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Erick Wendel, um dos keynotes confirmados na BrazilJS Conf é o convidado deste episódio de N². O bate-papo com Jaydson Gomes e Felipe Nascimento, CEO e CTO da On2 e criadores da BrazilJS, já começa com spoiler da palestra dele nesta edição da conf. Ele também conta como recriou o Node.js do zero e sobre suas viagens pelo mundo em encontros sobre tecnologia. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
#publi A BrazilJS Conf, maior evento de tecnologia da América Latina, volta ao presencial com uma proposta que vai além do código. Será nos dias 25 e 26 de abril, no Auditório Araújo Vianna em Porto Alegre (RS). Compre seu ingresso com 20% desconto exclusivo para leitores do Manual. *** Neste episódio do podcast, recebo Felipe Moura e Jaydson Gomes, da BrazilJS e On2, para uma conversa animada. Falamos da BrazilJS Conf e o apelo de eventos presenciais, do estado do JavaScript e o que a inteligência artificial representa para o futuro da web. *** Assinar o Manual custa pouco (a partir de R$ 9/mês ou R$ 99/ano), fortalece o projeto e, de quebra, oferece um montão de benefícios. Conheça a assinatura: https://manualdousuario.net/apoie/ Fonte
Uma pesquisa da McKinsey & Company aponta que um a cada quatro pessoas que ocupam cargos de C-Level já utiliza pessoalmente ferramentas de IA generativa no trabalho, e mais de um quarto dos entrevistados de empresas que utilizam inteligência artificial afirmam que a GenAI já está na agenda de seus Conselhos. Além disso, 40% dos entrevistados afirmam que suas organizações ainda vão aumentar os investimentos em inteligência artificial motivadas pelos avanços da GenAI.Com o final do ano, vale perguntar: 2023 foi o ano da Inteligência Artifical? Ou apenas de sua popularização? Neste episódio do N², os co-fundadores da On2 e da BrazilJS, Jaydson Gomes e Felipe Nascimento de Moura revisam o ano para destacar os principais pontos da tecnologia em 2023. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Andre Osowski atua como assessor de investimentos da Manchester, um dos 4 maiores escritórios vinculados à XP. Com mais de 15 anos de atuação no setor de serviços financeiros, ele dispõe de sólida reputação comercial no mercado local e internacional de meios de pagamento, investimentos, crédito e operações estruturadas. Desde 2021 comanda o projeto Manchester any where, que consolidou a primeira filial da Manchester em Porto Alegre.Neste episódio do N², o podcast da On2, o nosso co-fundador e CTO, Felipe Nascimento de Moura, recebe o Assessor de Investimentos Corporate e Private na Manchester Investimentos, Andre Osowski. No papo, os dois conversam sobre inovação e consolidação no mercado de investimentos, além dos impactos da tecnologia no mercado financeiro. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Lara Folster é fundadora da Lanche&Co e embaixadora do projeto do chef Jamie Oliver aqui no Brasil, o Food Revolution. Aprendeu a cozinhar com a mãe e a avó, e se especializou em comida natural na Natural Gourmet Institute, em Nova Iorque. A Lanche&Co é a união de mulheres e mães focadas em construir uma geração de crianças mais saudáveis e conscientes.Neste episódio do N², o podcast da On2, o nosso co-fundador e CTO, Felipe Nascimento de Moura, recebe a CEO da Lanche&Co, Lara Foster. No papo, os dois conversam sobre inovação na alimentação, a ambição do alimentar bem, principalmente para crianças e adolescentes e os desafios encarados por uma mulher que ocupa o cargo de CEO. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
O blockchain é uma tecnologia que “agrupa” dados. Na tradução livre, “corrente de blocos”. Um dos usos mais conhecidos envolve moedas e transações financeiras, mas muito mais pode ser feito.O Brasil é protagonista na adoção de tecnologias como blockchain e criptomoedas. Um relatório do CoinJournal mostrou que o país tem o sexto maior número de proprietários de criptomoedas. O que equivale a 7% da população com algum tipo de criptoativo.Neste episódio, o CEO e co-fundador da On2, Jaydson Gomes, recebe Fausto Vanin, fundador de OnePercent, LanceirosTech e PØX para falar sobre o potencial e o panorama do blockchain. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio, os fundadores da On2, Jaydson Gomes (CEO) e Felipe Nascimento de Moura (CTO), conversam com Tuane Padilha, people experience da empresa, sobre o primeiro ano do N², o podcast de On2. Pela primeira vez, também em vídeo. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio do N², o podcast da On2, nosso co-fundador e CEO, Jaydson Gomes, recebe o fundador e CEO da Zeeng, Eduardo Prange. No papo, os dois conversam sobre como a análise de dados pode potencializar negócios, passando por fortalecimento de marcas e performance. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio, o cofundador e CTO da On2, Felipe Nascimento de Moura recebe a Doutora em Comunicação pela Universidade Federal Fluminense, Krystal Cortez Luz Urbano. O terceiro episódio da série sobre Cultura Pop debate como a cultura pop afeta nossas trocas culturais, com foco nas produções japonesas e coreanas e como elas se relacionam com o Brasil. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
ShakeDown Radio - July 2023 - Episode 645 - EDM MusicPodcast: https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/chris-carragher1977Website: http://www.shakedownradio.comMixcloud: www.mixcloud.com/chriscaggsAmazon Music Podcasts: https://music.amazon.com.au/podcasts/b97680d3-2f54-486f-98c2-c5aa77d6a0c5/shakedown-radio-with-chris-caggsApple Podcasts / iTunes: https://apple.co/3tfyyDPGoogle Podcasts: https://bit.ly/42JlfcLiHeart Radio: https://ihr.fm/3ss7wr2Tune In App: https://bit.ly/3qTGsPFCastbox: https://bit.ly/3maXTcbFollow Chris Caggs on Social Media:Facebook Friend Page www.facebook.com/chriscaggsFacebook Fan Page www.facebook.com/chriscaggsradioTwitter www.twitter.com/chriscaggsInstagram www.instagram.com/chriscaggsTikTok @ChrisCaggsHashtag #ChrisCaggs #ShakedownRadio Listen to 4PLAY.fm - Australia's Newest Online Dance Radio Station - Programmed by JimmyZ of Wild FM, Nova and Club [V] with assistance by Chris Caggs of Groove FM Sydney & Brisbane, DJ-FM and Pump FM + More at www.4PLAY.fmOver the span of 25 Years across 15 Radio Stations - Chris Caggs has been on air at:Groove FM 96.9FM & 94.5FM - SydneyGroove FM 97.3FM - BrisbaneDJ-FM 87.6FM - Sydney2RDJ 88.1FM - Sydney2NSB 99.3FM - Northside Radio SydneyPump FM 99.3FM - Sydney2ICR Radio - SydneyMix It Up Radio - BrisbaneSTR8OUT Radio - MelbourneMixxbosses Radio - SydneyUrban Movement Radio - BrisbaneLiquid Radio - Sunshine Coast - DanceStarter FM - Sydney - DanceTune 1 Radio - Perth - Dance4PLAY Radio - Queensland - DanceV1Radio - Melbourne - DanceTracklist 1. Hot M3SS, Sian Lee - Movin' On2. Kaleena Zanders & Anabel Englund - Anything 4 U3. Kaysin & Niko The Kid feat Tristian Henry - What You Need (Radio Mix)4. KHSMR & Maddix - Close To You5. London Topaz - All I Need (Radio Edit)6. Marasi - Tormenta (Extended Mix)7. Riton x Belters Only feat Enisa - Never Knew Love8. 3LAU - Happy - Sad (Radio Edit)9. AIMMIA - Group Therapy (Radio Edit)10. Duke Dumont - Losing Control (Extended Mix)11. Disco Shift - Deuce12. Bingo Players - Rattle (Ape Rave Club Bootleg)13. Enzo - Smooth Operator14. Girls Of The Internet feat Anelisa Lamola - Affirmations (Extended Mix)
ShakeDown Radio - July 2023 - Episode 645 - EDM MusicPodcast: https://www.podomatic.com/podcasts/chris-carragher1977Website: http://www.shakedownradio.comMixcloud: www.mixcloud.com/chriscaggsAmazon Music Podcasts: https://music.amazon.com.au/podcasts/b97680d3-2f54-486f-98c2-c5aa77d6a0c5/shakedown-radio-with-chris-caggsApple Podcasts / iTunes: https://apple.co/3tfyyDPGoogle Podcasts: https://bit.ly/42JlfcLiHeart Radio: https://ihr.fm/3ss7wr2Tune In App: https://bit.ly/3qTGsPFCastbox: https://bit.ly/3maXTcbFollow Chris Caggs on Social Media:Facebook Friend Page www.facebook.com/chriscaggsFacebook Fan Page www.facebook.com/chriscaggsradioTwitter www.twitter.com/chriscaggsInstagram www.instagram.com/chriscaggsTikTok @ChrisCaggsHashtag #ChrisCaggs #ShakedownRadio Listen to 4PLAY.fm - Australia's Newest Online Dance Radio Station - Programmed by JimmyZ of Wild FM, Nova and Club [V] with assistance by Chris Caggs of Groove FM Sydney & Brisbane, DJ-FM and Pump FM + More at www.4PLAY.fmOver the span of 25 Years across 15 Radio Stations - Chris Caggs has been on air at:Groove FM 96.9FM & 94.5FM - SydneyGroove FM 97.3FM - BrisbaneDJ-FM 87.6FM - Sydney2RDJ 88.1FM - Sydney2NSB 99.3FM - Northside Radio SydneyPump FM 99.3FM - Sydney2ICR Radio - SydneyMix It Up Radio - BrisbaneSTR8OUT Radio - MelbourneMixxbosses Radio - SydneyUrban Movement Radio - BrisbaneLiquid Radio - Sunshine Coast - DanceStarter FM - Sydney - DanceTune 1 Radio - Perth - Dance4PLAY Radio - Queensland - DanceV1Radio - Melbourne - DanceTracklist 1. Hot M3SS, Sian Lee - Movin' On2. Kaleena Zanders & Anabel Englund - Anything 4 U3. Kaysin & Niko The Kid feat Tristian Henry - What You Need (Radio Mix)4. KHSMR & Maddix - Close To You5. London Topaz - All I Need (Radio Edit)6. Marasi - Tormenta (Extended Mix)7. Riton x Belters Only feat Enisa - Never Knew Love8. 3LAU - Happy - Sad (Radio Edit)9. AIMMIA - Group Therapy (Radio Edit)10. Duke Dumont - Losing Control (Extended Mix)11. Disco Shift - Deuce12. Bingo Players - Rattle (Ape Rave Club Bootleg)13. Enzo - Smooth Operator14. Girls Of The Internet feat Anelisa Lamola - Affirmations (Extended Mix)
