Deprecated instant messaging client
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Welcome to another episode of the Testing Peers Podcast. On this episode, Chris, Russell, David and Simon talk about how we can ensure Quality has a seat at the table of discussions, projects and all such scenarios where it should be there.Before that, Mr Banter (Chris) leads us off down a wonderful trail of memories of social media when it all began, everything from MySpace, Bebo, Friends Reunited and MSN Messenger covered and of course, the old Twitter during the pandemic.Simon leads us into a the topic, and mentions a comment Stephen Platten made on one of Chris's posts about a Culture of Quality on LinkedIn. Here is Stephen's comment:"How do you see us making sure we get our feet at the table so to speak? How do we get senior stakeholders to take notice?"Of course it depends on the context, and what influence is needed. It's also about who needs to care? Depending on the context and the problem you are having. The best way to get started is to look at engaging your senior leaders or the leadership level that make decisions in the context. It may be a need to educate and showcase the value that can be provided by being involved. The Peers dive into their own experiences and ways to help influence the decision makers to include a voice of quality.What challenges have you had in this scenario?contactUs@TestingPeers.comTwitter (https://twitter.com/testingpeers)LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/testing-peers)Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/testingpeers/)Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/TestingPeers)We're also now on GoodPods, check it out via the mobile app storesIf you like what we do and are able to, please visit our Patreon to explore how you could support us going forwards: https://www.patreon.com/testingpeersThanks to our brand new sponsors – NFocus Testing.nFocus are a UK based software testing company. They've been supporting businesses for 24 years by providing services that include burst resource, accelerated test automation, performance testing and fully managed testing services. In 2021, they launched a Test Automation Academy to create amazing testers and they've now created jobs for 48 people in our industry in just under three years!nFocus were a big part of PeersCon in 2024 and 2025, really grateful for all they do supporting the Testing Peers.www.nfocus.co.uk and info@nfocus.co.uk for anyone wanting to get in touch.Support the show
From Art School to Agency Owner April Edwards didn't begin her career in marketing. She started in art school, eager to design and create for a living. During the internet boom, however, she learned how to code—and that changed everything. Her early work included designing emoticons for MSN Messenger at American Greetings Interactive. [...] The post How April Edwards Built a 7-Figure Agency in the Deck Building Niche appeared first on Seven Figure Agency.
TTO-212 Husker Talk, Recruiting, Pop Tarts Dumb Sponsorships, 18 Week Season, Kansas City, KC hate, MSN Messenger, Manhattan Kansas, Smart Dust, Thirteen, Kids, Fleshlight Cum Keeper, EDC, Feminism Satire, Buying Body Parts, Metal Band Names, Cattle Decapitation, Breathalyser, Nebraska Cornhusker Balloon School, Polo Invented, Submarines, Castlevania, Squid, Stanford Prison Experiment, Russian 9 Year Old, Docu-series, Molly Cyrus Song Miley, KottonMouth Kings
Es ist die erste Sendung nach der Hochzeit und vielleicht verzeiht ihr es uns, dass wir gerade noch ausschlafen und dafür eine tolle Sonderausgabe der "Dachboden Revue" ins Rennen schicken, die wir vor aufgezeichnet haben. Trotzdem sollt Ihr sogar in dieser Folge einen Einblick in unsere After-Hochzeitsplanung bekommen und dazu jede Menge Spaß, denn es wird wieder gequizzt! In dieser Ausgabe knüpft sich Hobby-Quizmaster Mitch Maurices Wissen in Sachen "2000er Jahre" vor und das ist erstaunlich... SCHLECHT! Umso stärker ist Maurice Vorliebe für den ZDF Fernsehgarten und dass wirst du beim Hören merken! Und weil es trotzdem die erste Sendung nach der Hochzeit ist, gibt es zu Beginn der Sendung gleich zwei Überraschungen für die Jungs. Viel Spqaß beim Hören.
ICQ, MSN Messenger e todos aqueles programas que nos formaram como pós-jovems que se comunicam pela Internet. A maneira como você usa Whatsapp, Telegram e até redes sociais tem a ver com o que aprendemos com eles no passado? Assine a newsletter Imagina Só, de Nathália Pandeló Newsletter Pós-Jovem Pós-Jovem nas redes: Instagram | Twitter Canal do Whatsapp: Acesso aos Bastidores Assine a newsletter Design: Nayara Lara Trilha: Peartree
Rob and Lach rate and discuss doing a burnout, sharing tea bags, repechage events, MSN messenger, torrenting, kimchi, no TV households, living in the city, driving one handed + crying in public. Get 15% OFF SXSW Sydney Badges using our code here. Apply to join our 'MOVE' Founder Program here. Subscribe to our Dream Big Social Club NEWSLETTER to stay up to date with all things Funny Business + more ~ https://dreambigsocialclub.beehiiv.com/subscribe Web ~ https://linktr.ee/funnybusinesspodcast Instagram ~ https://www.instagram.com/funnybusiness_au/ LinkedIn ~ Lach / Rob CONTACT ME (Lach) ~ lach@dreambigsocialclub.com
Brian Fanzo is a digital futuirst who is helping out the dev team from PepeCoin, the OG meme coin community working to unlock utility and innovation to grow Web3 adoption. There is much, much more to Pepecoin than a fun meme, listen and learn. Why you should listen Pepecoin was originally launched in 2016 by a group of crypto OGs. Originally it was launched using its own proof-of-work blockchain network. Due to controversy surrounding the Pepe the Frog meme after the 2016 presidential election, a handful of exchanges forcefully renamed the Pepecoin project with the ticker "MEMETIC" on their platforms to be politically correct. At the time, the project was the only other memecoin except for Dogecoin and it quickly grew in popularity. In 2017, it even attracted the attention of Vitalik Buterin himself. After several years of operating its own blockchain network, the Pepecoin project decided to migrate to the Ethereum blockchain to take advantage of EVM smart contracts and DEX platforms where their ticker could not be arbitrarily changed. A group of opportunistic individuals saw the Pepecoin migration announcements and frontran it by deploying the $PEPE token that many of you know today - even going as far as to steal the original Pepecoin logo, until they were forced to remove it due to copyright. The OG $PEPECOIN contributors were fortunately no strangers to injustice. After all, they are battle-hardened crypto OGs who survived the great meme war of 2016. So rather than wallowing in their sorrows, they embarked on a journey to reclaim what is rightfully theirs by devving their way to the top. Since then, they have released: PepeOS: A web application inspired by vintage operating systems Pepe Paint: A unique draw-to-NFT platform and marketplace that empowers artists to create & monetize their talent Kek Bot: An advanced AI trading engine that converts natural language into automated trades & rewards users for training it BasedAI: A custom layer 1 blockchain network for ZK-LLMs and smart contracts Pepe Messenger: A vintage MSN Messenger themed chat application for decentralized, E2E encrypted, wallet-to-wallet instant messaging with much more on the way! Pepecoin is throwing a wrench in the well-oiled influencer shitcoin factory that churns out copypasta tokens to dump on unsuspecting average Joes. Instead, they are demonstrating that meme coins can and should be coupled with innovation and meaningful utility. You can either support the status quo by keeping the influencer assembly line running, or you can be part of history by joining the journey to becoming the first meme coin to be simultaneously considered a top-5 network. The #Pepening is inevitable Supporting links Stabull Finance Pepecoin Andy on Twitter Brave New Coin on Twitter Brave New Coin If you enjoyed the show please subscribe to the Crypto Conversation and give us a 5-star rating and a positive review in whatever podcast app you are using.
Angelo is back from vacation and he avoided the Crowdstrike fiasco by one day, MSN Messenger celebrates its 25th birthday, and Japan seems to be the latest UFO hotspot.
This week, we chat with Bart van den Akker, the man behind one of Europe's largest retro computer collections at The HomeComputerMuseum in the Netherlands. Learn about the unique features and challenges of maintaining and restoring vintage machines, including the day when a 6-meter truck delivered the world's largest PC-Games collection. Bart shares insights on recreating nostalgic experiences like LAN setups with MSN Messenger, the significance of the Dutch-designed Estatos computer, and the role of piracy in software preservation. Contents: 00:00 - The Week's Retro News Stories 36:36 - Bart van den Akker Interview Please visit our amazing sponsors and help to support the show: Bitmap Books - https://www.bitmapbooks.com/products/the-art-of-the-box Take your business to the next level today and enjoy 3 months of Shopify for £1/month: https://shopify.co.uk/retrohour We need your help to ensure the future of the podcast, if you'd like to help us with running costs, equipment and hosting, please consider supporting us on Patreon: https://theretrohour.com/support/ https://www.patreon.com/retrohour Get your Retro Hour merchandise: https://bit.ly/33OWBKd Join our Discord channel: https://discord.gg/GQw8qp8 Website: http://theretrohour.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/theretrohour/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/retrohouruk Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/retrohouruk/ Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/theretrohour Show notes: CGNET GameCube: https://tinyurl.com/58rzn72n Lost Dreamcast game emerges: https://tinyurl.com/7eamftsh Netflix reimagined Minesweeper: https://tinyurl.com/3r2ce9xd The first PC emulator arrives for iOS: https://tinyurl.com/57fz2kdt 16-bit style Karate Kid game: https://tinyurl.com/ye29x445
ICQ cerrará el 26 de junio, según informan sus desarrolladores.ICQ, uno de los pioneros en mensajería instantánea desde los 90s, dejará de funcionar el 26 de junio de 2024. Este servicio, conocido por su característico "uh-oh", fue un pilar en la comunicación en línea antes de la era de las redes sociales. Ahora, sus usuarios son alentados a migrar a VK Messenger, una plataforma de mensajería moderna operada por la misma empresa matriz de ICQ, VK. Esta noticia marca el fin de una era para muchos nostálgicos de la tecnología.Adiós a una era digital.ICQ nació en 1996 bajo la empresa israelí Mirabilis, ganando rápidamente popularidad por su fácil uso y su innovador sistema de números de usuario. AOL compró ICQ en 1998, potenciando aún más su crecimiento. En su pico, ICQ tuvo más de 100 millones de usuarios registrados, convirtiéndose en un ícono de la mensajería digital de la época.Sin embargo, la llegada de competidores como MSN Messenger y la aparición de aplicaciones móviles como WhatsApp y Telegram, hicieron que ICQ perdiera relevancia. En 2010, VK, una empresa rusa, adquirió ICQ, intentando revitalizar la plataforma, pero no logró competir eficazmente en el mercado global. Ahora, después de 27 años, ICQ se despide definitivamente.La despedida de ICQ no solo es un cierre de una aplicación, sino un reflejo de cómo la tecnología avanza y deja atrás incluso a los pioneros más emblemáticos. Otros servicios como MSN Messenger y AOL Instant Messenger también cerraron sus puertas hace años, mostrando un patrón en la evolución de la comunicación digital.Para quienes extrañan la era dorada de la mensajería instantánea, les recomiendo escuchar el pódcast "El Siglo 21 es Hoy" en ElSiglo21esHoy.com. Aquí se exploran temas tecnológicos contemporáneos y su impacto en nuestra vida diaria.
