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O que mudou do mercado de desenvolvimento nos últimos 2 anos? Convidei Tiago Aguiar para discutir esse assunto. Fizemos um balanço sobre alguns pontos importantes a ser considerado na carreira de desenvolvimento de software, e como desenvolvedores podem se capacitar com tanta mudança e tendência em IAs. Assuntos abordados no tema Introdução ao tema O que mudou no mercado de trabalho de 2024 para 2025 Modelo de trabalho híbrido O que Devs iniciantes ou não precisam se atualizar Comentando alguns tópicos da pesquisa Spiceworks report Como usar ferramentas de IA para produtividade sem depender dela Devs que usam Copilot tem 55% mais chance de aprovação em entrevistas Capacitação: como se capacitar em um mundo com tanta mudança? Portfólio relevante no Github Hard skills não é o suficiente é preciso também de soft skills Inglês ja não é mais o diferencial Otimizar sistemas críticos torna um Dev de valor Links úteis Nosso Discord: https://discord.com/invite/hGpFPsV2gB Café Debug globalhttps://open.spotify.com/show/3S1OK2ecjZj7zoaZ34bFkP?si=ae09a6a1796a4587 Patrocinadora do programa https://king.host/ https://www.jetbrains.com/pt-br/lp/devecosystem-2024/ https://www.gitclear.com/ai_assistant_code_quality_2025_research https://www.spiceworks.com/research/it-report/ Vídeo sobre estrutura de dados https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7kf1SACqlRw System Design interview Google https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Ti5vfu9arXQ Dynamic programming https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Hdr64lKQ3e4 Participantes Jéssica Nathany (Software Developer e host)LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/jessica-nathany-carvalho-freitas-38260868/ Weslley Fratini (Software Developer e co-host)LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/weslley-fratini/ Tiago Aguiar (Desenvovledor .NET na Redarbor Brasil e Criador de conteúdo)Site: https://beacons.ai/aguiardev Produtora AGO Filmes: https://thiagocarvalhofotografia.wordpress.com/dúvidas, sugestões ou anúncios envie para: debugcafe@gmail.comSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the digital age, data is king. And for B2B marketers, this treasure trove of information holds the key to unlocking new opportunities and driving demand. But how exactly can data be used to achieve these goals? In this podcast, I talk to John Webb, Founder and CEO of Get2Growth, about the power of data in the B2B market and provide actionable insights on how to leverage it effectively.We cover:What the opportunities are for B2B companies that sit on a lot of data right nowWhy aren't B2B companies able to utilise their data?What could B2B companies be doing to capture more data in the first place?How would you suggest they turn that data from unknown to a known audience?What companies need to be aware of from a legislation point of viewHow should companies start to build a demand generation engine?How did John and the Spiceworks team utilise the data they had, and how did that influence their revenue?The skills and attributes that John believes makes someone good at demand generationAnd so much more.Market Mentors is brought to you by Matt Dodgson, Co-Founder of Market Recruitment. Market Recruitment is a recruitment agency that connects B2B Tech & SaaS businesses with top class marketers to help them grow.If you'd like to be a future guest on the Market Mentors podcast you can apply here.
On this week's episode of Ask A CISSP, we have an interview with Kevin Apolinario! ABOUT KEVIN APOLINARIO I am an IT Professional with 12+ years of customer service experience. I have 8 years of experience as IT Support and system admin. I started working when I was 9 years old. My background is a bit unique from other people who work IT. I did roughly 4 years in the NYPD before breaking into tech. I also have about 12 years of restaurant experience. I took my customer service experience and transferred those soft skills into tech. I broke into tech in a non-traditional way without a degree. I am a self-taught individual that is always looking to learn from other people. If I don't know the answer today. I will find you the answer. IT is all about learning how to find the answer. I am the co-founder of the "Kevtech IT Support" IT Community. The community has grown from 100 people to 7,000+ people spread across different countries and time zones. I am a technical trainer on YouTube. I have helped over 1,000+ people land IT Support roles through technical instructional videos on YouTube. I have presented and spoken at Microsoft, Jobtrain, Upwardly Global, Spiceworks, HDI, Merit America. I educate new techs through training sessions. On my YouTube videos, I cover Comptia A+, Network+, Entry Level Helpdesk, Customer Service Skills, and Resume writing. YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/KevtechITSupport Website: https://kevtechitsupport.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/KevTechSupport Published YouTube Training Videos On: Virtual Labs (Virtual box, Vmware) Server 2016, Server2019 Active Directory (Users and Computers) Account Creation, security groups, password resets, distribution groups IT Interview Questions Cisco Anyconnect Okta Jira/Confluence Servicenow Azure Cloud Microsoft Office Suite 2016 Exchange 365 Windows 7/10/11 Office 365 MDM IT Customer Service Training Courses Ticketing System (Fresh Service, Jira) 2 Factor Authentication (Duo) MFA Microsoft Azure My passion is helping others break into IT/Cybersecurity. I recently created a Udemy course that has helped over 12,000 students learn the in-demand skills needed to work IT Support. The Other Side of the Firewall Socials: Audio - https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-other-side-of-the-firewall/id1542479181 YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXZgdDvlcQ8bP_V4dEF02Yw Ryan on Twitter, LinkedIn, and Clubhouse - @ryrysecurityguy #cybersecurity #helpdesk #informationtechnology
Nick Bhavsar, founder of Bhavsar Consulting Group, strives to help your business grow through implementing tried and tested best practices across key marketing disciplines including product marketing, demand generation, marketing operations and brand. Prior to starting his consulting business, Nick was VP of Marketing at Levelset (acquired by Procore), where he helped construction stakeholders get paid what they deserve stress-free. Nick also ran marketing at Bound where he helped marketers build stronger, deeper, more relevant experiences using data insights and digital personalization. Earlier in his career, Nick was Spiceworks' (acquired by Ziff Davis) resident funnel fanatic and led demand gen, sales enablement, and marketing operations teams on a mission to add a little spice to the world's tech marketers. Nick also ran product marketing at SolarWinds, helping the team successfully navigating the IPO gauntlet. At Intel, Nick leveraged his electrical engineering knowledge to design datacenter servers. His grasp of marketing best practices is only surpassed by his uncanny ability to detect freshly baked chocolate chip cookies from a mile away. Find Nick Online https://www.growth.llc/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickbhavsar/ If you're enjoying Entrepreneur's Enigma, please give us a review on the podcast directory of your choice. We're on all of them and these reviews really help others find the show. GoodPods: https://gmwd.us/goodpods iTunes: https://gmwd.us/itunes Podchaser: https://gmwd.us/podchaser Also, if you're getting value from the show and want to buy me a coffee, go to the show notes to get the link to get me a coffee to keep me awake, while I work on bringing you more great episodes to your ears. → https://gmwd.us/buy-me-a-coffee Follow Seth Online: Seth | Digital Marketer (@s3th.me) • Instagram: Instagram.com/s3th.me Seth Goldstein | LinkedIn: LinkedIn.com/in/sethmgoldstein Seth on Mastodon: https://masto.ai/@phillycodehound MarketingJunto.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
"您認為傳統的本地備份已經足夠了嗎? Spiceworks的IT專業人士一直在街上。他們知道他們在雲與佛羅里達州的範圍內的立場。有討論空間嗎?在有關TechRepublic的最新文章中,他們談到了雲備份的一些好處。喜歡: " "啟動AD- #TheMummichogBlogoFmalta Amazon Top和Flash Deals(會員鏈接 - 如果您通過以下鏈接購買,您將支持我們的翻譯)-https://amzn.to/3feogyg 僅在一次搜索中比較所有頂級旅行網站,以在酒店庫存的最佳酒店交易中找到世界上最佳酒店價格比較網站。 (會員鏈接 - 如果您通過以下鏈接購買,您將支持我們的翻譯)-https://www.hotelscombined.com/?a_aid=20558 “因此,無論您希望別人對您做什麼,也對他們做,因為這是法律和先知。”“ #Jesus #Catholic。 “從受孕的時刻,必須絕對尊重和保護人類的生活。從他生存的第一刻起,必須將一個人承認為擁有一個人的權利 - 其中每種無辜者都是無辜的權利。”天主教教堂的教理2270。 墮胎殺死了兩次。它殺死了嬰兒的身體,並殺死了母親的科學。墮胎是深刻的反婦女。它的受害者中有三個季節是女性:一半的嬰兒和所有母親。 流暢的馬耳他無線電是馬耳他的第一號數字廣播電台,演奏您的輕鬆最愛 - Smooth提供了“無混亂”的混音,吸引了35-59個核心觀眾,提供柔和的成人現代經典。我們操作一個流行曲目的播放列表,並定期更新。 https://smooth.com.mt/listen/ 馬耳他是一顆地中海寶石,等待被發現。馬耳他擁有文化和歷史,娛樂和放鬆,冒險和興奮的獨特結合,也是出國留學的理想之地。實際上,它擁有世界上最優秀的學習機構。 -https://www.visitmalta.com/ 關注電報:https://t.me/themummichogblogdotcom Tumblr:https://www.tumblr.com/themummichogblogofmalta blogspot:https://themummichogblogofmalta.blogspot.com/ 論壇:https://groups.google.com/g/themummichogblog Facebook:https://www.facebook.com/groups/chinesecommunitymalta 結束廣告" " 公司可以利用恢復測試恢復測試 雲提供商可以阻止任何人(甚至系統管理員)在設定的時間內調整,篡改或刪除數據 那麼,您如何看待這些好處,如何處理這個主題?在下面分享您的最新決定和最佳實踐,因為它與雲備份有關。 https://community.spiceworks.com/topic/2472062-do-you-think-think-traditional-on-premises-backups-are-enough?utm_campaign = digigest&utm_medium = email = email&utm_sourm_source = digeTmect = digeSt&utme = groups+poppopull3 "
On today's episode of the RecruitingDaily Podcast, William Tincup speaks to Peter from Spiceworks Ziff Davis about learning preferences and the desire for remote work.Advance Partners solves the inherent cash flow challenges staffing firms face by providing unlimited funding so you never have to say NO to an opportunity again.If you're ready to grow, and want the experienced service that made us the number one funder for staffing firms for the last 25 years, Click Here to learn more!
LastPass second incident, aged domains, Trigona ransomware, unemployment benefit fraud, ConectWise flaw, attackers target FI customers, and this week's 2023 predictions from SpiceWorks - plus some thoughts on cyber culture. https://thehackernews.com/2022/12/lastpass-suffers-another-security.html https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/crafty-threat-actor-uses-aged-domains-to-evade-security-platforms/ https://www.techradar.com/news/this-new-ransomware-is-seeing-rapid-growth-so-beware https://www.infosecurity-magazine.com/news/eight-30m-unemployment-benefits/ https://krebsonsecurity.com/2022/12/connectwise-quietly-patches-flaw-that-helps-phishers/? https://www.scmagazine.com/news/email-security/attackers-target-vulnerable-financial-customers-rather-than-the-institutions-themselves https://www.spiceworks.com/it-security/cyber-risk-management/interviews/top-cybersecurity-trends-2023/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/virtual-ciso-moment/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/virtual-ciso-moment/support
Two things to know today Gartner and Spiceworks each reveal IT priorities AND Women: Why are we tolerating this? Asks reddit group Do you want to get the show on your podcast app or the written versions of the stories? Subscribe to the Business of Tech: https://www.businessof.tech/subscribe/ Support the show on Patreon: https://patreon.com/mspradio/ Want our stuff? Cool Merch? Wear “Why Do We Care?” - Visit https://mspradio.myspreadshop.com Follow us on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/mspradionews/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/mspradionews/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/mspradio/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/28908079/
Adam Ryan, former president of The Hustle and cofounder of Workweek, wants to rethink the B2B model. Workweek is banking on finding individuals – creators, if you will – to build audiences around. The bet is that individuals, particularly but not exclusively those who are practitioners in the field, can build deeper connections with audiences while benefiting from the infrastructure, services and halo effect of a parent media brand. Some highlights from our discussion: Don't raise too much money. Adam spent part of his career at Spiceworks, a professional network for IT professionals. The company identified an underserved community and executed on the opportunity, only to have an unsatisfying outcome. “It was a great company, bad cap table,” Adam said. “They actually made a ton of money. They didn't need to raise that much money. And then because they did, they made terrible decisions, long term.” You can be professional and have personality. Workweek is leaning on its network of 19 creators to be front and center. It doesn't have an editor-in-chief and instead relies on its newsletter writers to chart their own path that hews closely to what motivates them. Nicole Casperson, for instance, writes WTFintech and focuses often on diversity and inclusion issues that are important to her personally. Sector expertise is critical. Not all Workweek creators worked in the fields they cover, but many do. Workweek writer Nik Sharma, for instance, is a DTC marketer. This hands-on familiarity with the issues in these fields in invaluable, so long as it is also married with the ability to clearly communicate and consistently produce valuable pieces. “The reason why [B2B content] is kind of boring is because you have a lot of people that have never done those jobs,” he said . “They're just like listening and regurgitating. They're not like coming from a point of action.” Paid acquisition is more than a shortcut. Publishers used to have an aversion to admitting to buying traffic. I can remember BuzzFeed making sure to point out it only bought ads for its sponsor content, not editorial. But Adam saw how an effective paid audience development strategy can accelerate growth. For instance, Workweek's The Marketing Millennials property grew by 7,000 newsletter subscribers organically in seven weeks while paid acquisition added 20,000. So long as a company is confident in its cost per subscriber number, and is focused on quality of acquired subscribers, paid acquisition is an important tool. Overall, Workweek pays to acquire nearly half its overall list at an average cost of $10 per subscriber. You need connective tissue. Workweek has cast a broad net in its first eight months of existence, with newsletters focused on everything from cannabis to fin tech to memes to franchises to marketing. It has since refined the model around “pods” of core categories. Workweek has clusters around areas like startups and investing, health, marketing and fintech. “It just allowed the business to focus on marketing allows our business to essentially have more efficiencies,” Adam said.
How do you solve a problem like LinkedIn? To get past high noise, low signal and build an online community that's truly meaningful, you need a vertical social network. In this 5-minute run through, Adam unpacks how his old company, Spiceworks, did just that. By creating mascots, products and conversations that actually meant something to their customers, they gained highly engaged, loyal followers. Take a listen as Adam gives two highly meaningful, highly practical takes on how to create a community that connects. This is the conversation you want to be having around your virtual water cooler. And if you love listening to Media Moves, please leave me a 5-star review on Rate My Podcast: https://ratethispodcast.com/mediamoves (https://ratethispodcast.com/mediamoves) Thank you so much! Keep up to date with the latest Media Moves news. Follow Adam on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AdamRy_n (https://twitter.com/AdamRy_n) Sign up to the Perpetual newsletter: https://workweek.com/brand/perpetual (https://workweek.com/brand/perpetual)
Welcome to The Incident Response Episode 19. Adam and Paul review the SpiceWorks 2022 State of IT report, and discuss QuestFlex If you have questions or suggestions for the podcast, you can always email Paul and Adam at theincidentreport@questsys.com. Thanks for listening! Articles Cited: The 2022 State of IT https://swzd.com/resources/state-of-it/#chapter-6 The Incident Report is created by Quest Technology Management. With over 40 years of experience, Quest is a leading Technology Integrator, working seamlessly with your staff, and systems to achieve your IT goals. Learn more about everything they do at https://www.questsys.com. The Incident Response Episode 19. Adam and Paul review SpiceWorks 2022 State of IT report, and discuss QuestFlex. Adam also shares a story about garbage cans, and how they helped close a deal.
On today's episode of the RecruitingDaily Podcast, William Tincup speaks to Ashley from Spiceworks Ziff Davis about equity audits.What's next for many of us is changing. Your company's ability to hire great talent is as important as ever – so you'll be ready for whatever's ahead. Whether you need to scale your team quickly or improve your hiring process, Greenhouse gives you the right technology, know-how and support to take on what's next.
Episode 5.19: Making Good Edtech Choices I'm joined on the pod by a legendary coach that won't lose her last game to their arch-rival, It's Danelle Brostrom! And also joining the pod is the Sultan of Seesaw, the Scion of Spiceworks, the Pontiff of Powerschool, Mr. Evan O'Branovic! TCAPSLoop Moment of Zen “Life is a web of intersections and choices. Your 1st choice is to recognize an intersection. Your 2nd choice is to be grateful for it.” ― Ryan Lilly In today's pod we discuss common mistakes educators make when selecting classroom technology? Below are some questions to ask before going rogue and purchasing and implementing new classroom technologies: 1. What is your learning goal? 2. What's your teaching and learning philosophy? 3. What's your context? Check out the EdSurge Product Index for more guidance on appropriate classroom technology Tech Tool of the Week: Awesome PBS resources for learning more about our amazing great lakes. https://www.greatlakesnow.org/ In closing, you can find us on Twitter @TCAPSLoop, @brostromda and @evanobranovic. Rate, Review and Subscribe to the podcast on Apple podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, Audible, TuneIn, Pocket casts, Downcast, Overcast, or wherever else you get your ear candy. Thanks for listening and inspiring!
