Podcasts about Tui

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Latest podcast episodes about Tui

Alles auf Aktien
Die Wahrheit über Fußball-Aktien und die Liste der WM-Gewinner

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 11, 2026 22:17 Transcription Available


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Lea Oetjen und Nando Sommerfeldt über den Absturz von Super ‌Micro Computer, das Dilemma von Oracle und Übernahmefantasie bei Hugo Boss. Außerdem geht es um Qualcomm, Arm Holdings, Broadcom, Advanced Micro Devices (AMD), Micron Technology, Marvell Technology, Tesla, Frasers Group, Fielmann, BMW, Mercedes-Benz Group, Volkswagen, Allianz, Deutsche Telekom, Siemens, Adobe, Galatasaray, Aarhus GF, FC Porto, Celtic FC, Manchester United, Juventus FC, Fenerbahçe SK, Borussia Dortmund, SS Lazio, Trabzonspor, Adidas, Puma, Nike, Hyundai Motor, Heineken, TUI, Sagax, B&M European Value Retail, Cranswick, SalMar, Fresnillo, Drax Group, Bakkafrost, Man Group, Zealand Pharma, flatexDEGIRO, Nemetschek, Mycronic, Bavarian Nordic, JD Sports Fashion und CTS Eventim. Hört „WELTMeister“ mit diesem Link bei Spotify: open.spotify.com/show/7CX3rSNRL11YEnW7IzkWIS Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

Radio Vigo
Hoy por Hoy Vigo (10/06/2026)

Radio Vigo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2026 90:00


Magazine de ocio, actualidad y cultura de Vigo.El Celta de Baloncesto ha renovado a Diana Cabrera y Maja Meraly de cara a su regreso a la Liga Femenina Endesa. En el ámbito cultural, Galicia acoge una exposición con 200 tesoros del British Museum sobre las islas del Pacífico, se anuncian las actividades de la Festa da Rosa y se avanza en la creación del museo municipal de Redondela para la obra de Ángel Barros. Por otro lado, la plataforma Loita critica que el hospital Álvaro Cunqueiro de Vigo aún no aplique las cesáreas humanizadas por falta de matronas, mientras que en Tui se aprueba un reconocimiento extrajudicial de crédito para pagar a proveedores. En educación, padres y alumnos protestan por la falta de claridad en la selectividad, y en el sector jurídico se analiza la complejidad legal de desheredar a un hijo por maltrato psicológico y un fallo judicial que anula una sanción urbanística en Vigo. Finalmente, se ofrecen consejos ecológicos para combatir plagas, se anuncia el inicio de la gira de Cadena Dial en la playa de Samil, Juan Tallón presenta su nueva novela y se destaca la necesidad de relevo generacional para los alfombristas del Corpus en Ponteareas.

Alles auf Aktien
Ultimative SpaceX-Anleitung und unterschätztes Einzeltitel-Risiko

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 9, 2026 23:49 Transcription Available


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Lea Oetjen und Daniel Eckert über die Siri-Revolution von Apple, einen Milliarden-Deal von Intel und eine profitable Erfrischung von Adidas. Außerdem geht es um Nvidia, Alphabet, Marvell Technology, Micron, Applied Materials, KLA Corp., Lam Research, Corning, Amazon, Vonovia, TAG Immobilien, Aroundtown, LEG Immobilien, Airbus, Tui, Lufthansa, BASF, Symrise, Evonik, Lanxess, Zealand Pharma, Eli Lilly, Novo Nordisk, Strategy, Jenoptik, SMA Solar, Westwing, Krones, Microsoft, Broadcom, TSMC, Meta, Tesla, iShares MSCI ACWI (WKN: A1JMDF) und Invesco FTSE All-World ETF (WKN: A3D7QX). Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản
#414 Học - Bước lùi của sự phát triển? - Trò chuyện cùng Tiểu My (Educational Content Creator)

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 24:17 Transcription Available


Học có phải bước lùi của sự phát triển?Năm 2010, có một thí nghiệm cực kỳ kinh điển tên là Marshmallow Challenge.Luật chơi đơn giản: cho bạn 20 que mì Ý, một cuộn dây, một cuộn băng keo, một cục marshmallow. 18 phút. Ai xây cái tháp nào đứng được, đỡ được cục marshmallow trên đỉnh, cao nhất, thắng.Tom Wujec, diễn giả TED Talk nổi tiếng, đã cho hàng ngàn người chơi: kỹ sư, kiến trúc sư, MBA, CEO, luật sư, và mấy bé mẫu giáo. Đố bạn, ai chiến thắng?Không phải những người có bằng MBA. Không phải luật sư. Hai nhóm đó là nhóm kết quả thấp nhất.  Người thắng - gây sốc cả hội trường - là mấy đứa nhỏ mẫu giáo. Mấy đứa nhỏ xây tháp cao hơn cả CEO, cao hơn luật sư, những người, (tạm gọi) là học ở bậc cao hơn.Tại sao?Vì người lớn có quy trình. Có công thức. Có "kinh nghiệm." Dân MBA dành phần lớn thời gian ngồi bàn ai sẽ là leader, vẽ kế hoạch, phân vai, thảo luận cấu trúc. Rồi 17 phút sau mới đặt cục marshmallow lên đỉnh. Sập. Hết giờ. Còn mấy đứa nhỏ thì không có công thức nào hết. Tụi nó không tranh nhau làm leader. Tụi nó bắt đầu chơi luôn. Đặt marshmallow lên trước, xây nhỏ, sập, xây lại, sập tiếp, xây lại nữa. Tới phút 18, tháp tụi nó đứng vững, vì đã được test sập rất nhiều lần rồi. Trong ngôn ngữ khởi nghiệp, tụi nhỏ đang làm điều mà MBA mất 2 năm để học: test MVP liên tục.Người lớn không thua vì kém thông minh. Người lớn thua vì có quá nhiều công thức thành công trong đầu. Công thức đó từng đúng trong một bối cảnh nào đó, một thị trường nào đó, một thời điểm nào đó. Rồi họ tưởng nó đúng mãi mãi.Tui làm kinh doanh đủ lâu để nhận ra một sự thật hú hồn:"Thứ giêt chế.t một người thành công, chính là công thức thành công của họ."Nokia có làm gì sai đâu. Họ chỉ làm đúng cái họ đã giỏi. Hết.Cá nhân tui thấy, lúc mà bản thân vỗ ngực: lúc mình nói được câu "tao có quy trình rồi, làm vậy là chắc ăn" đó cũng là lúc nguy hiểm nhất. Vì quy trình là con dao hai lưỡi. Nó cho mình tốc độ nhưng nó cũng vẽ sẵn lối mòn để mình không thấy đường nào khác.Bạn có nhận ra công thức thành công cũ của mình đang biến thành cái bẫy chưa?Tập mới Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp cùng Tùng BT nằm trong một series hoàn toàn mới mang tên "Lãnh đạo tuổi 20", với chủ đề "Học - Bước lùi của sự phát triển" cùng Tiểu My, một bạn 22 tuổi nhưng có hơn 5 năm kinh nghiệm trong lĩnh vực khởi nghiệp, từng nhận học bổng Fulbright rồi dừng giữa chừng, hiện đang là Business Development của một tổ chức về giáo dục. Tụi tui nói về marshmallow, về lối mòn của người thành công, về sự học và về cách thoát ra khỏi cái bẫy do chính mình tạo ra. Xem ngay dưới bình luận.Coi xong thử ngẫm lại: công thức thành công nào của bạn đang bắt đầu thành cái bẫy rồi mà bạn chưa dám thừa nhận? Và nếu bạn thích series này, cho tui một comment, một tương tác phản hồi để tui có thêm xí động lực làm nhiều nội dung hay hơn, "Khởi nghiệp real Kết quả thật" nữa nhaa

Radio Vigo
Hoy por Hoy Vigo (08/06/2026)

Radio Vigo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 8, 2026 90:00


Magazine de ocio, actualidad y cultura de Vigo.La actualidad de Vigo y el Baixo Miño, destacando la celebración del congreso "Industria do Mar" en el Real Club Náutico de Vigo sobre innovación y sostenibilidad, y la exposición de tesoros del British Museum en la Ciudad de la Cultura de Galicia. Asimismo, se detalló la investigación del archivero de la catedral de Tui, Abelino Bouzón, sobre las raíces gallegas del Papa en San Salvador de Torneiros ante su visita a España, y se repasó la previsión del tiempo con la llegada de nubes y posibles lluvias antes de una mejoría. El programa recogió quejas de los oyentes por citas médicas y semáforos inoperativos en la calle Tomás Alonso, repasó la lucha del Celta de Vigo por el ascenso y el debut de la selección en el Mundial, y cerró con entrevistas a Carolina Jiménez sobre efectos visuales e inteligencia artificial, y a Andrea González sobre el festival de música "IKFEM" en Tui.

The Unforget Yourself Show
Insight Out Leadership - from burnt-out marketing executive to stability coach with Tui Fleming

The Unforget Yourself Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2026 33:07


Tui Fleming, founder of her executive coaching practice and creator of the Pulse app, a strengths-based leadership business that helps CEOs and corporate high-flyers lead with heart, integrity, and what she calls insight out leadership.Through a multidisciplinary approach that blends strengths-based coaching, narrative therapy, breath work, guided meditation, and movement practices, Tui helps high achievers reprogramme old patterns and return to a steadier, more grounded way of leading.Now, Tui's journey from a burnt-out marketing and PR executive in some of New Zealand's biggest companies to a stability coach for leaders demonstrates how redefining worth can transform both career and identity.And while challenging external metrics of success with her mantra “stability before agility,” she's helping leaders build inner strength first, so they can show up powerfully for the people they lead.Here's where to find more:Website: www.tuifleming.comLinkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/in/tuiflemingInsta: https://www.instagram.com/tuifleming/?hl=enApp: https://pulsebytui.mvt.so________________________________________________Welcome to The Unforget Yourself Show where we use the power of woo and the proof of science to help you identify your blind spots, and get over your own bullshit so that you can do the fucking thing you ACTUALLY want to do!We're Mark and Katie, the founders of Unforget Yourself and the creators of the Unforget Yourself System and on this podcast, we're here to share REAL conversations about what goes on inside the heart and minds of those brave and crazy enough to start their own business. From the accidental entrepreneur to the laser-focused CEO, we find out how they got to where they are today, not by hearing the go-to story of their success, but talking about how we all have our own BS to deal with and it's through facing ourselves that we find a way to do the fucking thing.Along the way, we hope to show you that YOU are the most important asset in your business (and your life - duh!). Being a business owner is tough! With vulnerability and humor, we get to the real story behind their success and show you that you're not alone._____________________Find all our links to all the things like the socials, how to work with us and how to apply to be on the podcast here:https://linktr.ee/unforgetyourself

Radio Vigo
La Ventana Metropolitana (05/06/2026)

Radio Vigo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2026 19:58


La Ventana Metropolitana.El programa de radio local abordó los eventos más destacados de Vigo y sus alrededores, destacando la feria del coche de ocasión en el Ifevi y la fiesta de la rosa con su feria del vino rosado. En el ámbito de la seguridad, se informó sobre una persecución policial que terminó en accidente, la detención de un prófugo internacional en Tui y la investigación por robos en viviendas. Por su parte, el sector salud registró un trasvase de casi 800 pacientes desde el Hospital Povisa hacia el Complejo Hospitalario Universitario de Vigo, mientras que en el plano deportivo se confirmó que el Celta de Vigo dispondrá de 800 asientos en la grada de Gol para el inicio de la temporada. La política local estuvo marcada por la convocatoria de un pleno extraordinario debido al accidente mortal en las fiestas de Matamá, en medio de críticas de la oposición por la gestión del caso. En materia de vivienda, se avanzó en nuevos desarrollos urbanísticos en Navia que sumarán vivienda protegida, coincidiendo con la convocatoria de una manifestación por el acceso a una vivienda digna. Finalmente, se anunciaron mejoras en la estación de tratamiento de agua de Oitavén, el impulso a la Formación Profesional Dual en el sector tecnológico y diversas actividades culturales como el Corpus Christi de Ponteareas o la concentración de motos clásicas en Mos.

BIT-BUY-BIT's podcast
The Big Freeze | THE BITCOIN BRIEF 82

BIT-BUY-BIT's podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2026 64:12 Transcription Available