Stand-up comedian Aurie Styla, a 90s nerd, takes an autobiographical journey through technology history.We begin in the early 90s, with the tinny sound of the Nintendo Game Boy and his first 13-inch television which only worked if asked very nicely, and he re-wired to show all the channels available - in total, four.A technology lover since those days of that 13-inch TV and his first console, the Sega Master System – featuring ‘Alex Kidd In Miracle World', the most frustrating video game of all time – Aurie has seen technology transform in a manner that would have been hard to believe in the 90s.This show charts his personal relationship with machines, looking at the past (computer games that you had to load from cassette tapes), the present (houses that are lit and warmed via apps on your phone, cars that drive themselves without you) and the future (AIs that tell you how to dress and what to eat for dinner, and superior intelligences that command your every move whether you want to object or not).Technology has moved on rapidly, from being a fun sideshow to the bedrock of our understanding of human life. Aurie guides us through this landscape with infectious wit, taking time to remember the awkward interface of MSN Messenger while also negotiating the modern culture of having to check with a virtual assistant before you turn your lights off. A warm, human show about the way the world has become less and less warm and human, celebrating the march of tech while being appropriately terrified of it.An Impatient production for BBC Radio 4
Remember when you used to put ridiculous status updates on your page? How about signing into MSN Messenger non stop until hopefully your crush sees it and messages you? Kat, Dave and Octavia have some fun going down memory lane. Plus, Octavia just got an interesting Wedding Invite! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Sidor som MSN Messenger, Bebo och MySpace är populära under 2000-talet och möjligheten att själv välja vem du vill vara attraherar många. Online behöver du inte följa de regler och sociala koder som råder IRL, och det finns otaliga historier om livslånga vänskaper och kärlekshistorier som en gång börjat i cyberrymden. Men internet kan också vara en farlig plats, och du kan aldrig säkert veta vem det faktiskt är som sitter och skriver på andra sidan skärmen och vad de har för intentioner. Manusförfattare: Tove Vahlne Källor:CBCABCNEWSIcantbelieveitnonfictionLionessrueTallhotblond(2009) dokumentärfilm - regisserad av Barbara Schroeder
We're starting 2024 with a bang as we welcome two-time world champion Josh Warrington to the GGBC! One of the most requested guests, Josh is here to tell George and Dec all about building a fanbase; from hand delivering tickets around Leeds to fighting at Elland Road – the home of his beloved Leeds United - this is a story of graft, passion and dreaming big. With a difficult 2023 consigned to the history books, Josh plots the future - including a potential rematch with Leigh Wood - and we also see the welcome return of a much loved GGBC quiz format. This is a must listen for any young fighter. VOTE FOR THE GGBC TO WIN A SPORTS PODCAST AWARD HERE: https://www.sportspodcastgroup.com/sports_category/best-combat-sports-podcast/ Check out our Linktree: https://linktr.ee/ggboxingclub To get in touch on the socials, search for @ggboxingclub And we've got a playlist on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5zArDIRbHigN2Xt3ikCDq0?si=25851a4366fb476f Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Welcome to a bonus episode of Tired and Tested! Join Sophie as she delves into her dusty old box to discover a nostalgic gem from her youth. This week, she remembers MSN Messenger. Listen up for a brush with Bob Mortimer and an unfortunate incident with a sugared almond Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Victoria is joined by guest co-host Joe Ferris, CTO at thoughtbot, and Seif Lotfy, the CTO and Co-Founder of Axiom. Seif discusses the journey, challenges, and strategies behind his data analytics and observability platform. Seif, who has a background in robotics and was a 2008 Sony AIBO robotic soccer world champion, shares that Axiom pivoted from being a Datadog competitor to focusing on logs and event data. The company even built its own logs database to provide a cost-effective solution for large-scale analytics. Seif is driven by his passion for his team and the invaluable feedback from the community, emphasizing that sales validate the effectiveness of a product. The conversation also delves into Axiom's shift in focus towards developers to address their need for better and more affordable observability tools. On the business front, Seif reveals the company's challenges in scaling across multiple domains without compromising its core offerings. He discusses the importance of internal values like moving with urgency and high velocity to guide the company's future. Furthermore, he touches on the challenges and strategies of open-sourcing projects and advises avoiding platforms like Reddit and Hacker News to maintain focus. Axiom (https://axiom.co/) Follow Axiom on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/axiomhq/), X (https://twitter.com/AxiomFM), GitHub (https://github.com/axiomhq), or Discord (https://discord.com/invite/axiom-co). Follow Seif Lotfy on LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/seiflotfy/) or X (https://twitter.com/seiflotfy). Visit his website at seif.codes (https://seif.codes/). Follow thoughtbot on X (https://twitter.com/thoughtbot) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/150727/). Become a Sponsor (https://thoughtbot.com/sponsorship) of Giant Robots! Transcript: VICTORIA: This is the Giant Robots Smashing Into Other Giant Robots Podcast, where we explore the design, development, and business of great products. I'm your host, Victoria Guido, and with me today is Seif Lotfy, CTO and Co-Founder of Axiom, the best home for your event data. Seif, thank you for joining me. SEIF: Hey, everybody. Thanks for having me. This is awesome. I love the name of the podcast, given that I used to compete in robotics. VICTORIA: What? All right, we're going to have to talk about that. And I also want to introduce a guest co-host today. Since we're talking about cloud, and observability, and data, I invited Joe Ferris, thoughtbot CTO and Director of Development of our platform engineering team, Mission Control. Welcome, Joe. How are you? JOE: Good, thanks. Good to be back again. VICTORIA: Okay. I am excited to talk to you all about observability. But I need to go back to Seif's comment on competing with robots. Can you tell me a little bit more about what robots you've built in the past? SEIF: I didn't build robots; I used to program them. Remember the Sony AIBOs, where Sony made these dog robots? And we would make them compete. There was an international competition where we made them play soccer, and they had to be completely autonomous. They only communicate via Bluetooth or via wireless protocols. And you only have the camera as your sensor as well as...a chest sensor throws the ball near you, and then yeah, you make them play football against each other, four versus four with a goalkeeper and everything. Just look it up: RoboCup AIBO. Look it up on YouTube. And I...2008 world champion with the German team. VICTORIA: That sounds incredible. What kind of crowds are you drawing out for a robot soccer match? Is that a lot of people involved with that? SEIF: You would be surprised how big the RoboCup competition is. It's ridiculous. VICTORIA: I want to go. I'm ready. I want to, like, I'll look it up and find out when the next one is. SEIF: No more Sony robots but other robots. Now, there's two-legged robots. So, they make them play as two-legged robots, much slower than four-legged robots, but works. VICTORIA: Wait. So, the robots you were playing soccer with had four legs they were running around on? SEIF: Yeah, they were dogs [laughter]. VICTORIA: That's awesome. SEIF: We all get the same robot. It's just a competition on software, right? On a software level. And some other competitions within the RoboCup actually use...you build your own robot and stuff like that. But this one was...it's called the Standard League, where we all have a robot, and we have to program it. JOE: And the standard robot was a dog. SEIF: Yeah, I think back then...we're talking...it's been a long time. I think it started in 2001 or something. I think the competition started in 2001 or 2002. And I compete from 2006 to 2008. Robots back then were just, you know, simple. VICTORIA: Robots today are way too complicated [laughs]. SEIF: Even AI is more complicated. VICTORIA: That's right. Yeah, everything has gotten a lot more complicated [laughs]. I'm so curious how you went from being a world-champion robot dog soccer player [laughs] programmer [laughs] to where you are today with Axiom. Can you tell me a little bit more about your journey? SEIF: The journey is interesting because it came from open source. I used to do open source on the side a lot–part of the GNOME Project. That's where I met Neil and the rest of my team, Mikkel Kamstrup, the whole crowd, basically. We worked on GNOME. We worked on Ubuntu. Like, most of them were working professionally on it. I was working for another company, but we worked on the same project. We ended up at Xamarin, which was bought by Microsoft. And then we ended up doing Axiom. But we've been around each other professionally since 2009, most of us. It's like a little family. But how we ended up exactly in observability, I think it's just trying to fix pain points in my life. VICTORIA: Yeah, I was reading through the docs on Axiom. And there's an interesting point you make about organizations having to choose between how much data they have and how much they want to spend on it. So, maybe you can tell me a little bit more about that pain point and what you really found in the early stages that you wanted to solve. SEIF: So, the early stages of what we wanted to solve we were mainly dealing with...so, the early, early stage, we were actually trying to be a Datadog competitor, where we were going to be self-hosted. Eventually, we focused on logs because we found out that's what was a big problem for most people, just event data, not just metric but generally event data, so logs, traces, et cetera. We built out our own logs database completely from scratch. And one of the things we stumbled upon was; basically, you have three things when it comes to logging, which is low cost, low latency, and large scale. That's what everybody wants. But you can't get all three of them; you can only get two of them. And we opted...like, we chose large scale and low cost. And when it comes to latency, we say it should be just fast enough, right? And that's where we focused on, and this is how we started building it. And with that, this is how we managed to stand out by just having way lower cost than anybody else in the industry and dealing with large scale. VICTORIA: That's really interesting. And how did you approach making the ingestion pipeline for masses amount of data more efficient? SEIF: Just make it coordination-free as possible, right? And get rid of Kafka because Kafka just, you know, drains your...it's where you throw in money. Like maintaining Kafka...it's like back then Elasticsearch, right? Elasticsearch was the biggest part of your infrastructure that would cost money. Now, it's also Kafka. So, we found a way to have our own internal way of queueing things without having to rely on Kafka. As I said, we wrote everything from scratch to make it work. Like, every now and then, I think that we can spin this out of the company and make it a new product. But now, eyes on the prize, right? JOE: It's interesting to hear that somebody who spent so much time in the open-source community ended up rolling their own solution to so many problems. Do you feel like you had some lessons learned from open source that led you to reject solutions like Kafka, or how did that journey go? SEIF: I don't think I'm rejecting Kafka. The problem is how Kafka is built, right? Kafka is still...you have to set up all these servers. They have to communicate, et cetera, etcetera. They didn't build it in a way where it's stateless, and that's what we're trying to go to. We're trying to make things as stateless as possible. So, Kafka was never built for the cloud-native era. And you can't really rely on SQS or something like that because it won't deal with this high throughput. So, that's why I said, like, we will sacrifice some latency, but at least the cost is low. So, if messages show after half a second or a second, I'm good. It doesn't have to be real-time for me. So, I had to write a couple of these things. But also, it doesn't mean that we reject open source. Like, we actually do like open source. We open-source a couple of libraries. We contribute back to open source, right? We needed a solution back then for that problem, and we couldn't find any. And maybe one day, open source will have, right? JOE: Yeah. I was going to ask if you considered open-sourcing any of your high latency, high throughput solutions. SEIF: Not high latency. You make it sound bad. JOE: [laughs] SEIF: You make it sound bad. It's, like, fast enough, right? I'm not going to compete on milliseconds because, also, I'm competing with ClickHouse. I don't want to compete with ClickHouse. ClickHouse is low latency and large scale, right? But then the cost is, you know, off the charts a bit sometimes. I'm going the other route. Like, you know, it's fast enough. Like, how, you know, if it's under two, three seconds, everybody's happy, right? If the results come within two, three seconds, everybody is happy. If you're going to build a real-time trading system on top of it, I'll strongly advise against that. But if you're building, you know, you're looking at dashboards, you're more in the observability field, yeah, we're good. VICTORIA: Yeah, I'm curious what you found, like, which customer personas that market really resonated with. Like, is there a particular, like, industry type where you're noticing they really want to lower their cost, and they're okay with this just fast enough latency? SEIF: Honestly, with the current recession, everybody is okay with giving up some of the speed to reduce the money because I think it's not linear reduction. It's more exponential reduction at this point, right? You give up a