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This is the latest episode in GBTA's quarterly series focusing on artificial intelligence (AI) and business travel. Join us for an engaging episode featuring Steve Singh, the visionary founder of Concur, as he delves into the transformative power of AI in business travel. Discover how AI is revolutionizing the quest for the perfect trip, from personalized itineraries to seamless expense management. Steve shares insights on the latest advancements, the impact on travelers and businesses, and his predictions for the future. Tune in to explore how AI is not only enhancing the travel experience but also setting new standards for efficiency and convenience in the industry. Don't miss this enlightening conversation! The Business of Travel Podcast is your ultimate guide to navigating the ever-evolving realm of business travel. Each week, a new episode hosted by seasoned corporate travel professionals presents an engaging and enlightening exploration of key topics shaping the world of business travel today. The Business of Travel is the official podcast of the Global Business Travel Association. Visit www.gbta.org to learn more. Podcast Guests Steve Singh, Madrona Kevin Fliess, GBTA Additional Reading: Transforming Corporate Travel: An Open Roadmap to Fixing a Broken System, Steve Singh Music track is Space Jazz by Kevin MacLeod Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License
In this episode of Founded & Funded, Madrona Managing Director Steve Singh and Christal Bemont, CEO of Direct Travel, Madrona's newest portfolio company, delve into the acquisition of Direct Travel and its pivotal role in revolutionizing the $1.4T corporate travel ecosystem, along with @Spotnana , Troop, and Center. Full Transcript: https://bit.ly/3wxBFuT (00:00) Intro (01:19) Direct Travel: Transforming Corporate Travel Management (03:56) The Challenges of Modern Business Travel (07:43) The Perfect Trip: A Vision for Seamless Travel (10:06) Spotnana: Building the Next-Generation Travel Platform (16:27) Integrating Solutions: Center and Troop's Role in the Travel Ecosystem (20:58) Direct Travel's Strategic Vision and Integration (25:15) Realizing the Perfect Trip: Timeline and Expectations
Linking the Travel Industry is a business travel podcast where we review the top travel industry stories that are posted on LinkedIn by LinkedIn members. We curate the top posts and discuss with them with travel industry veterans in a live session with audience members. You can join the live recording session by visiting BusinessTravel360.comYour Hosts are Riaan van Schoor, Ann Cederhall and Aash Shravah.Stories covered on this session include -RIP Paul Byrne who passed away this week. A post about this by Timothy O'Neil-Dunne generated so many wonderful comments. My condolences to his family.Air Malta ceased operations after 50 years, and the new KM Malta Airlines took to the skies.In a slightly unexpected move, British Airways has lost direct control of British Airways Holidays, which will now be managed by IAG Loyalty. Steve Singh leads a group of investors to acquire Direct Travel for his mission of delivering #ThePerfectTrip. Travelport has laid off an undisclosed number of employees in its commercial organization.Steve Banks from Agiito becomes the new Focus Travel Partnership CEO. JetBlue increases costs for checked bags again. Hilton Hotels & Resorts has acquired a majority stake in the parent company of the luxury Nomad Hotel in London (Sydell Group), and plans to expand the brand throughout the world. Extra StoriesYou can subscribe to this podcast by searching 'BusinessTravel360' on Google Podcast, Apple Podcast, iHeart, Pandora, Spotify, Alexa or your favorite podcast player.This podcast was created, edited and distributed by BusinessTravel360. Be sure to sign up for regular updates at BusinessTravel360.com - Enjoy!Support the show
