Podcasts about slock

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Best podcasts about slock

Latest podcast episodes about slock

On The Brink with Castle Island
Weekly Roundup 03/21/25 (Trump addresses DAS, Kraken buys NinjaTrader, FIRM act advances) (EP.604)

On The Brink with Castle Island

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2025 40:13


Nic and Matt are back for another week of news and deals. In this episode:  Trump speaks at DAS Is anyone in Washington talking about abolishing capital gains tax for crypto? Trump denounces OCP2.0 TON raises a huge round Remember IOTA? We reminisce about Slock it and the DAO What happened to Ethereum Classic? Can you redeem PAXG for physical gold? Kraken acquires NinjaTrader for $1.5b The SEC says PoW mining is not a security Tim Scott's debanking FIRM act advances from the Senate Banking Committee We review Bessent's appearance on All In  What was the deal with the 'vibecession'

AMS Bowfishing Buzz podcast
Tim Wells Joins Us! – Bowfishing with the Slock Master (Ep.80)

AMS Bowfishing Buzz podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 8, 2024 101:44


This past week, we had the pleasure of bowfishing with the Slock Master himself, Tim Wells. Tim is an outdoor industry giant, and has been producing high quality, engaging content for over 30 years. His show, “Relentless Pursuit”, is one of the most watched outdoor programs ever. He joins us today on the Bowfishing Buzz to discuss how our recent trip with him went.  We also cover: • The new blow dart world record • What Tim did before he became an outdoor content creator • Why Tim is so invested in instinctual shooting • Tim's most memorable bowfishing adventure                                                           PLUS! Get ready, the 13th Annual Big 20 is only a little over a week away!

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies
Lefteris Karapetsas: Rotki – From Ethereum Devcon 0 to Building Rotki

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2024 71:24


We are, arguably, still early in the crypto industry, but some people were really…really early. One of them is Lefteris Karapetsas, who joined EthDev in 2014 and contributed to building the Ethereum ecosystem, since before the genesis block. His crypto journey is one for the history books, as after EthDev he joined Slock.it, right around the time of The DAO raise…and hack. Lefteris remained a core supporter of decentralisation and an active member of the Ethereum community, being involved (and delegated) in multiple projects' governance. More recently, he founded Rotki, an open source portfolio management app that aims to preserve user privacy. We were joined by Lefteris Karapetsas, true Ethereum OG, to discuss his 10-year long journey through the Ethereum ecosystem, from joining EthDev (pre-Devcon 0) to founding Rotki.Topics covered in this episode:Lefteris' backgroundEthereum's beginningsJoining Slock.itThe DAO r(a)ise and hackEthereum classic hard forkBrainbot & Raiden Network eraFounding RotkiCrypto accounting privacyThe challenges of building a local appRotki membership tiersUpcoming portfolio management on RotkiFuture roadmap for RotkiHow Ethereum's culture evolved over timeEthereum public good funding. Optimism governanceHopes and fears regarding Ethereum's futureEpisode links:Lefteris Karapetsas on TwitterRotki on TwitterSponsors:Gnosis: Gnosis builds decentralized infrastructure for the Ethereum ecosystem, since 2015. This year marks the launch of Gnosis Pay— the world's first Decentralized Payment Network. Get started today at - gnosis.ioChorus1: Chorus1 is one of the largest node operators worldwide, supporting more than 100,000 delegators, across 45 networks. The recently launched OPUS allows staking up to 8,000 ETH in a single transaction. Enjoy the highest yields and institutional grade security at - chorus.oneThis episode is hosted by Friederike Ernst. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/533

Bloomberg Surveillance
Bloomberg Surveillance: Equities Outlook for 2024 (Podcast)

Bloomberg Surveillance

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 37:47 Transcription Available


