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As Pastor Greg shares today's message "Jesus Makes The Unusable, Usable." It's so encouraging to remember that no matter our past or perceived limitations, God's grace through Jesus can transform us and make us usable for His purposes. It speaks volumes about His love and redemption.
Lott and St Andrew's UMC are teaming up to recycle styrofoam into usable material. Lott Industries will recycle #6 styrofoam, the kind you find when you buy electronics usually, and the Church of St. Andrew's UMC on Heatherdowns have decided to get involved. The church now has a drop-off bin on church property which they regularly empty and deliver to Lott Industries for recycling. The recycled material can be turned into park benches and other useful items. This effort is keeping thousands of tons of this material out of our landfills. For further information visit LOTT INDUSTRIES
Today I am going to try to answer a fundamental question: how should you actually measure user experience, especially with data products—and tie this to business value? It's easy to get lost in analytics and think we're seeing the whole picture, but I argue that this is far from the truth. Product leaders need to understand the subjective experience of our users—and unfortunately, analytics does not tell us this. The map is not the territory. In this episode, I discuss why qualitative data and subjective experience is the data that will most help you make product decisions that will lead you to increased business value. If users aren't getting value from your product(s), and their lives aren't improving, business value will be extremely difficult to create. So today, I share my thoughts on how to move beyond thinking that analytics is the only way to track UX, and how this helps product leaders uncover opportunities to produce better organizational value. Ultimately, it's about creating indispensable solutions and building trust, which is key for any product team looking to make a real impact. Hat tip to UX guru Jared Spool who inspired several of the concepts I share with you today. Highlights/ Skip to Don't target adoption for adoption's sake, because product usage can be a tax or benefit (3:00) Why your analytical mind may bias you—and what changes you might have to do this type of product and user research work (7:31) How "making the user's life better" translates to organizational value (10:17) Using Jared Spool's roller coaster chart to measure your product's user experience and find your opportunities and successes (13:05) How do you measure that you have done a good job with your UX? (17:28) Conclusions and final thoughts (21:06) Quotes from Today's Episode Usage doesn't automatically equal value. Analytics on your analytics is not telling you useful things about user experience or satisfaction. Why? "The map is not the territory." Analytics measure computer metrics, not feelings, and let's face it, users aren't always rational. To truly gauge user value, we need qualitative research - to talk to users - and to hear what their subjective experience is. Want *meaningful* adoption? Talk to and observe your users. That's how you know you are actually making things better. When it's better for them, the business value will follow. (3:12) Make better things—where better is a measurement based on the subjective experience of the user—not analytics. Usable doesn't mean they will necessarily want it. Sessions and page views don't tell you how people *feel* about it. (7:39) Think about the dreadful tools you and so many have been forced to use: the things that waste your time and don't let you focus on what's really important. Ever talked to a data scientist who is sick of doing data prep instead of building models, and wondering, “why am I here? This isn't what I went to school for.” Ignoring these personal frustrations and feelings and focusing only on your customers' feature requests, JIRA tickets, stakeholder orders, requirements docs, and backlog items is why many teams end up building technically right, effectively wrong solutions. These end user frustrations are where we find our opportunities to delight—and create products and UXs that matter. To improve their lives, we need to dig into their workflows, identify frustrations, and understand the context around our data product solutions. Product leaders need to fall in love with the problems and the frustrations—these are the magic keys to the value kingdom. However, to do this well, you probably need to be doing less delivery and more discovery. (10:27) Imagine a line chart with a Y-axis that is "frustration" at the bottom to "delight" at the top. The X-axis is their user experience, taking place over time. As somebody uses your data product to do their job/task, you can plot their emotional journey. “Get the data, format the data, include the data in a tool, derive some conclusion, challenge the data, share it, make a decision” etc. As a product manager, you probably know what a use-case looks like. Your first job is to plot their existing experience trying/doing that use case with your data product. Where are they frustrated? Where are they delighted? Celebrate your peaks/delighters, and fall in love with the valleys where satisfaction work needs to be done. Connect the dots between these valleys and business value. Address the valleys—especially the ones that impede business value—and you'll be on your way to “showing the value of your data product.” Analytics on your data product won't tell you this information; the map is not the territory. (13:22) Analytics about your data product are lying to you. They give you the facts about the product, but not about the user. An example? “Time spent” doing a task. How long is too long? 5 minutes? 50? Analytics will tell you precisely how long it took. The problem is, it won't tell you how long it FELT it took. And guess what? Your customers and users only care about how long it felt it took—vs. their expectation. Sure, at some point, analytics might eventually help—at scale—understand how your data product is doing—but first you have to understand how people FEEL about it. Only then will you know whether 5 minutes, or 50 minutes is telling you anything meaningful about what—if anything—needs to change. (16:17)
