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In Season 15 episode 2, Elixir Wizards Sundi Myint and Charles Suggs chat with Micah Cooper to talk about distributed systems, data replication, and what it actually looks like to build these ideas in Elixir. Micah shares his journey from Ruby to Elixir and walks us through Visor, a library he's building based on the Viewstamps replication algorithm. Inspired by systems like TigerBeetle, Visor explores how you can replicate state across nodes using GenServers, giving you fault tolerance and recovery without relying entirely on traditional database patterns. We talk about the difference between distributed systems and data replication, where things tend to get misunderstood, and what changes when you start thinking about state this way. The conversation also touches on event sourcing, tradeoffs in system design, and how Elixir's distributed model makes some of these concepts more approachable than you might expect. Along the way, we talk about building for curiosity, experimenting with new ideas, and how projects like this push the ecosystem forward. Topics discussed in this episode: Building Visor and working with the Viewstamps replication model Replicating GenServer state across nodes Distributed systems vs. data replication Lessons from TigerBeetle and financial system design Event sourcing challenges and tradeoffs Rethinking database-first architectures Snapshotting, recovery, and fault tolerance The role of Elixir's distributed model Experimentation, learning, and building for curiosity Links mentioned: Micah's GitHub https://github.com/mrmicahcooper Micah's GitLab https://gitlab.com/mrmicahcooper The Visor repository: https://gitlab.com/mrmicahcooper/visor Visor Hex Package https://hex.pm/packages/visor Ruby on Rails https://rubyonrails.org/ Phoenix LiveView Framework https://www.phoenixframework.org/ Zig Programming Language https://ziglang.org/ TigerBeetle https://tigerbeetle.com/ TigerBeetle internal docs https://github.com/tigerbeetle/tigerbeetle/tree/main/docs/internals The BEAM https://www.erlang-solutions.com/blog/the-beam-erlangs-virtual-machine/ GenServer https://hexdocs.pm/elixir/GenServer.html Apache Kafka https://github.com/apache/kafka RabbitMQ https://www.rabbitmq.com/ Redpanda https://www.redpanda.com/ SQL https://www.ibm.com/think/topics/structured-query-language Kubernetes https://kubernetes.io/ YAML https://yaml.org/ Nomad Workload Orchestrator https://developer.hashicorp.com/nomad Flutter https://flutter.dev/ Commanded https://hexdocs.pm/commanded/Commanded.html Go Programming Language https://go.dev/ Clojure Programming Language https://clojure.org/ Nebulex https://hexdocs.pm/nebulex/Nebulex.html Mnesia https://www.erlang.org/doc/apps/mnesia/mnesia.html Cachex https://hexdocs.pm/cachex/Cachex.html libgraph https://hexdocs.pm/libgraph/Graph.html Horde https://hexdocs.pm/horde/Horde.Registry.html NocFree split keyboard https://www.nocfree.com/ Micah's LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/micah-cooper-4a737560/
This week Peter & Mike have a design discussion about skill resolution systems. _________________________ YouTube - www.youtube.com/channel/UCrOtGhui_jdLdoQNI7PU4Pg X - @onestopcoopshop Discord - discord.gg/p4jX8AF Merch: one-stop-co-op-shop.creator-spring.com/ Donate to One Stop Co-op Shop - www.patreon.com/onestop Email - onestopcoopshop@gmail.com
This last week of being back from Florence has given me a chance to reflect a bit on he experience of not just being in a foreign country, but being in a completely different kind of physical environment. By that I mean, the city of Florence, or more specifically a city where I was walking everywhere. The origins of Florence date back to around 59 BCE. From that time, the city has continuously grown and evolved to what it is today. When you look at a map of Florence, you see a lot of twisty and windy streets that are built with cobblestones and buildings that run almost right up against them. From an accessibility standpoint, it presents a lot of challenges as I saw people being pushed in wheelchairs with great effort (or pulling suitcases for that matter). But beyond that, there is a quaintness and opportunity to be in a place where there are more people moving around than cars. Moving freely in a way that was unencumbered by traffic, being able to explore and discover, feeling a certain kind of vibrancy rooted in antiquity but lived in modernity. And now I am back in the exurbs, which has its own kind of design, whether it be intentional or just organic. Like Florence, homes and streets get built at different times. Some structures are destroyed and then rebuilt, green spaces created, land getting preserved, other land getting constructed. It is not just a dance of history, but also the presence or absence of intentional design. To talk about designing cities, I welcome Itai Palti to the Experience by Design studios. Itai has a background in architecture and working as an architect. He also is the founder of the Centre for Conscious Design, “an international collective promoting the emergence of healthy built environments using Conscious Design principles.” Together they promote the Conscious Cities Movement, “a global movement that reimagines the built environment as an extension of ourselves and our communities.” We talk about how architecture can be about community empowerment, creating environments and structures that bring people together rather than drive them apart. Itai talks about the decline of serendipitous connections, especially in cultures that de-emphasize community and prioritize solitude. Between those poles is the need to find compromise in how we build lived environments. Itai also discussed the importance of using scientific insights into architectural design. We explore how architects need to balance client demands with their desire to create socially impactful design. Accomplishing this goal requires that more than architects be involved, leveraging the expertise from all disciplines to come together in constructive dialogue to combine knowledge to create better cities and communities. Thus, we talk about systems design as well, and how the built environment is a key element in experience design. After being in Florence for only a few days, which was enough time to enjoy a walkable environment, that is something I can attest to. Itai Palti on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/itaipalti/ The Center for Conscious Design: https://theccd.org/ Conscious Cities Movement: https://theccd.org/conscious-cities/
On She Built It®, Alisa Sparks shares how she went from managing multi-million dollar military budgets to founding Linden Creek, a home staging and interior design company she built from her garage and grew into a national franchise. What started as a side hustle she built quietly on Fridays has become a 326-page operations manual, a 10-year franchise model, and a community of business owners building their own design businesses with done-for-you systems and hands-on support.Alisa talks about the risk-averse mindset that actually made her a better entrepreneur, the identity crisis that sparked the idea to franchise, and why functionality (not aesthetics) is always the starting point for great design. This conversation is for every woman sitting in a successful career who still feels the pull to build something entirely her own.Episode Resources:Rich Dad Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki and Sharon LechterConnect with us:Alisa Sparks LinkedInAlisa Sparks InstagramLinden Creek WebsiteLinden Creek LinkedInLinden Creek InstagramWork with She Built It® Media She Built It® Instagram She Built It® CEO, Melanie Barr InstagramMelanie Barr LinkedInShe Built It® LinkedIn
