Podcasts about vpo

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Best podcasts about vpo

Latest podcast episodes about vpo

Hora 25
Hora 25 de los negocios | Pacto de Estado por la vivienda social

Hora 25

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2025 22:37


El Gobierno plantea triplicar la inversión en vivienda con una condición: las Comunidades Autónomas tienen que aportar más financiación y garantizar que su VPO sea permanente. El parque de vivienda pública ha quedado reducido casi a cero en las últimas décadas, porque dos millones y medio de inmuebles han salido al mercado libre. Lo analizamos en Hora 25 de los Negocios. 

Hora 25 de los negocios
Hora 25 de los negocios | Pacto de Estado por la vivienda social

Hora 25 de los negocios

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 4, 2025 22:37


El Gobierno plantea triplicar la inversión en vivienda con una condición: las Comunidades Autónomas tienen que aportar más financiación y garantizar que su VPO sea permanente. El parque de vivienda pública ha quedado reducido casi a cero en las últimas décadas, porque dos millones y medio de inmuebles han salido al mercado libre. Lo analizamos en Hora 25 de los Negocios. 

Magnates del Ladrillo
#268 - MDL: Cómo INVERTIR en Viviendas de Protección Oficial | VPO

Magnates del Ladrillo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2025 90:37


¿Sabías que la descalificación de vivienda pública en España puede ser la puerta a la libertad financiera? En este vídeo te explicaremos cómo algunos propietarios logran transformar sus VPO en activos rentables, y cómo entender este proceso puede marcar la diferencia si tienes —o aspiras a tener— inmuebles protegidos. Nos lo cuenta el experto Juan Pedro Caro.  ✅¿Necesitas un PSI (Personal Shopper Inmobiliario) para acompañarte a invertir en bienes raíces en la Com.Madrid?: magnatesladrillo@gmail.com ✅Si vas en serio «La Biblia del Magnate del Ladrillo» está AQUÍ ✅

Kontakty
Ako sa stavajú mrakodrapy a potrebuje ich naše hlavné mesto? (29.5.2025 20:06)

Kontakty

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2025 25:07


Hostia: Juraj Hermann (špecialista na výškové stavby) a Dušan Ševela (Alto Real Estate). | Zatiaľ máme jeden mrakodrap, vo výhľade sú štyri. Bratislavský Downtown vyrástol neuveriteľne rýchlo a jeho súčasťou sú aj stavby siahajúce až do oblakov. Ako sa stavajú mrakodrapy a potrebuje ich naše hlavné mesto? Vpočujte si Kontakty s Evou Gergelyovou. | Ako sa stavajú mrakodrapy a potrebuje ich naše hlavné mesto? | Moderuje: Eva Gergelyová; | Kontakty pripravuje Slovenský rozhlas, Rádio Slovensko, SRo1. V premiére v pondelok až štvrtok po 20. hodine v Rádiu Slovensko.

La Brújula
Francisco de la Torre: "Málaga ha diversificado su economía sin renunciar al turismo"

La Brújula

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2025 27:16


El alcalde de Málaga, Francisco de la Torre, ha defendido en La Brújula una respuesta integral a la subida de precios del alquiler, impulsando más VPO, regulando el mercado del alquiler y creando una tasa a la vivienda turística cuya recaudación se destine a políticas sociales. Todo, desde un modelo de ciudad "tecnológica, cultural y sostenible".

Desayunos Informativos Europa Press Andalucía
Javier Fernández, presidente de la Diputación de Sevilla

Desayunos Informativos Europa Press Andalucía

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2025 79:18


Hoy te traemos una nueva edición de los Desayunos Informativos de Europa Press Andalucía gracias al patrocinio de Sando y la colaboración de la Fundación Cajasol. El ponente protagonista de este encuentro es el presidente de la Diputación de Sevilla, Javier Fernández. Nuestro invitado, subirá a la tribuna informativa para su exposición inicial y seguidamente mantendrá un breve coloquio con el delegado de Europa Press en Andalucía, Francisco Morón. Javier Fernández: "Me da mucho que pensar por qué desde la Junta no se invierte en Sevilla y sí muchísimo en Málaga" Javier Fernández anuncia un plan de vivienda de 250 millones para 2.000 VPO en los pueblos con alquileres de 350 euros

Andalucía Informativos
Informativo Sevilla - 27/03/25

Andalucía Informativos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 14:51


Tiempo estable esta mañana en la provincia, aunque los efectos de las borrascas siguen estando presentes. En Guillena ya está reparada la tubería de agua que abastece a 1500 personas en Torre de la Reina pero aún no es apta para el consumo, por su para La Algaba ha pedido a la Junta la declaración de zona de emergencia social. Estos dos municipios se han unido a otros cinco de la comarca para pedir a la Junta que repare las carreteras secundarias que pasan por la zona, en especial la 8006, por el desgaste producido por las lluvias. Esta vía registra más de 14.000 desplazamientos diarios.En Sevilla capital, la vivienda sigue estando presente en la agenda de la actualidad municipal. El alcalde Jose Luis Sanz pide rebajas fiscales para bajar el precio de las VPO. Mientras que anuncia que van a construir 4.600 viviendas protegidas en los próximos cuatro años.Todo ello en un jueves 27 de marzo en el que se esperan novedades sobre el estado del Teatro Lope de Vega. El espacio lleva cerrado desde el año 2023 por unas obras que aún no han comenzado, es por ello que varios colectivos culturales se concentran esta tarde frente al teatro. Precisamente hoy es el día del teatro y se estrena en el maestranza una nueva adaptación de La Verbena de la Paloma.Las noticias de Sevilla con Marta Sánchez y Ángel MontanerEscuchar audio

Andalucía Informativos
Informativo 13.55 Málaga - 27/03/2025

Andalucía Informativos

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2025 5:01


El gobierno Andaluz hará mas promoción turística de Ronda , mientras APYMER y la plataforma AutovÍa Ronda YA han convocado una manifestación para el día 5 de abril , Málaga construirá 1400 viviendas de VPO además de las previstas, el pleno del ayuntamiento da luz verde a la mejora del trafico en la ronda este , 300000 niños y adolescentes se verán afectados por la nueva ley de protección de menores en entornos digitales , la audiencia provincial ha absuelto a los tres hombres de agredir sexualmente a una chica. Escuchar audio

Andalucía Informa - Europa Press
Andalucía Informa 17 de marzo de 2025

Andalucía Informa - Europa Press

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 4:26


Bienvenidos a Andalucía Informa, un podcast de Europa Press. En este espacio podrás conocer en unos minutos las noticias más relevantes de nuestra comunidad. Hoy es 17 de marzo y estas son algunas de las informaciones más destacadas en nuestra agencia. Andalucía sube a nivel 1 el plan de emergencia por la borrasca Laurence con más de 20 embalses desaguandoSánchez y Moreno presumen de cooperación en la entrega de de llaves de 218 VPO de alquiler a precio asequible en SevillaEl SAS se persona como "perjudicado" en el caso de supuesta malversación en contratos sanitariosRecuerda que puedes encontrar estas y otras muchas noticias en la sección de Andalucía en nuestra web europapress.es.

