. So hey, Chris, what's new in your world? CHRIS: What's new in my world? Well, hey, Steph. Oh, I have an update on a thing that I think I talked about a while back or at least asked on Twitter. But I've been looking for a window manager for forever. And in that way that I sort of overcorrected a while back, I think where I'm no longer allowed to do anything related to productivity or dev tools. I was just forbidden because it was a time sink. I'm slowly trying to correct back and be like, you know what? I regularly think about how it would be nice to have a better window manager. So previously, I had used Divvy, D-I-V-V-Y, which is fine. It did an okay job, but it just didn't have quite the level of control that I wanted, or maybe I didn't investigate it enough. But it felt like it was lacking. So I did a little bit of research. A bunch of people recommended different things. There was Spectacle; there was Rectangle. There was a whole bunch of other things that I'm forgetting now because I have settled on Moom, M-O-O-M. Those are fun words. STEPH: I feel like you keep bringing interesting words [laughs] because last time, it was Things where you're tracking all the things. And now we have Moom to track the space. All right. CHRIS: If this is my legacy as a podcaster, then I feel like I will have done well just, you know, weird sounds mostly that's what he's going for. But yes, I've been using Moom now for…[laughs] God, it's just ridiculous to say, but here we are. STEPH: [laughs] CHRIS: I've been using it. I've been enjoying it. In particular, the thing that I liked about it...a bunch of the other ones that I looked at were like, oh, we've got all these different configurations. And you can move things any which way, and you can have any number of hotkeys. And I was like, wait, wait, wait, say more right now. You want to take over my global namespace of hotkeys and just clutter it with 19 different things? You know that that is a limited space that I'm working with here. And so Moom, somewhat uniquely, at least in the ones that I experienced, was what I would describe as a modal window manager. So much like Vim is modal where you start out in normal mode, and you're moving around and you kind of bounce and search and all of that, and then you enter insert mode. And in insert mode, keys do different things. And then in command mode...it's got all these different modes. And so there are lots of different namespaces for hotkeys. It's one of the things that makes Vim so powerful. Moom is similar in that there's one global activation hotkey. And then, within that, I can have a whole namespace of hotkeys. So like M will put something in the middle of my screen now. F will put something full-screen. And I don't need to remember weird multikey combinations for that. There's just the one to get started, and then I've configured it such that the tab will bounce to a secondary display and sort of rotate through them. M and F and Q and P I've got it physically laid out on the keyboard. So it looks like my screen. Q being on the left side will push something to the left side, P to the right side. And I'm very happy with that. I don't need a lot out of this tool. I don't need very complex management or scripting or any of that, which are very nice features that exist in the other ones. But that combination, the one hotkey to rule them all, and then the sub hotkeys within it, and the ability to mostly move between the screens and then put stuff where I want it is great. I'm very happy. STEPH: I think I've figured it out. So Moom, I think it's a combination of move and zoom, and that's how they got Moom. CHRIS: You're probably right. STEPH: That does sound really nice. I'm a Spectacle fan. And I have enjoyed it and just stuck with it because I haven't felt a need to change from it. And it's really nice where I use my arrow keys for which direction I want to go. So that has been easy for me to recall. But that sounds really nice, all the things that you're describing with Moom. CHRIS: Does spectacle have the like, is it some Command Option Control and then left or right or up or down? Or is it you type something, and then you type left, right, up, down? STEPH: I have to actually touch my keyboard to answer that question because I have the muscle memory, which is an interesting thing that my muscles knows it, but my brain has to really think about it. So I think it's like the Option Command, and then yeah, then use the arrow keys. CHRIS: Gotcha. That's roughly what I had when I was using Divvy previously, but I found just enough of a limitation there. And so Moom has been great as another tool. But I think Spectacle has a lot more features in terms of scripting and other fancier stuff that you can do, which is both super intriguing and, again, sort of the thing that I'm not allowed to do. [laughs] So I went with, like, this tool seems fine and has the one feature that I really want. That said, you brought up Things, which is the to-do list app that I've been looking at. I've been using it for a week now. It's great. I'm enjoying having a more structured way to say, like, here's what I'm doing today. Here's what I'm doing tomorrow. It's been wonderful. But I'm already looking at OmniFocus as a better version. STEPH: [laughs] CHRIS: Because I think there's some stuff that I don't love, and yes, I can hear my own voice in the back of my head that's like, always chasing that next thing. But I haven't actually made the effort to switch over or even tried. I've used OmniFocus in the past. But anyway, I'll let you know if I do make additional moves there. STEPH: Yeah, I'm enjoying this journey. Keep me up to date on it. I've heard of OmniFocus, but I know nothing about it. But I feel like I've heard good things. So I like this journey you're going on where you just keep switching and trying new things. That's fun for me [laughs], and there's chasing productivity. So I'm into it; I'm here for it. CHRIS: If I just invest enough hours to save a handful of minutes down the road, then I will have...oh no, wait, that's not how this goes. There's, of course, an xkcd about this which we can include in the show notes. But I'm trying to be very intentional with it. I waited for many years before I allowed myself to reinvestigate the world of to-do lists. And I'm hopefully going to keep it to just a couple of weeks of nonsense and then back to a few years of stable. That's the dream. But yeah, that's some of the smaller things that are up in my world. I have another topic that I want to chat about. But I'd love to hear what's new in your world? STEPH: Yeah, I have some interesting bits that I can talk about with the project that I'm working on. But more concretely, I have something that's been on my mind that I don't think that I've talked about here on the show, but I think would be fun to talk about because I just happened to run into it this week while working on some code. And it's the idea of defining test classes in RSpec so as you are testing part of your code, but then you want to create just like a fake class, something that you can use as a substitute for real application code. And so it's a really nice way that then you can have this replica behavior, but then maybe it's just one particular method or some behavior that you need to use in the class but then doesn't actually go to the real code. That's wonderful. That's great. One thing that I've learned is that with RSpec is when you are introducing a test class, so let's say if you have your RSpec describe and then either a string or it's the name of a class, and then you have a block so do, and then within that block is where you write your test. If you create a temporary class, say, like I have my class test class, and then I have some behavior, that gets defined in the global namespace. It's not scoped to that particular RSpec example. And the reason for that it's not specific to RSpec. RSpec is not the one that's doing this; it's actually Ruby behavior. So for Ruby, when you're defining within a block like that, if you're defining a constant, if you're defining another class inside of a block, it's going to use the outer namespace as its namespace. So if you had a top-level class that you were defining, but if you define a class as a block, and then inside of that block you define a constant, that constant is then defined in the object namespace instead of within that particular class that you have written. And so that's why RSpec has this behavior. Because someone brought up a really great question about this on RSpec::Core asking about it, and they're like, yeah, that's actually how Ruby works. And so we're not going to change RSpec's behavior since that is how Ruby has decided to handle this. And the part where this becomes important is when you define a test class within an RSpec example. While it may be unlikely that someone is going to use that exact same name for their test class that they're going to create in their RSpec example, if they were to use that same name, then you're going to have a collision between the two. One of them's going to win, and you're probably going to end up with some really weird test failures because it's going to get confusing as to which class is being used, and they may not match up with each other. So one way around this, and this is going to be one of the rare times that I suggest this, but let. Let is scoped to an RSpec example. And so you could define a class inside of a let, and then that will scope it to the example. There are probably some other approaches as well, but that's the one that I'm most familiar with to ensure that when you define that class or constant, it's not getting defined in the global namespace and ensuring that none of the other tests have access to it. CHRIS: Well, this is certainly interesting. I'm pretty sure I've been operating under the opposite assumption for the entirety of my career. This is good to know. I feel like I probably have had tests that failed because of this. And then I learned this truth, and then I subsequently forgot it. I don't know if you know this, but if you define a method within just a helper method that you extract in RSpec, are those also on the global namespace? I don't define classes in RSpec blocks that often. It's pretty rare. Like if I have a controller concern sort of thing that I want to test, I might say random controller and inject the thing there or some other abstracted piece. That is the only case I can think of where I have a fake model or a fake controller or something like that for test purposes. But it doesn't come up that often. I do extract a heck ton of local helper methods. And I'm wondering now, are those all in the shared global namespace? STEPH: I'm pretty sure they're not. And I'm getting on the edges of my knowledge here, but I think it has to do with the fact of when you're defining a constant. So if you're defining a class versus an actual constant, that will get into the global namespace because it's using the outer scoping. But in my experience, I'm pretty sure that's not true for the method just because I remember one time I did some funky stuff with RSpec. And I remember seeing that I couldn't access those methods from another example. CHRIS: I like the honesty. And you're like, to be clear, I was doing something weird, but I learned that day. Okay, that's good because at least that part maps to my understanding. So methods may be safe, but classes get shared. Very interesting. STEPH: And it's something that I rarely think about or had worried about just because if I'm defining a fake test class, I often will put it somewhere that's intended to be more global. So I'll stuff it somewhere in like spec support. So then other people can see, hey, I've already mimicked this behavior. So if you need to use the same thing, just go ahead and use this. It's not often that I am adding that class directly to the RSpec example group. So I think I've been fortunate where I haven't actually run into that conflict for that reason. But this came up while giving an RSpec course. And while we were just in a very small, tiny codebase and replicating some examples, someone in the class was like, "Hey, by the way, do you know that that's in the global namespace?" And I was like, "No, friend. Tell me more." So thanks to that person, they're the ones that actually enlightened me about how it's going into that namespace and how it can actually pollute your testing namespace. There's a really good article that's written by Ken Mayer. And we'll be sure to include a link in the show notes that talks about it and also provides the let example as a way to work around this. And also links to the GitHub discussion on RSpec::Core, where they talk about this behavior and why things are the way that they are. Circling back to some of the more general project-y things that I alluded to earlier, I've shared a bit about the project that I'm working on. But just to recap it, it is focused on helping a very large team that has a large number of tests, around 85,000. And they are looking to address flaky tests that they have and overall really improve their CI build time. So right now, it takes about 30 minutes for the build to take place. But they also have flaky tests, and then that slows things down. And so, the re-verify rate has been painful for them. There's been some really great work that has improved that, particularly there is a, I think we've talked about this before, but where they're re-verifying certain flaky tests, which isn't great because they're still flaky tests, but at least they're not preventing people from moving forward and shipping code. But some of the bigger stuff that is just on my mind is when you have a very large team and a very large application, by large team, I'm talking about 100 developers, and they are all contributing to this codebase. And there are around 85,000 tests, and that has grown substantially in the last 12 months. And so, if you think about the trajectory of the addition of those tests, it is just going to continue to grow. So there's a concern there of even if we address flaky tests and we improve things, there's an architecture concern of how do we really reduce the CI build time? And so there's that aspect, and then there's also the aspect of then well, how do we still work to improve the tests and the codebase as well as we go across all of these disparate teams? And right now, there is a bit of a culture where engineers don't feel empowered where they can necessarily address all of the flaky tests or things that they run into. And so there is a bit of a mindset of I'm stuck on this, or this test failed, or it's flaky, or I don't understand it. So I'm just going mute it, or I'm going to hand it off to someone else to work on it. So there are three big areas that are on my mind. The first one is architecture. You can throw architecture at it. There's also the code quality that's a concern. And then how do you improve the code quality in a way that you're improving it fast enough that then you've got 100 other developers that are also contributing to it at the same time? And then individual IC empowerment where then people feel like, hey, I ran into a slow test or a flaky test, and I feel like I can triage this, and I can make changes. For the architecture piece, we're still in the infancy stages of how to approach this and the strategy that we're using. But one of the ideas that has come up is how do we reduce tentpoles? And the tentpole is like when you're running your test and, let's say that it's parallelized, all of the various tests. But there is one process that takes like 20 minutes, and then the other process is completed in 5 minutes as a drastic example. And overall, you could have reduced your time if you had managed to split that 120-minute process across all the other workers who are then available for that work. So there are some tentpoles that are taking place. And that could be one first step in reducing the CI build time. There are also discussions around how to scale horizontally. Right now, we don't think that's something we can do with the service that we're using to run the test. But it's something that maybe we need to manually look into is then how do we build a queue of all these tests and not where we just split test by a file, which is typically how the Parallelize gem does it. But you could actually split up tests within a file. So if you had a particularly large file, that doesn't necessarily matter. But then building a queue of all these tests so then as each test finishes, a worker can just grab that next test. And then also you can easily scale up and scale down workers. As I'm saying that, that feels big, that's a lot to invest in. But that as an idea is how can we essentially then scale the architecture? So even as we continue to invest in the tests, in the system, and they continue to grow, our architecture can keep up with it. CHRIS: That last bit there is super interesting to me. It's something that I've looked into and haven't pursued yet. We're currently running on CircleCI with our test suite. And I don't even know that we pushed on parallelization because we're early enough on that. And we turned off bcrypt recently, which super-duper helps with the speed up. But overall, the test suite time is fine, is where I would put it. It had crept up, though, to a place where it was starting to be painful, is how I would describe it. And I think it's very easy for that to just continue growing and suddenly, it's 20 and 25 minutes. And then, depending on your merge strategy and all of that, it can be all the more complicated, and this gets in the way of deploys. And so, I think it is a super important thing to keep an eye on. I know Charity Majors pushes really hard for 15 minutes from merge to deploy to production. And so if your CI suite takes 25 minutes, then already you're stuck. As an aside, I just