Computer scientist Keith Winstein is an expert in how computers communicate. Computer networks create what he calls shared fictions – abstract realities, like a website or a Zoom call, that exist only because the computers on either end agree to act as if they are real. Unfortunately, today's networks lack a shared notion of a “computation,” which hurts market efficiency in cloud computing and frustrates efforts to hold tech companies accountable for the results of their algorithms. As computational power becomes concentrated in a smaller number of companies, Winstein advocates for a shared language of “computational truths,” defining computations precisely so results are reproducible and auditable. His research group hopes this will lead to greater transparency and accountability in the cloud and, ultimately, to greater confidence in the computations that companies do every day on our behalf. The truth matters, Winstein tells host Russ Altman on this episode of Stanford Engineering's The Future of Everything podcast. Have a question for Russ? Send it our way in writing or via voice memo, and it might be featured on an upcoming episode. Please introduce yourself, let us know where you're listening from, and share your question. You can send questions to thefutureofeverything@stanford.edu. Episode Reference Links: Stanford Profile: Keith Winstein Connect With Us: Episode Transcripts >>> The Future of Everything Website Connect with Russ >>> Threads / Bluesky / Mastodon Connect with School of Engineering >>> Twitter/X / Instagram / LinkedIn / Facebook Chapters: (00:00:00) Introduction Russ Altman introduces guest Keith Winstein, a professor of computer science and electrical engineering at Stanford University (00:02:56) Why Choose Networking The appeal of the shared digital “fictions” created by connected computers. (00:04:22) The Internet's Impact The broader societal implications of networking technologies. (00:05:35) Computational Truth The concept of tracking how data is produced and verified. (00:09:18) Misaligned Cloud Computing How “pay for effort” models create inefficiencies in cloud systems. (00:13:51) Determining Computational Truth The need for verifiable computation that produces consistent results. (00:18:19) Computations & Accountability How identifying computations could improve trust in systems. (00:20:56) Collaborating Online Why latency challenges make online performance collaboration difficult. (00:24:38) Real-Time Performance Systems Creating a custom system for musicians to perform together online. (00:28:00) Latency vs. Bandwidth Why faster internet speeds don't necessarily reduce delay. (00:30:43) Eliminating Latency How buffering layers in software create unnecessary delay. (00:32:41) Balancing Audio Quality & Delay The different trade-offs for musicians, actors, and audiences. (00:34:20) Rethinking Computer Science Education The need to bring playfulness and interactivity back into learning. (00:35:46) The Xylophone-Based Class Teaching computation through real-time sound and music. (00:38:34) Future In a Minute Rapid-fire Q&A: optimism, truth in computing, and innovation. (00:41:01) Conclusion Connect With Us:Episode Transcripts >>> The Future of Everything WebsiteConnect with Russ >>> Threads / Bluesky / MastodonConnect with School of Engineering >>>Twitter/X / Instagram / LinkedIn / Facebook Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.
Building a multi-million dollar business can feel overwhelming, especially when you don't know where to start. Today, Sandra will share her proven six-ingredient “recipe” for success that can help any entrepreneur turn big dreams into reality. You'll discover practical steps to move forward with clarity and confidence. If you love the episode and the show, I invite you to subscribe so you won't miss any of the great advice, tips, and impact. Sandra Yancey is an award-winning entrepreneur, #1 best-selling author of six books, movie producer, founder and CEO of eWomenNetwork, and is recognized by the International Alliance for Women as one of the world's 100 Top Difference Makers. Selected by the Emmy award-winning TV show The Doctors as their transformation expert, she is also recognized by CNN as an American Hero. Sandra holds a Master of Science degree in Organizational Development from The American University, Washington, D.C., and a post-graduate certification in Organization and Systems Design from the prestigious Gestalt Institute. Sandra is considered one of the premier business success experts in the world. Welcome, Sandra!Support the showCheck out Petite2Queen for more great interviews, podcasts, and blogs to help you achieve more, faster!https://www.petite2queen.com/
Send us a textIn this opening episode of reverberations, John invites listeners into a reflective inquiry beneath the surface of modern life:If progress is supposed to improve the human experience, why does it so often feel hollow?Through personal reflection, cultural observation and emerging research on loneliness, trust and belonging, this episode names a quiet but pervasive fracture between the systems we've built and the human beings we actually are.This episode an invitation to slow down… to tell the truth… and to ask better questions.John introduces the deeper journey of this season and gently seeds Integrated Systems Theory, a dignity-led framework for reimagining development from the inside out. Beginning with lived experience rather than policy or ideology, this episode sets the stage for a season-long exploration of dignity, belonging, human possibility and ecological reverence.If you've ever felt that something about “progress” doesn't quite add up…you're not alone.This is where the conversation begins.Support the showinstagram For more of my music, visit www.soundcloud.com/john-stuarttwitterAmplify Your LoveWe are...#BetterTogether
The most enjoyable part of doing the podcast is talking to a wide range of people who, regardless of their industry or role, share a common goal: making things better. At the end of the day, that's what it's all about. Sometimes we make things better by selling something people need. Other times, it's by teaching them something new, creating an art installation that moves them, designing a workplace where they feel fulfilled, or building tools that make tasks easier. Whatever the approach, the mission remains the same—to make things better.This simple goal can often get lost behind the different names our work has taken over time. Take “UX,” for example. It started as “Human Factors,” then became “Human-Computer Interaction,” and eventually evolved into “User Experience” and “Human-Centered Design.” Whatever the term, it all comes back to the same principle: improving lives. The more we keep that in mind, the better we understand what this work is truly about.There's a lot of talk today about creating a “Digital First” strategy. But perhaps we should think in terms of a Human First strategy—focusing on what people want, what they need, and how we can help close the gap. One of the great things about being a podcast host, educator, and thought leader in this space is providing the tools that help others create the tools people need.My guest on this episode of Experience by Design understands what it means to elevate human potential and create “human-powered excellence.” Terry Peters discovered his passion for computers and coding through his high school football coach. Over his 20+ year career, he has helped organizations shape their digital strategies through user research, systems design, and user-focused experiences. His systems perspective emphasizes the importance of employee experience within technological and digital design—prioritizing their voices to create solutions that truly make things better.We discuss Terry's journey into management information systems and eventually user experience. We explore the challenges of requirements gathering, the role of AI as a supportive tool in human-centered design (rather than a replacement), and Terry's work with Veracity, now part of RGP, where empathy is central to projects that impact employees' work and lives.Finally, we reflect on the ethos of user experience: improving people's lives and making things better. By integrating diverse perspectives, we can build tools that help people achieve that goal.Terry Peters on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/terry-peters-m-s-8198b61b/RGP: https://rgp.com/