second, and you're saving 30%. You give up two seconds, all of a sudden, you're saving 80%. So, I'd say in the beginning, everybody thought they need everything to be very, very fast. And now they're realizing, you know, with limitations you have around your budget and spending, you're like, okay, I'm okay with the speed. And, again, we're not slow. I'm just saying people realize they don't need everything under a second. They're okay with waiting for two seconds. VICTORIA: That totally resonates with me. And I'm curious if you can add maybe a non-technical or a real-life example of, like, how this impacts the operations of a company or organization, like, if you can give us, like, a business-y example of how this impacts how people work. SEIF: I don't know how, like, how do people work on that? Nothing changed, really. They're still doing the, like...really nothing because...and that aspect is you run a query, and, again, as I said, you're not getting the result in a second. You're just waiting two seconds or three seconds, and it's there. So, nothing really changed. I think people can wait three seconds. And we're still like–when I say this, we're still faster than most others. We're just not as fast as people who are trying to compete on a millisecond level. VICTORIA: Yeah, that's okay. Maybe I'll take it back even, like, a step further, right? Like, our audience is really sometimes just founders who almost have no formal technical training or background. So, when we talk about observability, sometimes people who work in DevOps and operations all understand it and kind of know why it's important [laughs] and what we're talking about. So, maybe you could, like, go back to -- SEIF: Oh, if you're asking about new types of people who've been using it -- VICTORIA: Yeah. Like, if you're going to explain to, like, a non-technical founder, like, why your product is important, or, like, how people in their organization might use it, what would you say? SEIF: Oh, okay, if you put it like that. It's more of if you have data, timestamp data, and you want to run analytics on top of it, so that could be transactions, that could be web vitals, rather than count every time somebody visits, you have a timestamp. So, you can count, like, how many visitors visited the website and what, you know, all these kinds of things. That's where you want to use something like Axiom. That's outside the DevOps space, of course. And in DevOps space, there's so many other things you use Axiom for, but that's outside the DevOps space. And we actually...we implemented as zero-config integration with Vercel that kind of went viral. And we were, for a while, the number one enterprise for self-integration because so many people were using it. So, Vercel users are usually not necessarily writing the most complex backends, but a lot of things are happening on the front-end side of things. And we would be giving them dashboards, automated dashboards about, you know, latencies, and how long a request took, and how long the response took, and the content type, and the status codes, et cetera, et cetera. And there's a huge user base around that. VICTORIA: I like that. And it's something, for me, you know, as a managing director of our platform engineering team, I want to talk more to founders about. It's great that you put this product and this app out into the world. But how do you know that people are actually using it? How do you know that people, like, maybe, are they all quitting after the first day and not coming back to your app? Or maybe, like, the page isn't loading or, like, it's not working as they expected it to. And, like, if you don't have anything observing what users are doing in your app, then it's going to be hard to show that you're getting any traction and know where you need to go in and make corrections and adjust. SEIF: We have two ways of doing this. Right now, internally, we use our own tools to see, like, who is sending us data. We have a deployment that's monitoring production deployment. And we're just, you know, seeing how people are using it, how much data they're sending every day, who stopped sending data, who spiked in sending data sets, et cetera. But we're using Mixpanel, and Dominic, our Head of Product, implemented a couple of key metrics to that for that specifically. So, we know, like, what's the average time until somebody starts going from building its own queries with the builder to writing APL, or how long it takes them from, you know, running two queries to five queries. And, you know, we just start measuring these things now. And it's been going...we've been growing healthy around that. So, we tend to measure user interaction, but also, we tend to measure how much data is being sent. Because let's keep in mind, usually, people go in and check for things if there's a problem. So, if there's no problem, the user won't interact with us much unless there's a notification that kicks off. We also just check, like, how much data is being sent to us the whole time. VICTORIA: That makes sense. Like, you can't just rely on, like, well, if it was broken, they would write a [chuckles], like, a question or something. So, how do you get those metrics and that data around their interactions? So, that's really interesting. So, I wonder if we can go back and talk about, you know, we already mentioned a little bit about, like, the early days of Axiom and how you got started. Was there anything that you found in the early discovery process that was surprising and made you pivot strategy? SEIF: A couple of things. Basically, people don't really care about the tech as much as they care [inaudible 12:51] and the packaging, so that's something that we had to learn. And number two, continuous feedback. Continuous feedback changed the way we worked completely, right? And, you know, after that, we had a Slack channel, then we opened a Discord channel. And, like, this continuous feedback coming in just helps with iterating, helps us with prioritizing, et cetera. And that changed the way we actually developed product. VICTORIA: You use Slack and Discord? SEIF: No. No Slack anymore. We had a community Slack. We had a community [inaudible 13:19] Slack. Now, there's no community Slack. We only have a community Discord. And the community Slack is...sorry, internally, we use Slack, but there's a community Discord for the community. JOE: But how do you keep that staffed? Is it, like, everybody is in the Discord during working hours? Is it somebody's job to watch out for community questions? SEIF: I think everybody gets involved now just...and you can see it. If you go on our Discord, you will just see it. Just everyone just gets involved. I think just people are passionate about what they're doing. At least most people are involved on Discord, right? Because there's, like, Discord the help sections, and people are just asking questions and other people answering. And now, we reached a point where people in the community start answering the questions for other people in the community. So, that's how we see it's starting to become a healthy community, et cetera. But that is one of my favorite things: when I see somebody from the community answering somebody else, that's a highlight for me. Actually, we hired somebody from that community because they were so active. JOE: Yeah, I think one of the biggest signs that a product is healthy is when there's a healthy ecosystem building up around it. SEIF: Yeah, and Discord reminds me of the old days of open sources like IRC, just with memes now. But because all of us come from the old IRC days, being on Discord and chatting around, et cetera, et cetera, just gives us this momentum back, gave us this momentum back, whereas Slack always felt a bit too businessy to me. JOE: Slack is like IRC with emoji. Discord is IRC with memes. SEIF: I would say Slack reminds me somehow of MSN Messenger, right? JOE: I feel like there's a huge slam on MSN Messenger here. SEIF: [laughs] What do you guys use internally, Slack or? I think you're using Slack, right? Or Teams. Don't tell me you're using Teams. JOE: No, we're using Slack. SEIF: Okay, good, because I shit talk. Like, there is this, I'll sh*t talk here–when I start talking about Teams, so...I remember that one thing Google did once, and that failed miserably. JOE: Google still has, like, seven active chat products. SEIF: Like, I think every department or every, like, group of engineers just uses one of them internally. I'm not sure. Never got to that point. But hey, who am I to judge? VICTORIA: I just feel like I end up using all of them, and then I'm just rotating between different tabs all day long. You maybe talked me into using Discord. I feel like I've been resisting it, but you got me with the memes. SEIF: Yeah, it's definitely worth it. It's more entertaining. More noise, but more entertaining. You feel it's alive, whereas Slack is...also because there's no, like, history is forever. So, you always go back, and you're like, oh my God, what the hell is this? VICTORIA: Yeah, I have, like, all of them. I'll do anything. SEIF: They should be using Axiom in the background. Just send data to Axiom; we can keep your chat history. VICTORIA: Yeah, maybe. I'm so curious because, you know, you mentioned something about how you realized that it didn't matter really how cool the tech was if the product packaging wasn't also appealing to people. Because you seem really excited about what you've built. So, I'm curious, so just tell us a little bit more about how you went about trying to, like, promote this thing you built. Or was, like, the continuous feedback really early on, or how did that all kind of come together? SEIF: The continuous feedback helped us with performance, but actually getting people to sign up and pay money it started early on. But with Vercel, it kind of skyrocketed, right? And that's mostly because we went with the whole zero-config approach where it's just literally two clicks. And all of a sudden, Vercel is sending your data to Axiom, and that's it. We will create [inaudible 16:33]. And we worked very closely with Vercel to do this, to make this happen, which was awesome. Like, yeah, hats off to them. They were fantastic. And just two clicks, three clicks away, and all of a sudden, we created Axiom organization for you, the data set for you. And then we're sending it...and the data from Vercel is being forwarded to it. I think that packaging was so simple that it made people try it out quickly. And then, the experience of actually using Axiom was sticky, so they continued using it. And then the price was so low because we give 500 gigs for free, right? You send us 500 gigs a month of logs for free, and we don't care. And you can start off here with one terabyte for 25 bucks. So, people just start signing up. Now, before that, it was five terabytes a month for $99, and then we changed the plan. But yeah, it was cheap enough, so people just start sending us more and more and more data eventually. They weren't thinking...we changed the way people start thinking of “what am I going to send to Axiom” or “what am I going to send to my logs provider or log storage?” To how much more can I send? And I think that's what we wanted to reach. We wanted people to think, how much more can I send? JOE: You mentioned latency and cost. I'm curious about...the other big challenge we've seen with observability platforms, including logs, is cardinality of labels. Was there anything you had to sacrifice upfront in terms of cardinality to manage either cost or volume? SEIF: No, not really. Because the way we designed it was that we should be able to deal with high cardinality from scratch, right? I mean, there's open-source ways of doing, like, if you look at how, like, a column store, if you look at a column store and every dimension is its own column, it's just that becomes, like, you can limit on the amount of columns you're creating, but you should never limit on the amount of different values in a column could be. So, if you're having something like stat tags, right? Let's say hosting, like, hostname should be a column, but then the different hostnames you have, we never limit that. So, the cardinality on a value is something that is unlimited for us, and we don't really see it in cost. It doesn't really hit us on cost. It reflects a bit on compression if you get into technical details of that because, you know, high cardinality means a lot of different data. So, compression is harder, but it's not repetitive. But then if you look at, you know, oh, I want to send a lot of different types of fields, not values with fields, so you have hostname, and latency, and whatnot, et cetera, et cetera, yeah, that's where limitation starts because then they have...it's like you're going to a wide range of...and a wider dimension. But even that, we, yeah, we can deal with thousands at this point. And we realize, like, most people will not need more than three or four. It's like a Postgres table. You don't need more than 3,000 to 4000 columns; else, you know, you're doing a lot. JOE: I think it's actually pretty compelling in terms of cost, though. Like, that's one of the things we've had to be most careful about in terms of containing cost for metrics and logs is, a lot of providers will...they'll either charge you based on the number of unique metric combinations or the performance suffers greatly. Like, we've used a lot of Prometheus-based solutions. And so, when we're working with developers, even though they don't need more than, you know, a few dozen metric combinations most of the time, it's hard for people to think of what they need upfront. It's much easier after you deploy it to be able to query your data and slice it retroactively based on what you're seeing. SEIF: That's the detail. When you say we're using Prometheus, a lot of the metrics tools out there are using, just like Prometheus, are using the Gorilla data structure. And the real data structure was never designed to deal with high cardinality labels. So, basically, to put it in a simple way, every combination of tags you send for metrics is its own file on disk. That's, like, the very simple way of explaining this. And then, when you're trying to search through everything, right? And you have a lot of these combinations. I actually have to get all these files from this conversion back together, you know, and then they're chunked, et cetera. So, it's a problem. Generally, how metrics are doing