On this episode of Wavelengths, an Amphenol Broadband Solutions podcast, Voice of B2B Host Daniel Litwin hit on two significant buzzwords: network convergence and network virtualization. Along for the ride was PJ Jayawardene, Senior Director of Wireless R&D for Charter Communications. The duo dug into the state of the union of each of these words and what they mean for the industry, as well as how service providers can be actionable around them. Network convergence is a familiar trend for service providers. The term continues to expand and create strategic challenges. Convergence in the telecommunications industry is about providing a continuous network thread, according to Jayawardene. He elaborated that people are going to care about the different service providers in their homes. The goal is that all these things will be seamless to the consumer. “It's not just the one word. It's not just convergence,” Jayawardene said. “You have to think about network and convergence together because, when you think about convergence, people think of multiple things coming together.” Network virtualization is another big buzzword, as small and big businesses find the term popular. Growth is expected in virtualization for service providers. Some 2020 research from Spiceworks found that double-digit growth is expected within the next two years in the use of application, network, desktop, storage and data virtualization. “The example is to start thinking of it as being able to build your own car,” he said. “With the parts you need to put together, you have this preference of a car that needs to go at a certain speed that can change its dynamic … and you put it all together.”
Subscribe to our Benzinga Crypto Youtube Channel Episode Summary:Market UpdateInstitutions Swiping Up NFTsDavid Sun POB.Studio InterviewMoon or Bust - To Play Moon or Bust go to https://www.benzinga.com/markets/cryptocurrencyGuests:David Sun Proof of Beauty StudiosCheck Out Other Benzinga Podcasts Here:Check Out All Benzinga Crypto News HereGet Moon or Bust Crypto Merch Here Join the Telegram: https://t.me/moonorbustBZ for 25% of Moon or Bust Podcast swag.Claim 1000 ZING airdrop: https://www.benzinga.com/zing Meet The Hosts:Brian MoirSolidity and React Developer | Blockchain Enthusiast | Decentralized Internet Advocate | Crypto investor since 2012https://twitter.com/moirbrian Logan RossBlockchain Analyst @ Benzinga | President @ Wolverine Blockchain | Crypto investor and educator since 2016https://twitter.com/logannrossRyan McNamaraBought sub $90 ETH during the bear market | Liquidated on ByBit | Was into DeFi before it was cool | Ran ASIC mining operation in 2016 (sorry planet Earth) | $UNI Bag Holderhttps://twitter.com/ryan15mcnamaraDisclaimer: All of the information, material, and/or content contained in this program is for informational purposes only. Investing in stocks, options, and futures is risky and not suitable for all investors. Please consult your own independent financial adviser before making any investment decisions.Unedited TranscriptWhat's up zinger nation. My name is Logan Ross, and this is moon or bust your home for all things, all coins and defy. I am coming to you live from Benzinga headquarters in beautiful downtown Detroit, Michigan. Today, the crypto markets are a little bit quiet, but the NFT markets are hot and we'll be covering.All as well as talking to our friend David's son from the NFT project, proof of beauty, this is a sweet one. You do not want to miss it. Uh, so get out your wrapping paper and put on your best cologne. Cause we're about to learn about proof of beauty's London gift and the London nightclub Dow. Okay. That's why you need your best Cullen in case you were wondering, I am joined today by defy developer, Brian Moore and master of margin, Ryan McNamara.How y'all felt. Doing good. That was a wicked intro. Logan who a, uh, I think it was the master of margin who wrote that one a hundred percent. How are you doing Logan? I'm doing great. Thank you so much for finally asking. Uh, but I want to know how y'all are doing in the chat. Uh, so let us know, drop a comment right below the like button, uh, Let us know what projects NFT or crypto you are looking at this week while you're down there.The first link in the description is the Benzinga crypto separate YouTube channel, where all the hot crypto clips will be posted. Uh, also join our telegram for a twenty-five percent off on the sick Buhner bus swag. You can get. BTC had doge hat, whatever, whatever team you're on, whatever you're feeling, uh, you can get 25% off by joining our telegram.It's that easy? Uh, also we just launched a brand new landing page for moon, our bust with a moon or bust game. Yes, that's right. A game. You can go vote moon or bust on all of your favorite tokens. Uh, the link is in the description as well. So make sure you check it out, go drop your votes and let us know how you're feeling.Make sure to connect with us on Twitter and our guests as well. All of that is linked in the description below. Um, but with that out of the way, let's get into the news. So I say we start off today talking about Budweiser, uh, buying a Tom Sachs NFT and the beer dot E E N S domain name, uh, Ryan, what do you think about a separate a second company coming into the NFT space, especially the PFP space, uh, after visa bought that crypto punk.Yeah, I definitely think it's really interesting. And it seems like visa might've been more of a marketing play. I think they put it really well in their tweet, talking about how they, they they've collected financial instruments through the past. So I thought that was really cool. But Budweiser, I think is a little bit different because not only did they get, like you said that Tom sex, rocket factory NFT, but they got ENS domain name, which I think is really.They actually got to, so they got beer dot Ethan. They got beyond beard at youth. So I don't really follow Budweiser much. I'm not really sure what that beyond beer dot eats would be used for, but yeah, who knows maybe they have something else in the works, but I definitely think that this could really push up the ENS market.There's probably more speculative investments with these shorter domain names, kind of like the.com bubble. And I think it'll be really interesting to see where this all goes. And if more companies start buying dot youth domain, Not to mention they bought it for 30 eith. Yeah. It was like a hundred thousand dollars.I wasn't saying that's really cool. Uh, so I don't know. I haven't heard yet, but we saw visa went through a third party to, to, you know, facilitate their transaction. Um, but did buzz, did Budweiser use a third party or did they buy east to do this? I do you guys hear about it? Oh, I didn't do my research on that.And neither did I it's like, you have to look in, if you guys know, drop a comment and fill us in, uh, otherwise we'll try to figure it out for next time. Um, but yeah, it's cool to see that further adoption. I think that visa might've knocked over the first domino in a long line of corporate NFT plays. Uh, so we'll keep our eyes on that going forward.Uh, in other news, uh, crypto markets are not doing a whole lot. I'll I'll share coin market cap with you guys here. We could just take a quick peek over the market. See what's up. See what's going on. So we got BTC hovering around 49. Again, we got east back at 3,200 car dynos holding steady, uh, looking for $3 again, soon Binance coins.The one that's ripping today. That's about it. We've got polka dot. Let's see. What do you guys have on your radars today? Anything in particular? I'm just glad Binance is above 500. Again, I bought, I put some more into my, um, rebalancing and change my values. So I added a lot more BNB when it was at two 70, I mean, uh, four 70.Okay. Breaking even there. For sure, good day, Mike, you want to let us know what crypto is you're looking at. Maybe we could talk about, um, uh, that goes to everyone else. We got Gavin, Gavin Newsome, good old Gavin, uh, is looking at car Dano. Maybe we'll pull up that chart for a second. Cardona was up 30% on the seven day that is thick.Uh, and you know, it's in price discovery. Reaching those new all-time highs. We're look for that to continue here shortly. Uh, yeah, let's see. The market cap is $125 billion. That's insane. I guess that's the fully diluted market cap. Maybe it's closer to the, to this number here, the 89 billion still either way.Ridiculous. Uh, and it's probably only going to get bigger throughout the next couple of months. We will keep our eyes on it for sure. Um, our well about the, um,The vice president of the global brands of Budweiser, um, their parent company, uh, enhance or Busch InBev said that they're, um, investing in a new NFT media shop run by Gary V. So there are jumping full, full, full in the deep end on this. They really capitalize on the new booming again, booming market, which is pretty cool.There you go. Another thing I wanted to point out, uh, chain-link Oracle's went live on Solano today. That is pretty cool in my opinion. And I like how chain-link is working with all these different blockchains. Uh, they, they have really got it figured out. Um, okay. But let's jump back to the, to the NFT space.Maybe we should just talk about proof of beauty, get that going. Or do you guys have any other projects you want to talk about? Really? We should rip her Rooney right? To proof of beauty. All right. Rip Rooney. We shall so back again today on Muno boss is our good friend David's son. David worked on the zero X protocol helps create the macho Dex aggregator.Uh, and now he started his own NFT project known as proof. Beauty proof of beauty turns blockchain transactions into beautiful pieces of NFTE art. And they recently launched a new limited collection called the London gift that David is here to tell us about. David welcome back, man. How are you? Good, good.How are you guys doing great. We are happy to have you on to talk to us about London. Uh, we had you on earlier this summer and the audience loved it, uh, for anyone who missed the last episode, um, maybe could you just fill us in on your background, how you joined the crypto space and what projects you've worked on so far?Yeah, I mean, you already kind of. Summaries, I'm going to fill in the gaps there. Uh, I joined in 2017 during that ICO bubble lost a good change of money during the bear market, uh, but decided to stick around and join zero X protocol as an engineer. And, you know, it was building infrastructure for what is today's defy.Um, and then at T marketplace, uh, things like what you like the technology, but open seat. It was very much so inspired by, uh, zero X protocol. But, yeah, so a bit the NMT bug, when crypto kitties slow down the eat market, um, back in 2018 and I always wanted to do NFTs, um, and provability kind of was a side project and soon became a full-time endeavor.And haven't looked back since. I love it. Uh, so before we talk about London, let's do a quick recap, uh, about proof of beauty's first collection, the hash collection. And if you want me to pull up any part of the website, just let. Yeah. Um, I think the best, uh, I guess demonstrator of the project probably will be hash dot POB that studio slash explore or explore page.Um, yeah. So, uh, hash is the project about collecting history about collecting transaction history, um, on the theory of blockchain, uh, what do we mean by that? Well, it's, uh, you know, We historically, you know, uh, have always collected, uh, Pictures. Uh, we actually tell history like just general history via, uh, arts.Right? We have oil paintings of the French revolution. We have a war photography of the Vietnam era. We did that, but just the more crypto native way, which is using NFTs as the. Painting that represents a moment of history, uh, on the blockchain. So, uh, you can feed it a transaction, right? Any Ethereum transaction, it could be your spirit first transaction, icky hack.It could be the largest, it could be the visa sale, right. Or it'll be the purchase of the crypto punk. And then we take all the information within that transaction and. A piece of art, right? Um, and this piece of art, you can also add a title description to kind of describe it. There's a whole lot of interaction you can do there.Right. And that's kind of a way of telling stories, right. In a very crypto native way. And then there's been a pretty lively, secondary market. People are speculating on what history is very valuable. Right. Um, Yeah, that's, that's hatch. It's kind of like a project to make collecting history, telling stories about crypto fund, hopefully.Um, and, and, uh, engaging. Yeah, this is awesome. Um, so right now I'm looking at Jay Z's crypto wallet addresses, is that. Uh, I think so I started way, way, way back. I started here. Uh, I found these featured collections. Wait, was it? No, it was down a little bit of login a little down. So Sean Carter right here, view Jason.Memorable moment. So what you guys did is you found Jay-Z's wallet addressed, found all the transactions and then use their algorithm to turn these into pieces of, of beautiful NFTE art, uh, that we could, I can mint right now for 0.08. Yeah. So these are like unclaimed transactions as, um, But, yeah, so like, just to kind of clarify, the key rule with hash is, uh, one transaction, one MTV.So if it's the minted, you could only buy it on the secondary market. Right? So there's like this race to the bottom where, you know, when the Lendon hard fork happened, everybody wanted, wanted the very first transition. After the hard fork. Right? So, um, this kind of a fun competitive game at play, um, you know, uh, with a lot of these guys trying to get the best parts of the history.Hmm. So I'm just pulling up ether scan here, looking into this NFT transaction, the first, uh, seven to one transaction on Jay Z. His address. I'm wondering if this is the punk. It doesn't look like it was, it could have been a transfer from somebody to him, I think. Very cool. And then we have the first Eve inbound.So what do you think this might. Probably just disguised when I'm in Coinbase and just loaded a crap load of, yeah. Dang. That's cool. And it's, it's still for sale. That's crazy. Uh, I have to pick that up after the show. No one swipe it from me, please. Um, okay. Let me take my screen off and pull up the next question.So at the beginning of this. Uh, Ethereum successfully launched the EIP 1559 London hard fork. Uh, what is the significance of this in your opinion? Yeah. I mean, I think there's a lot of layers to this. Um, obviously the first one is it, it radically changed how gas, uh, how we carpet gas pricing and, and that, you know, I don't think we have fully realized the benefits of like, you know, lower gas prices from the IP 1559 heart, um, a change, but it definitely radically changes.Pricings, right? Like there's, it's, it's a lot more predictable. It's, uh, you know, theoretically it's deflationary right. For Eve, which, you know, makes me more of a youth maxi than I was before. Um, you know, and, and that's really all cool. And. You know, men, a mask recently updated right. To support you. I think that 59 transactions and personally, I think the UX is a lot better just being able to see the price actively flash.And then if you, and then being a lot more predictable with the blog, with like the timing, it's like, oh, this should be within 30 seconds, which now is what used to be kind of just. Shot in the dark. Now it's a little less of a shot in the dark. At least now you have a little laser pointer, um, to help you out a bit.So that's very powerful. Um, but I think the repercussions of 1559 is it really demonstrates the power of utility and consumer use. I think a lot of other boxing's their political power is really constrained by their minors. Right? Whatever they say, you know, they, they own the hash power, right. The fact that you got P 1559, which perspec like on the perceptions, it's bad for minors as, as a part of their fees get burnt.Um, the fact that this thing was able to pass with some amount of buy-in the minor side on the developer side on the adapt side, kind of really is I think tells how politically strong. That youth community is right. Being able to do something that is had a lot of controversies from the beginning. Right.And that if that doesn't make you a little bit more bullish on youth being capable of upgrading itself, being capable of adapting itself to whatever future needs, uh, right. I don't think a lot of. Uh, blockchain and communities have yet to face these endeavors. I don't see a signal on definitely Bitcoin has its own struggles and usually it all is occurred to hard forks.The fact that Eve was able to have no hard forks, uh, and just very easily kind of move over to this, uh, kind of contentious, uh, EIP. It shows a lot of the maturity of the technology stack and the community that's operating. And then that's, to me a very longterm. Bullets signal that, you know, The world is going to throw a lot of crap at each blockchain, but it seems that Eve has, uh, has bore through a lot of these, you know, through its history and seems more likely to succeed and whenever a new, um, issue arises.Right? Yeah. Most definitely. Uh, I just kinda want to dig in here a little bit, cause I also think that this is the most significant thing. Uh, aside from the fee burning, it was being able to convince the miners to take less money, uh, and continue upgrading. This network, it shows that they are truly convicted.They truly believe in the future of the network and they care about holding Eve. Long-term more than they care about their mining profits in the near term here. So, um, we're looking for Bitcoin to, to try to pull off a similar feat towards the end of the year with taproot, right? Yeah. I think that's coming up actually in a month or so David, do you know.I'm probably the worst at Bitcoin since September. Yeah. They're pretty much trying to do a very similar idea. I mean, so David, I want to touch on what it takes to pull off something like this without a hard fork. Um, well, I'm not the best one to answer to this, to be honest. Um, I don't know all the nuances of core development on, on Heath.Um, but I do know that. The difficulty bomb in place with a theorem, um, was a huge, uh, what do you call it? Political poker chip that developers had against the miners. It's, uh, you know, the difficulty bomb, the hash rate grows very fast to a place where the hash difficulty goes very fast to a place where miners are.Unsustainably producing blocks. That's kind of like mutually assured destruction mechanic, and, um, developers gave themselves, I think the key to delay that bomb. Uh, so I think that played a part, but also I think miners are realizing just how much. Bye. And there was from dApps from, you know, from like just, uh, PR decks protocols from the NMT space.It's like they don't, they didn't want to make themselves the enemy towards this humongous market that they're now, uh, sustaining. So I think there's, there's been enough political pressure just to, uh, say that we want to be part of the future instead of. Make a very contentious, like we're all making money, so it's all be happy, kind of a deal.Very cool. Totally. So I want to jump back into proof of beauty because there has been a lot of new developments on it since you were on the show last, can we start by talking about proof of beauty's London gift and what it is? Yeah. Yeah. Uh, London as a project was a. Attempt to celebrate this hard fork.Right? Um, it was, we wanted to build something that, uh, I guess, you know, hash was about recording history, right? It was about how do we document it's like the camcorder, but we wanted a project that makes sense. Right. We wanted a product that celebrated that history and we saw a great opportunity with this hard fork that like, look, we can create a great meme around it, create a great project around it and find a way to celebrate it.Um, so that's what London that was, that was inspiration for London. Um, London started as actually an ERC 20 project. Um, it was an altcoin, um, but the key condition was you had a. Or if you wanted to get the London ERC 20 token, you had actually met at a very, very specific gas price on the specific gas price was 15.59 G way in celebration of VIP 