This "Meet the Guru" episode introduces Alex Naber, a seasoned medical device consultant at Greenlight Guru, offering listeners a deep dive into his background and expertise. Alex shares his journey, beginning in bioengineering and progressing through roles in complaints, field action, design quality, and post-market quality management at a major orthopedic company (Zimmer Biomet). His experience highlights the crucial need for expert guidance in navigating complex MedTech regulations and quality management system (QMS) pathways.Alex and host Etienne Nichols discuss the immense value of having a diverse internal team of consultants to draw from—a collective knowledge base that helps solve complex problems for clients. They emphasize that quality professionals don't need to know "everything" but rather must have the right resources and a "beginner's mindset" to guide companies effectively. The conversation also explores how modern software, like Greenlight Guru's QMS and EDC solutions, eliminates common industry pain points, such as fragmented, error-prone spreadsheet-based design controls by building true, linked traceability directly into the eQMS.Finally, the discussion touches on the philosophical "why" of the medical device industry: the patient. Alex shares a personal story about how orthopedics improved his grandfather's quality of life, underscoring the importance of maintaining a patient-first ethos. They conclude by discussing the upcoming QMSR transition, reassuring listeners that compliance is manageable, especially for those already adhering to ISO 13485.Key Timestamps[01:50] Alex Naber's MedTech Career Path: From Bioengineering to Design Quality and Post-Market Management.[04:30] The Power of Pooled Expertise: Why Greenlight Guru's Consultant Team is a "Sherpa up the mountain."[07:35] The Problem with Spreadsheets: Comparing traditional Design Control methods to modern eQMS traceability.[11:00] Accelerating Compliance: How Greenlight Guru's QMS Templates dramatically cut implementation time.[13:30] The Bloated QMS: Why adopting procedures from large corporations may hinder small-to-midsize companies.[16:00] Design Quality Explained: Marrying R&D/Product Development with QMS compliance.[21:30] The MedTech Ethos: Focusing on the patient and improving quality of life.[27:00] CAPA Management Insights: The critical distinction between Correction and Corrective Action.[30:25] Navigating the QMSR Transition: Reassurance that compliance isn't "that deep" if you are already ISO 13485 compliant.Quotes"It's a rewarding thing to just understand that you don't need to know everything. I think that's a thing that... people should realize and they should reach out to other people that are smarter or more experienced in realms that they don't understand." - Alex Naber"I think what got me into MedTech was more of the ethos behind it... We're creating products to make patients' lives better, to impact our world, our society in a positive manner, to give a better quality of life to individuals." - Alex NaberTakeawaysSeek a Unified Quality Solution: Fragmented quality processes (e.g., design controls in spreadsheets separate from the QMS) introduce significant regulatory risk. Adopting an eQMS, like the Greenlight Guru QMS solution, creates true traceability and dramatically streamlines compliance.Design Quality as a Partner, Not Police: Design Quality Engineers should actively partner with R&D, not...
The most transformative strategic leaders understand that building ever-larger organizational infrastructure is counterproductive. Instead, they leverage resources and achieve impact by engineering robust, trust-based networks.Jane Wei-Skillern, a Senior Fellow at UC Berkeley's Haas School of Business whose network leadership research has been downloaded over 31,000 times, reveals the four counterintuitive principles driving systemic success. This is a complete contrast to conventional growth thinking. Learn how to use decentralized influence to maximize resource effectiveness and generate sustainable, scalable impact. Paradigm Shifts: → Mission before Organization: Success is achieved by prioritizing a shared strategic objective over traditional organizational metrics, such as budget or internal infrastructure growth. → Trust not Control: Shifting from seeking headquarters dominance and enforcing internal hierarchy to establishing deep, relational foundations with trusted peers and collaborators. → Humility not Brand: Rejecting centralized brand management and resource accumulation in favor of leveraging shared intelligence across the broader ecosystem. → Constellations not Stars: Systemic impact is maximized when leaders work alongside peers as equals to build robust, enduring networks, rather than seeking individual organizational dominance.Ecosystem Impact: → Large, brand-driven organizations often struggle with internal politicking and learning barriers between headquarters and field offices. → Network leadership eliminates resource redundancies and increases efficiency, making limited resources "go further, go faster". → Leaders who reject the status of being the single "founder" or having the "best ideas" are better positioned to listen and observe intelligence from every corner of the world. → Robust networks generate organizational success more efficiently, effectively, and sustainably.The Innovation: Recognizing that scalable impact is achieved not by accumulating static resources or internal power bases, but by actively building an ecosystem of high-trust peer relationships. This approach fosters continuous collaboration and system-wide leverage.Strategic Application: Executives must audit whether current investments prioritize institutional growth or the engineering of high-trust, decentralized partnership ecosystems. Success hinges on designing a constellation structure that optimally distributes effort and knowledge.Strategic Reframe: In complex, hyper-connected systems that punish resource waste, ask: "Are we building a resource-draining institutional empire, or are we engineering a scalable, high-impact constellation structure built on leveraged peer-to-peer trust?" The most resilient Ecosystemic Futures are driven by influence through connection, not dominance through control. Guest: Jane Wei-Skillern, Senior Fellow, Center for Social Sector Leadership, UC Berkeley Haas School of Business Host: Marco Annunziata, Co-founder, Annunziata Desai AdvisorsSeries Hosts: Vikram Shyam, Lead Futurist, NASA Glenn Research CenterDyan Finkhousen, Founder & CEO, Shoshin WorksEcosystemic Futures is a Shoshin Works systems foresight series with NASA heritage.