Neste episódio, o cofundador e CTO da On2, Felipe Moura, recebe o ilustrador e quadrinista Thiago Krening e a coordenadora do Laboratório de Pesquisa CultPop, Adriana Amaral. O segundo episódio da série sobre Cultura Pop debate como a cultura pop afeta nossa vida, a criação de novas tecnologias e como ela pode moldar nossa perspectiva de futuro. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Segundo o World Resources Institute, o carsharing atende mais de 5 milhões de pessoas ao redor do mundo. Atento a esse tendência, no terceiro episódio do The C-Level Show, o CTO da On2, Felipe Nascimento de Moura recebe o Head of IT da Kinto Brasil, Alexandre Silveira para falar sobre mercado compartilhado, sustentabilidade e mobilidade. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio, o cofundador e CTO da On2, Felipe Nascimento de Moura recebe o fundador da ComicCon RS, Emerson Vasconcelos Almeida. Na conversa, os dois geeks trocam ideias sobre a forte presença da cultura pop no Rio Grande do Sul, abordam a 11ª edição da ComiCon RS e trocam figurinhas sobre conteúdos do mundo nerd. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
A inovação está presente em todos os setores e na gestão pública não é diferente. De que maneira iniciativas podem reforçar para o poder público a importância de manter investimentos na área? Para nos ajudar a entender o tema, o segundo episódio do The C-Level Show recebe o fundador e CEO da Wise Innovation, Paulo Renato Ardenghi, com mediação de Jaydson Gomes, cofundador da On2. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
No primeiro episódio, o The C-Level Show recebe o cofundador e mentor da On2, Cesar Paz, com a mediação do CTO da empresa, Felipe Nascimento. No bate-papo, Cesar analisa, a partir da sua visão de investidor serial, o cenário de demissões massivas nas empresas de tecnologia e o impacto que isso provoca no mercado. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Em homenagem ao Mês da Visibilidade Trans, esse episódio é conduzido pela pessoa desenvolvedora Alice Bonafé, que conversa com a Coordenadora de Ensino do Reprograma, Liana Alice Corrêa e com o Alexander, desenvolvedor da On2, sobre as pessoas trans na tecnologia, suas trajetórias, dificuldades e conquistas. Para além da inserção da diversidade de pessoas nas empresas, o episódio fala também sobre como os locais de trabalho podem se tornar mais acolhedores e como a tecnologia pode ajudar a fomentar a existência de pessoas trans. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Para entender os dois lados da relação entre Direitos Humanos e Tecnologia, em especial a relação com o racismo, neste episódio conversamos com a advogada de Direitos Humanos, Vanessa Garbini, e com a Doutora em Ciências Políticas e Assistente de Content/SEO da On2, Camila Andrade, sob a mediação da jornalista Alexandra Zanela. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Qual é o papel da tecnologia em meio à desinformação? Para responder essa e outras dúvidas sobre como a desinformação e a tecnologia se entrelaçam, o N² bate um papo com a Doutora em Comunicação, criadora da iniciativa Afonte Jornalismo de Dados e especialista em fact-checking, Taís Seibt e com o co-fundador da On2, Jaydson Gomes. A mediação é do jornalista Pedro Pereira. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Dados do relatório State Of Tech Diversity: The Black Tech Ecosystem do Kapor Center, mostram que de 2014 a 2021, o número de profissionais pretos em grandes empresas de tecnologia cresceu apenas 1%. Para entender os desafios e progressos da inclusão da população negra na tecnologia, este episódio do N² conversa com o mestre em Informática Aplicada e Co-fundador da OnePercent e do Pox, Fausto Vanin, e com a pós-doutora em Estudos Africanos e assistente de Content/SEO Pleno da On2, Camila Andrade. A mediação é da jornalista Tatiana Py Dutra. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Em um mundo onde praticamente tudo é digital, é essencial entender o que pode ser feito para garantir a proteção de dados pessoais na internet. Pensando nisso, o N² conversa com a CEO da Privacy Tools, Aline Deparis, e com a desenvolvedora full stack da On2, Alice Bonafé. A mediação é da jornalista Alexandra Zanela. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio, o N² traz um pouco da vivência nas empresas de tecnologia com o olhar dos juniores da On2. As desenvolvedoras Front-End Aline Dias e Júlia Lima, e o desenvolvedor Full Stack Gabriel Gomes contam um pouso sobre as suas experiências e trazem dicas para quem quer ingressar no mundo da tecnologia. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Neste episódio, o N² conversa com o Líder técnico, Cauan Gama Cabral e com o desenvolvedor Back-End Senior da On2, Kaio Teixeira, para entender como é ser um desenvolvedor sênior na tecnologia e traz dicas para quem é júnior ou pleno. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Nesse episódio especial, o N² faz uma imersão nos três anos da On2 por meio do depoimento de quem constrói a empresa. Com a participação dos sócios fundadores, pessoas colaboradoras e cliente, o episódio resgata histórias vivenciadas por esses personagens e apresenta as perspectivas para o futuro da On2. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Uma pesquisa realizada pela Game Brasil, divulgada em abril, mostrou que 74% dos brasileiros dizem ter o costume de jogar videogame. Mas além de um grande consumidor de jogos, o mercado brasileiro é uma potência também na produção. Neste episódio, vamos tentar entender como o Brasil está posicionado no mercado, ouvir a experiência de quem cria jogos e fazer as projeções para o futuro com o front-end designer da On2, Bernardo Costa de Araújo, o designer de jogos da Aquiris Game Studio, Matheus Cunegato, e o coordenador dos cursos de Tecnologia em Jogos Digitais e Bacharelado em Criação Digital da Universidade de Caxias do Sul (UCS), Marcelo Luís Fardo. A mediação do podcast é da jornalista Alexandra Zanela. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Magna & Leon talk about the common goals of salsa dancers and the pursuit of On2 mastery. - - - - - - - Follow us on Facebook & Instagram ➡️@nakedandcounting ➡️@magnagopal MagnaGopal.com ➡️@mrleonrose LeonRose.com
Segundo o Relatório Global de Tendências Migratórias, de 2022, da Fragomen, 35 milhões de pessoas pelo mundo já adotam o nomadismo digital como estilo de vida. Com a popularização dessa nova tendência, o N² conversa com Talles Perozzo, um desenvolvedor de software da DevGrid, em Londres, que adotou o nomadismo digital e já morou em diversos estados neste ano, além da desenvolvedora full stack da On2 e ativista de software livre pela Rede Mocambos, Alice Bonafé, que também adotou este estilo de vida. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Uma pesquisa da Associação das Empresas de Tecnologia da Informação e Comunicação e de Tecnologias Digitais (Brasscom), de 2020, mostra que no setor de Tecnologia da Informação e Comunicação somente 37% dos profissionais são mulheres e esse número fica ainda menor nos cargos de liderança. Para entender os desafios das mulheres na área da tecnologia, o N² conversa com a fundadora da WoMakersCode e Cloud Advocate da Microsoft, Cynthia Zanoni e com a Gerente de Projetos da On2, Carla Zanchetta. Esse episódio tem mediação da jornalista Alexandra Zanela. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Apesar do crescimento do setor da tecnologia durante a pandemia, o Brasil vive um apagão tech. O setor possui uma grande oferta de vagas, mas não há profissionais suficientes no mercado. Neste episódio do N², Jaydson Gomes, programador e cofundador da On2, e Julio Ferst, diretor presidente da Assespro-RS conversam sobre os motivos e o impacto desse apagão tanto na área da tecnologia quanto no país. Além disso, debatem sobre iniciativas para suprir essa falta de profissionais. A mediação é do jornalista Pedro Pereira. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Quais os impactos que a implementação da 5G proporciona na vida das pessoas? O que a 5G representa em termos de avanço tecnológico? Depois de alguns anos de expectativa, a nova tecnologia chegou ao Brasil. A cobertura no país começou em algumas capitais, mas antenas têm se espalhado rapidamente, o que significa que, em breve, a forma como nos comunicamos vai se transformar drasticamente. Neste episódio, recebemos o presidente executivo da Conexis Brasil Digital, entidade que reúne as empresas de telecomunicações e de conectividade no país. Também participam do debate o cofundador da On2, Jaydson Gomes, o fundador do Ecosys (ecossistema de empresas em que a On2 está integrada), Cesar Paz, e o investidor e consultor jurídico Blair Costa D'ávila. A mediação é do jornalista Pedro Pereira. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Onde estamos vivendo nossa vida dentro do digital? No segundo episódio do N², a Alice Bonafé, desenvolvedora full stack da On2 e ativista de software livre pela Rede Mocambos, e o Jaydson Gomes, cofundador da On2 e programador, conversam sobre a relação entre o indivíduo e o território, dilemas e reflexões do uso das tecnologias, re-descentralização da web e os desafios de criar uma estrutura que possibilite às comunidades uma real soberania e autogestão das informações em relação ao mercado. A mediação é da jornalista Alexandra Zanela. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