Lori Calvasina, RBC Capital Markets Head of US Equity Strategy,  says the path for equities is higher in 2024. Dana Telsey, Telsey Advisory Group CEO, breaks down record-high Black Friday sales. Aaron David Miller, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace Senior Fellow, discusses the latest on the Israel-Hamas war. Torsten Slok, Chief Economist, Apollo Global Management, says the Fed's rate policy is leading to a gradual slowdown.  Steve Schwarzman, Chairman & CEO of Blackstone Inc., says his firm has seen a bevy of buying opportunities in real estate across Europe. Get the Bloomberg Surveillance newsletter, delivered every weekday. Sign up now: https://www.bloomberg.com/account/newsletters/surveillance    Full transcript:  This is the Bloomberg Surveillance Podcast. I'm Tom Keene, along with Jonathan Farrell and Lisa Abramowitz. Join us each day for insight from the best and economics, geopolitics, finance and investment. Subscribe to Bloomberg Surveillance on demand on Apple, Spotify and anywhere you get your podcasts, and always on Bloomberg dot Com, the Bloomberg Terminal, and the Bloomberg Business App. We begin the program with Lori Cavasina, head of US ecority Strategy at RBC Capital Markets. Lori, good morning. We hope you all had a wonderful Thanksgiving. I want to kick off with your call fifty one hundred for five thousand rather year rent on the s and P five hundred for next year Deutsche Bank going one further, a fifty one hundred, Lurie talk to us about the path to five k. Well, thanks for having me as always, and look, you know we purposefully did not put out you know, we see a near term pullback and a resurgence. I think a lot of people got caught in that trap in twenty twenty three calling for a near term pullback in the first quarter that didn't end up happening. I do think we'll be watching our sentiment indicator very closely. It's been the best star in the sky to navigate the equity market this year, but it's also round tripped a couple of times. It started out giving you a screaming by signal because of deep pessimism. Return to that post. SBB gave a sales signal in August and then gave a by signal again in November. So I think we're going to have to just be very tactical in that. You know, I have been telling people November is very consistently a strong month, but December is a little bit more hit or miss. So we'll see if we end up getting the Santa or Grinch in December. But I do think the path for equities is higher next year, and if we do have a bit of a short term pullback either in December to start the year, I expect it to be temporary. Llurie Goldman Sachs had a note thanks zero Edge for this on sales girls looking out two years twenty three, twenty four to twenty five and the difference between them magnificent seven with eleven percent sales grows versus the SPX four ninety three of three percent sales growth. Why would anybody sell the magnificent seven right now? I think it's a great question, Tom. When we look at our indicators and we look at the megacap growth trade broadly, it looks crowded. If you look at the weekly CFTC data on Nasdaq one hundred futures positioning, we're basically close to peak valuation and growth relative to value. If you look at the rustle one thousand on a weighted PE multiple, which is going to be very heavily influenced by that magnificent seven. And if you look at earning's momentum, we're still seeing better earnings revision trends and growth and value, but value is starting to catch up a little bit, so we are seeing that leadership on the earning side fade a little bit. All of that tells me that there should be a pause in growth leadership at some point. But I think one of the reasons people can't really permanently quit these growth stocks is kind of hitting on exactly what you said, the idea that there will be superior growth there over the intermediate term. And if you look at GDP forecasts for next year one percent in real terms anticipated by the street one point eighty percent in twenty twenty five. When we're in a sub two percent GDP environment, growth stocks usually do outperform because economic growth is perceived to be scarce. So I do think there is a real tension. You know, we still like the tech sector even though we have these shorter term tactical concerns on growth, had those tactical concerns on growth frankly for a while, and they've yet to really materialize in a big way. And I do feel like you may need to see a real ratcheting up of GDP expectations before you can really see growth loose some of that leadership dominance. When you talk about sentiment and how really that's been the loadstone for you, it's figuring out where is investor sentiment em betting against it? Am I correct? Basically? You know, one of the things I've learned over my career, Lisa, is that when everybody is really really pessimistic, that's usually a fantastic time to buy. If you look at when the AAII net bullishness indicator is, you know, sort of one standard deviation or two standard deviations below the long term average. I forget the exact stat, but it's in the eighties in terms of the percent of time that you're up twelve months later. And you see similar stats if you look on the flip side when people are overly enthusiastic. Now, if you're above one standard deviation on extreme optimism, you still tend to see like a five percent gain over the next twelve months. So it's not necessarily a washout, but it does tell you that you tend to see consolidation. You do tend to see some choppier markets, And I think that's why it's so important, Lisa to really prioritize data over narratives. I know a lot of strategists like to tell a great story and then they go out and put together their charts to try to fit whatever narrative they're pushing out there. But I really think that you have to stick to the data, and things like that centiment indicator will keep you into falling into consensus traps. Again, everybody just sort of gloms onto the same narrative and things get too extreme. Well, the narrative that we've been hearing again and again is five thousand on the SMP going into next year at least, if not more, And there has been a sort of boom and optimism that we've seen. Does that mean it's time to start taking some chips off the table and to be a little bit less optimistic or does this mean that finally you might see some of that cash at record levels going into the equity market. Well, it's interestingly so you know, everybody wants to sort of talk about this idea, and this is maybe on the more barish side of the table that bonds look more attractive than stocks and the earning shield has collapsed relative to the bond yield, and all that is true, But if you actually go back, there have been periods in history when equity investors or investors in general have taken up both their equity allocations and their bond allocations at the same time. So I don't think it's unheard of for both to do. Well, you know, five thousand, it's starting to be a number we're hearing a lot. I think we were maybe the second person on the cell side that had it when we put ours out, but you are starting to hear about it. And I think ten percent is usually a reasonable place that a lot of strategists start, we do have one model that can take us up to fifty three hundred, and that's looking at our valuation work and earning's work. And I will tell you, Lisa, like and as I was putting the report together, you always think about kind of where did you go wrong in the past year. I was more optimistic than most, but not optimistic in the end. And that valuation model was the one thing that was telling me all year to look for forty seven hundred, forty eight hundred on the S and P it's pointing to forty seven hundred on the end of the year. Now twenty twenty three one point it was saying forty eight forty nine. So I do think you have to have a little bit of humility when you look at these forecasts. We look at a bunch of different models. We take the median. Some are more constructive, some are less. But I do think we do have to pay attention to that bowl case setting into next year, because so it's really what works this year? Does that mean a banner? Kelvistin says fifty three hundred. I'd like we could go there quite I think we stick with five K. I just wanted to jump in when you were putting this together. Surely five K was something like twenty percent upside of the time. So you know, John, I started back in October pricing the models, and we actually published a report in October where we said we're not going to do our target yet, but here's what all the models are showing. And back then we were getting, you know, more a little bit of a more subdued number because we had a lower starting point, so we did price everything. As of mid November, I think a lot of our models we froze as November fifteenth, November sixteenth, so we really are kind of getting sort of a true ten percent from current conditions as of mid November. Basically, when I do this, John, I go into a black hole for a few days, don't answer my phone, don't answer email, and don't talk to anybody, and update all at once. So well, welcome Bocasta the black hole, Laurie. We're happy to see you, Lori Cavasena. Obviously, Capital Markets, there's no one better to speak to on this. As if you stand at the four corners of fifty seventh Street and Fifth Avenue, the Dana Telsea is a child gazing upon Berg Dorth Goodman and across the street to Tiffany's and where Louis Vuton is now when there's some other unpronounceable I can't afford store on the other corner. Telsea joins us now CEO, chief Research officer of her Telsey Advisory Group. You got this right. A lot of people got this wrong. How did you expect this optimism that we come out of the season. Well, thank you very much for having me, and hope you guys had a great holiday. Here's I think overall, keep in mind we did have a barrage of earnings reports all talking about the cautious consumer inventory levels are lean. Promotions were in place thirty to forty That isn't outstanding, that isn't going off the rails. In terms of level of promotions, they were definitely clean. What you saw in terms of traffic, look at the Lululemons, the bathroom, body works. Macy's had more traffic than what you had at Nordstrom, and off prices like TJX had a ton of traffic. And the teen retailers picked up the reason why, value and innovation. If you add value and you had innovation, the consumer was coming So look at Uggs and Hoka where there was innovation. You look at the value on the pricing. It meant something. But we have a long season coming up now. Christmas is on a Monday. Watch that weekend before Christmas. Because procrastinators, it's their choice of when they want to spend. Just let's build them that this idea of watch what happens later in the season. Are you saying that you suspect people brought forward their shopping much more than they had in the past because they are being cautious. So the numbers are inflated to represent that more than just excessive spending altogether. Yes, I think. You look at the savings rate which has come down, You take a look at delinquencies which have gone up, and you look at what's happened with the pattern of promotions. It began in October, So with Amazon Prime Day in October their second Prime Day, you had a pull forward of what the promos were, and of course online is going to be strong. Stores are no longer open on Thanksgiving Day? So what did people do? They shop with their phone? Mobile mattered? Well, this really raises this question. Is it the modality of shopping that matters? Right now or is it the type of product mix that matters right now? And I'm curious, can you parse that up? Is it just online shopping or is it the products that people are getting online. It's the products that people are getting, and don't throw out the stores. The stores matter, the engagement that people have, the social interaction. So many companies in twenty twenty three came out with new store formats. You look at on mall and off mall, they both won and even outlets are strong. And that measure for value, where's the best total return of twelve months? You and Joe Feldman they're not on speaking terms on this, but the basic idea of which kind of retail and which individual stock is the best possibility off price I think is going to win over the next twelve months. TJ Max, would you off price? Off price? Not luxury, different world, it's off price. It's the TJ max Is of the world, the Burlington's and the Ross stores. Why they're getting the benefit of a trade down. Look at what you just saw in their results last week when they each delivered same store sales of at least five percent, when you typically these are three percent same store sales increases. They're getting the benefit of the trade down. There's been a heritage of Tjmax executing what's the secret sauce that makes them do that? The experience of their buyers. They know how to buy, They have their relationships with brands. Brands like being in their stores and they sell through and don't forget their locations. The description that you're painting of the American consumer is not that positive. It's one that is trading down. As you said, it's one that has caution that might not show up in force before that Monday Christmas. So where are we in this cycle, right? I mean, is this a matter of people running out of money or is it just them saying, well, we've been spending a lot recently. We probably should be a little more prudent. They had more money two years ago with the stimulus package during the pandemic. The load to middle income consumer is battered right now by higher interest rates. Even though inflation's moderating, it's still a higher price than it was in the past. And even you take a look at the luxury consumer, you need the feel good factor. With the geopolitical issues going on, the macro headwinds out there and the volatility the stock market, it makes it more challenging. So that's why experience. Look at the tailor swift concerts over the summer, what people are willing to spend on. Give them something innovative, they'll be there. So what does it say about the trajectory of the consumer and how people are going to be spending. Is it the beginning of more pain or is this basically the bulk of it. I think this is in the middle of the pain that we're I think the focus on essentials is right there. I think you need newness in order to drive demand. And even though the labor market continues to remain very good, the watchwords are out there and saying what's it going to look like? And inventory is cleaner, so you don't need to promote as deeply as you had in the past. Look at what's happening with the department stores. They're ordering more cautiously, and why are they ordering cautiously if they don't feel the demand is going to be there. They'd rather sell at full price than markdowns. And your most profitable markdown is your lowest markdown, not your greatest markdown. Toughest job in retail this year is a guy named Sabata Dico at Gucci absolute toughest, toughest job. Dana Telsey on what Gucci's going to do right off that corner of Fifth Avenue and fifty seventh. I think they're going more basic than they've ever been before. Absolutely, they're going away from what the idiocy was for three years. Yeah, the mismatching of the three years is all about matching now and it's about safe. They're going back back to their archives and seeing what can they reinvent and updated proof that we want that. Is there a proof that will sell to the Chinese? I think there's some proof it will sell to the Chinese, But we're not seeing the Chinese travel yet. We need them traveling to really drive demand. And don't forget you're seeing the local Europeans slow down. Also, what do you make of the buy now, Pay Later and we were hearing that it's actually picking up. Do you buy that? Do you think that this is a positive sign for the retail world or is it a negative sign that people are just basically turning to leverage. People are turning towards leverage. When buy Now, Pay Later first came out, it was a huge event. A huge development because it got younger people and frankly the millennials to spend. I think now that it's been around for a few years, if they can't pay on time, they're willing to delay and frankly be able to extend what their payment terms are. Is it changing charge cards? I mean, is buy now, pay later changing the charge card business? Not what we've seen. It didn't take off tremendously. It took off with a certain graphic and those are the millennials single best buke go. I think that it's going to be TJX. I think TJX is going to be the winner for Holiday in twenty twenty four. Dana, thank you for the brief. Dana Telsey with Telsey Advisory Group. Here we have seen far too much of him. He is an expert on turmoil, war and terrorism. Aaron David Miller with a continued brief, Senior Fellow Carnegie Endowment for International Piece. Aaron, just let me just cut to the chase. If we get out to a point of negotiation from where you sit, is there a hamas to negotiate with? Now there is, and the cutteries and the Americans are validating Hamas's effectiveness. The three of you are better analysts than I am, because you've i think, identified the core questions. There's growing daylight. The world is mad at Joe Biden, even though I think frank his own party's mad at him. There's a degree twenty five years at Department of State, I've never seen, never the degree of dissension and vocal opposition to an administration's policy from inside the foreign policy and national security space. On one resignation, but an extraordinary amount of noise. I think the President Frankly handled this pretty effectively. The Israeli Lebanese border is relatively quiet. The fears of escalation into a regional war which could produce plunging financial markets and rising up prices. So far that's been avoided, And you're right to focus on ostages, but I think the deal is very clear. I'd be stunned, frankly, if this humanitarian past collapsed. Hamas is trading hostages for time. They're hoping that the hostage families inside of Israel will continue to pressure the government in order to redeem all of the hostages that have not been The Arabs are angry, and THEWS earliers are going to face probably in the next week. If the ten hostages for a day of quiet, which is the offer on the table, If Amas accepts that doesn't add requests for more Palestinian prisoners, you could get another week out of this. But at some point the Israelis are going to want to resume in their ground campaign, and at that point, I think you're going to see growing awkwardness and uncomfortableness, maybe even tension in the US Israeli relationship. There's daylight between President Biden and some of his own members within his party, within his team that he has surrounding him. But he also reportedly has expressed concern about the collateral damage, about the civilians who have gotten killed, the incredible number, more than people had originally expected. How much is that going to lead to pressure in a new way that Benjamin not to Yahoo, who is not exactly popular at home, we'll have to listen to. I think that's the core question. President persona alone among modern presidents, he considers himself part of the Israeli story and is preternaturally his emotional support for Israel literally is impressed on his DNA. The politics. As you point out, he has to be concerned about rising the rising type opposition the Democratic