In this episode of AV Trade Talk, host Katye McGregor Bennett sits down with Alexa Centeno, co‑owner of Systems Design & Integration (SDI Boston) and founder of the new VELLA HAUS franchise, to explore how premium home staging and home technology come together to sell faster, sell higher, and create lifelong clients. Alexa shares her journey from integrator to stager (without leaving integration behind), the moment a $10M project setback became rocket fuel, and why she's taking her staging brand national. You'll hear about: How SDI evolved from hanging TVs to delivering 20,000‑sq‑ft smart estates with lighting control, theaters, outdoor lifts, motorized shades, voice control and more. The origin story of VELLA HAUS: turning a last‑minute “no” into a thriving staging business that completed 77 homes last year—and the systems she uses to scale. Staging with real tech to create emotion and demand: framed displays, full theater seating with screens and speakers, landscape audio, and why these experiences become powerful AV lead generators. Education as a differentiator: helping builders plan for shade pockets, lighting, and infrastructure—so design and technology align from day one. The big announcement: VELLA HAUS has launched and is now accepting franchise applicants for a national luxury home staging franchise with protected territories—starting in Massachusetts—and a highly selective (≈1%) award process. Who they're looking for and how to raise your hand. A peek inside SDI Boston's experience center: a Listening Room for cinema demos, an Experience Room showcasing Lutron, Ketra, Leon, Coastal Source, outdoor living, and more—curated to inspire designers, architects, builders, and homeowners alike. Highlights from Katye's CEDIA Expo Smart Stage panel on design‑tech collaboration featuring Toni Sabatino (Toni Sabatino Style), Caitlin Stewart (Leon Speakers), Frank DeFilippis (Sonos), and Alexa Centeno (VELLA HAUS), and what those conversations signal for integrator–designer partnerships. Whether you're a designer, integrator, builder, or realtor, this conversation offers practical ideas for teaming up, differentiating your projects, and creating unforgettable client experiences before, during, and long after the sale. #avtradetalkpod
Traditional, unilateral, centralized control is obsolete. When autonomous systems generate orders of magnitude more data than they can transmit, intelligence must live at the edge - and this constraint is revolutionizing everything from spacecraft to supply chains to healthcare.William Van Dalsem, 42-year NASA veteran and Stanford adjunct lecturer, reveals why the future belongs to systems that think for themselves---not because it's elegant, but because physics demands it.The Paradigm Shift:→ The Edge Intelligence Imperative: Spacecraft orbiting Earth collect far more data than they can download---typically an order of magnitude difference. Factory sensors and autonomous vehicles face the same constraint. The bottleneck isn't computing power-it's bandwidth. Intelligence must live where decisions are made.→ From "What" to "How": Organizations fail by conflating objectives with methods. Saying you need to "land on Mars using retro rockets" eliminates every methodological alternative you haven't imagined. Separate the destination from the journey.→ The Modular Revolution: Van Dalsem's son built a state-of-the-art gaming computer from plug-and-play components---nearly supercomputer performance at home. What if spacecraft---or supply chains, or organizations---worked the same way? Standards enable innovation; vertical integration constrains it. Ecosystem Impact:→ Air traffic management evolved from one operator per aircraft to systems managing thousands of autonomous vehicles---the same pattern emerging in warehouse robotics, smart cities, and distributed manufacturing→ Google's autonomous vehicles trained on moon-and-back distances (250,000 miles), capturing 90-99% of scenarios, yet still encounter situations they haven't seen - AI lacks mental models of physical reality. When confused, systems must "phone home," whether navigating streetsor diagnosing patients→ The academia-industry-government "triad": diversity of perspective matters more than depth of expertise for solving novel problemsThe Strategic Insight: Self-aware systems must be designed from inception, not retrofitted. Adding sensors to a Model T after it has been built isn't feasible. GE's digital transformation showed that "industrial equipment" must become "smart equipment" architecturally, not as an afterthought.The Hidden Risk: LLMs hallucinate, lack context, and harm team dynamics when one "AI master" disconnects from collaborative processes. They're trained on historical data, embedding obsolete assumptions. Computational tools amplify, rather than replace, human judgment.Strategic Reframe: Where must decisions be made, and what intelligence lives at the edge versus the center? Whether managing drone fleets, manufacturing networks, or distributed teams, resilient ecosystems distribute cognition across nodes rather than concentrating it in command centers.The Van Dalsem Principle: When you specify both the "what" and the "how," you've eliminated every innovation you didn't imagine. Problem-focused innovation opens the aperture for solutions you might never imagine.Guest: William Van Dalsem, Retired NASA Ames, Adjunct Lecturer, Stanford UniversityHost: Dyan Finkhousen, Founder & CEO, Shoshin WorksEcosystemic Futures is a systems foresight series provided by Shoshin Works, evolved from our collaboration with NASA's Convergent Aeronautics Solutions Project.
JournoDAO on Green Pill: A powerful convo on building community in collapsing systems — from integrity vacuums and decentralized tech to leadership in the digital age. They unpack network states, parallel societies, and the fine line between human values and AI-driven futures.