it...most metrics products are using it, even VictoriaMetrics, et cetera. What they're doing is they're using either the Prometheus TSDB data structure, which is based on Gorilla. Influx was doing the same thing. They pivoted to using more and more like the ones we use, and Honeycomb uses, right? So, we might not be as fast on metrics side as these highly optimized. But then when it comes to high [inaudible 20:49], once we start dealing with high cardinality, we will be faster than those solutions. And that's on a very technical level. JOE: That's pretty cool. I realize we're getting pretty technical here. Maybe it's worth defining cardinality for the audience. SEIF: Defining cardinality to the...I mean, we just did that, right? JOE: What do you think, Victoria? Do you know what cardinality is now? [laughs] VICTORIA: All right. Now I'm like, do I know? I was like, I think I know what it means. Cardinality is, like, let's say you have a piece of data like an event or a transaction. SEIF: It's like the distinct count on a property that gives you the cardinality of a property. VICTORIA: Right. It's like how many pieces of information you have about that one event, basically, yeah. JOE: But with some traditional metrics stores, it's easy to make mistakes. For example, you could have unbounded cardinality by including response time as one of the labels -- SEIF: Tags. JOE: And then it's just going to -- SEIF: Oh, no, no. Let me give you a better one. I put in timestamp at some point in my life. JOE: Yeah, I feel like everybody has done that one. [laughter] SEIF: I've put a system timestamp at some point in my life. There was the actual timestamp, and there was a system timestamp that I would put because I wanted to know when the...because I couldn't control the timestamp, and the only timestamp I had was a system timestamp. I would always add the actual timestamp of when that event actually happened into a metric, and yeah, that did not scale. MID-ROLL AD: Are you an entrepreneur or start-up founder looking to gain confidence in the way forward for your idea? At thoughtbot, we know you're tight on time and investment, which is why we've created targeted 1-hour remote workshops to help you develop a concrete plan for your product's next steps. Over four interactive sessions, we work with you on research, product design sprint, critical path, and presentation prep so that you and your team are better equipped with the skills and knowledge for success. Find out how we can help you move the needle at tbot.io/entrepreneurs. VICTORIA: Yeah. I wonder if you could maybe share, like, a story about when it's gone wrong, and you've suddenly charged a lot of money [laughs] just to get information about what's happening in the system. Any, like, personal experiences with observability that kind of informed what you did with Axiom? SEIF: Oof, I have a very bad one, like, a very, very bad one. I used to work for a company. We had to deploy Elasticsearch on Windows Servers, and it was US-East-1. So, just a combination of Elasticsearch back in 2013, 2014 together with Azure and Windows Server was not a good idea. So, you see where this is going, right? JOE: I see where it's going. SEIF: Eventually, we had, like, we get all these problems because we used Elasticsearch and Kibana as our, you know, observability platform to measure everything around the product we were building. And funny enough, it cost us more than actually maintaining the infrastructure of the product. But not just that, it also kept me up longer because most of the downtimes I would get were not because of the product going down. It's because my Elasticsearch cluster started going down, and there's reasons for that. Because back then, Microsoft Azure thought that it's okay for any VM to lose connection with the rest of the VMs for 30 seconds per day. And then, all of a sudden, you have Elasticsearch with a split-brain problem. And there was a phase where I started getting alerted so much that back then, my partner threatened to leave me. So I bought a...what I think was a shock bracelet or a shock collar via Bluetooth, and I connected it to phone for any notification. And I bought that off Alibaba, by the way. And I would charge it at night, put it on my wrist, and go to sleep. And then, when alert happens, it will fully discharge the battery on me every time. JOE: Okay, I have to admit, I did not see where that was going. SEIF: Yeah, did that for a while; definitely did not save my relationship either. But eventually, that was the point where, you know, we started looking into other observability tools like Datadog, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera. And that's where the actual journey began, where we moved away from Elasticsearch and Kibana to look for something, okay, that we don't have to maintain ourselves and we can use, et cetera. So, it's not about the costs as much; it was just pain. VICTORIA: Yeah, pain is a real pain point, actual physical [chuckles] and emotional pain point [laughter]. What, like, motivates you to keep going with Axiom and to keep, like, the wind in your sails to keep working on it? SEIF: There's a couple of things. I love working with my team. So, honestly, I just wake up, and I compliment my team. I just love working with them. They're a lot of fun to work with. And they challenge me, and I challenge them back. And I upset them a lot. And they can't upset me, but I upset them. But I love working with them, and I love working with that team. And the other thing is getting, like, having this constant feedback from customers just makes you want to do more and, you know, close sales, et cetera. It's interesting, like, how I'm a very technical person, and I'm more interested in sales because sales means your product works, the product, the technical parts, et cetera. Because if technically it's not working, you can't build a product on top of it. And if you're not selling it, then what's the point? You only sell when the product is good, more or less, unless you're Oracle. VICTORIA: I had someone ask me about Oracle recently, actually. They're like, "Are you considering going back to it?" And I'm maybe a little allergic to it from having a federal consulting background [laughs]. But maybe they'll come back around. I don't know. We'll see. SEIF: Did you sell your soul back then? VICTORIA: You know, I feel like I just grew up in a place where that's what everyone did was all. SEIF: It was Oracle, IBM, or HP back in the day. VICTORIA: Yeah. Well, basically, when you're working on applications that were built in, like, the '80s, Oracle was, like, this hot, new database technology [laughs] that they just got five years ago. So, that's just, yeah, interesting. SEIF: Although, from a database perspective, they did a lot of the innovations. A lot of first innovations could have come from Oracle. From a technical perspective, they're ridiculous. I'm not sure from a product perspective how good they are. But I know their sales team is so big, so huge. They don't care about the product anymore. They can still sell. VICTORIA: I think, you know, everything in tech is cyclical. So, you know, if they have the right strategy and they're making some interesting changes over there, there's always a chance [laughs]. Certain use cases, I mean, I think that's the interesting point about working in technology is that you know, every company is a tech company. And so, there's just a lot of different types of people, personas, and use cases for different types of products. So, I wonder, you know, you kind of mentioned earlier that, like, everyone is interested in Axiom. But, you know, I don't know, are you narrowing the market? Or, like, how are you trying to kind of focus your messaging and your sales for Axiom? SEIF: I'm trying to focus on developers. So, we're really trying to focus on developers because the experience around observability is crap. It's stupid expensive. Sorry for being straightforward, right? And that's what we're trying to change. And we're targeting developers mainly. We want developers to like us. And we'll find all these different types of developers who are using it, and that's the interesting thing. And because of them, we start adding more and more features, like, you know, we added tracing, and now that enables, like, billions of events pushed through for, you know, again, for almost no money, again, $25 a month for a terabyte of data. And we're doing this with metrics next. And that's just to address the developers who have been giving us feedback and the market demand. I will sum it up, again, like, the experience is crap, and it's stupid expensive. I think that's the [inaudible 28:07] of observability is just that's how I would sum it up. VICTORIA: If you could go back in time and talk to yourself when you were still a developer, now that you're CTO, what advice would you give yourself? JOE: Besides avoiding shock collars. VICTORIA: [laughs] Yes. SEIF: Get people's feedback quickly so you know you're on the right track. I think that's very, very, very, very important. Don't just work in the dark, or don't go too long into stealth mode because, eventually, people catch up. Also, ship when you're 80% ready because 100% is too late. I think it's the same thing here. JOE: Ship often and early. SEIF: Yeah, even if it's not fully ready, it's still feedback. VICTORIA: Ship often and early and talk to people [laughs]. Just, do you feel like, as a developer, did you have the skills you needed to be able to get the most out of those feedback and out of those conversations you were having with people around your product? SEIF: I still don't think I'm good enough. You're just constantly learning, right? I just accepted I'm part of a team, and I have my contributions. But as an individual, I still don't think I know enough. I think there's more I need to learn at this point. VICTORIA: I wonder, what questions do you have for me or Joe? SEIF: How did you start your podcast, and why the name? VICTORIA: Oh, man, I hope I can answer. So, the podcast was started...I think it's, like, we're actually about to be at our 500th Episode. So, I've only been a host for the last year. Maybe Joe even knows more than I do. But what I recall is that one person at thoughtbot thought it would be a great idea to start a podcast, and then they did it. And it seems like the whole company is obsessed with robots. I'm not really sure where that came from. There used to be a tiny robot in the office, is what I remember. And people started using that as, like, the mascot. And then, yeah, that's it, that's the whole thing. SEIF: Was the robot doing anything useful or just being cute? JOE: It was just cute, and it's hard to make a robot cute. SEIF: Was it a real robot, or was it like a -- JOE: No, there was, at one point, a toy robot. The name...I actually forget the origin–origin of the name, but the name Giant Robots comes from our blog. So, we named the podcast the same as the blog: Giant Robots Smashing Into Other Giant Robots. SEIF: Yes, it's called transformers. VICTORIA: Yeah, I like it. It's, I mean, now I feel like -- SEIF: [laughs] VICTORIA: We got to get more, like, robot dogs involved [laughs] in the podcast. SEIF: Like, I wanted to add one thing when we talked about, you know, what gets me going. And I want to mention that I have a six-month-old son now. He definitely adds a lot of motivation for me to wake up in the morning and work. But he also makes me wake up regardless if I want to or not. VICTORIA: Yeah, you said you had invented an alarm clock that never turns off. Never snoozes [laughs]. SEIF: Yes, absolutely. VICTORIA: I have the same thing, but it's my dog. But he does snooze, actually. He'll just, like, get tired and go back to sleep [laughs]. SEIF: Oh, I have a question. Do dogs have a Tamagotchi phase? Because, like, my son, the first three months was like a Tamagotchi. It was easy to read him. VICTORIA: Oh yeah, uh-huh. SEIF: Noisy but easy. VICTORIA: Yes, yes. SEIF: Now, it's just like, yeah, I don't know, like, the last month he has opinions at six months. I think it's because I raised him in Europe. I should take him back to the Middle East [laughs]. No opinions. VICTORIA: No, dogs totally have, like, a communication style, you know, I pretty much know what he, I mean, I can read his mind, obviously [laughs]. SEIF: Sure, but that's when they grow a bit. But what when they were very...when the dog was very young? VICTORIA: Yeah, they, I mean, they also learn, like, your stuff, too. So, they, like, learn how to get you to do stuff or, like, I know she'll feed me if I'm sitting here [laughs]. SEIF: And how much is one dog year, seven years? VICTORIA: Seven years. SEIF: Seven years? VICTORIA: Yeah, seven years? SEIF: Yeah. So, basically, in one year, like, three months, he's already...in one month, he's, you know, seven months old. He's like, yeah. VICTORIA: Yeah. In a year, they're, like, teenagers. And then, in two years, they're, like, full adults. SEIF: Yeah. So, the first month is basically going through the first six months of a human being. So yeah, you pass...the first two days or three days are the Tamagotchi phase that I'm talking about. VICTORIA: [chuckles] I read this book, and it was, like, to understand dogs, it's like, they're just like humans that are trying to, like, maximize the number of positive experiences that they have. So, like, if you think about that framing around all your interactions about, like, maybe you're trying to get your son to do something, you can be like, okay, how do I, like, I don't know, train him that good things happen when he does the things I want him to do? [laughs] That's kind of maybe manipulative but effective. So, you're not learning baby sign language? You're just, like, going off facial expressions? SEIF: I started. I know how Mama looks like. I know how Dada looks like. I know how more looks like, slowly. And he already does this thing that I know that when he's uncomfortable, he starts opening and closing his hands. And when he's completely uncomfortable and basically that he needs to go sleep, he starts pulling his own hair. VICTORIA: [laughs] I do the same thing [laughs]. SEIF: You pull your own hair when you go to sleep? I don't have that. I don't have hair. VICTORIA: I think I do start, like, touching my head though, yeah [inaudible 33:04]. SEIF: Azure took the last bit of hair I had! Went away with Azure, Elasticsearch, and the shock collar. VICTORIA: [laughs] SEIF: I have none of them left. Absolutely nothing. I should sue Elasticsearch for this shit. VICTORIA: [laughs] Let me know how that goes. Maybe there's more people who could join your lawsuit, you know, with a class action. SEIF: [laughs] Yeah. Well, one thing I wanted to also just highlight is, right now, one of the things that also makes the company move forward is we realized that in a single domain, we proved ourselves very valuable to specific companies, right? So, that was a big, big thing, milestone for us. And now we're trying to move into a handful of domains and see which one of those work out the best for us. Does that make sense? VICTORIA: Yeah. And I'm curious: what are the biggest challenges or hurdles that you associate with that? SEIF: At this point, you don't want just feedback. You want constructive criticism. Like, you want to work with people who will criticize the applic...and you iterate with them based on this criticism, right? They're just not happy about you and trying to create design partners. So, for us, it was very important to have these small design partners who can work with us to actually prove ourselves as valuable in a single domain. Right now, we need to find a way to scale this across several domains. And how do you do that without sacrificing? Like, how do you open into other domains without sacrificing the original domain you came from? So, there's a lot of things [inaudible 34:28]. And we are in the middle of this. Honestly, I Forrest Gumped my way through half of this, right? Like, I didn't know what I was doing. I had ideas. I think it's more of luck at this point. And I had luck. No, we did work. We did work a lot. We did sleepless nights and everything. But I think, in the last three years, we became more mature and started thinking more about product. And as I said, like, our CEO, Neil, and Dominic, our head of product, are putting everything behind being a product-led organization, not just a tech-led organization. VICTORIA: That's super interesting. I love to hear that that's the way you're thinking about it. JOE: I was just curious what other domains you're looking at pushing into if you can say. SEIF: So, we are going to start moving into ETL a bit more. We're trying to see how we can fit in specific ML scenarios. I can't say more about the other, though. JOE: Do you think you'll take the same approaches in terms of value proposition, like, low cost, good enough latency? SEIF: Yes, that's definitely one thing. But there's also...so, this is the values we're bringing to the customer. But also, now, our internal values are different. Now it's more of move with urgency and high velocity, as we said before, right? Think big, work small. The values in terms of values we're going to take to the customers it's the same ones. And maybe we'll add some more, but it's still going to be low-cost and large-scale. And, internally, we're just becoming more, excuse my French, agile. I hate that word so much. Should be good with Scrum. VICTORIA: It's painful, but everyone knows what you're talking about [laughs], you know, like -- SEIF: See, I have opinions here about Scrum. I think Scrum should be only used in terms of iceScrum [inaudible 36:04], or something like that. VICTORIA: Oh no [laughter]. Well, it's a Rugby term, right? Like, that's where it should probably stay. SEIF: I did not know it's a rugby term. VICTORIA: Yeah, so it should stay there, but -- SEIF: Yes [laughs]. VICTORIA: Yeah, I think it's interesting. Yeah, I like the being flexible. I like the just, like, continuous feedback and how you all have set up to, like, talk with your customers. Because you mentioned earlier that, like, you might open source some of your projects. And I'm just curious, like, what goes into that decision for you when you're going to do that? Like, what makes you think this project would be good for open source or when you think, actually, we need to, like, keep it? SEIF: So, we open source libraries, right? We actually do that already. And some other big organizations use our libraries; even our competitors use our libraries, that we do. The whole product itself or at least a big part of the product, like database, I'm not sure we're going to open source that, at least not anytime soon. And if we open source, it's going to be at a point where the value-add it brings is nothing compared to how well our product is, right? So, if we can replace whatever's at the back with...the storage engine we have in the back with something else and the product doesn't get affected, that's when we open source it. VICTORIA: That's interesting. That makes sense to me. But yeah, thank you for clarifying that. I just wanted to make sure to circle back. Since you have this big history in open source, yeah, I'm curious if you see... SEIF: Burning me out? VICTORIA: Burning you out, yeah [laughter]. Oh, that's a good question. Yeah, like, because, you know, we're about to be in October here. Do you have any advice or strategies as a maintainer for not getting burned out during the next couple of weeks besides, like, hide in a cave and without internet access [laughs]? SEIF: Stay away from Reddit and Hacker News. That's my goal for October now because I'm always afraid of getting too attached to an idea, or too motivated, or excited by an idea that I drift away from what I am actually supposed to be doing. VICTORIA: Last question is, is there anything else you would like to promote? SEIF: Yeah, check out our website; I think it's at axiom.co. Check it out. Sign up. And comment on Discord and talk to me. I don't bite, sometimes grumpy, but that's just because of lack of sleep in the morning. But, you know, around midday, I'm good. And if you're ever in Berlin and you want to hang out, I'm more than willing to hang out. VICTORIA: Whoo, that's awesome. Yeah, Berlin is great. I was there a couple of years ago but no plans to go back anytime soon, but maybe I'll keep that in mind. You can subscribe to the show and find notes along with a complete transcript for this episode at giantrobots.fm. If you have questions or comments, email us at hosts@giantrobots.fm. And you could find me on Twitter @victori_ousg. And this podcast is brought to you by thoughtbot and produced and edited by Mandy Moore. Thanks for listening. See you next time. Did you know thoughtbot has a referral program? If you introduce us to someone looking for a design or development partner, we will compensate you if they decide to work with us. More info on our website at tbot.io/referral. Or you can email us at referrals@thoughtbot.com with any questions. Special Guests: Joe Ferris and Seif Lotfy.
The fifth episode in the rock supergroup challenge has the Groovy Guys ditching their record collections for burnt CDs and early gen mp3 players, their instagram page has been replaced with MySpace and they've swapped Whatsapp for MSN Messenger. That's right, it's all about the 2000s. The rock supergroup challenge is a seven-part series covering the last six decades of music. Each episode, the Groovy Guys talk about one decade, bringing an iconic album to the table as they try to build an epic rock supergroup from that era. Once they've built six groups, they'll tackle the difficult task of building the final, ultimate rock supergroup. The topic: Rock supergroup - The Noughties The albums: The Strokes - Is This It, The White Stripes - Elephant, Muse - Origin of Symmetry, Blink-182 - ST Show notes: 00:00:00 - 00:03:38 Intro and recap 00:03:38 - 00:14:35 The Strokes - Is This It 00:14:35 - 00:28:20 The White Stripes - Elephant 00:28:20 - 00:40:40 Muse - Origin of Symmetry 00:40:40 - 00:56:45 Blink-182 - ST + Matt and Chris recap seeing Blink live 00:56:45 - 01:09:17 Building the 00s rock supergroup 01:09:17 - 01:10:17 Outro About Crate Expectations Crate Expectations is a podcast for vinyl record collectors and music fans - featuring Groovy Guys Tom, Dan, Matt and Chris rambling on about vinyl culture, new and old bands, the music industry, gigs… and bunnies. Contact us: Email | Insta | Web | LISTEN TO OUR BACK CATALOGUE HERE --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/crate-expectations/message
In a live episode recorded at Green Man festival, Rosie chats to Vagina Museum founder Florence Schechter and writer Harriet Gibsone about breaking up at a festival, stalking your ex through their Spotify playlists, how social media fuels nostalgia, kissing boys at scout camp, meeting first loves on MSN Messenger, attachment styles, the cultural history of sleeping in separate beds (as a sign of affluence) and being dumped via Grazia magazine. Recorded at Green Man festival on 20 August 2023. You can now follow The Breakup Monologues on Instagram and Threads @breakupmonologues and buy The Breakup Monologues book from all good bookshops: https://linktr.ee/breakupmonologues The Breakup Monologues will also be recording a live episode at The Bill Murray in London on 24 September (with guests Ria Lina, James Barr and Njambi McGrath): https://www.angelcomedy.co.uk/event-detail/the-breakup-monologues-live-podcast-24th-sep-the-bill-murray-london-tickets-202309241600/ Follow Flo on Twitter @floschechter Follow Harriet on Twitter @harrietgibsone
Text us and say hello!In this episode, Beth and I are embarking on a nostalgic journey through the evolution of communication, from the humble landlines of the past to the omnipresent smartphones of today.Join us as we reminisce about the days when our only means of reaching out was through a trusty landline. Remember those awkward corded phones and the thrill of receiving a call? We'll share stories of late-night conversations, tangled cords, and the anticipation of hearing that special ringtone.Next, we'll delve into the era of cell phones, when we became untethered from our homes and discovered the convenience of staying connected on the go. From the iconic Nokia bricks to the sleek flip phones, these gadgets were a game-changer, and we'll explore how they revolutionized the way we communicate.Of course, we can't forget the early days of online chatting, where platforms like AOL Instant Messenger and MSN Messenger allowed us to connect with friends and strangers alike. Those quirky screen names and the sound of the familiar "You've Got Mail" notification were a big part of our digital coming-of-age.Moving forward, we'll revisit the era of LiveJournal, MySpace, and Friendster, where we began sharing our lives and connecting with people in entirely new ways. These platforms paved the way for the social media explosion that was yet to come.So kick back (most likely on your smart phone), and enjoy another piece of 90s/00s nostalgia!Support the Show.We've got merch!Check out the site for some awesome Gen 'S' swag :)
29 miljard dollar - zoveel winst maakt UBS. En daarmee verpulvert de bank alle records. De winst is zelfs meer dan dubbel zo hoog als het vorige record. Dat komt bijna helemaal door de overname van Credit Suisse door UBS, begin dit jaar. Hoe kan een bank die betrokken was bij zo'n beetje elk schandaal, zo'n giga-goudmijn zijn? Ook gaat het over Nvidia en AMD. Die mogen hun chips óók niet meer verkopen aan landen in het Midden-Oosten. En wéér is Amerika de schuldige. Of dat de winst en de beurswaarde raakt, bespreken we in deze aflevering. Daarin hebben we het ook over meerdere grote fraudezaken, machtsmisbruik van Microsoft en inflatie-tegenvallers in Europa en de VS. Vandaag een beurs-exit die niet te wijten is aan slechte prestaties, maar aan een slecht imago. SBM Offshore - bekend van de olieplatforms - heeft flink te lijden onder schandalen uit het verleden. En juist daarom is het nu een overnameprooi. Tot slot krijg je een vooruitblik op de beursdag van morgen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
29 miljard dollar - zoveel winst maakt UBS. En daarmee verpulvert de bank alle records. De winst is zelfs meer dan dubbel zo hoog als het vorige record. Dat komt bijna helemaal door de overname van Credit Suisse door UBS, begin dit jaar. Hoe kan een bank die betrokken was bij zo'n beetje elk schandaal, zo'n giga-goudmijn zijn? Ook gaat het over Nvidia en AMD. Die mogen hun chips óók niet meer verkopen aan landen in het Midden-Oosten. En wéér is Amerika de schuldige. Of dat de winst en de beurswaarde raakt, bespreken we in deze aflevering. Daarin hebben we het ook over meerdere grote fraudezaken, machtsmisbruik van Microsoft en inflatie-tegenvallers in Europa en de VS. Vandaag een beurs-exit die niet te wijten is aan slechte prestaties, maar aan een slecht imago. SBM Offshore - bekend van de olieplatforms - heeft flink te lijden onder schandalen uit het verleden. En juist daarom is het nu een overnameprooi. Tot slot krijg je een vooruitblik op de beursdag van morgen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
'Vandaag ook weer eens mijn haar kortgeknipt. Echt heel kort. Het kortste dat ik ooit heb gehad, babyhaar niet meegeteld.' Maaike Wit leest voor uit haar puberdagboek van omstreeks 2005, de jaren waarin pubers met elkaar communiceerden via MSN.Zie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Iain Smith is a 9 time Microsoft MVP and a much respected figure in the field of Unified Communications. Iain joins Azure and Peter on the show this week where we discuss: • The history of UC, from MSN Messenger & Sync, to MS Teams • The current state of play with Teams from a UC viewpoint • His thoughts on what's next • AI, is the current pace of progress appropriate, or concerning? • And much more Connect with Iain: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/iainsmithuc/ Follow us on Twitter: Azure: https://twitter.com/amac_ncheese Kat: https://twitter.com/BeedimKat Peter: https://twitter.com/M365Rising Ru: https://twitter.com/rucam365 Femke: https://twitter.com/Femkedebruin The show: https://twitter.com/CloudCons365 Connect with us on LinkedIn: Azure: https://www.linkedin.com/in/azuremcfa... Kat: https://www.linkedin.com/in/katgreenan Peter: https://www.linkedin.com/in/peterrising Ru: https://www.linkedin.com/in/rlcam Femke: https://www.linkedin.com/in/femkecorn... Check out our blogs: Kat: https://collabwithkat.com/ Ru: https://campbell.scot Femke: https://femkecornelissen.com/ Check out Peter's other YouTube channel for M365 tips, tricks, demos, and exam guides: https://youtube.com/@peterrisingm365 Buy Peter's books! MS-700 Exam Guide 2nd Edition (UK): https://www.amazon.co.uk/MS-700-Manag... MS-700 Exam Guide 2nd Edition (USA): https://www.amazon.com/MS-700-Managin...