Party, but the Republicans, who have emerged as the sort of Israel right or wrong party, are also waiting for him to pressure the Israelis so that they can pressure Joe Biden. And finally, there's I think the president's realization that he doesn't have many good answers to the two or three critical questions that the Israelis are facing with. How do you prosecute a ward to eradicate Hamas without an exponential rise in Palestinian desks? How do you surge humanitarian assistance into a war zone? And finally, what do you do about the proverbial day after its weeks and months after? So I think part of the reason he's reluctant to press the Israeli's hard so far is because he doesn't have better answers for them these core questions. Aaron David Miller a student of this, with your books back thirty years, don't go out thirty years for but I'm going to give you five years or ten years forward. Is our relationship with Israel irrevocably changed? A fascinating question. The headline would suggest that generational changes in voter constituency in Congress. The growing divergence between United States and the values proposition that Israel is a liberal democracy more or less seeking the same things that we do, and growing policy differences suggest that, yeah, there is a lot of fraud tension in this relationship. Whether it's a headline or a trend line, that's the key issue. I suspect that the operating system that has kept the US's a Reeli relationship pretty much very close together is going to continue for quite some time. But again, we support Israel because it's an American interest to do so, and because it reflects American values to do so. When those things change in the face of our right wing Israeli government that's pursuing opposite policies both at home and with respect to diplomacy on the Israeli Polish Ennian issue, then I think the US is really relationship will begin to change. That tension is continuing to build. And thank you so fantastic to hear from you, Aaron David Miller. There of the kind of endowment for international pain. Torsten Sluck He's chief economist at Appalled Global Management and writes a piercing short note each morning and here he hearkens back to the skeletons in the closet, the worries that those older have about is this time like well, try nineteen seventy two, Is this time like a nifty to fifty or the point where Polaroid and Xerox were one of the five Magnificent five that we're out there, Doctor Slock joins us this morning, I loved the equal multiples. Now with nineteen seventy two, I believe that ended ugly. Do you take that over to an analog that this will end ugly? Well, we still, of course have to wait and see exactly how AI will be used, and no one really knows how it'll be implemented, and how much productivity we'll get out of it, how much more consumption or welfare overall. But the bottom line really is what we can track is the valuations, And what I did right in the note today is exactly that the valuations and the trajectory is beginning to look quite similar, including the levels we're at with the pe for AI stocks or the Magnificent seven. Now at above fifty on a trailing basis, it does make you wonder a little bit whether this is indeed going to have a different story compared to what we've seen before, or whether this is actually going to be similard some I mentioned Tom Galvin years ago at Donald sim Lufkin Generator was very top line sales specific. Are we going to have the nominal GDP to support the magnificent seven even if they level out, or to bring the breadth up in a good market. Well, the problem is that the SMP four ninety three has basically been flat for the last year. So the conclusion is that so far all the market gains have been driven by this handful of stocks. So that of course also should bring us all to the discussion, Okay, is this sustainable? To what degree? Is this something that is a good representation of the oral index? If you really end up just buying into one simple story, namely AI, which is the reason why a lot of people are focused on the consumer to understand exactly where we are in this spending picture. And I want to go back to what we really began with this idea of are we seeing sustained sales and a sustained strong consumer or are we just seeing these shifts underway regardless of who ends up benefiting the most. But shifts underway. That represents strength in pockets in the overall picture. Yeah, and absolutely, I do think that it's clear that the shifts have been towards services. So that's why goods have generally been slowing down. Another strength point, as you're pointing out, is that we've also seen strengthen online. But if you really back up and look at the data for how is the consumer doing. Well, we just heard your previous guests talk about trading down. If you look at the language rates for all the loans have been going up, the language rates for credit cards have been going up. We're seeing across the board the level of interest rates are beginning to bite harder and harder and harder on consumers. So the conclusion, of course, is that the FED is actually achieving exactly what the textbook would have predicted. Namely, the slowdown might not have been as fast as we all thought just a few quarters ago, but it is still playing out. The slowdown is here and it will continue. We still have the worst ahead of us. It is the case that monetary policy is biting continuously also going forward, what's the distance between goldilocks and a full blown recession. Well, the runway that we are on here for slowing the economy down. From a FED perspective, certainly is that inflation is coming down. The labor market is also gradually coming down, and we got to get a soft landing not only in invasion but also the labor market. But we begin to see that on a plant rate has gone up from three point falls now at three point nine. That's create a lot of discussion about the PSAM rule and to what degree that's an indicator of a recession or not. But the conclusion to your question, Lisa is I do think that we should view this in the broader context of what is it the FIT is trying to do? And the FIT is trying to slow the economy down. That's why they raise interest rates, they raise interust rates because they want us to buy fewer costs fuel wash us fuel refrigerators, let's furniture, let fewer iPhones, and because of that we should over time continue to see that process play out. There is a real tension right now, and I see this under the notes underpinning the notes calling for five thousand or fifty one hundred on the S and P by the end of next year, which is how the federal respond to the slowdown that they wrought that they wanted to see. Will they cut rates aggressively just simply because they're tightening the screws at a faster pace as growth slows. Do you buy that they will do that even if it keeps perhaps the economy flow and prolongs this period of disinflation. This is a really important discussion in teams. In M language, we are looking at the tailor rule. How much weight do they put on inflation? How much weight do they put on the labor market. So far, all the weight has almost entirely been on inflation. And the question is next year, once inflation does get closer to two, will they begin to shift their attention over towards the label market? In other words, are the coefficients changing so that we put more weight on the label market. Now that the labor market is beginning to show some signs of weakening, I appreciate that jobless claims are not slowing, but the work week is coming down. If you look at job openings is coming down. A number of indicators are suggesting that label demand is weakening. So I do think that they will begin to shift away from focusing purely on inflation to begin to focus. Also more on the label a slock rule. It's like the tailor. I'm inventing it right now. Focus the slock rule. Look for this. The slock rules is three months moving average and non farm payrolls. What statistic do we need on a three months moving average of non farm payrolls? Where we make the great tailor to slock shift. See if you look at your latest number for a non found it was one hundred and fifty thousand. If idays one eighty eight two, and if I type Ecoco on Bloomberg, I will see that by second quarter of next year, non found paybrows will on average fall April, May and June be thirty five thousand. So now goes not wondering, thirty five thousand, So that is not wondering. That's the average, So that can have some fluctuation. I was not wondering. I always say this and p going to trade. If we get thirty five thousand and non fund payrose, what if it even goes below zero? The risk is here that we may have a runway and the lack of effects of Martins hear pology essentially beginning to be a big a trag on growth. Adobe just out Amy, Thank you so much for this. This is Bramo spending this weekend. Adobe a twelve billion to twelve point four billion Cyber Monday spend last year was eleven point three billion. But to your distinction, that's cyber that's just we're parsing out how all of us are glued to Amazon and it's cyber Monday today, let alone all the other spending that we've seen over this period of time. Really, I mean, honestly, the distortions have been incredibly difficult to really pick up on, which is the reason why I'm listening to what you're saying toward Sten, this idea of the labor market weakening and the FED maybe responding to that, and I'm thinking about, well, people still have money to spend, Their real wages are actually going up, and oh yeah, this is a job full recession that people are accepting. This is what they say, right, that people are hoarding labor, this is a new world. Do you push back against that? Well, there is in your weekend reading from the Fed the working papers that write about this. There is some debate between the Boston Fed, the San Francisco Fed, the New York Fed, has also written about this. The Board of Prominence has also written about this. The key issue still is it's very clear that we are ultimately running out of savings, excess savings in the household sex. So the question is some people view that has already happened, other view that's about now, other view that may only happen in the next few quarters. But the trend is very clear. The fit is getting what they want. They want a slowdown, and that's why you will also madly get excess savings running out. And let's not forget student dont payment started on the first of Octoba. That's why retail sales for Octoba was readtivy week. If we put all these things together, I still think that the slowdown continues. Deutsche Bank put out a forecast for one hundred and seventy five basis points of FED rate cuts next year. Is that feasible with the recipe that you just put out there. Well, that does require, of course quite a hot slowdown in the economy. That certainly requires a recession and a hot landing. The question is that's not what the contentious is expecting at the moment. But it's clear that if we do get a shop all slow down, and that is also what the contentious is expecting. It's just above ceral DP is expecting it below zero. Both scenarios make sense on their own, but the conclusion still is we still have more downside risk from where we are at the moment. I got to go back to your day job a couple of years ago before you got this easy slog with Apollo, and that was a Deutsche Bank Rischie Senak, the Prime Minister told our Francine Lacroix adamantly he is not prescribing austerity. You and folk arts Landau live this at Deutsche Bank, of the continent of Europe and of the United Kingdom. Is there a risk they slip into an incorrect austere policy. Well, the problem is that both the UK and EU have some same list of problems at the US broadly speaking, and then have some addition. We stimulus. We did a lock in New world stimulus. They're stuck in the old world. Isn't that simple? Well, in some sense, fiscal policy is certainly very different. In the US. It was much more aggressive than what it was in the UK and Europe, and in that sense, all the rules that in particular the growth constability plaque in Europe but also in the UK have certainly played a very critical role in why fiscal policy has been very different in the UK relative to the US. The fiscal policy will be more expensive than perhaps some people would say given where rates are. That's what we saw from Germany and the recent prognostications over there. Do you think auctions matter? I do think auctions matter a lot. And as you know, as you just talked about two year, three year, a five years and seven year this week is very important. And if you go also and look at the auction sizes over the last several months, they have gone up and as they continue to go up. The risk really here is that short rates may eventually come down, but we may have a steepener because long rates may potentially not come down as much because now we are dealing with this supply issue that potentially to put up what pressure and limit how much of a time we can get in loong rates. Let's revisit a banner from two hours ago. Outnumbered again, Pharaoh gone slock here. Auctions matter two, No one cares one. I think we were at two before. Now I think we're at three. Yeah, you know, it's just so it's like three to one is how we're going to take that matter. It depends if you care. I care auction a few weeks ago with a matter quite alone, Yes, exactly. Thank you doctor, Please of the tursen go away at least till next week by Steve Schwartzman of course Blackstone. Steve, thank you. You were just on stage with the Prime Ministeryunak. How much are you putting in the UK? What are you most excited about when it comes to the UK growth. Well, we've been putting a lot of money into the UK. First of all, we're doing our headquarters building here, which is very significant size building. It will be the largest built in the Mayfair area in the last several decades. We bought two companies in the last two weeks in the United States in the UK, and you know we have a total of seventy billion pounds that's close to ninety billion dollars of investments in the UK with thirty seven thousand people working in these companies in real estate. See what stands out as the biggest strength actually for the UK. So there are many questions. There was an autumn statement we're not sure how they're going to fund some of the tax cuts if they continue down the road, and we don't know if the Conservatives are in power in twelve months. Well, the big advantages of the UK are the English language, the rule of law. They have a terrific university system, they have a great life science areas. They're the number one tourist area in Europe, which actually I found surprising, and so they have a lot of pockets of strength. They've been through a complex time politically, but if you look longer term, the rule of law in the UK is very strong. Their regulatory posture has been quite consistent over time. But we forget that these are good things and not all places in the world have them, and so I think I'm not an expert on the UK, you know, sort of laws in the sense of what they're doing politically. I think their autumn statement on balance, which was stimulative, is and necessary thing for their economy. And they have a much more open approach to immigration at the top levels of education, which is good for helping to power an economy. So I think there's some interesting things going on here. Steve, what can you tell us about private market valuations at Pe firms? So in general. Do you see LPs actually demanding more information on marks and more reporting requirements and evaluation. Is that something that's shifting. I don't see a big set of enormous concerns on that. What always happens at this stage and the cycle, you know, when you go to very high interest rates and the world sort of starts slowing down, is that deals slow down. So for l P is their biggest concern is they're not getting capital flows back that they normally were depending on. Just people aren't selling assets. These types of cycles always end and things returns to normal. It's quite interesting that, you know, we just did two deals in the UK in the last two weeks, one in the affordable in what they call social housing area, one in computer software. Both are million billion dollar, two billion dollar type deals. We're doing a number of things in the US now, some of which have been announced, some of which haven't. We just were involved with a situation in Norway that's twelve billion dollars. So the deal business is not totally in mothballs, and these things start again, and I think we're more on that side of the cycle. Although it has been you know, somewhat dreary for a year in terms, for example of real estate, I think you're raising an opportunity to stake funds ten billion. How's that going, Well, we're raising money for a European fund. Actually, we're always raising money for a lot of funds for ran scene, and you know, we're gone through a big fund raising cycle. So we have over two hundred billion dollars. It's one of the biggest pools of uninvested capital in the world and that will be deployed in due course. Interestingly, in real estate, which you just asked about, we're seeing a good deal of volume of buying things in Europe because European real estate is under pressure in large parts because interest rates were so low here for so long. Sometimes in countries they were negative, so the barring costs to own real estate were next to nothing, and now it's closer to six percent. So if you have to carry a whole portfolio that used to cost you next to nothing at six percent, they need to sell things, you know, it's necessary to just hold their other properties. And so we're seeing some very very good buys in that kind of environment because unlike most people, we have enormous capital and can buy the types of real estate that we like, whether they're data centers, whether they're warehouses, whether they're student housing, where those sectors have done very well. See what can you tell us about great? So, have you seen any redemptions in that? How's that going? It breaks greats? How do you say b r e it t you say b reat Yeah, Well, those those redemptions have gone down. You know, they're I think forty or something like that of what they were a year ago. And so that that pool of capital is actually doing quite well compared to almost all of the real estate, and so you know, we look forward to that sort of ultimately going back to a very normal kind of world. Overall. Does UK politics seem benign compared to the US, but also what we saw in the Netherlands, well, you know, commenting on politics of other countries, let alone our own, which has a sense of drama and you know sort of incredulity is outside of my remit fair Steve Schwartz with a thank you so much. As always, Steve also has to get to another meeting right here, because people are coming and going in all the corridors of course of Hampton Court Palace. John subscribe to the Bloomberg Surveillance Podcast on Apple, Spotify, and anywhere else you get your podcasts. Listen live every weekday, starting at seven am Eastern. I'm Bloomberg dot Com, the iHeartRadio app, tune In, and the Bloomberg Business app. You can watch us live on Bloomberg Television and always I'm the Bloomberg Terminal. Thanks for listening. I'm Tom Keen, and this is BloombergSee 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Startup Schlau Podcast
Christoph Jentzsch: Blockchain, Crypto, Ethereum, Tokenize.it | POD #26