Welcome to What's Up in Business Travel for Week 14 of 2024. This is a weekly podcast from BusinessTravel360, where we update you on what's up this week in the world of business travel. This podcast is great for those who need to know what's happening all in under 15 minutes.Topics covered during this podcast -Advito Q2 Index: Airfares down, hotel rates riseSpirit Airlines receives $200 MillionBoeing pays Alaska Airlines $160MAir Line Pilots Association says Pilot Shortage is StabilizingUnited asks pilots to take time off Layoffs hit Travelport's Commercial OrganizationAmTrav documents 12 months of NDC & edifact differentialsInvestor Group led by Steve Singh acquires Direct TravelHilton takes majority stake in NoMadMalaysia Airlines and IndiGo to codeshareNational grabs first place againAA loosens rules for petsFee changes for Global EntryCLEAR expands at Boston Logan AirportJetBlue changes checked-bag feesTune in every Monday morning to get your weekly update. We hope you will make this a regular part of your week and listen in while you on the move or sitting back and sipping your coffee.You can subscribe to this podcast by searching 'BusinessTravel360' on Google Podcast, Apple Podcast, iHeart, Pandora, Spotify, Alexa or your favorite podcast player.This podcast was created, edited and distributed by BusinessTravel360. Be sure to sign up for regular updates at BusinessTravel360.com - Enjoy!Support the show
Steve Singh, co-founder of travel expense management company Concur, and four firms have acquired corporate travel agency Direct Travel, writes Travel Technology Reporter Justin Dawes. Singh said the group purchased Direct Travel, one of the world's largest corporate travel agencies, from private venture capital firm Antares Capital and other debt providers. He said they're planning to release a platform for Direct Travel customers that combines the four firms' technologies and services. The platform is expected to include an artificial intelligence-powered trip planner and a way to provide assistance to travelers facing disruptions. Next, Trivago has brought back members of its leadership team from the time of its IPO in December 2016, reports Executive Editor Dennis Schaal. Trivago recently named Robin Harries its chief financial officer, a move the company said completed its leadership changes. Schaal notes that four executives who left Trivago in 2020 have returned to the Germany-based hotel metasearch engine. The company launched an AI-driven ad campaign in December. Finally, Wyndham Hotels & Resorts has announced its 25th brand, WaterWalk Extended Stay by Wyndham, reports Senior Hospitality Editor Sean O'Neill. O'Neill reports WaterWalk stands out from other hotel brands in that it permits owners to sell a mix of rooms. About 60% of its rooms are marketed as extended-stay hotel rooms and 40% are marketed as short-term rentals. O'Neill adds WalterWalk is part of Wyndham's strategy to expand in the extended-stay sector.
Back in 2022 Steve Singh reached tipping point after suffering from a rare headache condition called Cluster Headaches a pain so severe the pain scale suggests it is worse than labour. From the age of 16 he experienced over 700 attacks lasting generally for 2-3 hours and occurring multiple times in a day.Steve, never taking any drug before, decided to take a leap of faith into the unknown. He ventured down the woo woo path of psychedelic medicine, psychotherapy and massive amounts of meditation. This episode we chat about his journey of the first ever headache, his internal struggles and most importantly the lessons he took from undergoing a series of psychedelic ceremonies and rituals.Follow Steve hereListen to his podcast Squeezing the PlumsWe have an official instagram page. Stay up to date and see behind the scenes content here. @curious_conversations_podcast Stay up to date with the Tully & Sarah @tullyhumphrey @spasini To shop Tully Lou visitwww.tullylou.com.au @tullylou Use code TLCHERRY for $15 off your first order at Tully Lou#paidcollaboration @chemistwarehouse Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Today, managing director Steve Singh sits down with Troop Travel Co-founders Dennis Vilovic and Leonard Cremer. Madrona invested in Troop and its corporate travel meeting management platform in 2021. These three talk about looking for the right problem to solve, to launch a company, and how you decide if it's the right time. They also discuss when you need to switch from bringing on generalists to bringing on experts, how to identify the right investors to work with, why working closely with customers and potential customers is so important, and so much more. So I'll go ahead and hand it over to Steve to take it away.