EP 72 Talking Metaverse S*x and Platinum Joji Record with Yung Yizzo | Divij's Den These days, talk of the metaverse is inescapable. We take work meetings and suck up to our bosses in a virtual boardroom, attend couture fashion shows alongside BFFs, and even belt out “About Damn Time” at Lizzo and Charli XCX concerts in the world of virtual reality. And pretty soon, we might be having sex in it, too. With growing advancements in the world of VR, it's only natural for people to wonder what might come next. And with the sex industry and sex in general making a large shift to virtual spaces during the pandemic (hello the re-emergence of phone sex and the rise of OnlyFans!), it makes sense that sex and intimacy would be the next step. But what does sex and intimacy in the metaverse actually look like? If you're surprised to hear that sex is going digital, you shouldn't be. People have been using virtual spaces for the purpose of sex and intimacy since pretty much the internet started. Who doesn't remember the thrill of messaging your boyfriend semi-naughty things over MSN Messenger? A decade earlier, popular games like Second Life allowed users to engage in intimate and romantic acts in chat rooms. The reasons why someone seeks intimacy have remained the same, but for some, the prelude has changed from dinner and a movie to logging in from your living room. Online spaces, like the metaverse, allow people a potentially safer space to explore desires, fantasies, kinks, fetishes, and things that they don't feel comfortable or are unable to pursue in their physical lives. A digital space can also be a place for people with less physical mobility or who don't have the ability to experience certain types of pleasure IRL. But overall the metaverse is an open playground for anyone. “I want to dispel the myth that folks that would participate in sex or intimate relationships virtually are only people who can't get it in real life,” says sex and consent educator Samantha Bitty. “The truth is that there are so many different reasons for people to engage in intimate relationships virtually.” So how does sex in the metaverse actually look, and more importantly, feel? Well, it kind of depends. Just like sex IRL is varied and diverse, so too are sexual experiences in virtual reality. The multi-sensory part of VR means that four of your senses are engaged within the online space, providing users with, “a combination of audio, visual, tactile (haptic), and even olfactory stimulus that lends to a more robust sense of immersion in the digital world,” says Brian Sanchez, lead character artist at RD Land, which specializes in creating safe spaces for cybersex, alongside other VR experiences. Currently in beta, the platform allows gamers to use devices like vests, gloves, and adult toys to engage these senses. Companies like RD Land are hoping to push these boundaries of how users perceive the world around them, by subverting the way their senses react. For example, instead of just playing The Weeknd's latest album to get you in the mood, you could be in a virtual room where your device will vibrate differently to the beats of horny Drake or upbeat Lizzo and give different sensations. “In our worlds, every sensation can bring pleasure if the user so desires and so allows,” Sanchez says.
Today's guest is David Auerbach, a former engineer at both Microsoft and Google and now a technologist, writer and author of two books – Bitwise: A Life in Code and his most recent book, Meganets: How Digital Forces Beyond Our Control Commandeer Our Daily Lives and Inner Realities.Today, we talk about David's background in software engineering and what it was like to work at Microsoft on MSN Messenger and then at Google in the relatively early days of the tech giant's gargantuan growth.We also discuss his latest book – he explains the meganets term that he coined and how As we increasingly integrate our society, culture and politics within a hyper-networked fabric, the interactions of billions of people with unfathomably large online networks have produced a new sort of beast: an ever-changing systems that operates beyond the control of the individuals, companies, and governments that created them.But before we get into the conversation, a quick word about today's sponsor.Vowel.com is a game changing AI powered video conferencing platform that has an in-built AI powered meeting summary software that records all your meetings and automatically generates useful summaries at the end! I use it for all my meetings now and have found it so invaluable that I'm also using it for the podcast too to summarise the top takeaways from each episode.If you want to try it, sign up at Vowel.com using my code “daniellecode” for 3 months free of Vowel. Be quick though as this offer expires in 7 days.Enjoy!David on Twitter / Website / Buy Meganets here Danielle on Twitter @daniellenewnham and Instagram @daniellenewnham / Newsletter here
¡Tirorí, tirorí! Así nos pasábamos la vida durante nuestra adolescencia, chateando sin parar con amigos y desconocidos, aprendiendo cómo iba eso de Internet. Desde el rey indiscutible que fue MSN Messenger, hasta los SMS, el chat de Terra, Habbo, Chatroulette, el chat de BlackBerry, Omegle... ¡las posibilidades eran infinitas! Como infinitas serán las risas cuando le des al play, porque nos acompaña el maravilloso humorista y creador de contenido SERGIO ENCINAS, todo un titán de Internet y del recuerdo. ¡Agréganos y te mandamos un zumbido! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode, we take a trip down memory lane as we talk about the things we did on social media, such as MSN Messenger and Facebook Walls. We also discuss the times we gave our parents a scare with huge cell phone bills. Pheasant Hunting VS. Deer Hunting. Ryan verbally attacks Tyler, CB Radios, and explore the idea of what kind of pet we would want other than a dog. Bonus episodes every week: ➡️ https://www.patreon.com/youbetcharadio Buy our merch: ➡️ https://ohhyoubetcha.com/collections/products Check out our Youtube ➡️ https://www.youtube.com/@youbetcharadio
Pode ser difícil de acreditar, mas houve um tempo em que o melhor jeito de encontrar coisas na internet não era o Google. E a comunicação instantânea não era feita por WhatsApp. Antes do aparecimento e da consolidação dessas soluções como líderes de mercado, várias outras brigavam por espaço. Hoje, formam um longo rastro de concorrentes deixados para trás.No episódio de hoje, relembramos algumas dessas empresas e produtos que dominavam antes dos atuais dominantes. Se fazia tempo que você não pensava em nomes como AltaVista, MSN (ou Windows Live Messenger?) e Nokia, este episódio é pra você. Dá o play e vem com a gente!ParticipantesThiago MobilonPaulo HigaEmerson AlecrimJosué de OliveiraCréditosProdução: Josué de OliveiraEdição e Sonorização: Ariel LiborioArte da capa: Vitor Pádua
En este episodio hablo sobre el lanzamiento de la red 5G de movistar en México. De la iniciativa presentada en el Senado de la República en México para que las compañías celulares otorguen servicio de datos gratuito a los usuarios para utilizar páginas del gobierno. Apple dejará instalar apps de otras tiendas en el iPhone, según Mark Gurman. Apple confirma que utiliza sensores de Sony para las cámaras de sus dispositivos iPhone. Twitter suspende la cuenta de Mastodon y la de ElonJet y abre el debate sobre los límites de la libertad de expresión. Twitter liberará los nombres de usuario inactivos para que otra persona los pueda usar. Instagram añade función llamada "Notas" que recuerda a los estados de MSN Messenger, también activa nueva página para reclamar cuentas hackeadas y otra más para decirte si tienes shadowban. Videollamadas de WhatsApp ahora permiten hasta 32 participantes simultáneos. Autoridades de la ciudad de San Francisco inspecciona las oficinas de Twitter por violación de uso de suelo. Descubren chat privado entre los dueños de las empresas más importantes de trading crypto del mundo. Todos los episodios y links directos a las apps de podcasts disponibles en https://dobledensidad.com Redes sociales: http://facebook.com/dobledensidad http://twitter.com/dobledensidad http://twitter.com/LuisEric https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCQwSqezMIdx5lgMoxrK9CHw
Denna veckan pratar vi om vad som är okej att ta betalt för efter att vi redan köpt en bil, ett spel eller en processor, om robotdammsugare för tio år sen och Joel testar en dammsugare som delar batteri med en borrmaskin. Detta och mycket mer i veckans avsnitt av TechBubbel. 00:02:14 – Betala nu, betala mer sen 00:35:11 – MSN Messenger och Gagnam Style 00:45:52 – Veckans tips 01:00:21 – Veckans bubbel 01:05:06 – Veckans Facepalm Exekutiv producent: Mattias Ctrl Enqvist Mathias Alexandersson Joa War Oskar Eriksson Tack till TechBubbels producenter som bidrar på Patreon.com/techbubbel: Mats Jidaker Daniel Timm Emil Råsmark Rikner
The boays discuss the ongoing situation with Twitter following its purchase by Elon Musk, contemplating whether everyone will be moving to Mastadon to post "Toots", and reminisce about the good ol' days of Bebo, Limewire and MSN Messenger. They also touch upon Young Teams, GP's, private schools and ponder whether it'd be better to be remembered as a nice person or a great artist.A video version of this podcast is available on YouTube, where you can subscribe for all future episodes: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCxeugCQL5zyVhd7pCEAi9GATickets to see both Marc and Stuart at the Glasgow Comedy Festival are on sale now. Stuart is playing The Stand Comedy Club on Wednesday 22nd March. Tickets here:https://www.thestand.co.uk/performances/1463-13647-stuart-mcpherson-the-peesh-20230322-glasgow/Marc is at The King's Theatre, Glasgow on Friday 24th March. Tickets here: https://www.atgtickets.com/shows/marc-jennings-original-sound/kings-theatre-glasgow/You can follow Some Laugh on Instagram, Twitter and TikTok for clips, news and more - and please remember to give us a five-star review on all the usual podcast places.
Bölüm bağlantılarına buradan ulaşabilirsiniz: Parlamento Yakın Geçmiş #4: Milli Şef'in vedası Neden Popüler Oldu? #4: MSN Messenger Nedir Bu Alternatif Sahne? #3 Nedir Bu Alternatif Sahne? #4 Nedir Bu Alternatif Sahne? #5
Neden Popüler Oldu'nun dördüncü bölümünde Alara merceğine bir zamanların efsane mesajlaşma uygulaması MSN Messenger'ı alıyor. MSN'den bugüne sosyal medyanın üzerimizdeki etkisinin nasıl güçlendiğini inceliyor.