Startup Schlau Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 73:39


"Ich wollte wissen was die Welt im Innersten zusammenhält",sagt Christoph Jentzsch und entschied sich für ein Studium der theoretischen Physik & Mathematik in Dresden. Während seinem PhD stolperte er 2013 über die White Paper von Bitcoin und später Ethereum – Und war begeistert. Er liess seinen PhD liegen, ging als Mitarbeiter Nr. 4 zur Ethereum Foundation und bliebt seither dem Blockchain und Crypto-Space treu. Über die Jahre gründete und verkaufte mehrere Unternehmen (darunter Slock.it, EXIT an Blockains.com) und pioniert heute die Tokenisierung von GmbH Anteilen mit Tokenize.it. Im POD erklärt er unter anderem- alle relevanten Crypto & Blockchain Begriffe (Token, NFT, DAO, DeFI, Blockchain, ...)- wie Muster auf Muscheloberflächen entstehen und- wie er Unternehmertum und eine Familie mit 8 (!) Kindern unter einen Hut kriegt***Timestamps00:00 - 00:52 Intro00:53 - 01:43 1. Ich bin Christoph01:44 - 02:52 2. 10 schnelle Fragen02:53 - 08:54 3. Werdegang und die Welt der Kryptowährungen08:55 - 15:11 4. Definition: Token 15:12 - 16:38 5. Non-fundable Token (NFT) vs. Fundable Token16:39 - 20:31 6. PhD abgebrochen20:32 - 29:53 7. Ether-Domain29:54 - 39:17 8. Selbst gründen39:18 - 48:32 9. EXIT48:33 - 1:01:28 10. Startup-Finanzierung1:01:29 - 1:02:53 11. Stand heute1:02:54 - 1:04:02 12. Geld verdienen1:04:03 - 1:10:25 13. Zukunftsvision1:10:26 - 1:13:40 14. Abschlusszitat1:13:41 - Outro***Mehr über Christoph:LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/cjentzsch/Dev Con Videos: https://archive.devcon.org/archive/playlists/devcon-1/***Weitere Podcast Highlights:- André Dörrzapf: Meister im Gewichtheben, EMAILBRIEF, SaaS vs. Handwerkhttps://youtu.be/6XgJXl_Qq6I- Marina Zayats: Personal Branding, Kommunikation, KI, Netzwerkenhttps://youtu.be/_bRNeU0szuI***Mehr über Startup Schlau:Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/startupschlau/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@startupschlauund https://startup-schlau.de/

Overdrive Outdoors Podcast
Slock Master- Tim Wells

Overdrive Outdoors Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2023 70:24


In this week's episode Kevin and Josh are joined by Mr. Tim Wells, the Slock Master himself. This episode with Tim Wells is part of the series of podcasts with guests that were instrumental in our early years of our hunting journey, the folks that got us interested, entertained and educated us when we were just getting into it. In this episode we talk about how he got into hunting, starting at an early age, and even using primitive weapons to take game with his whole family. We talk about his journey from a youth in Illinois, hunting waterfowl, deer and squirrel, (one of his favorite game animals to eat) through to his current career in the outdoors. We talk about self filming and its challenges We talk about some of the places he has hunted, which ones were "hunter friendly" and those that aren't, encounters that were "hair raising" (which says a lot from a guy that has done what he has done) , and which animals posed a bigger threat. We talk about hunting with primitive gear, the ethics and effectiveness of them, and some of the specifics on how they work. Thank you agian Mr Wells for joining us, and as always, THANK YOU ALL FOR LISTENING www.predatorhunteroutdoors.com code: tripod for 10% off tripods and mounts code: light for 20% off lighting products Predator Hunter Outdoors www.huntwise.com code: OVERDRIVE for 20% off an annual membership HuntWise ORC Archery ATN Prym1 HuxWrx

WAGMI Ventures Podcast
Holding The World In Common with Griff Green (Giveth, Commons Stack, General Magic)

WAGMI Ventures Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2023 39:36


Griff Green has been a respected leader within the Ethereum community since 2015 and received a masters degree in Digital Currency in 2016 (as the first holder of its kind). As community manager for Slock.it and TheDAO, he led every angle of the crisis response effort following TheDAO Hack. He co-founded the White Hat Group, which secured the at-risk funds (10% of the total supply of ETH) during TheDAO hack and one year later rescued $210 million dollars worth of crypto assets following the Parity Multisig Hack. Griff and the WHG also audited Aragon and MakerDAO systems. Griff then founded Giveth, a crypto donation platform that radically empowers individuals and communities to affect real change in a transparent, decentralized way, and also founded Commons Stack, the natural progression of Giveth's efforts to build the future of giving with the goal of turning any non-profit cause into an impact investment.In this episode we discuss micro-economy governance possibilities, public and social goods funding, his best advice for those new to web3, and much more.Recorded Thursday January 12th, 2023.

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins
Hunting Stories with Tim Wells, The Slock Master (Part 2)

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 26:30


In this episode, Stephen continues talking with Tim Wells, the Stock Master.  Tim talks about his website and the weapons he sells on them.  He also talks about primitive hunting and why it should be allowed in more places.You can find Tim on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/timwells_slockmaster/ or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/TimWellsBowHunter.You can also find Tim on his website at https://slockmaster.com.You can follow Stephen on Facebook by searching for stephenrobbinshd or on Instagram at StephenHuntDay.You can also email Stephen at stephen.huntingday@gmail.com or info.huntingday@gmail.com.Join us next week as Stephen continues with more stories with Seth.And until next time, keep hunting and doing what God calls you to do.

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins
Hunting Stories with Tim Wells, The Slock Master (Part 1)

Hunting Day with Stephen Robbins

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2022 21:12


In this episode, Stephen talks with Tim Wells, the Stock Master.  Tim talks about spear hunting, and the important parts of planning. He also talks about the two different types of big game animals in Africa and the difference in preparing your hunt for them.You can find Tim on Instagram at https://www.instagram.com/timwells_slockmaster/ or on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/TimWellsBowHunter.You can also find Tim on his website at https://slockmaster.com.You can follow Stephen on Facebook by searching for stephenrobbinshd or on Instagram at StephenHuntDay.You can also email Stephen at stephen.huntingday@gmail.com or info.huntingday@gmail.com.Join us next week as Stephen continues with more stories with Seth.And until next time, keep hunting and doing what God calls you to do.

Unchained
Is Code Law? Should the Hacker Be Punished? The DAO Creators Disagree - Ep.325

Unchained

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 82:10


During my research for The Cryptopians, I found information that I believe identifies the perpetrator behind The DAO hack on Ethereum. Three founding members of The DAO and Slock.it (Christoph Jentzsch, Lefteris Karapetsas, Griff Green) discuss how and why they created The DAO, how they helped save the funds being siphoned off by black hat hackers, their personal feelings about The DAO, along with their reaction to the news about who I believe was The DAO attacker. Show topics:   Part 1: Background on The DAO Christoph, Lefteris, and Griff's background and how they came to Slock.it what Slock.it was and why the Slock.it team decided to create The DAO what The DAO has to do with venture capital funding why the Slock.it team did not cap The DAO sale what made The DAO such a popular investment vehicle why The DAO developers were scared at the amount of money they raised   Part 2:  what Christoph, Lefteris, and Griff's initial reaction to The DAO was saving funds from The DAO via a hard fork versus white hat hacking whether they thought Ethereum Classic would survive a hard fork how the Ethereum community has treated Christoph, Griff, and Lefteris in the wake of The DAO attack   Part 3: why they disagree on whether code is law their reaction to my naming Toby Hoenisch as The DAO attacker which actor would play them in a movie about The DAO attack Come to My In-Person Book Signings and Events! New York:  Wednesday, March 2, at 7pm At The Strand Bookstore Moderated by CoinDesk's Christine Lee https://www.strandbooks.com/events/event403?title=laura_shin_the_cryptopians_idealism_greed_lies_and_the_making_of_the_first_big_cryptocurrency_craze   Bay Area:  Tuesday March 8, 6pm San Francisco's Commonwealth Club  Moderated by The Information's Kate Clark https://www.commonwealthclub.org/events/2022-03-08/laura-shin-inside-first-cryptocurrency-craze   Seattle:  Wednesday March 9, at 7:30pm The Forum Moderated by Steve Scher, of Town Hall Seattle.  https://townhallseattle.org/event/laura-shin/ Thank you to our sponsors! Crypto.com: https://crypto.onelink.me/J9Lg/unconfirmedcardearnfeb2021            Beefy Finance: https://beefy.finance     Cross River Bank: https://crossriver.com/crypto    Episode Links   Guests Christoph Jentzsch ​​https://twitter.com/ChrJentzsch Griff Green https://twitter.com/thegrifft  Lefteris Karapetsas https://mobile.twitter.com/LefterisJP    DAO Hacker Reveal:  Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurashin/2022/02/22/exclusive-austrian-programmer-and-ex-crypto-ceo-likely-stole-11-billion-of-ether/ Unchained: https://unchainedpodcast.com/exclusive-cryptos-biggest-whodunnit-who-was-behind-the-2016-dao-attack-on-ethereum/  Medium: https://medium.com/@laurashin/who-hacked-the-dao-on-ethereum-heres-how-we-jumped-past-one-critical-step-60aec489a127 Bulletin: https://laurashin.bulletin.com/who-was-behind-the-2016-dao-attack-on-ethereum-the-backstory-to-my-investigation Forbes on YouTube: ​https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuICbAucfn0  Daily Tech News Show: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1306972988    The Cryptopians http://bit.ly/cryptopians  On Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Cryptopians-Idealism-Greed-Making-Cryptocurrency/dp/1541763017/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1645037311&sr=8-2 On Barnes. &. Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-cryptopians-laura-shin/1138980345?ean=9781541763012  On Bookshop.org:  https://bookshop.org/books/the-cryptopians-idealism-greed-lies-and-the-making-of-the-first-big-cryptocurrency-craze/9781541763012 Unchained: https://unchainedpodcast.com/how-writing-the-cryptopians-shaped-my-views-on-ethereum/    The DAO Hack https://www.coindesk.com/learn/2016/06/25/understanding-the-dao-attack/ https://www.gemini.com/cryptopedia/the-dao-hack-makerdao https://unchainedpodcast.com/how-matthew-leising-confronted-his-suspects-in-the-dao-attacks/