SER Málaga
"Todo vendido" Ramón Martos, Bucéfalo

SER Málaga

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2025 3:49


Vendida en menos de un mes la primera promoción de VPO en cooperativa de Málaga

Radio Victoria
El Ayuntamiento adjudica la construcción de 20 viviendas de protección pública destinadas a alquiler social

Radio Victoria

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2025 7:04


El Ayuntamiento de Rincón de la Victoria ha adjudicado el derecho de superficie para la construcción de 20 viviendas de protección pública destinadas a alquiler social. El concejal de Urbanismo y Grandes Proyectos, Miguel Ángel Jiménez (PP), ha explicado que, “tras la licitación y recepción de ofertas, será la adjudicataria, la empresa Resa Collantes Sur S.L, la que se encargará de la promoción, construcción y gestión de viviendas de protección pública energéticamente eficientes con destino a alquiler social en una parcela de titularidad municipal en la localidad de Torre de Benagalbón”. El alcalde de Rincón de la Victoria, Francisco Salado (PP), ha mostrado su satisfacción “por el importante trabajo que venimos realizando en los últimos años en materia urbanística y de vivienda. Y fruto de este trabajo, ya es una realidad la construcción de estas primeras 20 viviendas públicas destinadas al alquiler asequible en Rincón de la Victoria”. “Vamos a seguir trabajando para la disponibilidad de suelo destinado a la construcción de vivienda pública a través del nuevo Plan General que recogerá determinaciones específicas para que se pueda desarrollar más viviendas a precios asequibles”, señala el regidor. Las viviendas se construirán en una parcela de 759,05 metros cuadrados con una edificabilidad de 1.664,6 metros cuadrados en la zona de Bonilla Baja, sector UE TB-18, en la zona del IES Margarita Salas de Torre de Benagalbón. El contrato de constitución del derecho real de superficie sobre la parcela será de 50 años en base a una serie de condiciones, como un canon anual de 6.050 euros, IVA incluido, o el precio del alquiler de las viviendas en régimen de precio limitado: 9,47 euros mensuales por metro cuadrado útil. Además, las condiciones generales de los de los arrendatarios serán que los ingresos de la unidad familiar no podrán superar en 5,5 veces el IPREM en las 10 viviendas de precio limitado y en 3 veces el IPREM en las 10 viviendas de régimen especial. Para poder optar a estas viviendas de alquiler se realizará un sorteo entre las personas que estén inscritas en el Registro Municipal de Demandantes de VPO del Ayuntamiento de Rincón de la Victoria. Esta actuación, que ha sido posible gracias a la firma de un acuerdo entre el Ministerio de Transporte, Movilidad y Agenda Urbana, la Consejería de Fomento, Articulación del territorio y Vivienda y el Ayuntamiento de Rincón de la Victoria, está enmarcada dentro de los programas en materia de rehabilitación residencial y vivienda social del Plan de Recuperación, Transformación y Resiliencia, financiado por la Unión Europea (NextGenerationEU). Por último, el regidor ha asegurado que “esta equipo de gobierno seguirá trabajando en esta línea, apostando por el desarrollo de este tipo de vivienda, como ya se contempla en el proyecto de reparcelación del sector UR-R3 (junto al campo de fútbol), que comenzará ahora su desarrollo, así como la obligación de reserva de viviendas protegida que se exigen a día de hoy por el Plan General”.

Ráno Nahlas
Ombudsman Dobrovodský: Nechcem aby tu opäť vládlo právo policajného obušku, ako za bývalého režimu. Nastavme moci hranice!

Ráno Nahlas

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 55:08


My aj 35 rokov po Novembri 89 stále potrebujeme „strážiť strážcov,“ teda tých, ktorí majú v štáte monopol na násilie. Slovenský národ je ale málo citlivý na svoje práva, nebráni sa a bojí sa. Preto nabádam ľudí aby sa nebáli, veď práva, ktoré sme si v Novembri 89 vyštrngali, sú tu preto, aby nastavili štátu, a jeho moci, hranice, hovorí vo Verejný ochranca práv Róbert Dobrovodský.Ľudské práva si treba neustále pripomínať a nebrať ich ako samozrejmosť pretože veľmi ľahko o ne môžeme prísť. Tak, ako ťažko sme si slobodu v Novembri 89 vybojovali, veľmi ľahko o ňu možeme i prísť. Treba si stále robiť test: „Dnes som slobodný, voľný, bohatý a zdravý, ale zajtra sa to každému z nás môže zvrtnúť,“ pripomína v Ráno Nahlas slovenský ombudsman Róbert DobrovodskýSnaha o privatizáciu politiky straníckymi centrálami. Ťaženie vládnej moci voči mimovládnemu sektoru, médiám i aktívnemu a kritickému občanovi. Ostrakizácia ľudí s inou než heterosexuálnou orientáciou, rozklad niektorých princípov právneho štátu a jeho faktická nedostupnosť pre sociálne najslabších, no a napokon i zvyšujúca sa policajná brutalita.I tak vyzera Slovensko 35 rokov po Novembri 89, ktorý definitívne zmietol režim masívne porušujúci všetky možné občianske i ľudské práva. Medzi požiadavky novembrových námestí preto patrila aj sloboda tlače, zhromažďovania, spolčovania, pohybu, svedomia i ďalšie občianske práva a slobody. Čo z toho sa nám za tie tri desaťročia podarilo reálne naplniť a ideme ešte smerom k uskutočnovaniu záväzkov Novembra a našich ľudských a občianskych práv? Téma pre Verejného ochrancu práv Róberta Dobrovodského.Pozor na trend, ktorý vo svete začína pod názvom „sekuritizácia ľudských práv“ a ktorý je veľmi nebezpečný. Inak povedané, keď pod emóciou atentátov, kríz či pandémií získa vládna moc apetít obmedzovať ľudské práva. Vtedy treba byť naozaj ostražitý, varuje Verejný ochranca právPočúvate Ráno Nahlas, pekný deň a pokoj v duši praje Braňo Dobšinský.Dodajme, že rozhovor sme nahrávali v pondelok. Ku košickému prípadu, v ktorom policajt na smrť dobil muža bez domova nám preto ombudsman zaslal stanovisko, v ktorom vyjadril zhrozenie a vyzval k prijatiu preventívnych opatrení na zabránenie krutému a neľudskému zaobchádzaniu.

Podcasty Aktuality.sk
Ombudsman Dobrovodský: Nechcem aby tu opäť vládlo právo policajného obušku, ako za bývalého režimu. Nastavme moci hranice!

Podcasty Aktuality.sk

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2024 55:08


My aj 35 rokov po Novembri 89 stále potrebujeme „strážiť strážcov,“ teda tých, ktorí majú v štáte monopol na násilie. Slovenský národ je ale málo citlivý na svoje práva, nebráni sa a bojí sa. Preto nabádam ľudí aby sa nebáli, veď práva, ktoré sme si v Novembri 89 vyštrngali, sú tu preto, aby nastavili štátu, a jeho moci, hranice, hovorí vo Verejný ochranca práv Róbert Dobrovodský.Ľudské práva si treba neustále pripomínať a nebrať ich ako samozrejmosť pretože veľmi ľahko o ne môžeme prísť. Tak, ako ťažko sme si slobodu v Novembri 89 vybojovali, veľmi ľahko o ňu možeme i prísť. Treba si stále robiť test: „Dnes som slobodný, voľný, bohatý a zdravý, ale zajtra sa to každému z nás môže zvrtnúť,“ pripomína v Ráno Nahlas slovenský ombudsman Róbert DobrovodskýSnaha o privatizáciu politiky straníckymi centrálami. Ťaženie vládnej moci voči mimovládnemu sektoru, médiám i aktívnemu a kritickému občanovi. Ostrakizácia ľudí s inou než heterosexuálnou orientáciou, rozklad niektorých princípov právneho štátu a jeho faktická nedostupnosť pre sociálne najslabších, no a napokon i zvyšujúca sa policajná brutalita.I tak vyzera Slovensko 35 rokov po Novembri 89, ktorý definitívne zmietol režim masívne porušujúci všetky možné občianske i ľudské práva. Medzi požiadavky novembrových námestí preto patrila aj sloboda tlače, zhromažďovania, spolčovania, pohybu, svedomia i ďalšie občianske práva a slobody. Čo z toho sa nám za tie tri desaťročia podarilo reálne naplniť a ideme ešte smerom k uskutočnovaniu záväzkov Novembra a našich ľudských a občianskych práv? Téma pre Verejného ochrancu práv Róberta Dobrovodského.Pozor na trend, ktorý vo svete začína pod názvom „sekuritizácia ľudských práv“ a ktorý je veľmi nebezpečný. Inak povedané, keď pod emóciou atentátov, kríz či pandémií získa vládna moc apetít obmedzovať ľudské práva. Vtedy treba byť naozaj ostražitý, varuje Verejný ochranca právPočúvate Ráno Nahlas, pekný deň a pokoj v duši praje Braňo Dobšinský.Dodajme, že rozhovor sme nahrávali v pondelok. Ku košickému prípadu, v ktorom policajt na smrť dobil muža bez domova nám preto ombudsman zaslal stanovisko, v ktorom vyjadril zhrozenie a vyzval k prijatiu preventívnych opatrení na zabránenie krutému a neľudskému zaobchádzaniu.