1559.So it, it threw people for a little bit in the ringer. It was instead of thinking about gas prices, just like if I pay a lot, I get my transaction in. Um, the protocol was actually like, Hey, I don't want you to pay on actually. I need you to pay less. To get the most amount of tokens. So it made people have to rethink how gas price works.Right. And that was the whole point of the project because London was going to change how gas Spiceworks. So we wanted to project that makes you change how gas of works. Right. So, um, that created a very interesting, uh, uh, Community and mechanic right then that's why we called the Dow. The London nightclub Dow was people realized that you wanted to get a transaction.That's so low on gas price. And on the blockchain, you had to do it at night. You had to do it on the weekends when nobody was, you know, using the blockchain. So people were like, this is the nightclub, right? Like this is the London nightclub. We got to do it at the night. And we're all going to start having fun and start flooding the blockchain with, you know, London transactions.And that's that's, that's where that monitor came from the one, the nightclub. Um, but yeah, so, you know, you could have meant the London ERC 20 all the way up to the hard Hartford. Right. And right after Hartford, we gave it its first utility. You could buy the London gift and have tea, uh, which, which is about 8,000 of them.Um, and don't wait to get them was you had to pay 1559. London tokens. Right. So if we didn't ask for eith, we asked for the ERC 20 token. Um, yeah, so that was a very fascinating experience because the first four hours of the hard fork London gift was actually the number one burner. Uh, um, and that, like, it was really funny to see when there were, there were, I think there was a Bankless podcast that was live streaming, the IP 50, 59 of that.And then people were like, what the hell was this London gift that was topping it up for the first few hours of that podcast. Um, and that kind of, it was emblematic of that. Goal that we wanted to make noise. We wanted to make history. Right. Um, and, and we also actually have the honor of, um, the very first EIP, 1559 transaction on the theory of blockchain is a London transaction, like London gift transaction.Uh, so that's another like, uh, and, and the funny part is that very transaction has been collected as. By the half community. Right? So you can see the, like the interplay that we're having with these two projects, these two collections, uh, which is super exciting and super fun to see on the day, uh, of the hard fork.Um, and you know, I think for us, at least internally, it did everything we wanted it to do. Right. Which is make noise. Bring a community together. Uh, tell people about this great change through the hard fork, um, in a very crypto native way. Right. Um, and yeah, so now we have the London gift, um, It's been selling on open sea on the secondary market price floor has been all right.Pretty good at 0.13 right now. Um, and, and, you know, there's quirky names for those and, and people have been using them as backgrounds for their crypto punks for board aids. Uh, there's all kinds of fun stuff happening there. Um, And yeah. I mean, you know, you don't have to really understand all this crazy history that I just explained to buy a London gift.I hope that they're visually appealing enough. It's just like, you know what? I just want to own one for fun, right. Or own one, like an art blocks for speculation. Um, but yeah, like that's the history though behind the gift. So you're not just. Generative art and you're buying something that I think has a lot of embedded history in it.And it's been my job to, uh, show that part of the project. So cool. How you went from documenting or like cam cording history, like you said, to making it yourself. Yeah. Yeah. Um, that was the goal with London and we were. Uh, scared that we wouldn't be able to pull it off, but I think we, uh, I definitely, I blew it blew all of our, um, uh, expectations out of the water when it, when it came out.It's easy to think about that. The very first strings, the action on the new fork was your guys' project. I mean, what are the odds? I mean, it's a global thing. It could have been like. That let alone. That is enough to more people need to know that. Yeah. I think that adds a lot of credibility, honestly, to proof of beauty to have that transaction hash.That's really cool. I had a quick followup question about London. How much were London tokens? How much would it cost to mint a London gift at the time of mint, maybe in easy terms and USD. Uh, I definitely won't have exact numbers here, um, to get London, um, since it was low gas price and you didn't have the pain to eat, there was a fair launch project.Uh, we, we didn't pre mine anything. We didn't ask for any money for it. Uh, If you've minted at 15.59 G way, probably the London would cost you $4 for 1,559 of it. Cause it's, Ethan's cheap as 15.59 G way. Um, but I know some folks just because they were trying to get it, get it on a, on a T last minute they were trying to scramble in and get transaction.Then they were like paying 60 G way. Um, but at 60 G when you only got like a hundred London, So they were actually paying a huge premium just to even get a little bit of London, which is ironic for, for how the gas market works. But I do know that the price served all the way up to like about seven to 10 cents a coin for London, just right up to the hard fork.Um, and that was really amazing to see, because some of our early supporters of this project who minted, like millions of London were able to now profit, um, without even an entity coming out yet. Right. So they were able to sell their London for multiple Eve. Right. And, and that was, uh, Very different, you know, compared to gas wards that we're seeing with art blocks, with other NFP projects, where the miners reap the reward of their, of this huge FOMO, but we wanted a way to reward early supporters.And I think London did that. Right. Um, I think at the time of minting, because I mean, the market's very thin for London tokens. It was between seven to 12 cents a minute. So if it was four and to get an NMT was 1,559 London token. So napkin math, it would be about 150, 150, $160. And the price floor was stabilizing on the secondary market around 0.0 8.09.So that was about breakeven. I think. And now we're seeing that kind of rise as, as more folks are learning about what London is, London gift is. So aside from needing London tokens to mint the London gift, how does the token play into the ecosystem you guys are building? Yeah. Yeah. So that's a great question.Um, after we released the London gift, All of that London that we acquired. Well, not we, but the Dow acquired is now part of it's like working capital, right? So it's like a weird way of thinking about it, right? Like most ICO projects, they release a token and then they save a portion of it for themselves.We did it the other way we gave it all. And then we had to get, get it back in. All right. So, uh, the way we got it back in was the London gift and a T how we sold it. So about 13 million of the token, what is housed by the Dao, which is that we have a supplier 45 million of them. About 25% of the supply is now held by the Dao.Um, it also receives 5% of the secondary market fees. So we have about a thousand eith of volume on London gifts. So now it has about 50 ease of capital. They can use to do things. Um, And the London token and the London gift, our governance power to the stout. Um, and, and we really gave it the directive that does Dow should continue to land the London experiment, um, and whatever that means, um, and the community has kind of grabbed it around.This, this identity that we should be the Dow that creates history and celebrates history. So when, uh, the theory emerge happens, uh, uh, when he changed from proof of work to proof of stake, um, I think the London Dow is going to try to do something for that event. Um, but pretty much perpetuate this, um, the th the initial ambition of, of the London project.Um, but just for. Historic events. And now that it's a Dow has a operating capacity to do it. And I know that a lot of other folks want the London token to almost be like a mid pass. So if you want to get into exclusive entities, you will need to own London tokens to get access to. So there's a lot of speculation on the value, but we didn't define a lot of value in the beginning.We literally were just like, guys, you guys are getting a meme token. Like where are we going to be Frank with you? We haven't figured out any value for us yet. And the point is is that we're going to figure it out together. Right? Like, uh, and then, you know, still a lot of folks loved the idea, loved what the.The, the story behind the project is, and now we're, you know, working hard to, with the community to build out value. That's really cool. Has the dowel deployed any of that capital yet on any projects or. Uh, not, not yet. We have a lot of great proposals in play. We have a bird mechanic that we want, that people want to introduce to the London gift project so that you can burn those entities together at different NMT.Um, that's kind of in line with what EIP 1559 is all about. Running Eve. So they were like, we gotta burn love and gifts cause it's its own poetic to do so. Um, so there's that proposal kind of going through its process. And I think that would eventually have to, um, deploy capital to fund developers fund whatever's needed to realize that, uh, There's been a lot of work right now on boosting the LPs on the liquidity on London tokens.So there's been a lot of great proposals, deploy capital and deploy London tokens into, uh AMMS to support the liquidity needed to sustain a doubt. Right. Um, so. That's been two main threads, but there's a lot of other random ideas that people have wanted willing to build there's ideas around the London.Those you want to create a loaning group internally in the Dow where you can put up a, an, a T that you own as collateral, right. And you can draw money out and you can only get access to this. If you are London, dowel member, right. You'd be hold London token. So it's like a small credit, you know, Before London people.Right? So there's a lot of good ideas. It's really just been like, we found a way to get a community get together in the community now. Well shit, we, we, we have money. We have intention. Let's realize it. And they're all very quirky, you know, excited, exciting ideas. So, ah, that's awesome. I have two quick questions.I want to jump in with one. How do I join the Dow and two, how do I get London? Token? Yeah. Oh, you joined the London Dow literally just by owning either a gift or. 1,559 London tokens. Um, you can do more if you want to be a whale. Um, obviously that means more voting power, uh, but that's the minimum to get on our discord and access all the private channels.Um, that, that is, uh, that is reserved for the London down members. And you can buy London on sushi swap. We have a AMM there. I wouldn't say that. Yeah, the slippage is amazing. Um, we're working on that, but you could definitely buy London gift on the open sea markets for, you know, a Flores 0.13 right now.And that I did this morning. I picked up body, uh, in anticipation of this interview. I think it's so cool. So maybe do you want to just take a look at the features real quick? Uh, we could walk through them. So, uh, what are some of the ones that the community has picked out that you want to. Yeah, I, um, I think a lot of the community loves the view, go to the main, uh, filter and I can go all the way down to the unique, which is so most of these names.Randomly generated, but then I took some time to make some funny names and I just watched Deadpool. When I, when I did these names, I wanted to fall breaking names like of these are pretty fun. Um, uh, so somebody, who's a pretty funny, I think light-hearted, it's supposed to make up a few pokes at the T space.Um, um, can you show this for me last sold 108th for sale. Yeah. Yeah. So it's, these are really rare tokens, right? I guess NFTs. And there's only 30 of them out of the thousand 8,000 of them. And people have been trying to get their hands on these, um, And that's been, it's just been a fun, creative use name.Then I know that the community had a great laugh, um, from somebody names. Um, um, there's just different commentary on, on crypto culture, on NMT culture. Yeah, they're awesome. So David correct me if I'm wrong, but these London gifts, they were generated on men, right? They weren't generated before these were actually generated before.Um, uh, hash is not cause hatches at design concern. You know, we, we, we can't know what transaction and giving us until you gave it, you gave it to us, but right. For London, we took a page out of how board apes did its launch. Um, and they did it pre pre pre-built. So I saw you took inspiration from board apes, and I saw that on your website.Can you go a little bit more into detail about that inspiration? Yeah. Yeah. Um, well I think when we clarify, clarify inspiration, it was much more of a technical inspiration as in how they, uh, built their in a T project to last a very, very, very long time for if not forever. Right? Uh, since the London gifts.Project celebrating London to hard fork. It should exist as long as a theory exists. Right? So we had, we wanted to build a design constraint that this thing has decentralized as longterm as possible. And I think Bart apes has one of the better designs out there, uh, that allows her great rich artworks, but also, uh, storage, a lot of stuff on chain to allow you to maintain.This is in fact a right NFT, that's pointing to the right metadata. So that's what I mean by inspiration is we, I looked at its contracts. We looked at it it's Providence design and would be, uh, figured out, um, uh, you know, a lot of great ideas there, uh, that we can build for wanting to gift. So I've been looking at art blocks lately and it looks like they have some similar type of projects.Do you have any opinion on art blocks? Do you own any, what do you think about. Yeah. Yeah. I mean our boxes, uh, I I've, I've known him them when they were just on Rinka B, but when they were, does a test project, uh, in November last year, I don't remember. Um, yeah, I mean, I, I think the community is amazing. Um, there's been a lot of great noise and I think that what they're doing is lifting all that.Generative art up, right? We're all rising with their, with what they're demonstrating in the market that's capable of being created. Um, I do think, um, as a project, there's, there's some genuinely good art. Um, I, I do think that some things I personally don't visually find appealing, but, uh, some of the work like the Cadenza pieces, like they were truly, I think, uh, amazing to me, uh, sub scape was really good.Um, a lot of the work coming from. Keith is really well done. I really liked it. I remember when credenza was kind of quiet the market. Wasn't going crazy. Like it is now. I was putting up Teddy with offers and nobody was taking them. I was just like, darn it's like tennis is not allowed. I was like the only one dropping 10 offers.And, and nobody took them and I'm kind of regret not offering more now. Um, um, but yeah, I mean, it did to do great things for the general market. I do know that they have some growing pains that they're working through with gas boards, um, and pricing out their new community members because of just how expensive now curated pieces are.Our blocks factory is as well. Um, Yeah, I think they caught on a great meme, which is like this trading card kind of experience. Right. You pull a random and you, hopefully you get a great thing that such a, such a small supply. Um, and that's really awesome to see. Um, is that something that proof of beauty is interested in doing?Um, not necessarily mainly because I think they've kind of figured it out. Um, and we don't really think that. Precisely something that we can offer that is very, very unique. I do think that the London gift, um, visually and its design was very inspired by how art blocks works. Um, so it is meant to try the art blocks community towards the proof of beauty ecosystem.Um, but yeah, I mean, I, I think snowfall, the guy who. Um, our block is doing great stuff there. Um, and it's sustaining a good community there's downs now going on with their, some of their artworks, uh, only good things to say for them. And we're reaping the, you know, the windfall of the successful generative art project tidbit that I didn't know.So snow fro fro is actually the guy who founded our. Yeah. I mean, he was, he was a one man army in the beginning that I follow him and I've been following him for a while. I didn't even realize that that's a guy who found it hard blocks. Okay. I know he owns a shitload of crypto punks, but Hey, now I know.Yeah. So yeah. So David, can you tell us a little bit more about the, the London nightclub Dow? Um, I guess how does governance work on the platform? Is it a quadratic voting thing? Is it one token equals one vote? Uh, that's a good question. Uh, we have, um, implemented quadratic voting the snapshot proposals.Um, I don't think we're in a place where governance is mature enough to put everything on chain and also. Gas fees or horrifying bad. If you have to pay $40 a vote, um, and $4, if you don't want to vote, um, or withdraw your vote. Um, so we're, so we have to do this option B uh, gas, this voting, um, when that's snapshot and it's quadratic voting.Um, so we, we do have a lot of big whales and for London, there's a lot of guys with million dollar plus, well, a million London plays. So to kind of, even out the playing field, quadratic voting made a lot of sense. It does make sense. And those, those, uh, people with all that London, if I got the right contract, London is pretty up there now, compared to what 15, what you were explaining 1559, love them equal to in the beginning to get it.Now it seems that that token price has gone up quite a bit, but I don't know if that's the right crop contract. I was looking on sushi swap, but I got kind of confused. Where I think I got lost and did a scam London. There's a SU there is a London. I, I think I know what you're talking about on Susan's slop.I looked up London, there's a London, Tokyo. It's very priced well, and that's because it's the NFTA. Um, token it's presenting the price of the London gift, where does actually a different London, which is ERC 20. So I was confused on that and I don't know why they called the London, I guess, an a TX thing London as well.They should have called one gift, whatever. Yeah, I think that is what I was looking at. But moving on from that part and kind of going into the general NFT space, where do you think that. What do you think the booming in the NMP popularity in, you know, industries and celebrities and stuff, getting into these and paying ridiculous amounts of money, but actually raising the value of, you know, just someone who has, uh, a normal, everyday NMT that they got, they found Twitter.It got it for, you know, 0.02, either something, not a whole lot, but not. Too cheap, but you know, they got it. And now all of a sudden they're becoming millionaires because they had all these bunch. What do you think about all that stuff going on in this space right now? Yeah, I mean, uh, uh, I, that's a great question.I know when I joined the DFI space, I fell in love with this ambition to, uh, its ambition, to make wealth equitable, to access. Um, and, and that was just this very fundamental idea that. If we make a protocol that this does not care who you are, you should give you the equal amount of access to, to all the financial levers that we can access to.Right. As a participant, whether that means using compound without knowing what skin color, what nationality or whatever, um, in the, in a very, I guess, what do you call it? Realistic. More pragmatic view of that vision. I think, uh, defy you need assets. You need, you need a lot of money to really participate in a financially great way with, with these things, unless you're yellowing into like a thousand percent plus yields, hopefully you don't get bank run risk.Right? You hopefully your token doesn't just tank. Right? So. As much as the ambition is there. It's it's I don't think we were seeing truly the fruits of the labor. Um, whereas an NMT is, I think we're seeing people capturing, um, you know, community is via, Anaptys capturing, uh, brand power or capturing reputability in a T.And now they're able to sell these for a hundred, a thousand X to folks that need. Reputation that needs that very scarce resource. And it's creating generational wealth. It's creating a truly equitable world. It's given Eve the truly powerful reason to be at denominated asset, right? Like I've never in my life thought in E until not is right.Like I thought everything in the U S dollar, like my, my personal accounts and his area on and everything it's in the east now. It's not an us dollar, which is incredibly powerful. Right. Um, and yeah. See that movement where early speculators are able to capture the windfall of this demand is, is amazing. I think we don't see this often with wealth distribution systems, um, in the real world, or even in really in DFI.Right? I think the Unisource airdrop was very powerful, but folks were making $10,000 all of a sudden, because you need to swap, decided to do a distribution like that. I'm all for those kinds of things, right. It's definitely going to create a lot of FOMO and, and less, uh, well-intended projects will come in and these will eventually result in corrections in the market.Um, um, when I think this is a very long-term bullish sign. People want, um, partis want to participate in this new reputation market that is being established by entities, this new, uh, content market that is established. Right. Um, and they're more than happy to come to the table with a anonymous address to participate.Whereas before it was a lot more, you know, credit base, you had to participate, be institutions, be agencies or whatever, and they all take a cut. Right? So, yeah. So were you surprised when visa bought the crypto punk the other day? Uh, and what do you think is going to happen next? Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I actually interned at visa when I was still in college, so I I've definitely seen.One of visa is internally, but not all their teams. Um, I definitely was a little bit surprised that was visa, that there was a first one. I wouldn't be surprised that they were one of the few that were at the beginning, but I didn't expect them to be the first one. Uh, but I do know that their, I guess their assets team whoever's managing their wealth is a very, very.Team and how they have strategically invested in a lot of different FinTech companies before and, and, and whatever the future of wealth is. They've been fairly on top of their game and, and this crypto punks investment, both in marketing stunt, but I think also a huge, um, like glass ceiling that they broke for.Institutions that in fact, crypto punks, you know, the fact that they publish that said that versus buying a Bitcoin is very fascinating, right? It tells you that owning a crypto punk, you're not as something that appreciates in value. There's a genuine amount of reputational power, cultural power that you bought.Right. Uh, Bitcoin spent 10 years building, right. For the Bitcoin meme. But crypto punks did in three years. Right. Or really didn't this year. Right. Because two years before you got about a punk for like, you know, like $5, right? Like. Yeah. If I could only go back. Uh, so speaking of going back earlier this year, we kind of saw the first, uh, little NFT bubble, uh, going on prices went crazy.And then as the crypto prices went up, uh, people started moving their value into those assets instead. I kind of think that that while everything is, is like priced and Ethan open, see people are still looking at that USD value at the end of the day. Uh, and as Ethan goes up, do you expect the NFT space to kind of struggle and, um, you know, price, price, floors go down.What do you think is going to happen as the price of Ethereum rises? It probably there will be a correction in the anti spaced and due to nominating the things that youth, when the newcomers are denominated in us dollar will create a clash. Um, right. Like for folks like ourselves, for myself, who, who, who, who has been owning for a while, uh, where we have acquired a youth at three digit numbers versus what it is now, um, uh, There's we're bound for a correction.I think that's just kind of a natural inflows of, of the market. Um, I've somebody, or we had a conversation with somebody. We were like seven stages of hell, but the seven stages of crypto price movements, like you see moves Eve moves and then out coins and an entity starts to move. Like it's like a windfall of processing where wealth kind of just moves around and it flows back into the top level again.So we're saying we're going to always see that. The thing has been denominated and it's, um, you know, there's gonna be a lot of new folks, but crap while your, or date is 130,000 us dollars, that's a year salary from, for a software engineer in the bay area. Right. Like that's, you know, and that's pre-tax right.So let's. That's a lot of money. So do you think that you said the NFT bubble going to be comes after the altcoin bubble? Um, but we saw it in like early January coming, like before Bitcoin almost. And then now we're seeing it come again, maybe right before Bitcoin. Do you think it's before. Uh, I don't have any magic eight ball.Tell me that I don't, I don't know what the sequencing is at this point. Um, I do think that Bitcoin's mimetic strength over the, uh, over to other markets is, has been weakening a little bit more and more. Um, but I mean, institutions are still buying a lot of Bitcoin. Right. And I think that's more than anything.They bullish sign for Bitcoin as a store of value. So, um, I don't know the sequencing wall was changed. That's just how it, you know, if I were to predict that I would make, I would lose a lot of money. Why do you think that, um, in a T boom has happened again, like with board apes? Yeah. Budgie penguins and all of these different ones, he's either profile picture or, um, you know, these are these collectible NFT projects.Why do you think they're all Boomi again? Uh, one, some I've heard is saying that it's the community is bringing everybody together, but I wanted to see as someone that's actually doing a successful project, why do you think this is, uh, taken off rapid fire? Like it is and what. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, I think the above the bowl and March really needed a correction.It was at a place where we were operating a lot of us, I think, in the dark, when it comes to price discovery to community building, then I think the correction did come in and people were calling it at the NFC hangover or whatever where capital inflows were were, were a lot slower. Um, at the time during that time, I don't think that if the space was not building right, we were all still.Hard at work and because they're less noise, we were able to be a little less kind of fighting fires by the day we were more strategic and mindful of what we need to do. I can just speak on my own experience out in March when we were doing has still, or does the main focus like. Compared to what I know now about community building about price discovery about the token Nomics with NMT is like, I feel like I was a toddler now in March, right?Like we didn't understand anything or I didn't understand anything. And, um, we had hash max then I believe, you know, there's other great projects. But, um, I think once the NFC hangover happened, we were just kind of, I think it was a powder keg. We were just literally waiting for like the. Spark, and then everything was going to come back again.Right? It was just, to me, it was just as a matter of time for the bull market to come back. It was either in a few months, half a year or whatever, but, um, then if he sparked market works off the football lot of FOMO, right? Like, like a hedge fund goes buys and 508th of whatever, or buy the sweeps, the whole floor on crypto punks.And. That wouldn't fall brings everybody over again. Right. Um, when people are making money, everybody comes and make money. Um, but there's been a lot of maturing between these two bear bull and bear cycles, which is insane for how fast the market has been moving. The fact that we've been able to grow with it.Right. Like the fact that open, see now shows for price instead of average price, it literally showed average pride for years, right? From the beginning that opens the existed because they, nobody understood that floor price matter, not average price, right? Like it took us a bear, a bull market and a bear cycle realizing.Actually the statistic that we want to be working towards. Right. And we have tools like rarity, sniper, Ray, already tools that allows people to speculate on how rare your entities are. Um, keep our, seeing the present power of the reputation that you can gain. If you own a crypto, pumpkin, that's your portrait.Right? So, um, yeah, it's, it's, it's like relaying a lot of the good groundwork and we're also seeing a lot of great, um, infrastructure projects. Right. The fact that, uh, you know, that the open seat made like a billion, like how about a billion dollars of volume or whatever, and raise a hundred mil that puts a target on their back.Everybody wants in on that. This is now right? So that means some of the most talented people are now in the market. Right. Not buying but building. Right. That's like huge talent draw that. And it teases simply haven't had until this year. Right? Like it's, I don't think we were able to, it was able to draw the best people.Okay. It felt like a very small market or before January, right? This correction. I think quite a lot of people that stuck along. Right. So I like these because I think that the, um, the PFP or even the art projects are going to be here for a couple of years. But if you look back and you look at the tokens that even some that have been on or some of the past only like.Three to five out of the past seven years are tokens that we know now, you know? And so, and that's just gonna be the same continuing with these NMT projects. As long as the Ethereum is on polygon, all these ones that they're on their own blog. They're going to be there forever. These tokens will come and go, but these crypto punks are going to be in museums.Um, you know, they're already, they already are. So it's just really cool to see something like that with the longevity and the lifespan that these will have compared to ICO's and token projects. That'll just, yeah. So along, along with London came the, uh, background changed service, uh, which I think is really cool.I've been seeing a bunch of punks and apes with proof of beauty backgrounds. Uh, so if you can maybe talk about, uh, how that came about and the network effects you've been seeing, I will show everybody how they can do it, uh, while you're explaining. Yeah. Yeah. One of the things about London and I'm certain that you guys have felt this just from me, rambling is it's a complex project.It has a lot of history. Um, but we wanted London gift to have its own name. That's not just about history. And we wanted something about. Holds its ground for NFT speculators and just NFTE people in general. So, uh, we started to see people use London and hash as backgrounds for their, uh, uh, avatars. And we just thought that was the main, that was, um, that's how we're going to get people like crypto punks.You know, quite know what the hard fork is to love London or to love hash. So we really wanted to seize that opportunity and create a great project that would grow the, grow that meme. And that was, you know, literally two weekends and I, and I, and nearly an all-nighter and we, uh, slapped together a pretty scrappy service that, you know, we hope that we'll propagate that story, right.That, um, this meme, that London gift is a great background for. PSP projects. Yeah, for sure. Uh, I'm having a little bit of trouble selecting the, the 24 PX, uh, option for some reason. Uh, put your ape on there. I wish man. So yeah, I can't show you guys cause I don't have any of these other projects right now.Um, but maybe we could talk about how, um, you've been adding projects. Have you guys like been in contact with, with these creators? Have you let them know, worked with them to integrate. Uh, for some of them, the communities have reached out to us for most of these, we've been just taking them by the signal.Like people wanted this. We're like, okay, we'll add it. Right. Some that we obviously had ads just because they're blue chip, right? Like a Parkside that be very dumb and last not to add punks our board apes, like I own a board eight. Right. So I wanted to see my own selfish there too. Uh, cool cats. I'm a huge, cool cats fan.So that was a really easy ad for us. Um, Yeah, we it's open source so people can just drop in and literally just add two lines of code. And what law you going to add your own, uh, avatar and the process? We do permission it, cause sometimes the result is. To be less than desired and something like Photoshop may work a little bit better and know we're not interested in recreating Photoshop.So, um, when you had to restrict a few of them, but we've been collaborating with few communities like the crypto dunks, um, community. The derivative of the crypto punks project, um, we're working on a giveaway, right. Um, getting their community to, to use punks faculties, gift, get backgrounds, um, uh, the bowls on the block, the bears on the block.We're really excited too. Right. We were trying to help them out. Um, but yeah, yeah, we, we it's been the case by case basis, but awesome. Uh, that's unfortunately really all the time we have for today. David, thank you so much again for stopping by. It was a great interview as always. I'm really excited to see what's next for proof of beauty.Do you have anything you could share with us now? Yeah, I guess a half we have seasons, uh, which I'm not going to go too much into, but that's. Do generations of artworks, uh, where right now in season one saga, we do have a season two planned after season one sells out in season two. I'll just give it its name.It's called Toshi. Um, and I think Toshi, if you had to think about what it means, um, can tell you what kind of history you were targeting with Toshi. Very cool. I'm excited for. Um, so yeah, w we will have you back on when that project launches, but for now, I just want to give you the chance, any shout outs you want to make anything else you want to mention to the audience?The is. Yeah. Um, you know, we, we have a lot of great things going on. So following us, beauty, Twitter is going to be awesome. And if you go on there, we have a lot of other, Twitter's now managed by the community, not by us, for each, for all the doubts that we have going on. So that's been really amazing. You really want to follow the details of all this stuff, all the history that we're telling or making follow those Twitters, um, cause cause.Yeah, you don't want to miss out on, um, I think some of the wacky things that we're doing for sure. Awesome. Make sure to, to follow those. Twitter's they're linked in the description below and so is the website. Uh, it is right under the like button wink, wink. Um, but yeah, that's it for our interview and our show today.Um, David, thanks, Ryan. Brian, you have anything else you want to mention? No, thanks for coming on David. Absolutely. Awesome. Yeah, we'll see you guys Friday.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/moon-or-bust/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
One of Spiceworks help desk versions is shutting down on December 31. The desktop edition wasn't updated and wouldn't be. So many Spiceworks users consider: ... The post Spiceworks Desktop vs Spiceworks Cloud: What's the Difference? appeared first on Help Desk Migration Service.
On this episode of Wavelengths, an Amphenol Broadband Solutions podcast, Voice of B2B Host Daniel Litwin hit on two significant buzzwords: network convergence and network virtualization. Along for the ride was PJ Jayawardene, Senior Director of Wireless R&D for Charter Communications. The duo dug into the state of the union of each of these words and what they mean for the industry, as well as how service providers can be actionable around them. Network convergence is a familiar trend for service providers. The term continues to expand and create strategic challenges. Convergence in the telecommunications industry is about providing a continuous network thread, according to Jayawardene. He elaborated that people are going to care about the different service providers in their homes. The goal is that all these things will be seamless to the consumer. “It's not just the one word. It's not just convergence,” Jayawardene said. “You have to think about network and convergence together because, when you think about convergence, people think of multiple things coming together.” Network virtualization is another big buzzword, as small and big businesses find the term popular. Growth is expected in virtualization for service providers. Some 2020 research from Spiceworks found that double-digit growth is expected within the next two years in the use of application, network, desktop, storage and data virtualization. “The example is to start thinking of it as being able to build your own car,” he said. “With the parts you need to put together, you have this preference of a car that needs to go at a certain speed that can change its dynamic … and you put it all together.”
Perceptive Readers Do you need a Free Community to get your IT Questions Answered? Then you have one that has been around since 2006 at Spiceworks.com
Spiceworks and Ziff Davis B2B joined forces to offer customers unparalleled access to the world's most active and influential technology buyers. Robin Peto, Managing Director at Spiceworks Ziff Davis, joins me on today's Tech Talks Daily episode. Robin is responsible for directing the organization's research strategy, as well as leading a team of subject matter experts and talented researchers to help inform clients' mission-critical priorities. She offers insights grounded in her 20+ year career in the B2B tech sector. IT departments everywhere have rapidly deployed technologies to maintain business continuity during the rapid rush to remote work in the global health crisis. The massive move to work-from-home policies spurred shifts in hardware, software and services spend and will continue to make waves as many companies stick to flexible working arrangements permanently. To gain perspective on how this great shift will influence IT in the coming years, SWZD surveyed more than 1,000 technology buyers in companies across North America and Europe. To provide context into the magnitude of the shifts expected in 2021, the report tracks tech trends over three years. Robin reveals insights from their 2021 State of IT report. We discuss changes in IT and tech spending during the pandemic. We also talk about shifts in business communication tools, the future of business chat apps, remote working security concerns, and workers returning to physical offices/workforce of the future.
Mike Maples (@m2jr) is the co-founder and partner at Floodgate Capital and was one of the original “super angels”. For episode #15, I chatted with Mike about the process entrepreneurs should use to uncover breakthrough insights, a fishing trip with his Dad that taught him a lifelong lesson, how he stumbled into his first angel investment (Twitter), how he broke into venture capital after being a founder, and one of the biggest issues facing our country that almost no one talks about. We even turned the tables and Mike fired some questions my way. Mike has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and was also named one of the “8 rising stars” by Fortune Magazine. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike’s investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. Mike is the host of an amazing podcast called “Starting Greatness” and freely shares his insights on Twitter @m2jr. Mike is someone I’ve really enjoyed getting to know over the past year and he is compassionate and big hearted as he is insightful and wise. I hope you enjoy this episode with Mike Maples.