once more want to say out into the ether, CircleCI or any other CI platform, if you would allow me to say yes, we've already tested this Git hash, this Git SHA, or the working tree, ideally, because that's also deterministic, I would love that feature. I would love to not have to rebuild the same code when it gets merged into main, just saying once more out into the world. Also, GitHub, if you want to put me on the merge queue beta, I would love that if anybody out there is listening. [laughs] STEPH: I like how this has become a special requests hotline for all the things [laughs] that you're hoping to get a part of or features you'd like to see added. CHRIS: Hello, internet. I have some requests. STEPH: [laughs] CHRIS: I would love to see those things, but in the world where those don't exist. The particular thing that you're talking sort of a test queue, is something that I've seen. So Knapsack is a...what's the word? It's a tool; it's a service. It's a combination of things. But it does that essentially where it starts up a local build agent. And then it basically says like, all right, give me all of the tests that you need to run, and then I will feed them back to each of the individual agents that there's one agent running per parallelized process. And so say you've got five of them. The first one says, "Hey, give me a test," and runs it. And the second one says, "Give me a test," and et cetera. And so, the queue manager on the other side is in charge of that orchestration. And it means that they basically all finish in identical time, with one being an outlier, whichever one happens to be the longest. But it's only going to be however long your longest test is is basically that outlier versus what you're describing of like, well, if we split it by file, we can end up with more naive things where there's a bunch of feature specs on one of them, and it skews by two minutes. We obviously don't want that. So Knapsack, in particular, is a tool that I've looked at, but generally, I'm very interested in that as a solution to how do we maximally take advantage of parallelization there? STEPH: Interesting. I have not heard of Knapsack. There is one that sounds similar. It's called RSpec Queue. And it does some really interesting work where it will split the individual test, so it won't do it by file. It will also look at historical data to then try to be intelligent about how it's going to split it and find the longer running test. And I believe it uses Redis to then keep track of the test set up in run and things that still need to be run. That is a gem that the team is looking into using as well. I don't know how that works if that can integrate with the current platform as we're using TeamCity to run tests. I don't know if that's something that can integrate with TeamCity, if it's a replacement. I don't have all of the knowledge about RSpec Queue yet. But it seems to do a number of the things that we're interested in. So even if we can't use the gem, then maybe it's something that we can still imitate. CHRIS: The other thing that I'm surprised we haven't said yet is this is one of the places where people would often reach for microservices. I feel like we have to have the microservice conversation at this moment. Microservices can actually be a great solution to organizational problems. As a team scales, it does become really hard to manage a large group of developers. And so microservices introduces a very fixed boundary that then draws nice lines that you can have around things. And so, the individual build time for a portion of your application can be much more manageable by virtue of that. But it has this huge cost of technical complexity and overhead and et cetera, et cetera, all of the reasons that we may not want to go that route. And so interestingly, I was just looking at Shopify's Deconstructing the Monolith blog post, which I think at this point, they've skewed a little bit more into the microservices. Shopify is huge, one of the largest Rails apps out there. And so looking at them and being like, oh, what are they doing? It's an interesting sort of plot a course and to see how long they waited before they even started thinking about the much deeper things and even exploring microservices. But in this blog post, they talk about a different approach where they stuck with sort of a monolith. But then they started to introduce Rails engines and clear encapsulation within the large codebase such that then you can actually start to say, well, we don't need to run all the tests every time because if we're making a change within this section of the application, then we just need to run those tests. I've also heard of organizations having some logic that can determine based on the code change; we know the associated test files that we should run. I'm scared of that is how I would describe it. I want to trust my test suite. I want to be able to deploy on a Friday and say if tests are green, it's going out to production. That's great. And I worry about that sort of thing. That's hard to get right. That feels like caching, right? And that's one of those things that we historically get wrong a lot. But nonetheless, that is an approach that large organizations I've heard having good success with. So some way to determine what's the affected code and what tests do we need to rerun and et cetera. And that can really drastically reduce down the scope of each CI build. But those are some larger things that I have not had to reach for on any of the applications I've worked with. I've taken different approaches, different ways to reduce the time or otherwise Parallelizer et cetera. But it's interesting for when you get to a certain scale. STEPH: Yeah, it's funny that you bring up that idea because that came up in conversation with some of the other developers as well, was the idea of, like, what if we could just not run all the tests? You changed one file, and you don't need to run everything. And I immediately was like, that sounds very cool and super hard to be able to get right. And a lot of this code is extremely coupled, which then moves to the code quality area. So I suspect a lot of the test times could be improved by creating smaller objects because right now, a lot of the tests will load the entire world because they have to. They have to test everything. And so that is creating a ton of data, and then taking a long time to run versus if we were able to split out that code into smaller objects and test in unit tests, then that would also help speed up. But that's also hard to do. Where do you look first? We do have some great data, thanks to RSpec. RSpec is letting us know how long each test file takes to run, and then we are capturing that data. So I can go look at which files and say, oh, this file takes 10 minutes to run. Let's look at that file first versus some of the other ones that are performing better. But that is a battle that will take a long time to win. And it's something that takes consistency and then also encouraging others to join that battle. So while it's very important, it doesn't address the concern of tests growing rapidly and then being able to support that. Something that you said in a previous episode also was on my mind in talking about building processes in a way that encouraged people that they can make small, quick changes. And I think that's really important. So if we can build out the architecture to help scale this so then the tests were running in say 15 minutes, then if someone saw a test and they wanted to make a small refactor, they saw a factory.create, and they're like, oh, that could be a FactoryBot.build_stubbed instead and issue that into a pull request or change request and get that merged. I don't know if people feel as comfortable doing that right now because it takes them 30 minutes or longer to run the test. But that idea of how do we get a structure in place where people can make tiny, little improvements and do that as a whole, as a team, to then work on the code quality concerns? CHRIS: That last little bit is so interesting where you're saying, like, oh, we have a FactoryBot.create, FactoryBot.Build, but it has the overhead of having to go through the 30-minute test suite. But coming back to the thing we were talking about before, what if we didn't have to run all the tests? Although I find it very hard to tell, given a code change in actual production code, what tests do I need to run? When I'm just changing a test, I'm pretty sure I know which test I need to run in order to determine if that test still runs correctly. So that feels is there an optimization that can happen there? Which is I've only made test changes; therefore only run the changed tests. And then that's an encouragement to say, like; this is a part of our codebase that we are trying to improve on. Let's optimize the iteration speed there. You'd have to figure out how to write that. And so it's probably much like my productivity adventures, maybe not a good investment. Although given that this is such an organizational concern, maybe that is the thing that's worth spending an afternoon on and seeing if it could happen. Because if you can speed that process up, get more [inaudible 23:46] and more iteration in fixing the tests, that feels like it could be a win. STEPH: I think that's a really good idea. I think we could certainly tell that if a file's changed, that it's only a test file that has changed. And then I've heard very good things from the other developers that TeamCity has a wonderful API to work with. And so there's a way that we could then tell TeamCity to say, hey,...or it may not even be a TeamCity command. It may just be somewhere in the universe we have to say, "Hey, RSpec, only run this test," or "TeamCity, we're only going to feed you this one RSpec test to run, so user agent but only run this particular test." So I really like that idea. I think that's really intriguing. And I'll bring it up with the team because that would be a huge win, especially as Joël and I are really focused more on tests. That would just improve our lives. So selfishly, I'm excited about that idea because we are touching less of the application code and more focused on improving the test at this point. CHRIS: I mean, if right now you're getting, say, 5 or 10 pull requests through a day which frankly feels like a high bar on this, if suddenly that's 10 to 20, that's material right there. STEPH: Yeah, I don't know how large of an impact it would have for the rest of the team because I don't know how often they're only making changes to a test file, but it still feels like a nice optimization to have. Cool. Well, thanks. I appreciate that idea. CHRIS: My pleasure. Mid-roll Ad And now a quick break to hear from today's sponsor, Scout APM. Scout APM is leading-edge application performance monitoring that's designed to help Rails developers quickly find and fix performance issues without having to deal with the headache or overhead of enterprise platform feature bloat. With a developer-centric UI and tracing logic that ties bottlenecks to source code, you can quickly pinpoint and resolve those performance abnormalities like N+1 queries, slow database queries, memory bloat, and much more. Scout's real-time alerting and weekly digest emails let you rest easy knowing Scout's on watch and resolving performance issues before your customers ever see them. Scout has also launched its new error monitoring feature add-on for Python applications. Now you can connect your error reporting and application monitoring data on one platform. See for yourself why developers call Scout their best friend and try our error monitoring and APM free for 14 days; no credit card needed. And as an added-on bonus for Bike Shed listeners, Scout will donate $5 to the open-source project of your choice when you deploy. Learn more at scoutapm.com/bikeshed. That's scoutapm.com/bikeshed. CHRIS: What else is going on in my world? I continue to not code a ton which is interesting and probably makes sense for right now. But to share a small anecdote from this week, we had retro, and I ended up attending retro ever so slightly late. I was doing a hiring interview, which is super exciting. Again, for anyone that's out there, we are hiring at Sagewell Financial. And I would love to chat with you if that sounds interesting. But so I was having a wonderful hiring conversation that ran a little bit long. So I was a little bit late to retro, and I arrived, say like eight minutes in, and someone was expressing a concern. And the concern was, I very sincerely know this to be true, but they were saying in the most positive way. But they were like, "It'd be great if Chris could code more," and not in the judgmental like, Chris, why are you not getting as much done? Not in that way at all, very much in the it would be great if Chris had more time, if there wasn't as much pulling my attention in different directions. But then it kind of went into this interesting direction. So we then go back through and address the concerns and talk as a group about how we resolve them. But this one was like, my name was in the concern, again, in a very positive way, in a very supportive way. And we had a wonderful conversation, and there were really great ideas that were passed around. But man, did I feel weird having my name in a retro item. [laughs] STEPH: So one thing I've learned is that you do a really good job when you are giving presentations and being in the spotlight. But I don't think you actually love it. You love sharing content and things that you have learned. But I could see how being a focal point, especially if there's a concern or something that could have a negative connotation, that would feel squeamish. It would make me feel squeamish. CHRIS: I hadn't thought about it in that way. But as you say it, also, this conversation is a meta version of that. Like, let's talk about me talking about me. I don't want to be the center of attention. But I love technology or process. I love talking about the work. That's great. And so I'm happy to do that. I'm happy to stand in front of a room and talk about it. But yeah, when it's about me, that's weird. And so now I'm going to move...well, no, I'm not going to move on [laughs] because this is the topic right now. But so there's a bunch of things that we have been trying to introduce. And I think this is a useful part of the conversation more broadly and less about me. So one of the things that I think I mentioned in a previous episode was the introduction of point-dev, which is each week, we rotate through a person. And that person is in charge of triaging the errors, making sure that nothing is stuck in Sidekiq, responding to any support requests, et cetera, et cetera. But they're meant to be the frontline such that everyone else can be heads down and really focus on the work. And what was interesting of the three developers that are working on the project, I am point-dev this week. So I was like, yes, that's awesome this week because I'm the person on the frontline. That has not helped me, but in the future, it will. And then one of the other developers mentioned that they feel like it's really useful but also feel like it's been noisy. And we realized the previous week was their week on point-dev. But the other developer was like, "Yeah, it's been great. I haven't had to think about anything." And so they have been off of that rotation for two weeks now. They'll be taking it over next week. But it is doing exactly its job of providing that attention coverage so that they can keep their focus on the code, and that's really wonderful. So I'll be honest, when we started talking about it, there was a tiny voice in my head that was like, is this a failure mode? Should we be dealing with the noise rather than having a process to address it in the moment? Should we be dealing with the root cause rather than the symptoms? And I still think that's a good point of view. But we found so much value from this. And as I've mentioned it, many people are like, oh yeah, we have that. It's great. I've heard enough positive things. So I've backed away from that. But there was a voice in my head that was like, are we failing right now? But yeah, so point-dev has been really wonderful. And next week, I will have to...well, frankly, the next two weeks, I'm off of point-dev appointments, so I'm very excited about that. I've been doing some of the product management or sort of the tech side of the product management and helping to triage cards and make sure that there's very clear work lined up for the engineering team when they're ready to do that. I'm trying to back away from that just a little bit. And one of the things that we did there was introduced an inbox column in our Trello board. You know how I love a good inbox. You know how I love to get to inbox zero. But that is a good way for me, for anyone now in the organization, which I don't want everyone to have to learn our processes, but just saying, "This is the place that you put requests, and we will deal with them. I assure you of that." It has been great because that means I don't need to be quite as responsive in Slack. I can just gently redirect people, "Hey, if you don't mind, please put this in Slack in the inbox column, and that'll be great." That thing, though, that gentle pushback in Slack is one of the things that I've struggled with. And this was one of the more personal aspects of the conversation that happened in retro was me being, like, if we're being honest, I tried to do that. But it's not my favorite thing to do in the world. Whenever someone asks me something, I want to be helpful. I don't want to seem rude or brisk or like I'm too busy for you, et cetera, et cetera. So I will often respond to the question or do the thing that they're asking and then say, "In the future, if you could go to this other place." And ideally, I'm slowly moving