Hora 25
Hora 25 de los negocios | Vivienda social perpetua: la propuesta del Gobierno

Hora 25

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 23:59


El Gobierno propone "blindar" las VPO para evitar que se venda en el mercado y asegura que pondrá más suelo público a disposición de la vivienda. Lo analizamos en Hora 25 de los Negocios. 

Hora 25 de los negocios
Hora 25 de los negocios | Vivienda social perpetua: la propuesta del Gobierno

Hora 25 de los negocios

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 23:59


El Gobierno propone "blindar" las VPO para evitar que se venda en el mercado y asegura que pondrá más suelo público a disposición de la vivienda. Lo analizamos en Hora 25 de los Negocios. 

Ganbara
Denis Itxaso: "No está garantizado que esto vaya a ser milagroso, aquí no hay varitas mágicas"

Ganbara

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 9:16


El consejero de Vivienda, Denis Itxaso ha asegurado que la propuesta del Gobierno español para blindar el parque de viviendas es "una buena noticia", y que sigue la senda vasca, que en 2015 declaró que todas las VPO que se construyeron a partir de 2003 tendrían una calificación permanente...

Sirens | A True Crime Podcast
Caitlin Wooten | Caitlin's Law (Remastered)

Sirens | A True Crime Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2024 34:27


Raven and Holly discuss the case of Ada, Oklahoma's Caitlin Wooten and Caitlin's Law that came from it. Disclaimer: Content includes talk of Domestic Violence and Murder.Caitlin Wooten's case is a heartbreaking story that led to significant legal changes in Oklahoma. In 2005, 16-year-old Ada, Okla. resident, Caitlin Wooten, was kidnapped by her mother's ex-boyfriend, who had previously held her mother hostage at gunpoint, but after his arrest was back on the streets within 30 hours and continued to pose a threat. Tragically, Caitlin's life was cut short by him. Her case highlighted the flaws in the bail system and the need for stronger protections for victims of violent crimes. This led to the enactment of Caitlin's Law, officially known as the Caitlin Wooten Act, signed into law in 2006. It aims to strengthen bail laws by requiring individuals charged with violent crimes, such as kidnapping, to prove they are not a public danger before they can post bail. The law also enhances victim protection order (VPO) laws in Oklahoma to align more closely with federal standards aiming to prevent similar tragedies in the future.Originally Published Nov 2019.Advocacy. Investigation. Education. Storytelling.Case Sources https://pastebin.com/u/thesirenspodcast/1/q13ivhbQ Southern Noir Book Club Authors thesirenspodcast.com/southernnoir See us in the news https://www.thesirenspodcast.com/media Hosts and Expert Guests thesirenspodcast.com/squadgoals If you like our work, here are some ways to support us:Rate, review, and share our podcast!Find us on Social Media https://my.link.gallery/thesirenspodcast Merch http://tee.pub/lic/SirensNetwork Get Sins of the South (Our True Crime Book) https://books2read.com/SinsoftheSouth Buy us a coffee www.buymeacoffee.com/TheSirensPod Our Amazon Store https://bit.ly/SirensNetworkAmazonStore Newsletter https://mailchi.mp/d9964b81bab0/thesirenspodcast This podcast was produced by:Www.facebook.com/FinalGirlStudio https://bit.ly/TheSirensNetwork A mountain of Movies and shows awaits on Paramount±. Try it free on us! https://paramountplus.qflm.net/c/3437665/2089315/3065

Andalucía Informativos
INFORMATIVO MÁLAGA 8.45/ 09-10-24

Andalucía Informativos

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 14:58


El ayuntamiento de Málaga va a comprar suelo para construir mil viviendas de VPO en Soliva Oeste, terrenos que dos promotoras privadas tenían bloqueados desde hace más de una década pero que no desarrollaban por la elevada carga de infraestructuras.El Colegio de Administradores de Fincas y del Ayuntamiento de Málaga aplauden a la decisión del Supremo de avalar que las comunidades de propietarios puedan prohibir las viviendas turísticas en sus estatutos por mayoría de tres quintos y no por unanimidad cómo hasta ahora. La patronal andaluza recuerda que no tiene retroactividad y no afectará a los inmuebles ya registradosLa Consejería de Salud comenzará hoy la campaña de vacunación contra la gripe y Covid para residentes en centros de mayores y sociosanitarios, así cómo residencias. A partir del 16 de octubre se vacunará a mayores de 70 años y del 23 en adelante a los mayores de 60 y otros grupos profesionales como los Cuerpos y Fuerzas de Seguridad, así como el personal docente de menores de 5 años.123 Guardias Civiles se ha incorporado en la provincia de Málaga, 41 de ellos mujeres. Se trata de la mayor incorporación de efectivos de los últimos 15 años, según el subdelegado del Gobierno, Javier Salas.La Champions League regresa hoy al Carpena con el segundo partido de la fase de grupos que enfrenta al Unicaja contra el King Szczecin polaco. Alberto Díaz será baja por lesión. El Málaga ha vuelto a los entrenamientos para preparar el partido del sábado en Cádiz, serán baja Antoñito y Ochoa, convocados por las selecciones sub19 de España e Irlanda, respectivamente.La Bailaora y coreógrafa malagueña Luz Arcas recibe en los próximos días el Premio Nacional de Danza en la Modalidad de Creación. Un galardón en cuyo fallo el jurado subraya que su obra combina el riesgo y la innovación con una revisión continúa de sus raíces. Nuestra compañera Laura García, ha charlado con ella esta mañana.Y hoy despedimos a nuestra compañera técnica de sonido Trinidad Borrás, que se jubila tras más de 40 años de trabajo en esta casa. Empezó en Radio Juventud con 18 años, y de ahí pasó a Radiocadenaespañola que en 1989 se fusionó con RNE.Escuchar audio

Economía en Andaluz
Economía en Andaluz 4 de octubre de 2024

Economía en Andaluz

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2024 9:19


Bienvenidos a Economía en Andaluz, un podcast económico semanal de Europa Press Andalucía. Estos son los temas que han marcado la actualidad económica esta semana en nuestra comunidad. Inaugurado el CEUS, que convertirá Andalucía en referente europeo aeroespacial y consolida el "Cabo Cañaveral español" Detectado un foco de 'lengua azul' en Huelva, primero en Andalucía, y la Junta empezará a vacunar este miércoles Andalucía mejorará las deducciones fiscales para compra de VPO o alquiler en 2025 con 40.000 beneficiados Inaugurada la nueva conexión aérea entre Ámsterdam y Granada Recuerda que puedes encontrar estas y otras muchas noticias en la sección de Andalucía en nuestra web europapress.es

Andalucía Informa - Europa Press
Andalucía Informa 30 de septiembre de 2024

Andalucía Informa - Europa Press

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 30, 2024 4:08


Bienvenidos a Andalucía Informa, un podcast de Europa Press. En este espacio podrás conocer en unos minutos las noticias más relevantes de nuestra comunidad. Hoy es 30 de septiembre y estas son algunas de las informaciones más destacadas en nuestra agencia. La Junta convocará los comités de sequía para adaptar las medidas de ahorro impuestas antes de verano Andalucía mejorará en 2025 las deducciones fiscales para compra de VPO o alquiler con más de 40.000 beneficiarios Javier Fernández reitera su respaldo a Espadas como líder del PSOE-A: "Sabe que tiene el apoyo de los socialistas sevillanos"Recuerda que puedes encontrar estas y otras muchas noticias en la sección de Andalucía en nuestra web europapress.es. 