Give yourself a rub of the shoulders and a pat on the backside, it's time for another episode of Taskmaster: The People's Podcast. This week we have a real life Taskmaster on the episode, Jaakko Saariluoma all the way from Finland. That's right, we've bagged the statistically nicest Taskmaster in the world. Has he had a dalliance with the Freemasons? Is it better to save children or be the Taskmaster? Why has Jack started referencing Tudor politics? There's only one way to find out...Returning sections include Ask the Andys where we find out about the tasks we never see and of course Head to Head Taskmaster Moments continues with Asim Chaudhry's charming Papa G rap going up against the iconic Tree Wizard performed by Romesh Ranganathan. Jump on Twitter and get voting!If you want to share your Taskmaster obsession, whether it's talking about your favourite task, what you loved from the latest episode or that you've recently changed your MSN Messenger nickname to `·.¸¸.·´´¯`··._.· GrEgAnDaLeX4LyF `·.¸¸.·´´¯`··._.· , we're all ears. You can leave a voice note on the Fanswering (has the world gone mad?) machine. The number is 07810 025570. Alternatively send us an email at the address below. Your time starts... NOW!Watch Taskmaster every Thursday at 9pm on Channel 4.Get in touch with Lou and Jackfans@taskmaster.tvWatch all of Taskmaster on All 4www.channel4.com/programmes/taskmaster Visit the Taskmaster Store for all your TM goodies!taskmasterstore.comCatch up with old episodes from anywhere in the worldtaskmastersupermaxplus.vhx.tvVisit the Taskmaster YouTube Channelyoutube.com/taskmaster Taskmaster the Podcast is Produced by Ben Drayton for Avalon Television Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Youpi c'est l'été et en cette belle semaine de Juillet on vous a préparé une belle compil de news.Beaucoup de news chez Insta, Beyoncé sur Tiktok, nouvelles emojis en approche et nouveautés Facebook.Nouveautés sur les abonnements InstaOn entend parler d'abonnements payants sur quasi toutes les plateformes maintenant avec des promesses qui ne sont clairement pas à la hauteur.La Beta test des abonnements payants Instagram lancée en Janvier aux US sur un panel d'ambassadeurs promettait des lives session privées, des Stories réservées aux abonnés et des Badges d'abonnés.AUjourd'hui la plateforme vient étoffer l'offre avec de nouvelles fonctions lancées elles aussi en test :Des posts et des reels réservés aux abonnés payantsUn onglet exclusif sur le profil : un onglet orné d'un icône couronne apparaîtra sur le profil des créateurs qui proposent des abonnements et celui-ci donnera accès à un flux à part de contenus exclusifs.Des chats réservés aux abonnés : Des conversations, alimentées via Messenger qui pourront être créées directement à partir de la boîte de réception ou d'une Story et se terminer automatiquement après 24 heures. Les créateurs pourront ainsi choisir quand ils souhaitent se connecter avec leurs abonnés et accueillir jusqu'à 30 membres dans ces chatssourceInstagram notesJe suis tombé sur un article canadien qui disait « La nouvelle fonction Notes d'Instagram fait revivre les années MSN Messenger » alors autant te dire que j'ai cliqué direct. Très vite après la sortie de Twitter notes, Instagram emboîte le pas et met en test sa fonction note sur une poignée de comptes.LA fonctionnalité vous permet d'écrire une note, une recette, une pensée de 60 caractères dans votre compte Insta et celle-ci sera visible par vos amis ou amis proches seulement pendant 24h depuis la messagerie Instagram.Les notes apparaîtront comme des petites bulles, au dessus des messages. Côté design, cela ressemble aux réponses à un sticker question.Le + i sera possible d'interagir avec ces contenus, et donc de créer une nouvelle zone d'interaction !A noter que cet ajout d'Insta ressemble fortement aux statuts éphémères du célèbre MSN messenger.sourceBeyonce sur TikTokLe monde de la musique peut être tranquille, Beyoncé a débarqué sur Tiktok.A quelques semaines de la sortie de son nouvel album, Renaissance, Beyoncé vient de créer son compte tiktok. Pour faire les choses bien, l'artiste a mis à disposition des utilisateurs l'intégralité de son catalogue musical .Son dernier titre. #breakmysoul enflâmes les utilisateurs avec plus de 160 Millions de vues du hashtag.Dans la foulée, une compilation de vidéos reprenant Break my soul.En quelques jours, le compteur grimpe à 3,6M d'abonnes.sourceAmbazaLa news est sortie la semaine dernière et fera plaisir aux fans de feuilletons de l'été.Une école d'un nouveau genre est sur le point de voir le jour en France, ambaza, une école d'influenceurs.La baseline de l'école est simple : « Nous créons des influenceurs à succès”. Ça fait rêver. Une formation à 1200 euros qui promet une rémunération de 5000 euros par mois et 20.000 abonnés sur Instagram.En tout cas la vidéo plutôt controversée est devenue virale sur Twitter avec plus de 3 millions de vue.sourceSalut à toutes et à tous, se suis TDL et vous écoutez LSD.Pendant les vacances d'été, LSD passe en hebdomadaire.Alors que certains d'entre vous, se dorent la pilule au soleil on continue à vous abreuver en news Social Media. De l'actu bien fraîche à déguster à l'ombre entre 2 merguez et une petite partie de pétanque. ——Instagram teste une nouvelle fonctionnalité permettant de streamer depuis un PCLive Producer va permettre de lancer un live depuis un ordinateur via un logiciel de streaming tiers (OBS, Streamlabs, etc.). Et ça c'est une très bonne nouvelle, puisque cela va permettre de nettement augmenter le niveau de production des lives Instagram.Jusqu'à présent, il n'existait aucune option pour diffuser un live Instagram tourné et monté en multi caméras. On était sur un live on ne peut plus minimaliste. 1 caméra (celle de ton téléphone) et puis c'est tout ! Instagram va mettre à disposition une clé de streaming ce qui autorise des logiciels dédiés à la productuion et à la diffusion d'émission en live de steamer directement dans Instagram. Exactement comme avec Twitch ! Avec des inserts vidéos, plusieurs caméras (autre que votre mobile) des micros externes, ou des éléments graphiques… Ca va changer radicalement la donne du live Instagram et se présente ouvertement comme une future arme sur le sujet du live shoppingLe Live Producer n'est pas encore disponible pour tout le monde. Instagram a expliqué à TechCrunch que le nouvel outil n'était disponible que pour un petit groupe d'utilisateurs bêta.————Facebook envisage un retour aux pseudosEst-ce que tu te souviens de l'époque ou Facebook voulait des meetingfull interactions. L'époque de la chasse aux sorcières ou tous les comptes Facebook avec un pseudo ont été fermé. L'époque ou il ne faisait pas bon avoir plusieurs comptes Facebook…ET bien…Meta pourrait bientôt permettre aux utilisateurs de configurer plusieurs profils Facebook liés à un compte principalFacebook expérimente en ce moment, la possibilité de créer jusqu'à 5 profils distincts, tous liés à un seul compte principal.EN gros je peux avoir mon compte Thibault Tourvieille de Labrouhe, mais aussi 4 autres comptes avec pseudos pour interagir différemment sur la plateforme.Pourquoi ? Et bien Facebook veut faire revenir les gens. Les créateurs de contenu, les communautés… En libérant l'usage des pseudos et du multi compte elle multiplie ses chances d'y parvenir.On en a déjà parlé ici, Meta envisage de transformer le feed Facebook en « Discovery Engine ». En gros de ramener la logique de centre d'intérêts communautaires de TikTok et de reels au coeur de Facebook.Avec plusieurs profils pour une même personne je pourrai avoir un compte Facebook dédié à mes interactions familiales mais aussi un autre plus focus autour de différentes facettes de ma personnalité.————Est-ce que tu sais de quand date le premier emoji ?Et bien le tout premier smiley a été utilisé il y a plus de 140 ans. En 1881, dans un numéro du magazine américain Puck.Incroyable ! Au fur et à mesure des années, les emojis se sont inscrits dans notre langage courant sur le web. Et à partir de 2010, les emojis sont intégrés officiellement dans le langage standard Unicode.Et hier c'était justement la journée mondiale des EMojisVisibrain, a classé les emojis en fonction de leur popularité et nous propose un classement des emojis les plus utilisés sur Twitter France depuis Janvier 2022.Visage larmoyant
On today's podcast with Nickson, Meg & Eli - it was funnn one!! Eli accidentally got into the middle of an argument at the gym, we hear what you'd wish you could erase off social media (A LOT ending up on YouTube, yikes!) and what's Eli feeling guilty about doing on MSN Messenger when he was 13yo?!! Enjoy the podcast! :) Chapters: 02:00 - Punny business names 08:10 - Hotter partners 17:00 - Digital dumping 26:15 - What you'd erase off social media 35:50 - Annoying neighbourhood sounds 40:50 - Eli at gym: argument 45:35 - Monobrows: yay or nah 49:30 - Meg's Quiz for Dummies 51:50 - Finish Me Off 55:00 - Snow Machine See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode, Beth discusses the increasing difficulty we have interacting with others in person, or at least in real time on the phone, choosing electronic messaging or social media instead, especially when you might be vulnerable and the circumstance requires open and honest communication.Listen In!Thank you for listening to this episode of Eleve" 365!
A born entertainer with a burning desire to play music to people around the world, Sam Divine's enigmatic sets are an effortless schooling in pure, unadulterated house.From her early days as the sole member of the Defected street team in Ibiza to fronting their radio show and now headlining some of the world's biggest clubs and festivals, The First Lady of Defected, has become an intrinsic part of the UK house music scene.The seeds of Sam's DJ career can be traced back to a pair of belt drive turntables and a battered Numark mixer set up in her Mum's shed; a pirate radio show broadcast from her bedroom using ‘borrowed' equipment from the local college and MSN Messenger, and time spent expanding her musical knowledge working at Spin Central in her hometown of Weston-super-Mare and Chemical Records in Bristol. Enjoy x
We are glad to have the opportunity to share the marketing fuelled Bridge the Gap episode with Jones. Holden Stephan Roy held down this interview and it's full of knowledge nuggets. Make sure to let us know what you think in the comments below. 00:00 Growing up on the border of Niagara 04:03 Really into drawing at first 12:14 MSN Messenger and Facebook 22:54 Disconnects and the parasocial lives we live 29:28 Internet is a great tool, but a bad toy 34:45 Record labels and grant money 42:18 Consistency gets attention 51:31 Invest in people 01:04:34 Know your fans to grow relationships 01:14:24 Learn to people better 01:19:48 Universal Battle Zone 01:32:15 A moving ship means some come and other go 01:39:03 Battle axe warriors are a wave 01:45:04 A new wave of battle rap 01:50:28 Getting to the bag 02:00:11 Passion is about the love of it 02:11:34 The local scenes are a wild west 02:18:21 Jones has a new album coming 02:22:46 Outro Follow Jones on Socials: https://www.instagram.com/the.official.jones/ Check out Jones's music: www.premixmusic.com https://www.facebook.com/groups/287792865886555 https://www.instagram.com/universalbattlezone/ Discover Holden Stephan Roy's Linktree: https://linktr.ee/behindthatsuit
Will the new EU Digital Markets Act mean that all messaging could soon become as interoperable as email? Some serious smoke around the whole grand unifying Apple subscription fire. Why Instacart is voluntarily lowing its valuation. And, of course, the weekend longreads suggestions.Sponsors:Codecademy.com promocode rideLinks:EU negotiators agree new rules to rein in tech giants (Politico)Apple Is Working on a Hardware Subscription Service for iPhones (Bloomberg)Lapsus$: Oxford teen accused of being multi-millionaire cyber-criminal (BBC News)Instacart Slashes Its Valuation by Almost 40% to $24 Billion (Bloomberg)Weekend Longreads Suggestions:LAPSUS$: How a Sloppy Extortion Gang Became One of the Most Prolific Hacking Groups (Motherboard/Vice)The Man Behind Ethereum Is Worried About Crypto's Future (Time)There's something off about ApeCoin (Platformer)Of Course We're Living in a Simulation (Wired)Nicolas Cage Can Explain It All (GQ)See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sean Wilkie and Ashley Storrie return for the long-awaited Series 4 of Are We Being Unreasonable? and talk to stand-up comedian Rachel Fairburn and Twitch star Dando about She's All That, Unsolicited Dick Pics, He's All That, MSN Messenger, Parasocial Behaviour, Addison Rae, Bhad Bhaby, True Crime Podcasts, Open Relationships and Serial Killers.You can see Ashley in Up For It on BBC iPlayer and hear her on BBC Radio Scotland at 10 pm every Friday or on the BBC Sounds App.You can also find Ashley and Sean's comedy sketches from BBC Short Stuff and BBC The Social on the iPlayer, and the BBC Scotland Facebook and Twitter pages. You can find Ashley's twitch at twitch.tv/ashleystorrie And you can follow Rachel and Dando on Twitter @RachelFairburn and @weedandoStories we covered this week can be found at:https://www.reddit.com/r/AmItheAsshole/comments/p6kc77/aita_for_posting_a_relatives_nudes_in_the_family/and https://www.reddit.com/r/AmItheAsshole/comments/pbmqwv/aita_for_telling_my_friend_that_he_got_exactly/You can find Sean and Ashley on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and TikTok @SitDownDad and @AshleyStorrieAnd you can follow Dando on Twitch at twitch.tv/dando and listen to Rachel's podcast All Killa No Filla on all major podcast platforms. Our theme song is "Snap Happy" by Shane Ivers from www.silvermansound.com.Please hit subscribe, leave a review, and share the episode with your friends if you've enjoyed the show.