Visit our Substack for bonus content and more: https://designbetterpodcast.com/p/heidi-trost Designing a good security experience is hard. Every time we run into one of those security captchas that requires you to “identify all the motorcycles” in the tiled images, we want to give up and surrender to our robot overlords…or throw our laptop out the window. Our guest today, Heidi Trost, just published a book called Human-Centered Security: How to Design Systems That Are Both Safe and Usable. In the book, Heidi aims to help people who are “tired of hearing things like ‘humans are the weakest link' and instead want to focus on designing more secure, more resilient systems.” In our conversation, we spoke with Heidi about the metrics we can use to measure the quality of the security experience, why the login/password recovery is so broken—even for companies that are good at UX design—and some ways to approach user testing for security. Bio Heidi Trost is a UX leader who helps cross-disciplinary teams improve the security user experience. With a background in UX research, Heidi does this by helping teams better understand the people they are designing for, as well as the security threats that may impact people and systems negatively. Heidi is also the host of the podcast, Human-Centered Security, where she interviews security experts and people who design for the security user experience. *** Premium Episodes on Design Better This ad-supported episode is available to everyone. If you'd like to hear it ad-free, upgrade to our premium subscription, where you'll get an additional 2 ad-free episodes per month (4 total). Premium subscribers also get access to the documentary Design Disruptors and our growing library of books, as well as our monthly AMAs with former guests, ad-free episodes, discounts and early access to workshops, and our monthly newsletter The Brief that compiles salient insights, quotes, readings, and creative processes uncovered in the show. Upgrade to paid *** Visiting the links below is one of the best ways to support our show: Masterclass: MasterClass is the only streaming platform where you can learn and grow with over 200+ of the world's best. People like Steph Curry, Paul Krugman, Malcolm Gladwell, Dianne Von Furstenberg, Margaret Atwood, Lavar Burton and so many more inspiring thinkers share their wisdom in a format that is easy to follow and can be streamed anywhere on a smartphone, computer, smart TV, or even in audio mode. MasterClass always has great offers during the holidays, sometimes up to as much as 50% off. Head over to http://masterclass.com/designbetter for the current offer. Thuma: We're the sort of people who can't help but get lost in the details of creating a beautiful living space. A well designed home is a sanctuary for creative thinking. For those who revel in crafting a beautiful living space, Thuma offers modern furniture that transforms your home into a sanctuary for creative thinking.
⦁ Are the Astros improving their Defense with Altuve at LF? ⦁ Is Altuve going to be Usable at LF? ⦁ Who Said It?
Is it usable Kia Xceed 2024 Gt line spec quick review
Passage: 2 Corinthians 4:5-7, 2 Timothy 2:19-21 WATCH THE VIDEO HERE: To learn more about Adelphi, visit us at: adelphibaptist.com
In this week's podcast Kyle and Frank do a deep dive on usable space and how it pertains to deer, turkeys, quail, and overall property management.
This is the Engineering Culture Podcast, from the people behind InfoQ.com and the QCon conferences. In this podcast Shane Hastie, Lead Editor for Culture & Methods spoke to Neeraj Mainkar about the challenges of developing safe and usable medical device software in areas where software bugs can have life-and-death consequences, and how to approach these challenges through rigorous processes, user-centered design, and leveraging emerging technologies. Read a transcript of this interview: https://bit.ly/3VLYtQP Subscribe to the Software Architects' Newsletter for your monthly guide to the essential news and experience from industry peers on emerging patterns and technologies: https://www.infoq.com/software-architects-newsletter Upcoming Events: QCon London (April 7-9, 2025) Discover new ideas and insights from senior practitioners driving change and innovation in software development. https://qconlondon.com/ InfoQ Dev Summit Boston (June 9-10, 2025) Actionable insights on today's critical dev priorities. devsummit.infoq.com/conference/boston2025 InfoQ Dev Summit Munich (Save the date - October 2025) QCon San Francisco 2025 (17-21, 2025) Get practical inspiration and best practices on emerging software trends directly from senior software developers at early adopter companies. https://qconsf.com/ InfoQ Dev Summit New York (Save the date - December 2025) The InfoQ Podcasts: Weekly inspiration to drive innovation and build great teams from senior software leaders. Listen to all our podcasts and read interview transcripts: - The InfoQ Podcast https://www.infoq.com/podcasts/ - Engineering Culture Podcast by InfoQ https://www.infoq.com/podcasts/#engineering_culture - Generally AI: https://www.infoq.com/generally-ai-podcast/ Follow InfoQ: - Mastodon: https://techhub.social/@infoq - Twitter: twitter.com/InfoQ - LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/company/infoq - Facebook: bit.ly/2jmlyG8 - Instagram: @infoqdotcom - Youtube: www.youtube.com/infoq Write for InfoQ:Learn and share the changes and innovations in professional software development. - Join a community of ex perts. - Increase your visibility. - Grow your career. https://www.infoq.com/write-for-infoq
Having begun power operation at the end of August 1951, on December 20 Atomic Energy Program scientists at the EBR-I successfully used the reactor to produce enough electricity to power four 200 watt light ...