Every leader is at mercy of macroeconomic conditions these days, but still expected to hit an even bigger revenue target.. This episode is your playbook for realizing the power behind embracing downturns, upturns, and any-which-way turns the economy will throw at your pipeline. On this episode of The Run Revenue Show, Steve, Managing Director at Madrona Venture Group, shares his learnings from leading his team at Concur through the ‘99 dot com burst, the 2008 financial crisis, and beyond. You'll walk away with a playbook for how to use macroeconomic data to your advantage, keep your team informed and empowered, and solidify you no matter what. Here's what's inside: How to grow your revenue —without adding headcount Why precise forecasting enables you to think more strategically about spending and where to make your investments. What effectively instrumenting your business looks like and why it should be a priority for you. Grab this week's checklist Check out RunRevenue.Pro for tips, playbooks, and advice for stopping revenue leak and achieving revenue precision. See how Clari's Revenue Platform can help you win more deals, protect your customer base, and achieve revenue precision—even in a downturn. → Clari.com
The 2021 virtual GeekWire Awards were held this week, recognizing the top companies, innovators, entrepreneurs and technologies in the Pacific Northwest, as nominated and chosen by the GeekWire community — along with celebrity cameos. On this special episode of the GeekWire Podcast, we’re featuring highlights from a behind-the-scenes conversation with former Docker and Concur CEO Steve Singh, managing director of Madrona Venture Group, which was hosted for finalists in advance of the awards by GeekWire co-founder John Cook. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Jim Cramer takes you through his game plan for next week and how to best approach the continued economic uncertainty. Then, Constellation Brand’s CEO, Bill Newlands, discusses the company’s recent earnings report and how the stay-at-home economy has effected business. Next, the CEO of Zebra Technologies, Anders Gustaffson, joins Cramer to talk about the change in logistics and supply chains amid COVID-19. And, Cramer goes off the tape with Steve Singh to hear more about how All in Seattle is helping with recovery efforts in Seattle. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
These are uncertain times. The certainty is that it’s not up and to the right. In this special Founded and Funded we hear from the CEOs of Redfin, Qumulo and Highspot on how they helping their companies, employees and customers steer through the coming weeks. There is insight here from the 2008 downturn and the unique situation we find ourselves in now. Steve Singh shares his experience at Concur which he grew through the downturn to an acquisition by SAP in 2014.
In the Application News, Chrome constrains the cookies and Edge pushes privacy, Windows builds a sandbox for Linux, Android Q for more quarantined code with more LLVM features, Steve Singh stepping down as Docker CEO, and Verizon releases its 2019 DBIR! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode61 Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly
In the Application News, Chrome constrains the cookies and Edge pushes privacy, Windows builds a sandbox for Linux, Android Q for more quarantined code with more LLVM features, Steve Singh stepping down as Docker CEO, and Verizon releases its 2019 DBIR! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode61 Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly
This week, Derek Weeks joins us to talk about DevSecOps and Securing Software Supply Chains! Derek is the VP and DevOps Advocate at Sonatype! In the Application News, Chrome constrains the cookies and Edge pushes privacy, Windows builds a sandbox for Linux, Android Q for more quarantined code with more LLVM features, Steve Singh stepping down as Docker CEO, and Verizon releases its 2019 DBIR! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode61 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Visit our website: https://www.securityweekly.com Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
This week, Derek Weeks joins us to talk about DevSecOps and Securing Software Supply Chains! Derek is the VP and DevOps Advocate at Sonatype! In the Application News, Chrome constrains the cookies and Edge pushes privacy, Windows builds a sandbox for Linux, Android Q for more quarantined code with more LLVM features, Steve Singh stepping down as Docker CEO, and Verizon releases its 2019 DBIR! Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ASW_Episode61 Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Visit our website: https://www.securityweekly.com Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly
Putting together the M&A case for Docker, Microsoft Build, Google I/O, and Oracle’s cloud grudge. Plus: The Most Expensive Free Dog in the World. Dead frogs tell no tales. It’s just me and the dog. Smart enough not to go up the stairs, dumb - enough to think the eggs are coming back. Is Docker the new MySQL. Most valuable, unrealized container brand: Google. JEDI grudge. Nihilism, greatly underrated. Relevant to your interests Announcing Docker Enterprise 3.0: Delivering High-Velocity Application Innovation (https://blog.docker.com/2019/04/announcing-docker-enterprise-3-0/) A hacker is wiping Git repositories and asking for a ransom (https://www.zdnet.com/article/a-hacker-is-wiping-git-repositories-and-asking-for-a-ransom/) Department of Justice approves $34B IBM acquisition of Red Hat (https://www.wraltechwire.com/2019/05/06/department-of-justice-approves-34b-ibm-acquisition-of-red-hat/) How Airbnb took over the world (https://www.theguardian.com/technology/2019/may/05/airbnb-homelessness-renting-housing-accommodation-social-policy-cities-travel-leisure) Canonical Sharpens Focus on Red Hat, VMware; IPO Plans Remain (https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/news/canonical-sharpens-focus-on-red-hat-vmware-ipo-plans-remain/2019/05/?utm_source=feedblitz&utm_medium=FeedBlitzRss&utm_campaign=sdxcentral) RHEL 8 released: It's the last pre-IBM Red Hat Linux Enterprise Linux (https://www.zdnet.com/article/rhel-8-released-its-the-last-pre-ibm-red-hat-linux-enterprise-linux/) 8.0 release notes - Red Hat Customer Portal (https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_enterprise_linux/8/html-single/8.0_release_notes/index) Salesforce acquires Tel Aviv-based conversational AI startup Bonobo for a reported $50 million (https://tech.eu/brief/salesforce-acquires-tel-aviv-based-conversational-ai-startup-bonobo-for-a-reported-50-million/) Bucking a trend of rapid growth, Microsoft actually shuts down an Azure data center (https://www.onmsft.com/news/bucking-a-trend-of-rapid-growth-microsoft-actually-shuts-down-an-azure-data-center) Microsoft Build: Microsoft Botched Its First HoloLens Demo of Build 2019 (https://gizmodo.com/microsoft-botched-its-first-hololens-demo-of-build-2019-1834553577?rev=1557159754030&utm_source=gizmodo_twitter&utm_campaign=socialflow_gizmodo_twitter&utm_medium=socialflow) Microsoft Build 2019: the biggest news from the developer conference (https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/6/18531471/microsoft-build-2019-news-windows-office-365-azure-cortana-minecraft-developers-conference) Microsoft Build Day 1: Windows Subsystem For Linux Gets More Linux (https://www.anandtech.com/show/14301/microsoft-build-day-1-windows-subsystem-for-linux-gets-more-linux) Spatial - Collaborate from anywhere in Augmented Reality (https://spatial.is/) Minecraft mobile AR game teased, full reveal coming May 17 (https://www.windowscentral.com/minecraft-mobile-ar-game-teased-announcement-coming-may-17) Microsoft Edge gets IE mode tabs and better security control (https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.slashgear.com/microsoft-edge-gets-ie-mode-tabs-better-security-control-more-06575616/amp/) Google I/O 2019 (https://www.theverge.com/google-io) The 8 biggest announcements from the Google I/O 2019 keynote (https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/7/18531198/google-io-summary-keynote-news-highlights-recap-2019) What is Uber? Forget the sharing economy – it's just a libertarian scam (https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2019/may/09/uber-sharing-economy-ride-share-ipo) 10 Most Interesting Announcements From Microsoft Build (https://www.forbes.com/sites/janakirammsv/2019/05/07/10-most-interesting-announcements-from-microsoft-build/#68329977531f) Samsung spilled SmartThings app source code and secret keys (https://techcrunch.com/2019/05/08/samsung-source-code-leak/) In gambling mecca, Dell’s founder offers evidence that big bets on multicloud, AI and edge will pay off (https://siliconangle.com/2019/05/06/in-gambling-mecca-dells-founder-offers-evidence-that-big-bets-on-multicloud-ai-and-edge-will-pay-off-delltechworld-guestoftheweek/) Marketing Daily: Study: Voice Assistants Far From Hot Marketplace For Buying (https://www.mediapost.com/publications/article/335481/study-voice-assistants-far-from-hot-marketplace-f.html) Comic Relief switched from multi-cloud to serverless with AWS and saw a 93% cost reduction (https://diginomica.com/comic-relief-switched-multi-cloud-serverless-aws-and-saw-93-cost-reduction) SAP makes its cloud data service, data management