Unchained
Is Code Law? Should the Hacker Be Punished? The DAO Creators Disagree - Ep.325

Unchained

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2022 82:10


During my research for The Cryptopians, I found information that I believe identifies the perpetrator behind The DAO hack on Ethereum. Three founding members of The DAO and Slock.it (Christoph Jentzsch, Lefteris Karapetsas, Griff Green) discuss how and why they created The DAO, how they helped save the funds being siphoned off by black hat hackers, their personal feelings about The DAO, along with their reaction to the news about who I believe was The DAO attacker. Show topics:   Part 1: Background on The DAO Christoph, Lefteris, and Griff's background and how they came to Slock.it what Slock.it was and why the Slock.it team decided to create The DAO what The DAO has to do with venture capital funding why the Slock.it team did not cap The DAO sale what made The DAO such a popular investment vehicle why The DAO developers were scared at the amount of money they raised   Part 2:  what Christoph, Lefteris, and Griff's initial reaction to The DAO was saving funds from The DAO via a hard fork versus white hat hacking whether they thought Ethereum Classic would survive a hard fork how the Ethereum community has treated Christoph, Griff, and Lefteris in the wake of The DAO attack   Part 3: why they disagree on whether code is law their reaction to my naming Toby Hoenisch as The DAO attacker which actor would play them in a movie about The DAO attack Come to My In-Person Book Signings and Events! New York:  Wednesday, March 2, at 7pm At The Strand Bookstore Moderated by CoinDesk's Christine Lee https://www.strandbooks.com/events/event403?title=laura_shin_the_cryptopians_idealism_greed_lies_and_the_making_of_the_first_big_cryptocurrency_craze   Bay Area:  Tuesday March 8, 6pm San Francisco's Commonwealth Club  Moderated by The Information's Kate Clark https://www.commonwealthclub.org/events/2022-03-08/laura-shin-inside-first-cryptocurrency-craze   Seattle:  Wednesday March 9, at 7:30pm The Forum Moderated by Steve Scher, of Town Hall Seattle.  https://townhallseattle.org/event/laura-shin/ Thank you to our sponsors! Crypto.com: https://crypto.onelink.me/J9Lg/unconfirmedcardearnfeb2021            Beefy Finance: https://beefy.finance     Cross River Bank: https://crossriver.com/crypto    Episode Links   Guests Christoph Jentzsch ​​https://twitter.com/ChrJentzsch Griff Green https://twitter.com/thegrifft  Lefteris Karapetsas https://mobile.twitter.com/LefterisJP    DAO Hacker Reveal:  Forbes: https://www.forbes.com/sites/laurashin/2022/02/22/exclusive-austrian-programmer-and-ex-crypto-ceo-likely-stole-11-billion-of-ether/ Unchained: https://unchainedpodcast.com/exclusive-cryptos-biggest-whodunnit-who-was-behind-the-2016-dao-attack-on-ethereum/  Medium: https://medium.com/@laurashin/who-hacked-the-dao-on-ethereum-heres-how-we-jumped-past-one-critical-step-60aec489a127 Bulletin: https://laurashin.bulletin.com/who-was-behind-the-2016-dao-attack-on-ethereum-the-backstory-to-my-investigation Forbes on YouTube: ​https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PuICbAucfn0  Daily Tech News Show: https://www.twitch.tv/videos/1306972988    The Cryptopians http://bit.ly/cryptopians  On Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Cryptopians-Idealism-Greed-Making-Cryptocurrency/dp/1541763017/ref=tmm_hrd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1645037311&sr=8-2 On Barnes. &. Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/the-cryptopians-laura-shin/1138980345?ean=9781541763012  On Bookshop.org:  https://bookshop.org/books/the-cryptopians-idealism-greed-lies-and-the-making-of-the-first-big-cryptocurrency-craze/9781541763012 Unchained: https://unchainedpodcast.com/how-writing-the-cryptopians-shaped-my-views-on-ethereum/    The DAO Hack https://www.coindesk.com/learn/2016/06/25/understanding-the-dao-attack/ https://www.gemini.com/cryptopedia/the-dao-hack-makerdao https://unchainedpodcast.com/how-matthew-leising-confronted-his-suspects-in-the-dao-attacks/

The Crusty Mullet Podcast
#5 Slock Master

The Crusty Mullet Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 9, 2021 63:30


John and Billy discuss recent offshore fishing trips, hunting deer in South Carolina, the oddities of nature, mice and rat hunting strategies, a new creature of the night and the SlockMaster!The second half of the episode (28:45) focuses on fishing strategies for a new angler or a new area.   Shoot us a comment or dm on instagram with your questions and we will discuss in future episodes. Join us as we follow #followthemigration

Cypherpunk Nightmares, El Podcast Más Futurista Del Planeta
Vol XV, Capítulo 2, Cypherpunk Nightmares "Jedi Religion and Padawan Polytechnik"

Cypherpunk Nightmares, El Podcast Más Futurista Del Planeta

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2021 76:26


TEMAS: *Libro Bitcoin Billionaires y los gemelos Winklevoss, *Proyecto Filecoin y privacidad en el Web 3.0, *Mercado Silk Road y Ross Ulbricht, *el libro AI Superpowers y El Progreso en China, *Coinbase y Uniswap, *Stablecoins y el Fed, *Economic Wars, *Slock.it y el Internet of Things.

Asian Hustle Network
Jaeson Ma // Ep 56 // Revolutionizing Media Through 88rising

Asian Hustle Network

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2021 56:08


Welcome to Episode 56 of the Asian Hustle Network Podcast! We are very excited to have Jaeson Ma on this week's episode. We interview Asian entrepreneurs around the world to amplify their voices and empower Asians to pursue their dreams and goals. We believe that each person has a message and a unique story from their entrepreneurial journey that they can share with all of us. Check us out on Anchor, iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play Music, TuneIn, Spotify, and more. If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe and leave us a positive 5-star review. This is our opportunity to use the voices of the Asian community and share these incredible stories with the world. We release a new episode every Wednesday, so stay tuned! Jaeson Ma is a media executive, artist, investor and serial entrepreneur. He is a strategic advisor & financier of popular social music video app Triller, co-founded premium production studio Stampede Ventures, digital music label 88rising, ZASH Global Media a publicly Nasdaq traded media & technology conglomerate and east-west brand strategy & investment firm East West Ventures. Jaeson is a Senior Advisor to Tencent Music Entertainment & KKBox fund KKFarm and a Network Partner for consumer tech fund GoodWater Capital. He is also a senior advisor to private equity funds advised by Courage Capital Management, LLC that invests in catalogs of music rights. As well, Jaeson is a Senior Advisor to Wise Road Capital, a global Private Equity investment company, focusing on semiconductor industry and other emerging high-tech industries. Jaeson is considered one of the leading financiers to companies, institutions, and individuals investing in Asian media, entertainment, & tech. His investments include Musical.ly (TikTok), Grab, Coinbase, Triller, Slock.it, Brain, CAA Caravan, Oursong, Kind Heaven, NanoTech Energy, XiaoPeng, & MAUM (2 Star Michelin). Please check out our Patreon at @asianhustlenetwork. We want AHN to continue to be meaningful and give back to the Asian community. If you enjoy our podcast and would like to contribute to our future, we hope you’ll consider becoming a patron. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/asianhustlenetwork/support

Fourche Creek Podcast
Episode 2: Tim Wells "Slock Master" of Relentless Pursuit

Fourche Creek Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2020 79:20


Tim Wells "Slock Master" of Relentless Pursuit visits with Joby and Shed of the Fourche Creek Podcast and discusses his adventures, along with the current state of our great nation.