After a brief hiatus, the After Hours crew was able to sit down with a few cold beverages to discuss what we've been up to lately. A lot has happened since July when we last recorded an episode! We also discussed the upcoming Thanksgiving holiday, gave out some great recommendations and gave you some not so legit promo codes to use. Also, if anyone is interested in sponsoring our backpacking trip through Europe, just hit up our AOL or MSN Messenger. Enjoy the show!
No releases this week; but lots of interesting tidbits nonetheless. If you read just one article this week, check out “The Myth of the Treasure Fox”. Link below, of course.Get the Drop on Sorting. Kevlin Henney does a deep dive on the drop-sort, a sorting algorithm that sorts by dropping elements in the collection. This is not as useless as it immediately appears, and Kevlin explains why. It's engaging and informative.In a screenshot that is strangely alluring Maarten shows off what VB looks like in the brave new world of .NET 6, with a pattern based XML Literal. If I were to rate VB on this screenshot alone, I'd give it a 12/10. Having worked in VB, I give it a 4/10. It's slightly ahead of the readability of JavaScript 5, and slightly behind Python. These ratings are final.Chat Wars! How microsoft tried (and failed) to keep MSN compatibility with AIM. If AIM and MSN were still alive, they'd have graduated college by now and be grumbling about the state of the job market. I mean, they unemployed, strictly speaking, with AIM having been retired in 2017, and MSN Messenger having been retired in 2014..NET 5 Support of Azure Functions OpenAPI Extension Yes, now Azure Functions support .NET 5 for OpenAPI Extensions. If you, like me, have no idea what that is, then this blog post isn't for you! (It's becoming increasingly clear that these blog-posts with keyword laden titles are there to help hit some sort of internal Microsoft KPI related to pushing Azure). “George, you're being unfair!”, I can hear you say. If I'm being unfair, then why aren't these blog post titles telling you the outcomes they can help you acheive, instead of keywords of processes related to their own products?No, NVidia Didn't Fool Everyone with a Computer-Generated CEO In case you missed this, NVidia used a Computer Generated capture of its CEO for a short scene in its presentation, but their initial blog post on the subject made it seem like they used the CG'd CEO throughout. It's still impressive, bu tnot nearly as impressive as initially made out to be.Microsoft revamps Visual Studio JavaScript projects in forthcoming version. Visual Studio will now rely on whatever the ‘system' has installed for JavaScript frameworks when creating a new JavaScript-ish project in Visual Studio 2022. I assume it will work seamlessly with things like nodeenv and other virtual environments, and if it doesn't that would be a bit embarassing, wouldn't it?.NET Optional SDK Workloads This came about because I saw the word ‘workload' in reference to .NET, and had no idea what it meant. It means a way to extend the SDK to do other things than it's meant to. I can't figure out if this is a public thing (you too can write extensions for the SDK) or if this is a Microsoft Only addition, or who this is even for.A Decade Later, .NET Developers Still Fear being ‘Silverlighted' by Microsoft. Killing Silverlight was the closest thing .NET Developers had to experiencing the Red Wedding. An entire developer stack killed overnight. I don't claim there's any sort of ‘guest right' when it comes to Technology Stacks, but there's a certain amount of creative destruction taking place that Microsoft was not known for previously. They have several hundred projects to kill to even get close to Google's bloodthirstiness. There are, of course, differing views, as is the norm on Twitter.Async code has signficantly less overhead using .NET 5 compared to .NET Core 3.1. Screenshots of the benchmarks in the link if you like that sort of thing.The myth of the treasure fox in Skyrim. This is why I love twitter. You learn things you'd otherwise never hear about. I won't spoil the story for you, but it's worth your time to read.Introducing DevOps-Friendly EF Core Migration Bundles. DevOps here means “Deploying your code easily” and has nothing to do with Azure DevOps (either Azure DevOps On-Prem, or Azure DevOps on Azure — and no, I'm never letting Microsoft live that atrocious naming down). Anyway, The EF Core team has made it easier to run database migrations in a CI environment.Highlights from Git 2.33. The news here is that git now has a new rewritten and faster merge strategy called merge-ort. To try it out (it's not the default yet), you can use the command git merge -s ort when merging two branches in git. The -s ort is some sort of a cruel joke, I think. Or at least proof that no one talks their way through commands any more. Can you imagine telling someone with your mouth-words how to do it? “Type g i t space dash s space o r t”.Performance Improvements in .NET 6. If you like performance blog posts and you tolerate IL, this blog post is for you. As deep a dive as you'll get on just what performance improvements have been made in .NET 6, and what it looks like under the covers.Visual Studio 2022 Preview 3 offers a new breakpoint context menu to set advanced breakpoints more easily. If you don't use advanced breakpoints, they're quite magical to improving productivity when debugging — like setting a breakpoint after a specific number of times, or setting conditional breakpoints.In the “We can't help being evil” department, It's harder to switch default browsers in Windows 11. Besides the tweet, there's an in-depth article about it on the verge, and what that means for us. Since 90s clothing is come back in style, I suppose 90s monopoly practices should too? You can now have global using static .. This is a great idea. I mean, globals are already a time-honored programmer tradition, and of course seeing methods being called that you have to have an IDE to trace is a wonderful idea.And that's it for what happened last week in .NET. It was a light week; but as we get closer to November (and .NET 6), we should see more releases.
Builders, barking dogs and failing hardware. That can only mean it's time for another episode of Double Tap Canada. Steven, Marc and Shaun are here to talk about what's new in the tech world this week. Well, amongst other things, such as Steven's new favourite TV show and Shaun's shed troubles… When it comes to tech news, we kick off with the announcement that Clubhouse is now open to all with no need for an invitation to join. This is obviously great news, but is it too late? Is the honeymoon period over for Clubhouse? Also, we have a new email service from DuckDuckGo that can shield you from having to deal with a mountain of junk mail and help you maintain your privacy by blocking email tracking. Shaun is also excited by a new feature coming to Windows 11. Microsoft Chat is part of the built-in Teams platform on Windows 11 and allows you to quickly message, audio/video call or share files, etc., with your contacts directly from the taskbar. Steven isn't convinced it's anywhere as useful as iMessage, and Shaun can't wait to go back to the days of apps like ICQ, MSN Messenger, Yahoo Chat, etc. The team will also be answering some of your emails, such as a crackling audio problem in JAWS, some more information regarding diabetes blood monitoring and the perils of a digital divide. The show wraps up with bad news for Marc, as Sony announces the new Sony ZV-E10 Vlogger camera. This upgrade to the popular ZV1 adds some great new features and the ability to change lenses. Can Marc resist the temptation to upgrade his camera? Finally, just how sweaty are your fingers? Well, apparently, they are sweaty enough to generate electricity to power a wearable gadget. Free, clean and renewable energy ... all without lifting a finger. Great Scot! It sounds amazing, but can it produce enough power to run a time machine? Marc is determined to find out…
How were you talked to about sex and dating!? My older brother (Johnathan Schrale) and I discuss our experiences growing up in the same household - with a shared mom but different dads. We cover lots of subjects from masculinity and gendered expectations, to body issues and the multiple ways we would try to get our crush's attention on MSN Messenger in the early 2000s. (CW: Uncomfortable/unwanted sexual situations, mental health issues such as depression and anxiety, addiction [ex. alcoholism], eating disorders, and body dysmorphia.)
Remember Myspace? How about Tumblr, Yik Yak, AOL, and even MSN Messenger? I hope you don't, cause the cringe is real. Today we're diving into a huge topic that deserves more than one episode and that topic is... Social Media! We're going wayyy back to where it all started and how it got to where it is today. So you better sit down and crack a cold one cause the nostalgia train is about to get bumpy! Let's Get Crackin'! Follow Us! Insta: @cacowtb_ota Rez @the_real_rez Blair @blairrbear Joe @joesheabutter Subscribe to OTA Studio's YouTube page for Skits, Vlogs, and Live Shows: https://linktr.ee/otastudios BEER WINGZ SPORTS BOOBS Buffaloooo Wiild Waaangz whoop whoop
It's Royal Rumble season, you know what that means. Fretz talks about NXT's Fight Pit, Sami Zayn cosplaying as Bernie Sanders, Alexa Bliss cosplaying as 2016 and Sammy Hagar....or Hager make an Impact (on AEW). The Royal Rumble is this Sunday and Fretz predicts it and guaran-damn-tees failure! Meanwhile, in 2001, Nitro is on its last legs, ECW has closed down and this little obscure show called Monday Night Raw happened. Stone Cold and The Game have a contract signing for a match at No Way Out. They must not instigate each other or face dire consequences. Kurt Angle's pizza commercial from 1997 is unearthed and a fatal four match to name the #1 contender to the WWE title main events. So fire up your dial up modem, turn on MSN Messenger and join Fretz in his continued journey back in time. This Sunday, be sure to catch the 20 Bell Salute exclusively on Patreon. Fretz breaks down a cult classic comedy, the end of ECW and the 2001 Royal Rumble, featuring a watch along of the rumble match. Follow Wrestle Addict Radio on Twitter @Addict_Wrestle Follow Fretz on Twitter/Instagram @Fretzlemania Join our EXCLUSIVE $5 Patreon: www.patreon.com/wrestleaddictradio Merch: https://fretzlemania.myteespring.co/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/wrestleaddictradionetwork/message
A music deep dive with Canadian royalty, Gold Medallists Tessa Virtue & Scott Moir. They remember the early days of making mixed CDs for road trips and Tessa using the library for MSN Messenger. We find out Scott is the better dancer, makes the playlists and doesn't love Hall and Oates like Tessa. Currently diving into documentaries about rock legends 'Queen', the anthems we hear at arenas and stadiums they don't care for. Scott had bleached blonde hair phase a la Eminem and we discover all of Tessa's nicknames.
De invitado tenemos a Joel O'farrilli (@joelofarrilli) periodista de espectáculos y experto sobre Juan Gabriel que además de todo lo tenía en su MSN Messenger y hasta de pronto se prendían la webcam. Un gran podcast en el que también tuvimos a Erika Hinojosa (@erikahinojosa1) experta en espectáculos para darle al tequila. Que lo disfruten.