play with HANA (https://www.zdnet.com/article/sap-makes-its-cloud-data-service-data-management-play-with-hana/#ftag=RSSbaffb68) Microsoft, Red Hat Partner on OpenShift (https://www.enterpriseai.news/2019/05/08/microsoft-red-hat-partner-on-openshift/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=microsoft-red-hat-partner-on-openshift) Steve Singh stepping down as Docker CEO (https://techcrunch.com/2019/05/08/steve-singh-stepping-down-as-docker-ceo/?guccounter=1) Google launches Portals, a new web page navigation system for Chrome (https://www.zdnet.com/article/google-launches-portals-a-new-web-page-navigation-system-for-chrome/#ftag=RSSbaffb68) Oracle Releases GraalVM Enterprise (https://adtmag.com/articles/2019/05/08/oracle-graalvm.aspx?m=1) OpenShift 4: Red Hat's on ramp for the hybrid cloud (https://www.zdnet.com/article/openshift-4-red-hats-on-ramp-for-the-hybrid-cloud/#ftag=RSSbaffb68) After two years as Docker CEO, Steve Singh steps down, Rob Bearden steps in (https://siliconangle.com/2019/05/08/two-year-stint-docker-ceo-steve-singh-step/) Nonsense Red Hat employees permanently inked with new company logo (https://twitter.com/WRALTechWire/status/1123974716090408967) Parent of Schick razors to buy shaving start-up Harry’s for $1.37 billion (https://www.usatoday.com/story/money/2019/05/09/shaving-startup-harrys-acquired-schick-razor-owner-1-37-b/1150244001/) Bird has a new electric scooter: it’s durable, comes in three different colors, and you can buy it (https://www.theverge.com/2019/5/8/18535698/bird-one-electric-scooter-ride-share-own-price) ## Sponsors This episode is sponsored by SolarWinds® and one of their web APM tools: Loggly®. It’s scalable cloud-based log management that won’t break the bank. Learn more or try it FREE for 14 days. Just go to http://loggly.com/sdt (http://loggly.com/sdt). Conferences, et. al. ALERT! DevOpsDays Discount - DevOpsDays MSP (https://www.devopsdays.org/events/2019-minneapolis/welcome/), August 6th to 7th, $50 off with the code SDT2019 (https://www.eventbrite.com/e/devopsdays-minneapolis-2019-tickets-51444848928?discount=SDT2019). 2019, a city near you: The 2019 SpringOne Tours are posted (http://springonetour.io/). Coté will be speaking at many of these, hopefully all the ones in EMEA. They’re free and all about programming and DevOps things. Coming up in: Paris (May 23rd & 24th), San Francisco (June 4th & 5th), Atlanta (June 13th & 14th)…and back to a lot of US cities. ChefConf 2019 (http://chefconf.chef.io/) May 20-23. Matt’s speaking! (https://chefconf.chef.io/sessions/banking-automation-modernizing-chef-across-enterprise/) ChefConf London 2019 (https://chefconflondon.eventbrite.com/) June 19-20 Listener Feedback Dominic Wellington who Coté interviewed (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/guests/dominicwellington) got a new job (https://findthethread.postach.io/post/turning-over-a-new-leaf) so we sent him some new stickers. SDT news & hype Join us in Slack (http://www.softwaredefinedtalk.com/slack). Send your postal address to stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com (mailto:stickers@softwaredefinedtalk.com) and we will send you free laptop sticker!s Follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/softwaredeftalk), Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/softwaredefinedtalk/) or LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/software-defined-talk/) Listen to the Software Defined Interviews Podcast (https://www.softwaredefinedinterviews.com/). Check out the back catalog (http://cote.coffee/howtotech/). Brandon built the Quick Concall iPhone App (https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/quick-concall/id1399948033?mt=8) and he wants you to buy it for $0.99. Recommendations Coté: UK Hailstorm (https://twitter.com/cote/status/1126454849300836352), will it work this time? Original HailStorm (https://www.itprotoday.com/windows-78/microsoft-hailstorm-controversy), circa 2002. HailStorm revisited/renamed in the Identity 2.0 era (https://www.theregister.co.uk/2008/10/30/microsoft_generva_hailstorm?page=1). And now? FB and Google authentication, I guess? (Also, remember this presentation (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RrpajcAgR1E&feature=youtu.be&t=24) that launched a million single word per slide talks?) Matt: Fleabag Season 2 (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5687612/) (BBC/Amazon); Word for the week: Acedia (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Acedia). Brandon: Episode 908: I Am Not A Robot (https://www.npr.org/sections/money/2019/04/24/716854013/episode-908-i-am-not-a-robot) and Overcast Clipping (https://marco.org/2019/04/27/overcast-clip-sharing).