A bi-weekly news show informing you on the latest in Bitcoin, privacy and open source tech hosted by Ungovernables, Max and Q. AOBFTF with ZachQ eurotripNew Foundation websiteNEWSU.S. Treasury seizes nearly 1B in Iran-linked crypto, Tether freezes 344M USDT on Tron https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/u-s-treasury-the-united-states-iranThe Mined in America Act would put the Bitcoin network at riskhttps://www.therage.co/mined-in-america-act-bitcoin-at-risk/CVE in Core Lightning: Optech #407 disclosurehttps://bitcoinops.org/en/newsletters/2026/05/29/Introducing Cube: Burak unveils a trustless Bitcoin smart contract L2https://medium.com/cube-bitcoin/introducing-cube-8b3702e470a5Published: May 2026Anonymous plaintiff sues for title to $293 billion in dormant Bitcoinhttps://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/anonymous-plaintiff-seeks-legal-bitcoinPublished: 2026-05-28The U.S. Constitution inscribed on the Bitcoin blockchain via expanded OP_RETURN https://bitcoinmagazine.com/news/someone-inscribed-the-constitution-bitcoinPublished: 2026-05-29RELEASESBitcoin Protocol, Core, Knots, SecurityCore Lightning v26.06rc2 — 2026-05-22Release candidate 2 for CLN 26.06. Documentation and gRPC interface refinements on top of rc1's graceful command, sendamount RPC, and BOLT12 payer-proof support. Routing-node operators should test on a non-production node before adopting.Eclair 0.14.0 — 2026-05-21Significant Lightning release from ACINQ. Final versions of channel splicing, simple taproot channels, and zero-fee commitments all ship in this version. This is the Eclair side of the same protocol work showing up in CLN and LDK. If you run an Eclair routing node, this is the upgrade to track.Hardware Signers and Hardware-Wallet AppsColdcard MK5 launch — 2026-05-29New flagship hardware. Larger Gorilla Glass screen, redesigned buttons, improved NFC, dual secure element architecture retained. Already supported in Bitcoin Safe 2.0.0rc0 from earlier this fortnight.Frostsnap 0.3.0 — 2026-05-27Headline change: deterministic firmware build with cryptographic digest verification. So end users can independently verify the firmware binary matches the source. That is the right direction for any hardware signer carrying real money.Keystone 3 v2.4.4 — 2026-05-26Wallet connection removal, Zcash SLIP39 support added, device verification fixes.Trezor Suite v26.5.1 — 2026-05-27 (FTD re-surfacing)Adds ERC-681 QR code support in the send form. Show editorial: only relevant if you use Trezor for Ethereum-side workflows, not a Bitcoin-only change.Ledger Live Desktop 4.5.0 — 2026-05-21Bridge integration refactoring across desktop and mobile.Ledger Live Mobile 4.6.0 — 2026-05-28Async API updates and bridge resolution improvements.Software WalletsSparrow Wallet 2.5.0 — 2026-05-21Headline feature: Silent Payments receiving wallets, including support for airgapped hardware wallet signers. Adds frigate.2140.dev as a Silent Payments capable public Electrum server, auto-selected when required. Plus a BIP32 derivation fallback when retrieving signing nodes for high-index inputs. This is the biggest privacy upgrade of the fortnight in any consumer-facing Bitcoin wallet, and the airgapped-signer support means Coldcard and similar users get it without going hot.Sparrow Frigate 1.5.3 — 2026-05-30Adds a privacy-preserving hourly aggregate of historical scan stats, locally generated server.features response when the backend returns a method-not-found error, improvements to the hosts field in server.features.Bitcoin Seed Tool 2.3.0 — 2026-05-19 (borderline, in grace)Educational interface redesign with violet accent color and integrated learning features.Nunchuk Android 2.5.2 — 2026-05-27"Bug fixes and improvements," nothing detailed publicly.Liana Business v0.1 — 2026-05-20First alpha of Liana's business product line. Environment variable support for signet testing. New product tier from Wizard Sardine for business-focused multisig with timelocked recovery.Peach Bitcoin 0.69.0 (build 350) — 2026-05-19Encrypted backup of custom payout addresses, restoration guidance, camera permission fix, push notification translations.Lightning, L2, ScalingPhoenix 2.8.0 — 2026-05-22UI fixes on Android: scanning inverted QR codes, a button to use the entire available balance when paying Lightning.Phoenixd 0.8.0 — 2026-05-20Upgraded lightning-kmp dependency to 1.12.0.ZEUS 13.0.2 — 2026-05-21Stable release of the RC chain we previewed last fortnight. New default RGS server at rgs.zeusln.com with 15-minute graph updates instead of 3-hour. Improved clipboard, NFC, UI improvements.Arkade arkd v0.9.6 — 2026-05-26Package and component renaming, CI workflow improvements, golang version bump.Arkade TS SDK @arkade-os/sdk 0.4.32 — 2026-05-29Maintenance bump.Arkade TS SDK @arkade-os/boltz-swap 0.3.37 — 2026-05-29Maintenance bump on the Boltz-swap helper.ThunderHub v0.18.4 — 2026-05-29Native display formatting for trading distribution, better CLTV headroom in route building.Blink Mobile 2.4.49 — 2026-05-30Bug fix: removes ABI-prefixed versionCode overrides.LNbits v1.5.5-rc1 — 2026-05-24Release candidate.Mostro v0.17.4 — 2026-05-22Payout confirmation to winner, solver-directed dispute slash, concurrent taker bonds with first-to-lock wins, MOSTRO_NSEC_PRIVKEY environment variable, Yadio price tolerance fix.Bisq v1.10.1 — 2026-05-30Raises trade amount limits to 0.250 BTC after the v1.10.0 post-exploit reset. Adjusts risk-based reduction factors. Fixes a BSQ swap validation bug.Bisq v1.10.0 — 2026-05-17 (carries over from last fortnight as final tag on cutoff day)The post-incident hardening release we covered last fortnight: trade protocol validation, PGP supply-chain verification, 0.125 BTC initial cap, macOS Apple Silicon support.EcashCashu TS v4.5.1 — 2026-05-23Deprecates the current checkProofsStates method in favour of a v5-compatible one. Wallet builders should plan the migration.Fedimint SDK canary release — 2026-05-27React Native transport: flattened RPC payload, persistent callback. Rolling canary channel.Bitcoin Dev InfrastructureBDK FFI 3.0.0 — 2026-05-29Major version of the BDK language bindings. Anyone shipping a wallet on top of BDK should read the migration notes carefully.Liquid GDK 0.77.4 — 2026-05-27Rate-limiting error handling, Rust dependency updates, UTXO retrieval fixes, build improvements.Self-Hosting and Sovereignty InfraJoinMarket-NG 0.31.1 — 2026-05-30Privacy-critical fix: prevents a Sybil DoS where relayed !hp2 floods could starve a maker's own post-ioauth commitment broadcasts. Also installs whiptail in maker and taker container images so the jm-ng TUI works out of the box. JoinMarket-NG continues to ship hardening on a tight cadence.Tor Browser 15.0.14 — 2026-05-19 (borderline, in grace)Important Firefox security updates rolled in.Mullvad Browser 15.0.14 — 2026-05-19 (borderline, in grace)Firefox 140.11.0esr base, NoScript 13.6.19.1984.Nostr (Bitcoin-relevant)Amethyst 1.11.0 — 2026-05-20Restores Lightning Address and LNURL fields in Edit Profile. Useful: those fields were missing for a stretch and creators relying on zaps as a revenue stream were getting cut off in profile edits.EDUCATIONTFTC retrospective: Why Keonne Rodriguez is in prison for building Samourai Wallet — 2026-05-28Bitcoin Optech Newsletter #407 — 2026-05-29CLN vulnerability disclosure (already in news), transcripts from a May Bitcoin Core developer meeting covering SwiftSync, cluster mempool, Erlay redesign, package relay. Eclair 0.14.0 and CLN 26.06rc2 release context.Bitcoin Optech Newsletter #406 — 2026-05-22BIP322 advances to Complete status with human-readable prefixes and PSBT support. TCP hole punching for Bitcoin nodes behind NATs (we flagged this Delving Bitcoin thread last fortnight). Services section highlights Ibis Wallet (BDK-based with coin control and Tor), LDK Server, Mempool.space taproot visualization.Bitcoin Optech #406 recap podcast — 2026-05-26Discussion of BIP322 updates, TCP hole punching, Ibis Wallet, LDK Server, Mempool.space v3.3.0, peer-observer infrastructure.Bitcoin Optech #405 recap podcast — 2026-05-19Bitcoin Core CVE-2024-52911 discussion and the UTXO-set P2P sharing draft BIP with Fabian Jahr.Rainey's book on financial censorshipMentioned by Gladstein on 2026-05-21 as quoting his work on the war on cash and the blocksize war. Plug in education / further reading.TO DONATE TO ROMAN'S DEFENSE FUND: https://freeromanstorm.com/donateHELP GET SAMOURAI A PARDONSIGN THE PETITION ----> https://www.change.org/p/stand-up-for-freedom-pardon-the-innocent-coders-jailed-for-building-privacy-tools DONATE TO THE FAMILIES ----> https://www.givesendgo.com/billandkeonneSUPPORT ON SOCIAL MEDIA ---> https://billandkeonne.org/VALUE…

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản
#413 Lãnh đạo tuổi 24 - Trò chuyện cùng Thới Anh Khôi (Operation Manager Saigon Tếu)

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2026 30:57 Transcription Available


22 TUỔI, LÀM TRÁI NGÀNH, ĐÙNG MỘT CÁI SẾP BẢO: "LÊN LÀM MANAGER ĐI EM!"Phản ứng đầu tiên của bạn sẽ là gì?"Mình có đủ năng lực không? Lỡ làm bể việc thì sao? Đang yên đang lành, ôm cái ghế này có khi Bão Tố (BT) tới...Đó y chang là những gì thằng đệ tui trải qua khi tui kêu bạn lên làm Lead team Vận hành của Sài Gòn Tếu (và giờ bạn đã là Manager cứng của một phòng ban lớn nhất nhì team).1. Vùng xám của thế hệ trẻ: Muốn nhưng không dámCó một điều tui thấy hơi ngược đời. Người ta hay gắn mác thế hệ trẻ bây giờ làm hai thái cực: Một là tham vọng ngút ngàn, mới 2x tuổi đã muốn làm sếp nọ sếp kia. Hai là chê các bạn lười, chỉ thích sống chill, sống nhàn, không muốn gánh thêm trách nhiệm.Nhưng chẳng ai nói về một vùng xám ở giữa: Rất nhiều bạn MỤỐN lắm nhưng KHÔNG DÁM. Vì tự thấy mình không xứng đáng với những gì được trao.Sau buổi trò chuyện với người em mà tui luôn tự hào - Anh Khôi, tui mới rút ra một điều: Nhiều bạn sợ vì nghĩ rằng, khoác cái áo "Leader" hay "Manager" vào là tự nhiên mình phải biến thành siêu nhân. Phải quyết đoán, phải gánh vác thế giới và tuyệt đối... không được làm sai.Đáng buồn là cái suy nghĩ đó vô tình tước mất cơ hội để các bạn được bước ra khỏi vùng an toàn, được lớn lên. Để rồi 3 năm, 5 năm sau nhìn lại, tặc lưỡi tiếc nuối: "Nếu lúc đó mình dám thử một lần thì sao...?"Đúng vậy, tui nói với Khôi: "Thử đi em, sai thì làm lại, không được thì xuống thôi. Có sao đâu!" Ai dè bạn thử một phát... 2 năm. Giờ muốn xuống cũng hổng biết xuống đâu nữa. Đùa một chút, nhưng thiệt sự muốn chia sẻ với các bạn một góc nhìn để các bạn tự tin hơn khi cơ hội tới. Như Khôi nói với tui trong tập podcast này: Việc thăng chức nhiều khi giống như chơi một tựa game, chúc mừng bạn đã qua một màn mới. Độ khó nhích lên một chút, hôm sau nhích thêm một chút. Vậy thôi! Không có gì đáng sợ cả, mình không phải gánh cả sinh mệnh thế giới, đối đầu với con boss cuối ngay lập tức. Sợ hãi thường là do cái đầu mình chưa quen với viễn cảnh mới thay đổi nên tự hù dọa bản thân quá mức mà thôi.Sếp chọn bạn, tui chọn bạn, cũng là có lí do. Tui là sếp của bạn, nhưng cũng là một người làm kinh doanh, giao một vị trí sinh tử của Sài Gòn Tếu cho một nhân sự 22 tuổi không bao giờ là câu chuyện cảm tính.- Yếu tố nào giúp tui quyết định trao cho một người trẻ vị trí quán lí team?- Làm sao một Manager 24 tuổi có thể điều phối mượt mà 50 con người có full time, parttime, freelance, và thậm chí phải liên tục làm việc với nhiều anh chị lớn tuổi và dày dặn kinh nghiệm hơn mình?- Cái giá thực sự của việc làm sếp ở tuổi "đầu 2" là gì?Tất cả những điều chân thật nhất sẽ được chia sẻ trong tập Cà phê Khởi nghiệp cùng Tùng BT tuần này, với format hoàn toàn mới! Mong sẽ mang lại thật nhiều giá trị cho các bạn trẻ đang trên hành trình phấn đấu phát triển sự nghiệp của bản thân. Đón xem bên dưới nhé!---P/s: Nếu mọi người hứng thú và ủng hộ chủ đề này, tui sẽ triển khai luôn một series mang tên "Lãnh đạo tuổi 20s" với sự góp mặt của nhiều bạn trẻ giỏi giang, thực chiến, nhưng cũng đầy trăn trở. Cho tui biết ý kiến của mọi người nha! 

Saturday Morning with Jack Tame
Ruud Kleinpaste: Natural pest control by your local birds

Saturday Morning with Jack Tame

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2026 4:14 Transcription Available


Last week I got rather excited with my bird feeding exercise in the garden – silvereyes everywhere, bellbirds becoming part of the ornithological gig, starlings in good flocks, hedge-sparrows in hedges. As the winter is getting near, the birds will come and visit your generous fodder in good numbers: sugar water, bits of meat and dripping, but also remnants of very ripe bananas, fruit bits, and anything that is edible. One of the biggest attractants is sugar water and the old bits of meat – dozens and dozens of birds will make their way to the smorgasbord. An important point we need to consider about feeding birds in your garden is that you'll need to keep going till spring. Your generosity is something the birds rely on and when you stop, there will be consequences for the artificially high populations created by extra feeding. I often catch large numbers of silvereyes when they dash in the direction of the food resources; they often have no idea that my very fine bird-catching net is not always visible. All I do is get the birds and give them a light-weight metal and numerical band around their leg, so I can always tell who is who in our garden. Hundreds of them each autumn/winter, individually coded. In some parts of the South Island, we also get Bellbirds and Tui. You might think you will have “lost” them from the garden when spring is moving in – they are getting very secretive around nesting time, but they will remember your place as a heaven full of food. Yes, they know where you live – I reckon they'll also know what kind of plants you have in the garden. And the most important aspect of it all is that in spring and summer they'll come and do the pest control business for you by scouting the scale insects and aphids, psyllids, whitefly, and mealybugs from your plants to feed their kids. LOTS OF FOOD! Over the past decades I have been doing some local research in my gardens (West Auckland, East Auckland, and some spots in Canterbury) where I observed the silvereyes, tūi, and bellbirds literally hoovering the small insects from our plants. Seeing as I hate spraying systemic insecticides, I like these birds with their knowledge of entomology and the location of the food – I have great respect for their job in our garden. Oh, and by the way: tūi and bellbirds will probably do a significant job of pollination in your garden as well. What's not to like? LISTEN ABOVE See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Therapy Crouch
Abbey Wants To Play A Crackhead In A Movie?!

The Therapy Crouch

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2026 28:07


On today's Ask Me Anything episode of The Therapy Crouch, Abbey and Peter are still living their best lives in Portugal as they answer your most random, chaotic and hilarious questions yet. Peter reveals his bizarre talent for recognising footballers from just their forehead, the gang debate whether digestive biscuits have got thinner over the years and Abbey shares the household tasks she absolutely refuses to do.The conversation quickly spirals into dream movie roles, awkward running styles, questionable farming smells and whether being called “Daddy” in bed really does increase testosterone levels by 300%. There's also chat about Arctic Monkeys, celebrity acting ambitions, animal births, podcast life behind the scenes and why Abbey would rather play a crackhead than a glamorous role.If you want to submit an Ask Me Anything question to the podcast - hit the link below https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rAKDST4HU_8al_aWpOlys3TRJrWvDV-84piVdlOOjU4/edit00:00 Introduction 01:10 Peter's Weird Football Knowledge 04:30 Arctic Monkeys and Music Taste Debate 07:28 Holiday Advice with TUI 08:37 The Great Digestive Biscuit Conspiracy 11:00 What “Normal” Things Are They Bad At? 15:30 Dream Movie Roles and Acting Ambitions 20:05 The Farmer Story That Gave Everyone The Ick 22:00 Farm Smells, Animals and Countryside Chat 24:00 Animal Births and Kitten Conversations 26:40 The “Daddy” Debate Gets Out Of HandTo contact us: Email: thetherapycrouch@gmail.com Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetherapycrouchpodcast/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thetherapycrouch Website: https://thetherapycrouch.com/For more from Peter https://twitter.com/petercrouchFor more from Abbey https://www.instagram.com/abbeyclancyOur clips channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZntcv96YhN8IvMAKsz4Dbg Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Alles auf Aktien
Die perfekte Agenda fürs Mega-IPO-Jahr und 6 Übernahmekandidaten

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later May 26, 2026 21:38 Transcription Available


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Nando Sommerfeldt und Holger Zschäpitz über florierende Luftfahrt-Titel, darbende Chemie-Werte und den historischen Ferrari-Moment. Außerdem geht es um Lufthansa, Air France-KLM, MTU Aero Engines, Ryanair, TUI, BASF, Brenntag, Deutsche Börse, Delivery Hero, Uber, Prosus, Ferrari, Porsche, Klarna, StubHub, Chime, Figma, CoreWeave, Circle, Cerebras, Fervo Energy, HawkEye 360, Aramco, Alibaba, SoftBank, NTT, Visa, AIA, Enel, Meta, General Motors, ICBC, Bank of America, Goldman Sachs, DoorDash, Entain, Scout24, Big Yellow Group, Melrose Industries, Argenx, Alpha Bank, UniCredit, Commerzbank. Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

LINUX Unplugged
668: --yolo

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2026 77:01 Transcription Available


Brent's been hacking smart speakers, Wes has a surprise, and Chris gives up on OpenClaw.Sponsored By:Jupiter Party Annual Membership: Put your support on automatic with our annual plan, and get one month of membership for free!Managed Nebula: Meet Managed Nebula from Defined Networking. A decentralized VPN built on the open-source Nebula platform that we love.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:ConnecTen Internet — Get $35 off your order total with Jupiter35

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All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Untitled Linux Show 256: Cash Aware

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2026 111:15 Transcription Available


This week a popular distro adds AI into its offering, Fedora is retiring Deepin, Google is abandoning Gemini CLI, and the fight to give Vizio smart TV owners more control over software running on their TVs. For tips, BleachBit's new TUI is great for headless servers, an update to arch, update-alternatives, and Lynis! You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4f6smWz. Enjoy the show! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Jeff Massie, and Ken McDonald Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord. Sponsor: outsystems.com/twit

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
Untitled Linux Show 256: Cash Aware

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2026 111:15 Transcription Available


This week a popular distro adds AI into its offering, Fedora is retiring Deepin, Google is abandoning Gemini CLI, and the fight to give Vizio smart TV owners more control over software running on their TVs. For tips, BleachBit's new TUI is great for headless servers, an update to arch, update-alternatives, and Lynis! You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4f6smWz. Enjoy the show! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Jeff Massie, and Ken McDonald Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord. Sponsor: outsystems.com/twit

LUFTRAUM
TUI setzt auf eigene Airlines – Interview mit dem CCO von TUI

LUFTRAUM

Play Episode Listen Later May 22, 2026 22:10


Die TUI will ihre Airlines künftig kommerziell eigenständiger aufstellen und den Einzelplatzverkauf stärken. Gleichzeitig schließt der Reisekonzern eine touristische Langstrecke mit Tui fly ab Deutschland auf absehbare Zeit aus. Das sagte Stefan Baumert, der Chief Commercial Officer, in diesem Podcast. Viel Spaß damit.

NewlyWeds
Has Sophie lost her wedding ring?!

NewlyWeds

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2026 47:50


Another sleep-deprived week in the Laing household can only mean one thing… another WILD ride of a podcast. This week, Sophie's managed to lose her wedding ring, while Jamie's dealing with ring problems all of his own... The couple also get into breastfeeding, sad nipple syndrome, and the absolutely AWFUL chat they somehow ended up having at a social event.PLUS, Sophie's planning a road trip involving vampires, Morgan Freeman and Justin Bieber (Jamie's not invited), and Jamie FINALLY addresses the rumours: has he had a bleph?!