This interview was recorded for GOTO Unscripted.https://gotopia.techRead the full transcription of this interview hereThomas Johnson - Co-Founder & CTO at MultiplayerJulian Wood - Serverless Developer Advocate at AWSRESOURCESTomhttps://x.com/tomjohnson3https://www.linkedin.com/in/tomjohnson3https://github.com/tomjohnson3Julianhttps://bsky.app/profile/julianwood.comhttps://twitter.com/julian_woodhttp://www.wooditwork.comhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/julianrwoodLinkshttps://www.multiplayer.appDESCRIPTIONJulian Wood and Tom Johnson explore the complexities of modern software development, with Tom sharing his journey from machine learning and distributed systems to founding Multiplayer, a company focused on simplifying development by automating documentation, debugging, and system design.They discuss the challenges of building and managing complex software architectures, especially with microservices and cloud platforms, and the need for better tooling to address these issues. Tom emphasizes the importance of simplicity, collaboration, and transparency in development, especially when it comes to API design and managing system dependencies. They also explore best practices for team communication, the evolving role of platform engineering, and the shift toward a future where infrastructure is abstracted away, allowing developers to focus on software creation.Together, they envision a world where better tools and AI lower the barrier to entry for developers, driving innovation and enabling more people to bring their ideas to life.RECOMMENDED BOOKSSimon Brown • Software Architecture for Developers Vol. 2David Farley • Modern Software EngineeringKim, Humble, Debois, Willis & Forsgren • The DevOps HandbookSimon Wardley • Wardley MapsSimon Wardley • Wardley Mapping, The KnowledgeDavid Anderson, Marck McCann & Michael O'Reilly • The Value Flywheel EffectMike Amundsen • Restful Web API Patterns & Practices CookbookBlueskyTwitterInstagramLinkedInFacebookCHANNEL MEMBERSHIP BONUSJoin this channel to get early access to videos & other perks:https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCs_tLP3AiwYKwdUHpltJPuA/joinLooking for a unique learning experience?Attend the next GOTO conference near you! Get your ticket: gotopia.techSUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL - new videos posted daily!
Lex chats with Jamie Burke - founder of Outlier Ventures, about the current state and future of Web3, decentralized finance, and the metaverse. Jamie highlights Outlier Ventures' impressive growth, with a portfolio of around 400 startups, and discusses successful projects like IOTA and Fetch.ai. The conversation delves into the open metaverse, emphasizing the importance of infrastructure and middleware in blending physical and digital realities. Jamie also explores the transformative role of AI in the metaverse and offers practical advice for entrepreneurs navigating this rapidly evolving landscape. Notable discussion points: 1.The “Post-Web” Is an Intent-Led Internet: Jamie Burke outlines a shift from today's attention-based web to an intent-driven internet, powered by AI agents, Web3 infrastructure, and DePIN. In this model, agents act on user intent, radically streamlining interactions and replacing much of today's web interface. 2. Web3 Will Be Run by Machines, Not People: Burke predicts that autonomous agents—not humans—will become the primary users of blockchains, making crypto “machine money.” As a result, products, brands, and processes matter less, while incentive systems and on-chain automation take center stage. 3. Founders Must Embrace Systems Thinking: In the Post-Web era, survival depends on designing self-optimizing systems, not just building products. Burke stresses that token engineering, incentive design, and value flow mapping will define the next generation of durable startups. MENTIONED IN THE CONVERSATION Topics: Web3, decentralized finance, metaverse, Open metaverse, Post web, Outlier Ventures, IOTA, Fetch.ai, accelerator program, AI, artificial intelligence, Agentic AI, agents, Web3, post-web, digital economy, blockchain technology ABOUT THE FINTECH BLUEPRINT
What agency can you identify in the systems you are in? And how can you use it to invite others to design with intention together? ...Josina Vink is a designer and researcher with expertise in health system transformation. They have extensive experience leading and facilitating participatory system and service design processes in health care, government, non-profit and community settings. Josina has worked as a service and systemic designer in healthcare internationally including at the Mayo Clinic in the United States, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health in Canada, and Experio Lab in Sweden. In their practice, they have developed new services, supported policy change, facilitated shifts in practices across sectors, and led social lab processes. Josina is currently Associate Professor of Service Design at the Oslo School of Architecture and Design in Norway. Their research explores how design can create profound and significant change in health and care by reshaping social structures. Today, Abbie and Josina explore Josina's emerging approach to design- specifically in health care systems, but also beyond that in our everyday lives, relationships, and social worlds- which empowers every member of the system to participate through dialogue, supports designing driven by adaptation, and sustains collective reflexivity that nurtures plurality and our ability to coordinate through discomfort....Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created, produced & hosted by Abbie VanMeter.Stories Lived. Stories Told. is an initiative of the CMM Institute for Personal and Social Evolution....Music for Stories Lived. Stories Told. is created by Rik Spann....Explore all things Stories Lived. Stories Told. here.Explore all things CMM Institute here.
Ruth Fisher, Ph.D., is a systems design researcher, modeler, and analyst. She studies markets to determine how environments shape outcomes. Dr. Fisher has 30 years of experience in the technology and healthcare industries and has worked on behalf of technology companies, early-stage researchers, physicians, and technology start-ups.Dr. Fisher came to cannabis in 2016 to help her brother figure out how to use medical cannabis to address his MS-induced neuropathic pain. Since then, she's become an ardent researcher and advocate for medical cannabis use. As an economist, she's also fascinated by cannabis technologies and market dynamics – how the industry is evolving for both medical and adult use, and how well the industry is serving the different market participants.Dr. Fisher is author of,The Medical Cannabis Primer: Ushering in the Golden Age of Marijuana.