The Byte - A Byte-sized podcast about Containers, Cloud, and Tech
Sign up to all the new announcements including AWS credits - https://beta.docker.com/Help others- https://codepath.org/Docker Foundation - https://www.docker.com/foundationEpisode TranscriptionWelcome back to The Byte. Day two, DockerCon recap. We're just going to walk through a couple of the announcements in day two. A couple of things I missed on day one. Like the ARM announcement. I can't believe I forgot to announce that in the last episode. Docker is actually partnering with ARM to develop a relationship where they can push containers on to ARM devices. You can actually develop on a Mac or a Windows machine ARM containers. That's a huge advantage. You can actually paralyze your build on your machine for X86 and ARM and then ship it to an ARM device.The reason why ARM is so important is that obviously, it powers every cell phone. The ARM processor is on every device everywhere. It's really low-level stuff. It's small processors. Doesn't take a lot of energy. Super, super-efficient, and at the same time, Amazon announced its ARM processor initiative as well. Now you can actually deploy ARM processors in Amazon Cloud and they're cheaper than Intel processors. It works on the same workload. If you were to run it on a Python machine, a Python application, you could ship it to an ARM processor instance in Amazon, it's actually cheaper. That's really cool.They kind of did some demos around it and they showed in day two a concept where they actually built parallel workloads. One for ARM, one for X86, and that was really cool. Now, some of the tools that they actually showed during the demo was Buildx. Buildx, it's really actually pretty cool. It allows you to paralyze your composed builds for super-fast local iteration. I'm just reading the recap. Sorry.The next thing was Docker Jump. It actually allows you to provision instances in the cloud. Similar to what machine did, but you did, do Docker provision or Docker Jump. You can give it the instance information and it provisions everything into your cloud. That's really awesome, if it works that seamless as the demo was, I just can't wait because that's going to be really handy because it does all the communication, all the tunneling back and forth, and it'll be ... make our jobs much more efficient, being able to provision from the Docker command line.Buildx enables ARM builds as well. You don't have to change the Docker file. You don't have to do anything. You just do Buildx. You give it the ARM architecture flag and it just builds it. Really cool. Also, you can context manage. You can actually tell the Docker command line, "Hey, I want to actually manage my environment." You go Docker context and you give it the server name and you can switch between instances with the same command line. For example, I can run Docker on my laptop, do Docker context, and then I'm actually controlling my instance in the cloud with the same command line, without doing anything else. That's really handy.They also kind of explored the engineering initiatives, what they're trying to achieve. They came out and they said, "Container to user, super important initiative." They're actually going to offer commercial support around container D, and I thought that was pretty interesting. No one else is doing that and it's going to really bring some more support to the community, because it's obviously the industry-standard container D, and now since they're getting commercial support, maybe we can build even more interesting things on top of it.Day two, a little bit jumped into [inaudible 00:03:35], Docker company to support services. Sorry. Like I said, I'm still not quite sure what it is. Is it just enterprise with Kubernetes offering? I'm still asking around, looking for more details. Additionally, at the very beginning of the Docker keynote for day two, CEO Steve Singh was talking about the Docker Foundation that they're starting to really enable developers around the world, give them a chance to actually build up their knowledge, enable developers of all background, ethnicities ... just everywhere in the world. They want to level the playing field, which I thought was really cool. They donated a lot of money to this program. They brought up somebody from codepath.org and he was explaining exactly his initiative to bring more students into the fold. It's really nice. It's like an open-source initiative, so you can offer your time to help our or you can actually write material so check it out. codepath. Interesting initiative.Finally, if you want to trial these things I talked about, day one, day two, they finally gave us a link and it's called beta.docker.com, and on this link, you can sign up for all these command line plugins we're talking about, enterprise edition, Docker enterprise desktop. All these things will be coming through beta. I think some of them are available now. I haven't signed up yet. They'll let you know as more things come available. Go ahead and go to the beta.docker.com, sign up, and you'll be on the list when things get announced.That's all for today. I will head back over to the conference today and get some more information and I'll provide you what I find out once again. Have a great day. Talk to you later.