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản
#412 Khởi nghiệp (không) bình an... - Phỏng vấn Diễn viên Thanh Thúy

Cà Phê Khởi Nghiệp Cùng Tùng Bê Tê - Không kịch bản

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2026 30:25 Transcription Available


Xin chào mọi người, đã lâu rồi không gặp. Tui phải thừa nhận là thời gian qua tui lười, và tui cũng nếm đủ mùi "lên bờ xuống ruộng" với 5 chi nhánh của 1Mil Perfume, setup lại Sài Gòn Tếu, và nhận về cái kết rớt môn nghiên cứu sinh Tiến sĩ.Khởi nghiệp chưa bao giờ là một bức tranh màu hồng. Trong hơn mấy trăm tập podcast trước, tui đã nói hết lý thuyết rồi. Giờ là lúc chúng ta mổ xẻ những vệt xước thật nhất của nghề làm chủ. Vì vậy, những tập podcast sắp tới sẽ rất khác biệt, vì không chỉ có tui, mà còn có những người bạn kinh doanh cùng ngồi xuống cộng hưởng, để đối diện với những vấn đề "real" nhất trong cuộc đời một doanh chủ.Khách mời mở bát cho chương mới này là chị Thanh Thúy – người phụ nữ xuất hiện trong mọi bữa cơm của gia đình tui hồi nhỏ, một nhà sản xuất sừng sỏ từ năm 2006. Không ngờ ngoài làm nghệ thuật, chị cũng lăn lộn kinh doanh... Chị nói với tui một câu rất thấm: "Càng có nhiều tiền càng không bình an."Đàn bà làm kinh doanh phải gánh trên vai chữ "đảm việc nhà, giỏi việc nước". Đàn ông làm kinh doanh thì chới với giữa tham vọng và sự gắn kết gia đình. Vậy làm sao để "Khởi nghiệp bình an"? Hoặc ít nhất... làm sao để đối diện với câu hỏi: "Doanh thu bao nhiêu?" và dám mỉm cười trả lời: "Lỗ!"... à không "Chưa lời".Tập podcast này không có công thức triệu đô, chỉ có những cuộc nói chuyện ruột gan của những người chủ, người khởi nghiệp đang bầm dập nhưng vẫn tin vào con đường mình chọn.Nghe ngay bên dưới nhen!

What in the World
Jet fuel shortages explained - in under 10 minutes

What in the World

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2026 9:28


Since the Iran war broke out, the Strait of Hormuz has effectively been blocked. The Strait is one of the world's busiest oil shipping routes - leading to fears about shortages of jet fuel. Prices for aviation fuel more than doubled after the war began, and the cost of some plane tickets has gone up dramatically. In May 13,000 flights were cut from schedules. And European travel operator Tui says its customers are appearing more cautious about booking summer holidays due to the Iran war.Loads of people have questions about jet fuel shortages, airlines cancelling flights, and if jet fuel could run out. This has also sparked a conversation about sustainability, with people asking if reducing flights could have a positive impact on the climate, as well as whether eco-fuel could replace jet fuel. In this episode we sit down with BBC business reporter Emer Moreau to answer all your burning questions about jet fuel shortages. Instagram: @bbcwhatintheworld Email: whatintheworld@bbc.co.uk WhatsApp: +44 330 12 33 22 6 Presenter: Hannah Gelbart Producers: Mora Morrison, Baldeep Chahal and Benita Barden Video Producer: Baldeep Chahal Editor: Verity Wilde

Hamburg News
Hamburg-News: Hafengeburtstag verpasst – Kreuzfahrt-Passagiere sauer

Hamburg News

Play Episode Listen Later May 13, 2026 7:08 Transcription Available


Heute geht es um die Frage, wie sich die Immobilienpreise in Hamburg entwickeln. Weitere Themen: Kreuzfahrt-Passagiere ärgern sich, dass sie den Hafengeburtstag verpasst haben, einem CDU-Politiker wird übel mitgespielt – und Wolfgang Kubicki greift Friedrich Merz erneut scharf an.

Zehn Minuten Wirtschaft
Wird Kerosin jetzt knapp oder nicht? Und was ist mit meinem Urlaub?

Zehn Minuten Wirtschaft

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2026 10:38


Flugzeugbenzin ist knapp und deshalb auch teuer. Das merken wir an den Flugpreisen. Und die Hauptreisezeit kommt ja erst noch! Aber was bedeuten hohe Preise und knappes Kerosin für die Flugbranche und auch für meinen Sommerurlaub? Das klärt Host Niels Walker im Gespräch mit Wiebke Neelsen aus der NDR Info-Wirtschaftsredaktion.

The Therapy Crouch
Abbey Calls Out Peter's Non-Stop Holiday Behaviour In Portugal!

The Therapy Crouch

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2026 54:57


On today's episode of The Therapy Crouch, Abbey and Peter are back in Portugal for part two of their sunny getaway, but there's no peace and quiet in sight. Abbey wastes no time exposing Peter for turning the family holiday into a full-blown sports tour, with golf, paddle, football and post-match beers all somehow making the itinerary ahead of family time. Peter, naturally, insists it's all part of his passion for sport.The couple then get into a surprisingly honest and hilarious debate about why football brings men together so easily, and whether women have anything that creates the same kind of instant bond. Peter reflects on his emotional return to Liverpool for the Legends match and why sport has always been his escape, while Abbey explains exactly why golf sends her over the edge.Later on, things descend into total chaos with a Portugal-themed quiz involving capitals, custard tarts and some wildly confident wrong answers. Sunshine, arguments, emotional moments and complete nonsense… just another day on The Therapy Crouch.If you want to submit an Agony Ab to the podcast - hit the link belowhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rAKDST4HU_8al_aWpOlys3TRJrWvDV-84piVdlOOjU4/editPlus, more holiday dilemmas, in this episode Abbey and Pete welcome back listeners Lana and Jeanette, to help them plan their TUI holiday. Booking T&Cs apply. ATOL and ABTA protected.https://www.tui.co.uk/00:00 Introduction03:00 Peter's Injury & Competitive Nature08:40 Why Liverpool Means So Much14:03 Abbey Calls Out Peter's Holiday Behaviour16:25 Why Men Bond Over Football27:21 Abbey vs Peter On Golf30:43 Sport & Mental Health32:18 “Look… It's Dusk” Chaos45:14 The Portugal Quiz Begins51:00 Capitals Challenge Meltdown54:58 OutroTo contact us:Email: thetherapycrouch@gmail.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetherapycrouchpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thetherapycrouchWebsite: https://thetherapycrouch.com/For more from Peterhttps://twitter.com/petercrouchFor more from Abbeyhttps://www.instagram.com/abbeyclancyOur clips channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZntcv96YhN8IvMAKsz4Dbg Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Untitled Linux Show 252: Full Send

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 100:58 Transcription Available


This week we're talking about Distro releases, like Ubuntu's Resolute Raccoon, Fedora's 44, and the scuttlebut about Microsoft Azure Linux. Then there's the latest and greatest Ryzen chip, Linux drivers being retired, and Firefox turns 150. And don't forget the newest Framework, and the LeafKVM launches. For tips, we cover Perch for TUI micro-blogging, f3 for finding fake flash, eget for easy installs, and SDRAngel for surfing the airwaves on your SDR! You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4cO6Hj2 and have a great week! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Ken McDonald, Rob Campbell, and Jeff Massie Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
Untitled Linux Show 252: Full Send

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2026 100:58 Transcription Available


This week we're talking about Distro releases, like Ubuntu's Resolute Raccoon, Fedora's 44, and the scuttlebut about Microsoft Azure Linux. Then there's the latest and greatest Ryzen chip, Linux drivers being retired, and Firefox turns 150. And don't forget the newest Framework, and the LeafKVM launches. For tips, we cover Perch for TUI micro-blogging, f3 for finding fake flash, eget for easy installs, and SDRAngel for surfing the airwaves on your SDR! You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4cO6Hj2 and have a great week! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Ken McDonald, Rob Campbell, and Jeff Massie Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

One Life One Chance with Toby Morse
Episode 392- Justice Tripp (vocals- Trapped Under Ice/AngelDust)

One Life One Chance with Toby Morse

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 20, 2026 188:11


In this episode Toby sits down with return guest (check out episode #164) and TUI/AngelDust vocalist Justice Tripp and AngelDust bassist Zechariah Ghostribe! They chat about TUI, AngelDust, expressing himself through music, Chad Gilbert, their own sound, new TUI, authenticity, gatekeeping, denim addiction, east vs. west coast, ADHD, night terrors, what comes next, influences, fitness and health, gold teeth and much more!  Please remember to rate, review and subscribe and visit us at https://www.youtube.com/tobymorseonelifeonechance Please visit our sponsors! Flatspot Records- https://flatspotrecords.com/ The Field Dream- https://thefielddream.com/ Rockabilia- use code OLOC10 Rockabilia Athletic Greens https://athleticgreens.com/oloc Removery- code TOBYH2O https://removery.com  Liquid Death https://liquiddeath.com/toby Refine Recovery https://www.instagram.com/refinerecoverycenter/  

adhd vocals liquid death tui angel dust trapped under ice chad gilbert flatspot records rockabilia
All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)
Untitled Linux Show 251: Vibe But Verify

All TWiT.tv Shows (MP3)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2026 123:52 Transcription Available


Old Bugs are getting fixed, like the 20-year-old Enlightenment bug, finally landing per-screen virtual desktops in KDE, and even more X11 vulnerabilities. Mint is making the slower release cadence official, Fedora is pushing 44 off a week, and Tumbleweed is going to systemd-boot. Linux is finally dropping 486 support, Mozilla has announced Thunderbolt, and the FSF has entered the office. For tips, we have Netwatch-tui for live network stats, wtf for modular TUI dashboards, v4l2loopback-ctl for managing virtual cameras, and a tour of a working Grafana dashboard. You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4tkp3PI and happy Linuxing! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Ken McDonald, and Jeff Massie Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)
Untitled Linux Show 251: Vibe But Verify

All TWiT.tv Shows (Video LO)

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2026 123:52 Transcription Available


Old Bugs are getting fixed, like the 20-year-old Enlightenment bug, finally landing per-screen virtual desktops in KDE, and even more X11 vulnerabilities. Mint is making the slower release cadence official, Fedora is pushing 44 off a week, and Tumbleweed is going to systemd-boot. Linux is finally dropping 486 support, Mozilla has announced Thunderbolt, and the FSF has entered the office. For tips, we have Netwatch-tui for live network stats, wtf for modular TUI dashboards, v4l2loopback-ctl for managing virtual cameras, and a tour of a working Grafana dashboard. You can find the show notes at https://bit.ly/4tkp3PI and happy Linuxing! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Ken McDonald, and Jeff Massie Download or subscribe to Untitled Linux Show at https://twit.tv/shows/untitled-linux-show Join Club TWiT for Ad-Free Podcasts! Support what you love and get ad-free audio and video feeds, a members-only Discord, and exclusive content. Join today: https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.

Alles auf Aktien
Die 100-Milliarden-Rallye von Intel & das ungarische Aktien-Trio

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2026 21:56


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Daniel Eckert und Lea Oetjen über die Erholung von Oracle, „dunkle Wolken“ am Telekom-Himmel und einen Hackerangriff auf die Superreichen. Außerdem geht es um ServiceNow, SAP, T-Mobile US, Goldman Sachs, LVMH, Fraport, Lufthansa, TUI, Southwest Airlines, United Airlines, Delta Air Lines, OTP Bank, MOL, Gedeon Richter, Expat Hungary BUX ETF (WKN: A2JB7B), Intel, Alphabet, Nvidia und SoftBank. www.businessinsider.de/events-bi/finance-summit/ Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

11KM: der tagesschau-Podcast
Klimakiller Kondensstreifen: Wie Fliegen klimafreundlicher werden kann

11KM: der tagesschau-Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2026 27:27


Fliegen ist schlecht für das Klima – aber nicht nur CO2 ist dabei ein Problem. Mindestens genauso schädlich sind der Wissenschaft zufolge die Kondensstreifen. Sie können bis zu 24 Stunden am Himmel bleiben und den Treibhauseffekt verstärken. Judith Kösters aus der ARD-Klimaredaktion erzählt in dieser 11KM-Folge, wie Kondensstreifen durch Flugverkehr genau entstehen und wie man mit leichten Anpassungen extrem viel fürs Klima tun könnte. Warum passiert trotzdem nicht viel bei den Airlines? Hier geht's zur ARD Klima Update-Folge “Kondensstreifen: Umweg fliegen, Klima schützen” von Judith Kösters: https://www.ardsounds.de/episode/urn:ard:episode:1256f7c587332133/ Hier geht's zur früheren 11KM-Folge „Deutscher Klimafonds: Viel Geld, wenig Klimaschutz? “: https://1.ard.de/11KM_Klimafonds Noch mehr Folgen des ARD Klima Updates findet ihr hier: https://1.ard.de/ARD_Klima_Update?=cp Diese und viele weitere Folgen von 11KM findet ihr überall da, wo es Podcasts gibt, auch hier in ARD Sounds: https://www.ardsounds.de/sendung/11km-der-tagesschau-podcast/urn:ard:show:4549910994dc2464/ 11KM ist am 9. Mai beim ARD Sounds Festival dabei. Alle Infos und Tickets hier: https://www.ardsoundsfestival.de/#/ An dieser Folge waren beteiligt: Folgenautorin: Axinja Weyrauch Mitarbeit: Sebastian Schwarzenböck, Marc Hoffmann Host: Elena Kuch Produktion: Laura Picerno, Christine Frey, Lorenz Kersten und Hanna Brünjes Planung: Nicole Dienemann und Hardy Funk Distribution: Kerstin Ammermann Redaktionsleitung: Yasemin Yüksel und Fumiko Lipp 11KM: der tagesschau-Podcast wird produziert von BR24 und NDR Info. Die redaktionelle Verantwortung für diese Episode liegt beim BR.

Brave Bold Brilliant Podcast
Leaders In Strategy: Growth, Profitability, and Purpose

Brave Bold Brilliant Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2026 38:59


In this episode of the Leaders In Strategy podcast, host Mike Harris sat down with Jeannette, who shared her journey from corporate CEO to successful entrepreneur and advisor, offering profound insights into the strategic drivers of business growth and profitability.  The discussion delves into the importance of leadership development, the power of a growth mindset, and why a common language across an organisation is critical for success. Whether you're a solopreneur or a corporate leader, this blend of lived experience and practical advice provides a roadmap for anyone looking to align their professional ambitions with a life by design. You'll Learn Why: Successful entrepreneurship is often about gaining freedom, choice, and flexibility to align your professional portfolio with your personal life goals. True business success requires a holistic approach that integrates leading yourself, leading your team, and leading the business. Avoid disconnect by ensuring that leadership training and development are explicitly linked to the overarching business plan and strategy. Business leaders must have a firm grasp of their key financial indicators—performance, financial strength, and liquidity—to survive the high failure rates of early-stage businesses. This episode is living proof that no matter where you're starting from — or what life throws at you — it's never too late to be brave, bold, and unlock your inner brilliant. Visit ⁠https://brave-bold-brilliant.com/⁠ for free tools, guides and resources to help you take action now

Alles auf Aktien
Strategien für die Waffenruhe-Euphorie und 11 Space-Aktien

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 9, 2026 19:59


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Philipp Vetter und Holger Zschäpitz über Kuss der Muse für Meta, einen Streik-Dämpfer für die Lufthansa und erfreuliche Corona-Zahlen für Constellation Brands. Außerdem geht es um Anthropic, OpenAI, Alphabet, Delta Air Lines, Applied Digital, Microsoft, IAG, Air France-KLM, TUI, Volkswagen, Heidelberg Materials, Siemens, RWE, Solaria, Enel, Engie, Rocket Lab, Firefly, Lockheed Martin, Boeing, AST Space Mobile, Iridium, Globalstar, China Satellite, SES, Eutelsat, Viasat und BlackSky, Virgin Galactic, VanEck Space Innovators (WKN: A3DP9J). Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr "Alles auf Aktien" findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

Highlights from The Pat Kenny Show
Annual teacher conferences next week: What can we expect?

Highlights from The Pat Kenny Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2026 13:20


Next week, the annual conferences of the TUI and the INTO will be taking place in Killarney, while the ASTI annual convention will be taking place in Wexford. On the agendas for each conference are issues affecting teachers up and down the country, from salaries and allowances to conditions of work and school resourcing. Joining Pat to discuss what will be coming up over the next week and what could and should be discussed is Brian Mooney, Guidance counsellor and columnist with the Irish Times.