Podcast Notes Key Takeaways During the pandemic, there’s been a lot of inflection points in belief. People believe in telemedicine, remote work, and eCommerce more now than ever before“Part of these belief inflections happen because of the elimination of the paradox of choice. If you have no choice but to work remote, you figure out how to do it.” – Mike Maples Jr. What’s the secret to becoming a great venture capitalist?“I think it gets lucky in the first five years” – Mike Maples Jr.Mike’s first investment was Twitter and most investors on the Midas list made an incredibly lucky first investmentA college degree is more of a signal than proof of skill“Really what a college degree is, is it’s a signal. And companies have decided that they respect that signal.” – Mike Maples Jr.Instead of thinking of a startup or market when trying to start a company, think about inflections that you can become obsessed with. Then imagine multiple different futures that would be possible with that inflection and work your way backward to the present.That’s backcasting: Using an insight to predict multiple futures and then working backward to the present “The asymmetric upside of being right about the bet is where you have an awesomely powerful startup” – Mike Maples Jr.More on Backcasting from MikeGreat entrepreneurs are able to resolve the impedance mismatch between people who live in the future and people who live in the present “What an entrepreneur really is, is a time traveler who based on inflections, identifies a valuable non-consensus future. Then comes back to the present and starts a movement, and recruits early people to join their movement.” – Mike Maples Jr. “The future is not something we try to predict, it’s something we create”– Mike Maples Jr.Read the full notes @ podcastnotes.orgMike Maples (@m2jr) is the co-founder and partner at Floodgate Capital and was one of the original “super angels”. For episode #15, I chatted with Mike about the process entrepreneurs should use to uncover breakthrough insights, a fishing trip with his Dad that taught him a lifelong lesson, how he stumbled into his first angel investment (Twitter), how he broke into venture capital after being a founder, and one of the biggest issues facing our country that almost no one talks about. We even turned the tables and Mike fired some questions my way. Mike has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and was also named one of the “8 rising stars” by Fortune Magazine. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike’s investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. Mike is the host of an amazing podcast called “Starting Greatness” and freely shares his insights on Twitter @m2jr. Mike is someone I’ve really enjoyed getting to know over the past year and he is compassionate and big hearted as he is insightful and wise. I hope you enjoy this episode with Mike Maples.
Four things to know today Microsoft makes a MSP related announcement https://techcommunity.microsoft.com/t5/small-and-medium-business-blog/announcing-microsoft-365-lighthouse-for-managed-service/ba-p/1698181 Spiceworks research on IT trends https://www.ciodive.com/news/2021-IT-spend-trends-spiceworks-ziff-davis-/585627/ Hackers are selling RMM access https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/hackers-sell-access-to-your-network-via-remote-management-apps/ AND ConnectWise bug bounty program https://www.channele2e.com/technology/security/connectwise-bug-bounty-program/ https://www.kaseya.com/legal/vulnerability-disclosure-policy/
Today, the 1st in a two-part series on entrepreneurship, we have entrepreneur, Co-Founder of FloodGate and host of “Starting Greatness” Mike Maples, Jr. He recently wrote “How to build a breakthrough: the secret of back-casting” and we’re going to go deep on it today! Watch out for our next episode, we’re having founder/CEOs Osman Rashid. He started $8B, publicly-traded Chegg and now Convo.com. Status of Silicon Valley Christopher and Mike starts their discussion about the state of Silicon Valley. Both agreed that most of Silicon Valley companies are the first adopters of sheltering in place and work from home arrangements. It has definitely benefitted some companies who have adjusted early on. However, they also Mike also describes this coronavirus pandemic as a “hand of God” who “punished” some companies and catapulted some to success. “I've never really seen a situation where you have a tale of two types of businesses. Most recessions, they affect some worse than others, but they affect everybody badly to some degree. Whereas what we're seeing in this one is: it's almost like a lot of things that were already starting to gather, got accelerated forward — telemedicine, remote distributed work, distance learning, remote work infrastructure. So you could make the case that this has had a dramatic impact in both directions ironically.” - Mike Maples Jr. Moving Forward By Looking Backward Mike recently created an interesting piece about moving forward by looking backward. He mentions that the future doesn't happen to us. It happens because of us. He further explains why he wrote the piece and how it can help entrepreneurs plan their future. “Great founders design the future. Design is the right word. It's not just about drawings or how things look or even how they function or perform. It's about people with a determined idea of what a better future should be. Not only building that better future, but convincing people in the present to change the trajectory, that they're on.” - Mike Maples Jr. Create A Movement To Move A Market For Mike, entrepreneurs don't discover markets. They create movements that become markets. They move people to their point of view and they move people from the present to a better future. “I thought it might be useful to try to help entrepreneurs get some lessons that I'd received from some of the super performers that I've worked with on how do you build a breakthrough. I've spent a lot of time over the years trying to deconstruct what they do and how it's different from what normal startups look like. That is why I wrote this post on backcasting.” - Mike Maples Jr. To know more about how backcasting can help you design the future that you want and for more information about Mike, download and listen to this episode. Bio: Mike Maples, Jr is a Partner at Floodgate. He has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and was also named one of “8 Rising Stars” by FORTUNE Magazine. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike’s investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. Mike is known for coining the term “Thunder Lizards,” which is a metaphor derived from Godzilla that describes the tiny number of truly exceptional companies that are wildly disruptive capitalist mutations. Mike likes to think of himself as a hunter of the “atomic eggs” that beget these companies. Interests: Calligraphy, cinematography, and sporting clays. Links: FloodGate Twitter: @m2jr Linkedin: Maples How to build a breakthrough, Medium We hope you enjoyed this episode of Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on iTunes!
Today, the 1st in a two-part series on entrepreneurship, we have entrepreneur, Co-Founder of FloodGate and host of “Starting Greatness” Mike Maples, Jr. He recently wrote “How to build a breakthrough: the secret of back-casting” and we’re going to go deep on it today! Watch out for our next episode, we’re having founder/CEOs Osman Rashid. He started $8B, publicly-traded Chegg and now Convo.com. Status of Silicon Valley Christopher and Mike starts their discussion about the state of Silicon Valley. Both agreed that most of Silicon Valley companies are the first adopters of sheltering in place and work from home arrangements. It has definitely benefitted some companies who have adjusted early on. However, they also Mike also describes this coronavirus pandemic as a “hand of God” who “punished” some companies and catapulted some to success. “I've never really seen a situation where you have a tale of two types of businesses. Most recessions, they affect some worse than others, but they affect everybody badly to some degree. Whereas what we're seeing in this one is: it's almost like a lot of things that were already starting to gather, got accelerated forward — telemedicine, remote distributed work, distance learning, remote work infrastructure. So you could make the case that this has had a dramatic impact in both directions ironically.” - Mike Maples Jr. Moving Forward By Looking Backward Mike recently created an interesting piece about moving forward by looking backward. He mentions that the future doesn't happen to us. It happens because of us. He further explains why he wrote the piece and how it can help entrepreneurs plan their future. “Great founders design the future. Design is the right word. It's not just about drawings or how things look or even how they function or perform. It's about people with a determined idea of what a better future should be. Not only building that better future, but convincing people in the present to change the trajectory, that they're on.” - Mike Maples Jr. Create A Movement To Move A Market For Mike, entrepreneurs don't discover markets. They create movements that become markets. They move people to their point of view and they move people from the present to a better future. “I thought it might be useful to try to help entrepreneurs get some lessons that I'd received from some of the super performers that I've worked with on how do you build a breakthrough. I've spent a lot of time over the years trying to deconstruct what they do and how it's different from what normal startups look like. That is why I wrote this post on backcasting.” - Mike Maples Jr. To know more about how backcasting can help you design the future that you want and for more information about Mike, download and listen to this episode. Bio: Mike Maples, Jr is a Partner at Floodgate. He has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and was also named one of “8 Rising Stars” by FORTUNE Magazine. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike’s investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. Mike is known for coining the term “Thunder Lizards,” which is a metaphor derived from Godzilla that describes the tiny number of truly exceptional companies that are wildly disruptive capitalist mutations. Mike likes to think of himself as a hunter of the “atomic eggs” that beget these companies. Interests: Calligraphy, cinematography, and sporting clays. Links: FloodGate Twitter: @m2jr Linkedin: Maples How to build a breakthrough, Medium We hope you enjoyed this episode of Follow Your Different™! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on iTunes!
Adam Ryan is the President of The Hustle. He has been with the company since they were doing $10k a month in business to now doing over 8 figures a year. Adam joined the company to be the first sales person but now runs the complete day to day operations. In this episode, he talks about moving up quickly in the company, what it takes and what he recommends to anyone else who wants to move up fast at a startup. He also speak about how things are going at The Hustle during this crazy time, a few tips on how to get an interview and how to get a job at The Hustle. Show Notes: 2:50 - Spiceworks taught him how to go from 1-100M 3:30 - Why Adam left under armor to joint the hustle 5:20 - Why Adam doesn’t love big companies 6:38 - 10K a month when he joined to $1.5M in a year. 8:17 - What made them change business model 8:57 - What it felt like to go from if to when 10:30 - What Adam uses weeks and nights to keep up with the growth of The Hustle 13:30 - How to be successful at a fast growing company (Adams first question he asked when hiring) 14:40 - Advice to people joining start ups 15:20 - How they’re handling corona. Contingency plans, etc. 17:20 - Is the hustle currently thinking about Layoffs 17:50 - Tools that will not get cut? Sales force and another big name 19:30 - Startups that stand out to Adam 20:40 - Adams billion dollar idea 23:00 - 100 million dollar ideas 24:20 - What Adam looks for in separating yourself as an employee 25:00 - How to get in the door about a company 26:20 - Positions The Hustle is hiring for
Nicholas Tolstoshev is talking programs. Brand representative programs, where brands pay you for access to your community. Ambassador programs, where you reward your best contributors. And empathy programs, where you help your coworkers see things from the eyes of your members and customers. This discussion also ends on a note that we probably all need to hear right now, and that’s the importance of leaning on and being honest with each other about our shared challenges of navigating life and work during the pandemic. Nicholas shares how he has worked to start these honest and difficult conversations at Automox. Here’s to workplaces that are being encouraging and understanding during these difficult times. Patrick and Nicholas also discuss: Building ambassador programs and empathy programs to strengthen communities Empowering community members to create and moderate conversations of their own How Nicolas cultivates the internal employee community at Automox Our Podcast is Made Possible By… If you enjoy our show, please know that it’s only possible with the generous support of our sponsor: Discourse. Big Quotes Balancing your brand ambassador program (11:33): “[When creating a brand ambassador program], you’ve got to balance the rewards versus what [the ambassadors are] doing. You don’t want to either over or under reward and then have to course-correct later because much like having something be free and then charging for it, that’s always a hard thing to overcome.” –@tolstoshev Empowering your users to build their own communities (27:50): “If you don't make room for people to have [unofficial] conversations on your own site, it's not going to stop them from having those conversations. They’re just going to go have them somewhere else. That was the lesson that an early mentor of mine drummed into me. Be part of the conversation and the best way to do that is to make a place for it. If somebody has already made a place for it, then go meet them where they are.” –@tolstoshev The positive effects of community during the pandemic (40:10): “Since the pandemic hit … I was finding myself stuck at home and feeling isolated and depressed and not having much motivation to work. I had the idea to do this program where a small group of us get together and just share what's going on and what's frustrating in their lives. ... It was a huge benefit for me. I rolled this out to the rest of the company and fortunately, the execs saw the benefit in doing it. It's been rewarding to build community internally within the company and help people get through such a difficult time.” –@tolstoshev About Nicholas Tolstoshev Nicholas Tolstoshev is a sysadmin turned community manager having worked on technical communities for Intuit, Spiceworks, Webroot, LogRhythm, and currently Automox. He also launched Growers Network, a community in the cannabis space. Related Links Sponsor: Discourse, civilized discussion for teams, customers, fans, and communities Nicholas Tolstoshev on LinkedIn Nicholas has managed communities for Intuit, Spiceworks, Webroot, LogRhythm, and currently Automox Growers Network, a community in the cannabis space Sean Dahlberg on Community Signal The Spiceworks brand representative program The unofficial Spiceworks Discord Meetup wants to charge users $2 just to RSVP for events — and some are furious (via The Verge) BoardReader Transcript View transcript on our website Your Thoughts If you have any thoughts on this episode that you’d like to share, please leave me a comment, send me an email or a tweet. If you enjoy the show, we would be so grateful if you spread the word and supported Community Signal on Patreon.
Imagine being told by your boss on your very first day at work that you are literally going to be doing cold calls to clients in an isolated office all day despite having no experience. What do you do? Go into the corner and start to cry? Or, roll with the punches telling yourself that with each call you will get better? Adam Ryan chose to do the latter when it came to his very first day at work. Adam Ryan is a former 9th-grade government teacher originally from Columbia, Missouri, who had the opportunity via the Lance Armstrong Foundation to come to Austin, Texas which was supporting a non-profit charity he was working with. He was working for free before taking a leap into the world of media marketing and began working for Spiceworks, a B2B media platform mainly focusing on IT where he sold advertising. When working at Spiceworks began to lose its luster, Adam soon left to work with Under Armour where he worked to assist in making major acquisitions that involved familiar names such as MapMyFitness and Endomondo. In taking the plunge, Adam would soon contribute to the major successes of The Hustle in addition to soon becoming the President of the company.
Every community has its own shared language and for the Spiceworks community, that shared language revolves around IT. Made up of IT professionals and service providers that support them, the Spiceworks community convenes to share their collective expertise and find solutions. In this episode of Community Signal, Sean Dahlberg, director of community at Spiceworks, shares how his team approaches community management and how they ensure that the community continues to offer value to its members, even as the company endures organizational change. Spiceworks was acquired last year by Ziff Davis and co-founder Jay Hallberg rcently announced his resignation. In response, Sean says that he and his team have prioritized being as open and honest with the community as possible in an effort to avoid rumors and reassure the community that the company is still committed to offering value to its members. Sean and Patrick also discuss: Sean’s transition from the Marine Corps, to the gaming industry, to Spiceworks The pepper scale system, which allows Spiceworks members to level up based on their specific area of expertise How Sean balanced the needs of Star Wars fans and MMORPG players Our Podcast is Made Possible By… If you enjoy our show, please know that it’s only possible with the generous support of our sponsor: Discourse. Big Quotes Highlighting expertise in the Spiceworks community (20:16): “We use what we call the pepper scale system. You get points for engaging the community. Everyone starts as a little Pimento, and you can work your way up to Pure Capsaicin. One of the challenges with that is we have individuals who are up at Ghost Chili, Thai Pepper, even Pure Capsaicin and, when they’re making posts, people are automatically giving it an assumption of expertise. The challenge there is with IT professionals, there’s so many avenues, there’s so much technology, technology is changing so much that just because I’m a Pure Capsaicin, that just means I post a lot. [We started a new status system, which] gives you a level expertise [based on those] different technology areas. I could be an expert when it comes to Active Directory, but I may know nothing at all when it comes to Linux. Now that’s highlighted on my profile, but also in the topics themselves.” –@ashentemper Making the most of your data resources (34:05): “I used to be a front end developer myself. I know a little SQL. Don’t ever hire me for it. We do data downloads, every day, of what’s going on with the community. I was running my own reports in spreadsheets. One of our business analysts came by one day, and they saw this Excel sheet with 50 tabs, doing all these weird things. They’re like, ‘What are you doing?’ I said, ‘This is showing my first-time posters. This is showing my retention rate based off of the different pepper levels.’ I guess they were so insulted about how bad these Excel sheets were that they actually went and built the real dashboards [for me].” –@ashentemper The importance of anonymity for some community managers (42:20): “Back when I just started community management, at least in the game industry, you didn’t use your [real] name. Part of the reason was fear of people coming and finding you and putting pies in your face. [Once], a user found the office and had a VHS of just videos of someone getting a pie in their face for 40 minutes. Then, at the end of it, said ‘see you soon.’ You never use your real name. If you go look at the game industry, especially back in the early 2000s, everyone had these weird [usernames].” –@ashentemper About Sean Dahlberg Sean Dahlberg is the director of community for a vertical network dedicated to technology professionals called Spiceworks. He attended nine different schools growing up while living in various parts of the globe, joined the U.S. Marine Corps, and transitioned from there into the massively multiplayer online game development industry and now to working in the B2B technology space. Related Links Sponsor: Discourse, civilized discussion for teams, customers, fans, and communities Sean Dahlberg on Twitter Sean’s website Spiceworks Spiceworks co-founder Jay Hallberg announces his resignation Ziff Davis, the company that acquired Spiceworks Nic, the senior community manager for Automox and a former community professional at Spiceworks The Spiceworks Partner program Trivia Crack Submit A Ticket, Spiceworks’ webcomic Star Wars: The Old Republic Star Wars: Knights of the Old Republic Transcript View transcript on our website Your Thoughts If you have any thoughts on this episode that you’d like to share, please leave me a comment, send me an email or a tweet. If you enjoy the show, we would be so grateful if you spread the word and supported Community Signal on Patreon.