The big fluffy, leather chair interview is a staple of the tech world now. A big named executive (usually) comes up on the stage with a big name journalist and is interviewed in a “wide ranging” discussion. In addition to videos of these being broadcast, tech outlets often write summaries - news stories even - based on the interviews, and others sometimes post “lighted edited transcripts.” One of our favorite news sites, CRN, does this often. And while they do the sleazy thing of making 20-35 pages out of what should be a, at most, two page story, they're usually good interviews if you're into the the topic. Continuing a discussion we started in SDT #108, we look at three of these interviews, giving us the chance to a close reading of the interviews themselves and talk about the format in general.The three interviews: (1.) Meg Whitman, HPE; (2.) Steve Singh, Docker; (3.) Pat Gelsinger, VMware. All of them, of course, are CEOs.See the more detailed show notes for more.
The big fluffy, leather chair interview is a staple of the tech world now. A big named executive (usually) comes up on the stage with a big name journalist and is interviewed in a “wide ranging” discussion. In addition to videos of these being broadcast, tech outlets often write summaries - news stories even - based on the interviews, and others sometimes post “lighted edited transcripts.” One of our favorite news sites, CRN, does this often. And while they do the sleazy thing of making 20-35 pages out of what should be a, at most, two page story, they’re usually good interviews if you’re into the the topic. Continuing a discussion we started in SDT #108, we look at three of these interviews, giving us the chance to a close reading of the interviews themselves and talk about the format in general.The three interviews: (1.) Meg Whitman, HPE; (2.) Steve Singh, Docker; (3.) Pat Gelsinger, VMware. All of them, of course, are CEOs.See the more detailed show notes for more.
The big fluffy, leather chair interview is a staple of the tech world now. A big named executive (usually) comes up on the stage with a big name journalist and is interviewed in a “wide ranging” discussion. In addition to videos of these being broadcast, tech outlets often write summaries - news stories even - based on the interviews, and others sometimes post “lighted edited transcripts.” One of our favorite news sites, CRN, does this often. And while they do the sleazy thing of making 20-35 pages out of what should be a, at most, two page story, they’re usually good interviews if you’re into the the topic. Continuing a discussion we started in SDT #108, we look at three of these interviews, giving us the chance to a close reading of the interviews themselves and talk about the format in general.The three interviews: (1.) Meg Whitman, HPE; (2.) Steve Singh, Docker; (3.) Pat Gelsinger, VMware. All of them, of course, are CEOs.See the more detailed show notes for more.
Docker's decision to hire Steve Singh as its new CEO surfaces questions about the future of arguably still the most symbolic and important company in the shift to container-based architectures. With Singh as CEO, the message is clear. Docker is making a big move into the enterprise market. We decided to ask Fintan Ryan, an analyst with RedMonk about Singh's appointment, what it says about Docker's focus, how it impacts their engineering strategy and the larger context for ecosystem partners, cloud service providers and the overall developer community.
Chatting with SAP's Steve Singh about the future of work, software and AI.