Am CISPA erforscht Carolyn Guthoff unter anderem Client-Side Scanning und versucht die Frage zu beantworten, wie sich die persönliche Sicherheit Chats verbessern lässt, ohne gleichzeitig die Privatsphäre unsicher zu machen.
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In this episode, Heidi gets a taste of her own medicine and is interviewed by co-host John Robertson about her newly-released book Human-Centered Security: How to Design Systems That Are Both Safe and Usable. We talk about:Why Heidi's experience as a UX researcher prompted her to write Human-Centered Security.Places in the user journey where security impacts users the most.Why cross-disciplinary collaboration is important—find your security UX allies (people in security, legal, privacy, engineering, product managers, to name a few).Practical security UX tips like secure by default, guiding the user along the safe path, and being really careful about the words you use.Technical users—IT admins, engineers, security analysts—are users, too and why it's so important to thoughtfully design the security user experience for them. (Spoiler: they help keep the rest of us safe!)
Just as a rock climber meticulously checks their gear and follows strict safety protocols to navigate treacherous heights, security UX professionals must also anticipate risks and design safeguards to ensure a smooth and safe journey for users in a digital landscape. In Lou's interview with Heidi Trost, author of Human-Centered Security: How to Design Systems that are Both Safe and Usable, Heidi highlights the critical safety protocols climbers and belayers follow, which mirror the precautions needed in system design to mitigate human error and anxiety. This analogy sets the stage for a broader discussion on security user experience challenges. Heidi stresses the necessity of cross-disciplinary collaboration, especially when dealing with sensitive data like personally identifiable information (PII) and electronic protected health information (EPHI). She points out how involving legal and security teams early can streamline projects and improve outcomes. Designers, as facilitators, must bridge the gap between complex security concepts and user comprehension. Heidi's book helps them do this by using personas to understand how the dynamic between users, security UX, and threat actors shapes. Lou and Heidi's conversation explores the evolution of multi-factor authentication (MFA) and its unintended consequences. What started as a simple 6-digit code morphed into a troublesome fatigue for users. Heidi underscores the importance of iterative design to adapt to these evolving challenges, likening the chaos of security interactions to a relentless ping-pong match. As they look ahead, Louis and Heidi discuss the rapid evolution of AI in security contexts, emphasizing the balance between technological advancement and user protection. With AI assistants poised to know more about individuals than ever, designers must remain vigilant to prevent potential misuse. Their conversation is an invitation for professionals to rethink how they approach security UX and design, encouraging a proactive stance in this ever-changing landscape.
With the number of libraries available to Go developers these days, you'd think building a CLI app was now a trivial matter. But like many things in software development, it depends. In this episode, we explore the challenges that arose during one team's journey towards a production-ready CLI.
With the number of libraries available to Go developers these days, you'd think building a CLI app was now a trivial matter. But like many things in software development, it depends. In this episode, we explore the challenges that arose during one team's journey towards a production-ready CLI.
Link to YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/@DryCreekWranglerSchool Link to Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/drycreekdewayne/ Link to Website: https://drycreekwranglers.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Cliff Coleman, MD, MPH, is a physician and international expert in the field of health literacy. His award-winning work focuses on improving health literacy and clear communication training for healthcare professionals through systems approaches, including curriculum design and evaluation. Coleman is Professor of Family Medicine at the Oregon Health & Science University (OHSU) School of […] The post Health Information Equity: Equal Access to Information that is High-Quality, Understandable, and Usable (HLOL #252) appeared first on Health Literacy Out Loud Podcast.