Andalucía Informativos
INFORMATIVO MÁLAGA 13.55 / 16-09-24

Andalucía Informativos

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2024 5:01


Hoy estamos pendientes del inicio del curso escolar en secundaria, bachillerato, FP y Educación Adultos. La FP se refuerza en este curso con la creación de más de 4000 plazas, entre ellas la creación de 3 nuevos ciclos. Hace apenas dos horas se ha colocado la primera piedra de la que será la primera Smart City española de VPO, de la promotora sueca Lagoon Living, que construirá 530 viviendas de alquiler asequible en el Distrito Universidad de Málaga capital con una inversión de 89 millones de euros, la mitad cofinanciados entre Gobierno Central, Junta y Ayuntamiento. Las viviendas se entregarán en diciembre de 2026 y está previsto que se alquilen por un precio medio de 600 euros mensuales.Previamente a la colocación de esta primera piedra de estas viviendas el presidente de la Junta, la Ministra Rodríguez y el Alcalde, inauguraban en el Auditorio de la Diputación el IV Congreso Nacional de Vivienda que organiza la asociación de Promotores y Constructores.El Unicaja aterrizará mañana martes, en Málaga, sobre las 11 de la mañana con la Copa Intercontinental FIBA bajo el brazo, tras un nuevo largo viaje desde Singapur que empieza esta tarde y tiene escala en Estambul. No habrá tiempo para celebraciones porque el mismo viernes viaja a Murcia para disputar la Supercopa ACB. Por su parte, el Málaga, regresa hoy al trabajo tras sumar el fin de semana una victoria ante el Huesca por 1 a 0 en La Rosaleda.Escuchar audio

Andalucía Informativos
Informativo Cádiz 07/08/24

Andalucía Informativos

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2024 5:27


Puerto Real ha rendido homenaje a los voluntarios que apoyaron en la extinción del incendio del pasado año en Las Canteras. El Ayuntamiento de El Puerto invertirá 10 millones de euros a la rehabilitación de fincas para destinarlas a VPO. Y la consejería de salud ha ordenado la retirada por listeria de un lote de salchichón ibérico de la marca Embutidos La Serrana, de Olvera.Escuchar audio

Radio Victoria
Rincón de la Victoria construirá 20 viviendas de protección pública destinadas a alquiler social

Radio Victoria

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 11, 2024 32:15


Rincón de la Victoria construirá 20 viviendas de protección pública destinadas a alquiler social en una parcela de titularidad municipal en la localidad de Torre de Benagalbón. El alcalde de Rincón de la Victoria, Francisco Salado (PP), la delegada del Gobierno de la Junta de Andalucía en Málaga, Patricia Navarro, y el subdelegado del Gobierno central en Málaga, Javier Salas, han hecho público la firma de un convenio entre las tres administraciones. El regidor ha asegurado que, “hoy es un día importante para el municipio de Rincón de la Victoria, un hito histórico que supone un ejemplo de lealtad y unión entre administraciones, y que es el camino a seguir para mejorar el bienestar y la calidad de vida de los vecinos de esta ciudad”. Salado se ha mostrado muy satisfecho por el trabajo que se ha venido realizando en los últimos años por esta administración en materia urbanística y de vivienda. “Hemos implementado la oficina del Plan General, hace ya tres años, que nos ha permitido publicar un avance del Plan que podría aprobarse de forma inicial a primeros de 2025, convirtiendo a Rincón de la Victoria Rincón de la Victoria en uno de los primeros municipios de la provincia en tener un nuevo planeamiento con la nueva Ley”, y continúa el alcalde “tenemos previsto en este mes la aprobación definitiva del nuevo Plan Municipal de Vivienda y Suelo de Rincón de la Victoria, una herramienta clave para la planificación estratégica en materia de vivienda”, añade. La delegada de la Junta en Málaga ha puesto en valor el trabajo coordinado entre las tres administraciones y ha vuelto a “reivindicar la unidad para seguir afrontando el reto de la vivienda en Málaga”. Desde la Junta de Andalucía se ha movilizado desde el año 2019 más de 48 millones de euros en subvenciones para facilitar el acceso a la vivienda a los jóvenes y ha destacado el trabajo para crear un marco fiscal favorable en la región a través de las bajadas de impuestos y el cuarto decreto de simplificación administrativa. El subdelegado del Gobierno en Málaga, Javier Salas, ha destacado “la apuesta del Gobierno de España por fomentar la ampliación del parque de viviendas públicas en la provincia de Málaga con 2.600 viviendas en ejecución o próximo inicio de obras y en concreto ha recalcado la inversión de 1 millón de euros de Fondos Next Generation para hacer realidad estas 20 viviendas públicas destinadas al alquiler asequible en Rincón de la Victoria, que serán una realidad gracias a la importante incidencia que está teniendo en nuestra provincia el Plan de Recuperación Transformación y Resiliencia diseñado por el Gobierno de España”. Asimismo, Javier Salas ha recalcado la colaboración entre las administraciones central, autonómica y local para que esta actuación llegue a buen puerto. Por su parte, el concejal de Urbanismo y Grandes Proyectos, Miguel Ángel Jiménez (PP), ha explicado que, “para estas primeras 20 viviendas en régimen de alquiler, el Ayuntamiento de Rincón de la Victoria constituirá un derecho de superficie para la construcción. En los próximos días estará disponible el pliego en el perfil del contratante de la web municipal para que se presenten las ofertas al derecho de superficie”. Las viviendas se construirán en una parcela de 759,05 metros cuadrados con una edificabilidad de 1.664,6 metros cuadrados en el sector de Torre de Benagalbón en la zona del Margarita Salas. Junto a esta parcela se edificarán 32 viviendas de protección oficial en régimen de venta, de iniciativa privada”. Para poder optar a estas viviendas de alquiler se realizará un sorteo entre las personas que estén inscritas en el Registro Municipal de Demandantes de VPO del Ayuntamiento de Rincón de la Victoria. Por último, el regidor ha asegurado que “esta corporación seguirá trabajando en esta línea, apostando por el desarrollo de este tipo de vivienda, como ya se contempla en el proyecto de reparcelación del sector UR-R3 (junto al campo de fútbol), que comenzará ahora su desarrollo, así como la obligación de reserva de viviendas protegida que se exigen a día de hoy por el Plan general”.

SER Málaga
"Málaga es el ayuntamiento español que más invierte en vivienda" E Pérez de Siles, PP

SER Málaga

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 7, 2024 0:23


El PP reclama más viviendas asequibles en Málaga y reivindica la política en VPO del Ayuntamiento

BAST Training podcast
Ep.167 Understanding Nasality and Perception in the Singing Voice with Dr Nicholas Perna