Faith Matters
What to Say When Your Kid Leaves the Church: Joseph Grenny & Jeff Strong

Faith Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 2, 2026 49:51


Today we're asking: what do you do when someone you love tells you they're leaving the Church? What do you say? How do you stay grounded and connected when the stakes feel high or you're caught off guard?We sat down with two longtime friends of the podcast—authors and researchers Joseph Grenny and Jeff Strong—to explore these high-stakes moments when someone is ready to talk about their shifting faith.Drawing on research from over 500 real-life conversations about faith transitions, Joseph and Jeff uncover something both surprising and sobering: statistically, it's devout parents and church leaders who are most likely to miss the mark in these conversations.They suggest this isn't about a lack of love or sincerity—but consequences of a very natural response to fear. Jeff and Joseph call it a TUI—talking under the influence. When the amygdala takes over, stress floods the system, and the thinking brain goes offline. What looks like a communication problem is actually a chemical one, and even the most well-intentioned among us can say things that damage relationships for years.But it doesn't have to be that way. Today, Joseph and Jeff show us how to recognize when we're under the influence, how to pause before we cause harm, and how to come back grounded and clear—so that we can choose connection over control, curiosity over fear.With General Conference this weekend and Easter just days away—seasons that bring families together and open the door naturally, to these conversations—we hope this episode reminds you that you're not alone, and that these hard moments, can become the fertile ground for relationships that are deeper, more honest, and more connected than they were before.You can also read and share an essay called "Messy Conversations: When Loved Ones Leave the Faith" by Joseph Grenny at faithmatters.org. Come to Raising Little Saints: A Faith Matters Family Night! RSVP here. 

Late Night Linux
Late Night Linux – Episode 379

Late Night Linux

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 23:24


Making silly URLs, visualising complex weather data, a TUI network discovery tool, and an open source version of a classic synthesizer in discoveries, plus the sad reality that it’s more or less impossible to avoid code that’s been generated by “AI” these days. Discoveries creepy link Supercell Wx whosthere Ultramaster KR-106 AI in FOSS systemd 260-rc3 Released With AI Agents Documentation Added New Xfce Wayland compositor is being developed with genAI Automox Turnkey Results Endpoint management tailored to your specific environment. Know the plan. Trust the result. Learn more at www.automox.com Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with some early episodes See our contact page for ways to get in touch. RSS: Subscribe to the RSS feeds here

Late Night Linux All Episodes
Late Night Linux – Episode 379

Late Night Linux All Episodes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2026 23:24


Making silly URLs, visualising complex weather data, a TUI network discovery tool, and an open source version of a classic synthesizer in discoveries, plus the sad reality that it’s more or less impossible to avoid code that’s been generated by “AI” these days. Discoveries creepy link Supercell Wx whosthere Ultramaster KR-106 AI in FOSS systemd 260-rc3 Released With AI Agents Documentation Added New Xfce Wayland compositor is being developed with genAI Automox Turnkey Results Endpoint management tailored to your specific environment. Know the plan. Trust the result. Learn more at www.automox.com Support us on patreon and get an ad-free RSS feed with some early episodes See our contact page for ways to get in touch. RSS: Subscribe to the RSS feeds here

BirdNote
The Tui of New Zealand

BirdNote

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2026 1:41


The Tui is one of New Zealand's most remarkable birds, intelligent and with iridescent feathers. Its down-curved beak fits perfectly into native flowers. But the Tui is best known for its voice. Each Tui's complex song is slightly different, a colorful mix of musical notes and offbeat sounds. It's one of the few birds that can imitate human speech — and even accents. More info and transcript at BirdNote.org. Want more BirdNote? Subscribe to our weekly newsletter. Sign up for BirdNote+ to get ad-free listening and other perks.  BirdNote is a nonprofit. Your tax-deductible gift makes these shows possible.   Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Alles auf Aktien
Tobacco-Moment für Big-Tech und 11 Buyback-Aristokraten

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 23:21


In der heutigen Folge sprechen die Finanzjournalisten Lea Oetjen und Holger Zschäpitz über den nächsten Taco-Trade, den Absturz der Tech-Titel und die Gewinne von CTS Eventim. Außerdem geht es um AMD, Intel, Nvidia, Micron, Lam Research, ASML, Meta, Alphabet, APA Corporation, Occidental Petroleum, EOG Resources, Valero Energy, Autodesk, Salesforce, CrowdStrike, Fortinet, Netflix, Olaplex Holdings, Henkel, TUI, Siemens Energy, Deutz, Carnival, Wüstenrot & Württembergisch, Jungheinrich, SAP, Deutsche Post, Siemens, Apollo, Blackstone, KKR, SK Hynix, Commerzbank, Apple, Mondelez International, McKesson, Loews, Morgan Stanley, Wells Fargo, Visa, Mastercard, American Express, JPMorgan Chase, Bank of America, Citigroup, General Dynamics und RTX. Hier kostenlos für den AAA-Newsletter anmelden: https://www.businessinsider.de/informationen/newsletter/alles-auf-aktien/ Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Noch mehr „Alles auf Aktien“ findet Ihr bei WELTplus und Apple Podcasts – inklusive aller Artikel der Hosts. Hier bei WELT: https://www.welt.de/podcasts/alles-auf-aktien/plus247399208/Boersen-Podcast-AAA-Bonus-Folgen-Jede-Woche-noch-mehr-Antworten-auf-Eure-Boersen-Fragen.html. Hier könnt ihr den AAA-Newsletter abonnieren: https://www.welt.de/newsletter/article232797673/Alles-auf-Aktien-Der-taegliche-Boersen-Newsletter-fuer-WELTplus-Abonnenten.html Und - ganz neu: AAA gibt es jetzt auch auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alles_auf_aktien/ Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast „Deffner&Zschäpitz“ hören. +++ Werbung +++ Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte! https://linktr.ee/alles_auf_aktien Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

Skift
World Cup Hotel Demand Is Lagging And That's a Warning Sign

Skift

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 4:02


Early hotel bookings for the 2026 World Cup are coming in softer than expected, signaling a shift toward last-minute demand, while hotels race to capture travelers earlier in the discovery phase and Gen Z reshapes how travel competes with other spending priorities. On today's Skift Daily Briefing, Sarah Dandashy breaks down why World Cup demand may materialize later than expected, how hotels are trying to influence travelers before they even search for a stay, and why younger travelers are forcing brands to prove travel is worth the spend. This episode is presented by Lodgify! Articles Referenced: Honorable Mention: @AskAConcierge on IGHotels Warn World Cup Bookings Are Coming in LightMillennials Made Travel Their Personality — For Gen Z, It's Just Another PurchaseHilton, Marriott, TUI, Minor, Kempinski: How AI and Social Media Are Reshaping Travel Discovery Connect with Skift LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/skift/ WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VaAL375LikgIXmNPYQ0L/ Facebook: https://facebook.com/skiftnews Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/skiftnews/ Threads: https://www.threads.net/@skiftnews Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/skiftnews.bsky.social X: https://twitter.com/skift Subscribe to @SkiftNews and never miss an update from the travel industry.

The Book Faire: Children's Literature for Grownups
Tui T. Sutherland on Writing Children's Literature: Dragons, War, and Series for Young Readers

The Book Faire: Children's Literature for Grownups

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2026 25:59


https://tuibooks.com/In this episode, Tui T. Sutherland dives deep into her acclaimed Wings of Fire series, a cornerstone of children's literature beloved by young readers everywhere. She discusses her process of crafting immersive worlds, developing rich characters, and exploring complex themes like war, empathy, and creativity. Tui also shares valuable insights for librarians, educators, and anyone passionate about kids' literature on maintaining engagement throughout a long-running series. Tune in for a thoughtful conversation about storytelling that captivates young readers and encourages a love for literature.

The Therapy Crouch
Pete's “Midlife Crisis”? Tapas Alone, Snapchat Accusations and Brutal Nicknames 1080p

The Therapy Crouch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2026 28:26


On today's episode of The Therapy Crouch, it's an Ask Me Anything special and things get chaotic very quickly as Abbey and Peter dive into your wildest questions.From hilarious nickname stories (including the unforgettable “Jetpack Joe”) to brutally honest debates about whether going to the cinema alone is weird, this episode is packed with relatable moments and classic Crouch chaos. Peter raises eyebrows with his new solo habits — including tapas for one — while Abbey questions whether it's all giving midlife crisis energy…The pair also open up about parenting struggles, emotional moments with their kids, and the surprising ways AI is creeping into family life. Plus, there's strong opinions on football fashion, celebrity encounters (including Stevie Wonder and Prince William), and a completely unfiltered discussion on bathroom etiquette that you probably weren't ready for.If you've ever wondered what's “normal” in relationships, social situations, or just life in general — this episode covers it all (and then some).Got a question or dilemma for the podcast? Submit it below:https://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rAKDST4HU_8al_aWpOlys3TRJrWvDV-84piVdlOOjU4/editTherapy Crouch is sponsored by TUI! You pick it, they sort it. The time has come for Abbey and Pete to help two listeners solve a real life holiday dilemma they're trying to crack, ahead of their TUI holiday! https://www.tui.co.uk/Every day can be Iconic with TK Maxx. Shop at your nearest store, online or on the App now: https://www.tkmaxx.com/uk/en/00:00 Introduction01:00 Outrageous Nicknames04:30 The “Snapchat” Joke08:10 Is Going To The Cinema Alone Weird?10:00 Pete's Solo Tapas Confession12:00 Midlife Crisis Accusations14:10 Kids & Flight Hacks16:30 Kids Say The Funniest Things18:00 Football Opinions Get Heated21:00 Celebrity Encounters25:00 Bathroom Etiquette DebateTo contact us:Email: thetherapycrouch@gmail.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetherapycrouchpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thetherapycrouchWebsite: https://thetherapycrouch.com/For more from Peterhttps://twitter.com/petercrouchFor more from Abbeyhttps://www.instagram.com/abbeyclancyOur clips channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZntcv96YhN8IvMAKsz4Dbg Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

php[podcast] episodes from php[architect]
The PHP Podcast 2026.03.19

php[podcast] episodes from php[architect]

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2026 62:09


The PHP Podcast streams live, typically every Thursday at 3 PM PT. Come join us and subscribe to our YouTube channel. Another fun episode of the PHP Podcast! Here’s what we covered: Elizabeth Barron’s New Role – We discussed Elizabeth Barron’s appointment as Executive Director of the PHP Foundation and recommended checking out the extended Alive & Kicking interview from Tuesday (it’s really good!). ElephantAlert.com Launch – Joe from the PHP Architect team launched a new community resource for tracking PHP elephant plushie sales! Never miss a limited edition elephant again at elephantalert.com – a fun way to stay updated on the collectibles the community loves. Real Coding Stories – Eric shared his experience going “old school” and manually coding an S3 image upload feature with workflow triggers after Claude kept misinterpreting the requirements. Sometimes you just gotta type it yourself! AI Reality Check – An honest discussion about AI’s current limitations: the promise vs. the reality of productivity gains, struggles with OpenClaw workflows, the frustration of repeated formatting issues, and concerns about junior developers being over-relied upon with AI tools. Eric’s worried we’re approaching an “AI unraveling” moment in the industry. AI in Healthcare – Eric had to opt-in to AI-assisted medical procedures at a doctor’s appointment – a glimpse into how AI is spreading into high-stakes environments (and potential liability nightmares). Laravel Artisan TUI – Eric’s excited about Artisan Browse, a new terminal user interface (TUI) for Laravel’s Artisan commands. Perfect for his tmux workflow! Nothing you *need*, but everything you *want* when you live in the terminal. SlideWire Released – Wendell (who writes the PHP Enterprise column) released SlideWire – a package for creating presentations using Blade and Livewire. Eric’s planning to use it for his next talk (maybe the PHP Tech opening?). Magazine Updates – February print issue finally shipped after the usual back-and-forth with the printer about safe print areas. Features a monster-themed FrankenPHP cover that’s quickly becoming a favorite! Laravel 13 Official Release – Laravel 13 is now the default version! No breaking changes expected, lots of attribute updates in the framework. Pretty smooth upgrade path for most projects. PHP UK Videos Live – PHP UK conference videos are now available on their YouTube channel. Chris and Mike attended and had a great time! PHP Tek 2026 Countdown – Just 61 days away! Schedule is posted (though still subject to minor adjustments). Remember: your ticket includes access to PHP Tech TV for all recorded talks, so don’t stress about conflicts. PHP Internals Discussion – Covered the “PHP Community” RFC proposing ways to make PHP development more community-driven with faster iteration. Eric and John discussed the balance between community input and maintaining code quality/stability – suggesting perhaps a community vote that counts as a weighted portion of the total RFC votes. DevOps Wins – Eric successfully migrated all sites from Envoyer to Laravel Forge’s new zero-downtime deployment feature, saving money and simplifying the stack. Sometimes consolidation is the right move! Pool Player App Updates – John’s dealing with real-world edge cases now that his pool league management app is in production. Main pain point: email notifications going to spam. Twilio SMS integration coming soon to solve the time-sensitive notification problem. 3D Printing Crunch Time – John was up until 2 AM printing keychains for his wife’s school fun run (thought he had a week, turns out it was the next day). The hum of the printer became the unofficial background soundtrack of the episode! Links from the show: ElephantAlert.com – Community PHP Elephant Sales Tracker Artisan Browse – TUI for Laravel Artisan SlideWire – Presentations with Blade and Livewire Laravel 13 Documentation PHP UK Conference YouTube Channel PHP[tek] 2026 – May 19-23, Chicago PHP Community RFC – Faster Moving Community Driven PHP Laravel Forge PHP Score – Technical Debt Monitoring X: https://x.com/phparch Mastodon: https://phparch.social/@phparch Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/phparch.com Discord: https://discord.phparch.com Subscribe to our magazine: https://www.phparch.com/subscribe/ Host: Eric Van Johnson X: @shocm Mastodon: @eric@phparch.social Bluesky: @ericvanjohnson.bsky.social PHPArch.me: @eric John Congdon X: @johncongdon Mastodon: @john@phparch.social Bluesky: @johncongdon.bsky.social PHPArch.me: @john Streams: Youtube Channel Twitch Partner This podcast is made a little better thanks to our partners Displace Infrastructure Management, Simplified Automate Kubernetes deployments across any cloud provider or bare metal with a single command. Deploy, manage, and scale your infrastructure with ease. https://displace.tech/ PHPScore Put Your Technical Debt on Autopay with PHPScore CodeRabbit Cut code review time & bugs in half instantly with CodeRabbit. Music Provided by Epidemic Sound https://www.epidemicsound.com/ The post The PHP Podcast 2026.03.19 appeared first on PHP Architect.