On this episode of On Board Games, Erik and Bruce talk about games (and other things) they've played including: Flip 7 Endeavor Deep Sea Balatro Mobile Mini Poker Chips (BGG Thread here) Jackbox Survey Sample You can get a discount on Zencastr.com using this link. (30:26) Next, they talk about the systems behind game design, the AI of the game itself. ---------------------------------------------------------------- Inverse Genius: http://www.inversegenius.com/ Patreon account: http://www.patreon.com/obg Twitter: @onboardgames RSS Feed: http://onboardgames.libsyn.com/rss Email us: onboardgamesmailbag@gmail.com On Board Games Guild at Board Game Geek
Elizabeth Gentry, Ph.D., a solution value analyst at Philips and a part-time instructor for the University of Louisville and IISE, returns to ExpertISE to answer the question: "How do you incorporate feedback loops and continuous improvement in the systems you design or optimize?"
Dr. Vijay Janapa Reddi is an Associate Professor at Harvard University, and Vice President and Co-founder of MLCommons. He has made substantial contributions to mobile and edge computing systems, and played a key role in developing the MLPerf Benchmarks. Vijay has authored the machine learning systems book mlsysbook.ai, as part of his twin passions of education and outreach. He received the IEEE TCCA Young Computer Architect Award in 2016, has been inducted in the MICRO and HPCA Halls of Fame, and is a recipient of multiple best paper awards.
Passive House Podcast co-host Zack Semke sits down with Sarah Nuamah, board member of Passive House Northwest and a Systems Design and Services Agent at Small Planet Design. Sarah shares insights into her distinctive journey within the high-performance building industry. She discusses her passion for incorporating advanced building techniques into the realm of trades labor, with a focus on imparting these skills to a younger generation. Sarah's dedication to advocating for sustainable building practices, coupled with her commitment to social impact and environmental consciousness, serves as a driving force behind her impactful contributions to the industry.https://phnw.org/https://www.smallplanetsupply.com/Reimagine Buildings 2024https://www.accelevents.com/e/passive-house-acceleratorUpcoming Eventshttps://passivehouseaccelerator.com/articles/passive-house-weekly-january-1st-2024Thank you for listening to the Passive House Podcast! To learn more about Passive House and to stay abreast of our latest programming, visit passivehouseaccelerator.com. And please join us at one of our Passive House Accelerator LIVE! zoom gatherings on Wednesdays.
In a world where organizations constantly strive for efficiency and innovation, Design Systems have emerged as essential tools. They are pivotal in delivering greater value to users while simultaneously enhancing team productivity and satisfaction.Yet, these systems often stumble. Many companies face challenges in implementing and maintaining effective Design Systems.In our latest episode, Alen and Tom delve into these challenges with Dan Mall, a leading authority on Design Systems and the author of the new book "Design that Scales." Dan also runs Design System University, creating, collecting, and curating curriculum, content, and community to help enterprise teams design at scale.Previously, Dan ran design system consultancy SuperFriendly for over a decade. We discuss his experience running a successful distributed agency and his reflections on what he'd do differently a year after wrapping up this business.Our conversation also ventures into critical areas for design freelancers and agencies: pricing strategies and the evolving landscape of design subscription models. Drawing from his expertise and his book Pricing Design, Dan offers clarity on these often misunderstood topics.So join us as we uncover the intricacies of successfully implementing and gaining buy-in for Design Systems. Discover how to measure their impact meaningfully, and learn from Dan's extensive experience in running a distributed agency and navigating the complex world of design pricing.
**A Modern Nonprofit Podcast Episode: Innovating Nonprofit Programs with Systems & Design Thinking** Hey Nonprofit Champions! Ever felt the challenge of marrying the needs of your community with the demands of your funders?
Dr. J Metz (@drjmetz, blog), Technical Director of Systems Design at AMD and Chair of SNIA BoD, has been on our show before discussing SNIA research directions. We decided this year to add an annual podcast to discuss highlights from their Storage Developers Conference 2023 (SDC23). Dr, J is working at AMD to help raise … Continue reading "155: GreyBeards SDC23 wrap up podcast with Dr. J Metz, Technical Dir. of Systems Design AMD and Chair of SNIA BoD"
On this episode, Enterprise Agility Coach Om Patel responds and discusses some typical complaints or gripes with agile practices and agilists in general.0:00 Topic Intro: Gripes with Agile0:26 Om's Immediate Response2:25 Agile Has No Deadlines5:08 Lack of Product7:30 Giving Deadlines9:43 No Documentation11:47 Formality of Handoffs16:36 No Long Term Planning21:31 Systems Design & Architecture25:20 Locking Down Scope (Scope Creep)28:04 Inadequate Testing32:36 Wrap-Up= = = = = = = = = = = =Watch it on YouTubeSubscribe to our YouTube Channel= = = = = = = = = = = =Apple Podcasts:https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/agile-podcast/id1568557596Google Podcasts:https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkcy5idXp6c3Byb3V0LmNvbS8xNzgxMzE5LnJzcwSpotify:https://open.spotify.com/show/362QvYORmtZRKAeTAE57v3Amazon Music:https://music.amazon.com/podcasts/ee3506fc-38f2-46d1-a301-79681c55ed82/Agile-Podcast= = = = = = = = = = = =
What are endogenous and exogenous technologies, and how can this framework help us bring our ideas to life? Join Modern Mantra founders Nick and Elijah as they catch up on the concepts that have been circulating for them recently. Elijah starts by sharing around his recent explorations with music and plant medicine. Find out how making music has deepened his connection with nature, and expanded his understanding of endogenous tools: our inbuilt technologies, such as the breath and the voice.Turning to the ‘exogenous' - our external, tangible technologies - what happens as we start visualizing the invisible? Nick discusses the tech that could change the landscape for healers, and envisions what becomes possible when our inner dimensions begin to synthesise with the digital scape.Tune in to get inspired by ancient wisdom, fresh ideas and new innovation for accessing your core essence, and unlocking the creative magic to start manifesting your visions into reality.Show notes:04:52 Tapping into Icaros, the frequencies of nature14:07 Endogenous and exogenous technologies20:16 The body as an interface: ancient practices for recentering25:46 Music making for intimacy with nature, self and others33:24 Digitally visualising the human energy field44:33 When modern science catches up with ancient wisdomThanks for listening! Follow us on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or find us on LinkedIn! Join the ModernMantra.co mailing list here.