No episódio de lançamento do N², o podcast da On2, os convidados Jaydson Gomes e Felipe Nascimento de Moura, dois dos sócios-fundadores da empresa, falam sobre o começo da empresa, os projetos desenvolvidos, posicionamento no mercado, uso e desenvolvimento crítico da tecnologia, cultura digital e empreendedorismo. A mediação é do jornalista Pedro Pereira. Get full access to BrazilJS at www.braziljs.org/subscribe
Intro: David Schwimmer, Zazie Beetz, Grace Gummer, and Joe Sikora teach us about sexual harassment, Let Me Run This By You: I think a ghost is peeing in my basement. Fulling mills, alcoholics, Johnny Depp, Britney Spears.FULL TRANSCRIPT (unedited):2 (10s):And I'm Gina Pulice.1 (11s):We went to theater school together. We survived it, but we didn't quite understand it.2 (15s):20 years later, we're digging deep talking to our guests about their experiences and trying to make sense of it all.1 (21s):We survived theater school and you will too. Are we famous yet?2 (39s):Hello? Hello. Hello survivors. This is Gina reporting to you on a beautiful spring day. I hope it is a beautiful spring day wherever you are, or if it's not, I hope it will be very soon. We are guests lists in this episode today, as I reported to a couple of weeks ago should happens. We had recorded a great episode with a lovely person and just their audio didn't record at all. You know, just one of those things like internet gremlins, bloody body boss. So we're going to re up with him at some point, but we do have coming down the pike, a few really great episodes, including Glen Davis, the director of Steppenwolf theater company and Trammel Tillman, the actor who plays Mr.2 (1m 28s):Mel chick and severance. And if you listen to this podcast, do you know how much I love severance? I'm really, really excited about that one also Sumia Taka Shima. So we've got some really fantastic interviews lined up. I hope you will be tuning in and the upcoming weeks. And just another note to say, thank you so much for your ongoing support and listenership. We really love doing this podcast. Love making it for you. So we love that you enjoy listening to it. And if you haven't already, you should check out our website, undeniable writers.com and our social media.2 (2m 14s):We're on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Do you think we should get off of Facebook? Well, do you think we should get on Facebook? Do you think we should get off Twitter? See, I really want to make the great break. I want to get away from social media, but I feel I'm trapped now. You know, because professionally and personally, it's a great way to connect with a lot of people that I otherwise wouldn't be able to connect with, but it's, it's just this equal parts, terrible and wonderful creation, and we're all completely addicted to it. So, you know, who knows what's who knows how this is gonna work out for us?2 (2m 55s):Honestly, it could go either way. We could figure out a way to manage this problem and get on top of it and figure out a way to have enjoyment, but not addiction to social media. Or we could all find ourselves waking up in the middle of a Handmaid's tale. I mean, we are kind of headed that way. It's really looking like people want us to live in Gilliad. And for whatever reason, I just don't feel like people who don't want to live in Gilliad are good at making it so that we don't live in Gilead, myself included. What am I doing? I'm donating money.2 (3m 36s):I mean, fat, lot of good. That really does so, wow. This is taking a bad turn. I don't mean for it to do that. I really want to express my love and appreciation for you all and my excitement about our upcoming episodes and my wish that you connect with us on social media, that's killing us all. And I hope you enjoy today's episode, which we are entitling. I'm going to have to accept that. I will always look like Dora the Explorer at some point, please enjoy Hey, sexual harassment training.2 (4m 41s):So in order for my son to get his work permit, you know, through, you have to go through this training and it said it would take an hour. And I was thinking like, is that really gonna take an hour? It's like one full hour because it's one of these, did you ever have to do it? Yeah. You can't go to the next slide until1 (5m 2s):No, no. They make sure your ass is there for an hour. Gina.2 (5m 6s):That's right. And you know, I do have to say it is something I really miss about California. People complain about the bureaucracy and the, you know, and in this training, you know, it's infantilizing in certain ways. But like, if you have to make things accessible to all people and it's like, if it's infantilizing to you or you already know it, consider yourself lucky. Well also about the people that don't already know, it like1 (5m 37s):Gina, the, the majority of our world, especially those who harass people are in like infants who need hand-holding. So we need to infantilize them because they're fucking infants and they need this shit from the ground. Like, dude, I love it. Like, I love the fact that they won't, that they won't like fast-forward until you wash them. Because you know, these motherfuckers, the people who really need to watch it would fast forward through the whole thing and think they don't need it.2 (6m 9s):Yeah. I mean, maybe we actually need to be infantilizing. I am often accused of, You know, expecting too much from people, you know, like I just, the number of times somebody says to me, yeah. But I just don't think most people will understand that or, you know, think about it that way. Anyway, I completed it. And it was so the one you saw did it have like David Schwimmer and Zazie Beetz and Gracie Gummer I guess that was so sweet. And Joseph Cora,1 (6m 48s):Cora Joseph. I actually watched it with miles when miles, my husband had to do it for his new job. And I was like, I know all the And they must pay so much. I mean, like I either they're doing it for free or,2 (7m 4s):Oh, I assume they were doing it for free. I assumed it was like, we're doing this well. Cause it was through rain, rain made the videos. So I would assume that1 (7m 13s):People2 (7m 14s):Aren't asking rain to pay them1 (7m 16s):Like a million dollar2 (7m 18s):Scale or whatever.1 (7m 21s):No, my fee is actually 1.3 million for this sexual harassment for2 (7m 27s):Video, the second video1 (7m 28s):And tire rape video. Yeah. You're going to pay me anyway.2 (7m 33s):Hey, how are you? I love your crushed blue velvet.1 (7m 37s):Thank you. I, yeah, my, my standard thing now is like, I literally have like 10 meetings a day, which is hilarious. So a lot of it is my students getting ready to launch. So a lot of it is really motivated and highly stressed, 22 year olds that are like, ha who? And I love it. And I love meeting with them and they also are, you know, just exactly where we were the same thing of like, and in fact, a lot of them, yeah. They're ahead of where we were, because at least they know there's a fucking problem,2 (8m 18s):Right? Yeah. There, they don't necessarily have their head all the way up inside of the crevice of their ass. Like I did. Exactly. Well. That's cool. Yeah.1 (8m 29s):So I'm doing that. And like, I don't know. There was something I thought if you, I feel like I haven't talked to you in so long.2 (8m 36s):I agree. Well, I think it's because you have so many meetings. You're busy all day long. Thank goodness you have your new fancy office. How's it working?1 (8m 44s):I do. It's working great. We haven't, I'm in the focus room now because we don't have our rug yet. And our rug will mask all the sound. And also, yeah, I didn't to be in a booth. So we have these tall booths that are, are for doing this kind of thing, but the seat I'm old and the chair is not that comfortable. So I'm in the focus from, there's also a pumping room Moms. I don't go in that room, but there's a refrigerator in there. Like you can put your breast milk.2 (9m 14s):A cool,1 (9m 14s):Hilarious.2 (9m 16s):I pumped in so many disgusting places pumped at Yankee stadium. Yes. Like in the women's bathroom, take me out to the ball game or something like that. I've pumped in many bathrooms. I've pumped in while driving I've driving. Yes. It's, it's hard to be a woman. Did I tell you about Jesse Klein's book?1 (9m 45s):No.2 (9m 