The Blockchain Socialist
The dystopian future of smart cities built by LLCs and the socialists that ignore the signs

The Blockchain Socialist

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2020 56:12


For this week's episode I took a closer look at the company Blockchains LLC which bought the German startup Slock.it who was working on creating blockchain-enabled smart locks. Digging deeper I found out that Blockchains LLC is currently in the works of creating its own smart city "enabled by the blockchain" next to Reno, Nevada. We start by listening to a news segment aired on a local Reno new station about the company and the city being built  then connect that with he two recent MEL magazine stories by Andrew Fiouzi as well as the Housing for All Token article I recently published on the blog.At the end I also hope to adequately push back against the claims that I'm selling some sort of cryptocurrency. I don't give a shit if you buy cryptocurrency or not, that has nothing to do with this project. The point is to explore the ideas and the projects in the blockchain space to understand the flaws of the libertarian agenda that permeates it and show that it doesn't need to be that way because we can create anti-capitalist counter narratives that take the same technologies to serve the working class rather than for generating profit.SourcesBlockchains LLC news segmentBlockchains LLC blockchain city promoCurrent construction of the cityMEL Magazine: THE SOCIALISTS TRYING TO RECLAIM CRYPTOCURRENCYMEL Magazine: SMART LOCKS COULD MAKE IT EVEN EASIER FOR LANDLORDS TO EVICT THEIR TENANTSInterview with Mark AlizartInterview with Aleeza HowittHousing for All TokenIf you liked the podcast be sure to give it a review on your preferred podcast platform. If you want to see more content like this, please consider donating to my Patreon starting at just $3 per month. At the moment I've spent more on this 9-month old project than I've ever made so any amount helps. Also, sign up for the Newsletter, follow me on Twitter (@TBSocialist), and join the r/CryptoLeftists subreddit to continue the discussion and give your thoughts.Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/theblockchainsocialist)

D Network
#5 Jaeson Ma - Building Triller, TikTok's Top Competitor, and Realizing Potential of Asian Superheroes

D Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2020 65:33


Jaeson Ma is a media executive, artist, and serial entrepreneur. He is a co-owner of popular social music video app Triller, co-founded premium production studio Stampede Ventures, digital music label 88rising, and east-west brand strategy & investment firm East West Ventures. Jaeson is a Senior Advisor to Tencent Music Entertainment & KKBox fund KKFarm and a Network Partner for consumer tech fund GoodWater Capital. He is also a senior advisor to private equity funds advised by Courage Capital Management, LLC that invests in catalogs of music rights. Jaeson is considered one of the leading financiers to companies, institutions, and individuals investing in Asian media, entertainment, & tech. His investments include Triller, Musical.ly (now TikTok), Grab, Slock.it, Brain, Oursong, Proxima Media, Kind Heaven, & MAUM. Jaeson's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jaesonma/ Jaeson's Twitter: https://twitter.com/jaesonma Jaeson's LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jaesonma/ East West Ventures is an entertainment and lifestyle fund, focusing on celebrity backed enterprises. Website: www.ewventures.co Triller is an entertainment platform built for creators. A social video community where you can show the world who you are by capturing flawless videos and sharing them in seconds Website: https://www.triller.co/ Stampede is a premium content company focused on creating the next generation of blockbuster franchises for the world. Website: http://stampedeventures.com/ 88rising is an American mass media company and digital music platform. Website: https://88rising.com/

Completely Sober.
Episode 3: Slock with a Rock

Completely Sober.

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2020 48:26


Heyo, we all out here talking with my bud slock. He is way funnier in person (and more..special) but this was a good time regardless. 7/10 would do again. So if you haven't already, hit that subscribe button, share the living crap out of the podcast and stay tuned for the next one. Love you all.

Blockchain Hustle Podcast
Why you need Smart Contracts for your Business - Part 2

Blockchain Hustle Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 18, 2020 9:57


This episode is the second part of the share on how some enterprises are leveraging smart contracts in their businesses. Applications include Supply chain logistics, Cloud storage, Identity and access management and Insurance and I share this along with examples of companies using these.Welcome to the Blockchain Hustle where I take a look at some interesting plays of how blockchain technology is opening up new business vistas across multiple industries.  TIME STAMPED SHOW NOTES: [00.17]            Introduction[00.26]            Revisit – Smart contract business applications, Part 1[00.49]            Supply chain logistics - Samsung[02.14]            Decentralized and resilient cloud storage - Storj[03.20]            Identity and Access management overview[03.29]            (a) Secure container release - Antwerp Port Authority & T-Mining[04.27]            (b) Sharing economy - Slock[05.35]            Standardization in IoT data exchange and deployment[07.09]            Insurance - AXALeave some feedback:I hope this content will be valuable to you. If you liked this podcast, do subscribe to it and leave a short review. What should I talk about next? Please let me know by writing to me.Connect with me:LinkedIn http://sg.linkedin.com/in/meenusarin | Twitter @meenusarin |Email meenu@vlsiconsultancy.com| Website www.vlsiconsultancy.com | Blog http://www.vlsiconsultancy.com/newblog

Startupowcy
Co Warto Wiedzieć Przed Założeniem Startupu ?

Startupowcy

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2019 46:19


Piotr Sędzik – jest przedsiębiorcą z Wrocławia i pasjonatem nowych technologii. Współzałożyciel firm: Footsteps (footsteps.city) - jednego z największych providerów aplikacji mobilnych w branży B2G, dostarczającego technologię z zakresu ‚smart city’ do ponad 50 samorządów w Polsce (obsługującego takie miasta takie jak Wrocław, Gdańsk, Zielona Góra, Gorzów Wielkopolski czy Łódź); Applover - czyli wrocławskiego Software House’u (applover.pl), specjalizującego się we wdrożeniach oprogramowania dla firm z sektora Blockchain, Fintech czy Edtech (wśród klientów między innymi: Slock.it, Uniwersytet ETH Zurich czy Agencja Warszawa). Jego Software House digitalizował duże firmy konsultingowe w Londynie czy Paryżu. Organizator warsztatów z prowadzenia biznesu w internecie oraz budowania startupów, prelegent na wielu wrocławskich eventach. Finalista konkursu Forbes 25 under 25.

Into The Abyss
The Rise of the DAO

Into The Abyss

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2019 23:34


In this part one of a two part series, the rise and fall of the DAO we take a full look at the events leading up to the infamous DAO hack where upwards of 50 million USD worth of the cryptocurrency Ether was stolen from an autonomous blockchain organization. In part one we focus on the events leading up to the Slock team becoming the largest crowdfunded project of all time (at the time).

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies
Griff Green: Giveth – Creating the New Economic Model of Giving

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2019 81:12


We're joined by Griff Green, one of the founders at Giveth. The organization, which emerged out of the ashes of the DAO, aims to create a better model for charitable work. Operating as a Dapp, Giveth aims to bring new governance models in the nonprofit space. The goal is to create better incentives for donors and charity workers, in all types of social good projects. Topics covered in this episode: Griff's background as a gold-hodling digital nomad His time spent at Slock.it and his involvement in the aftermath of the DAO collapse How traditional charity organizations work The problems these organizations face and how funds get allocated The Giveth backstory and why the team chose to start the project Incentive alignment in the charity space The use of bonding curves and continuous organizations to fund charity projects The project's roadmap and future Episode links: Giveth website Rewriting the Story of Human Collaboration Griff's talk at EthCC Crowdfunding the Commons The Future of Giving is Crowdfunding the Commons Deep Dive: Augmented Bonding Curves Episode 282 with Simon de la Rouviere The Giveth blog Giveth on GitHub Join the Giveth community Sponsors: Azure: Deploy enterprise-ready consortium blockchain networks that scale in just a few clicks - http://aka.ms/epicenter This episode is hosted by Sebastien Couture & Sunny Aggarwal. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/284

The Blockchain and Us: Conversations about the brave new world of blockchains, cryptoassets, and the
How a Blockchain Venture Studio Works - Mervyn G. Maistry, CEO & Founder, Konfidio and Kintaro Capital

The Blockchain and Us: Conversations about the brave new world of blockchains, cryptoassets, and the

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2019 57:44


Mervyn Maistry speaks about founding and running Konfidio, a venture studio in Berlin, blockchain uses cases that are ready today, why blockchain technology is a seminal technology, the meaning and merit of decentralization, misconceptions about blockchains, why big corporations can't run blockchain innovation hubs, gender and race bias in VC investing, the philosophy of the future, and much more. Mervyn is CEO and Founder of Konfidio, a blockchain venture studio in Berlin, and Chairman of Kintaro Capital. He graduated medical school and worked in paediatrics in South Africa, and he also held key positions at prestigious organizations, such as COO at Deutsche Bank, Global Managing Partner at Accenture, and Managing Partner Digital Strategy & Transformation Lead at EY. Mervyn also advises various projects in the blockchain and business world including Slock.it, D33p.org and Cyberian Mine. Mervyn Maistry: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dr-mervyn-g-maistry-65b435  Konfidio: https://www.konfidio.com  Kintaro Capital: https://kintarocapital.com  Also mentioned in this episode: Yuval Harari: https://www.ynharari.com  Many thanks to our advertisers who support this podcast! CoreLedger is a blockchain-based peer-to-peer transaction infrastructure provider. It enables businesses to document, tokenize and trade any type of assets in a reliable and flexible environment. CoreLedger makes anything transactable, literally anything. To learn more about CoreLedger's technology and how you can transform your business onto blockchain, visit https://www.coreledger.net. The Blockchain and Us newsletter To stay up to date about what blockchain pioneers, innovators and entrepreneurs from all around the world think about the future of this space, sign up for the newsletter on https://www.theblockchainandus.com.

Running on Blockchain
#006 Christoph Jentzsch (slock.it) – Steuerung von IoT Geräten über Ethereum

Running on Blockchain

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2018 53:16


Christoph Jentzsch, Gründer und CEO, berichtet in dieser Folge von den vielen Erfahrungen die sie mit slock.it in den letzten vier Jahren gemacht haben: Wie sie zur Vision einer dezentralen Sharing Economy kamen, warum sie dafür eine DAO (dezentrale, autonome Organisation) gegründet haben und wie ihnen ein Hacker-Angriff in aktuellen Beratungsprojekten hilft. Außerdem diskutieren wir die (Un-)nötigkeit von Tokens in Blockchain Anwendungen und tauchen in den slock.it IoT Layer ein, der das Finden, Nutzen, und Bezahlen von IoT Geräten ermöglicht. Christoph verrät auch, wie damit der Rasen der Nachbarn gemäht werden kann.

WTMJ Conversations & WTMJ Features
08-05-18 For Your Health: Dr. Stephanie Slock

WTMJ Conversations & WTMJ Features

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2018 6:31


Founderella Podcast
#4 Blockchain und Sharing Economy: Interview mit Slock.it-Gründer Christoph Jentzsch

Founderella Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2018 33:51


Blockchain – Software Engineering Daily
DAO Reflections and Slock.it with Christoph Jentzsch

Blockchain – Software Engineering Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2018 57:52


The DAO was a system of smart contracts on the Ethereum blockchain that investors put millions of dollars into. Back in May 2016, it was the largest crowdfunding event in history, and we discussed it in detail in a previous episode with Matt Leising. The DAO was hacked due to a security vulnerability, and this The post DAO Reflections and Slock.it with Christoph Jentzsch appeared first on Software Engineering Daily.