Today, Pastor Al Dagel takes a look at Israel's "Shepherd King" to illustrate how we can recover from a fall.
Today on episode 195 of the Podcast we are bringing you a seminar from Alan Summerford from Land and Legacy and Kyle Lybarger from Native Habitat Project! Alan and Kyle go over the importance of native habitat and forage for whitetails. They cover all the things that you would hope for in this dive into the information of natives and how deer use them for forage and bedding. The guys teach you how to be an efficient hunter and how ultimately your success can be planned! Take time to visit our sponsors! Satties LLC - Click HERE! Hooked Up Custom Bowstrings - Click HERE! Get your information for the Mobile Hunters Expo HERE! We would love to hear your thoughts on this one as well so feel free to hit us up in the email or send us a message! If you haven't already check out our YouTube page and subscribe! As always if you enjoy listening to the podcast please like, share, and give us 5 stars on any of the major podcast platforms we are found on. Hear something we missed? Let us know what we are doing wrong or doing right, or if you have a question; Email us at RichardCates@TheMobileHuntersExpo.com Happy Hunting and Tight Lines! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Philips Hue Programming (Part 1 of 3) Tiny Tip – Re-usable Cable Ties Command Line Text Expansion with Espanso by Ed Tobias Philips Hue Programming, Evolved (Part 2 of 3) Tiny Tip – Cable Tags Manta Sleep Masks Transcript of NC_2024_08_18 Join the Conversation: allison@podfeet.com podfeet.com/slack Support the Show: Patreon Donation PayPal one-time donation Podfeet Podcasts Mugs at Zazzle Podfeet 15-Year Anniversary Shirts Referral Links: Parallels Toolbox - 3 months free for you and me Learn through MacSparky Field Guides - 15% off for you and me Backblaze - One free month for me and you Setapp - One free month for me and you Eufy - $40 for me if you spend $200. Sadly nothing in it for you. PIA VPN - One month added to Paid Accounts for both of us CleanShot X - Earns me $25%, sorry nothing in it for you but my gratitude
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Usable.net released their midyear Americans with Disabilities Act Web Lawsuit report. Denis Boudreau dives into the data.
In this episode, we sit down with Aki B, the founder of DLC Link, to dive into how his company is revolutionizing Bitcoin's role in DeFi. Aki and our host Luis Nuñez delve into the mechanics of transactions on DLC Link and the key participants involved. They also discuss innovative Bitcoin bridging techniques, highlighting DLC's unique approach using Discrete Log Contracts. Additionally, you'll hear about their collaborations with ChainLink and other partners, the importance of dlcBTC (DLC's safer wrapped Bitcoin), remote staking, enhanced security measures, and a broad view of the Bitcoin L2 ecosystem. Watch the episode to learn how DLC Link is making Bitcoin more composable and usable in decentralized finance, leveraging its inherent security for truly decentralized transactions.
PREVIEW: #ARIANE-6: Colleague Bob Zimmerman comments on the last days of Ariane-6, the overdue and one-time usable booster developed by the European Space Agency. More tonight on the success of commercial space. 1954
Howdy, friend! It's been a wet and humid Summer down here in central Texas but at least we aren't burning in triple digit temperatures…yet. Regardless, it is that time for yet another episode of our Homebrew Happy Hour podcast!… THE home brew #podcast where we answer all of your home brewing questions and discuss anything […]
During a panel discussion at this year's Auto Intel Summit + National Remarketing Conference presented by SmartAuction in Cary, N.C., a quartet of experts explained how evolving technology is making massive amounts of data more understandable and usable for auto financing. Led by Cherokee Media Group's Nick Zulovich, the panel included: —Kevin Filan of Open Lending —Jessica Gonzalez of InformedIQ —Scott McMahon of Equifax —Tim Yalich of Wolters Kluwer
We have the privilage of welcoming the wild man, our very own missionary to Uganda, Shannon Hurley! He will be preaching from Isaiah 66:1–2 on the Three Qualities Of A Usable Servant.