46s):Wait, Jesse Klein is a writer and she, she wrote her second book. First one was called. You'll grow out of it. And the second one, this one is called, I'll see myself out. She was the sh writer for inside Amy Schumer. She's now the show runner for, I love that for you, which I want to watch.1 (10m 5s):Yeah. I did not read the books and you love the first one, right? Or2 (10m 9s):I love the first one and I love the second one. The second one. She just, I mean, the thing about, cause she, she just really states a very, very, very true truth, which is that what certain women who are mothers just don't see a lot of like their experience of motherhood reflected in, in, Out there. Right. When I was pregnant with my first child, I read a book called the girlfriend's guide to having a baby. I picked this, it talked about infantilizing and finalizing only named book title, you know, from the other options because the other ones seemed, if you can believe even cornea or even worse in my lasting impression.2 (11m 1s):I mean, there was not that it was all terrible. I read that and I read a Jenny McCarthy book.1 (11m 5s):I was going to say, did you read the Jenny? That was your option.2 (11m 9s):That was my options. And my lasting impression of the girlfriend's guide book was like, it was a lot about how you were going to lose the weight after the baby. And her thing was like, this was her advice at the beginning of the week, make an enormous vegetable stew. And every time you're hungry, grab yourself a cup of this tasteless flavorless calorie list.1 (11m 40s):Oh my2 (11m 41s):God. And my ass, I did try to do it. I tried for like, cause I came home and I was like, oh, I still am six months pregnant. It looks like. So I, at that time, in my life, it was very concerned about getting back to my pre-baby weight, which never happens for most of us. And, and I basically, while I was nursing, I basically starved myself on this vegetable route. And all of this is to say, Jesse Klein says the unsayable. She speaks the taboos of like, listen, sometimes you regret being a mom. There are days where you're like, it wasn't worth it the other days where you say it was, but you're not allowed to ever feel like what gets reflected back to us as like, you know, you're so lucky.2 (12m 29s):It's a sh it's a miracle you should just forever be grateful for.1 (12m 34s):Well, the other thing that I'm noticing is, and you know, it's apropos mother's day just happened. Right? So I'm also noticing that there are, there's another school of people that are saying that our childless women are childless people, but mostly childless women that I know that are like, well, they did it to themselves. So like, I don't feel bad for them. And I don't have that feeling. I don't have kids, but I, I definitely feel like it is a choice for most people to have a kid. And I mean, if our government has its way, it will be a choice. Right. It'll be just your forest, but most people have a choice. And so, but just because you make a choice, this is my other thing.1 (13m 15s):And it's the same with like, people that, you know, talk about like people choosing to do drugs and choosing just because someone makes a choice does not mean that they are, they, they should deserve to suffer in some horrible way. If they're not happy with the choice or they've made a choice that on some days they feel like it wasn't the right choice. So I feel like to say like, oh, F mothers breeders and all that stuff. That is also for me not okay, because what it is saying is that right? Like, because you made this choice at a given point in your life, you now are like deserve any bad thing that comes from that choice.1 (13m 54s):And I don't believe, I feel three the best they can every day, whether it's a kid or whatever to get through. And so I think that's the backlash of, you know, the opposite of, of the childless movement, which is like people who choose to have children are somehow also for, I don't know.2 (14m 14s):Yeah. Well, we're all assholes. This is the point1 (14m 18s):Your essay was asshole. Just like us. So2 (14m 21s):That's like us, they are us. We are the assholes, all, every single one of us. So yeah. I, I mean, I totally understand. I see all sides of that argument. I see. I can understand why women who don't have want to have children feel, I understand why they are. They feel angry because they are made to feel like there's something wrong with them by multiple people, including therapists. And as you experienced seemingly benign comments that people think just being, I mean, do you get, do you get a lot of flack about not having kids? No.1 (14m 56s):I think I would, if my parents were alive, so I'm kind of glad they're dead on that way. And then also, because, because it would, my mom, well, the thing is that my mom, when I was taking care of her, the funny story is that she was pressuring me to have kids with miles and we had just gotten married and she was dying and it was not the right time clearly. And then towards the end, after when she was really dying, dying, and I was taking care of her and I was like, I would like boss her around because she wouldn't do what I said. I was like, mom, you cannot do this. You can not do that. Like I was so worried about her that I became a giant pain in the ass and she was like, maybe it's better. You don't have kids2 (15m 51s):For the last two years since we got actually, before we got Wallace, the dog, we had Millie the rabbit.1 (15m 59s):I2 (16m 1s):Was a sad APOC with Millie of the rabbit. My son wanted a rabbit. I said, no, my husband bought it when I was out of town. And I knew, yeah, I know I went out of town.1 (16m 16s):Well, it didn't, you do get a dog in Oakland when, when Aaron was out of town and you,2 (16m 21s):He wasn't out of town. I was just like on a walk with my friend that I came home with a dog. Yes.1 (16m 25s):And he said, and he said, something happened. And he said, did you meet bill Cosby? Yeah.2 (16m 29s):And she thought, I said, you have to come home because there's somebody I want you to meet. And all he could imagine it was that it was bill cost. Right? Yeah. Got it. Yeah. He would have been worried. So yeah. So when my son had Millie the rabbit, you know, he was learning what it means to take care of another creature. And he wasn't always that excited to take care of her. And one of the things that he did was let her free roam around certain places, which was against the rules. And one of the places that she free roamed was in our basement, which meant that she peed and pooped.2 (17m 9s):And we're, you know, years later we're still finding a little thing. Anyway, this meant that when we got Wallace, the dog and he went into the basement, he immediately peed off1 (17m 20s):All the things.2 (17m 21s):Correct. And so we stopped letting him go into the basement. I bought a case of this urine foam deodorizer shit. Cause we had rugs down there. That's in work. We threw the rugs away. We got carpet tiles. The idea like if it happens in one place we can clean or, or get rid of this one tile when I have to replace a whole rug. And that dog has not to, my knowledge has not been in the basement for at least a year. And it still smells like pee. We have steam cleaned and, and foam till the cows come up. When I tell you this is something I have dealt with every single day, since we've basically, since we've lived here, I it's no exaggeration.2 (18m 9s):And So what it is is my obsession. My obsessionality focuses on one of these things. All my energy gets put into this. When we lived in New York, it was the rats and the mice. Now it's the P So I, I approached this, like I am going to dominate the S P smell. Then my life is going to be complete. And I finally did it. I S I said, there's no more cleaning these carpet tiles. We've got to take them all up, which was very difficult to do. And we took them all up. I was so proud because I had to really face it, you know, getting down on my hands and knees.2 (18m 51s):I had to really contend with that. Smelling P is like the worst thing for me. I was so proud of myself, my two sons and I, we did all of the work. It didn't smell like pee last night for the very first time the whole family hung out in the basement because we have fun stuff to do down there. We've got a ping pong table and gymnastics equipment and workout stuff. And my daughter, and has been worked down there and I'm like, I'm going to join them. It doesn't suck to be in the basement anymore. We're having a great time. I felt like I was the, one of those prescription commercials. The montage1 (19m 27s):With the medicines like called like rejuvenate X or like Family.2 (19m 33s):I'm throwing my head back and laughing. And we're just enjoying this, having a grand old time. And I decided I'm going to move the laundry along. Cause our laundry is down there. And I pick up this thing of clean wash and stuff. I start folding. I pick up one, I smell pee.1 (19m 55s):Oh my God. Oh my God.2 (19m 57s):And I looked down and the laundry basket that it was put