Inside Wirtschaft - Der Podcast mit Manuel Koch | Börse und Wirtschaft im Blick
#1494 Inside Wirtschaft - Robert Halver/ Jens Chrzanowski (XTB): Inflation von Krisen, die Welt ist nicht untergegangen

Inside Wirtschaft - Der Podcast mit Manuel Koch | Börse und Wirtschaft im Blick

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2026 16:23


Der Krieg in Nahost geht weiter und von einem schnellen Ende kann wohl keine Rede mehr sein. Gilt jetzt das Sprichwort: „Kaufen, wenn die Kanonen donnern“? „Ein Krieg kann nicht endlos geführt werden - allein, weil er teuer ist. Die beteiligten Parteien können kein Interesse daran haben. Auch der Iran nicht, Amerika nicht, China nicht, die Anrainerstaaten nicht und die Weltwirtschaft nicht. Seit 2008 haben wir eine Inflation von Krisen gehabt und die Welt ist nie untergegangen. Muss man jetzt kaufen? Ich bin der Meinung, dass man sowieso immer in Form der regelmäßigen Aktien-Ansparpläne kaufen muss. Jetzt bekomme ich das Objekt der Begierde deutlich günstiger", so Robert Halver (Baader Bank). Für die aktuelle Situation gibt Jens Chrzanowski (Deutschlandchef vom Online-Broker XTB) klare Empfehlungen: „Es gibt 'Kaufen, wenn die Kanonen donnern', aber auch 'nie in ein fallendes Messer greifen'. Man könnte sich jetzt auch interessante Aktien wie eine TUI oder eine Lufthansa in die Watchlist packen und muss sie nicht heute sofort kaufen. Denn das Messer könnte noch etwas fallen. Ich glaube nicht, dass der Krieg morgen oder übermorgen vorbei ist. Ich glaube aber auch nicht, dass er ein bis zwei Jahre geht. Vielleicht ein paar Wochen bis ein paar Monate. Es gibt sogar ein paar Gewinner. Ich habe mir die Broker-Aktien angeschaut und die haben ein paar Pluspunkte gemacht. Weil bei solchen volatilen Märkten auch die Trader relativ viel traden und das ist gut für das Geschäft der Broker. Ansonsten leidet alles: Bitcoin, Gold, der Dax. Die Day-Trader haben jetzt Hochzeitstag. Der aktive Day-Trader kann immer in beide Richtungen handeln." Alle Details im Interview von Inside Wirtschaft-Chefredakteur Manuel Koch an der Frankfurter Börse und auf https://www.xtb.com

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0
Why Anthropic Thinks AI Should Have Its Own Computer — Felix Rieseberg of Claude Cowork & Claude Code Desktop