Data Futurology - Data Science, Machine Learning and Artificial Intelligence From Industry Leaders
Scott is a firm believer in “making your data do the work,” and he has enlightened countless business executives to the value of proper data management by focusing on the strategic rationale and business alignment rather than technical implementation and system integration. Scott is more of the strategic WHY than the technical HOW. He has spent over two decades guiding Tech Brand owners to leverage their reference data and taxonomy assets. In a variety of strategic marketing, GTM, innovation, and consulting roles, Scott has worked with some of the world’s most iconic business data brands, including Dun & Bradstreet, Nielsen, Microsoft, Kantar, NPD as well as start-ups such as Qoints and Spiceworks. Enjoy the show! We speak about: [00:30] How Scott started in the world of data [04:30] How did you develop your engaging videos? [07:50] How have you seen data change over time? [11:30] What are people not understanding about MDM? [16:35] What are the classic pitfalls? [19:45] Is master data similar to data engineering? [21:00] Do people struggle to talk about data as an asset? [25:50] How are you having the best time in your career right now? [30:55] What’s the philosophy behind your content? [38:30] How did you land on the Data Whisperer and Meta Meta Consulting? Resources: Scott’s Website: http://metametaconsulting.com Scott’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCVQ1YhjNqc77GVsb3Xs4tvw Scott’s Twitter: https://twitter.com/stdatawhisperer Scott’s LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottmztaylor/ Quotes: “You need data management first before you do business intelligence.” “I’m the sous chef in the back, making sure we have the right ingredients.” “Do upon your data as you would have it do upon you.” “Master data is your most important data.” Thank you to our sponsors: Fyrebox - Make Your Own Quiz! RMIT Online Master of Data Science Strategy and Leadership Gain the advanced strategic, leadership and data science capabilities required to influence executive leadership teams and deliver organisation-wide solutions. We are RUBIX. - one of Australia’s leading pure data consulting companies delivering project outcomes for some of the world’s leading brands. Visit online.rmit.edu.au for more information And as always, we appreciate your Reviews, Follows, Likes, Shares and Ratings. Thank you so much for listening. Enjoy the show! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/datafuturology/message
In this episode I am joined by the enigmatic Scott diValerio, of Spiceworks. We discuss the importance of living and breathing your values (and not letting them become something just stuck on your wall!). We also talk about the interplay between OKRs and values and how you can start to assess individuals' performance against each of these attributes. We are now offering an amazing set of premium bonus content for absolutely free, purely for our amazing podcast listeners as a big thank you for following us on our journey! Check it out here https://downloads.therebegiants.com/bonuscontent
This week’s guest is out here determined to change the world, specifically within the workplace. Ashley Connell, CEO and Founder of Prowess Project, has been an unstoppable tech marketer and entrepreneur in both Austin and London over the past 13 years of her career. With a keen ability to marry the art and science of marketing, she has honed her dynamic skills in key positions including launching and driving all European marketing initiatives during her tenure at Spiceworks, and managing Global Field Marketing at SanDisk. This week, Ashley and I discuss: Her WHY behind Prowess Project Gender Equality Gap in the Workforce How Men Take Action vs. How Women Take Action Shifting Into a Confidence Based Mindset Getting Mom’s Back to Work …and MORE! Grab the full episode notes: mindbizlife.com
Three things to know today: Spiceworks has some good news about the state of IT spend https://www.computerweekly.com/microscope/news/252471512/Channel-to-benefit-from-IT-spending-increase https://rcpmag.com/articles/2019/09/26/rising-it-budgets.aspx Channel Futures reports MSP Salary Data https://www.channelfutures.com/best-practices/msp-salary-guide-structure-competitive-offers-that-dont-break-the-bank/ And Gartner gives us some insight into employee motivation. https://www.channelpartnerinsight.com/channel-partner-insight/news/3082105/business-prospects-waning-for-uk-as-brexit-turmoil-continues
Jay Hallberg, founder, and chairman of Spiceworks founded the Austin-based company with three friends in 2006. They built Spiceworks into a giant social network for information technology system administrators and tech professionals. Recently, Ziff Davis bought the company for an undisclosed price. At SpiceWorld, an annual convention held at the Austin Convention Center, Hallberg talked about the company's evolution and plans for future growth.
Are phishing simulations pentesting for humans or training? What’s more effective with those folks who can’t stop themselves from clicking on everything: “name and shame” or a private, personal coaching session? How do you deal with phishing repeat offenders? Join Tory Dombrowski, an IT director known as "the diabolical one" for his phish testing schemes, and Lisa Plaggemier, chief evangelist for Infosec as they discuss if it's ever a good idea to terminate habitual clickers, how to protect your org from click-happy employees, and training techniques and escalation methods. Join us in the fight against cybercrime: https://www.infosecinstitute.com. Special offer for Cyber Work listeners: https://www.infosecinstitute.com/podcast. Check out our Spiceworks page: https://community.spiceworks.com/pages/infosec.
On this episode Marcus Merchant shows how an IT director can take a business from 30% efficiency to 70%+ ...and how he got a job in IT with no knowledge at all started drinking from the firehose. Why never implement version 1.0? How to collect important data and proceed to massive success. Spiceworks for real, well making spice work.
Justin and Chelsea are joined by Roger Grimes, Data-Driven Defense Evangelist for KnowBe4, as well as Dave Tutweiler, HelloDave in Spiceworks, to talk about how to prepare your users for the next round of cyberthreats in 2019. For more On the Air check out: community.spiceworks.com/ontheair
According to a new report from IDC published in partnership with Avaya, only 19% of companies believe their transformation efforts are enabling them to truly lead or disrupt their markets. At the same time, a new study from Spiceworks confirms that 40% of companies plan to increase funding in 2019 to upgrade old systems and infrastructure. That means twice as many organizations are ramping up IT budgets with the likelihood of less than half seeing digital transformation success.
How will people embrace the idea of the abundance of networks for the betterment of humanity? On today's episode of Legends and Losers, a venture capitalist in the Silicon Valley Mike Maples, Jr. joins us to talk networks and the stock market, and why we need to underscore the opportunity and hope technological innovations bring. “We can either destroy each other out of our cynicism or we can lift each other up out of our shared purpose.” - Mike Maples, Jr. Three Things We Learned Accepting the shift from companies to networks for business Most people think that companies have always been there as we know them, but the truth is far from it. In the 1800s, there were no companies in America with less than a hundred employees. But since the arrival of the railroad and steam engine, the stock market came to be, hence the birth of networks. The power of investing in networks Corporations characterized by mass production and distribution would eventually yield to networks characterized by mass computation and connectivity. These networks would also impact transportation and consequently, energy, housing and manufacturing. Mike claims that investing in these networks is one sure way to improve one's standard of living. Embracing networks and the future People must start entertaining the thought that investing in networks will bring about the same kind of change 200 years ago. Prior to the stock market, people just tried to get by. Change accelerated in the 1800s after humanity embraced the power of technological innovations and their impact on overall standard of living. When we frame the issues that surround technology and the stock market, we need to do so through the lens of opportunity and hope. We should shy away from using language that induces fear in those less informed. Instead, we should help people realize that the abundance of networks and wealth ultimately aids humanity. Bio: Mike Maples, Jr. is a Partner at Floodgate and is widely considered to be one of the top venture capitalists in Silicon Valley. He has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and was also named one of “8 Rising Stars” by FORTUNE Magazine. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike's investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. Mike is known for coining the term “Thunder Lizards,” which is a metaphor derived from Godzilla that describes the tiny number of truly exceptional companies that are wildly disruptive capitalist mutations. Mike likes to think of himself as a hunter of the “atomic eggs” that beget these companies. Interests: Calligraphy, cinematography, and sporting clays. Links: Floodgate Twitter Medium LinkedIn We hope you enjoyed Mike Maples, Jr. on this episode of Legends and Losers! Christopher loves hearing from his listeners. Feel free to email him, connect on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and subscribe on iTunes!
Origins - A podcast about Limited Partners, created by Notation Capital
Mike Maples is the founding partner at Floodgate and has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010. Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was involved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back startup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (IPO TIVS, acquired by IBM) and Motive (IPO MOTV, acquired by Alcatel-Lucent.) Some of Mike’s investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv, ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaarvoice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce. In this episode, we cover a wide range of topics, including Mike's decision to become a VC and how he raised Floodgate's first fund, how Floodgate's fund strategy and portfolio construction has evolved since, and how he and his partners think about building the firm in the years and decades to come.
This week's tools, tips and tricks goes over a fantastic collection of IT Administration and Security tools, Spiceworks. Spiceworks is a full free suite of tools that covers everything from a full funcitonal IT discovery and Inventory management system, Help Desk, scanners and software tracking solutions. If you are an IT or Security admin without a budget to buy an off the shelf suite and don't like open source, Spiceworks might be for you. Spiceworks - https://www.spiceworks.com Be aware, be safe. ------------------------------------ Website - https://www.binaryblogger.com Podcast Page - http://securityinfive.libsyn.com Podcast RSS - http://securityinfive.libsyn.com/rss Twitter @binaryblogger - https://www.twitter.com/binaryblogger iTunes - https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/security-in-five-podcast/id1247135894?mt=2 YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/binaryblogger TuneIn Radio - Security In Five Channel Spotify - Security In Five Podcast Page Email - contactme@binaryblogger.com
Oji Udezue is the head of product for Atlassian's communications products, which just launched its first new product since IPO: Atlassian Stride. A product veteran with past roles at Microsoft, Bridgewater Associates, Spiceworks and his own startup, InterMingl, Oji is passionate about bringing new scalable products and ideas into the world. He mentors startups with a focus on companies with diverse founders, and drives startup investments in Africa as a passion project. His ultimate goal is productizing functional telepathy but for now will settle for transforming how teams and the people in them, communicate and process social data at work.
https://onlinexperiences.com/Launch/QReg/ShowKey=47670&LangLocaleID=1033&AffiliateData=podcast On this episode we sit down with Spiceworks's very own Lee Young to talk about how SMBs should be balancing security and budget, where they should focus, and how important PC security can be in protecting your data.
In this new episode of the 10 on Tech podcast, James Green and Scott Lowe of ActualTech Media interview VP of IoT Strategies and Business development at Cradlepoint, Ken Hosac (@KenHosac) about Cradlepoint and their 2018 State of IoT Report that they did in conjunction with Spiceworks. In this interview, you’ll learn about: Pushback received from IT concerning security and bandwidth when implementing IoT Specific use case examples where IoT is being leveraged and implemented The importance of network segregation as a part of an IoT strategy for an organization Resource Links: Cradlepoint — https://cradlepoint.com/ 2018 State of IoT Report — https://cradlepoint.com/white-paper/state-iot-2018 Cradlepoint NetCloud — https://cradlepoint.com/cradlepoint-netcloud
Mike Maples, Jr. (@m2jr) is the man who taught me how to invest. He's one of my favorite people and a personal mentor.He is a partner at Floodgate, a venture capital firm that specializes in micro-cap investments in startups. He has been on the Forbes Midas List since 2010 and named one of Fortune magazine's "8 Rising VC Stars." Before becoming a full-time investor, Mike was inolved as a founder and operating executive at back-to-back starup IPOs, including Tivoli Systems (acquired by IBM) and Motive (acquired by Alcatel-Lucent). Some of Mike's investments include Twitter, Twitch.tv. ngmoco, Weebly, Chegg, Bazaar-voice, Spiceworks, Okta, and Demandforce.Enjoy!This podcast is brought to you by ConvertKit. After trying the competition, this is the only email tool that has made email marketing intuitive for my team without sacrificing any of the features and benefits I need to run a profitable business. It's easy-to-use systems, split testing, resending technology, automation, targeted content, high rates of deliverability, integration with more than 70 services -- like WordPress, Shopify, and Sumo -- and excellent customer service are the reason I made it my go-to ESP.Whether you have a thousand subscribers or a million, whether you run a simple blog or a whole company, ConvertKit has a plan that's scaled to fit your budget and requirements. Go to ConvertKit.com/Tim to try it out and get your first month for free! Test the platform and make sure it works for you and your business.This podcast is also brought to you by WordPress, my go-to platform for 24/7-supported, zero downtime blogging, writing online, creating websites — everything! I love it to bits, and the lead developer, Matt Mullenweg, has appeared on this podcast many times.Whether for personal use or business, you’re in good company with WordPress — used by The New Yorker, Jay Z, FiveThirtyEight, TechCrunch, TED, CNN, and Time, just to name a few. A source at Google told me that WordPress offers “the best out-of-the-box SEO imaginable,” which is probably why it runs nearly 30% of the Internet. Go to WordPress.com/Tim to get 15% off your website today! ***If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on Apple Podcasts/iTunes? It takes less than 60 seconds, and it really makes a difference in helping to convince hard-to-get guests. I also love reading the reviews!For show notes and past guests, please visit tim.blog/podcast.Sign up for Tim’s email newsletter (“5-Bullet Friday”) at tim.blog/friday.For transcripts of episodes, go to tim.blog/transcripts.Interested in sponsoring the podcast? Please fill out the form at tim.blog/sponsor.Discover Tim’s books: tim.blog/books.Follow Tim:Twitter: twitter.com/tferriss Instagram: instagram.com/timferrissFacebook: facebook.com/timferriss YouTube: youtube.com/timferriss
North Korea is creating malware for closed networks. Your users may be as much of a risk as hackers. We also look at biometrics ad face recognition as security measures. Video available below Host: Tim Albright Guests: Derek Joncas – Extron Electronics Brad Kult – HGA Links to sources: Spiceworks – Apple face recognition already [...]
North Korea is creating malware for closed networks. Your users may be as much of a risk as hackers. We also look at biometrics ad face recognition as security measures. Video available below Host: Tim Albright Guests: Derek Joncas – Extron Electronics Brad Kult – HGA Links to sources: Spiceworks – Apple face recognition already [...]
What the Kracked hack of WPA2 wireless systems means for IT networks. A new botnet threatening audio visual networks. Video available below Host: Tim Albright Guests: Bradford Benn – Bradford Benn’s website Michael Drainer – Drainer Technologies Derek Joncas – Extron Electronics Links to sources: Fast Company – Krack WPA2 hack Spiceworks – New botnet, [...]
What the Kracked hack of WPA2 wireless systems means for IT networks. A new botnet threatening audio visual networks. Video available below Host: Tim Albright Guests: Bradford Benn – Bradford Benn’s website Michael Drainer – Drainer Technologies Derek Joncas – Extron Electronics Links to sources: Fast Company – Krack WPA2 hack Spiceworks – New botnet, [...]
Justin sits down with Spiceworks’s own Jake Teague and Kris Bushover to find out how they got started in IT and some of their most memorable job interview experiences. https://onlinexperiences.com/Launch/QReg/ShowKey=45014&LangLocaleID=1033&AffiliateData=podcast
On this episode we talk with Elisa Gladu, head honcho (honch-ess?) of SpiceWorld planning about the hardest and best parts of planning the conference and seeing it come to life! This podcast is previewing the October 4th episode of On the Air, where we're talking with Spiceworks presenters about what they're talking about at SpiceWorld 2017. https://onlinexperiences.com/Launch/QReg/ShowKey=44306&LangLocaleID=1033&AffiliateData=swpodcast
Weve spent a lot of time talking about VMUGs and community involvement. But believe it or not, there are other groups out there! Today we look into IT meet ups and developing user groups.
Weve spent a lot of time talking about VMUGs and community involvement. But believe it or not, there are other groups out there! Today we look into IT meet ups and developing user groups.