in was a cloth basket all around the bottom. I see it like a four inch ring of yellow around the bottom of my laundry basket. The basket. Well, here are my options for what happened. A Wallace knows how to open the door and goes downstairs to pee. When nobody's looking, it seems unlikely B he somehow gets down there when somebody forgets to close the door. But even then it seems unlikely. Cause I wouldn't. I would know if that happened with any frequency.2 (20m 40s):See, There's a ghost peeing in my Apigee1 (20m 47s):Ghost.2 (20m 48s):Migos1 (20m 49s):Unlikely,2 (20m 51s):Unlikely.1 (20m 54s):I2 (20m 54s):S I F I felt like I was going crazy. I felt last night with this issue, I thought I'll never be free from this.1 (21m 4s):You're like Plagued with the P.2 (21m 7s):And you know, the street that we live on is called fulling mill and a fulling mill is refers to a place where in the process of creating Textiles, they did something with the sh the wool and the S and it had to be cleaned with urine1 (21m 29s):Shuts your mouth this way.2 (21m 32s):Yes. Ma'am yes. Ma'am this entire area. A little clock that I live1 (21m 37s):On2 (21m 39s):Was, is named for what it was. And this one, this town was founded in the 17 hundreds, which was the place down by the water where they cleaned, wash the wool with urine, for whatever reason. Yeah. I mean, could it be that we are just dealing with 300 years Of1 (21m 60s):P well,2 (22m 1s):Hasn't seen, right.1 (22m 2s):I know I it's one of your kids pig and the baskets.2 (22m 6s):I mean, well, in this particular basket, it was around the outside of it.1 (22m 11s):No. So Sue Wallace picked up the leg. We put, what was her2 (22m 17s):Around it? Not just like in one spot,1 (22m 20s):It doesn't make any sense. So we have no answers still.2 (22m 24s):I have no answers. I threw away the laundry basket and it doesn't smell like pee down there any more. But I just, I just realized like, okay, well, this is where it's about my obsession and my intolerance, right? When we lived in New York, I was so traumatized by the rats and the mice. And I just became so deeply intolerant. And that's how it works with fears, as you know, oh,1 (22m 49s):The2 (22m 50s):More you back away from it, the worse it is. Right.1 (22m 53s):And also it's, you're like super, what was it? It was, it's not entirely, it's not intolerant. It's also unreasonable. We become totally on it is an intolerant, but it's like, we become unreasonable about our willingness not to let go of the thing. Like, I, I get it. I've been there when I am. I've been there. But like, what I'm really anointed is is that you're not telling me the answer to what happened. We don't know2 (23m 20s):Girl. I do not know. I don't know.1 (23m 24s):No.2 (23m 25s):No.1 (23m 26s):Okay. So it hasn't flooded. You've never had, so we just don't know how and no other, where there any other laundry baskets in the basement that have this problem?2 (23m 36s):No. Okay. Here's what all allow for allow for This possible, even though the dog never pees inside the house, to my knowledge, you know, I mean, he's two years old now. He really, to my knowledge, hasn't done it in at least a year. Maybe at some point, one of this basket was in my daughter's room. He sometimes sleeps in there, but, but even then I felt like I would have smelled it when I walked in the room,1 (24m 3s):I feel like he would have done it. Why around the basket, this doesn't make any sense.2 (24m 7s):It makes no sense. It makes no sense. I'm choosing to think about it. Like, yeah, there's, there's, there's the logistical practical thing of like, figuring out what happened and try not to let it happen again. But then there's the other, perhaps more important thing, which is, well, it's the, if you're going to pick this to be your thing, you know, you're always going to be vexed by it. That's what I'm, that's what I, it just didn't occur to me really until last night. Like, I'm, there's a part of this that I am doing to myself. Yes. It's P whatever, like we clean it and we move on. Right.1 (24m 42s):So, you know, it is, it is sort of, to me what the P represents in terms of, for me, it's a very, I have a dog that is a very, very bad dog. And she, what is it? What does it mean? If I have a very bad dog? What does it mean that if my dog is not civilized and behaved or doesn't give a shit about following rules, or it means that I have done something wrong and I cannot get clean. Like, it just it's, it cannot, I cannot get clean. Like that is the feeling is I can not, I can never do it. Right. I can never have a perfect dog.1 (25m 23s):And why, why other people seem to, I can't get my dog to be perfect. And it is, it becomes an obsession obsession. So like, my dog got put in timeout, you know, a daycare and like, I could not get over it. I was like, why? I was like, wait, what does this mean? Like I had a whole thing and she has not been back to daycare sentence because I'm like, I cannot risk her going. And then, then she got kennel cough, which is the real reason. And it's expensive as hell. But underneath there is this thing of like, I do not want to deal with my dog getting a bad report every time that she did something rotten and went to time out, time out, which is like five minutes alone with a person it's not even a thing, but like, it is a thing to me.1 (26m 6s):So I get it. And I also do think that it's, I have to I'm of two minds, right? Cause like I'm of the mystery, true crime mind, like I'm trying to figure out. And the, the, and the other mind is the psychological realism. Mine. That's like, no, this is about you and your need to want to be perfect, you know, and want to have a perfect basement where you can have the perfect pharmaceutical commercial.2 (26m 31s):Yes. And you know what also just drives me nuts about myself is that every time I have this moment, I have a satisfying moment like that. I can't really load into like, and so this is how it's always going to be now. I really1 (26m 49s):Believe2 (26m 50s):This is how it's supposed to be. And it's like, and I finally figured out how to do it as if any happy moment isn't just fleeting or, you know, lasts for however long it lasts. Yeah.1 (27m 0s):Right. And we're told that they, you know, like they do and that, you know, it's just like every, any time I cut my hair, I'm looking at my neck. It's always turns into Dora the Explorer hair. I cannot stop my hair for being Dora the Explorer. And it's just because it's thick. So she can, she razors it's down. She does all the things. But as soon as it starts to grow, it is Dora the Explorer hair. And I am just going to have to embrace the door or the hair or2 (27m 32s):Jumps, or1 (27m 33s):Just shaved my head.2 (27m 35s):And also, I mean, take heart because most people who are going through menopause start really losing their hair. So you're still growing loud and proud.1 (27m 45s):It's like a triangle head. I just said, yeah,2 (27m 48s):I know. I get the same thing. It's just1 (27m 50s):Thick. And like, what is happening? Oh yeah. Anyway,2 (27m 54s):How much would she charge if you just asked every couple of weeks to go back in just for a quick ride?1 (27m 57s):Sure. I could do that. I could do that. And then, but then, then I have to confront my fear of breaking the salon chair. Remember that whole fear. I have all these fears,2 (28m 6s):But you've sat in that chair and it didn't break. So1 (28m 9s):No, no, it's going to be fine.2 (28m 10s):I think you're good.1 (28m 11s):I'm going to be good. I'm going to be okay. So that's okay. So, but the other thing I have to say is like speaking of urine is I had a friend in high school who's and this is like pretty sad, but her dad was a drunk and every night he would drink and every night he would pee in the hamper because he would think it was the toilet. So he would walk to the, so this reminded me of that, of like, he was so wasted in the night, in the dark and he would get up in a drunken stupor every night. And then I was like, well, why don't you start? Like, I just, now I'm like, why didn't they move the hamper? Or first of all, why they get his ass out of, to rehab. But like, that's the Real underlying question, but like, why not move the hamper and like put a bowl or something.2 (28m 58s):That's an interesting that, that I don't know how that family responded to it. But like, but that way of thinking about it too, like, that's exactly what I would be thinking. Well, I just have to move the hamper.1 (29m 11s):That's also enable whole fucking bright.2 (29m 13s):Right, right. That is a sad story.1 (29m 17s):It happens a lot where people pee in corners and things. And I had died of a brain aneurysm later, but I had a friend who got so wasted. They literally shit in someone's houseplant. And didn't2 (29m 35s):Inside the house.1 (29m 36s):Yes. He tells, he tells a story about it and he, yeah, he shit in his, he was drunk and shit in, or maybe it was high. He was on drugs, something was wrong. And he found out later cause his friend I think told him,2 (29m 53s):Yeah. Right. It's