Welcome to episode number 16 of the FITFO Podcast, where I have conversations with amazing dads, moms, and thought leaders of all different industries to help me figure out how to become the father I want to be for my young girls. I'm pumped to have you all here for another amazing conversation and this is another first for me, having a husband and wife duo on the pod. These two are accomplished authors, high achievers in their respective industries, new parents and all around resilient individuals who have overcome alcoholism and drug addiction together. Sarah Alaimo is a Career Happiness Coach specializing in serving women in recovery. Sarah is also an International best-selling author, Human Resources leader and Recovery Advocate. She is a Southern California native massively deprived of sunshine while living in the Pacific Northwest. She is a mom to baby son Jack and one-eyed black Pomeranian, Baron. Among her favorite things in life, she would list ice cream, the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim baseball, travel adventures and of course, John. While she would love to say that she has learned moderation since getting sober in 2015, the fact that she listed ice cream before her husband really says it all. John has over twenty years of professional experience developing solutions that improve operational excellence across multiple industries. He is a connector of people and ideas and a passionate innovator invested in pioneering initiatives that contribute to meaningful change. He is also a veteran of the US Navy, identifies with having both apparent and non-apparent disabilities, is neurodiverse, and is in recovery from a history of mental illness all of which play a key part of who he is and the value he delivers. As a result, John has become a leader advocating for mental health and disability inclusion driving innovations across government, healthcare, and business to help create a culture shift with how employees are supported in the workplace. John serves as the Vice President of Amazon's People with Disabilities (AmazonPwD) Affinity Group and is the Founder of Amazon's Mental Health & Well-Being Affinity Group. He holds a BS in Nuclear Engineering Technology and Graduate Certificate in Systems Design and Management from MIT. Time stamps: Intros: Sarah 3:30 and John @ 5:45 8:20 John's new book - and talking unconscious biases and mental health as component of DEI 12:15 how they are approaching inclusion in the household 17:50 Book writing, launches and group publishing 21 how the writing process helped the recovery 24:42 Mental health and addressing that in public 33 how they approached coming out and admitting they had a problem 34:19 how they would recommend someone talking to a loved one battling addiction 37:42 how can companies approach hiring, and engaging with their employees on these topics? 38:53 business toolkits for companies to use with recovery friendly workplace, mental health, disability inclusion and more 42 DUI on background and how to overcome that when looking for a new job Referenced in the Show: Sarah Alaimo.com IG: Sarahdianealaimo LinkedIn: John - https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-alaimo-shrm-cp-46097024 Sarah - https://www.linkedin.com/in/sarahdalaimo
Rocket scientist Ben Haldeman is on a mission to create a blueprint of life on Earth (from sacred plants to animal and human DNA) and send it out into the universe.In conversation with Nick, Ben introduces his astronomical venture LifeShip, the Noah's Ark of the new space age, that has already sent the genomes of 500 species into the cosmos.The intention? To back up Earth and spread life to the stars. The dream? To populate new worlds with these seeds of earthly life, consciousness and culture.Tune in as Nick and Ben uncover the magnitude of this mission, and the giant leap of expansive opportunity and existential inquiry that LifeShip is launching humanity into.Ben HaldemanBen is a space entrepreneur involved in companies at the intersection of space, longevity, biology, and consciousness. He is founder of LifeShip, a community space movement with a mission to spread the seeds of life to the stars. LifeShip's first mission is a DNA seed bank time capsule on the Moon. LifeShip's products allow people to preserve and propagate their DNA, story, and digital twin avatar across space and time. Ben was an early engineer at Planet Labs where he designed the camera used on hundreds of satellites to record our changing planet. He built a global network of dozens of robotic telescopes to find new exoplanets at LCOGT. In grad school at UC Berkeley, Ben built instruments to look for life on Mars.https://www.lifeship.com/https://www.instagram.com/lifeship/https://www.instagram.com/benlifeshipShow notes:00:03:45 - Receiving a transmission to send seeds to the stars00:10:23 - Introducing Lifeship: the Noah's Ark of the New Space Age00:16:20 - Making space exploration accessible00:21:28 - Rippling life into the universe, from a capsule the size of a coin00:27:23 - A democratized, decentralized movement for humanity00:31:51 - The importance and responsibility of continuing life beyond Earth00:41:06 - The roadmap from here? Earth guardianship, personal growth and human legacy.00:51:59 - When the universe teases you with alternative life pathsThanks for listening! Follow us on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or find us on LinkedIn! Join the ModernMantra.co mailing list here.
In this episode of "The Rise Productive," hosts Demetri and Chantz sit down with aNotioneer, an expert in systems design and the future of AI. They delve into the world of artificial intelligence and explore its potential to revolutionize productivity in the workplace. They discuss the challenges of designing effective systems, the importance of collaboration and communication in the workplace, and how AI can help streamline business processes. Tune in to this fascinating conversation to learn more about the future of productivity and how AI can help us work smarter, not harder. Thank you as always for listening. What did you think of this episode? Please leave us your thoughts about the episode and a rating on Apple Podcasts. We'll be responding to comments every Saturday on the main podcast! RESOURCES & LINKS:
Darius Mora, CEO of Vitality Therapeutics, channels learnings from his personal healing journey to develop AI technology that can diagnose mental health conditions, giving individuals sovereignty over their personal growth.What happens as we begin optimising our wellbeing with the aid of technology?Speaking to the dangers of ‘living life like a self help book', Darius recounts his own story of burning out despite hitting all the markers of a healthy and mindful lifestyle.Given how unique and subjective our lived experience and learnt responses are, providing advice and emotional support to others becomes a delicate act.With a growing demand for therapy and mental health care, how can we harness artificial intelligence to support the emotional evolution of humankind?Darius and Nick unpack the responsibility that comes with integrating AI into the mental health sphere. They touch on the importance of ethical boundaries, and of awareness around our human, emotional fragility.Finally, Darius lets us in on the profound realisations he's had on his own path to growth, integrity and deepened connection.Darius Mora is a dedicated advocate for mental health, and CEO of Vitality Therapeutics. His company focuses on creating groundbreaking technology that can diagnose depression through voice analysis alone. Driven by personal experience, Darius became deeply invested in mental health after facing a significant burnout episode. Through his own healing journey, he discovered the powerful potential of combining cutting-edge technology with time-honored wisdom to transform the way we approach mental well-being. Darius firmly believes that only when we are becoming the best versions of our selves can we really start serving the people around us, and contribute our gifts.Website: https://www.dariusmora.com/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/feeling.vitality/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/vitality-therapeutics/ Show notes11:58 The perils of advice-giving: navigating our individuated mind maps17:20 Ethical boundaries and a safety net for AI24:43 Is emotional attachment to digital spirits inevitable?31:15 An emotional coach chatbot for mental health diagnosis44:37 Burnout epiphany: zooming out to appreciate the macros of life51:50 Integrity, change, and healthy attachment in relationships1:01:46 What's your biggest vector for personal growth?1:05:23 Combatting avoidance tactics with shadow workThanks for listening! Follow us on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or find us on LinkedIn! Join the ModernMantra.co mailing list here.