Justin sits down with new guest host for the June 28th episode, Spiceworks's very own Jeff Grettler! Jeff talks about moving from pro wrestling into IT (a very common transition) as well as his views as an IT pro about cloud computing. https://vts.inxpo.com/Launch/QReg/ShowKey=41196&LangLocaleID=1033&AffiliateData=podpro
Influence Marketing Podcast: B2B influencer, advocacy, and community marketing
Rick Vanover, with Veeam Software, shares with us his key principles and beliefs that have made the Veeam Vanguard Program so successful. The program is in its third year, and has 61 members, with a very high engagement rate in activities and outings, such as the VeeamOn event. Rick talks up the importance of starting small, picking your team wisely, and using your intuition, rather than only going by quantitative metrics. The Veeam Vanguard Program features creative and trusted leaders who see some of the following benefits in joining a unique program that only competes with itself, instead of other programs. Who we are: Influence Marketing Podcast, a podcast brought to you by the Influence Marketing Council, an industry council for B2B or tech brands that drive innovation, and influencer, advocacy, and community marketing. We are your hosts, John Mark Troyer and Kathleen Nelson Troyer. Together, we are looking forward to working closely with a select number of startups and enterprise tech companies to develop their best practices, discovering what their marketing programs have in common and working with the council members how they drive innovation between these programs and the rest of their business. It’s part of our research program, and also just our curiosity to have a conversation around influence marketing in the B2B space. We will be surveying and gathering our research from people who run advocacy and influencer programs, to find out what makes them tick. Key Takeaways: [2:50] Rick’s nickname, is the Rickatron! [5:32] Rick and his team administer the Veeam Vanguard Program. This is the third Veeam Vanguard class. There are currently 61 members. Rick was a longtime employee at Veeam before he started this program. Before that he worked at a bank. [6:24] Some of Rick’s advice for getting a program off the ground: start small. Less is more — start with a manageable scope where you know you can be successful. When they launched the Vanguard program they kept it low key and small, and are growing it at a manageable pace over the past three years. [8:03] Their selection mechanism profiles people on different factors such as: internal advocacy, initiation of user groups, social sharing, running community events, and suggestions from other Vanguards and program leaders. Candidates are also welcome and encouraged to reapply. [12:30] Rick shares how the Veeam event, VeeamOn, started and grew into a great community event, and how getting into other cloud native communities helps him bring fresh and new ideas to the Veeam community. He does not feel groups should compete with one another, but instead should strive to be their own best and learn from each other. [14:46] Rick’s main goal to address is geo-distribution. He takes great responsibility in making sure the program is diverse in all ways with gender, location, etc. He would liketo expand and cover more in several countries, such as Japan and Africa. [18:47] The Vanguard is explained as the persona who is an advocate on the company’s behalf, is an evangelist, and is trusted to be neutral out in the community, with an emphasis on creativeness, trust and support. [26:00] His front and center goal is to give his Vanguards an outstanding experience. [30:28] One Vanguard, Kerstin, helps immensely with providing a catalog of cool and unique swag members can choose from. [34:17] Veeam Champions and Veeam Expert Clubs are separate groups, and the Vanguard program encompasses all of those groups, and houses them under its umbrella. [36:17] Rick feels Delta is an example of a company that gives good engagement with customer service questions and responses on Twitter. [38:51] Some of the benefits Vanguards get include access to information early in press releases, webinars, announcements, and top secret product launches! He trusts them to not reveal any information before it is appropriate to do so. [40:41] Continuing to innovate and expand the program is of the utmost importance. New ways to embellish the program include working with partners to keep the program fresh, and providing opportunities for Vanguard members to speak at community events. [42:00] Rick doesn’t think there is competition for influence marketing programs. Every program can share, and benefit from each other, but he strives to make the program as good as possible, through the people on his team and the Vanguards himself. He was surprised how willing people are to say yes to attending VeeamOn events and webinars. When programs are bigger people may engage less. [44:31] They don’t have a community manager, so now everyone is on triage working all angles, like Slack, Twitter, writing, presenting, and working in the labs. Ideally there would be one community manager, but for now this system works! Mentioned In This Episode: John’s Twitter: @jtroyer Kathleen’s Twitter: @dailykat Rick Vanover’s Twitter: @rickvanover Veeam: veeam.com Veeam Vanguards: veeam.com/vanguard.html VeeamOn: veeam.com/veeamon Spiceworks: spiceworks.com Photo credit: Clint Wyckoff
This week's episode is sponsored by the coolest company in tech... Spiceworks! (At least we think so anyways.) Justin sits down with Executive Director of Product Operations at Spiceworks to talk about how things have changed within the Spiceworks Community, what's ahead for IT pros, as well as her big hairy audacious prediction for the future of the company! https://vts.inxpo.com/Launch/QReg/ShowKey=40312&LangLocaleID=1033&AffiliateData=podpro
Join the slightly groggy, sleep-deprived ChannelPro Weekly crew as they discuss some new hardware from Zyxel and Lenovo, a new outsourced NOC offering from lesser-known RMM/PSA vendor Pulseway, the merits of buying versus building customer lists, and the magic ingredients that make for happiness on the job in IT. That’s followed by an interview with Anthony Graziano, of “boutique” Microsoft cloud solution distributor SherWeb, and a look at the surprisingly durable HP all-in-one in Matt’s kitchen (which will soon become part of his tech museum) and its forthcoming replacement. Oh, and goats. More than you ever thought you’d hear about goats on this podcast. Subscribe to ChannelPro Weekly! Look for us in your favorite podcast app. If you don't see us (yet) then you can subscribe via RSS in almost any podcast app using this link: http://www.channelpronetwork.com/rss/cpw Show Information: Episode #: 036Title: Stalled by the GoatsDuration: 1:22:23File size: 37.7MBRegulars: Rich Freeman - Senior News Editor, Cecilia Galvin - Editor in Chief, Matt Whitlock - Technology Editor Topics and Related Links Mentioned: Zyxel Launches 802.11ac Wall Plate Access Point Lenovo Unveils DX8200D Software-Defined Storage Solution Pulseway Adds NOC Services Customer Lists: Buy or Build? 4 Surprising Insights on Tech Job Satisfaction from Spiceworks Two Minute Drill: SherWeb Where's Joel? Matt's Museum Pick: HP TouchSmart 2 Matt's Tech Pick: Planar PCT2235 22” Frameless Projected Capacitive Touchscreen Monitor Rich's ICYMI and What's Up This Week preview
Patrice, Jerry, and Ben are back and ready for more punishment. They are hit by BS Outsider with an IT tool called Spiceworks and Google's data collection policies. And somehow they survive!
ChannelPro Weekly #19 is here! This week Rich, Cecilia, and Matt discuss Sophos and its new encryption solution, Windows 10 Research from Spiceworks, the Hardware Hit Parade, and July's peer-to-peer story "Cloud or Bust." Also, Rich interviews Todd Schwartz from Skykick about their research into Office 365 market penetration, and a few other surprises, too! Download/subscribe and listen today! Subscribe to ChannelPro Weekly! Look for us in your favorite podcast app. If you don't see us (yet) then you can subscribe using this link: http://www.channelpronetwork.com/rss/cpw, or in iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/channelpro-weekly-podcast/id10955685... Show Information: Episode #: 019Title: Using Balloons for Cloud MigrationDuration: 1:34:24File size: 86.4MBRegulars: Rich Freeman - Senior News Editor, Cecilia Galvin - Editor in Chief, Matt Whitlock - Technology Editor Topics and Related Links Mentioned: Sophos Introduces Always-On Encryption Solution Spiceworks Says Windows 10 Adoption is Right on Track Hardware Hit Parade Cloud or Bust Interview: Todd Schwartz of SkyKick on the company's recent, and interesting, research into Office 365 market penetration. Where's Joel? Interview: Drew Lydecker of AVANT Communications on their news with Acronis and general market strategy. Matt's Museum Pick: SmartMedia Card Matt's Tech Pick: Seagate Barracuda Pro 10TB HD ICYMI/What’s Up This Week preview
“There’s something inherently valuable about viewing television.” Andy Bryant and Charlier Mawer would know. As the creative force behind the UK’s Red Bee agency, they help global clients such as the BBC, NBC Universal, and Fox market their networks and shows. They’re also co-authors of the new book The TV Brand Builders: How to Win Audiences and Influence Viewers. I couldn’t wait to discuss TV brands past, present, and future on this week’s episode of the On Brand podcast. Andy Bryant and Charlie Mawer Andy Bryant is Managing Director of Red Bee, a London-based, internationally acclaimed creative agency specializing in marketing and design for TV brands. He is a recognised thought leader in his field and frequent speaker at leading industry conferences globally on TV brand strategy, marketing, and creativity. He is an Honorary Professor of Film & TV Studies at the University of Nottingham in the UK. Charlie Mawer is Exec Creative Director of Red Bee, responsible for their global creative output. Acknowledged world leaders in channel branding and entertainment marketing, they have worked in over 30 countries with clients including BBC, UKTV, NBC Universal, and Fox, winning a myriad of creative awards including European Agency of the Year for four successive years. A BAFTA nominee, and former Promax UK chairman, Charlie has lectured around the world including for a variety of universities, for TEDxTalks, the BFI, and D&AD. Before we go, I want to flip the microphone around to our community …Recently Sean Carpenter gave us a shoutout for the our recent episode featuring Jen Slaski of Spiceworks. Thanks for listening, Sean! Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you’d like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. Subscribe to the podcast – You can subscribe to the show via iTunes, Stitcher, and RSS. Rate and review the show – If you like what you’re hearing, head over to iTunes and click that 5-star button to rate the show. And if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review. This helps others find the podcast. OK. How do you rate and review a podcast? Need a quick tutorial on leaving a rating/review in iTunes? Check this out. Remember – On Brand is brought to you by my new book — Get Scrappy: Smarter Digital Marketing for Businesses Big and Small. Order now at Amazon and check out GetScrappyBook.com for special offers and extras. And finally a reminder that On Brand is brought to you by the Social Brand Forum. This premier digital marketing experience takes place September 22-23 in beautiful Iowa City, Iowa. Learn from experts like Jay Baer, Joe Pulizzi, and Gini Dietrtich in the heart of the heartland. Listeners of the show get the best rate when they register using promo code ONBRAND at socialbrandforum.com.
SPONSOR See cote.io/promos (http://cote.io/promos) for a full list of all the deals "mid-roll" stuff currently going on. Get $50 off DevOpsDays Minneapolis, July 20th and 21st, with the code SDT2016. I'll be getting some for Chicago and Seattle sometime too. Interested in speeding your software's cycle time, reducing release cycles, and a resilient cloud platform? Check out the free ebook on Cloud Foundry (http://pivotal.io/cloud-foundry-the-cloud-native-platform?utm_source=Cote-promo&utm_medium=LP-link&utm_campaign=Duncan-Winn-OReilly-Cloud-Native-eBook-Q116) or take Cloud Foundry for a test drive with Pivotal Web Services (http://try.run.pivotal.io/SDT?utm_source=cotepivotallandingpage&utm_medium=landingpage&utm_term=FreeTwoMonthsPWS&utm_content=button&utm_campaign=cote). See those and other things at cote.io/pivotal (http://cote.io/pivotal/). Show notes If you like video, see this episodes' video recording (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLk_5VqpWEtiWnQ7od08nzkB32oT4gnDiP). Samsung Buys Joyent Joyent notes (https://www.joyent.com/blog/samsung-acquires-joyent-a-ctos-perspective) Coverage from Venturebeat (http://venturebeat.com/2016/06/15/samsung-buys-cloud-infrastructure-provider-joyent-will-keep-operating-as-standalone-company/) "Until today, we lacked one thing. We lacked the scale required to compete effectively in the large, rapidly growing and fiercely competitive cloud computing market. Now, that changes," Microsoft acquires LinkedIn Press Release from Microsoft (http://blogs.microsoft.com/firehose/2016/06/13/microsoft-to-acquire-linkedin/) M&A Synergies Theoretical WTF'ing: Slideshare, extended to all Office formats (https://twitter.com/monkchips/status/742379875667955713). Login with LinkedIn + AD = SSO won (https://twitter.com/cloud_opinion/status/742383636507328513). Also (http://www.recode.net/2016/6/13/11921064/microsoft-ceo-memo-linkedin-ceo-memo): "Massively scaling the reach and engagement of LinkedIn by using the network to power the social and identity layers of Microsoft's ecosystem of over one billion customers. Think about things like LinkedIn's graph interwoven throughout Outlook, Calendar, Active Directory, Office, Windows, Skype, Dynamics, Cortana, Bing and more." 433 million professionals in LinkedIn (from MSFT internal memo (http://www.recode.net/2016/6/13/11921064/microsoft-ceo-memo-linkedin-ceo-memo)). ...but it's probably all the same people, tho (https://twitter.com/MYDemaray/status/742386678363361280). "Along with the new growth in our Office 365 commercial and Dynamics businesses this deal is key to our bold ambition to reinvent productivity and business processes." (MSFT CEO, from MSFT internal memo (http://www.recode.net/2016/6/13/11921064/microsoft-ceo-memo-linkedin-ceo-memo)) Ads and dumb-AI context: "This combination will make it possible for new experiences such as a LinkedIn newsfeed that serves up articles based on the project you are working on and Office suggesting an expert to connect with via LinkedIn to help with a task you're trying to complete. As these experiences get more intelligent and delightful, the LinkedIn and Office 365 engagement will grow. And in turn, new opportunities will be created for monetization through individual and organization subscriptions and targeted advertising." (MSFT CEO, from MSFT internal memo (http://www.recode.net/2016/6/13/11921064/microsoft-ceo-memo-linkedin-ceo-memo)) LinkedIn growth since Dec, 2008: "Our team has grown from 338 people to over 10,000, our membership from 32M to over 433M and our revenue from $78M to over $3 billion." (MSFT internal memo (http://www.recode.net/2016/6/13/11921064/microsoft-ceo-memo-linkedin-ceo-memo)). Others from memo: Lydia training inline in MSFT apps; paid content in MSFT apps (a la Spiceworks); HR and recruiting. Deal PR deck (https://ncmedia.azureedge.net/ncmedia/2016/06/msft_announce_160613.pdf) - pretty good. I can see how the social graph and all the "semantic web sit" in LinkedIn, crossed with MSFT assets works well. One take on ads, doesn't like the Office angle, cause privacy, but oh wait: Google Apps and GMail (http://marketingland.com/microsofts-linkedin-acqusition-represents-huge-opportunity-bing-ads-180572) It's the 1 dataset MS can keep out of Facebook and Google's hands. https://trackchanges.postlight.com/9-things-microsoft-could-do-with-linkedin-2aec55c2bc72#.iv7cofd13 "Microsoft could improve LinkedIn": Microsoft designs for people who have to do boring things with computers in order to make money. It's the 9–5 software vendor. Previous big acquisitions (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_mergers_and_acquisitions_by_Microsoft#Acquisitions): Nokia for $7.2bn (http://www.theverge.com/2013/9/2/4688530/microsoft-buys-nokias-devices-and-services-unit-unites-windows-phone), Skype for $8.5bn, Xamarin for $400m. From 451 M&A coverage (https://451research.com/report-short?entityId=89397&type=mis&alertid=78&contactid=0033200001wgKCKAA2&utm_source=sendgrid&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=market-insight&utm_content=newsletter&utm_term=89397-Microsoft+connects+with+LinkedIn+with+%2426bn+acquisition): I-banker stuff: "Microsoft will pay $196 per share to acquire LinkedIn, a 50% bump up from where it was trading ahead of the deal announcement, although well behind the $250 each share was worth in November. The price tag values LinkedIn at 8.2x trailing revenue." "The company [Microsoft] must find new ways to differentiate. Integrations with LinkedIn offer potential functionality that will be challenging to duplicate. When the two companies are joined, there will be multiple ways that LinkedIn's member network, and the data from that, will go into improving Microsoft's Office and Dynamics apps, besides the other benefits from running a combined company." "LinkedIn's tools for recruiters account for 58% of the $860m in revenue it generated in the first quarter of the year [so, $3.440bn run rate]. When combined with educational material from its Lynda.com acquisition, HCM tools make up 65% of sales. Tools for marketers and premium subscriptions (including its offering for sales teams) each make up less than 20% of the business, and are the slowest growing parts of the business." "Microsoft is the world's largest software developer, with about $100bn in sales and a $400bn market cap." I-Bankers rejoice (http://blogs.barrons.com/techtraderdaily/2016/06/13/microsoft-for-linkedin-deal-shows-accelerating-pace-of-ma-says-ubs/)! Tim Anderson inadvertantly makes a good case of CRM/HCM (http://www.itwriting.com/blog/9393-microsoft-and-linkedin-some-early-thoughts.html) Private Equity buying Tech Companies Why private equity is buying up software companies (http://www.cnbc.com/2016/06/10/why-private-equity-is-buying-up-software-companies.html) The theory seems to be: SaaS companies are undervalued, and PE firms are looking to buy cheap assets and grow them, and re-exit them. This vs. the usual cut costs and re-exit then. Of course, Qlik and Ping aren't SaaS. Vista Acquires Ping Identity for $600m (http://techcrunch.com/2016/06/12/ping-shapes-new-identity-after-600-million-acquisition/) Symantec buys Bluecoat from Bain (http://techcrunch.com/2016/06/13/symantec-grabs-blue-coat-systems-for-4-65-billion/) bignews.chef.io It's habitat (https://habitat.sh) Habitat centers application configuration, management, and behavior around the application itself, not the infrastructure that the app runs on. Habitat is comprised of plan and build system, a supervisor, an HTTP interface on that supervisor to report package status, a depot, a communication model for disseminating rumors through a supervisor ring, and many other components. Check out the code (https://github.com/habitat-sh) Don't look at the camera, and don't smile - Cade Metz story (http://www.wired.com/2016/06/chef-just-took-big-step-quest-make-code-work-like-biology/) Adam Throwing Eggs at Nathan (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XD0vRW4G82U). Mid-roll Matt talking habitat (http://www.meetup.com/CloudAustin/events/228918510/) - June 21st in Austin! Coté in Poland next week (https://cote.io/2016/05/27/come-see-me-in-poland/). Pivotal Conversations podcast (https://soundcloud.com/pivotalconversations) - subscribe (http://feeds.soundcloud.com/users/soundcloud:users:232731292/sounds.rss). SpringOne Platform (https://springoneplatform.io/) – get $300 off your registration with the code pivotal-cote-300! Discounts to DevOpsDays: Get $50 off DevOpsDays Minneapolis (http://www.devopsdays.org/events/2016-minneapolis/), July 20th and 21st, with the code SDT2016. Cloud Native Roadshows (http://pivotal.io/event/pivotal-cloud-native-roadshow) - all year long, in many cities globally. Check 'em out (http://pivotal.io/event/pivotal-cloud-native-roadshow) and come learn about Pivotal and Cloud Foundry for free, including some lunch. As always, see Crazy Coté's Discount Codes and Special Promotions (https://cote.io/promos/) BONUS LINKS! Not covered in show. What enterprise wants from Google's cloud Google, in short, needs to learn to be boring (http://readwrite.com/2016/06/07/enterprise-wants-googles-cloud-pl1-2/) ...according to Gartner analyst Lydia Leong (https://twitter.com/cloudpundit/status/713825582719582209): "Azure almost always loses tech evals to AWS hands-down, but guess what? They still win deals. Business isn't tech-only." What a weird thread that is! "Greene is also tapping her VMware Rolodex, talking with big enterprise rivals like SAP SE, Microsoft and Oracle, to get more of their products into the Google cloud. That's must-have for some large companies, which need prepackaged software from these providers to run their businesses. No Oracle or SAP products are available on Google's cloud today. Microsoft and Oracle declined to comment, while SAP confirmed early talks." From Jack Clark's Bloomberg piece (http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-03-22/google-s-greene-hastens-cloud-expansion-in-race-with-amazon). Docker, K8s and Mesos as Interoperability Targets Piece from TheNewStack (http://thenewstack.io/vendors-working-towards-k8s-docker-interoperability/) Meta Podcast Stuff Scrrips by Sticher (http://www.wsj.com/articles/e-w-scripps-buys-podcast-company-stitcher-1465239600) Future of Podcasting by Ben Thompson (https://stratechery.com/2016/the-future-of-podcasting/) Apple Announcement WWDC 2016: Apple's 8 key enterprise stories (http://www.computerworld.com/article/3083396/apple-mac/wwdc-2016-apple-s-8-key-enterprise-stories.html) Recommendations Brandon: Keepin it 1600 (https://theringer.com/keepin-it-1600-podcast-politics-election-jon-favreau-dan-pfeiffer-220924af4c94#.c8pj2lmhn). Radlolab Presents More Prefect (http://www.wnyc.org/shows/radiolabmoreperfect/). Matt: I miss Uber; Matt's gets Mercutio'ed (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mercutio) by Austin and Uber. Occupied (http://www.imdb.com/title/tt4192998/). Coté: Nine minute history of "old IBM" (http://www.marketplace.org/2016/06/08/world/profit-ibm) - Poison Ivy treatments: I gotcha covered, so to speak.