like, Hey buddy, we gotta have a talk. I mean, I'm willing to put up with a lot, but it's shitting in my plants, shipment my ficus. That's where I got to draw the line.1 (30m 6s):All the2 (30m 6s):Things that it is likely. And by the way, I mean, I ever since writing the essay, like I can't pay any more attention to this Johnny Depp thing and whatever it does come my way. It's just sounds like it's like a bunch of fecal matter. And1 (30m 21s):Okay. So I had2 (30m 22s):None1 (30m 23s):After I read your essay, I was like, okay, let me just check it out. And I was at my friend Jesus house and she was like, you've got to listen. She had like it T vote or something. And she's like, I saved this for you to listen to, because I literally could not understand what he was saying. And I said what? She said, no, it is the most at the same time. And I, and I agree, monotonous mixed with mumble dialogue mix with circular logic, mixed with an effect mixed with pretend and mixed with benzodiazepines. I think he's on to keep him sober and like quote sober.1 (31m 4s):I literally thought, oh, this is a technique he's using to like lawless all into believing, whatever. He, it's so hard to track that the brain goes, just let it go. Like don't even2 (31m 20s):Right. Right. And he gets that privilege because, or he has traditionally because of his looks and his status. Yeah. Oh my God. I speak about looks and status. We predicted it. Brittany Spears is back on her bullshit posting nude selfies. I'm the girl is sick. The woman is sick. And I'm not saying she needs to have whatever, some draconian like guardianship, but she's, but now we know why, because she won't take her GED medicine because people like to feel manic. Right.1 (31m 51s):And also it's going2 (31m 52s):To end badly. It's going to end badly1 (31m 53s):And badly. And also the thing I, our friend on social media, Jimmy McDermott posted. Cause I posted like, you know, I want to write a pilot about this trial. And I said, but I'm going to like totally redo the costuming and the SATs. And then Jimmy mid-term had said, yeah, Johnny tap literally looks like he's the tour bus driver of the Al Capone tour in Chicago. Like he2 (32m 16s):Got, he1 (32m 17s):Does like2 (32m 18s):Three1 (32m 18s):Piece what's happening. So anyway, regardless of that, I just want to say like, don't the mumbling and the that's all for me. And this sort of smiling is so indicative of a manipulative, like person that has gotten away with so much shit. I don't care what you think of him in her. I mean, I, of course I care, but like my, my thing is always from the psychological point of view of what is coming across and what is the speaker trying to do either consciously or unconsciously. And my thing is he is trying to lull us into believing that everything's, he's saying, it's just, it's just so neither here nor there it's just so it's and I'm like, okay.1 (33m 3s):And she says, she says, dad, who, by the way, is recovering from a stroke, said, why won't this guy just shut the fuck up? What is he saying? And I said, exactly, exactly. Well, okay, well,2 (33m 18s):But, but silver lining there Jesus' dad was reading better. He's getting out amazing.1 (33m 23s):I just shut up and I was like, exactly,2 (33m 26s):Exactly, exactly. If you liked what you heard today, please give us a positive five star review and subscribe and tell your friends. I survived. Theater school is an undeniable ink production. Jen Bosworth, Ramirez and Gina plegia are the co-hosts. This episode was produced, edited and sound next by Gina for more information about this podcast or other goings on of undeniable, Inc. Please visit our website@undeniablewriters.com. You can also follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter. Thank you.
CPR's Clubhouse Live! featuring Luis Marte Luis Marte is a singer, producer, songwriter who began his career in the mid 90's as part of Freestyle Group, On2. When he returned in 2012, he began a new path in becoming the new Freestyle sound, coming from Florida along with parter, djmerkone. https://youtu.be/JtUL0ik9aRo Purchase his new song, 100MPH at luismartemusic.com CPR’s Clubhouse: The Freestyle Podcast available on the following appsApple Podcast GooglePodcasts TuneIn Radio App Stitcher App PodBean App The Podcast App Overcast App Deezer App
We are in strange and uncertain times. The technology industry has always managed to respond to strange and uncertain times with incredible innovations that lead to the next round of growth. Growth that often comes with much higher rewards and leaves the world in a state almost unimaginable in previous iterations. The last major inflection point for the Internet, and computing in general, was when the dot come bubble burst. The companies that survived that time in the history of computing and stayed true to their course sparked the Web 2.0 revolution. And their shareholders were rewarded by going from exits and valuations in the millions in the dot com era, they went into the billions in the Web 2.0 era. None as iconic as Google. They finally solved how to make money at scale on the Internet and in the process validated that search was a place to do so. Today we can think of Google, or the resulting parent Alphabet, as a multi-headed hydra. The biggest of those heads includes Search, which includes AdWords and AdSense. But Google has long since stopped being a one-trick pony. They also include Google Apps, Google Cloud, Gmail, YouTube, Google Nest, Verily, self-driving cars, mobile operating systems, and one of the more ambitious, Google Fiber. But how did two kids going to Stanford manage to become the third US company to be valued at a trillion dollars? Let's go back to 1998. The Big Lebowski, Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas, There's Something About Mary, The Truman Show, and Saving Private Ryan were in the theaters. Puff Daddy hadn't transmogrified into P Diddy. And Usher had three songs in the Top 40. Boyz II Men, Backstreet Boys, Shania Twain, and Third Eye Blind couldn't be avoided on the airwaves. They're now pretty much relegated to 90s disco nights. But technology offered a bright spot. We got the first MP3 player, the Apple Newton, the Intel Celeron and Xeon, the Apple iMac, MySQL, v.90 Modems, StarCraft, and two Stanford students named Larry Page and Sergey Brin took a research project they started in 1996 with Scott Hassan, and started a company called Google (although Hassan would leave Google before it became a company). There were search engines before Page and Brin. But most produced search results that just weren't that great. In fact, most were focused on becoming portals. They took their queue from AOL and other ISPs who had springboarded people onto the web from services that had been walled gardens. As they became interconnected into a truly open Internet, the amount of diverse content began to explode and people just getting online found it hard to actually find things they were interested in. Going from ISPs who had portals to getting on the Internet, many began using a starting page like Archie, LYCOS, Jughead, Veronica, Infoseek, and of course Yahoo! Yahoo! Had grown fast out of Stanford, having been founded by Jerry Yang and David Filo. By 1998, the Yahoo! Page was full of text. Stock tickers, links to shopping, and even horoscopes. It took a lot of the features from the community builders at AOL. The model to take money was banner ads and that meant keeping people on their pages. Because it wasn't yet monetized and in fact acted against the banner loading business model, searching for what you really wanted to find on the Internet didn't get a lot of love. The search engines or portals of the day had pretty crappy search engines compared to what Page and Brin were building. They initially called the search engine BackRub back in 1996. As academics (and the children of academics) they knew that the more papers that sited another paper, the more valuable the paper was. Applying that same logic allowed them to rank websites based on how many other sites linked into it. This became the foundation of the original PageRank algorithm, which continues to evolve today. The name BackRub came from the concept of weighting based on back links. That concept had come from a tool called RankDex, which was developed by Robin Li who went on to found Baidu. Keep in mind, it started as a research project. The transition from research project meant finding a good name. Being math nerds they landed on "Google" a play on "googol", or a 1 followed by a hundred zeros. And within a year they were still running off University of Stanford computers. As their crawlers searched the web they needed more and more computing time. So they went out looking for funding and in 1998 got $100,000 from Sun Microsystems cofounder Andy Bechtolsheim. Jeff Bezos from Amazon, David Cheriton, Ram Shriram and others kicked in some money as well and they got a million dollar round of angel investment. And their algorithm kept getting more and more mature as they were able to catalog more