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2026 86:59


Claude Cowork came out of an accident.Felix and the Anthropic team noticed something interesting with Claude Code: many users were using it primarily for all kinds of messy knowledge work instead of coding. Even technical builders would use it for lots of non-technical work.Even more shocking, Claude cowork wrote itself. With a team of humans simply orchestrating multiple claude code instances, the tool was ready after a brief week and a half.This isn't Felix's first rodeo with impactful and playful desktop apps. He's helped ship the Slack desktop app and is a core maintainer of Electron the open-source software framework used for building cross-platform desktop applications, even putting Windows 95 into an Electron app that runs on macOS, Windows, and Linux.In this episode, Felix joins us to unpack why execution has suddenly become cheap enough that teams can “just build all the candidates” and why the real frontier in AI products is no longer better chat, but trusted task execution.He also shares why Anthropic is betting on local-first agent workflows, why skills may matter more than most people realize, and how the hardest questions ahead are about autonomy, safety, portability, and the changing shape of knowledge work itself.We discuss* Felix's path: Slack desktop app, Electron, Windows 95 in JavaScript, and now building Claude Cowork at Anthropic* What Claude Cowork actually is: a more user-friendly, VM-based version of Claude Code designed to bring agentic workflows to non-terminal-native users* Why “user-friendly” does not mean “less powerful”: Cowork as a superset product, much like how VS Code initially looked simpler than Visual Studio but became more hackable and extensible* Anthropic's prototype-first culture: why Cowork was built in 10 days using many pre-existing internal pieces, and how internal prototypes shaped the final product* Why execution is getting cheap: the shift from long memos, specs, and debate toward rapidly building multiple candidates and choosing based on reality instead of theory* The local debate: why Felix thinks Silicon Valley is undervaluing the local computer, and why putting Claude “where you work” is often more powerful* Why Claude gets its own computer: the VM as both a safety boundary and a capability unlock, letting Claude install tools, run scripts, and work more independently without constant approval* Safety through sandboxing: why “approve every command” is not a real long-term UX, and how virtual machines create a middle ground between uselessly safe and dangerously autonomous* How Cowork differs from Claude Code: coding evals vs. knowledge-work evals, different system-prompt tradeoffs, longer planning horizons, and heavier use of planning and clarification tools* Why skills matter: simple markdown-based instructions as a lightweight abstraction layer for reusable workflows, personalized automation, and portable agent behavior* Skills vs. MCPs: why Felix is increasingly interested in file-based, text-native interfaces that tell the model what to do, rather than forcing everything through rigid tool schemas* The portability problem: why personal skills should move across agent products, and the unresolved tension between public reusable workflows and private user-specific context* Real use cases already happening today: uploading videos, organizing files, handling taxes, managing calendars, debugging internal crashes, analyzing finances, and automating repetitive browser workflows* Why AI products should work with your existing stack: Anthropic's bias toward integrating with Chrome, Office, and existing workflows instead of rebuilding every app from scratch* Computer use one year later: how much better it has gotten, why vision plus browser context is such a superpower, and why letting Claude see the thing it is working on changes everything* Why many “AI verticals” may get compressed: specialized wrappers may matter in the short term, but better general models and stronger primitives could absorb a lot of narrow use cases* The future of junior work: Felix's concerns about entry-level roles, labor-market disruption, and whether AI can compress early-career learning into denser simulated experience* Why Waterloo grads stand out: internships, shipping experience, and learning how real teams build products versus purely theoretical academic preparation* The agentic future of the desktop: what it means for Claude to have its own computer, whether AI should act on your machine or a remote one, and how intimacy with personal data changes the product design space* Why Electron still mattered: shipping Chromium as a controlled rendering stack, the limits of OS-native webviews, and why browser engines remain one of the great software abstractions* Anthropic's Labs mentality: wild internal experiments, half-broken future-looking prototypes, and the broader effort to move users from asking questions to delegating increasingly long and valuable tasks* Why the endgame is not just more capability, but more independence: teaching users to trust AI with bigger scopes of work, for longer durations, with fewer interventionsFelix Rieseberg* X: https://x.com/felixrieseberg* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/felixrieseberg* Website: https://felixrieseberg.com/Anthropic* Website: http://anthropic.comFull Video PodTimestamps00:00 — Cheap execution and building all the candidates00:44 — Intro in the new Kernel studio02:47 — What Claude Cowork is04:18 — Why user-friendly can be more powerful05:33 — How Anthropic built Cowork07:09 — Prototype-first product development08:00 — Why local computers still matter09:20 — Skills, primitives, and platform leverage12:13 — Cowork's architecture: VM + Chrome + system prompt15:38 — Felix's own bug-fixing Cowork workflows17:38 — Local-first agents20:16 — Evals, planning, and knowledge-work optimization23:14 — What Anthropic means by evals24:21 — Scaffolding, tools, and why skills matter27:44 — Demo: YouTube uploads and self-generated skills31:03 — Calendar automation and cleaning your desktop34:47 — Browser context and why DOM access matters37:47 — Skills portability and plugins44:36 — Which AI categories survive?46:19 — Junior jobs, simulated work, and labor disruption52:00 — Gradual takeoff vs big-bang takeoff53:42 — Finance, taxes, and enterprise verticals56:24 — Vision and the improvement in computer use57:31 — Why Claude writes its own scripts58:06 — Should Claude have its own computer?1:01:26 — Windows 95 in JavaScript1:03:19 — VM tradeoffs and sandbox design1:07:23 — Approval fatigue and safe delegation1:11:18 — The future of Cowork1:12:27 — What comes next for agentic knowledge work1:15:13 — Electron, Chromium, and desktop software lessons1:22:16 — Multiplayer agents and coworker-to-coworker workflows1:26:05 — Anthropic Labs and closing thoughtsTranscriptAlessio: Hey everyone. Welcome to the Latent Space Podcast, our first one in the new studio. This is Alessio, founder of Kernel Labs, and I'm joined by swyx, editor of Latent Space.swyx: Yeah, so nice to be here. Thanks to, uh, TJ, Alessio, Allen helping to set everything up. It looks beautiful. We even have the logo outside.Yeah, kind.Felix: It's like really nice, right? When you walk in here as a guest, you're like, ah, this is a serious production. You're like, feel it immediately.swyx: Yeah. Felix, you've been, you're, you're currently a product manager of Cowork or,Felix: uh, really Technicswyx: Eng. Yeah. The, the identities are kind of vague member technical staff.Felix: I know member staff is like, the official title will carry around forever.swyx: Yeah. I basically kind of wanted, like we've been. Kinda obsessed. I, I've been using it a lot, even for managing latent space. Like, uh, cowork helps me upload videos and like title things and like edit and everything. It's, it's like really amazing.Alessio: Cool. He said multiple times Cowork has said gi in the group track.swyx: Yeah, yeah, yeah. So, so we have a second, uh, we have a second channel, uh, for latent space tv. Uh, and I, uh, and uh, we basically, this is our Discord meetup. Um, and I I, we have like Claude Coworks, it might be a GI, I don't know if we, we have, uh, uploaded it yet, but one of the sessions was like a, like a Claude cowork thing.Felix: I, you have to see, I would love to see it. Like, I'm so curious, like one of the most fun parts of my job is like constantly see the weird things people use Cowork for because it's obviously like very hard for us to actually design for specific use cases we do. But like every single person who's like most amazed is usually amazed about a thing that I didn't even expect cowork would be good at.Um, we have a new designer and it's one of the first small tasks. I was like, Hey, we need like a new emoji for cowork for our internal stock. It's like a pretty small thing. I like, can you please do it? And he drew an SVG and just gave it to coworker was like, can you animate this emoji? And now it has like this beautiful loopy animation.Um, and I mean, I think obviously this goes down to like, it turns out you can do more things with code than you expected, but it, it's like that kind of stuff that is really fun to me. So, long story short, I would love to see like, the kind of things you're doing.swyx: I'll pull it up. I'll pull it up.Felix: Yeah. Yeah.swyx: Uh, but before we get into it, I, I think always wanna start with like a top level. What is Claude Cowork for people who haven't heard of it? Haven't tried it out.Felix: Okay. Uh, real quick, Claude Cowork is a user friendly version of Claude Code. So the way it basically works is we have Claude Code and for us, fairly impressive agent harness that over December we noticed more and more people are using either, even though they're not technical, they, they're not at home in the terminal or they are at home in the terminal, but they started using Claude Code for non-coding workloads, right?Like managing expenses or like filling out receipts or organizing a knowledge base. Like there was a big obsidian moment that a lot of people liked and we wanted to capitalize on that, but also bring, bring this capability to people who are not terminal native and who might not know how to like brew and store something.So cowork is Claude Code running in original machine with a little bit of padding, a little bit more guardrails, making it a little safer and a little bit more convenient for people who don't wanna first open up the terminal when they go to work.swyx: It's interesting, uh, that is kind of. Pitch that way as a more user friendly thing because I always feel like it, it, to me, I I treat it as like why I'm familiar with Claude Code.Like we, we did a Claude Code episode Yeah. A year ago. But this one is like even more power user tools ‘cause it, uh, it kind of integrates much better with like clotting Chrome and, uh, in all the, all the other tooling. But like, maybe, maybe that's like a perception thing, right? LikeFelix: No, honestly, I don't think you're wrong.This is like a, a thing I've been thinking a lot about for like the last two weeks. So,swyx: but when they say user friendly, it's like, oh, it's the dumb down version. But no, actually this is the superset.Felix: Yeah. Like, I think a similar thing happened, A similar thing happened to me about 10 years ago, like maybe 12 years ago when I was at Microsoft and we started working on, on Electron and like browser-based technologies and cross-platform stuff.And one of the first use cases was Visual Studio Code, which used to be a website. And the initial narrative was, or Visual Studio Code is, is like a more user-friendly version of Visual Studio. But in a similar vein, I think there was some voices saying, oh, this is. For serious developers, like, we're not gonna use this.Right? For like anything. And I think in the end what happened is people have different stories about why Visual Studio Code became such a big thing. But my personal, my personal belief is that the Hackability and the extendability has like played a pretty big role, right? You can hook in Visual Studio Code that like almost any workload, it's so easy to hack on, so easy to put extensions for it.And I think cowork might be hitting a similar thing where it's very easy to extend and it's very easy to bring into your workflows. Uh, so the convenience I think is a bit of a, it's obviously the thing we strive for as developers, but I think the way people find value in it then is by probably mapping it onto whatever they actually have to do in their job.Alessio: So end of last year, you see the spike of like non-technical usage and clock code. What's the design process to say we should make clock code work? Because I mean, you built it in only 10 days. Um, I'm sure there was some discussion before on whether it's easier to use mean. You know, like making, making like a desktop GUI is obviously one way to do it, but like there's a lot of nuance in the product.Like maybe talk people through what was like the trigger of like, we should build a separate thing. We should not build like a different plot code thing. And then maybe some of the more interesting design decisions that maybe you didn't take.Felix: Yeah, I think philanthropic, we've been thinking about ways to move people who are comfortable with using Claude to answer questions and bring more of the power of like this thing to now like, execute tasks for you.I can like solve problems for you can like build things for you. How do we bring that capability to people who are currently mostly comfortable with like a like question answer paradigm within the chat. And we've had a lot of prototypes around that. Just going back as far as like easily a year and a half.Like we had a lot of people working on that. Um, and internally philanthropic is a very prototype demo, first culture. We have a lot of like internal prototypes that don't reach the public. What Cowork actually became is like we sort of picked the right pieces out of the many prototypes that we had.Right. And that's, that's maybe also like, I think an important qualifier whenever people mention this like 10 day number. I do think it's important to me to mention that within Double Scratch there was like a lot of stuff already happening, right? Like, and I think it's important for people to remember that when you build a website, you use React, you use like a bunch of other things.And this is like a similar scenario with like a lot of pieces we already had. Um, and in terms of decision path, I think we live in like an interesting new world where execution is actually quite cheap.swyx: Mm-hmm.Felix: So maybe, maybe what you would do That's so crazy. The year. I know it's wild.swyx: You should be, ideas are cheap.Execution is the hard part. IFelix: know. And like the, we, we used to live in this world maybe where you would take a product manager and the product manager would go to a number of potential customers and in this like very low bandwidth way, would try to. Try to like tease out what are the problems they're having, what are they willing to buy?Um, and then maybe what can you build to like drive out that need and then you go back and you like draft a spec and you think about it and then like you make a design and you execute it. We internally philanthropic app, not pretty much closer to the point where we're like, don't even write a memo, just like build, like let's build all the candidates very quickly.Let's just build all of them and then pick the best ones. I think the, the decision that is most impactful both for the product as well for the users right now is like the way we put value on your local computer. I think that's a big decision point a lot of people have thought about. Should this thing, whatever it is, should it ultimately run into computer or should it run in the cloud?‘cause they're big trade offs, right?Alessio: I guess like if we solve auth, it would be easy to do in the cloud. But I think like the fact that I can just download any file from anywhere and then put it and cowork there, it's like a big unlock. Um, I mean it's interesting you mentioned reusing certain pieces. I think this is something I've been thinking about even with Claude Code, right?The price of like writing code is going to zero, blah, blah, blah. But it actually seems like the value of having some sort of platform substrate is like increasing because as you build these new things, you can kind of plug them together.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: So I almost feel like when people are saying, oh, the value of a lot of software is gonna zero because you can recreate it, to me it's almost like the opposite.It's like having an existing platform to build on top of. It's like even more valuable because you can kind of bolt things on.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: You have obviously mcps, you have skills, you have like obviously the models, which is a big part. All these things kind of come together. Do you feel like that's a valid way to think about it, where people should invest even more in kind of like primitives.To rebuild on or are you like recreating a lot of it each time because like things change and it's easier to rewrite than reuse?Felix: You know, I think, I think you're right. I think you're right that the holistic platform is really useful. And this is maybe a whole like a somewhat contrarian view to a lot of people in ai.I actually don't think that the future is going to be hyper personalized software down to the point where everyone is running their own version. Like, I actually think it's going to be quite hard for all of us to have our own internal chat tool and like, if I wanna talk to you, likeswyx: howFelix: is that gonna work, right?In the, in the context of cowork and how we build it, I think it's a bit of a combination. Like what the, the execution that gets cheap is not necessarily rebuilding all the primitives. I think our priori, there's also not a lot of value in it. So for instance, my team did not think about rebuilding clock code.We're like very much started with the. The core thesis of this should be Claude Code.Mm-hmm.Felix: And then we'll like build things on top of it. The part of the execution that gets a little cheaper is like, how do you take all of these Lego pieces and put them together in a way that makes sense for users?It's like actually valuable. You have so many different approaches now in terms of what kind of, what kind of things do you actually elevate to a primitive, do you strongly believe that all your products should be built by just combining primitive that the public also has available? Do you keep some things internal?Um, and I think that's still evolving, but I think what's probably gonna go away is like, I'm not sure if it's gonna fully go away, but I'm gonna say, I think for me personally, I will probably no longer try to come up with a really good product without testing up with people. This is not a new concept, but wherever you used to have to make costly decisions around, do we pick technology A or technology B, or do we like, um, build it this way, build it the other way.I really strongly believe now you just build all of them and try them out with a small focus group and then whatever, whatever is better is what you go with. Right. And that, that is probably quite different even from how we maybe worked a year ago. Right. Like, I think, I think this happened very recently.Alessio: Yeah. I started building something in on Electron since you're here. Coincidence. Uh, but then Electron and like SQL Light are like, there's like some issues that like between development and like, uh, building anyway. And I was like, let's just rebuild the whole thing in Swift and just recreated the whole thing in Swift.And it's like, I. It's done.swyx: You know, I didn't take any effort. I, I, I don't even know Swift.Alessio: Yeah, exactly. I was like, I'm the, I'm not reviewing it anyway, whatever. You can write in whatever language you pick, but the important stuff that I did was not write the electron bindings. Yeah. It was like the logic of what happens in the app, you know, and then the model is like, yeah, I can just recreate the same thing as withswyx: Yeah.I, I think you still want, especially for people who are doing like high performance software or like very complex software, uh, you still want like, some view of the architecture. Uh, but you can use markdown for that,Felix: right? Yeah.swyx: Uh, you don't actually have to read the code again. I, I'm still like on a sort of like a definitional thing.Um, can we build a good mental model of Claude Cowork? Um, this is what I have, right? Like you you said it's like fundamentally cloud co. We don't wanna touch it. There's the cloud app, there's clouding Chrome. I think you guys do something different in planning, but, uh, I've been talking with Tariq who is on the cloud co team, and you guys are, he's like, no, we just exposed planning.Maybe we can clarify like, what are the major pieces. That people should be aware. It goes into cowork, like,Felix: okay, I think you basically have them. So really, um, you can, you can take planning more or less out. I think there's a few things that are really valuable in cowork. Um, the virtual machine is probably the most powerful thing.So we currently run like a, we currently run like a lightweight VM and we put clocked out into the vm and we do that for, for, um, a number of reasons. Safety and security is a big one, but even if you, even if you ignore for a second safety and security and you're just like, okay, Yolo, I want this thing to do whatever.It is quite powerful to give Claus on computer that is like generally a good idea. And in terms of architecture and UX and everything else that we've been working on, philanthropic, it often is quite useful for you to like anthropomorphize, um, clot aggressively and just be like, this is a person. What will you do if you give a, if you had a person, right?Yeah. And the analogy I've given my dad this morning who is still like quite insistent on using chat even for like coding things, is if you were a developer and your employer told you that you don't need a computer, they're just gonna like, send you emails with a code and you send emails with code back like that, maybe work for Patrick Miles in the back, but that it's not very effective.Um, so what we can do with the VM is because it's a, it's a Linux system, Claude Code has more or less free reign to install whatever needs to install. It can install Python, it can install no js. We do have strict network ingress and egress controls. So you can still, as, as a user in like plain human language, make it clear to, to the entire system what you're okay with and what you're not okay with.But at no point do we have to ask a real person, like a, like a person who might be in marketing or a lawyer. I'd have to go to a lawyer and be like, are you okay with me installing Homebrew?Alessio: Yeah, yeah.Felix: Right. Because the implications of the question and the answer are complex and nuanced and like, not, not easy to reason about.This gives us a lot of distraction that makes Cloud very powerful. Now then around it, we, we do probably have a number of things that also keeps growing almost every single week that you're probably noticing that make cowork maybe better for certain tasks than just cloud. Cloud on its own. Yeah. But most of those actually live in the system prompt.They're about like, what can we infer about the work that you do? What can we, what can we intru in the system prompt to make that more effective? It's of course the like very tight integration with Cloud and Chrome. You're noticing that a lot of people, especially as the models get better, a lot of people throw up their hands when it comes to MCP connectors in this area.I'm not gonna, I'm not gonna go through like 25 M CCP connectors, click off everywhere and then like half of them don't let me do the things anyway. So Cloud and Chrome is quite powerful because we can just talk to the cloud and Chrome sub agent and that will just do things for you.swyx: Yeah, so, so one example right in MCPI, honestly, I think that the state of MCP is kind of, kind of.Really hard to integrate. Um, I need to, I needed to add, uh, Figma MCP to the coding agent that I use.Felix: Yeah.swyx: Uh, and, but I didn't wanna read the docs, so I just had caught to it. And it's, it's great at reading docs and the same, same way I had to set up like a Google Cloud, um, account for some project I was working on and get some API keys somewhere.And Google Cloud is famously super hard to navigate, so I just didn't wanna deal with any of it. I just used Claude CoworkFelix: within the first week of developing on Core. This happened very, very quickly. Um, I caught myself by starting to use cowork for coding tasks, which is not ostensibly what we built it for, right?We don't need to. But I found myself, um, I found myself like on our internal, internal tool that we have for, to collect crashes and just like debugging information and I found myself sort like picking out the ones that I think we can easily fix versus the ones that might be like kernel corruption or something else on the operating system.And I found myself sort of picking these out and then just telling Clark, go fix this bug. I was like, what am I doing here? Go one level up, tell a cowork, I want you to go to all these crash tools. I want you to find all the bugs that you think are fixable and not like an operating system crash. And then I want you to tell another cloud to like fix all of that.Um, and that's, that's, that's sort of another cloud,swyx: just so it can spin up another instance or,Felix: uh, it, currently what I do is, um, and this is a bit of a hack, but I tell it to use clockwork remote to which website itself? Yeah, that's interesting. So you basically take, if you, if you imagine like a dashboard with like 20 bucks, you, this is remote control or clock or remote, or, sorry, I just wanted to confirm what, the way I'm using it is.I have cowork running and I'm telling cowork, here's where I normally go every morning to find the latest bugs. Go read the entire bug list, separate out which ones are fixable, which ones are, are fixable, and then for the fixable ones, four is this almost loop. For each bug, write a markdown file with a prompt.And then for each markdown v, that is a prompt. Start of a cloud set. So natively Claude Code hasswyx: this concept of subagents. Mm-hmm. And this is basically a subagent, but you're not using the subagent functionality.Felix: I'm not using the subagent functionality. And the reason I'm not is because I'm firing that off as a Claude Code remoteswyx: task.Felix: Yes. That's kind of nice. ‘cause then I can just fire it off. I can go to my next meeting and in Claude Code remote. Now the work is happening.swyx: Mm-hmm. Yeah. You, you see like you're already starting to use the cloud over your local machine. And I think this is one of those things where like. Shouldn't just everything just be cloud first, right?Felix: Ah, this is such a good group. I'm like solely bad about this. I have so many thoughts about that. Okay. So I generally believe that Silicon Valley overall is undervaluing the local computer. And my default argument for that is always how come we're all using MacBooks and not like an iPad or a Chromebook?Um, that there is like still value in, in having a local machine. And now when I think about Clot, it's this entity that is supposed to be very useful to you, like it tremendously useful to you. I think that entity needs to have access to all the same tools you have access to. Otherwise it's gonna be hamstrung in like all these complex ways.And there's, there's sort of two approaches we could take. We could say, okay, we're gonna like one by one chip away at everything that is at your computer and move it into the cloud. That's, that's one way to do it. Um, and I think other products have taken that path. I personally, this is a very personal opinion, but I personally, for the amount of tools that I use.Just don't have the patience to give another tool like permissions to every single thing and keep those permissions up to date. The second thing that I'm still grappling with, and I don't have a good answer for anyone just yet, but the second thing I'm still grappling with is what does it look like for someone to slurp up your entire work and put that in the cloud?Like if I, just as an example, like if you could click a button and it just clone your entire computer into the cloud, is that something that you would want? I'm not totally convinced yet that all everyone will. Mm-hmm. And that is sort of like upstream of all the technical issues we're gonna have. ‘cause like in general, I think the world is not ready for this kind of stuff.Like, I'll give you one quick example that would probably be very easy for us. So as a desktop app, we in theory with your permission, can do a lot of things on your computer, including reading your Chrome cookies. If we really want to do right, we could take your Chrome cookies, you would have to decrypt them for us.We could put those on the cloud if we really felt like it. Pretty easy solution. That would be super cool. We could just be like, oh, we can do all your tasks in the cloud now. Um, a lot of websites, thanks, include it. If, if they see the same authentication from like two different locations, we'll just lock down your account and now you have to go to the branch and be like, okay, I, I'm here with my passport.You actually know that. Wow. Yeah. As tired as well are of the term agent for the age agent future, I think there's a lot of stuff that sort of slowly needs to catch up and until that's the case, the way I, as someone's working on clock and make Cloud most effective is to like put it where you are working.swyx: Anything else? I thought with our mental model, so like, basically like, uh, part of me also just want, like the more I understand how it works, the more I can use it to its full potential. Right?Felix: Yeah.swyx: And so what I'm get hearing from you is you told me to delete the planning thing. You're not doing anything special on, on the, that's only exclusive to Qua cowork.Felix: We have some tricks for this sort of like change week over week. We eval cowork maybe against different use cases than he would evil clock code, right? If you think about it this way. Okay, so like clock code is our eval clock cowork. Yeah. So clock code is like quite optimized for coding tasks and we mostly value it whether or not we're getting better or worse depending on how good it is at like a typical suite job.And Clark Cowork on the other hand, we evaluate more against typical knowledge work, the kind of stuff he would find in finance or in like maybe a, like in like a legal office. Um, my personal use case is always like managing my things, like managing my personal mortgage or something like that, right? Or like wealth planning for me and my family.Those are the kinds of use cases we eval, clock cowork on. And what you might be picking up on is like the subtle changes we make to the system. Prompt what we put in the system, prompt how we steer, clot with the tools we give it. Um, like either it'd be better in one or the other direction and whether there's a trade off, try us exist a lot.CLO code will be better of a code and Claude Cowork will be better. For non-coding tasks, will those gaps still exist in the next three generations of models? It's like a little unclear to me though.swyx: Yeah,Felix: because right now these like hyper optimizations we make, I'm not sure for how long they're still be relevant.swyx: I think what I was referring to was also, it, it just, uh, it qualitatively felt different when I probably, it's just all prompting and I'm reading too much into it, but like the, the fact that it comes out with like a nine step plan, I can edit the plan and give feedback and, and, and see it execute the plan.Yeah. It felt more long range than in Claude Code, but maybe that already existed in Claude Code and you just build a nicer UI for it.Felix: It's kind of both. Um, like if the Clark Code people who build the planning functionalities would city, they probably say yes, we have all of those things in Clark code and they do.Um, I think people tend to give cowork. Tasks that are maybe of longer time horizon, I thought isswyx: so long. Yeah.Felix: That's like one thing, right? It's just like that the, the chunk of work tends to be maybe a little bigger. And then the second thing is that