forward and being like, "No, no, no, please go to the other place. We've talked about this a few times." But it is an interesting example of one of the specific aspects of my personality coming through in this. But that introduction of an inbox has been great. Love me a good inbox, as I said. And then, more generally, we just tried to talk through what are the things that I'm doing? Do I need to own all of those uniquely? And some of them the answer we decided was yes but some of them we decided no. And we started to sort of distribute the work there or some of the meetings or different aspects of it. And so overall, it was a really great conversation but also very weird for me. STEPH: Yeah, because then you wonder, am I not doing the right thing? Am I not spending my time the right way? But then hopefully, that meeting helped reinforce that yes, you are spending your time the right way and that you're doing a lot of productive things. There are just too many productive things for you to do, and so you have to prioritize those aggressively. I like all the things that you just highlighted. There's one in particular, the last one that you mentioned about finding things that you can hand off to others. And I love that for a couple of reasons. It came up in a recent conversation that I was having with some other thoughtbot developers around when someone's on a project, typically someone just falls into being the point person. They just happen to be the person that the client talks to and ask questions and goes through the most. And that's something that is okay. But we want to make sure that that's not a bad thing, that everybody is treated equally, that everybody is given equal opportunities and room to grow. And so, in my mind, whenever someone is that point person, or you have fallen into that role, it is your job to then pull other people up. So if you have been given the responsibility of running a particular meeting each week, then go ahead and do it once or twice, so you can demo it and show it to someone else as to how you do this. But then tag somebody else and say, "Hey, I'm going to let you or ask you to run this next time." So then that person can experience it. They can demo their style, and then it continues on to have more people. So I really like that you are highlighting it's not just beneficial for you to then distribute those tasks, but it's empowering for everybody else on the team as well. I'm curious, so what was the final outcome? It sounds like there are some really good things in place, and you're transitioning, handing some things off. But I can't imagine that things have gotten...all of your priorities are still there. So do you think you'll actually code more, or what's the outcome for next week? CHRIS: Short term, maybe probably not, if we're being honest, but trending in that direction. So one of the things that's going on right now is hiring. That is just an activity that takes a lot of time. And I care a lot about doing that well, both for the organization and then for individuals on the other side. I want to be respectful of their time and communicate in reasonable timelines and not leave people without an answer or follow up or those sorts of things. It probably makes sense for that to sit with me as the starting contact. And then from there, folks that are continuing on in our hiring process they're going to talk to many other members of the team, and that won't just be me. But there are a lot of first conversations that I'm having. And so right now, my schedule has a bunch of that, which is fine and good. And that will hopefully, at some point, we'll hire some great people. And then we'll be on the other side of that. And that piece of the work that I have right now goes away. Some of the other outcomes that we named there were a couple of action items. And so I think those will help, but they're sort of we got to work towards that. One is transitioning a meeting, but it's a biweekly meeting. And I'm not going to just not attend the next one. So it'll be me and one of the other developers attending to transition ownership of that meeting moving forward. And then from there, so like, two weeks from now, I will not have that consideration on my calendar. And that's like one 30-minute block that I get back or, depending on how you think about it, one block that that 30-minute broke up. I do want to touch back just on something that you're saying there. I think you're being very kind to me in saying like, no, but you've got so many things, and so it's hard to do that. I think that's true, but that's kind of the work overall, and my version of that is one thing. But everyone sort of has, as a team, we have a version of like, how are we being most productive? Are we making sure we're doing the most important things? And so it was interesting in the moment, but I think it was a very good conversation. And I want to make sure that both we as a team and then me as an individual, wherever that happens to be the case, are open to these sort of constructive things. Like, frankly, to do the work to figure out how to get work off my plate that hasn't felt like the most important thing. It felt like close to the most important thing, but then there were all the other things that I had to do. So I wasn't doing the work to figure out how to not do the work. It is a complicated sentence that I just said. But this was a case where retro, I think, very usefully highlighted that this was a good thing for us collectively to put effort into such that we can be more productive moving forward. It happened to be slightly more focused on me rather than the entirety of the team. But broadly, that kind of thinking is why I'm a huge fan of retro. I think it's a great place to take a step back think about how we're doing the work rather than just being in the work day-to-day. STEPH: So if I'm internalizing what you said correctly, let me know if not, but it sounds like you're in one of those places, and I've witnessed this with other people and myself where someone is overwhelmed. They have a lot to do, and they're very focused in that grind and in that moment of doing all the things that they have to do. And it's very hard to then say, "I'm in the weeds right now. And then I also have to figure out how to get out of the weeds." And that's a very different skill and mental space to be able to do that. Because often, when you're just in that mode, all you can focus on is a bit on survival at that time. And then it may take other people to notice to say, "Hey, you're in the weeds. We need to figure out a way to help you not live there and to find ways to distribute some of the work." Does that sound like a fair assessment? Because I think I say all that because I've just seen people in that position. And then they think back, like, oh, I should have offloaded stuff earlier. And it's like, yeah, true, totally. And it often takes a retro or someone else coming to you and saying, "Hey, I've noticed...I looked at your calendar today; how can I help?" [laughs] CHRIS: I think that's probably the right calibration. And mostly, my emphasis was just I want to make sure that broadly, any team that I'm on has the space for this sort of conversation. And that thing that you're saying exactly that phrasing of like, "Hey, I saw your calendar. How are you doing? How's that going, though? Are you feeling okay? [laughs] You can't sleep and whatnot." That can be a really useful thing to have and to have organizational norms about what are our expectations of how many meetings someone should have in a week. And where do we start to think about different things? You did use the phrase overwhelmed. I want to say that I'm like 101% whelmed. So I'm just ever so slightly overwhelmed, but it is like I'm in the weeds. I need to figure out how to clear some of the weeds so that then I can get out of it. And it was a great conversation that came from that. STEPH: That's awesome. I'm glad you got a good team that, frankly, felt comfortable bringing it up, and then that you could lean on them for ways to talk about how you could code some more and talk about priorities and where you want to focus your time. CHRIS: It will be an interesting thing. As the team grows, I don't expect this to get easier. We talked about this a number of weeks back. And I think for a while; hopefully, we clear a little bit of dust here, and then I get back to being a little bit more on the code, and that's going to happen for a while. But as I think about the longer sort of the future of the company, this is something I'm going to have to revisit a handful of times. And it's a really interesting question that I'm still struggling with internally. And where do I want to be versus what will be needed and whatnot? So it'll be interesting to see how it evolves. But for now, I think I can gain back a little bit of coding time, a little bit of maker time versus manager time, as Paul Graham's essay goes. And yeah, I think that'll be good. STEPH: Yeah, I like how you're already looking forward to the fact that it will probably fluctuate because, yeah, right now, you are sort of paying a tax. You are building up to then where you can have more people on the team. And then that may give you back some of your time where then you can code because you can outsource some of the work to them. But then, as the team grows, so are other responsibilities. And traditionally, being in a CTO role and most CTOs I know will code here and there because they want to, and they enjoy it, but it is not their full-time job. So I think you're really wise to have already noticed that and start thinking about how that's going to trend in the future. And it sounds like you might need to figure out how to throw some architecture at it. So then you can scale horizontally, and then you can just have more time to do all the things. Yeah, that's right. [laughs] CHRIS: You're suggesting microservices, right? That's how my job becomes easy? STEPH: Yeah. Well, I'm thinking more like RSpec Queue, but we'll have RSpec Chris or some version of that. CHRIS: Chris Queue. STEPH: Chris Queue. [laughs] CHRIS: And then I just paralyze my human, and then it'll be great. STEPH: Yeah, that's always worked out well in the movies. Whenever somebody clones themselves, that goes super well. CHRIS: Multiplicity is a fantastic piece of cinema, and I stand by that. STEPH: I haven't seen it, but I feel like it doesn't end well for the main character. CHRIS: I feel like every time I mention a movie, you haven't seen it. I feel like we need to do a movie marathon at some point just to catch up so that we've got shared analogies. But yeah, it's a fun movie. It's fine. It turns out fine in the end. But there are some humorous adventures that happen in the middle. Cloning maybe [laughs] isn't the most direct option to solve productivity problems. STEPH: [laughs] Yeah, I think I've got Labyrinth, Hackers, and Multiplicity now on the watch list. And I appreciate the fact that you know that I'm not likely to watch them, although out of the three, Hackers will probably happen. CHRIS: All right, what if I were to get a bunch of Pop-Tarts, non-frosted? STEPH: Ooh. CHRIS: Does that change -- STEPH: Wait, are you going to send them to me? Because if you just have them, that's no good. [laughter] CHRIS: Eat Pop-Tarts on a video call and be like, "Look at this movie. It's great." [laughter] STEPH: All right, bribery definitely works for me. [laughs] CHRIS: Okay, so got it, noted. And based on the nature of the conversation that we have devolved into here, I think we've probably reached a good point. What do you think? Should we wrap up? STEPH: Let's wrap up. CHRIS: The show notes for this episode can be found at bikeshed.fm. STEPH: This show is produced and edited by Mandy Moore. CHRIS: If you enjoyed listening, one really easy way to support the show is to leave us a quick rating or even a review on iTunes, as it really helps other folks find the show. STEPH: If you have any feedback for this or any of our other episodes, you can reach us at @_bikeshed or reach me on Twitter @SViccari. CHRIS: And I'm @christoomey. STEPH: Or you can reach us at hosts@bikeshed.fm via email. CHRIS: Thanks so much for listening to The Bike Shed, and we'll see you next week. All: Byeeeeeeeeeee!!!!! Announcer: This podcast was brought to you by thoughtbot. thoughtbot is your expert design and development partner. Let's make your product and team a success.
Printing music is something that takes skill and attention to detail — both by the music preparer and the printer. When everything's communicated well, it leads to print shop nirvana and the ideal result for everyone involved. Philip Rothman and David MacDonald talk through a specific project and illustrate the various steps along the way to set it up for success. No detail is too small, from the page size, to the number of copies, to the shipping methods desired. Philip relays his tips and best practices from the perspective of a professional music printing service. Then, David gives advice for how to ensure good results if you need to take your project to a more general-service copy shop, or even if you are printing yourself, like some inventive ways to format the page size and convey the instructions to minimize the risk of errors that can be introduced and avoid miscommunication in what is one of the last, most critical steps in preparing a piece of music. More on Scoring Notes and elsewhere: Chronology of a perfect music printing job Creating PDFs from Sibelius 7 Export File Names Dialog in Dorico Name Mangler and Moom productivity apps On the margins: Headers, footers, and footnotes in Sibelius Smarter title pages for parts in Sibelius Smarter title pages for parts in Finale Working with master pages in Dorico, part 2 How to fix a common page numbering problem in Sibelius PDF-MusicBinder and PDF-BatchStitch utilities for music printing
Government makes usable website; Apple & Google oppose antitrust efforts; sad NFTs; non-smart non-contracts; we don't talk about crypto, no no no; Microsoft buying Activision Blizzard; Instagram closed petfluencers; the Witcher; the Expanse; Encanto; Ray Donovan; Station Eleven; Star Trek news; Stroke Cast; Stay & Moom apps; 12' Ladder; Rode VideoMic; Reddit revamps block to actually block; Aftermath; Humankind: A Hopeful History; Termination Shock; NSO Group's Pegasus; VPNLab; Boba Vette.Show notes at https://gog.show/537/FOLLOW UPAT&T and Verizon delay 5G rollout at some airports after airlines warn of disruptionsIN THE NEWSThe Government's New Website for Ordering Free COVID Tests Is Refreshingly Easy to UseApple and Google oppose Senate antitrust efforts, claiming they'd hurt consumer securityWhich Celebrity Has the Saddest NFT?The Dune NFT Fiasco Is the Least of Crypto's Legal WorriesUK government announces official crackdown on 'misleading' crypto adsSpain sets new rules for influencers who promote cryptocurrencyMicrosoft is buying Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billionMicrosoft Game Pass tops 25 million subscribersBring in the clones: Instagrammers are genetically replicating their petsMEDIA CANDYThe WitcherThe ExpanseEncantoWhy “We Don't Talk About Bruno” Is the Biggest Disney Hit Since “Let It Go”Ray Donovan the MovieStation ElevenStar Trek: Discovery' Renewed For Season 5; Premiere Dates Announced For ‘Picard' And ‘Strange New Worlds'Stroke CastAPPS & DOODADSStay by Cordless DogMoom12' ladderHYPER Triple 4K Display Dock for MacBook Pro 2016-2021Rode VideoMic GO IIRode Microphones VideoMic GO II Lightweight On-Camera Microphone at AdoramaRode Microphones VideoMic NTG On-Camera Supercardioid Shotgun Microphone at AdoramaOculus Quest 2Reddit 'revamped' its block feature so blocking actually worksAT THE LIBRARYAftermath by LeVar BurtonHumankind: A Hopeful History by Rutger Bregman , Erica Moore , Elizabeth MantonTermination Shock: A Novel by Neal StephensonSECURITY HAH!The CyberWireDave BittnerHacking HumansCaveatFett's Vette 2021 Music Video (MC Chris)Israeli police reportedly used Pegasus spyware to conduct domestic surveillanceEuropol Shuts Down VPNLab, Cybercriminals' Favourite VPN ServiceSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Throwback - Biomedical Informatics, Pharmacogenomics, & Academia feat. Dr. Moom Roosan Intended Audience: Everyone On today's throwback episode, we had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Moom Roosan regarding her role in pharmacy informatics. Dr. Roosan has a unique background of attaining a PhD in Biomedical Informatics in addition to her pharmacy degree. She expands on her passion of teaching and on how we can use technology and apply it to pharmacogenomics in a meaningful way. To reach Dr. Roosan for further questions, you can email her at roosan@chapman.edu ========== Interested in learning more about pharmacy informatics? Check out the FREE Introduction to Pharmacy Informatics course at www.pharmacyinformaticsacademy.com ! New to LinkedIn and not sure where to start? Download my free ebook, "Professional Networking Unlocked", at https://www.tonydaopharmd.com/ebook Follow us on social media! Twitter: @pharmacyitme Instagram: @pharmacyinformatics LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pharmacyitme/ Website: Pharmacy IT & Me Email: tony@pharmacyitme.com Follow Tony's personal Twitter account at @tonydaopharmd Network with other pharmacists at Pharmacists Connect!http://pharmacistsconnect.com For more information on pharmacy informatics, check out some of the following useful links: ASHP's Section of Pharmacy Informatics and Technology: https://www.ashp.org/Pharmacy-Informaticist/Section-of-Pharmacy-Informatics-and-Technology/ HIMSS Pharmacy Informatics Community: https://www.himss.org/library/pharmacy-informatics Disclaimer: Views expressed are my own and do not reflect thoughts and opinions of any entity with which I have been, am now, or will be affiliated.