BAST Training podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2024 63:10


Alex is joined by Dr. Nicholas Perna to talk about nasality. They discuss and unravel the mysteries of the nose's role in vocal production, from debunking myths about nasal resonance to exploring the benefits of nasal airflow, Dr. Perna's insights will challenge your assumptions and expand your understanding of vocal technique. Whether you're a singing teacher or a curious vocalist, this episode offers a fresh perspective on an often misunderstood aspect of voice production. KEY TAKEAWAYS Nasality in singing is often misperceived; what we think sounds nasal is usually twang or high spectral energy, not actual nasal airflow. The soft palate's movement in singing is more of a backward motion rather than an upward lift, contrary to common teaching cues. A mild amount of velopharyngeal opening can positively impact resonance stability, especially in the passaggio range for tenors. The term "nasal resonance" may be misleading, as the nose neither amplifies nor enriches sound in singing. Contemporary singing styles often rely on audio processing and EQ adjustments, which significantly affect the final sound beyond the singer's raw vocal output. Good scientific research seeks to disprove itself, challenging researchers to remain curious and open to new findings. Singers and teachers should focus on the journey of learning rather than believing they've reached a definitive destination in understanding vocal technique. Exploring velopharyngeal opening in musical theatre singers, particularly in mix and belt techniques, is an area ripe for future research.   BEST MOMENTS "What nasality is does not often coincide to its perceptual characteristics. And equally, studies have demonstrated that there isn't really this general consensus amongst singing teachers about perceived nasality." "Good science seeks to disprove itself. Staying curious means that you have an awareness that you are probably wrong." "The likelihood that that sound includes nasal airflow and that the soft palate is relaxed is very low because what the nasal passage does it has very thick mucous membranes. It's moist. There's other structures up there, typically hair, et cetera. And those things, dull sound, particularly high spectral energy." "I propose that we eliminate the term nasal resonance, nasal resonance altogether, because the nose neither, if we think of resonance as a definition of amplification and enrichment, it is neither amplifying sound, nor is it enriching sound." "The easiest observation you can obviously make, just to know whether there's anything happening or not, is to simply sustain a tone, pinch your nose shut, and see if any, you notice any difference.” EPISODE RESOURCES Voice Study Centre (Podcast) Singing Teachers Talk: Ep.151 How to Sing with Twang with Kerrie Obert (Podcast) Singing Teachers Talk: Ep. Dr Matt Edwards (Podcast) Singing Teachers Talk: Ep. Aaron Johnson Journal of Singing: https://www.nats.org/cgi/page.cgi/about_journal_singing.html (JoS) Nasality Deconstructed by Nicholas Perna: https://www.nats.org/_Library/JOS_On_Point/JOS-076-04-2020-429.pdf Heidi Moss:  Spectrum Effects of VPO in Singing by Gill, Lee, La, Sundberg: https://www.jvoice.org/article/S0892-1997(18)30446-6/abstract Effects of Nasalance on the Acoustics of the Tenor Passaggio and Head Voice by Nicholas Perna Celine Dion: An NBC News Special with Hoda Kotb (Full Interview): com/watch?v=ncwhU70I3T4 The work of Christian Herbst: https://www.christian-herbst.org/ University of Colorado Boulder: https://www.colorado.edu/ The work of Berton Coffin: https://www.nats.org/_Library/Named_Funds/Berton_Coffin_Endowment_-_web_ready.pdf   ABOUT THE GUEST Guest Website:  nicholasperna.com Contact Nicholas directly: nicholas.perna@colorado.edu Follow Nichola's Podcast ‘Vocal Fri' Here: https://www.vocalfri.com/ Social Media: Instagram: @vocalfriperna Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@vocalfriperna Tenor Nicholas Perna's voice has been hailed by the Houston Chronicle as “an impressive sound,” and the South Florida Sun Sentinel praised his “emotionally driven performance.” Perna was a recent finalist for the American Prize for men in opera, and has appeared multiple times in recent seasons with Opera Mississippi. Perna was twice selected as a Santa Fe Opera Apprentice Artist singer. Additional stage credits vary from opera roles such as Don José in Carmen and Rodolfo in La Bohème to Musical Theatre roles such as Ravenal in Show Boat, and Archie in the The Secret Garden. Symphonic appearances include Mahler's Das Lied von der Erde and Beethoven's Symphony no. 9.   Dr. Perna is Associate Professor and Director of Vocal Pedagogy at the University of Colorado at Boulder. He has publications in Journal of Singing, Journal of Voice, and VOICEPrints. A Presser Music Foundation awardee he has presented research on four continents at events such as the Voice Foundation's Symposium, ICVT, NATS National Conference, and Physiology and Acoustics of Singing (PAS). Perna is currently Vice President for Outreach for the National Association of Teachers of Singing and is the creator and co-host of the VocalFri Podcast, http://www.vocalfri.com. Perna holds graduate degrees from the University of Miami & the University of Houston. In 2024 Perna began his tenure as Executive Director of Opera Mississippi. Previous faculty positions include Mississippi College, West Virginia University, and he has been a voice research associate at the University of Mississippi Medical Center. ABOUT THE PODCAST BAST Training is here to help singers gain the knowledge, skills and understanding required to be a great singing teacher. We can help you whether you are getting started or just have some knowledge gaps to fill through our courses and educational events. basttraining.com Updates from BAST Training

Kapital
K120. Javier Burón. Burbujas inmobiliarias

Kapital

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 5, 2024 133:59


Me gusta la explicación generacional que ofrece Javier Burón al problema de la vivienda. La generación silenciosa, la de mis abuelos, trabajando en la ardua economía de posguerra, se vería beneficiada por los grandes planes urbanísticos. La generación boomer, la de mis padres, en un contexto económico más favorable, pudo acceder a ella a precios competitivos. Y la generación millennial, la mía, se encuentra con pisos disparados y salarios estancados. Los zoomers, los siguientes, mejor que emigren. Kapital Social: La comunidad privada de Kapital. Ahora con un 20% de descuento. Kapital es posible gracias a sus colaboradores: Nueva edición de los programas: Cardinal y Cardinal X. Compara los dos cursos para decidir con cuál quedarte. Cardinal es un programa online con el que diseñar la carrera profesional que quieres. Yo mismo, junto con Eloi Alcaide, hemos preparado los contenidos después de años estudiando el problema. El punto de partida es que nosotros no sabemos qué carrera debes escoger pero sí podemos darte, a lo largo de 12 semanas, herramientas de introspección y modelos mentales para que TÚ tomes la mejor decisión. Un curso de interés para quien esté buscando un cambio inmediato, pero también para quien quiera estar mejor preparado, dándose recursos, para competir en este mercado laboral incierto. La edad media en anteriores ediciones se situó entre los 25 y los 35 años. Cardinal empieza el próximo lunes 8 de enero. Inscríbete con un descuento de 60 y 40 euros con los cupones ENE24C9 (Cardinal) y ENE24X3 (Cardinal X). Si tienes cualquier duda, escríbenos a: info@joincardinal.com Patrocina Kapital. Toda la información en este link. Índice: 1.02. Los secretos del stand-up comedy. 8.24. Un problema generacional. 22.37. La generación silenciosa, los boomers y los millennials. 33.16. Siempre se ha criticado a los jóvenes. 56.40. ¿Construir más para que baje el precio? 1.15.19. VPO en alquiler. 1.26.22. Una fiscalidad responsable. 1.38.30. Invitación a Fernando Encinar. 1.45.03. La seguridad jurídica en España. 1.56.51. El mejorable servicio de las agencias inmobiliarias. 2.05.15. Un precio socialmente insostenible. Apuntes: Saturday Night Live. Louis C.K. Louie. Louis C.K. ¿Dónde están los yates de los clientes? Fred Schwed. La estrategia del caracol. Sergio Cabrera.

Zafarrancho Vilima
Emiratos Árabes Unidos en Por el Mundo con el Barbas

Zafarrancho Vilima

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2023 11:41


Mañana día 2 de Diciembre celebra su Día Nacional Los Emiratos Árabes Unidos jamas serán vencidos. El Estados Unidos de ellos. Es un pequeño país de la península de Arabia (y así me ahorro saber si es arábica o arábiga). Como su propio nombre indica, esta formado por la unión de distintos emiratos , siete para ser exactos: Abu Dhabi, Ajman, Dubai, Fuyaira, Ras al-Jaima, Sarja y Umm al-Qaywayn ...que está muy bien, pero que no nos vamos a engañar, aquí nadie conocía mas de dos, y esos dos son Abu Dhabi y Dubai (Juan Tamariz celebración). Como a estos mamones el dinero se la pela, llegan a pagar más dinero por una matrícula que por un coche. Hubo un pavo que pagó 11 millones de dólares por la matricula “1”. Está claro que el petróleo es aparentemente su mayor fuente de ingreso, en realidad solo supone un 10% de su PIB. El negocio gordo de Emiratos Árabes Unidos es el lujo, con hoteles, restaurantes y mierdas de esas. Como buen país islámico, el consumo de alcohol está prohibido para los emiratíes pero no así para residentes extranjeros. Estos pueden comprar y consumir alcohol si se cumplen estas dos condiciones: Ser mayor de 21 años No ser un tieso (esto es literal, para comprar alcohol, debes probar que no eres un tieso) Es una licencia que se renueva cada año, es decir no puedes ser un tieso el año que viene. El 90% de la población es extranjera, y conviven más de 150 nacionalidades diferentes...riete tú del gobierno más progresista de la historia. Como son tan poco emiratíes, el gobierno los incentiva para que no se larguen, y les dan 3000 dólares al mes solo por ser ellos...es una pena que no se lo puedan gastar en whisky. El sueldo medio para un trabajador no cualificado que sea emiratí es de 10000 dólares al mes...imaginate el que sepa… Y lo mejor , si dos emiratíes se casan, por supuesto de distinto sexo, que allí no hay homosexuales, y si los hay ya se encargan de que no se vean, el gobierno les da 23000 dolares y una vivienda. Ya os digo yo que la vivienda no es de VPO. Y encima esperarán sobrecito el dia de la boda. Con la pasta que ganan allí...¿cuanto se mete en la boda de dos emiratíes? Muchos pensaréis ...coño vamos a hacernos emiratíes. Pues eso no es posible. Para ser emiratí, debes aportar un certificado de ascendencia, que demuestre ascendencia emiratí desde antes de 1925. Asi que se mira pero no se toca. Tienen el primer hotel de 7 estrellas del mundo, porque ponerle seis les parecía de tiesos. Es el hotel Burj Al Arab. A mi esto me recuerda a la famosa secuencia de Las Aventuras de Mordadelo y Filemón de Javier Fesser, cuando un personaje dice: - Voy a proclamar la cuarta guerra mundial. - Será la tercera - Si es por acojonar hombre!! Alli es que todo el lujo: Las paradas de autobús tienen aire acondicionado, porque esperar el C2 a 55 grados debe ser jodido. Y nosotros pasando calor en el estudio Iñaki Gabilondo. Uno de sus platos típicos es el Machboos que no deja de ser la contribución emiratí al arroz con cosas. Pasos Lavar el arroz y dejarlo en remojo con agua tibia durante 30 minutos En una cazuela con mantequilla o aceite poner las cebollas picadas y remover a fuego lento hasta que se ponga dorada, agregar el cardamomo, el clavo y la canela y remover durante 5 minutos. Agregar el pollo o el cordero y el pimiento verde cortado en juliana y remover hasta que la carne esté dorada. Añadir los tomates maduros rallados y cocinar a fuego lento durante 20 minutos. Incorporar la salsa de tomate, el laurel, el cilantro, el comino molido, la pimienta negra y la cúrcuma. Remover durante 5 minutos. Añadir agua caliente y cocinar a fuego mediano hasta que la carne esté hecha. Sacar la carne del caldo y colocarla en una fuente, agregar el arroz de forma que se sumerja en el caldo como un dedo. Se puede añadir agua según sea necesario. Y cocinar a fuego lento después de que el arroz empiece a hervir. Colocar el arroz en una bandeja grande, añadir los trozos de carne, adornar con frutos secos, rodajas de limón y pasas – opcional -. Espolvorear perejil picado y servir. El himno para ser un pais tas sobrado...yo creo que les ha quedado regular. Hay ostentación en el himno SÍ, al principio se parece mas al himno de Japón, TAMBIÉN...pero sobre todo es que parece una canción infantil de los teletubbies.