David Wakerly is the co-founder and CTO of Dioxcycle—a truly mind-blowing tech company that turns factory emissions back into usable plastic. Dioxcycle has raised over $17 million in funding to date, and focuses on repurposing carbon emissions into ethylene, an essential chemical in many products. David teaches me the environmental challenges associated with ethylene production, the carbon-intensive processes currently used, and about Dioxcycle's groundbreaking electrolyzer technology. Their goal is to create sustainable solutions that could prevent 800 million tons of emissions and recycle 600 megatons of CO2 per year by 2050. Join David as he explores the potential to revolutionize the industry and make a positive impact on the planet. ➡️ https://dioxycle.com ➡️ Watch this Episode on YouTube: @therosspalmer
In this episode, the Team talks about accessibility and design. Guest host Lauren DeMarks talks about user experience (UX) design and the spectrum of use cases for ensuring equitable experiences regardless of temporary or long-term physical disabilities. Show Notes:Overall, what does it mean to have accessible design? Lauren, would you like to give us a definition or overview? OVERVIEW Accessibility is the practice of making sure a product, environment or service can be used by everyone—however they encounter it.Including those with blindness/low vision, speech impairments, hearing impairments, cognitive & learning disabilities, motor/dexterity issues—accessible solutions make it so that these folks can actually meaningfully use the designs we create. But accessible design is important in ALL elements and design disciplines. Accessible design can also help people with various kinds of impairments (because you probably first think of permanent ones). Situational —walking in high heels, I'm at a loud concert. Temporary— my leg is broken, I have an ear infection and cannot hear. Permanent — I am paralyzed and cannot use my legs, I am blind. Accessible designs help EVERYONEAccessible design helps ALL people—even those without disabilities (taking 14 bags of groceries to my 7th floor apartment makes elevators look real nice). What's the difference between Accessibility and usability? Usability issues generally affect all users, both users with and without disabilities. All users have difficulty using a website. Accessibility issues occur solely for people with disabilities when they have difficulty using or accessing a website without problems. Accessible design makes spaces and designed products USABLE for EVERYONE, regardless of ability. Accessibility is important in ALL silos of designDigitalPrintPhysical EnvironmentalTeachingEtc. DigitalMainly consider solutions that benefit low-sight or low-hearing users. Cognitive impairments come into considerations too. Alt. text. Not just relying on color to communicate a message. Allowing for customization (text size, color-blind settings, etc) (we also see this in video games). Goes beyond just visual, and as a digital designer you need to have a tight partnership with your developers to make sure the code is accessible as well. Print design? Oxo vegetable peeler maBuilt environments & environmental design. Take mobility into account more than digital products. What things are considered in this area of design? Routes, signage, etc… Curb cut - Physical productsDesign for folks with arthritis, but they're just flat out more comfortable for everyone. TeachingProviding multiple ways (within reason) for students to demonstrate mastery. Host, Producer, & Editor - Mark CelaHost, Director, & Script Writer - Kristen PericleousHost, Social Media Manager, Social Media Content Creator, & Editor - Dan Lawson
Chapter 1 What's Simple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book by Giles ColborneSimple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design is a book written by Giles Colborne. It focuses on creating user-friendly designs for websites, mobile applications, and other interactive interfaces. The book offers practical advice and guidelines for designing user-friendly experiences that are easy to navigate and understand. It covers topics such as user research, information architecture, visual design, and usability testing. Overall, it provides valuable insights and tips for creating simple and usable designs that enhance the user experience.Chapter 2 Is Simple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book A Good BookYes, "Simple And Usable: Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design" by Giles Colborne is considered a good book for those interested in learning about design principles for web, mobile, and interaction design. The book provides practical advice and examples for creating user-friendly and effective designs. It has received positive reviews for its clear and concise explanations of design concepts.Chapter 3 Simple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book by Giles Colborne Summary"Simple And Usable" by Giles Colborne is a practical guide to creating effective web, mobile, and interaction design. The book is divided into three main sections: simplicity, usability, and design.In the simplicity section, Colborne discusses the importance of keeping designs simple and easy to use. He emphasizes that simplicity is not about reducing features, but about creating an intuitive and pleasurable user experience.In the usability section, Colborne covers the principles of usability testing and user-centered design. He explains how to conduct usability tests, gather feedback from users, and use this feedback to improve the design of a website or app.In the design section, Colborne explores the elements of good design, such as typography, color, and layout. He explains how to create visually appealing designs that are also functional and easy to use.Overall, "Simple And Usable" is a practical guide for designers looking to create user-friendly web, mobile, and interaction designs. Colborne's clear writing style and real-world examples make this book a valuable resource for anyone involved in the design process. Chapter 4 Simple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book AuthorGiles Colborne is a UX designer, speaker, and author based in the UK. He is the founder of the digital design agency cxpartners and has over 20 years of experience working in the field of user experience design.The book "Simple And Usable: Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design" was released in 2010 by New Riders publishing. It focuses on practical techniques for designing user-friendly digital experiences.In addition to "Simple And Usable," Giles Colborne has also written another book called "Simple and Usable Web, Mobile, and Interaction Design," which was released in 2010. This book is a valuable resource for anyone looking to improve their digital design skills.In terms of editions, the original "Simple And Usable" book is considered the best as it is a comprehensive guide to designing user-friendly digital experiences.Chapter 5 Simple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book Meaning & ThemeSimple And Usable Web, Mobile, And Interaction Design Book MeaningThis book by Giles Colborne is a practical guide for...