The Chair - Netflix F-Boy Island - HBO Max The Heist - Netflix RuPaul's Drag Race All Stars Season 6 Finale Movie was Random Harvest from 1942 with Greer Garson - highly recommend Next week is The Third Man from 1948 with Orson Wells and Joseph Cotton email us at 2QueensWhat@gmail.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/john-burns1/message
Nicole, one of Tapau Please's co-hosts, welcomes Moom Health founders, Mili and Maya Kale, into the studio to share more about their wellness business and the importance of empowering women and their health choices. The sisters didn't necessarily start off their careers wanting to pursue their current passion, but given time and personal journeys that led them down this path, it only made sense for them to create a platform that celebrates womens' diversities, especially in the wellness realm.
MOOM'BA PARTY MIX (MIXE PAR JULIEN FREJAVILLE)
Lets be real ... How many of us buy different vitamins and supplements off iHerb that we eventually forget to take? Put your hand up if you can't even remember what each pill is for. Do we even really know what that long list of ingredients are actually doing to our body? This week, we speak to Maya Kale (@mayzkale), co-founder of Moom Health (@moomhealth), about how we can make wellness as simple as possible, by focusing on the bare essentials. We break down what it really means to listen to your body, how to figure out what on earth it's actually saying and what our own personal health needs are.
Coming soon on Promo Audio, more infos : https://linktr.ee/promoaudiomusic
Fredrik och Christian avbryter Jockes ögonblick av zen! Vad tror ni hände zen? En av de mest avslappnande filmer Jocke sett på Youtube: Svensk yngling bygger timmerstuga med traditionella verktyg. Uppföljning av korv: Roslagsgrill finns att tillgå på Ica Maxi i Solna. Aftonbladets test av falukorv. Fasansfulla fläktljud Christian kompletterar sin iMac 27-tum med en 1080p-skärm på högkant Har Christian köpt någon skrivare ännu? Jocke blir uthängd i Roadwork. Jocke lämnar Twitter - av många anledningar. Christian har uppdaterat sin lista med ignorerade ord på Twitter Vad fan och varför är Clubhouse? Mikrotik über alles - Jocke byter ut hela nätverksmiljön för servrar och Internet hemma. Fredriks fönster närmar sig Siracusa county, bara lite. Hur gör övriga med sina fönster? Vad heter podden i framtiden?fs Sten Tore Ingemar Melin (1928-02-09-1990-07-28) Länkar Timmerstugevideon på Youtube Erik Grankvist bygger timmerstuga Aftonbladet testar falukorv Svensk köttinformation har numera förenklat sitt namn lite Nyhléns Hugosons Reinfeldt fick falukorv Eclipse Målerivideos med far och dotter på Youtube Buffee Hejdå, Twitter Road work Avsnittet i fråga John Roderick Steve Troughton-Smith Clubhouse Heta linjen Guldmodellen av första Apple watch Apples Ping The windows of Siracusa county Windowshade FVWM i3 Magnet Hocus focus Iterm2 Moom Spaces Mac OS X 10.5 “Leopard” Denne gigant bland giganter Fredrik Björeman, Joacim Melin och Christian Åhs. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-245-fristande-clubhousekolumnist.html.
Full Moon This weekend. Feel it NOW. What to do during the full moon: Meditate. Full moon meditations are a powerful way to tap the luminous lunar energy and harness the energetic power of the moon's light. ... Release. ... Hold a moon circle. ... Do a manifestation ritual. ... Take a moon bath. ... Start something new. ... Overwork or overstress. ... Make life-changing decisions. Use this Meditation I created just for you. www.askhollyhall.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/askhollyhall/message
Onderwerpen Apple heeft plannen voor de MacBook Pro. Hoe Huawei België via Twitter een hak wilde zetten. Samsungs S21 Tips Maarten: 2020game.io Steven: SetApp.com, Magnet, Moom, Divvy & Fish Shell Ruurd: Bidet handdouche & A Fisherman’s Tale
New Purchases... Elgato Stream Deck - https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/stream-deck 15 hotkeys to do whatever you need Each key has a little screen behind it so you can show whatever you like Moom - windows positioning app for Mac - https://manytricks.com/moom/ Great for setting up your screen with the apps where you want them Replacement for Magnet App […]
New Purchases… Elgato Stream Deck – https://www.elgato.com/en/gaming/stream-deck 15 hotkeys to do whatever you need Each key has a little screen behind it so you can show whatever you like Moom – windows positioning app for Mac – https://manytricks.com/moom/ Great for setting up your screen with the apps where you want them Replacement for Magnet App ... Read more
VirtualDJ Radio TheGrind - Channel 2 - Recorded Live Sets Podcast
Live Recorded Set from VirtualDJ Radio TheGrind
Your Von Braun City DoorDash delivery is here! Please enjoy your Side Five Guys signature Bright Burger with a side order of Potato Gryps, and be sure to wash it down with some delicious Reccoca-Cola! Tasty!!! Watching - Mobile Suit Zeta Gundam Episodes 22-24 Featuring - Max & Sarah & Colin Check out our other shows! - Pod of Greed & Slappers Only & Never Believe It! & smallwalk & Meda Watch Twitter Noise Space
The full moon effect is real. It can make you emotional and sensitive to energy, find out more and which crystals can help in this weeks episode. ************************************************************ Use code HALLOWEEN to get 15% off in my Etsy store (£10 min purchase) https://www.etsy.com/uk/shop/CrystalsAndMagicKB ******************************************************************* Website: katybatt.com/ Shop for crystals https://www.etsy.com/uk/shop/CrystalsAndMagicKB Youtube: www.youtube.com/channel/UCGCWChWb4NsqJVNrrvNsZ8Q? Follow me on: Facebook facebook.com/realistichol Instagram @realistichol Twitter @realistichol
Lepas banget ngobrol sama Mumtaz, ternyata kita sama-sama Lambe.
Rob Griffiths worked for Apple (1990-95), founded macosxhints.com in 2000, went on to write for Macworld Magazine, has done some podcasting, and is currently a partner at Many Tricks Software, makers of great Mac utilities such as Moom, Witch and Name Mangler. Rob recalled his early years with the T.I. Silent 700, Commodore PET, and Apple II. At Colorado State University, Rob realized programming was not for him and followed a business track. Later, after graduate school, he landed a job with Apple. We chatted about his career, moving on to great years at Macworld Magazine, and then his current partnership at Many Tricks Software. We then delved into WWDC 2020, challenges as an Apple developer, the transition of Macs to Apple Silicon, and the evolution of macOS as a partial touch-screen OS. Good stuff here!
Hey InsAnnies! This is a very special episode! You will learn why Annie is Annie from the people who made her. Meet Annie's favorite things on Earth-her parents! You will see how hard they laugh at very inappropriate things, recall hilarious family stories and pictures, share a love for props, and are living proof that ADHD is inherited. Mad love this episode. And special thanks to the patrons!
The Sun heads into Gemini kicking off 30 days here while a New Moon in Gemini opens up 2 weeks of momentum for each sign to move forward into something new or next level here. Tune in for your astrology with Zoe Moon and hear how this may impact your sign.
One of the top rated, hand curated, independent and original playlists throughout the world is the Superfire playlist and it is only available in the New Chat Mixtapes podcast stream. Subscribe for free anywhere in the world! Check the playlist for episode #404 FEATURING DJ Pete Bodega running wild on the following tracks... EL PIPPEN 99 - YAMAHA STEVE ‘N KING - BOUNCE ARYUE + ASOX - ONE TIME LO’DID - BACK & FORTH VAVO + ZHIKO - DAY N’ NIGHT VIGILAND & MHA - WE DON’T TALK ENOUGH BEAUZ + BSY + JSY + CAPPA - PLEASE DON’T GO SIMON FAVA + YVVAN BACK - Trumpets SONNY FODERA + KING HENRY + ALUNAGEORGE - BEFORE U CHOICES - LESS IS MORE BECCA + BUSISWA + DWP ACADEMY - NO ONE MICHAEL GRAY + KIMBERLY BROWN - BROTHER BROTHER MAX STYLER + JIMMY NEVIS - BACK TO ME First-touch, no-sync, mega-mix vibes!!! Subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes podcast for free or simply press play on any of your favorite streaming platforms. Link up online!!!
Press play and go volume up on some musical vibes, better than radio, more than a playlist it's New Chat Mixtapes. Episode 402 of the worldwide riddim mix podcast features the first hour of the YUSH! mix that originally aired on 3/11/2020. Don't miss out. Subscribe for free on your favorite podcast platform and tell your ones! Pree the tracklist... CRUSHA MUSIC - HAPPY VIBES RIDDIM JAH KAAN -RISING UP DEANO DEANN - PARTY STUNT RIDDIM LYBRAN + WINHAADO - PARTY VIBES LIKKLE GEMM + TUGGAWAR - RAVING HEVS RECORDS - STREETS UP RIDDIM RAYZOR - DREAD TABANKE JUBY - LOOK SHE DEY LEONCE - AH REACH MOYA DAN - HAVE IT UP COPPELY - TIGHT SHU SHU - BAD INNA DEM MIND GG MAGREE - YOU DON’T KNOW ME SKYDON - TICK TOCK I QUU - WINE FI M LAA LEE - GAL YUH HOT OLIVER WADE - BROKEN ZOOKEEPER - PARALLEL LINES SKINNY FABULOUS - HOLD ON N7 + PWAP - HOT HEAD TEMPA - BLOCK HOT ILL STREET DUDE - LOFi john christian - DOS DENVIEL - ME SIENTO CABRON ALMANAC - MINI GAME BUBBLES - LIKE IT KAYLA - BUMPA ON THE LOOSE S.CARTER - LIKE CRICKET WHITNEY - BOUNCE ON IT SHUR I KAN - THIS SITUATION EMOTIONAL ORANGES - ICONIC DJ MARK BRICKMAN - AGAIN & AGAIN EL OFFICIAL & JUANQUI - NO ESTOY PA NA HEV’S RECORDS - THINK A CHATTING RIDDIM BAREFACE - NUFF FAKE TEECO SWIL - NUH YOUNG FRANCO & PELL - JUICE Sound up!!!!! Link up online
Big vibes in the exclusive YUSH playlist every week. Get the best in riddim and lyrics from around the world right here in the New Chat Mixtapes podcast stream. The best, first, live, no-sync, inna real dj fashion. Check the playlist and be advised you only get this flavor one place, New Chat Mixtapes... MARIE LA MELODIA DEL GENERO + EL MEGA - NO DIGAS QUE TE VAS AMINE - SHIMMY ROCKWELL - VENT CE’CILE - CRY CHRISTOPHER MARTIN + BUSY SIGNAL - WHY ROD WAVE - THIEF IN THE NIGHT BLACK DILLINGER - GIRL OF MY DREAMS MASICKA - ICE CREAM TRUCK NANIVYBZ - COOK UP RIDDIM DEEP JAHI - NEVER CHEAT 6 FEET PRETTY - NUMBER 1 OZUNA + MYKE TOWERS - ESTAMOS EN LEY WAYNE WONDER - STILL FRESH BUGLE + BOUNTY KILLA - GHETTO LIFE NEW KIDZ - UNITY SUKU + WAYNE WAONDER - BLESSINGS ELE A EL DOMINIO - HACE MUCHO TIEMPO LAHBA - ANECDOTE HOT FRASS - SIGHT DEATH ESCO - SCOWA BURNA BOY - ODOGWU
Give thanks for music!!! Press play on episode 400 of New Chat Mixtapes podcast. Widely considered one of the top music podcasts available and running solid since 2008. It's not just the selections of superfire tracks for any given New Chat playlist. It's not the world class DJ's like Kenny Tekneek. It's the listeners and the way connect through this non stop stream of riddim and lyrics. Celebrate over a decade of the world's most loved mixtape podcast and subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes wherever podcast content is streaming and link up online: @djkennytekneek @djpetebodega more life!!!