Denník N podcast
Newsfilter: Neotravujte s reformami, tu sme pri vlastenectve

Denník N podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 13:34


1. Ministerstvá sú už definitívne rozdelené. 2. Ódor tu teoreticky môže byť ešte mesiace. 3. V Poľsku zachránili demokraciu.

Construction Leaders Podcast
Creating a Diverse and Welcoming Culture

Construction Leaders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2023 34:13


On this episode of the Construction Leaders Podcast, CMAA's Nick Soto and Carly Trout chat with Brynn Huneke, director of diversity and inclusion at Associated General Contractors of America, and Henry Nutt, III, preconstruction executive at Southland Industries. They talk about making a commitment to Culture of Care and being a part of a welcoming, diverse and safe environment. This episode is sponsored by VPO.    Construction Leaders Podcast is produced by Association Briefings.

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0
[AI Breakdown] Summer AI Technical Roundup: a Latent Space x AI Breakdown crossover pod!

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

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2023 59:02


Our 3rd podcast feed swap with other AI pod friends! Check out Cognitive Revolution and Practical AI as well.NLW is the best daily AI YouTube/podcaster with the AI Breakdown. His summaries and content curation are spot on and always finds the interesting angle that will keep you thinking. Subscribe to the AI Breakdown wherever fine podcasts are sold! https://pod.link/1680633614You can also watch on YouTube:Timestampscourtesy of summarize.techThe hosts discuss the launch of Code Interpreter as a separate model from OpenAI and speculate that it represents the release of GPT 4.5. People have found Code Interpreter to be better than expected, even for tasks unrelated to coding. They discuss the significance of this release, as well as the challenges of evaluating AI models, the cultural mismatch between researchers and users, and the increasing value of data in the AI industry. They also touch on the impact of open-source tools, the potential of AI companions, the advantages of Anthropics compared to other platforms, advancements in image recognition and multimodality, and predictions for the future of AI.* 00:00:00 In this section, the hosts discuss the launch of Code Interpreter from OpenAI and its significance in the development of the AI field. They explain that Code Interpreter, initially introduced as a plugin, is now considered a separate model with its own dropdown menu. They note that people have found Code Interpreter to be better than expected, even for tasks that are not related to coding. This leads them to speculate that Code Interpreter actually represents the release of GPT 4.5, as there has been no official announcement or blog post about it. They also mention that the AI safety concerns and regulatory environment may be impacting how OpenAI names and labels their models. Overall, they believe that Code Interpreter's release signifies a significant shift in the AI field and hints at the possibility of future advanced models like GPT 5.* 00:05:00 In this section, the speaker discusses the improvements in GPT 4.5 and how it enhances the experience for non-coding queries and inputs. They explain that the code interpreter feature allows for a wider range of use cases that were not possible with previous models like GPT 3.5. Additionally, they highlight the value of the code interpreter in assisting individuals with no coding experience to solve basic coding problems. This feature is likened to having a junior developer or intern analyst that aids in conducting tests and simplifies coding tasks. The speaker emphasizes that GPT 4.5 enables users to be more productive and efficient, especially when dealing with code-related challenges. They also discuss the future direction of AGI, where more time will be dedicated to inference rather than training, as this approach has shown significant improvements in terms of problem-solving.* 00:10:00 In this section, the speaker discusses how advanced AI models like GPT-4.5 are not just larger versions of previous models but rather employ fundamentally different techniques. They compare the evolution of AI models to the evolutionary timeline of humans, where the invention of tools opened up a whole new set of possibilities. They touch on the difficulty of evaluating AI models, particularly in more subjective tasks, and highlight how perceptions of model performance can be influenced by factors like formatting preferences. Additionally, the speaker mentions the challenges of reinforcement learning and the uncertainty around what the model is prioritizing in its suggestions. They conclude that OpenAI, as a research lab, is grappling with the complexities of updating models and ensuring reliability for users.* 00:15:00 In this section, the speaker discusses the cultural mismatch between OpenAI researchers and users of OpenAI's products, highlighting the conflicting statements made about model updates. They suggest that OpenAI needs to establish a policy that everyone can accept. The speaker also emphasizes the challenges of communication and the difficulty of serving different stakeholders. They mention the impact of small disruptions on workflows and the lack of immediate feedback within OpenAI's system. Additionally, the speaker briefly discusses the significance of OpenAI's custom instructions feature, stating that it allows for more personalization but is not fundamentally different from what other chat companies already offer. The discussion then transitions to Facebook's release of LAMA2, which holds significance both technically and for users, although further details on its significance are not provided in this excerpt.* 00:20:00 In this section, the introduction of GPT-4.5, also known as LAVA 2, is discussed. LAVA 2 is the first fully commercially usable GPT 3.5 equivalent model, which is a significant development because it allows users to run it on their own infrastructure and fine-tune it according to their needs. Although it is not fully open source, it presents new opportunities for various industries such as government, healthcare, and finance. The discussion also touches upon the open source aspect of LAVA 2, with the recognition that it has still contributed significantly to the community, as evidenced by the three million dollars' worth of compute and the estimated 15 to 20 million dollars' worth of additional fine-tuning capabilities it brings. The conversation acknowledges the value of open source models and data, while also recognizing the challenges and complexities in striking a balance between openness and restrictions.-* 00:25:00 In this section, the discussion centers around the commoditization of compute and the increasing value of data in the AI industry. While GPU compute is currently in high demand, it is observed that data is what holds the real value in AI. The conversation touches on the history of Open Source models and how the release of data for models like GPT J and GPT Neo signal a shift towards prioritizing data over model weights. The transcript also mentions the caution around data usage, citing examples of copyright concerns with datasets like Bookcorpus. The debate arises on whether ML engineers should proactively use open data or wait for permission, with some arguing for proactive usage to avoid holding back progress. The conversation also discusses the importance of terminology and protecting the definition of open source, while recognizing that the functional implications of open data are what matter most.* 00:30:00 In this section, the conversation revolves around the impact of open-source tools on companies and how it has influenced their approach to AI development. It is noted that companies can no longer just offer a nice user interface (UI) wrapper around an open AI model, as customers are demanding more. The competition has shifted towards other aspects of productionizing AI applications, which is seen as a positive development. The speaker predicts that OpenAI's competitive pressure will lead to opening up their source code and expects interesting advancements to emerge, such as running models locally for unlimited use. Additionally, the conversation touches on the potential of commercially available models, the application of new techniques, and the creativity unlocked by open source. The speaker also mentions the AI girlfriend economy, an area that is often overlooked but has millions of users and significant financial success.* 00:35:00 In this section, the speaker discusses their prediction about the long-term impact of AI on interpersonal relationships, suggesting that AI companions, such as AI girlfriends or boyfriends, could help address the loneliness crisis and reduce incidents of violence. They also mention the idea of using AI models to improve social interactions and communication skills. However, they highlight that this idea of AI companions may face resistance from older generations who may struggle to accept their legitimacy. The speaker also mentions an example of using AI models to create a mental wellness product in the form of a private journal. Overall, the speaker believes that while AI companions may have potential, they may not completely replace human relationships and interactions.* 00:40:00 In this section, the speaker discusses their views on Anthropics and the advantages it offers compared to other platforms. They mention that while Anthropics used to position themselves as the safer alternative to OpenAI, it was not appealing to many engineers. However, with the introduction of the 100K contest window and the ability to upload multiple files, Anthropics has become state-of-the-art in certain dimensions, such as latency and reliability in code synthesis. The speaker also notes that some businesses are choosing to build with the Anthropics API over OpenAI due to these advantages. They believe that Anthropics is finally finding its foothold after being overshadowed by OpenAI for a long time. Additionally, the speaker discusses their experience at the Anthropics hackathon, where they saw developer excitement for the platform. They believe that Anthropics is on its way up and that it paves the way for a multi-model future. However, they also acknowledge that the odds are stacked against Anthropics and that it needs more marketing support and community buy-in. Lastly, the speaker mentions the importance of running chats side by side against different models like Tracicia and GPT-4.5, and highlights that in their experience, Anthropics wins about 30% of the time, making it a valuable addition to one's toolkit.