In this CE-approved Beyond Clean Articles On-The-Go episode, Hank Balch discusses the shortcomings of traditional Sterile Processing productivity metrics and proposes a new approach called usable units of service (UUOS) -- "A shift to a model of usable units of service (UUOS) for the Sterile Processing industry would bring quality standards back into the productivity conversation where they truly belong. The concept of UUOS is simple. Instead of measuring productivity as worked hours vs. UOS (traditional UOS), the formula would change to account for…” Check out this article, take the CE quiz & download your certificate here: https://www.flexiquiz.com/SC/N/broken-productivity-metrics Stay tuned for new CE-approved Articles On-the-Go releasing each week! Bookmark our new AOTG CE page here: https://www.beyondcleanmedia.com/articles-on-the-go #FightingDirty #HankBalch #BeyondClean #WeFightDirty™ Click To Subscribe on YouTube, iTunes, Stitcher, Google Play or Spotify or Visit Our Website!
Note: This episode contains at least 2 very important knowledge bombs about the importance of SaaS for Web3, and the art of dealmaking for chain partnerships! We've got more Blockchain infrastructure than we can possibly use... But is it USABLE? Tim from Venly will explain the importance of developer tools to make Web3 more accessible to everyone... Blockchains are brilliant. Tokens are tremendous. But development on most chains can be dire... Esoteric languages, confusing contracts, limited interoperability, and APIs that don't connect to anything legacy organisations actually use today. Venly are looking to change that. In this show we'll talk about: - The challenge of building with Blockchains today - What do we mean by 'tooling' for Web3 - What's in the Venly tooling stack - Example use cases where enterprises and projects are benefiting from SaaS / BaaS solutions - What more is needed to see wider Web3 adoption
"Full And Usable" - Rev. Joel Siegel - Nov. 19. 2023 PM by Promise of Life Church
"Spiritual And Usable" - Rev. Joel Siegel - Nov. 19. 2023 AM by Promise of Life Church
Featured on WGN Radio's Home Sweet Home Chicago on 01/06/24: Fred AuWerter of White Rabbit Inc. joins the program to share who White Rabbit Inc. is and what they do, as well as talk about the current high level home improvement trends and homeowner motivation to utilize garages as a usable space. Learn more about […]
Featured on WGN Radio's Home Sweet Home Chicago on 01/06/24: Fred AuWerter of White Rabbit Inc. joins the program to share who White Rabbit Inc. is and what they do, as well as talk about the current high level home improvement trends and homeowner motivation to utilize garages as a usable space. Learn more about […]
2 Kings
2 Kings
Disclaimer: The views, information, or opinions expressed on this program are solely the views of the individuals involved and by no means represent absolute facts. Opinions expressed by the host and guests can change at any time, and do not represent views of past, present, or future employers. Guest Bio: Nicole is the Chief Product Officer at Axio. Nicole has spent her career building awareness around the benefits of usable security and human-centered security as a way to increase company revenue and create a seamless user experience. Youtube VOD Link: https://youtube.com/live/tFaAB9an47g Questions and topics: Usable security: is it an oxymoron? What determines if the security is ‘usable' or no? We sacrifice security for a better UX, what can be done to alleviate that? Or is it some sort of sliding scale in “poor UX, amazing security or awesome UX, poor security” Examples of poor UX for ‘people': MFA, and password managers. SEC updates and ‘material events' and how that would affect security, IR, and other company reporting functions. Also, additional documentation (Regulation S-K Item 106) https://www.linkedin.com/posts/nicole-sundin-5225a1149_sec-adopts-rules-on-cybersecurity-risk-management-activity-7090065804083290112-ISD8 Are companies ready to talk about their cybersecurity? Can the SEC say “you're not doing enough?” What is ‘enough'? Are we heading toward yet another audit needed for public companies, similar to SOX? When does an 8-K get