Episode 16 - Quarantine Conference, Day 1: Tom KellyKyle and Gilbert chat with Tom Kelly of Clean Cut Audio and three identical Taylor Swift jackets.Show NotesTom Kelly on YouTube. Tom Kelly on Clean Cut Audio. Tom Kelly on Reminiscent. Tom Kelly on Patreon. Tom Kelly on EDIT/OR. Tom Kelly on Gene Wilder on The Truth on Blank on Blank.The Mighty Black StumpHotstoppersYou know, Tom is Tom and Tim is Tim.ScreenflickAlex Knickerbocker something something Potato Jet.Kyle has The Glow.Speaking of Kyle's Glow, we wish Lauren a speedy recovery.Favored Terrain knocked their livestream out of the park.EDIT/OR Episode 12 - Fuck Podcast Conferences. And don't forget about fuckpodcastconferences.com.DronesHow many of you are afraid to click this team-building link? Three? We bet it's three.The idea of Mark tapping on the Bukkakepreneur chapter just makes us so happy.AB5 sucks.Tweet at Kyle.You're all Marked.Continue to do nothing to improve your speaking because you swear you'll clean it in post with Adobe's Project Sound Seek.We're not entirely sure why but fuck you, Earwolf. It just...it just feels so right.For more on hiding places, see John Acuff's Finish.Gilbert should have to put a dollar in a jar every time he complains about social media. And then at the end of the year he should have to take that $40,000 and donate it to one of Jack Dorsey's gurus.Moom, Keyboard Maestro, Hazel. Good stuff.Natural point of aim.Get the fuck off social media, rely infinitely more on quality sources at longer intervals (for your sanity), and listen to some fiction. Thanks so much for doing that, Audible. Very cool.And thanks so much to Shawn Blanc for doing this.And to Glenn Fleishman for doing this.Really, go visit Tom. He's our favorite Tim.Stay safe, people. But still go fuck yourselves. ❤️
Touch the stream and experience the playlist source of the best Reggae music in mixtape form right here in the New Chat Mixtapes podcast. Bare new roots, culture, dub, dancehall riddim and lyrics this time featuring all the superfire that caught air during Zion Train Radio on 3/6/2020. Check the trackless below... THE SHAKIN’ JAMAICAN - TAKE TEN FIKIR AMLAK + KING ALPHA - OBATALA DUB HOUSE OF RIDDIM - WINDRUSH GENERATION DUB BLACK PROPHET - GOOD NEIGHBORS SUBATOMIC SOUND + SCREECHY DAN - CHAMPION SOUND HEAVYWEIGHT ROCKAZ + JESSE ROYAL - SWEET SENSATION SANCHEZ - NEVER KEEPING SECRETS AMJ COLLECTIVE - NO MATTER WHO YOU ARE DUB ALPHONSO EVANS - GATES OF ZION MICHAEL BUCKLEY - WISH YOU A GOOD DAY FYAH RAINE - HARD WORK TERRY LINEN - PROMISE ME TING SHE - GRACE ROCKLAND - ROAD TO MOUNT ZION Subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes podcast for free wherever podcast content is streaming!
The amazing live recording from the legendary second hour of the YUSH! mix from 3-4-2020. Available right here on the New Chat Mixtapes podcast. Subscribe for free, tell your friends and press play on some music that doesn't suck. Riddim worldwide!!!! RYGIN KING - KING NAH LEAVE La Sista - Curitas (By JGalvez) Sly & Robbie; Dennis Howard - Earthquake Riddim Dennis Howard - Terror Riddim (Instrumental) Natti Natasha Ft. Nicky Jam, Manuel Turizo Y Myke Towers - Despacio (By JGalvez) Kranium - My Way (Intro Clean) Jahvillani - Fire Works Dennis Howard - Turbo Charge Riddim (Instrumental) Famous Twenty - Simpatico Wayne Wonder - Only Me Mr Chicken - Sneak Up Galaxy P - Who Is the King Deano Deann - Party Stunt Riddim Dermy Dee - El Choppo LOUIE V MUSIC - BALMAIN BOUNCE RIDDIM [INSTRUMENTAL] I WAATA - STAY REAL D RUPTION - SPEED OFF POPCAAN - BLOCK TRAFFIC RATIGAN - IRISH SPRING [CLEAN] Crusha Music - Happy Vibes Riddim Ozuna - Preguntas (By JGalvez) POPCAAN - BLOCK TRAFFIC Baby Wayne - Fire Rock Riddim Savage - Tick It Yah Hevs Records - Streets Up Riddim (Instrumental) Messiah - The Box (Spanish Remix) (By JGalvez) (WWW.ELGENERO.COM)
Another scorcher from DJ Pete Bodega this time courtesy of the Superfire playlist mix series. Raving vibes up! Subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes wherever music podcasts are streaming and tell your friends! Episode 397 features a non stop live session of dance floor hitters from artists like: ILLYUS & BARRIENTOS RYAN BLYTHE MORPEI AYLEN ILLUSIONIZE & VISAGE MUSIC M-22 TOM CLASSIC TRIPL EDX OLIVER HELDENS One love!
The best music mixtape podcast in the world is still free!!! Like the superfire playlist that we cultivate for this podcast, original, independent, and free!!! In episode 394 catch the airwave heatwave from hour 2 of the YUSH1 mix from 2-26-2020 with DJ Pete Bodega blending up all the riddim and lyrics he can squeeze into one 60 min session. Sounds like... CHAN DIZZY - MONEY AND GUN BEENIE MAN - MY MONEY CHOP 6IXX - CHEDDA PELE WONG - PHYSICALLY PSYCHO I WAATA - LOVE PLAY D’ANGEL - DANCEHALL TROUBLE MOLE - BREATHE SK - TEK POSITION SHEBA ROYAL - WINE BEN OVER LIL RICK + LEXXUS - BIG BATTY GAL XPLICIT ENTERTAINMENT - GOOD OYE RIDDIM OLATUNJI - PARTY CYAH DONE ROME - GOOD GOOD KIARA SIMONE + PRINCE TAEE - NASTY NAOMI COWAN - CLIMBING ELECTRO BABY + XINI GAMI - PLAYA NEW HOPE CLUB + R3HAB - LET ME SLOW DOWN SQUASH - FEEL NO WAY DARKOVIBES + KILLBEATZ + MR EAZI - COME MY WAY AEROTIQUE + GLACEO - LOSE IT DJ KUNTEH RECORDS - ACCRA TO KINGSTON RIDDIM DEV - DRUNK AGAIN NORA VAN ELKEN - SEQUOIA JP - VIBES Tell your friends, subscribe to New Chat mixtapes for free and link up online!!!
Join the mixtape podcast movement and subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes wherever content is streaming. Here in episode 393 you'll hear the first hour of the YUSH! mix from 2-26-2020 with DJ Pete Bodega at the controls on blends, cuts, scratches, edits, live remix vibrations. Nuff vibes, sounds like: JUANCKY LA DIFERENCIA - TODO PARA BIEN TV NOISE - TURN UP THE BASS BEN SNOW - PRESSURE PLAINA - NEVA SELL ZOTTI - ROSA SHENSSEA - FOREPLAY NGHTMRE & SLANDER - FEELING GUD MONTY - STK MOZEY - LADY KILLAZ DUX N BASS ft. NIKISHA REYES - I NEED YOUR LOVE RICKO BERRY - DRY TEARS RIDDIM KONGOMAN ASH - MONEY EVIL CHYLD ft. DROWSY - BEDTIME NLE CHOPPA - N.W.A. MARIAH - TAXI BAD BUNNY - VETE POINT O - GET RICH VYBZ KARTEL & SIKKA RYMES - CELEBRATION LISA HYPER - MONEY INNA BANK SHAWN STORM - COULDN’T BELIEVE COSCULLUELA - UN AK CALI P - STEP OUT TAINY, DALEX & ALVARO DIAZ - MERA Subscribe for free, tell your friends, new music in the mix weekly! New Chat Mixtapes, since 2008.
Mixtapes flowing like water. Riddim falling like rain. It's already been a hot year for music here in the New Chat Mixtapes podcast stream. So let's turn up the fire some more with episode 391 featuring the first hour of the YUSH! mix from 2-19-2020 with DJ Pete Bodega melting waves from all over the world of music. Open format genre to genre non stop mixing with live edits, blends, and exclusive on the fly remix vibrations. Listen anywhere podcasts are streaming and subscribe for free so you never miss a mix! Tell your friends, vibes this way, New Chat Mixtapes since 2008.
169. Biomedical Informatics, Pharmacogenomics, & Academia feat. Dr. Moom Roosan Intended Audience: EveryoneOn today's episode, we had the pleasure of interviewing Dr. Moom Roosan regarding her role in pharmacy informatics. Dr. Roosan has a unique background of attaining a PhD in Biomedical Informatics in addition to her pharmacy degree. She expands on her passion of teaching and on how we can use technology and apply it to pharmacogenomics in a meaningful way. To reach Dr. Roosan for further questions, you can email her at roosan@chapman.edu Follow us on social media! Twitter: @pharmacyitme Instagram: @pharmacyinformatics LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pharmacyitme/ Website: Pharmacy IT & Me Email: tony@pharmacyitme.com Follow Tony's personal Twitter account at @tonydaopharmd Network with other pharmacists at Pharmacists Connect!http://pharmacistsconnect.com For more information on pharmacy informatics, check out some of the following useful links: ASHP's Section of Pharmacy Informatics and Technology: https://www.ashp.org/Pharmacy-Informaticist/Section-of-Pharmacy-Informatics-and-Technology/ HIMSS Pharmacy Informatics Community: https://www.himss.org/library/pharmacy-informatics Disclaimer: Views expressed are my own and do not reflect thoughts and opinions of any entity with which I have been, am now, or will be affiliated.This podcast is powered by Pinecast.
Tonight Mke McCoy will be talking about his latest book ASTEROIDS!
Tonight Mke McCoy will be talking about his latest book ASTEROIDS!
Tonight Mke McCoy will be talking about his latest book ASTEROIDS!
Tonko House has been blessed with tremendous support from this amazing community of animation industry. One thing we love talking about is "animation and filmmaking." And another thing we are most grateful is our talented circle of friends. Tonkocast is all about what we love about---talking animation with our friends once a month. Website: http://www.tonkohouse.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0JyYj-OHh2xzrpf11zndggInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/tonkohouse/ **Tonkocast is a total DIY operation recorded with non-professional equipment. So excuse our home made quality everyone!
More info about Bobby Chiu!YouTube Site: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCKfG25IfoxX8AT0JjmG2H0QSchoollism Website: https://www.schoolism.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/digitalbobert/Twitter: https://twitter.com/bobbychiu Tonko House has been blessed with tremendous support from this amazing community of animation industry. One thing we love talking about is "animation and filmmaking." And another thing we are most grateful is our talented circle of friends. Tonkocast is all about what we love about---talking animation with our friends once a month.Website: http://www.tonkohouse.com/YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0JyYj-OHh2xzrpf11zndggInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/tonkohouse/**Tonkocast is a total DIY operation recorded with non-professional equipment. So excuse our home made quality everyone!
Tonko House has been blessed with tremendous support from this amazing community of animation industry. One thing we love talking about is "animation and filmmaking." And another thing we are most grateful is our talented circle of friends. Tonkocast is all about what we love about---talking animation with our friends once a month. **Tonkocast is a total DIY operation recorded with non-professional equipment. So excuse our home made quality everyone!
Tonko House has been blessed with tremendous support from this amazing community of animation industry. One thing we love talking about is "animation and filmmaking." And another thing we are most grateful is our talented circle of friends. Tonkocast is all about what we love about---talking animation with our friends once a month.**Tonkocast is a total DIY operation recorded with non-professional equipment. So excuse our home made quality everyone!
Moltz got a battery case for his SE that he hopes doesn't blow up.Lex uses In Your Face for more noticeable notifications on the Mac.Dan has been using Stay to keep windows in their position.Moltz has used Magnet.Moom is another good app for window management.John Siracusa has released Front and Center.Apple acquires Xnor.ai.Marco Arment would like to see low power mode on the Mac.Craig Hockenberry shares a suggestion for saving battery life when you leave your Mac with the lid closed.Our thanks to Kensington, the people who make universal docking stations that are designed to increase productivity. Get access to more ports and make your laptop as powerful as a desktop with HDMI and display link video connectors plus USB 3.0, USB C, and Thunderbolt 3. Visit kensington.com/rebound right now to check out Kensington!
More from the YUSH MIX archives. Some audio from 5-24-17 full of riddim and lyrics lots of folks straight missed. Catch up with the fire, subscribe, stream, download and catch the live YUSH MIX broadcast every Wed on NiceUpRadio.com with DJ Pete Bodega, cool runnins! Subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes for free, worldwide, pretty much wherever awesome music podcasts are available.
The best music from around the world heads to the Zion Train Radio playlist every week. Here's a sampling of the amazing reggae vibes on display from the week of July 12th 2019. Turn up, tune in, tell your friends!!! Subscribe to New Chat Mixtapes wherever dope music podcast is available. Anybody that needs more than a simple playlist, link up!!!
Another episode of New Chat Mixtapes featuring serious riddim selections and lyrical heat folks slept on from the week of April 19th 2017 recorded live during the YUSH mix. Expect the overlooked amazing sounds that the mainstream can never supply you via an algorithm, right here on the New Chat Mixtapes podcast. Subscribe anywhere podcasts are available. Worldwide.
Neste episódio, Cami Andrade fala sobre o papel do RH sob a ótica da psicologia no desenvolvimento de profissionais nos dias atuais. Hoje consultora da Moom e curadora do HackTown, ela conta sobre suas experiências e de como deixou as grandes corporações para orientar pessoas fora delas. Essa mudança foi impulsionada pela falta de perspectiva na adaptação e evolução da área para os tempos hiperconectados de hoje.
Summer/Winter Solstice Critical Mass Meditation.You install HeartMath's Global Coherence Beta App (FREE) and join by entering the access code OpenEarth70. Simple and join all these hearts joining forces in this mass meditation! to create more love for the planet and space!Summer/Winter Solstice occurs on Friday, June 21st at 11:54 AM. The session for meditating Appreciation, Gratitude and Peace is from 11 AM to 12 PM Eastern Time. 1HOUR LONG HEARTFELT MEDIATION!To find out more on this HeartMath institute http://www.heartmath.org and download this Global coherence beta APPHarvey Newman event can be accessed by using the code: OpenEarth70 on this APP. Come experience this heart sensory meditation in masses...