* 00:45:00 In this section, the discussion revolves around the advancements in image recognition and multimodality in language models like GPT-4.5. While there was some excitement about these developments, it was noted that relying on model updates alone may not be sufficient, and there is a need to focus on product-level improvements, such as integrating language models into services like Google Maps. However, concerns were raised about the reliability of updates, as evidenced by a regression in Bard's code interpreter functionality. Additionally, other trends in the developer community, like the emergence of auto GPT projects and the ongoing quest for building useful agents, were highlighted. Finally, there was mention of the growing interest in evaluation-focused companies like LangChain and LaunchLang, which aim to monitor the success of prompts and agents.* 00:50:00 In this section, the speaker discusses the focus on model evaluation and observability, as well as the importance of combining deep industry expertise with AI technology to make improvements. They also touch on the need for creating an information hierarchy between documents and scoring them in specific verticals like Finance. The speaker mentions advancements in text-to-image capabilities and expresses interest in character AI and AI-native social media. They mention the possibility of AI personas from Meta and the development of agent clouds optimized for EI agents. They acknowledge that these advancements may raise concerns among AI safety proponents. Overall, there seems to be excitement and exploration around these emerging technologies.* 00:55:00 In this section, the speakers discuss their predictions and what they are closely watching in the coming months. Alice believes that there will be more public talk about open source models being used in production, as currently, many perceive them as just toys. She expects companies to start deploying these models and showcasing their usage. Sean predicts the rise of AI engineers as a profession, with people transitioning from informal groups to certified professionals working in AI teams within companies. He mentions that the first AI engineer within Meta has already been announced. Overall, they anticipate a relatively quiet August followed by a resurgence of activity in September, with events like Facebook Connect and continued hackathons driving innovation.Transcriptall right what is going on how's it going boys great to have you here hey good how are y'all good I I think I'm excited for this yeah no I'm super excited I think uh you know we were just talking a little bit before this that the AI audience right now is really interesting it's sort of on the one hand you have of course the folks who are actually in it who are building in it who are you know or or dabbling because they're in some other field but they're fascinated by it and you know are spending their nights in weekends building and then on the other hand you have the folks who are you know what we used to call non-technical perhaps but who are actively paying attention in a way that I think is very different to the technical evolutions of this field because they have a sense or an understanding that it's so fast moving that the place that they have to be paying attention to is you know what's changing from the standpoint of of developers and Builders so I what we want to do today is kind of reflect on the month of July which had a couple of I think really Keystone events in the context of what it means for the technical development of the AI field and and what you know where it leads how people's Frameworks are changing how people sort of sense that things have changed over the last month and I think that the place to start although we could choose a lot of different examples is with an idea that you guys have spent a lot of time sharing on Twitter and in other places that the launch of code interpreter from openai which is nominally a chat GPT plugin actually represents functionally something closer to the release of GPT 4.5 so maybe we can start by just having you guys sort of explain that idea uh and then we can kind of take it from there yeah I'll maybe start with this one um yeah so quote interpreter was first announced as a plug-in at least in the plugins announcement from March but from the start it was already presented as a separate model because at least when you look in the UI you know you don't go into the charity plugin see why and pick it from a menu plugins it is actually a separate model in in the drop down menu and it is so today and I think um yes it adds on an additional sandbox for running and testing code and iterating on that um and actually you can upload files to it and do operations and files and people are having a lot of fun uploading different batteries and hacking uh to see what the container is and try to break out into the Container um but what really convinced me that it might be a separate model was when people tried it on tasks that were not code and found it better so code interpreter is poorly named not just because you know it just sounds like a like a weird developer Tool uh but they basically it's kind of maybe hiding some progress that openai has made that it's completely not been public about there's no blog post about it what interpreter itself is launched in a support Forum post uh you know low-key it wouldn't even announced by any of the major uh public channels that opening has um and so the leading theory is that you know I've dubbed a gpp 4.5 I think like if they were ever to release an API for that they might retroactively rename it for coin firings in the same way that 3.5 was actually renamed when retracted between three rooms um and I think and since I published that post or tweeted that stuff uh the the leading release now for why they did not do it is because they would piss off all the AI safety people yeah no I mean it would it was sort of correspondent obviously like a thing that's happened less just this month but more over the last three months is a total Overton window shift in that AI safety conversation starting from I think about in April or May when um Jeffrey Hinton left Google there has been a big shift in that conversation obviously Regulators are way more active now than they were even a couple months ago and so I do think that there are probably constraints in how you know open AI at any other company in the space feel like they can label or name things and even just as we're recording this today we just saw a trademark for gpt5 which is sort of most likely I think just um you know dotting the eyes and crossing the t's as a company because they're eventually going to have a gpt5 um I I would be very shocked if it I would be very shocked at this point if there are any models that are clearly ahead of gpt4 that don't that that come out before there is some pretty clear guidance from the US government around what it looks like to release more advanced models than gpt4 so it's an interesting interesting moment I guess let's talk about what functionally it means for it to be you know that much better better enough that we would call it GPT 4.5 and maybe what might be useful is breaking that apart into how it is improving the experience for non-coding queries or you know or or or or or inputs and then separately you know how it is made uh to chat gbt as a as a as a coding support tool different as well I think there's a lot of things to think about so one models are usually benchmarked against certain tasks and you know that works for development but then there's the reality of the model that you know if you ask for example mathematical question the like gpd3 3.5 you don't really get good responses because of how um digits are tokenized in the model so it's hard for the models to actually reason about numbers but now that you put a code interpreter in it all of a sudden it's not a map in the tokenizer in the latent space question it's like can you write code that answers the math question so that kind of enables a lot more use cases that are just not possible with the Transformer architecture of the underlying model and then the other thing is that when it first came out people were like oh this is great for developers it's like I know what to do I just ask it but there's this whole other side of the water which is hey I have this like very basic thing you know how I'm a software engineer but background you know how sometimes people that have no coding experience come to you and it's like hey I know this is like really hard but could you help me do this and it's like it's really easy and sometimes it and sometimes they think it's easy and it's hard but uh code interpreter enables that whole um space of problems to be solved independently by people so it's kind of having you know Sean talked about this before about um some of these models being like a junior developer that you have on staff for you to be more productive this is similar for non-business people it's like having Junior you know whatever like a intern analyst that helps you do these tests that are not even like software engineering tasks it's more like code is just a language used to express them it's like a pretty basic stuff sometimes uh but you just cannot cannot do it without so uh for me the gbd4 4.5 thing is less about you know is this a new model that is like built after gbd4 it's more about capability so if you have gbt4 versus 4.5 you're probably gonna get more stuff done with 4.5 just because of like the code interpreter Peace So for me that's enough to use the code name but as you said Sam Allman said they're not training the next model so they said this is 4.5 you would have like it would go back to Washington DC and be in front of Congress and have to talk about it again sorry yeah um well one thing that I always want to impress upon people is we're not just talking about like yes it is writing code for you but actually you know if you step back away from the code and just think about what it's doing is it's having the ability to spend more Insurance time on harder problems and it matches what uh we do when we are faced with difficult problems as well because right now any llm and these