and more sites. By 1999 they went out and raised $25 million from Kleiner Perkins and Sequoia Capital, insisting the two invest equally, which hadn't been done. They were frugal with their money, which allowed them to weather the coming storm when the dot com bubble burst. They build computers to process data using off the shelf hardware they got at Fry's and other computer stores, they brought in some of the best talent in the area as other companies were going bankrupt. They also used that money to move into offices in Palo Alto and in 2000 started selling ads through a service they called AdWords. It was a simple site and ads were text instead of the banners popular at the time. It was an instant success and I remember being drawn to it after years of looking at that increasingly complicated Yahoo! Landing page. And they successfully inked a deal with Yahoo! to provide organic and paid search, betting the company that they could make lots of money. And they were right. The world was ready for simple interfaces that provided relevant results. And the results were relevant for advertisers who could move to a pay-per-click model and bid on how much they wanted to pay for each click. They could serve ads for nearly any company and with little human interaction because they spent the time and money to build great AI to power the system. You put in a credit card number and they got accurate projections on how successful an ad would be. In fact, ads that were relevant often charged less for clicks than those that weren't. And it quickly became apparent that they were just printing money on the back of the new ad system. They brought in Eric Schmidt to run the company, per the agreement they made when they raised the $25 million and by 2002 they were booking $400M in revenue. And they operated at a 60% margin. These are crazy numbers and enabled them to continue aggressively making investments. The dot com bubble may have burst, but Google was a clear beacon of light that the Internet wasn't done for. In 2003 Google moved into a space now referred to as the Googleplex, in Mountain View California. In a sign of the times, that was land formerly owned by Silicon Graphics. They saw how the ad model could improved beyond paid placement and banners and acquired is when they launched AdSense. They could afford to with $1.5 billion in revenue. Google went public in 2004, with revenues of $3.2 billion. Underwritten by Morgan Stanley and Credit Suisse, who took half the standard fees for leading the IPO, Google sold nearly 20 million shares. By then they were basically printing money. By then the company had a market cap of $23 billion, just below that of Yahoo. That's the year they acquired Where 2 Technologies to convert their mapping technology into Google Maps, which was launched in 2005. They also bought Keyhole in 2004, which the CIA had invested in, and that was released as Google Earth in 2005. That technology then became critical for turn by turn directions and the directions were enriched using another 2004 acquisition, ZipDash, to get real-time traffic information. At this point, Google wasn't just responding to queries about content on the web, but were able to respond to queries about the world at large. They also released Gmail and Google Books in 2004. By the end of 2005 they were up to $6.1 billion in revenue and they continued to invest money back into the company aggressively, looking not only to point users to pages but get into content. That's when they bought Android in 2005, allowing them to answer queries using their own mobile operating system rather than just on the web. On the back of $10.6 billion in revenue they bought YouTube in 2006 for $1.65 billion in Google stock. This is also when they brought Gmail into Google Apps for Your Domain, now simply known as G Suite - and when they acquired Upstartle to get what we now call Google Docs. At $16.6 billion in revenues, they bought DoubleClick in 2007 for $3.1 billion to get the relationships DoubleClick had with the ad agencies. They also acquired Tonic Systems in 2007, which would become Google Slides. Thus completing a suite of apps that could compete with Microsoft Office. By then they were at $16.6 billion in revenues. The first Android release came in 2008 on the back of $21.8 billion revenue. They also released Chrome that year, a project that came out of hiring a number of Mozilla Firefox developers, even after Eric Schmidt had stonewalled doing so for six years. The project had been managed by up and coming Sundar Pichai. That year they also released Google App Engine, to compete with Amazon's EC2. They bought On2, reCAPTCHA, AdMob, VOIP company Gizmo5, Teracent, and AppJet in 2009 on $23.7 Billion in revenue and Aardvark, reMail, Picnic, DocVerse, Episodic, Plink, Agnilux, LabPixies, BumpTop, Global IP Solutions, Simplify Media, Ruba.com, Invite Media, Metaweb, Zetawire, Instantiations, Slide.com, Jambool, Like.com, Angstro, SocialDeck, QuickSee, Plannr, BlindType, Phonetic Arts, and Widevine Technologies in 2010 on 29.3 billion in revenue. In 2011, Google bought Motorola Mobility for $12.5 billion to get access to patents for mobile phones, along with another almost two dozen companies. This was on the back of nearly $38 billion in revenue. The battle with Apple intensified when Apple removed Google Maps from iOS 6 in 2012. But on $50 billion in revenue, Google wasn't worried. They released the Chromebook in 2012 as well as announcing Google Fiber to be rolled out in Kansas City. They launched Google Drive They bought Waze for just shy of a billion dollars in 2013 to get crowdsourced data that could help bolster what Google Maps was doing. That was on 55 and a half billion in revenue. In 2014, at $65 billion in revenue, they bought Nest, getting thermostats and cameras in the portfolio. Pichai, who had worked in product on Drive, Gmail, Maps, and Chromebook took over Android and by 2015 was named the next CEO of Google when Google restructured with Alphabet being created as the parent of the various companies that made up the portfolio. By then they were up to 74 and a half billion in revenue. And they needed a new structure, given the size and scale of what they were doing. In 2016 they launched Google Home, which has now brought AI into 52 million homes. They also bought nearly 20 other companies that year, including Apigee, to get an API management platform. By then they were up to nearly $90 billion in revenue. 2017 saw revenues rise to $110 billion and 2018 saw them reach $136 billion. In 2019, Pichai became the CEO of Alphabet, now presiding over a company with over $160 billion in revenues. One that has bought over 200 companies and employs over 123,000 humans. Google's mission is “to organize the world's information and make it universally accessible and useful” and it's easy to connect most of the acquisitions with that goal. I have a lot of friends in and out of IT that think Google is evil. Despite their desire not to do evil, any organization that grows at such a mind-boggling pace is bound to rub people wrong here and there. I've always gladly using their free services even knowing that when you aren't paying for a product, you are the product. We have a lot to be thankful of Google for on this birthday. As Netscape was the symbol of the dot com era, they were the symbol of Web 2.0. They took the mantle for free mail from Hotmail after Microsoft screwed the pooch with that. They applied math to everything, revolutionizing marketing and helping people connect with information they were most interested in. They cobbled together a mapping solution and changed the way we navigate through cities. They made Google Apps and evolved the way we use documents, making us more collaborative and forcing the competition, namely Microsoft Office to adapt as well. They dominated the mobility market, capturing over 90% of devices. They innovated cloud stacks. And here's the crazy thing, from the beginning, they didn't make up a lot. They borrowed the foundational principals of that original algorithm from RankDex, Gmail was a new and innovative approach to Hotmail, Google Maps was a better Encarta, their cloud offerings were structured similar to those of Amazon. And the list of acquisitions that helped them get patents or talent or ideas to launch innovative services is just astounding. Chances are that today you do something that touches on Google. Whether it's the original search, controlling the lights in your house with Nest, using a web service hosted in their cloud, sending or receiving email through Gmail or one of the other hundreds of services. The team at Google has left an impact on each of the types of services they enable. They have innovated business and reaped the rewards. And on their 22nd birthday, we all owe them a certain level of thanks for everything they've given us. So until next time, think about all the services you interact with. And think about how you can improve on them. And thank you, for tuning in to this episode of the history of computing podcast.