Bizarre news secret moon bases ,doomsday predictions , life after death and mo mo and a lady almost buried alive bizarre news ,filler between the thrillerJoin our facebook group todaydrop on by and have a look at Bizarre podcasts new website https://bizarrepodcast.wixsite.com/mysitehere you can contact the show to submit your stories or just say hi , find out where to listen to the latest episodes instantly also listen on spreaker , podcast addict , castbox and the brand new podcoinhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/2262776690459186/itmss://itunes.apple.com/gb/podcast/bizarre-podcast/id1441262859?mt=2
We talk about Apple Watch Series 4 complications, then launch into a discussion about Mojave and its oddities with permissions. Then we devolve into a global thermonuclear war about Marzipan apps on macOS.LINKSApple Watch: Hello New Faces, Goodbye Old FacesWhy are Apple Watch faces such a mess?Six Colors reviewComments on the Marzipan appsOur experience with Moom and App Store customersResetting the Mojave Accessibility permissions is a PitAPICKS OF THE WEEKRob: Apple Watch Series 4Kirk: Stocks appIan: FreePrints
The creator of the popular series Ruby Tapas and MOOM shares how he determined what to delegate, the importance of taste when creating something, how he determines pricing of a product and how he markets is products.
Adventures in Businessing: Entrepreneurship, Small Business, and a Healthy Dose of Humor
Bonjour! Good to have you back. Have you ever forgotten to click the “record” button when you and your friends get together to record a podcast? Don’t worry; James hasn’t, either. Jeremy introduces this episode’s topic, “How do you test and measure new business ideas or products?” He opens the discussion by stating that he’s fired some people in the last forty-eight hours. Maybe some of you took him up on the offer to hire him as a freelance executioner? If you haven’t, he seems willing and ready to fire people for you; you should get in touch. The group talks about various ways to test and experiment with business ideas. Kevin and James shared about a new product experiment that’s currently in development. Of course, they didn’t give any details, which made it a bit boring, to be honest. If you’re absolutely looking for some nuggets out of that part of the conversation, James suggests that one way of testing ideas is to see if your current user base has a problem that the idea solves. Jeremy also observes that one method of deciding is a simple risk versus reward examination. Rob tells a story, surprise, about someone who is really smart giving him a packet of documents explaining where The Alderman Group should go in the future. This isn’t the first time he’s mentioned this mysterious figure, and he was a bit dodgy when asked if it may have been a future version of himself, al a Back To The Future II. This mentor explained that a good way to think about expanding your business is asking: “What are we paying for that we could do better?” If you know your industry, chances are you know enough to be dangerous in adjacent or ancillary industries that support yours as well. This shadowy “maybe future Rob” mentor seems really smart. On second thought, maybe it wasn’t future Rob… Somehow, Rob gets to the topic of playing ice hockey; apparently it’s really important to skate “where the puck is going rather than to where it is.” Eventually he relates that he spent an hour or two a day for the past several months considering where his business should go and arrived at his infamous “pivot.” What is this “pivot” you ask? Well, stop asking, because Rob ain’t telling. There are secrets all over this podcast. I feel like I’m listening to a much less interesting version of Serial. Jeremy tries to save us from the hockey analogy by interrupting Rob and asking about when it’s better to stay focused on what you’re doing well, rather than branching off into a new business venture. Jeremy introduced the topic and then most of the way through the discussion decides to play devil’s advocate and suggest that maybe you shouldn’t branch out into anything new after all. Kevin talks way too much in this episode, perhaps compensating for the fact that he was basically dead when the previous episode was recorded. I don’t think he’s been able to find a real balance yet. Hopefully he will soon, for all our sakes. Rob relates a heartfelt apology and gives us all a well-deserved lesson in being humble. To be honest, it makes all the other hosts’ recommendations seem a bit shallow in comparison. I decided to take some time to reflect upon how I can become more humble and less self-serving. I’m just kidding, you can find my rebuttal here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UHEfSzUbh3s Jeremy phones in his recommendation this week with a shameless plug for a Wal-Mart plug for his phone. He must have been a Boy Scout because he takes the motto very seriously. Or at least he thinks that you should. To be fair, Jeremy is a very busy man and rolled up late to the recording, so perhaps his lack of preparedness should be expected. James recommends a blog on leadership by Chris Lema. I don’t have anything bad to say about Chris; he’s pretty awesome. He’s the kind of boss you really want: insightful, intelligent, good-looking, you get the picture. If you see an ad for “AIB show notes writer” on indeed.com, then you know where I went. Kevin suggests using a program for Mac called Moom that allows you to automate window arranging. If you struggle with getting all your program windows ordered, Moom may solve your problem. But, let’s face it, if you have that many windows open at once, you’re probably just goofing off anyway. Also, his recommendation is only for Mac OSX. Talk about lazy; he couldn’t even be bothered to research a Windows alternative? Typical. Our Recommendations Rob: TIP - Embrace Humility Kevin: APP - Moom Jeremy: TIP - Be prepared? James: BLOG - Leadership Notes
Recorded at Gothenburg startup hack 2017, a little celebration of being social around coding. Fredrik chats to first Erik Thorelli of the Gothenburg Sketch & design meetup, then Erik Larkö of the Bring your own project Gothenburg group. Topics stretch from what Sketch is and what it can do for you, over group recommendations, to side projects, where to find ideas and how to get over whichever obstacles we put up in our minds to playing with new things. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund och @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed on info@kodsnack.se if you want to write something longer. We read everything you send. If you like Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! 02:19: Sketch & design with Erik Thorelli 22:01: Bring your own project with Erik Larkö Links Gothenburg startup hack The startup panel discussion Erik Thorelli Erik Larkö The Sketch & design meetup Sketch Bionote Moom Invision Airbnb’s tool to render React components to Sketch Got UX The React meetup Dan Abramov Bring your own project Gothenburg John Carmack Gothenburg lounge hackers Helen V. Holmes - critique is terrifying Purple shopper - the purple things buyer Robopong Purple scout Dark web The Docker meetup Got.λ - the functional programming group Papers we love Titles Two Eriks Not so cluttered as an Adobe app Visualizing what the heck you’re trying to build I spend ten minutes adjusting the battery level DevUX Can I use it for something? Maybe you’ve never designed anything before Appealing, even for me Faster than fiddling around with CSS It helps reduce waste A caricature of a designer and a developer Asymmetrical pair programming and designing A compiler for design Feels weird, but in a good way Semi-empty Github projects I want my Github page to be cool Why do you want to be John Cleese? Dare to fail Be a good person I don’t think I’ve ever finished a project Where do you get your ideas from? I steal them Expose yourself to ideas The world doesn’t need another Pong game, but you need to write a Pong game Developing as a developer
Vi börjar med att uppmärksamma dels avsnittets jämna siffra, dels Neochromes avslutande av Advent of code 2016 i Ocaml (och svarar äntligen lite på ett av hans mejl). Neochrome: vill du vara med i ett avsnitt och prata Ocaml och relaterade ämnen? Hojta till i så fall! Sedan pratar vi lite fönsterhantering - kaklande fönsterhanterare och Kristoffers senasate erfarenheter av dem närmare bestämt. Därifrån kommer vi in på två sätt att prata om enkelhet - enkla primitiver kontra kompletta lösningar som gör exakt en sak. Enkla primitiver kontra app-enkelhet, kanske? Vi drömmer om ett Macos som körde hårt på enkla primitiver-spåret. Huvudämnet går också lite i spåret komplexa lösningar på små byggstenar: Kristoffer börjar berätta om sina problem kring datasynkronisering och säkerhetskopiering, de lösningar som finns och som han har provat och de idéer han börjat knacka på för att försöka lösa problemen på ett bra och distribuerat sätt. Ett mer robust och decentraliserat internet och robust decentraliserad synkronisering av all din data, är inte det värdiga projekt så säg? Ett stort tack till Cloudnet som sponsrar vår VPS! Har du kommentarer, frågor eller tips? Vi är @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @iskrig och @bjoreman på Twitter, har en sida på Facebook och epostas på info@kodsnack.se om du vill skriva längre. Vi läser allt som skickas. Gillar du Kodsnack får du hemskt gärna recensera oss i iTunes! Länkar Advent of code Kodsnacks Advent of code-repo Neochromes Ocaml-lösningar på Advent of code 2016 Ocaml ML Arch Linux i3 Ja, Tobias har en jättestor skärm Moom - grundläggande kakling på Macos Kaklande fönsterhanterare för Macos: kwm och chunkwm SE Linux PAM Awesome LXDE Xfce Litestep Salt Ansible Puppet Chef Git annex Symlänkar IPFS Resilio sync Syncthing Fuse archive.org - som vill spegla internet Gittorrent IPNS Titlar Litegrann som Jesus födelse När började det riktiga Kodsnack egentligen? Väldigt decimalnormativt En bedrift oavsett språk Jag lärde mig ML i skolan Extremistiskt funktionellt Kaklande fönsterhanterare Jag kan kakla litegrann i Gnome Jag kan kakla ett fönster åt vänster Grundläggande kakling på Macos Ortogonala axiom En speciallösning för varje läge När man hittar rätt primitiver Så svårt att hitta rätt typ av enkelhet Precis. Nja. Nej. Hashen av en symmetrisk kryptonyckel Jag kan ju skriva det Jag vill ha det helt decentraliserat Det perfekta filsystemet för backup och synk En vision av internet som är mycket mer robust och mycket mer decentraliserat Brytpunkten mellan identitet och data
Robert Kondo and Dice Tsutsumi began their animation careers at Pixar, where they worked on films such as Ratatouille, Toy Story 3, and Monsters University. Their ambitions eventually led them to start their own studio - Tonko House - where they could tell their own stories in their own way. The Dam Keeper was the first result. And seriously, if you haven't yet watched it, take 15 minutes and do that now. On this episode, we talk about all things The Dam Keeper and Moom, the importance of music in Tonko House's storytelling, The Dam Keeper Educational Project, and the Totoro Forest Project. We also dive deep into the themes and symbolism of The Dam Keeper, which - even though it's only 15 minutes - is positively rich with messages.
This week we take a look at the trailers for Moom and Kaze no Yoni before diving into Sailor Moon exhibits, Jump Summers with Universal Studios, and some unfortunately placed Pikachus. Our featured anime are Arcana Famiglia and Infinite Stratos Season 2. #ArcanaFamiglia #InfiniteStratos #Animation #Anime #Cartoons #Keyframe #News #Podcasts #Reviews #TheGeekShow
Those belissimo sons of mamas are back with a hot new pizza-pie. Joined by special guest stars Peter Dinklage, Patrick Stewart and the dancing shiny suited guy from the You Am I clips, they talk North American geography, tailoring and of course another slice of the 1995 Hottest 100. What it all boils down to: straight amore. Honk that like button, fam. SONGS COVERED: 85. Alanis Morissette - Hand in My Pocket 84. You Am I - Cathy's Clown 83. Bjork - Army of Me 82. Mr Blonde - Sunday 81. The Caulfields - Devil's Diary @AndrewM138 @DJYwrites @Hottest100s @nlfharrison www.facebook.com/hottest100sand1000s www.applespiel.com www.davidjamesyoung.com
Those belissimo sons of mamas are back with a hot new pizza-pie. Joined by special guest stars Peter Dinklage, Patrick Stewart and the dancing shiny suited guy from the You Am I clips, they talk North American geography, tailoring and of course another slice of the 1995 Hottest 100. What it all boils down to: straight amore. Honk that like button, fam. SONGS COVERED: 85. Alanis Morissette - Hand in My Pocket 84. You Am I - Cathy's Clown 83. Bjork - Army of Me 82. Mr Blonde - Sunday 81. The Caulfields - Devil's Diary JOIN US ON DISCORD: https://discord.gg/jRrfwB LIKE HOTTEST 100S AND 1000S ON FACEBOOK: hottest100sand1000s FOLLOW HOTTEST 100S AND 1000S ON TWITTER: @Hottest100s AND YOUR HOSTS: @AndrewM138 | @NLFHarrison See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
uBeam vows to prove wireless power is possible, Google cars went 1.2 million miles without a ticket, Windows 10 has a new update and we're talking about the Moom OS X application for moving and zooming windows.