The Constructrr Podcast
Blockchain with an Integrated Project Model Reduces Risk and Increases Transparency

The Constructrr Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2017 40:21


Blockchain in Construction: Part 2 Dave Hughes is a construction professional who is interested in unlocking the productivity issues in the AEC industry and sees blockchain as a major piece of the puzzle in doing that. He is interesting in finding new ways to leverage technology within the industry. We talk about the utilizing blockchain in an integrated project delivery model, blockchain integration with BIM and IoT, and the potential use of blockchain with integrated insurance. Where you can find Dave Hughes: Email: dave@hanga.co https://www.linkedin.com/in/davidmcraehughes/ (LinkedIn) https://twitter.com/hangadave (twitter) Resources: https://www.ted.com/talks/bettina_warburg_how_the_blockchain_will_radically_transform_the_economy (Ted Talk) https://animalventures.co/ (Animal Adventures ) https://www.udemy.com/the-basics-of-blockchain/ (Udemy Course) http://www.keepsite.com (Keepsite) https://slock.it/solutions.html (Slock.it) http://griffithsandarmour.com/ (Griffiths & Armor )for Integrated Project Insurance Listen to the previous episodes in the "Blockchain in Construction" series:  http://www.constructrr.com/ep44 (Blockchain – Smart Cities Are Changing Policy) Music By Epic Music Supervision www.constructrr.com/ep45  

The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life
781: Crypto: What AirBnB Looks Like In Digital Currency World

The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2017 30:02


Christoph Jentzsch. His background is in Theoretical Physics and he’s been part of the Ethereum project since 2014 as a lead tester. At the end of 2015, he co-founded Slock.it, working on decentralized sharing economy through the connection of blockchain and IoT (Internet of Things). One of the more famous projects that he was part of was the DAO (Decentralized Autonomous Organization). Famous Five: Favorite Book? – Zero to One What CEO do you follow? – God Favorite online tool? — GIthub How many hours of sleep do you get? — 8 If you could let your 20-year old self, know one thing, what would it be? – “Avoid the bug in the DAO”   Time Stamped Show Notes: 01:50 – Nathan introduces Christoph to the show 02:20 – DAO stands for Decentralized Autonomous Organization 02:26 – It is a smart contract on the Ethereum blockchain which aims at connecting people to pull their funds together and run small contracts 02:45 – It failed and all the people got refunded 03:10 – Christoph believes that Anthony Di Iorio is one of the founders of Ethereum 03:24 – As a lead tester for Ethereum in 2014, Christoph was responsible for driving tests 03:39 – Consensus tests are for client implementation 04:10 – Nathan’s analogy of cryptocurrency using railroad tracks 04:55 – Augur has launched their own token on top of Ethereum 05:18 – They created their own token of value in exchange of the virtual currency of ether 05:47 – There has been a lot of ICOs (Initial Coin Offering) lately and there has been opinions around them 06:03 – Bitcoin was always meant for virtual currency 06:09 – While Etherium has a virtual currency too called ether, its actual purpose is to be an open source platform to build decentralized applications or Dapps 06:22 – People now create simple Dapps issuing a token on the Ethereum blockchain to fund Dapps projects 06:32 – People thought DAO was an ICO but it wasn’t 06:35 – DAO has collected a hundred million dollars in ether 06:44 – After that, many ICOs have gone out 07:40 – There are only a few hundred people who send ether into their contract 08:11 – There was an article Nathan had read regarding Bitcoin’s current problem 08:28 – The main problem is public blockchains are not scaling 08:38 – In the protocol, one blockchain can only have 1 megabyte 09:04 – There is now a high demand that leads to a higher price 10:33 – Everybody can take part in the cryptocurrency game 11:45 – People can create their own blockchain but they’re missing the network effect 12:18 – There are some minors who control the network 12:48 – As long as there are users in the system, they don’t mind the minors 12:54 – Minors serve the blockchain, but Christoph believes the users are the ones in-charge 13:21 – After the DAO failed, there was a discussion of how things should be done 13:27 – Some are saying to split the blockchain into 2 versions: the new version is where people get refunded and the old version is the hackers who have the money 14:58 – There are now 2 Ethereum classes: ethereum classic and ethereum 15:19 – Christoph’s focus is now on Slock.it where they’ve built a decentralized sharing economy 16:02 – It is built over the public ethereum and they don’t have tokens 16:17 – They’re using ether as a payment 16:33 – Most startups are called ICOs and make their own tokens to fund themselves 16:40 – Slock.it is VC funded with a seed funding of $2M 18:06 – Slock.it isn’t currently getting any payment but they will in the future 18:38 – Slock.it collaborates with Innogy 18:51 – Innogy allows electric charging stations to connect with smart contracts in the blockchain 19:00 – A user can charge his car, making him enter the smart contract 19:10 – If you’re the owner of a charging station and you have an electric car, you can set the price for the station and offer it to public 20:05 – Noke padlocks can now be open and closed through Bluetooth and Slock.it has added a payment option where it can be opened by paying 20:34 – Slock.it can be integrated into the device and it is different from Airbnb 21:28 – As long as the ethereum blockchain is alive, the Noke padlock can be used through Slock.it 22:10 – Christoph currently resides in Germany 22:45 – “As of now, crypto is not a very good currency” 23:23 – Ether is as volatile as bitcoin 23:45 – You can definitely exchange your tokens for real dollars, but it’s not an efficient system 24:03 – Paying people with ether isn’t that easy at the moment 24:12 – Currency is the least interesting aspect 24:19 – There’s a limitation in scalability and in privacy 24:40 – Christoph thinks ethereum, smart contracts and blockchains own up as programmable money 25:55 – Slock.it is currently integrated into an existing hardware 26:20 – There are currently thousands of charging stations under Slock.it 26:36 – Team member is currently 14 26:48 – The seed round was in February 2017 28:02 – The Famous Five   3 Key Points: Some startups are coming out as an ICO to fund themselves, but not all of them are legal. Cryptocurrency still isn’t very stable so as a business owner, paying your people with this currency isn’t efficient. Public blockchains are not scaling and there’s a protocol that needs to be followed.   Resources Mentioned: Simplero – The easiest way to launch your own membership course like the big influencers do but at 1/10th the cost. The Top Inbox – The site Nathan uses to schedule emails to be sent later, set reminders in inbox, track opens, and follow-up with email sequences GetLatka - Database of all B2B SaaS companies who have been on my show including their revenue, CAC, churn, ARPU and more Klipfolio – Track your business performance across all departments for FREE Hotjar – Nathan uses Hotjar to track what you’re doing on this site. He gets a video of each user visit like where they clicked and scrolled to make the site a better experience Acuity Scheduling – Nathan uses Acuity to schedule his podcast interviews and appointments Host Gator– The site Nathan uses to buy his domain names and hosting for the cheapest price possible Audible– Nathan uses Audible when he’s driving from Austin to San Antonio (1.5-hour drive) to listen to audio books Show Notes provided by Mallard Creatives

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies

Nick Morgan, a former attorney at the SEC, joined us to discuss their recent report on the DAO and what it means for the ICO boom. Topics covered in this episode: The history and mandate of the SEC Nick’s years as a trial attorney at the SEC How the Howey Test is used to determine if something is a security The application of the Howey Test to the DAO case The weaknesses in their argument that token holders relied on the effort of others Why the SEC did not prosecute the Slock.it founders Why the SEC will likely focus on token sales involving fraud How the SEC’s limited resources will make it hard for it to impact the ICO boom The implications of the SEC report for cryptocurrency exchanges Episode links: SEC Press Release on The DAO SEC Report on Investigation of The DAO Seven Takeaways from the DAO Report - Kyle Mitchell EB134 – Emin Gün Sirer And Vlad Zamfir: On A Rocky DAO Nicolas Morgan Website The DAO Report: Understanding the Risk of SEC Enforcement - CoinDesk This episode is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain and Sébastien Couture. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/198

Finding Genius Podcast
Slock.it – Combining Ethereum-Based Smart Contracts with IoT Devices

Finding Genius Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2017 21:37


Stephan Tual, founder of Slock.it, talks about Ethereum-Based Smart Contracts that allow IoT devices, (such as door locks on Air BnB apartments) to be fully automated – unlocked and locked based on rules, such as when a rental payment is received for an apartment (unlocked) and 5 minutes after checkout time (locked). Other use cases are: electric charging stations that can be rented on demand, charging monitored remotely, and repaired if a signal showing malfunction is received. Slock.it has recently received $2 million in funding and is poised for fast growth. Listen, subscribe, and rate Future Tech Podcast, and enjoy this fascinating interview!

airbnb iot ethereum devices smart contracts slock future tech podcast stephan tual
nipcast
Nipconf 2016 - Stephan Tual (COO Slock.it) en interview au Studio Nipconf (21.10.2016)

nipcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2016 18:19


Stephan Tual nous parle de blockchain à travers les cas d'usage travaillés par la société qu'il a co-fondée fin 2015: Slock.it . Au carrefour entre blockchain et Internet des objets, la startup propose des solutions qui se passent d'intermédiation: dans le cas du géant allemand de l'énergie RWE, Slock.it pourrait faciliter la distribution de bornes d'électricité chez des particuliers qui pourraient alors largement contribuer à un réseau de recharges sur le plan national. Stephan revient également sur le succès fulgurant de The DAO avec le journaliste Frédéric Vormus: cette organisation décentralisée a levé 150 millions de dollars avant qu'un pirate ne précipite sa chute en été 2016. Il raconte cette histoire extraordinaire vue par son équipe. Yann de la Nipconf pose la dernière question de cet interview, en trois minutes, sur un plan plus personnel; vous en saurez plus sur l'avis de Stephan concernant les actions décidées cet été (Soft/Hard Forks).

The SubGenius Hour of Slack Podcast
Hour of Slack #1580 - Post-19X-Day-Starwood-and-RNC

The SubGenius Hour of Slack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 25, 2016 62:40


First time back in the WCSB studio after 19X-Day, Starwood 36, and the RNC! We changed our minds about releasing the X-Day recordings as fast as we can -- we'll save some of those for our 6 months in Texas when we don't have the station or Dave. But this show has the Lonesome Cowboy! -- and lots of music too: Xposed 4Heads, The Fantastic Plastics, O.O.B. Experience, Doktors 4 Extreme Prejudice. Discussions cover The Age of Stupid, current events, undercurrents, currants, the elections, and how to repeat, quip your jab and Slock on. Some anecdotes from the various events are told and the "Bob" Whoopee Cushion is finally explained in full.