because the work, when it gets longer, it gets a little bit more ambiguous.We do tell co-work to make heavy use of the planning tool or to make heavy use of the ask user question tool, right? We do want it to come up with like. Different scenarios of, okay, tease out what the user actually wants. Don't go off to work for like four hours and then come back with the wrong thing.And you're probably picking up on that.swyx: Yeah.Felix: Um, I wish I could tell you I like built this magical thing and it's like, there's some secret sauce,swyx: but No, no, no. I mean, it's, it's just clarity is good that, you know, engineers just want to know. Yeah. They can, they can plan around it. And then I think also for me, um, I am realizing I have to switch to my, my other machine because this is a new machine that doesn't have my session.But, uh, yeah, the, the, the planning is really important for, for me to like approve or like to see whether it's like, it's right. The ask is, the question is so beautifully presented. I mean, it also, it also available in like cursor and, and in Claude Code. But like, I, I think like it's so nice to see that it, like it's kind of for me like to understand that it gets me, it gets what I want to do.Felix: Yeah.swyx: Yeah.Felix: It probably very hardswyx: just on the topical evals. Mm-hmm. When you say eval, I think people are very vague about what it means. Is it just like vibe testing or do you have like automated programmatic evals of Claude Cowork?Felix: When we say eval, uh, what we really mean is that we essentially take the entire transcript, including all the tools that clot has available ultimately to it, and we then measure what are the outputs, depending on what we tweak, right?So we do run that a lot. We use that in training. Um, we use that in, in like, if you sort of separate out post training from like the scaffolding around it. Cowork sort of exists in the scaffolding space, but obviously we also train on it a little bit. Um, so when we say eval, we mean given the certain transcript, what do the outputs look like?Including the file outputs as well as like the actual token outputs, like the ones that you see in the chat window.Alessio: I'm curious, um, how much of the failure modes are the model intelligence versus like the usage of the end tool to put the intelligence in? Like the well planning is like a good example, right?It's like one thing is to come up with a plan. The other thing is like make a nice spreadsheet. Yeah. That kind of runs you through the plan. Like how have you seen that? Well,Felix: the thing that I grapple with a lot is that whatever scaffolding you come up with, I think we still have a bit of sort of like model overhang where the model is dramatically more capable than right.Users end up using it for. And I think part of that is that we're just not getting the model all the tools to do all the things that's theory capable of, right? There's like one thing, um, however, whenever you do build the scaffolding, I'm sort of wondering at what point, at what point will that scaffolding go away and like how much you invest in figuring out what the right scaffolding is.It's kind of up to, it's a little bit of a bet. And one thing that I as an NJ quite enjoy is that like working in philanthropic and working at a frontier lab, I maybe have a little bit more insight into what's coming, coming down the chute in terms of like, what's the next model, what is the model capable of?What is good at, what is it bad at? And I'm, I'm increasingly wondering, is the right thing for us to like really invest too much in sort of these like scaffolding corrections where the model might otherwise not misbehave, but just not do the thing that you want?Alessio: Yeah.Felix: Or is it to just like give it as many capabilities as possible, try to make those safe so there's the worst case scenarios, likeno status might be otherwise.And then just simply wait a second for the next model drop. I'm personally, currently more leaning into the ladder. I think we're gonna see a lot of like applications and companies that do very impressive things with ai that in the short term might seem very effective ‘cause they're very specialized to individual use cases.But I think once models get better generalization and get better at like those specific use cases without being super guided on those, I'm not sure how long that's gonna stick around. And you can kind of, kind of already see this in like skills and NCP servers, right? Mm-hmm. We've, we've already seen sort of this like slow shift from MCP service to skills.And like, maybe a good example is Barry who made skills. He was initially hacking on something that honestly looked a lot, looked, looked a lot like what Cowork does today. It was sort of thinking about what if cowork, but for like people who don't wanna build code. Mm-hmm. And, um, he too did that as a prototype inside the desktop app.One of the first use cases we thought of were, okay, what, what are like coding like use cases that could really benefit from graphical interfaces and like from being a little separated from the actual underlying code. And everyone comes with the same answers. Data analysis,Alessio: right?Felix: Yeah. Or saying how many users do we have today?How many, like, it's always data analysis. And I think the thing that ultimately led to skills is that we wanted to connect this little prototype to our data warehouse and. The team very quickly discovered that like instead of building a custom tool for the thing to talk our data warehouse, they just like meet and embarked on follow like mm-hmm.Dear Claude, if you want to get data, here's the end point. Here's what the API looks like. You'll figure it out.swyx: Ah.Felix: And then it be hand over control. Yeah, yeah. Also just like maybe go one step up in the layer of abstractions, right. Just, yeah. Instead of, instead of telling the thing, here's ACL I, please call the CLI, or here's an MCP.Please call this ECT shape. Just like this is the end point. If you wanna know something, if you post here, maybe you can do post sql. It's gonna be okay. And that ended up being so effective that they started trying the same pattern of like just giving the model a markdown file that describes whatever it needs to do.That the whole thing eventually became skills and we're like. We should package this up. This is a good idea.swyx: Yeah. Um, we've had Barry Mahesh, uh, on, on our conference and uh, he's uh, definitely got a good idea there.Felix: Yeah.swyx: I wanted to show you the, how I've been using Claude Cowork.Felix: Uh, this is was my favorite part.swyx: This is this. So this is like me, uh, this is how we run the Discord. Uh, we literally, uh, at first I didn't trust Cloud Core. This was my very first usage.Felix: Okay.swyx: Right. So then I was like, okay, I will just try to manually download from Zoom all my recordings and upload it to YouTube. Yeah. Because this is a very laborious process.I got a click, click, click YouTube, um, isn't super user friendly. Uh, and it just did it. And then I was like, actually, you know, even the download from Zoom part, I should also. Put into Claude Cowork, and then I did it right. Here's a bunch of, and it starts compacting here, and it, and it, it starts to even be able to do things like look through the individual frames of the video to name the video so I can upload it auto automatically.Oh, that is, and this replaces my job as a YouTuber. We will forever appreciate your creative Yes. You know, and so that's great. Uh, but then by the way, it compacts and makes, makes like a new thing, right? So I, I don't, I don't have the initial, initial thing, but then I asked it to make its own skills so that it, so that something that's repetitive and one-off and human guided becomes more automated and I can use the skills independently and reuse them.Uh, and it obviously you can write skills and that goes into context and skills at the bottom here, which is, which is so nice. Um, so I have all these skills that, that I now sort of do on a weekly basis. Uh, I know you've released scheduled Coworks, which I haven't done yet, butFelix: course I should try them. I, I think this is like so wonderful and fun for me to see because.One thing that is very fun for me about skills in particular is that they're so easy to make. Like anyone can make a skill, like a text message, could be a skill, and they can be so hyper personalized to you. And this is like sort of the subtraction layer, right? Like, um, I, I'm just guessing, but I assume, heck, you are very good at your job.You're probably given this thing some guidance about how to do it, right? I,swyx: I just said, wrap everything up into, into a skill, right?Felix: Yeah.swyx: And then, uh, and then I was like, actually, sometimes I might need to break, uh, things apart because some parts fail or some parts might be needed in individually. So I told it to split one skill into three skills.So it's like a skill splitting thing, and then there's like a parent skill that just orchestrates all of them if I want to use that. You know, like, um, I think that's, that's like really good. Uh, and, and, uh, there's, there's one more part, which is the, uh, Google Chrome thing that I told you about.Felix: Yeah.swyx: Where I'm like, okay, you know, what's better than uploading, using Claude Coworks to YouTube?Like actually. Looking at the docs to like programmatically upload to YouTube and then putting that in a skill. And I've never done that before. I don't want to deal with Google Cloud. Yeah. So Claude Cowork does it for me.Felix: That is really cool.swyx: So, so I, I just, I don't care. I just, like, I do a thing. I don't, it doesn't really matter.Felix: That is really cool. And then you've, I assume paired the skill just with the script that it's built.swyx: Yeah, no, I just update, update the skills.Felix: Oh, that is beautiful. Yeah. That's wonderful.swyx: It's kind of like a skill, like, uh, uh, basically I think like the way that people ease into Claude Cowork is like take a knowledge work task that you would normally be clicking around for and then, uh, try to turn, turn that, and then you do the, okay, well what if you went further?Okay. And then when, if you went further, when, if you, and it sort of expand the scope of cowork as you gain trust with it and, and also teach it how to replace you.Felix: Yeah. It's like a little bit like playing factorial, but for your own life. Uh, like you say, you start really small.swyx: Yeah.Felix: You start automating something really tiny and like.Once it clicks, you keep adding onto this like automation empire. Just like make your life easier and easier. My favorite skill has been, um, every single morning Kohlberg starts looking at my calendar and make sure that there's conflicts because people tend to schedule a lot of meetings, sometimes last minute, sometimes miss it soft and painful.And a lot of products have existed like that A lot. I've written in the custom prompt there. I haven't made it a skill, um, honestly should.swyx: Yeah.Felix: But I've given it like pretty clear instructions about okay, here are some people, if they book over other meetings, I'm probably gonna go to their meeting. Like if Dario schedules a meeting.swyx: Right.Felix: Not try to reschedule down. Right. Um, and I think there's some other rules in there about like what kind of meetings I care more about what kind of meetings I care less about. What is okay to like, maybe pun like when I want to be, when I want to be working, when I don't want to be working. And it's those really small things that I can think kind of click with people.Right. When we launch co-work, I think one of the US races that went most viral on Twitter. X was clean up your desktop, which is stuff, because silly, that's such a smart thing, right? Like you don't need to model to clean up your desktop. Not really. Um,swyx: like this, like clean up my desktop.Felix: Yeah, exactly. Yeah.swyx: I need to, I need to choose my desktop, right? I guess give it access to my desktop.Felix: Yeah.swyx: Okay. Uh, okay. This is very scary. Oh, we'll do it.Alessio: I did, I did it with my downloads folder. It was like, you have so many term sheets and there's like eight copies of your rental lease for your office. I was like, all right.Like, don't yell at me.Felix: It's like, it's not such a small task. And then like, I, I would never go out there and normally otherwise and tell people I've pulled a product. It can organize your folder. Right. Um, because it feels small. But I think to your point like,swyx: oh, here's, here's the, here's the ask user questions.Felix: Yeah.swyx: Uh,Felix: beautiful. Right. Elite obvious junk. You probably shouldn't click that.Alessio: No.Felix: If he's not done right.swyx: As long as it's reversible, I don'tAlessio: make up blend to,swyx: yeah. Uh, yeah. No, I, I have a, I have a typical, everything is super messy folder. So, yes. I think this, this is super helpful. So this is a pretty simple task.Mm-hmm. But I've, okay, here it is. Right. Here's the progress. I don't see this in, that's why I'm like, this gotta be something different than, uh, than Claude Code, because I'm like, weFelix: do. Yeah. That's, we do system prompt that. We're like, all right. We want you to think about like, this task Yeah. Methodology.Yeah.swyx: And then I can, I can, I can do like little suggestions for, for, for these things. It's beautiful. Look at this. I, I can, I can like say like, oh, don't do that. Don't do this. It's amazing.Felix: I'm so happy. You like it. Um, I mean, the other way around, like we're part of the Clark core team, if you would like this in Clark COVID.swyx: Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Uh, so, so yeah, I mean, uh, this is really good. Obviously I, I'm like kind of raving about it. Uh, you know, I have other things like sign up for pg e so if you can do phone calls for me, that'd be great. Um, I, I do, peopleFelix: have done that. Obviously you can't do that natively, but people have done that with like, various other providers.swyx: Yeah. Uh, and then this is like signing up for the Figma MCP. Um, I, I really am trying to do like everything, um, data analysis as well. I do think, um, oh, design to code, uh, very, very good. Right? So like, here's a Figma file, take it. And then this is where like a lot of other tasks is like knowledge work, like replace my manual clicking, but this is no, I would normally use Claude Code or uh, Claude Code for this, but because I perceive that you have better Chrome integrationFelix: mm-hmm.swyx: I, I think you can actually do a better job of this. And I, this, this is one shot at my, uh, conference website.Felix: That's pretty cool. Like at some point I would love to like, hear how you feel about code. In the desktop apps, which is like I never use, which is the, the same team. Same team.swyx: So I use the call code in terminal, which I, I perceive to be the default way of cloud coding.Felix: So one thing this has,swyx: sorry, I'm just like, I'm notFelix: here, I'm not here. All products. Can I talk about other stuff? Like I, I'm not sure if people out there wanna like hear me advertise my stuff for like an hour. Please do that. Um, this thing is like a builtin browser, which is a thing a lot of products have said.Yeah, it's a builtin browser. And I think giving cloud eyes into like what you're actually working on makes it so much more effective. And that's probably what you've seen in cohort because it can see Chrome, it can like debug the dom, it can like see things. Um, that does make it more powerful.swyx: Yeah. So, so I think, uh, my mental model was kind broken.‘cause I only use this cowork because I thought it had a, a browser thing in it. But I understand that the Claude Code app. The app version of Claude Code does have a built-in browser. I've seen, I've seen this preview thing.Felix: Yeah.swyx: I just, I've never used it.Felix: But in the end, in the end, you sort of have it by hard.Yeah. You basically get the same thing. Right? Like the, the, the additional skill that you're describing is chart is better if we can see what it's working on. Right. That's, that's sort of like the summary here and like whether it's using your Chromeswyx: Yeah.Felix: Or it's just like making up its own little like browser.It doesn't really make a big difference because either way it's gonna see what it's working on and that just makes it much better. And then you don't have to run QA for your cloud.swyx: Why doesn't it pick up my existing Claude Code sessions? ‘cause I, I mean, obviously I've used Claude Code, but Excellent question.Um, don't have a good answer other than like, we're honest. Just haven't Yeah. This is what the Open AI team does. Okay. Uh, cool. I I I don't have other, like, I, I just, I, I do wanna expand people's minds and also maybe show people if they haven't really done it, but like, I, I think it's very interesting how I sometimes use this more than I use, I mean, I use dia, right?Yeah. Um, I, and I use, uh, I've used like all the other agentic browsers and philanthropic didn't have to build an agentic browser because you just had Claude Cowork and that's enough.Felix: Yeah. I also think like maybe integrating with number of excellent browsers out there, it's like currently on my personal priority list, a little higher than like trying to rebuild a browser from scratch.Yeah. You know, never say never, but I think going back to this idea of like, we wanna plug this into an entire existing workflow, I think our goal is actually to not replace any of the applications we have in your computer. But instead of like, work really well within a new workflow,Alessio: make the new one. Yeah.Are, it seems that nowadays, especially on the browser, most of the innovation is like user ergonomics. It's not really like the underlying browser engine. So I feel like to call it, it doesn't really matter if it's like the, uh, or Chrome or Alice, whatever.Felix: Yeah. We wanna, we wanna meet you wherever you are.Which is like, like obviously I would say that, but it's also just generally true because I don't wanna shrink my potential user base artificially by saying, okay, like, I'm gonna start building for the people who are willing to switch browsers.Alessio: Right.Felix: That's such a, like, you know, like many lawsuits have been filed over who gets to review the browser and like a lot of money has switched hands over the question of like, which browser is default and which search engine is default within the browser.Um, I just wanna build for, yeah, I wanna build for swyx essentially. Like, I wanna, I wanna, I wanna build for people who have a number of annoying tasks that they feel like. Maybe clock could do it. Could do it for them.Alessio: Yeah. What do you think about skills portability? I think there's been one thing, I use another thing called zo, which is kinda like a cloud computer plus agent.And I have a skill to add visitors to the office. Yeah. So whenever somebody has to come in after hours, they need to check in downstairs. Um, but I wanna like text the thing, so it doesn't really work in, in cowork, but now that skill is in the zone harness and it's not in my cowork thing. And then if I make a change, it's gotta, I gotta sync them.How do you see that going? Like I see memory as like. Cloud personal, kinda like, I don't necessarily want my memories to be cross thing.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: But I do want my skills to be cross agent that I use. I think with MTPs, people do the same thing. It's like, oh, Mt. P Gateway. Mt P registry. I don't really know if that's like a business.So I'm curious like if you've had any thoughts in the area.Felix: I think for me, this is sort of where I go back to the really basic primitives for our skills are file-based instead of like this complicated thing that exists inside a place somewhere that is like super proprietary. I'm really leaning into the idea of like, it's all just files and vultures, and that makes it very portable on its own.Right. We do have skills as part of this container format, which was just called plugins.Alessio: Mm-hmm.Felix: And plugins are available both for Claude Code and Claude Code work the same format, and you can install plugins. This works in cowork today. You can basically say, I'm gonna add a whole, like just a GitHub repo as a.Skills marketplace or like a plugin marketplace. And that's how we're doing portability. I think we have a lot of room left to grow in. How do we make it easy for people to know that they can write skills? How do we make it easy for them to just like, share a skill with you? Because obviously all the words I just said, right?Like I'm losing most of the knowledge worker base out there, right. And start by saying, oh, you can connect to GitHub repo. It's not exactly how most people will end up working in like a general knowledge worker space. Um, but I think there's something there. And another thing that's there that I think has not really been properly explored is the, the, the combination of which part of the skill is very portable and then which part of the skill is like very personal to you.Right. And I think that's something we haven't really solved as an industry. Hmm.swyx: It's like, which, how you wanna introduce more structure to the skill or have always have like. Public skill, private skill, you know, pair. Yeah, yeah. Kind of. I think there'sFelix: like a, like the easiest way to do this, which is we do like use string interpolation or something.Right, right. Yeah, yeah. Insert username here, insert like phone number, insert, like known folder, locations, that kind of stuff. Um, that's probably clunky. That's why we haven't built it. Um, but I do think someone is going to come up with like an interesting way to keep everything we like about skills. The portability is just a file, it's just marked down.It's just text, honestly. Right. Like a text file words. The complete lack of structure, which means you don't need any kind of tutorial to write a skill. Just like explain it to Claude the way he would explain it to me and Claude will probably get it before I work. Mm-hmm. Right? You're just like, for booking a flight, tell Claude how to book a flight the same way we tell him somewhere.I just started working here today. But combine that with a very like, personal thing. Um, maybe we'll stick with a booking a flight example. I don't actually think. AI should be booking flights. I think the tools we have is yes.swyx: Yeah. Finally, somebody says it. It's the default demo that everyone's making.Felix: I'mswyx: like, I even against like booking demos, it is not a good showcase.Felix: Yeah. I'm like, I just wanna book my flight myself. But, um, I think there's a lot of things that have a personal and a non-personal component and that's maybe why people reach for flight booking because some things are very universal. Yeah. Super flight is usually better, right? Like few people try to book the most expensive flight.And then some things are quite personal about like what times you prefer, which seat you prefer, which airports you prefer. Combining that and like a skill format that is actually portable, compatible, easy to understand for people. I think that would be very exciting. We just haven't figured it out yet.Alessio: Yeah, I think the text part every, I think everybody by now has some sort of like cloud file thing. Either Dropbox, Google Drive, whatever. So it feels like in a way it should basically like sim link. My skills into all my agent harnesses. Yeah. Just keep those ing like we have internally this like valuable tokens repo, which is like all the commands sub agents.It's good. Uh, and then I build like a TUI where you can start it and be like, you know, install this command and this three sub agents into this agent in this folder and just copy paste this. It doesn't do anything. It literally cp the file into that. But I feel like there should be something similar where like whenever I go into a new thing, it's like, hey, here's like the link to exactly the cloud folder and just bring down these skills into this.Yeah. Like today it doesn't quite work like that. Like if I install a new agent, I cannot, I have to like copy paste all the skills and I don't even know where they are.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: That's like the big problem. It's like where do I find them?Felix: Yeah.Alessio: Um, so I'm curious like in the future like that, that almost feels like my personal productivity thing will be my skills.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: Is not really the product that I use. Everybody has access to the same product. But today there's, that just looks like copy pasting ME files, IFelix: think so many things I, I really like thinking about agents and LLMs just as like another coworker. So many attempts have made to build documentation companies that are like, oh, we're gonna solve oil documentation problems.Um, I myself, like spend a little bit of time working in notion, right? I'm like deeply familiar with the concept of let's get everyone on the same page. Mm-hmm. Right? And what you're basically saying here is you want all your agents to be on the same page about your preferences, about the skills, about the way they ought to work and like how they ought to execute.And I'm not sure what the right thing is going to be if it's going to be some, some company that can say, all right, we're as an independent body, we're not trying to like, push into any particular product. It's our job to be like the skill authority, and we provide, I don't know, we're gonna be the Dropbox of skills and we can just sim link us into all the products we want to use.I'm not sure that's gonna be viable business, but as, as an idea, it would be cool.Alessio: Yeah. Yeah. I think so many things are just going away as businesses. It's like, how am I supposed to do it? I'm not even asking somebody to make a product about it. Like yeah. I wanna personally know. And there's things like you said, it's like you almost wanna skill and then interpolate it between personal and work.So if I'm booking a fly for work, it's different than I'm booking a flight personally.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: In some ways, yeah. But like a lot of the scaffolding is the same, you know? Cool.Felix: I mean, as an engineer I will tell you like, you know, technic a person to technic a person. I will just be like siblings.Alessio: Well that's what, that's what I do.We call that MD and agents that MD's just the same how sim length. And so it is like, that works, but it feels like, yeah, I don't know. MaybeFelix: you can always go one, you can always tell cowork problem and then cowork will solve it for you. Just make the siblings. That's like one way to do it.Alessio: That's true.That's true. All right. Everything is called cowork.Felix: Uh, potentially spicy. Question for both of you.swyx: Uh, which of these industries will go away?Alessio: Okay, so what Felix was saying before is interesting. There's busy like. The short term pressure of like, we need to turn these tokens into valuable things, which is I should build the last mile product that harness the model.And then there's the question of like, long term, which ones are gonna still be valuable? And I think you're kind of seeing this today with like, uh, you know, the coding space in a way is kind of like everybody's moving up and up in stack because you need more than just turning tokens into code. I think search, like enterprise search is kind of saying the same thing.Like with G Clean and like all these different companies is like, at the end of the day, if Cowork is the one doing all the work, the search itself is like such a small part that like, I don't know if I'm really gonna pay that much money just to do search. It's almost like everything is like a cowork vertical.So like how much can cowork first party support?swyx: Mm-hmm.Alessio: And how much can it not? I think for a lot of these things, the planning thing that you were showing do Which one? The planning. The planning.swyx: Okay. Yeah. Yeah.Alessio: That's one thing where like most of the value that these agents provide is like they're better at planning for specific tasks.Yeah. And have better tools for it.swyx: Yeah.Alessio: But I think the models are now moving in that direction and they have the right harnesses and they're on your computer. So for me it's almost like if for the end customer trusts your startup to be the provider of that task result, then I think that works. This is, uh, something that, this is a shortswyx: spike that we're, we're working on.Uh, yeah.Felix: I think, look, I'll, I'll, I'll tell you this, like I don't think I'm the best person to like actually estimate which industry is going to be hit the hardest. But I do think that at philanthropic as a group of people, we're deeply worried about the impact. That the tools are going to have on the labor market, especially for like junior employees that, because I think, I think it's only honest to say that when we talk about automating a lot away, a lot of the work that we personally find annoying that we maybe think's not the best use of our time.In a lot of industries, that kind of work would've been given to a junior entry level employee. Yeah. Right. And I think it's, it's only, it's only right to be really worried about that and like worry what that's going to do in particular to people like enter the shop market.Alessio: Mm-hmm. I have a solution for that.Which you make them, you create simulative jobs for them.Felix: Okay.Alessio: So this is, this is like half joke, half true. So if you think about software engineering, when you're like a junior engineer, you work like 1, 2, 3 years. And in those three years there's like maybe like a handful of moments where like you really learn something.And then a bunch of other days where like you're not really progressing.Felix: Yeah.Alessio: I think now we can use AI and these models to actually like shortcut these careers and almost like simulate the early years of your work and like just make them like super dense and like these learnings, it's like, hey, we're working on this feature, which is like a distributed system and you need to learn this thing that might take three months at a company.And so you take three months here, it's like we're just simulating the whole thing. It's actually not a real thing. And in one week we kind of speed run through the whole thing and you kind of learn your lesson from there. And we kind of repeat that in like one year. You basically get like three years worth of like projects and experience.Yeah. I think it's harder for like things like sales or for things like, you know, marketing because you don't really have a way to get the feedback loop. But I think a lot of it, it sounds kind of silly, it's like you're making the new effect job, but it's almost like you go to college, right? People pay to learn how to do it, and this might feel similar where it's like, hey, we have the.Jane Street Simulator is like, you wanna come work at Jane Street? We'll just put you in the simulator for like three months.Felix: Wow.Alessio: And you'll come out of it. It's like, you know, I'm ready.Felix: So there, there is an aspect here. I'm not an expert enough to like actually know what, what is going to happen to marketing or legal or finance, right?Like, I don't work in those jobs and I, I don't think I should talk about them, but I am an engineer and I think I have a pretty good idea of what engineering is like. And I think one thing we're sort of seeing is that as a company and also as, as the public, we're like deeply worried about entry level, but we're also seeing more senior engineers accelerate it.If like they're more productive. They, they actually increase the value they provide. And the thing that I'm thinking about a lot is the fact that even before all of this happened, um, I've always had a lot of respect for the University of Waterloo and the, the new grads that have joined my teams as from coming from the University of Waterloo always felt like.More ready than new grads will like literally spend their entire time at the university regardless of how good, but never actually had to work inside an environment where you have to ship things that eventually will be used by users. And I'm, I'm, I'm German. I like initially went to German University and I think the, the, the like information systems programs, there tend to be very theoretical, right?Like I often give people the example of like trying