Please Join Me with My House Astrologist Dr Ron Cole bringing ALL Stars ,Planets,Sun and Moom and SKY info Straight to you . Then join the Girls Annabelle Miller , Brenda Brand , and ME For an Hour filled with EVERYTHING Messages
O MacBooku, uri in uri. Povezave Moom app Kabel USB-A na USB-C AnandTech MacBook review The Verge MacBook review Še en MacBook review Apple Watch video navodila Apple Watch navodila Kako deluje merjenje srčnega utripa na Apple Watch Kako natančne so razne zapestnice pri merjenju srčnega utripa ResearchKit podrobnosti Membranje Welcome to Macintosh Simple Beep
Es gibt weit mehr als Dropbox and 1Password das auf einen Mac gehört. Wir diskutieren all die kleinen Helfer und Menu-Apps, die es verdienen als erstes auf einen jungfräulichen Mac installiert zu werden. Wir machen uns in Folge 10 über einen rein hypothetisch leeren Mac her und verkünden, was die Bare Essentials sind die jeder installieren muss. Da wir natürlich nicht alle gleich ticken, werden darauf hin ein paar individuelle Extras aufgezählt, welche jeder von uns mental als essentiell abgespeichert hat. Lieber Fluggast, wenn dir das Gehörte gefällt oder dir Sorgenfalten auf die edle Stirn fabriziert, dann haben wir etwas für dich: iTunes Bewertungen. Überbleibsel giveaway Unser gigantöses _giveaway__ hat seine Gewinner gefunden: Die Marked 2 gesponsort von Brett Terpstra himself gehen an: @das_schaf und Angela Meyhöfer. “Delight is in the Details“ von Shawn Blanc dürfen sich @tobiasbrummer und @wissmann für lau ordern. Die Fournova Lizenzen von Tower 2 gehen an Thomas Schlosser und @ningwie. Wir freuen uns, dass dieses Mal mehr Leute mitgemacht haben und einige auf Facebook gar den Link geteilt haben mit ihren Freunden. Falls ihr es dieses Mal nicht geschafft habt was abzustauben, harrt aus, denn heute hauen wir zwei TextExpander Lizenzen von Smile als giveaway raus. Eigentlich sollten hier jetzt noch ein paar Überbleibsel stehen, aber Piloten sind auch nur Menschen und machen beispielsweise beim durchgehen der Checkliste Fehler. Falls ihr uns nur hört ist euch das wahrscheinlich gar nicht aufgefallen, aber hier wird ungeschönt und brutal die Wahrheit ans Tageslicht gefördert in Form von decodierten Nullen und Einsen, die live und direkt auf euern’ Bildschirm gezaubert werden. Magie (wenn auch schwarze). Überschallneuigkeiten Das Navdy Heads-up Display ist ein beeindruckendes Gadget mit enger iOS und Android Integration und eignet sich perfekt zum Nachrüsten in euern Skoda. Das Schmankerl hat Untertstützung für Gesten (in der Luft) und Spracherkennung an Bord. Zur Zeit kann man es für 299$ vorbestellen (später sind es 499$ im Verkauf). Als Lieferdatum ist Anfang 2015 angegeben. Alpha und Omega Jeder Macintosh-mit-der-Maus-und-Tastatur Bediener kennt die Situation: Der erste Start und man fängt an seine Lieblingsanwendungen zu installieren. Sven hat schon einmal im Hinblick auf unsere heutige Sendung vor einem Jahr seinen Blog Post The Fresh Mac Install veröffentlicht und verweist zugleich auf die extra-nerdige Version von Brett Terpstra der ebenfalls zeigt, was auf einen neuen Mac bei ihm so draufkommt. Der gemeinsame Nenner Irgendwie sind wir uns ja doch ein wenig einig. Ohne Dropbox geht gar nix. Wir alle installieren die App zu aller aller erst und genießen dann, wie unsere wichtigen Dateien und Einstellungen für das System ab sofort vollautomatisch synchronisiert werden auf unsere Festplatte und der Kaffee automatisch heiß und frisch gebrüht überbracht wird. Damit wir uns im Der Ubercast Adminbereich einloggen können und dort Unruhe Stiften können wir als nächstes 1Password runtergeladen. Ab dem Moment haben wir Zugriff auf alle Logins für Webanwendungen, sonstige webbasierte Dienste und die erworbenen Lizenzen. De facto, auch ohne 1Password geht es nicht. Das war es auch schon. Episode Ende. … nein, nicht wirklich. Aber da es ab hier wieder anfängt Turbulenzen durch die Turbine zu hageln, folgt nun eine grobe Unterteilung. Die zweite Stufe: Launcher Damit die Muskelreflexe nicht ins Leere gehen während man Mac per Tastaturkürzel bedient muss natürlich der Launcher des Vertrauens her. Bei Sven ist das Alfred 2. Andreas kommt eigentlich mit Apple Spotlight gut aus und stuft Launcher per se nicht unbedingt als Teil der Bare Essentials ein. Irgendwann installiert er aber doch LaunchBar, weil dass sich so gehört. Patrick fährt zweigleisig. Er hat ⌘-SPACE für LaunchBar reserviert, was auch eine der ersten Apps ist, welche er installiert. So kann er spielend durch die Ordner auf seinem Mac springen – was er mit Alfred nicht gut kann, da die App leider keine fuzzy search Funktion hat (z.B. wird der Teekränzchen Ordner nicht gefunden, wenn man nur Kränzchen eingibt). Etwas später folgt dann aber trotzdem Alfred 2 mit ⌥-SPACE, weil viele der Skripte und Workflows von den Nutzern einfach so gut sind. Wie wichtig uns die Launcher sind verraten die Zahlen, denn die Lügen ja bekanntlich nie: Alfreds Sven oder Svens Alfred wurde seit dem 4. Juni 2013 insgesamt 7.008 mal aufgerufen, damit drückt er seinen ⌃+SPACE Shortcut 16,8 am Tag. Patricks Alfred ist reaktiviert seit dem 25. Juli 2013 und er hat den Butler 2.190 mal mit den Glöckchen herbeigeklingelt. Im Durchschnitt sind das läppische 5,7 mal am Tag. Dafür haut er bei LaunchBar so richtig in die Tasten: Durchschnittlich 110x pro Tag (Spitzenwert: 214). Andreas ist wie sein Co-Pilot “Kombinator” (die Spitznamen werden von LaunchBar ausgesucht nach dem Nutzerverhalten), beide lieben die Send to und Instant Send Funktionen. Andreas kommt auf 65 Aufrufe pro Tag (Spitzenwert: 207). Damit Patrick diese Statistik beim nächsten Jubiläum von Der Übercast zur Hand hat und vergleichen kann, ob sich was geändert hat, werdet ihr nun zugescreenshotet: Link zum Bild: Launcher Statistik Futter für den Launcher Sven’s favorisierte Alfred Workflows (siehe auch #UC007 zum Thema LaunchBar): Rdio Caffeine VPN Toggle Evernote Add to Fantastical Alfred for Trello Translation für Google Translate Nebenbei nutzt er auch Suchfunktionen im Beruf und halt auch, um die eigenen Artikel auf der Webseite flott zu Tage zu fördern. Andreas nutzt naturellement die eigenen LaunchBar Actions, daneben noch die Livesuchen für dict.cc, Merriam-Webster und diese fantastische Spotlight Search Action. Bei Patrick kommt LaunchBar skripttechnisch nicht so zum Einsatz. Hauptsächlich nutzt er die Websuchen von StackExchange, GitHub, Amazon, eBay und Co. Die Google Maps suchen nutzt er ganz oft, sei es um die Route direkt anzuzeigen oder einen Ort zu suchen. Alfred versüßt ihm die studentische Tätigkeit mit BibDesk Search, BibQuery und Skimmer. Daneben kommt noch vom Internet-Buddy Gabe Weatherhead der Application Buckets mit auf die stets-im-Einsatz Liste – ein Horter und App-Messi braucht so was. TextExpander (inkl. giveaway) Weil wir alle einigermaßen faul sind gehört auch Smile Software TextExpander zu einen der ersten Apps die installiert werden. Das ist nützlich und nicht zum Lachen. Pfui Andreas und Patrick! Aber deswegen wird ja nicht gelacht. Auch nicht, weil wir zwei Lizenzen für das tüchtige Helferlein TextExpander abzugeben haben. Wer wissen will, warum bei einem Audioformat wie ‘nem Podcast brav melden wie in der Schule nix bringt, der hört am besten rein an dieser Stelle. Zurück zur Tagesordnung: Bei Sven sind die Markdown Service Tools von Brett Terpstra integriert und SearchLink, ebenfalls aus dem Hause Terpstra. Das man als Poweruser Snippets in andere Snippets integrieren kann verrät euch Andreas. Dieser packt Shell Scripts und AppleScripts zusammen und triggert was das Zeug hält. Daneben findet Andreas die Autokorrekturgruppen der Deutschen Sprache noch ganz nützlich und das diese bei ihm gar auf auto-update gestellt sind. Patrick tut kund, dass es für in als 30:70 Deutsch-Englisch-Schreiber oft ein Ärgernis ist, die Autokorrekturgruppen manuell von übereifrigen Snippets zu befreien. Geschäftstiger (roar!!) Sven beichtet derweil, dass er den Namen vom Chef automatisch korrigieren lässt, damit er nicht wie der letzte Horst bei den wichtigen Emails dasteht. Anbei dazu ein Post von Dr. Drang der euch zeigt, was so mit geht mit einer Skript in Skript Lösung: Modular URL shortening TextExpander snippets. Was als Blogger nicht fehlen darf in der Ideenschmiede für Snippets ist Shaun Blancs Idee Namen aus der Technologie-Szene automatisch zu korrigieren. Anmerkung der Redaktion zum letzten Tipp und dem Thema “Nerd-Shaming”: Dies ist auch ein Tipp an Sven, der in den Show Notes eine App immer wieder ganz individuell geschrieben hat. TextExpander giveaway Was gibt es abzustauben??? 2 Lizenzen für TextExpander von Smile Wie nehme ich teil? (1) Hört euch den Flug UC#010 an (2) Werdet sozial aktiv: Auf allen sozialen Netzwerken findet ihr einen speziellen Post zu unserem Gewinnspiel. Es gilt diese frohe Botschaft zu verkünden. Es reicht sich ein soziales Netzwerk auszusuchen, dem Übercast dort zu folgen, bzw. zu liken Auf Facebook den Beitrag teilen und liken Oder auf Twitter den entsprechenden Tweet retweeten Es geht sogar bei Google+ plusen und sharen Oder bei App.net reposten Mit diesen zwei Schritten seid ihr im Pool und vielleicht einer der glücklichen Gewinner. Klar, wenn ihr auf mehreren Netzwerken aktiv werden, so steigert ihr damit auch eure Chancen. Teilnahmeschluss ist Sonntag, der 22. August 2014. Die Bekanntgabe der Gewinner erfolgt dieses Mal direkt und persönlich im Sozialen Kanal der Kandidaten, da unser Aufnahmeplan gerade etwas unregelmäßiger aussieht. Die Helfer im Hintergrund Wir nähern uns der Nicht-Essentiell-trotzdem-cool Ecke. Derjenige mit dem Micro auf Senden ist gerade Patrick. Dieser merkt an, dass bevor der ein neues System aufsetzt, er als erstes seine TaskPaper-Liste zu rate zieht: Setup a new system: - Go through this list and adjust it (add missing pieces, etc.) - Make a SuperDuper! backup - Optional: Rename Hard Drives - Adjust path to volume/file location - Adjust paths in Hazel scripts - Adjust paths in Keyboard Maestro scripts - Adjust paths in TextExpander scripts - Adjust paths in Services - Adjust paths in Scripts - Adjust paths in Workflows - Adjust paths in GeekTool - Make/replace SymLinks - LaunchBar - LittleSnitch - 1Password - Dropbox - Drag and drop applications from Backup - Migrate Preferences from Backup - Geektool's Preferences - Transmission's Preferences and Applications Support Files - Dictionaries from `/Library/Dictionaries` - Install the rest of the applications manually Was aus der Liste entfernt wurde sind Hyperlinks zu den jeweiligen Ordnern oder Dateien auf seiner Festplatte – ist halt übersichtlicher so. Als nächstes installiert Patrick LittleSnitch, damit Marco und Manfred von Objective Development stolz auf ihn sind. EXKURS Des weiteren wird der Schummler-Tag eingeleitet. Denn trotz dem Fakt, dass wir seit Folge 7 Picks eingeführt haben, bleibt einem ja nur ein Pick pro Show. Patrick nutzt das aus schamlos aus, um die Maschine vom Kurs abzubringen. Er stellt kurz eine weitere Alternative zu Illustrator vor: Affinity Designer ist seit kurzem in der öffentlichen Beta und will ähnlich wie Sketch die Leute aus der Adobe-Hölle befreien. Wir drücken die Daumen. Zurück auf Kurs. Die Queen Sven ist not amused und fordert Stringenz. Ne, als Vielflieger ist er sowas natürlich gewöhnt und lässt Nachsicht und spendiert eine Runde Tomatensaft auf’s Haus. Also… nvALT kommt bei Patrick als nächstes auf die Kiste. Da man hier schlank und schnell seine Notizen ablegen kann und finden kann. Sein Setup sieht so aus und wird per Dropbox auf alle Devices geschickt. Mit Hazel, dem Putz- und Räumungsdienst von Noodlesoft holt sich Sven die Roboter auf den Mac. Andreas gibt geradewegs weitere seiner Lieblingsregeln für den Donwloadordner zum besten: runtergeladene HTML und .exe löschen runtergeladene Videos umbenennen DMG - Lizenzbestimmungen Dialog unterbinden Da er ein netter Kerl ist, gibt es auch einen Download-Link für euch. Und wo wir schon gerade bei der Roboterfraktion gelandet sind, da darf Keyboard Maestro natürlich nicht fehlen. Hier ein Auszug aus Andreas seinem Nutzverhalten-Katalog: Die zeitlerische Markdown Library. Als Networker vor dem Herren werden jeden Montag die Xing Events automatisch geparst und für in Frage kommende Termine wird eine URL generiert. Effizienz und Selbstanalyse Skripts für die eigenen Prioritäten, Mindnote Map, etc. Zudem werden im Büro alle 