In Today's Episode we have the Man, The Myth, The Legend: Mr. Eddie Hercules He is an Influencer, Entrepreneur, Kizomba, Urban Kiz, Dancehall /afro-movements Instructor, and Physical trainer. He has been dancing Kizomba since 2015. He is the owner and founder of Hercules Dance Fitness and also The Kizomba Dance Alliance He was born in Oakland, California. And Currently Lives in Berkeley, California In this episode we talk about: - His Childhood California - Hobbies in his youth - His College Years - How he get introduced to West African Drumming. - What got him into dancing - Hints and tips on becoming a better leader and follower https://www.facebook.com/EddieHerculesUrbanKiz/ https://www.instagram.com/hercules_worldtour/ https://www.instagram.com/Kda_Global/ https://www.instagram.com/HerculesDanceFitness/ _______________________________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
On today's Episode we have the wonderfully mesmerizing Tina Cavicchio. She is a traveling Latin Fusion Dancer, Instructor and performer. She was born in NYC. Currently living in Massachusetts. Her father was a ballroom dance entertainer. She has been dancing since the age of 2, and has trained in ballet, tap, jazz, ballroom, contemporary, hip hop, modern, Latin, and African dancing. She started dancing ballroom at age 11, training specifically in mambo She is also the director of her own dance team In this Episode we talk about: - Her Youth in Boston and NYC - What got you into dancing? - How she get introduced to latin dancing - Her time with Alma Latina Boston - Tips for leads on how to lead without using strength all the time. - What makes you such a wonderful teacher https://www.instagram.com/tinacavicchio/ https://www.facebook.com/tincavicchio/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCRaIdKL7Hlj6FeNSgRsymRA _______________________________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
On Today's Episode we have the incredible Ms. Tarah-Stephanie. Who is a UrbanKiz, Tarraxo, Hip-Hop, Dancehall, and Waaking dancer and Instructor. She Currently lives in Quebec Born in Haiti. She the creator and founder of the dance Team UrKiz in 2017. She started dancing Kizomba in 2015 In this episode we talk about: - Her Childhood Growing up in Haiti - Her move to Quebec - Her Beginner stage in Kizomba/Urban Kiz. - Difference between Kizomba/Urban Kiz - How is Tarraxo different than Tarraxinha - What made hercreate UrKiz - What is it like being the director of a dance team - What makes her such a great teacher ...::Tarah-Stephanie's Social Media::... Facebook https://www.facebook.com/tarahurkiz/ https://www.facebook.com/tarahstephanie.ae Instagram https://www.instagram.com/urkizofficial/ https://www.instagram.com/tarahkiryu/ ________________________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
On Today's episode we have the incredible Mr. Mike Ahombi. He is a KIZOMBA, URBANKIZ,TARRAXHINA AND TARRAXO instructor. He was born in Kinshasa, D.R.Congo. Moved to the USA in 2014. From a early he has been involved in dancing from Afrobeat to Hip hop through Ndombolo. Mike’s french background, exposed him to Ghetto Zouk music and dance since the age of 12. In this episode we talk about: - Tarraxinha - His Beginner Stage - His time as a Professional Basketball player in the Congo - What got him into Dancing - His Childhood in the Congo - Tips to improve your leading, following and Tarraxinha. - His Transition from Africa to America. ...::Mike Ahombi Social Media::... Facebook https://www.facebook.com/Ahombi/ https://www.facebook.com/micky.ahombi YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCf7PSBqxHFwCe7b7uSjOK5w Instagram https://www.instagram.com/ahombimike/
#Brasil #Zouk #BrazilianZouk On this episode we have the amazing Larissa Almeida & Luí Salton. Who are Brazilian Zouk Dancers, Instructors choreographers and performers. Currently living in Brazil. In this episode we talk about: - Childhood In Brasil - What got them into dancing - The Dance Scene in Brasil - Their beginner stage - Their Teacher Training - What makes them such amazing teachers - Tips and Hints to improve your leading and following. ...::Luí e Larissa Social Media::... Instagram https://www.instagram.com/luielarissa/ Facebook https://www.facebook.com/lui.pierre https://www.facebook.com/larissa.almeida.566790 https://www.facebook.com/luielarissa/ https://www.facebook.com/events/440138763210922/ Email contatoluielarissa@gmail.com ____________________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
On today's show we have the incredible Sensas Lionel. Who is a Kizomba and Urban Kiz dancer and Instructor. Currently Lives in Frankfurt, Germany Born in Montebello, Guadeloupe In this episode we talk about: Growing up in Guadeloupe Zouk Music How he stated dancing His beginner stage. Hints and tips to improve your lead and follow. https://www.facebook.com/sensaslionel https://www.instagram.com/sensas_lionel/ _______________________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
On Today's Episode we have the incredible Eloy J Rojas. Born in Venezuela. Currently Lives In Berlin, Germany. Started his professional training around 2008. Background in ballroom, ballet, contemporary, lyric, latin, afro-latin and caribbean rhythms. Director of his own dance school and dance team. He moved in 2014 to Mexico City. In 2016 he moved to Berlin. In this episode we talk about: Growing up in Venezuela His Beginner Stage What sparked his professional dance career. What made him move to Berlin What makes him such a great teacher Tips and Hints on improving your lead. http://www.eloyjrojas.com/ https://www.facebook.com/eloyjrojas/ https://www.instagram.com/eloyjrojas/
On Today's Episode we have the incredible and amazing Tony and Gracie Flores. Who are Professional Dancers, Instructors, Directors, and Choreographers. Currently Living in California. They specialize in Cumbia, Salsa y Bachata. They are the directors @ ProjXDance Company In this episode we talk about Their Childhood Growing up Dancing Tips on improving your lead and follow. What it is like running a dance team and studio. Great episode with some truly hard working individuals. https://www.facebook.com/TGFloresDance/ https://www.facebook.com/grayysee https://www.facebook.com/tony.flores.338 https://www.facebook.com/ProjXDance/ https://www.instagram.com/grayyseee/ https://www.instagram.com/projxdance/ https://www.instagram.com/iam.tonyflores/
On Today's episode we have Ms. Brielle Friedman . She is a Salsa Teacher and Performer, Writer, and marketing consultant based in New York City First Stated Salsa Dancing back in 2010 Currently living in NYC, born in Florida. Creator of Vitamin B – a Blog dedicated to Salsa and your life. In this episode we talk about: Her childhood Traveling the Globe. Her Love of traveling the World. Her Love of Competing in Dancing. What get her into Dancing Her beginner Stage Her Blog https://www.instagram.com/briellefriedman/ www.briellefriedman.com www.vitaminb.blog https://www.facebook.com/briellefriedman https://twitter.com/briellefriedman www.youtube.com/channel/UCu-I9KGku481Kn_tw5qdRWw http://socialdancecommunity.com/how-to-balance-your-dance-life-with-the-rest-of-your-life/ https://vitaminb.blog/auditioning-as-a-dancer/ http://socialdancecommunity.com/what-i-learned-from-going-pro/ ____________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
Two Left Feet Podcast Episode Wiley EP 55 I am now on the line with Abigail and Tony Wiley. Who are the owners and operators of Kizomba Noroeste. They currently live in BlackPool, United Kingdom. They currently teach, Salsa, Bolero, Semba and Kizomba. Tony and Abigail have been dancing kizomba since 2010 and teaching since 2014 In this Episode We Talk about: Growing up In BlackPool England The Dance Scene in Blackpool How they met What got them into dancing Their Amazing Teaching Style Their Recent Trip to Angola Their Business Kizomba Noroeste https://www.instagram.com/ab1ga1lbarker/ https://twitter.com/KizombaDesejoNW https://www.youtube.com/user/barkerkennell https://www.facebook.com/abigail.wylie.5 https://www.facebook.com/learnkizomba/ https://www.facebook.com/tony.wylie.7 ___________________________ Twitter: @Tw0LeftFeet Instagram: tw0_left_feet Website: https://2leftfeet.blog/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/groups/2171874589599779/ Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/TwoLeftFeetPodcast/ iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/two-left-feet-podcast/id1454425997 Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/5bQSnwKDmHbDQdgnZ0OrC3 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/Twoleftfeet https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCR109vJ4Pbl146Ok1u5vSuA https://anchor.fm/twoleftfeetpodcast
Jose Santoyo and Tia Bordenave have been major players in the salsa world for years, from California to Texas. We talk about: How they got into salsa and what inspired them. The competitions, the performances, the culture, the fashion. Teaching salsa and its many styles. The On1 vs On2 controversy. The salsa scene in Austin: http://gloriasnightlife.com/index.php (Gloria's), Dallas Nightclub, Copa. Quote of the show: ”I focused more on the gentleman leading the woman to make the woman feel amazing on the dancefloor” - Jose Santoyo
I've been dancing salsa On2 for the past 4 years. Like many, my salsa career began as a wide-eyed and bushy-tailed On1 salsero. For those of you that have yet to make the jump to On2, here are the 3 essentials of New York style salsa that will help you on your journey: --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/thisweekinsalsa/message
This salsa dance video lesson we teach you the "Lock and Load" salsa dance combination. It is an advanced move, and therefore we will be teaching it in On2 timing. This episode is dedicated to the memory of Steve Jobs who recently passed away in October...