publicly disclosed? Materiality is based on a “reasonable investor”? So, you don't need to announce that until you're certain, and it's based on what you can collect? Cyber Risk Management and some good examples of how to set up a proper cyber risk organization Additional Links: https://csrc.nist.gov/CSRC/media/Projects/usable-cybersecurity/images-media/Is%20Usable%20Security%20an%20Oxymoron.pdf http://web.mit.edu/Saltzer/www/publications/protection/Basic.html https://www.sec.gov/news/press-release/2023-139 https://www.sec.gov/news/statement/munter-statement-assessing-materiality-030922 https://www.pwc.com/us/en/services/consulting/cybersecurity-risk-regulatory/sec-final-cybersecurity-disclosure-rules.html https://www.nasa.gov/centers/ames/research/technology-onepagers/hc-computing.html https://securityscorecard.com/blog/what-is-cyber-security-performance-management/
Dr. John Goetsch - Are You Usable? by West Coast Baptist College
Tyler discusses the new technology in the Ford Bronco that they used while out at Cruise Moab. We already covered our trip, and all the trails we went on, but we had some follow-up questions on all the new tech that is in the Bronco. We covered everything from the one peddle driving to using the tank turn. Tyler really enjoyed driving the Bronco in Moab, and he feels the new tech was pretty neat but might not be completely necessary. WE HAVE A WINNER FOR THE WINCH! Thank you to everyone who has submitted reviews over the past few years. We have finally achieved our goal of 500 Reviews on iTunes/Apple Podcasts! We now can announce the winner, and it was #411- Usernamealreadytaken69420, and the runner-up was #40 - Joez60421. We are also waiting to hear back from Six String Trucker for winning the 350th, and to Redrockethotpocket for winning the 450th swag pack. CALL US AND LEAVE US A VOICEMAIL!!!! We want to hear from you even more!!! You can call and say whatever you like! Ask a question, leave feedback, correct some information about welding, say how much you hate your Jeep, and wish you had a Toyota! We will air them all, live, on the podcast! +01-916-345-4744. If you have any negative feedback, you can call our negative feedback hotline, 408-800-5169. 4Wheel Underground has all the suspension parts you need to take your off-road rig from leaf springs to a performance suspension system. We just ordered our kits for Kermit and Samantha and are looking forward to getting them. The ordering process was quite simple and answering the questionnaire to ensure we got the correct and best fitting kits for our vehicles. If you want to level up your suspension game, check out 4Wheel Underground. Episode 398 is brought to you by all of our peeps over at patreon.com and irate4x4! Make sure to stop by and see all of the great perks you get for supporting SnailTrail4x4! Discount Codes, Monthly Give-Aways, Gift Boxes, the SnailTrail4x4 Community, and the ST4x4 Treasure Hunt! Thank you to all of those that support us! We couldn't do it without you guys (and gals!)! MORRFlate is generous enough to donate two of their newest TenSix™ PSI Pro to two lucky winners for May's Monthly Giveaway. The new PSI Pro will automatically stop filling your tires at your desired preset pressure. Now it truly is set it and forget when filling up your tires. These new PSI Pros are retailing for over $300. MORRFLate Pre-Sale of the TenSix™ PSI Pro™ - Claim Your Spot Now Congratulations to Ryan Hughes and Sean Spegitti for winning April's giveaway. These two lucky winners will win one of our gift boxes. These gift boxes are filled with fun items that Tyler and I enjoy about our industry. They are sometimes very useful and other times totally random. Listener Discount Codes: MORRFlate - snailtrail to get 10% off MORRFlate Multi Tire Inflation Deflation™ KitsIronman 4x4 - snailtrail20 to get 20% off all Ironman 4x4 branded equipment!Sidetracked Offroad - snailtrail4x4 (lowercase) to get 15% off lights and recovery gearSpartan Rope - snailtrail4x4 to get 10% off sitewideShock Surplus - SNAILTRAIL4x4 to get $25 off any order!Mob Armor - SNAILTRAIL4X4 for 15% offSummerShine Supply - ST4x4 for 10% off4WheelUnderground - snailtrail for 5% off Midroll Music by ComaStudio