Multi-talented Modern Mantra creative and designer, Nibras Ibnomer, joins studio co-founder Elijah for a conscious, emotive and fluid exploration that will resonate with all artists and creatives.To begin, they discuss one of the biggest blocks to authentic self expression: fear of judgement, and our unconscious bias towards likeability. This programming permeates how we show up in the world, and ultimately, how we create. How to rewrite these codes?Nibras and Elijah radically reframe the creative process from a holistic perspective: shifting the focus from the creative end-product, to how we create.How can integrating embodiment practices and attunement rituals into our creative process support us in transcending the age-old trope of the suffering artist?The conversation concludes with a deeper paradigm shift: the creator as a divine vessel for ideas and creations, not as owner. What can happen when you embody this approach in your own creative pursuits? Tune in to find out.Highlights08:38 Mirrors of Self: whose perception of us matters?16:53 Internal like-ability programming, and how we self modulate25:21 How do you feel in your body as you create?29:21 Creating without suffering: rituals for coming home to the body37:45 Holistic attunement practices for working as a collective44:47 Divine creation: The artist as vessel vs ownerNibras IbnomerMulti-disciplinary creative, venture designer, user experience designer, writer, and strategist. Working on moving towards ‘Humaning beautifully': figuring out emotions, wellbeing, psycho-spiritual flourishing and sharing in many multi-media forms along the way. Recently a resident at Medley Berlin working on creating metaphor-based maps of healing modalities, tools and techniques. Previously a product designer in London and remotely with Cleo, Stint and others.Connect with NibrasTwitter: https://twitter.com/heynibrasWebsite: https://www.heynibras.com/Thanks for listening! Follow us on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok or find us on LinkedIn! Join the ModernMantra.co mailing list here.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
In the world of computer software, we design code based on what we call ‘tight' or ‘loose' coupling. Tightly coupled systems make assumptions about what they connect to – that they are stable and predictable. Loosely coupled systems better account for flexibility and change. However when I look at the world today, I see the 21st century is the result of humans building ONLY tightly coupled systems. In this episode, I'm going to deep dive what this means and why it leads to this boom & bust world that we are all being subjected to.
TODAY'S GUEST David Peter Stroh is the bestselling author of Systems Thinking for Social Change: A Practical Guide for Solving Complex Problems, Avoiding Unintended Consequences, and Achieving Lasting Results. For the past 40 years, David has helped leaders to apply systems thinking to organizational strategy, and achieve breakthrough, sustainable change. He is a founding partner of the influential consulting firm Bridgeway Partners, a faculty member of the Academy for Systems Change, and a charter member of the Society for Organizational Learning. EPISODE SUMMARY In this conversation we talk about: How he was exposed as a child to both natural and urban complexity growing up in Inwood, at the very northern tip of Manhattan, NY. How he fell in love with transportation systems, but ended up studying Organization Development at MIT. How his search for greater impact and a seat at the table led him down the Systems Thinking path, and eventually to founding a consulting firm alongside Charlie Kiefer, Robert Fritz, and Peter Senge, later of The Fifth Discipline fame. We also discuss: What's a system, and what's systems thinking? Why do complex systems often yield unintended consequences? What are the benefits of systems thinking, especially in the world of impact? What does it tell us about wealth inequality and poverty? And why David has come to see systems thinking as an almost spiritual practice? David's book and his blog are must reads for anyone interested in making deep and lasting positive impact, and avoid undesirable consequences. And this conversation can serve as a good, and I think, exciting intro to the topic. So let's jump right in with David Peter Stroh. TIMESTAMP CHAPTERS [3:34] Life During Covid [6:00] The Advantages of Various Points of View [12:17] The Birth of Innovation Associates [18:05] Defining Systems Thinking [22:57] The Role of Intent In Systems [33:32] The Benefits of The Systems Thinking Approach In Creating Change [42:56] The Spiritual Aspects of Systems Thinking [59:03] A Sermon for Those Who Wish to Create Change EPISODE LINKS David's Links
home—body podcast: conversations on astrology, intuition, creativity + healing
Reframing productivity is a very January thing to do, yes? How can we release ourselves from the outer forces, inner voices, and productivity gurus driving us toward more-more-more? And when we do choose another path, how do we set up our work so that we actually bring our dreams to life — without getting lost in ambiguity, confusion or overwhelm?“How do we strike the right balance of getting things done but while also feeling inspired + alive?”I'm joined by Amelia Hruby, my friend, podcast producer + co-teacher of our upcoming course Living Systems. Together we discuss all things productivity through a feminist, ecology lens; and we share the systems + frameworks that allow us to live more in alignment with our internal rhythms, energetic capacities + ever-changing seasons.This episode is for anyone who wants to do life, work + business your way, and needs support figuring out what your way really is.