10 Minuten Facebook, Google+, Twitter und Minecraft Tabs im Browser geschlossen. Wir stellen noch einmal klar: Keyboard Maestro kann mehr als der Name suggeriert. Es können z.B. zeit- und datumsabhängige Trigger genutzt werden, um Skripte anzustoßen, per GUI-Programmierung kann man eine Reihe an virtuellen Mausklicks erstellen (um ein Programm ohne AppleScript-Unterstützung zu skripten) und vieles mehr. Die App ist bei Patrick ebenfalls essentiell und spielt ganz oben in seiner Top 10 mit. Sein Steckenpferd und Haupteinsatz zweck ist die Palettenfunktion von Keyboard Maestro. Das sind Listen mit selbst hinterlegten Kurzbefehlen, Skripten oder was auch immer. So muss er sich nicht wie bei TextExpander ‘zig Snippets merken, sondern zündet in jedem Programm meist den selben Shortcut, welcher ihm dann eine Programmspezifische Auswahl an Befehlen zur Verfügung stellt. Er muss dann nur noch aus einer Liste auswählen, was er den nun eigentlich für eine Rakete in die Luft jagen will. Hier ein Auszug aus seinen Lieblingspaletten: Markdown Maestro Guide – genauso wie Andreas seine Library, nur ganz anders (und nicht so up to date). Notizen erzeugen aus dem Stegreif, dem Browser, Clipboard oder einer Textselektion: Notes Palette Filing Macro Stichwort nvALT: A Bulletproof ‘Open nvALT Notes with’ Method (für die Leute mit mehr als einem Text Editor). Noch mehr Helfer(lein) Sven möchte Caffeine nicht missen, denn die App verhindert, dass ihm der Bildschirms bei Präsentationen einschläft (oder wann auch immer der Bildschirm nicht schnarchen gehen soll). Die Augen massiert und entspannt bekommt Patrick von F.lux. Die App tönt euren Bildschirm in einen ganz gemächlich in einen wärmeren Farbton, sobald die Sonne untergeht. Macht ihr Überstunden, so wird’s noch wärmer. Beim Thema Farbschema fällt Patrick auch gerade ein, wie toll Solarized eigentlich ist und das man auch mal testet wie hässlich Path Finder aussehen kann. Ein Mann und sein Text Editor. Bei Andreas ist das Vi aka Vim bei Patrick FoldingText (Markdown schreiben ohne Markdown zu sehen) und Sublime Text (für alles andere). Als nächsten auf der Tagesordnung bei einem neuen Mac steht bei Patrick “das Dock schöner machen”. Ganz im Geiste Tine Wittlers werden hier die Grundregeln abgearbeitet: Nur die Apps ins Dock, die eh immer offen sind. Das Dock gehört UNTEN hin und automatisch versteckt. Anders geht’s nicht. Ist alles an Ort und stelle, darf man “Spacer” erstellen per Terminal.app: defaults write com.apple.dock persistent-apps -array-add '{tile-data={}; tile-type="spacer-tile";}' Will man die Space auf der Dokumentenseite des Docks (da wo der Mülleimer ist) haben: defaults write com.apple.dock persistent-others -array-add '{tile-data={}; tile-type="spacer-tile";}' Um das Dock gefüllt schneller aufspringen zu lassen, kann man das Delay abstellen. Öffnet wieder das Terminal und kopiert die Folgende Zeile rein, danach Return drücken: defaults write com.apple.dock autohide-delay -float 0 && killall Dock Zum wiederherstellen des ursprünglichen Verhaltens: defaults delete com.apple.dock autohide-delay && killall Dock Noch mehr Tipps für Tüftler gibt’s hier. Wer viele Fenster offen hat und Fechner heißt nutzt Moom von Many Tricks. Wer Fechner oder Welker heißt und viele Apps in der Menüleiste hat braucht Bartender. Dann ist endlich Ordnung in der Menüleiste. Patrick legt auch die Hand für die App ins Feuer. Eine weitere Empfehlung kommt von Patrick. Choosy bewirbt sich als “schlauerer Standardbrowser für OS X”. Es findet von alleine heraus, welchen Browser ihr gerade am meisten nutzte, kann aber auch eine Liste an Webadressen von alleine immer in eurem Zweitbrowser öffnen, z.B. wenn ihr Online-Banking betreibt ist das ein zusätzlicher Sicherheitsfaktor. Klappt wunderbar in Kombination mit einem Launcher. Mindmaps in schön und ohne Käse. Mindnode hat laut Andreas nix überflüssiges und man bekommt damit ohne Extrafunktionen schnell was auf die Beine gestellt. Die anderen beiden nicken zustimmend. VLC gehört bei Videoprofi Andreas ebenfalls auf den Mac. Es schluckt alle Formate die ihr auf es werft und kann auch ohne zu Mucken konvertieren. Unsere Picks Auch hier wird wieder geschummelt. Andreas hat es Patrick gleich getan und mogelt unverschämt noch einen zweiten Pick rein… bis auf das er hier das Unschuldslamm mimt. ☝ Andreas: iStat Menus - alle System-Statistiken in der Menüleiste, DIY TRX - Fitnessgeräte selbst schrauben. Patrick: DropShare - Droplr/CloudApp auf dem eigenen Server. Sven: Timeful — Aufgaben im Kalendar planen; Selbstlernend mit Gewohnheiten-Unterstützung In Spenderlaune? Wir haben Flattr und PayPal am Start und würden uns freuen.
Assign It To Me Podcast #40 Intro Yahoo Email Hacked Superbowl Weekend Blog Posts How I lost my $50,000 Twitter Name Apple - Thirty Years of Mac Bill Gates Topic Grappling with overly complex Data Warehousing and Reporting solutions. Picks of the Week: Vince: Sony 4k Ultra Short Throw Projector Steven: Moom, f.lux
I dagens AppSnack pratar vi om kvalitetskrav på Foxconn, Angry Birds Star Wars, 1-årsdagen för Steve Jobs bortgång och självklart iPad mini. Glöm inte att du kan följa #AppSnack på Twitter @apptvse eller Facebook. Du kan även lyssna på programmet som podcast via iTunes där vi också uppskattar om du går in och betygsätter oss. Medverkande i veckans avsnitt är Jakob Hultman, aka @raekob, Tobias Hieta, aka @tobiashieta, Michael P. Gartner, aka @bigmajk och Linus Larsson, aka @iamlinus. Programmet leds som vanligt av Calle Gisselsson, aka @gisselsson. BRÖD TEXT MED FÄRDIGA LÄNKAR Veckans Nyheter Ökade kvalitetskrav på Foxconn-fabrikerna. China Labour Watch (http://bit.ly/SVM9nB) Reuters (http://reut.rs/SG4vyx). Apple förlänger gratisperioden med större iCloud för tidigare MobileMe-användare till siste september 2013. http://www.readability.com/articles/mg8siz5s Angry Birds möter Star Wars. http://www.readability.com/articles/utay02qo Veckans Varning Fake-app på iTunes topplista: Lock Secret and Folder Screen Production http://itunes.apple.com/se/app/las-din-skarm/id549776185?mt=8 http://mobil.aftonbladet.se/a/www/15562418 Veckans Lyssnarfråga Finns det någon iPad-app för att läsa och skriva Word-dokument som sedan kan exporteras till en PC? Veckans Snackis På ettårsdagen av Steve Jobs bortgång visste sörjandet, eller kanske snarare firandet, av ettårsdagen inga gränser. Alla bloggar, sajter och tidningar med mera körde krönikor, anekdoter, minnesreportage, "bortglömda videos" med mera. Apple själva la upp en hyllningsvideo på sin startsida med musik av cellisten Yo Yo Ma och på så kallad gräsrotsfansen bidrog "fansen" med allt från Steve Jobs Gangnam ( http://bit.ly/SMfIrb ) till galna tatueringar (http://bit.ly/VNIQn0) och minnesdatorer (http://bit.ly/SG3wOI). Vi diskuterar ifall det gick överstyr och hur vår panel sörjde i fredags. Majks favoritminne: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=D1R-jKKp3NA Linus tips om Steve Jobs besök på Lunds Universitet: Del 1: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i3InPa3Bzdg Del 2: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F3AffJTRPvc Veckans Snackis 2 iPad mini Blir det en iPad mini den 17 oktober, hur kommer den i så fall att se ut, och vilket sandpapper bör vi använda för att fila ned våra pekfinger? http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443635404578033684191275730.html?ru=yahoo&mod=yahoo_hs Om Wall Street Journal hade rätt i att produktionen satte igång nu i september samtidigt som Apple har svårt att möta efterfrågan på iPhone 5 kanske det inte är så konstigt att arbetarna på Foxconn har det lite körigt? http://www.reuters.com/article/2012/10/06/us-apple-foxconn-idUSBRE8941JF20121006 Källor: http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10000872396390443635404578033684191275730.html?ru=yahoo&mod=yahoo_hs http://macworld.idg.se/2.1038/1.469379 http://www.dailymail.co.uk/sciencetech/article-2212664/iPad-mini-rumours-Apples-Asian-suppliers-begun-mass-production.html Veckans Spel The Amazing Spider-Man http://itunes.apple.com/se/app/the-amazing-spider-man/id524359189?mt=8 Veckans OSX tips/program Linus pratar om Moom. Den smarta fönsterhanteraren som gör livet enklare. Länk till Moom http://itunes.apple.com/se/app/moom/id419330170?mt=12 Veckans Produktivitetstips MindNode http://itunes.apple.com/se/app/mindnode/id312220102?mt=8
In this episode of The Treehouse Show, Nick Pettit (@nickrp) and Jason Seifer (@jseifer) talk about HTML5 Boilerplate, the new Firefox beta, and the app review of the week is Moom.
In this episode of The Treehouse Show, Nick Pettit (@nickrp) and Jason Seifer (@jseifer) talk about HTML5 Boilerplate, the new Firefox beta, and the app review of the week is Moom.
Breakbot - Baby I'm Yours (Aeroplane Remix) Grum - Through The Night (Swiss Menergy Remix) Groove Armada - History (Grum Remix) Fenech Soler - Lies (Grum Remix) Aeroplane - My Enemy (Rex The Dog Remix) Chemical Brothers - Swoon (Don Diablo Remix) Aeroplane - Save Me Now Edwin Van Cleef - Triton Oh Land - Son of A Gun (Yuksek Remix) Foster The People - Call It What You Want - (Ocelot Remix) Fear Of Tigers - The Adventures Of Pippi Longstrump (Edwin Van Cleef Remix) Jay Lamar & Jesse Oliver - Opal Jay Lamar & Jesse Oliver - Diamonda (Bright Shades + Justin Faust + Original Mix) Grum - Through The Night (Tom De Neef's Jacksqaud Remix) Senor Stereo Feat Danny Daze - Unintentional (U - Tern Remix) Grum - Through The Night (Grum Club Mix) Passion Pit - Sleepyhead (Grum Remix)
Os hablo sobre BundleHunt, un paquete de software de esos que últimamente crecen como setas. La verdad es que me he cansado un poco de todos ellos pero este merece la pena, y mas si no tenéis todavía Little Snitch instalado en vuestro ordenador; es uno de los básicos (por lo menos para mi lo es) y por su precio os compráis el paquete entero que además tiene otros tesoros como MacPilot, BannerZest y PulpMotion, además de libros sobre diseño web, vectores,… Y todo ello por $49,99. He incluido en esta entrada un anuncio del paquete, si pincháis sobre él y compráis me llevaré una pequeña comisión lo cual siempre ayuda aunque ya sabéis que podéis hacerlo directamente en su página si lo preferís. Además hoy os presento a una compañía de software para Mac, ManyTricks, que me ha enamorado con dos de sus pequeños programas, Moom y Desktop Curtain. No estoy afiliada a ellos ni me llevo absolutamente nada pero ¡¡estoy encantada, sobre todo con Moom!!. Al final una felicitación para todos vosotros.
In this episode we take an alternative look at the fallout from WWDC, discuss the pitfalls of iTunes vouchers and tell you how you can be one of the first to get an exclusive behind the scenes tour of MacBites HQ BackBites Batterygate Mobee Magic Charger ChatBites WWDC Complete list of iOS5 new features Notification Centre Notification Centre linen Reboot to Safari Mode in Lion Return of the Pirates of Silicon Valley? Yesterday's banned apps are tomorrow's new feature Is Apple stealing features from developers? iTunes Vouchers: How to Multiply Your Online Spending Power Activating stolen iTunes cards Don't trust iTunes cards Software Review Moom (iTunes link) Moom (developer's site) BiteBack Thanks to everyone who Liked the MacBites Facebook page, voted for their favourite outtake and submitted their MacLoveBites - please keep 'em coming! Sign up to the MacBites Mail newsletter and get to see behind the scenes at MacBites Elaine's Webinar 30th June, 19:00 GMT (20:00 BST) - Showcase Your Images. Register for your FREE ticket Not in the UK? Check the start time in your part of the world with our webinar timezone website
some creepy things going on here in the dark!! ..watch your head!Tracklist:01_Jun.OGG 4.4M02_Taod.OGG 5.7M03_Parti.OGG 2.3M04_Moo.OGG 4.8M05_MooM.OGG 2.1M06_Hui.OGG 3.6MListen:StreamInternet Archive:http://archive.org/details/tpd079Download:[tpd079] Take Pills Die - 07.02.22 I'll See You When My Battery Dies (ogg) [tpd079] Take Pills Die - 07.02.22 I'll See You When My Battery Dies (mp3)
some creepy things going on here in the dark!! ..watch your head!Tracklist:01_Jun.OGG 4.4M02_Taod.OGG 5.7M03_Parti.OGG 2.3M04_Moo.OGG 4.8M05_MooM.OGG 2.1M06_Hui.OGG 3.6MListen:StreamInternet Archive:http://archive.org/details/tpd079Download:[tpd079] Take Pills Die - 07.02.22 I'll See You When My Battery Dies (ogg) [tpd079] Take Pills Die - 07.02.22 I'll See You When My Battery Dies (mp3)