LINUX Unplugged
658: Automated Love Crunch

LINUX Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2026 63:16 Transcription Available


We each spent the week on our own projects, breaking then fixing things. Now we're back to compare progress, and a few lessons learned.Sponsored By:Jupiter Party Annual Membership: Put your support on automatic with our annual plan, and get one month of membership for free!Managed Nebula: Meet Managed Nebula from Defined Networking. A decentralized VPN built on the open-source Nebula platform that we love.Support LINUX UnpluggedLinks:

Staying Relevant
Sam and Pete on Marriage and Kids...

Staying Relevant

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 42:49


This week the boys pass on some pretty big life advice to 20 year olds up and down the country. They deliberate when they truly peaked, the age they'd happily stay forever, and whether things actually improve with time… or if it's all downhill from here. We'll leave that for you to decide.We hear their hopes and dreams for the future as well as their biggest regrets along the way.Things take a swift turn as we hear their biggest relationship deal breakers and what would truly make them run for the hills - Sam slightly misses the mark with this one, but that's why we love him.We find out whether the boys REALLY want marriage and kids and how they'd best describe themselves under pressure. Turns out they don't do so well under pressure.—

The Therapy Crouch
Abbey Clancy's Worst Drive Ever! Dating Dilemmas & Wine Debates!

The Therapy Crouch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2026 32:29


On today's episode of The Therapy Crouch Ask Me Anything, Abbey and Peter are back answering your questions and sharing some of the most chaotic stories from their week.Abbey reveals a terrifying experience driving down the winding roads of Box Hill, despite having a serious fear of heights. With a sheer drop beside the road, cars piling up behind her and the kids in the back, the pressure quickly became overwhelming as she tried to navigate one of the narrowest roads she's ever driven.Peter also finds himself under fire as Abbey recalls another recent car journey with him behind the wheel, comparing the experience to the Wolf of Wall Street boat scene thanks to some rather aggressive acceleration and braking.The team also tackle some of your questions, including a sticky dating situation where a listener may have complicated his love life after getting a barmaid's number… only to realise she's friends with his new girlfriend.Plus there's discussion around relationship “wine therapy”, whether sitting down with a glass of wine actually helps solve arguments or just makes things worse, the ultimate wine vs beer debate, and some hilarious ideas for the kids' next fancy dress outfits.If you want to submit an AMA question to the podcast - hit the link belowhttps://docs.google.com/forms/d/1rAKDST4HU_8al_aWpOlys3TRJrWvDV-84piVdlOOjU4/editThe Therapy Crouch is sponsored by TUI! You pick it, they sort it. The time has come for Abbey and Pete to help two listeners solve a real life holiday dilemma they're trying to crack, ahead of their TUI holiday! https://www.tui.co.uk/00:00 Introduction01:00 Dog Chaos & Early Morning Wake Ups03:00 Abbey vs Peter Driving Debate04:40 Abbey's Terrifying Box Hill Drive09:40 Who Is Actually the Worst Driver?14:30 Dating Dilemma: Two Barmaids Problem19:30 Dating Multiple People Debate23:00 Honesty vs Lying in Relationships25:25 Wine Therapy Gone Wrong28:50 Kids Dressing Up as Peter Crouch33:00 Easter Book Joke & OutroTo contact us:Email: thetherapycrouch@gmail.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/thetherapycrouchpodcast/TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@thetherapycrouchWebsite: https://thetherapycrouch.com/For more from Peterhttps://twitter.com/petercrouchFor more from Abbeyhttps://www.instagram.com/abbeyclancyOur clips channelhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZntcv96YhN8IvMAKsz4Dbg Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Shifting Our Schools - Education : Technology : Leadership
Tui T. Sutherland on Creativity, World-Building, Empathy, and Writing for Young Readers

Shifting Our Schools - Education : Technology : Leadership

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 9, 2026 24:20


In this episode, we sit down with Tui T. Sutherland, bestselling author of the Wings of Fire series, for a rich conversation about creativity, writing, world-building, empathy, and storytelling for young readers. Tui shares how play, curiosity, and even dogs can support focus and imagination, why world-building starts with better questions, and how writers can balance community feedback with their own creative vision. She also reflects on the role of empathy, diversity, and self-exploration in storytelling, offering practical insights for aspiring writers, educators, and anyone interested in how stories shape young minds. This conversation explores the creative process behind building immersive fictional worlds, developing memorable characters, and staying grounded in joy and curiosity while writing. Whether you are a fan of children's literature, interested in the craft of writing, or looking for inspiration around imagination and creative confidence, this episode offers plenty to take away. 00:00 How Dogs Support Creativity and Focus 02:40 World-Building That Makes Stories Feel Real 05:23 Balancing Reader Feedback and Creative Vision 07:56 Community, Empathy, and Representation in Storytelling 10:58 Writing as Therapy and Self-Exploration 14:30 Advice for Aspiring Writers 17:11 Imagining Worlds Through Play and Curiosity Resources Wings of Fire Series by Tui T. Sutherland — https://www.scholastic.com/teachers/authors/tui-t-sutherland/ Scholastic — https://www.scholastic.com/ Tui T. Sutherland on Twitter / X — https://twitter.com/tuitweets

php[podcast] episodes from php[architect]
The PHP Podcast 2026.03.05

php[podcast] episodes from php[architect]

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2026 70:43


The PHP Podcast streams live, typically every Thursday at 3 PM PT. Come join us and subscribe to our YouTube channel. Another fun episode of the PHP Podcast! Here’s what we covered: OpenClaw & Archie Development Eric and John dove deep into the ongoing development of OpenClaw and the Archie Discord bot. They discussed AI-powered standups, automation challenges, and how Archie is learning to interact with the community. Eric shared stories about teaching Archie to handle edge cases and the surprisingly human-like conversations emerging from the standup system. Apple Developer Account Renewal Mix-up Eric shared a frustrating (and relatable) tale about accidentally renewing his Apple Developer account with the wrong credit card and Apple ID. Elizabeth Barron Named PHP Foundation Executive Director Big congratulations to Elizabeth Barron on becoming the new Executive Director of the PHP Foundation! The guys discussed what this means for the PHP community and floated the idea of having her on the show for an interview. Eric Mann’s Firebreak – AI Policy Enforcement Discussion of Eric Mann’s latest project from the Portland hackathon: Firebreak, a policy-as-code enforcement proxy for LLM API deployments. It intercepts prompts, classifies intent, and enforces pre-negotiated policies with full audit trails. Think OPA/Gatekeeper, but for AI APIs. Cursor IDE + JetBrains Integration The conversation turned to Cursor’s new integration with JetBrains IDEs, bringing AI-powered coding assistance to the beloved PHP development environment. John and Eric debated the merits of AI pair programming and whether it helps or hinders learning. Laravel AI SDK Laravel’s official AI SDK was a hot topic, with discussion about how it incorporates parts of the Prism library and makes it dead simple to integrate AI into Laravel applications. AI Meeting Recording with ReadAI Eric recounted his first experience being kicked out of a meeting due to AI recording policies. The guys discussed the evolving norms around AI transcription services and the ethics of recording without explicit consent. Laracon EU Livestream The full Laracon EU livestream is available for free on YouTube – all 9+ hours of it! They highlighted talks from Simon Hamp and Shane (NativePHP) and encouraged everyone to check out the incredible content. Ward Laravel Security Scanner A new Go-based security scanner for Laravel applications called Ward was showcased. It detects misconfigurations, vulnerabilities, and exposed secrets with a beautiful TUI. NativePHP Speed Breakthrough Simon Hamp and Shane revealed major performance improvements for NativePHP, reducing latency from 700 milliseconds down to sub-milliseconds by moving away from web views. This makes PHP mobile apps feel truly native. Links from the show: Ward – Security scanner built for Laravel Laracon EU Amsterdam 2026 Day 1 PHPDocker.io – Generator Laravel AI SDK Cursor is now available in JetBrains IDEs Basic issue tracker for LLM coding agents Welcoming Elizabeth Barron as the New Executive Director of The PHP Foundation From Defense AI Drift to Policy Enforcement: Why I Built Firebreak Firebreak – Policy-as-code enforcement proxy for LLM API deployments X: https://x.com/phparch Mastodon: https://phparch.social/@phparch Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/phparch.com Discord: https://discord.phparch.com Subscribe to our magazine: https://www.phparch.com/subscribe/ Host: Eric Van Johnson X: @shocm Mastodon: @eric@phparch.social Bluesky: @ericvanjohnson.bsky.social PHPArch.me: @eric John Congdon X: @johncongdon Mastodon: @john@phparch.social Bluesky: @johncongdon.bsky.social PHPArch.me: @john Streams: Youtube Channel Twitch Partner This podcast is made a little better thanks to our partners Displace Infrastructure Management, Simplified Automate Kubernetes deployments across any cloud provider or bare metal with a single command. Deploy, manage, and scale your infrastructure with ease. https://displace.tech/ PHPScore Put Your Technical Debt on Autopay with PHPScore CodeRabbit Cut code review time & bugs in half instantly with CodeRabbit. Music Provided by Epidemic Sound https://www.epidemicsound.com/ The post The PHP Podcast 2026.03.05 appeared first on PHP Architect.

Python Bytes
#470 A Jolting Episode

Python Bytes

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 23, 2026 25:29 Transcription Available


Topics covered in this episode: Better Python tests with inline-snapshot jolt Battery intelligence for your laptop Markdown code formatting with ruff act - run your GitHub actions locally Extras Joke Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training The Complete pytest Course Patreon Supporters Connect with the hosts Michael: @mkennedy@fosstodon.org / @mkennedy.codes (bsky) Brian: @brianokken@fosstodon.org / @brianokken.bsky.social Show: @pythonbytes@fosstodon.org / @pythonbytes.fm (bsky) Join us on YouTube at pythonbytes.fm/live to be part of the audience. Usually Monday at 11am PT. Older video versions available there too. Finally, if you want an artisanal, hand-crafted digest of every week of the show notes in email form? Add your name and email to our friends of the show list, we'll never share it. Brian #1: Better Python tests with inline-snapshot Alex Hall, on Pydantic blog Great for testing complex data structures Allows you to write a test like this: from inline_snapshot import snapshot def test_user_creation(): user = create_user(id=123, name="test_user") assert user.dict() == snapshot({}) Then run pytest --inline-snapshot=fix And the library updates the test source code to look like this: def test_user_creation(): user = create_user(id=123, name="test_user") assert user.dict() == snapshot({ "id": 123, "name": "test_user", "status": "active" }) Now, when you run the code without “fix” the collected data is used for comparison Awesome to be able to visually inspect the test data right there in the test code. Projects mentioned inline-snapshot pytest-examples syrupy dirty-equals executing Michael #2: jolt Battery intelligence for your laptop Support for both macOS and Linux Battery Status — Charge percentage, time remaining, health, and cycle count Power Monitoring — System power draw with CPU/GPU breakdown Process Tracking — Processes sorted by energy impact with color-coded severity Historical Graphs — Track battery and power trends over time Themes — 10+ built-in themes with dark/light auto-detection Background Daemon — Collect historical data even when the TUI isn't running Process Management — Kill energy-hungry processes directly Brian #3: Markdown code formatting with ruff Suggested by Matthias Schoettle ruff can now format code within markdown files Will format valid Python code in code blocks marked with python, py, python3 or py3. Also recognizes pyi as Python type stub files. Includes the ability to turn off formatting with comment [HTML_REMOVED] , [HTML_REMOVED] blocks. Requires preview mode [tool.ruff.lint] preview = true Michael #4: act - run your GitHub actions locally Run your GitHub Actions locally! Why would you want to do this? Two reasons: Fast Feedback - Rather than having to commit/push every time you want to test out the changes you are making to your .github/workflows/ files (or for any changes to embedded GitHub actions), you can use act to run the actions locally. The environment variables and filesystem are all configured to match what GitHub provides. Local Task Runner - I love make. However, I also hate repeating myself. With act, you can use the GitHub Actions defined in your .github/workflows/ to replace your Makefile! When you run act it reads in your GitHub Actions from .github/workflows/ and determines the set of actions that need to be run. Uses the Docker API to either pull or build the necessary images, as defined in your workflow files and finally determines the execution path based on the dependencies that were defined. Once it has the execution path, it then uses the Docker API to run containers for each action based on the images prepared earlier. The environment variables and filesystem are all configured to match what GitHub provides. Extras Michael: Winter is coming: Frozendict accepted Django ORM stand-alone Command Book app announcement post Joke: Plug ‘n Paste

Adafruit Industries
Deep Dive w/Scott: CircuitPython in Zephyr native simulator

Adafruit Industries

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2026


Join Scott as he shows off CircuitPython running locally in the Zephyr native simulator and discusses how it provides a feedback loop for LLM agents. He'll also answer any questions folks have. Thanks to dcd for the timecodes: 0:00 Getting started 3:00 Hello everyone - welcome to deep dive 4:10 adafruit ESP32-S2 example microcomputer running circuitpython 5:32 using LLM agents to generate code 5:55 new monitor - mouse tiler 6:37 mouse tiler using absolute positioning 7:25 resumed pi session with generate_mousetiler_layouts.py 8:49 example how LLM's are game changing 9:19 update KWIN scripts settings 11:00 "My AI Adoption Journey" https://mitchellh.com/writing/my-ai-adoption-journey 15:00 How to test USB without the linux kernel 16:55 Testing is more important now that LLMs are in the loop 17:43 Low level USB IP - using Raspberry Pi to share mouse and keyboard over internet 18:48 USB OCD esp32p4-usbip $35 asked Codex to write code overnight to send USB over wifi 20:30 usbip-pyusb-test w/MNS 21:49 upgraded from $20 to $200 subscription ( only 14% used ) 23:00 S3 USB Host not supported yet 23:46 esp32-S3-USB-OTG https://docs.espressif.com/projects/esp-dev-kits/en/latest/esp32s3/esp32-s3-usb-otg/user_guide.html 25:04 ESP P4 has Ethernet 29:13 considering Octo probes could be accessible over the internet ( over tailscale ) 31:33 Gross PR with job server (build all boards - agent generated) 34:00 demo the TUI interface 38:07 chef analogy in https://www.avo.app/blog/from-pairing-to-leading 40:25 Keep PRs small! ( multiple branches ) 42:20 skip to the testing virtual desktop 43:10 using the zephyr simulator 44:50 edit settings.toml / using pi 47:50 testing to verify web workflow 49:25 web workflow test not working 50:20 pi: "figure out why web workflow not working" 52:07 look at tests/test_web_workflow.py 59:56 wrap back to "My AI aboption" 1:01:23 prioritize step 5 engineer the harnesses 1:03 Wrapping up - new channel #coding-agents-and-llms 1:05:48 out on the 6th ( 2 weeks from now ) Visit the Adafruit shop online - http://www.adafruit.com ----------------------------------------- LIVE CHAT IS HERE! http://adafru.it/discord Subscribe to Adafruit on YouTube: http://adafru.it/subscribe New tutorials on the Adafruit Learning System: http://learn.adafruit.com/ -----------------------------------------