Bitcoins & Gravy
Episode #82 Griff Green & The Universal Sharing Network

Bitcoins & Gravy

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2016 69:31


Today I welcome to the show Griff Green, formerly a chemical engineer turned Community Organizer for Slock.it and The DAO. Slock.it is a software company focusing on smart contracts and The DAO is . . . well The DAO is The DAO. Griff Green recently did what only a handful of people in the world have done. He obtained a Master of Science degree in Digital Currency and now he travels the globe as a Crypto-Nomad. Today Griff talks to us about smart contracts, Autonomous Beer Kegs, and The Universal Sharing Network that will change life as we know it. MAGIC WORD: Hidden in each episode of Bitcoins and Gravy is a Magic Word. I know that it may sound absurd, but listen for the Magic Word and you can earn LTBcoin! First set up a free account at LetsTalkBitcoin.com. Then tune in to your favorite LTB podcast and when you hear the Magic Word, don’t delay! Submit it to your account to claim a share of this week’s distribution of LTBcoin. Listeners now have a full week from the release date to claim a magic word. Setting up an LTB account has always been fast and easy . . . and now it’s profitable!!! TRANSCRIPTIONS: Great news listeners! Our transcription page is now live on the website thanks to the continuing hard work of one of our loyal listeners who is also a consultant to the show. These Professional transcriptions are provided each week by one of our fans who can be found at: http://diaryofafreelancetranscriptionist.com CREDITS & VALUABLE LINKS: https://slock.it/ https://slock.it/https://daohub.org/ www.cryptocompare.com Ode To Satoshi Ode to Satoshi lyrics & melody by John Barrett Copyright 2014 RJM Publishing - BMI Nashville. Lead Vocal, Harmony Vocals, Harmonica, Snare Drum: John Barrett Harmony vocals: John Barrett, Connie Sinclair and Lij Shaw Guitar: Jonathan Brown Mandolin: Ben Miller Bass Guitar: Michael Rinne Initial tracks recorded by Mark Thornton of Sidekick Sound Studios, Madison, TN. All other tracks Recorded, Mixed and Mastered at The Toy Box Studio, Nashville, Tennessee Engineer: Lij Shaw. Assistant to engineer: Don “The Don” Bates Produced by John Barrett & Elijah “Lij” Shaw Special thanks to Alan Baird for his dobro, guitar and mandolin playing on many of the shows. Now that’s some pickin man! Thanks also to Alex Munoz Guijarro for his excellent pedal steel playing on many of our shows. Interviews for this episode were recorded and edited by John Barrett at The Tree House Studio - Nashville, Tennessee. All shows are produced by John Barrett with the moral support of his trusty sidekick Maxwell Rascalnikov CoyoTe Rex, aka Max. Questions or Comments? Email me to say Howdy!: howdy@bitcoinsandgravy.com Visit theWebsite: BitcoinsAndGravy.com Bitcoins and Gravy Tipping Addresses: Bitcoin: 14RbXduu2sXKNHtKtRVAx8xQyGAubjY1dA Litecoin: LgqYgxLTBPgr8C1JGLLJVLK4ZN1fveprAp And if you don’t feel like contacting me, just kick back, relax and enjoy the show. I hope you enjoy listening to my guests as much as I enjoy talking with them!

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies
Stephan Tual: Building a Universal Sharing Network on Ethereum and a $150M DAO

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2016 78:47


In this episode we welcome back Stephan Tual, the COO of Slock.It, a German startup working at the intersection of the Internet of Things and the Ethereum blockchain. Slock.It’s small team also wrote the smart contracts that power ‘The DAO’, a decentralized capital management entity that recently raised north of $160 million for investing into Ethereum based projects. ‘The DAO’ has been featured in many mainstream news outlets, such as New York Times, Wall Street Journal and the Economist. The interview explores the vision, motivation and challenges behind both ‘The DAO’ and Slock.It. Topics covered in this episode: Stephan’s background and role as CCO at Ethereum Foundation. What is ‘The DAO’ and how it relates to Slock.It. DAOlink and the business opportunity of enabling interactions between DAOs and traditional firms. Opportunities, assumptions and challenges for ‘The DAO’. Vision and products of Slock It – Univeral Sharing Network and the Ethereum computer. Episode links: Slock It Website The DAO The DAO on Github The DAO Whitepaper Why I’ve Resigned as a Curator of the DAO Is The DAO going to be DOA? This episode is hosted by Meher Roy and Sébastien Couture. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/132

The Bitcoin Podcast
TBP57 - Future of a Shared Economy

The Bitcoin Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2016 56:09


Today we interview the CCO and co-founder of Slock.it, StephanTual. He stops by to help clear up the confusion around thingsrelated to Slock.it and the first ever decentralized autonomousorganization (DAO). Not only is he a smooth talkin' maama-jaama,he's smart as hell. Afterwards, we discuss how we feel about allthis, convince Cello why it's awesome, and try and figure out theeasiest way to dive in. The future is now, and it is awesome! Toget started, visit Slock.it and daohub.org. It's got just abouteverything you need.

Epicenter - Learn about Blockchain, Ethereum, Bitcoin and Distributed Technologies

As the blockchain field continues evolving rapidly, Sebastien, Meher and Brian take some time to discuss the current environment and the longer term implications of blockchains. We discussed how smart contracts could affect the pace of innovation and the competitiveness of industries. We also talked about the role DAOs will play and what we can take away from the current DAO crowdsale and its connection with Slock.it. Topics covered in this episode: How companies running on smart contracts could impact the pace and cost of innovation A smart contract-based insurance example Why smart contracts and blockchains will challenge our understanding of organizations The current state of DAOs Slock.it and the DAO crowdsale Episode links: Maciej Olpinski's Blog Slock.it The DAO EB108 - The Big Chain Powwow This episode is hosted by Brian Fabian Crain, Meher Roy and Sébastien Couture. Show notes and listening options: epicenter.tv/129

Tech Talks Central
TTC #259 IoT & Blockchain Technology for Renting, Selling, Sharing

Tech Talks Central

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2016 12:03


Slock.it was the winner of the IoT competition at 4YFN, for 2016. Their system allows anyone to rent, sell or share anything without the use of a middleman. They have set up an ethereum-based locking system -based on blockchain technology- that can be opened with money. Stephan Tual, Founder & COO at Slock.it, gives an example of its use, explaining how someone could rent their house, without having to put it on a platform like AirBnb; which might not be available in every country and in the end takes a commission. What they would be renting out is the actual door of the apartment -an autonomous object connected to the Internet- using a decentralised database of sort, allowing the users both types of access; to rent and use. Everything can be done through a phone and obviously the prospects are enormous and, may we dare say, quite democratic. Took a lot of imagination to realise the potential of considering every object autonomous, thus transferable, but the guys seem to be onto something. A startup worth keeping an eye on. Start by listening to the interview Sakis Triantafyllakis conducted for Tech Talks Central.

Lift conference
Blockchain Technology Beyond Bitcoin in 3min

Lift conference

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2016 3:16


During Lift16, we focused an entire session on the Blockchain Technology powering the most used decentralized cryptocurrency in the world: Bitcoin, and tried to understand better what it is, how it works and what it can do with three international experts from the field: Stephan Tual (Slock.it, Ursium, Ethereum), Primavera De Filippi (CNRS, Harvard Law School) and Joseph Lubin (Consensus Systems, Ethereum).In this video, get the gist of their talks in 3min and never again find yourself saying "WTF is the blockchain?"Recorded on February 11, 2016, in Geneva.

Lift conference
Stephan Tual - Blockchain: it's about state

Lift conference

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2016 16:02


Stephan Tual, founder of Slock.it & Ursium, CCO of Ethereum, is working at revolutionizing the emerging Sharing Economy infrastructure.In this second talk of the session Blockchain Technology Beyond Bitcoin at Lift16, Stephan Tual took us on a discovery tour of the type of applications that are already in place using the blockchain and what we can expect for the Internet of Things (IoT) in such a decentralized future.From smart locks to charging stations, discover how the blockchain has been changing our world.Recorded on February 11, 2016, in Geneva.

Teahour
#83 这次我们聊聊超酷的 Ethereum

Teahour

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2016 148:30


本期节目由 思客教学 赞助,思客教学正在进行 React 全端训练营招生, 如果报名时说明你是 Teahour 听众, 你将获得 100 元优惠, 我们也将获得 100元的赞助, 感谢你的支持. 本期为 Teahour.FM 三周年特别节目, 由 Terry 主持, 继续请到了他的最好基友 Jan, 聊聊基于 Ethereum 平台的开发. 我们的反馈邮箱是: hi@teahour.fm 欢迎你的来信, 我们将抽取有价值的来信和反馈在节目中播出. 主持人 Terry 的 blog 我如何把薪水从 50人民币/天 提升到 100美元/小时的 (1) 核心开发者宣布比特币实验失败 Sam Stephenson Sam tweet 1 Sam tweet 2 Asset Pipeline Prototype JS Backbone JS rbenv rvm Adrian Holovaty Adrian tweet Adrian’s presentation at 37Singal Django: wanxiang blockchain labs 德勤(Deloitte) Ethereum Vitalik Vitalik github account Vitalik Blog Bitcoin Magazine The Zen of Python RubyMotion Halting Problem Toward a 12-second Block Time Casper Riak Formalize Casper Binary Sharding Public vs Private Blockchain Raft Consensus Algorithm 同态加密 Ethereum: the World Computer Thomas Schelling SchellingCoin lightning network State Channels IPFS Swarm Storj Slock 百万格子 庞氏合约 RANDAO Alarm Clock ethfans CloudMagic Special Guest: Jan.

The Third Web
The Ether Review #12 - Stephan Tual, Slock.it

The Third Web

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2016 39:36


Joining me today is Stephen Tual is a one time member of the Ethereum team and one of the founders of Slock.it, a project that aims to be Ethereum’s bridge to the internet of things. Their Devcon 1 presentation was lauded as one of the most stark illustrations of the power of Ethereum. Well worth looking up on youtube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49wHQoJxYPo [Note: This episode does not contain a magic word.] Stephan Tual: @stephantual @slockitproject slock.it Josh Stern: @joshuastern http://www.joshstern.info/ Content: Stephan Tual, Arthur Falls Production and Editing: Arthur Falls, Kerry Guy

The Third Web
The Ether Review #6 - Devcon 1 Debrief

The Third Web

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 25, 2015 41:54


Today we have a panel of Devcon attendees. Alex Amsel, Hudson Jameson and Jack du Rose.We discuss the Ethereum community, the development state of the consensus process, storage solutions, Free My Vunk, Slock, Oraclize and much more. Alex Amsel: http://newretro.org/ Hudson Jameson: http://hudsonjameson.com/ Jack du Rose: http://colony.io/ Production and Editing: Arthur Falls

Fill or Kill
Avsnitt 25 – Das (Slock) Auto

Fill or Kill

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2015 38:34


I den 25e episoden kommer poddarna att prata om FED, Volkswagen och att folk underskattar värdet i att ha cash. Utöver det så spekulerar poddarna om vilket svenskt bolag som kommer att vinstvarna först och lyssnarfrågor. Avslutningsvis, indextävlingen och veckans Fill & Kill. Over and out!