“Everything we do as employees translates into the brand.” I’ve been fascinated by the Spiceworks brand since I first read about them in Jay Baer’s new book Hug Your Haters. This people-focused community platform for IT professionals is the very definition of an inside-out brand. I couldn’t wait to discuss this philosophy and more with Spiceworks’ Exec Brand Muse Jen Slaski on this week’s episode of the On Brand podcast. About Jen Slaski Jen Slaski is the Executive Director of Marketing Communications at Spiceworks but she’s more commonly known around the office as the “Exec Brand Muse” where she’s responsible for the essence of the Spiceworks brand – a brand that’s previously won MarketingProf’s Brand of the Year. And a brand that Jen refers to as an “inside-out” because of how Spiceworks company culture helps fuel it. Jen joined the company in 2006 and has been helping to create and evolve the company’s brand and marketing efforts ever since. Jen has always had a passion and flair for the start up world. Before Spiceworks, she held multiple marketing positions at companies like pcOrder.com and Motive, and ran a full spectrum of guerrilla, online and offline marketing programs, and events as an independent marketing consultant. Jen graduated from Stanford University with a Liberal Arts degree. In her spare time she enjoys day-tripping to classic Americana towns, vintage thrifting, journaling, collaging and facilitating self-discovery workshops and retreats for individuals, teams, and small interest groups. Did you hear something you liked on this episode or another? Do you have a question you’d like our guests to answer? Let me know on Twitter using the hashtag #OnBrandPodcast and you may just hear your thoughts here on the show. Subscribe to the podcast – You can subscribe to the show via iTunes, Stitcher, and RSS. Rate and review the show – If you like what you’re hearing, head over to iTunes and click that 5-star button to rate the show. And if you have a few extra seconds, write a couple of sentences and submit a review. This helps others find the podcast. OK. How do you rate and review a podcast? Need a quick tutorial on leaving a rating/review in iTunes? Check this out. Remember – On Brand is brought to you by my new book — Get Scrappy: Smarter Digital Marketing for Businesses Big and Small. Order now at Amazon and check out GetScrappyBook.com for special offers and extras. And finally a reminder that On Brand is brought to you by the Social Brand Forum. This premier digital marketing experience takes place September 22-23 in beautiful Iowa City, Iowa. Learn from experts like Jay Baer, Joe Pulizzi, and Gini Dietrtich in the heart of the heartland. Listeners of the show get the best rate when they register using promo code ONBRAND at socialbrandforum.com.
Welcome one and all to ChannelPro Weekly Episode #9, the very last of our "single digit" episodes. We're steamrolling our way to #10 with an extra-extended edition, with Matt, Cecilia, and Rich talking the latest happenings from Lenovo's Accellerate 2016 partner conference; saying hello to "physicalization"; program news from Spiceworks, Sophos, and Blackberry (yes, the company still exists); as well as the 2016 ChannelPro 20/20 Visionaries list that just hit the wires. Also, Rich speaks with Nick Heddy, VP of Sales at Pax8, on working with smaller cloud marketplaces vs. the big boys. Matt's got his museum and hardware picks, Rich fills us in on the week ahead, and much more. Listen to ChannelPro Weekly and don't forget to subscribe! Subscribe to ChannelPro Weekly! Look for us in your favorite podcast app. If you don't see us (yet) then you can subscribe using this link: http://www.channelpronetwork.com/rss/cpw, or in iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/channelpro-weekly-podcast/id10955685... Show Information: Episode #: 009Title: Pressing the 'BS' KeyDuration: 1:34:23File size: 86.3MBRegulars: Rich Freeman - Senior News Editor, Cecilia Galvin - Editor in Chief, Matt Whitlock - Technology Editor Topics and Related Links Mentioned: Lenovo Accelerate 2016 Lenovo Launches New N23 and N42 Laptops Geared for K-12 - Hands On Say hello to "physicalization"… (http://www.gartner.com/newsroom/id/3315817) OpenStack Vendor ZeroStack Introduces Global Partner Program Partner Program News: Spiceworks Adds New Member Benefits Sophos Launches MSP Partner Program BlackBerry Revamps Partner Program Poll: Are you selling Blackberry solutions or using any yourself? Introducing the 2016 ChannelPro 20/20 Visionaries Visionary Moments Interview with Nick Heddy, VP of Sales at Pax8, on working with smaller cloud marketplaces versus the big ones. Where's Joel? Matt's Museum Pick: Sharp YO-500 Electronic Organizer Matt's Tech Pick: Lenovo ThinkPad X1 Wireless Mouse ICYMI/What’s Up This Week preview
Download this episode's ebook at http://www.continuum.net/podcast/. Effectively pricing and packaging your services can be one of the most difficult challenges to tackle as an MSP. How do you know you’re maximizing your profits while not scaring away prospects with prices that are too high? On this episode of MSP Radio, we chat with Brandon Garcin, Content Marketing Manager at Continuum, about a recent pricing study Continuum commissioned through Spiceworks and some of the strategies MSPs are using to price their services. For more information on the topic, download our new Pricing and Profitability eGuide here: http://www.continuum.net/podcast/.
Prompted by a question on Spiceworks – an IT management software and community online. I've provided a link to the community. It's a good place for IT professionals to get advice and meet other IT pros. Episode 21: How to make a 6 figure income in IT. Listen below or download the episode here. ….. […] The post 21 Earning a 6 Figure Income in Information Technology appeared first on Building Your I.T. Career.
The marketing whiz kids from Spiceworks, Jen Slaski and Todd Darroca, join us at Spiceworld, the IT network's huge user conference in Austin, TX to talk about the benefits of building a genuine community that delivers content right to your doorstep. Special thanks to our sponsors: InboundWriter Oracle Marketing Cloud Uberflip In This Episode The different between an event and an experience How to give your audience exactly what they want Getting back to the important basics Using data to draw out the best content from sponsors The power of a tight-knit community What to do with all of your content once it's all over Resources Rob Zaleski's Twitter MarketingProfs Spiceworks SpiceWorld Conference Spiceworks Webinars Visit ContentProsPodcast.com for more insights from your favorite content marketers.
Todd Darroca, Marketing Communications Specialist at Spiceworks, drops by the Content Pros Podcast today to discuss how to stay on the cutting edge of content creation and why it's important to get your whole team excited about creating content and adding value for your audience. Special thanks to our sponsors: ProofHQ InboundWriter Oracle Marketing Cloud Sysomos Visit ContentProsPodcast.com for more insights from your favorite content marketers
Spiceworks is the world's largest community of global IT professionals that come together online and offline. Spiceworks was recently named by Glassdoor as one of the world's best companies to work for and they have received numerous other similar awards. In this episode of the future of work podcast I talk with Scott Abel, Co-Founder and Chief Strategy Officer for Spiceworks. We explore some of the things that he does to create such a great place to work. From having "slices with Scott" where employees can ask Scott absolutely any question to having open-door meetings with venture capitalists, Scott may just be running one of the world's most open and transparent companies. According to Scott, being open and transparent is one of the best ways to build trust and engagement. Tune in to learn more! (Music by Ronald Jenkees)
Sometimes it’s the little extras that make a job worthwhile. Cheryl Casone from the FOX Business Network has the scoop on some employment opportunities with great perks in this edition of “Hired!”: Getting you Hired! I’m Cheryl Casone with the FOX Business Network. Teriyaki Madness is an Asian restaurant with 16 locations across the U.S., but they just signed deals to expand in Arizona, Florida, Michigan, Nebraska and New Jersey. Sport Clips is a sports themed haircut place for men and boys. Three hundred and sixty seven jobs open by the end of 2014. Store managers and stylists needed. You can make anywhere from 25 to $80,000 a year depending on the position you take. The founder– a big sports fan and all their televisions reflect that. Spiceworks is a technology company for IT pros to connect, purchase and study all things technology. Based in Austin, Texas. Perks if you work there include– breakfast taco Mondays, bagel Fridays, CrossFit classes and yoga. Finally, Marriott has over 4,100 properties and have nearly 5,000 jobs open right now. Food and beverage, management, housekeeping, as well as opportunities in their corporate offices. Perks include a program to help you quit smoking, discounted rooms and great healthcare benefits. I’m Cheryl Casone with the FOX Business Network for FOX News Radio. For more on these opportunities, go to casoneexchange.com. Follow Cheryl on Twitter: @CherylCasone Click HERE for more “Hired”!
In this special episode from RubyConf 2012 we pulled aside some of the attendees and found out what they're working on. We also include a selection of the great lightning talks at the conference. Enjoy! Rob Mack from Spiceworks Dr. Nic Williams from Engine Yard talks about BOSH Ray Hightower from WisdomGroup, WindyCityRails, and ChicagoRuby Noel Rapin from Groupon John Foley and Nick Howard talk about Project Grok, an Open Source Code Reader Club (like a book club, but for code) Brian Ford from Engine Yard talks about Rubinious 2.0-rc1. Jeff Casimir from JumpstartLab talks about gSchool Daniel Huckstep from Yardstick Software talks about rc files and sub. Joshua Szmajda talks about the Ruby Hangout, an online Ruby meetup. Ron Evans from The Hybrid Group talks about gitnesse and wields a mean ukulele. Christian Trosclair from The Hybrid Group talks about Kids Code Camp and FeatureCreep Richard Schneeman from Heroku talks about Issue Triage. Chris Maddox from LivingSocial talks about happiness. Follow @thoughtbot and @rubyconf on twitter.
In this episode Mark and Shawn are joined by Tabrez Syed and Cole Lakes of Spiceworks to discuss their suite of enterprise IT tools. Mark and Shawn also answer some listener feedback by giving a rundown of some of their favorite podcasts.
EMNER - www.opendns.com ... Så nemt sikre du din hjemme computer eller dit firma for den sags skyld! - www.spiceworks.com ... Nogen der sagde microsoft sccm gratis og så med indbygget helpdesk system? - 3 lancerer trådløs router som er hjemmearbejdsplads - slut med TDC tekniker! - Mere om iphone 2.2 podcast understøttelse og Iphone mulighed for at virke som internetrouter - Hvordan man nemmest retter oversættelser i Opensource software? - Dansk gruppen - Send en mail - MIPS pr. 1000 dollar udvikling Ugens "Mads" En ting der skal på not listen er at dem der podcaster ikke lader deres første episoder ligge i deres rss-feed og heller ikke i Itunes. Fx Hvis jeg går ind i Itunes storen og finder magaboco kan jeg ikke hente de allerførste episoder jeg kan kun hente fra episode 6. Hvorfor det? Det er jo bare dumt. Det er får fedt i er startede igen men fik først set det nu (øv øv) Ps. Den samme Mads fra sidste sæson Hilsen Mads Frimann Ugens "Pimp din 'Buntu" - De hotteste ikoner - Det hotteste GTK theme Denne uges Internet TV - Miro + Denne kanal (Kopier kanal URL og tilføj den i Miro som kanal og lær noget om klimaforandringer) - Miro + Denne kanal (Kopier kanal URL og tilføj den i Miro som kanal og bliv underholdt af John Stewart) Hot og Not Hot - Iphone 2.2 firmware - godt nyt for podcasting! - Bittorrent + RSS + Miro - Stor Kriminelle Røde Kai historie (her link til afsnit 8) - Ultra small Mobile computing erstatter mobiltelefonen - De danske 'freedoms fighters' fra dansk gruppen. Dem længe leve! - Susan Silverman, College Professor - sætter sine studerende til at podcaste! - Folk der bidrager til Opensource! - FON routeren - Husker i den lille sag?! Man kan eje verden med denne lille sag det er PORNO - Gmail - Deres gadgets funktion er simpelthen for sej! se bl.a. goosync, remeber the milk og mange andre! - Gmail - Nu med video chat fra din webmail.. KOM IGEN HOTMAIL!! Not - "ADSL Teknikeren har været der, men der var ingen hjemme løgnen" - "Mobiltelefonen bliver det næste betalingsmiddel" - DR bruger stadigvæk (dybt suk) windows media i deres player - Folk der køber en windows licens - iPhone! WHAT?!? Jo sikkerheden er sgu ikke i top det er FANDME for dårligt! - NUtv Hvorfor kan danmark ikke lave webtv?? Så brug dog podcastmachine.com for fanden! Nogen der har noget at lave til Jacob??
The Teachers' Podcast: The New Generation of Ed Tech Professional Development
Improving learning with a multimedia extravaganza from Kathy and Mark. Audio Books, Audible Kids, and LibriVox, the FLIP video camera and always resources, resources, resources! Topnotch articles demonstrating new media for learning advancement, use in classrooms and more. Adaptable tool for admin and tech support! Product reviews: Spiceworks and Flip. Triple-crown of announcements in this episode include the launch of Talking Financial Literacy Podcast (www.talkingfinlit.org), more details about the Podcast Contest, and TTPOD Meet-UP at ISTE NECC 2008 (June/July) teacherspodcast.org. The 3rd Annual Best Educational Podcast Contest -more details https://teacherspodcast.org/contest-2008/ Live from the technology capital of the world! Mark and Kathy's book, Podcasting for Teachers, Reminder- don't miss the opportunity to join in the dialogue: the Facebook group for TTPOD is always busy! Check out the link, give us a call - or let us call you- come to the website to find out more. Blog, phone, email, poke us! Make us the center of YOUR ed tech Universe: teacherspodcast.org. A new generation ofEdTech professional development. Contact us at teacherspodcast@gmail.com or comment at the website/blog. We appreciate our great audience and fans - we are here for you as The Teachers' Podcast. More Ed Tech You Can Always Use Today and Tomorrow. Message line: 201-693-4935. Produced and copyrighted by Transformation Education LLC, Gura and King, 2007-2008. Let us know your teaching and learning needs- Mark and Kathy. One for the Road: Join us on the Ed Tech Journey of Discovery!