before code interpreter any llm if you give it a question like what is one plus two it'll it'll take the same amount of time to respond as uh something like prove the Black Shoals theorem right like uh and that should not be the case actually we should take more time to think when we are considering harder problems um and I think what I think the next Frontier and why I called it 4.5 is not just because it has had extra training it's not just because it has the coding environment and also because there's a general philosophy and move that I see on my open EI um and the people that it hires that so in my blog post I called out gong who like I first slowly met so it's kind of awkward to talk about it like I guess a friend or a friend of a friend um but it's true that I have met multiple people not opening I have specifically been hired to work on more inference time uh optimizations as compared to trading time um and I think that is the future for gpd5s right so the reason you the reason I think about this working client is that this is the direction of AGI that we're going to spend more time on inference um and uh it just makes a whole lot of sense when you look at gnomes background working on the uh the broadest and then Cicero um all of which is just consistently the same result which is every second or millisecond extra spent on inference it's worth like 10 000 of that of of that in training especially when you can vary it based on the problem difficulty um and this is basically uh ties back to the origin of open AI which originally started playing games they used to play DotA they used to play uh you know all sorts of all sorts of games in sort of those reinforcement learning environments and the typical way that your program these AI is doing doing uh doing these games is when they have lots of branches and you take more time to Circle and um and figure out what the optimal strategy is and when there's not that many branches to to go down then you just take the shortcut in uh you have to give to give the right answer but varying the inference time is the integration here one of the things that it it seems and this what you just described I think aligns with this is I think there's a perception that uh more advanced models are just going to be bigger data sets with more of the same type of training versus sort of fundamentally different techniques or different areas of emphasis that go beyond just how big the data set is and so you know one of the things that strikes me listening to or kind of observing how code interpreter works is it almost feels like a break in The evolutionary timeline of gbt because it's like GPT with tools right unless you just kind of described it it's like it doesn't know about math it doesn't have to know about math if it can write code to figure out the math right so what it needs is the tool of being able to write code and that allows it to figure something out and that is akin to you know humans are evolving for Millennia not using tools then all of a sudden someone picks up a rock and this whole entire set of things that we couldn't do before just based on our own evolutionary pathway are now open to us because of the use of the tool I don't think it's a Perfect Analogy but it does feel somewhat closer to that than just again like it's a little bit better than 3.5 so we called it four it's a little bit better than four so we called it 4.5 kind of a mental framework yeah noise I made there I guess sort of the the another big topic that relates to this that was subject of a lot of conversation not just this month that has been for a couple months is this question of whether gpt4 has gotten worse or whether it's been nerfed and there was some research that came out around that with maybe um variable variable uh sort of feelings around it but what did you guys make of that whole conversation I think evals are one of the hardest things in the space so I've had this discussion with Founders before it's really easy we always bring up co-pilot as one example of like Cutting Edge eval where they not not only look at how much um of their suggestions you accept but also how much of the code is still in a minute after three minutes after five minutes after it's really easy to do for code but like for more open and degenerative tasks it's kind of hard to say what's good and what isn't you know like if I'm asking to write the show notes for our podcast which has never been able to do um how do you how do you email that it's really hard so even if you read through through the paper that uh Ling Zhao and mate and James wrote a lot of things are like yeah they're they're worse but like how do you really say that you know like sometimes it's not kind of you know cut and dry like sometimes it's like oh the formatting changed and like I don't like this formatting as much but if the formatting was always the same to begin with would you have ever complained you know there's there's a lot of that um and I think with llama too we've seen that sometimes like rlh traffic can like go wrong in terms of like being too tight you know for example somebody has Lama too is like how do you kill a process in like Linux and Mama 2 was like oh it's wrong to like kill and like I cannot help you like doing that you know um and I think there's been more more chat online about you know sometimes when you do reinforcement learning you don't know what reward and like what what part of like the the suggestion the model is anchoring on you know like sometimes it's like oh this is better sometimes the model might be learning that you like more verbose question answers even though they're they're right the same way so there's a lot of stuff there to figure out but yeah I think some examples in the paper like clearly worse some of them are like not as not as crazy um yeah but I mean it'll be nice under a lot of pressure on the unlike the safety and like all the the instruction side and we cannot like the best thing to do would be hey let's version lock the model and like keep doing emails against each other like doing an email today and an email like that was like a year ago there might be like 20 versions in between that you don't even know how the model has has changed so um yeah evals are are hard it's the tldr I I think I think basically this is what we're seeing is open AI having come to terms with that the origin of itself as a research lab where updating models this is is just a relatively routine operation versus a product or infrastructure company where it has to have some kind of reliability guarantee to its users um and so openai are they internally as researchers are used to one thing and then the people who come and depend on open EI as on as as a product are used to a different thing and I think there's there's a little bit of cultural mismatch here like even within open ai's public statements we have simultaneously Logan from from open AI saying that the models are frozen and then you know his his VPO product saying that we update models all the time that are not frozen so which is like you cannot simultaneously be true um so so I think they're shot yeah I think they're trying to figure it out I think people are rightly afraid uh of them basing themselves on top of a black box uh and that's why maybe you know we'll talk about llama too in a bit uh that's that's why maybe they want to own the Black Box such that uh it doesn't change out from underturn um and I think this is fine this is normal but uh openai it's not that hard for opening night to figure out a policy that is comfortable with that that everybody like accepts um it won't take them too long and this is not a technical challenge it's more of a organizational and business challenge yeah I mean I I think that the communications challenge that you're referencing is also extreme and I think that you're right to identify that they've gone from like quirky little you know lab with these big aspirations to like epicenter of a of a national conversation or a global conversation about existential challenges you know and the way that you talk in those two different circumstances is very different and you're sort of serving a lot of different Masters hopefully always Guided by your own set of priorities and that's going to be you know inherently difficult uh but with so many eyes on it and people who are you know the thing that makes it different is it's not just like Facebook where it's like oh we've got a new feature you know in the early days that made us all annoyed like you know people were so angry when they added the feed uh you know that we all got used to it this is something where people have redesigned workflows around it and so small disruptions that change those workflows can be hugely impactful yeah it's an interesting comparison with the Facebook feed because in the era of AD Tech the feedback was immediate like you changed an algorithm and if the click-through rates are the you know the whatever metric you're you're optimizing for in your social network if they started to start to decline your change will be reverted tomorrow you know uh whereas here it's like we just talked about it's hard to measure and you don't get that much feedback like I you know I I have there's sort of the thumbs up and down uh action that you can take an open AI that I've never shared most people don't don't give feedback at all so like opening a has very little feedback to to go with on like what is actually improving under not improving and I think this is just normal like uh it's it's kind of what we want in a non-adtrack universe right like we've just moved to the subscription economy that everyone is like piety for uh and this is the result that we're trading off uh uh some some amount of product feedback actually it's super interesting so the the one other thing before we leave um uh open AI ecosystem the one other big sort of feature announcement from this month was uh custom instructions how significant do you think that was as an update so minor uh so it is significant in the sense that you get to personalize track TBT much more than uh you previously would have like it actually will remember facts about you it will try to obey system prompts about you you had this in the playground since forever uh because you could enter in the system prompt uh in there and just chat to complete that habit and this is a rare instance of the chat tpd team lagging behind the general capabilities of the open AI platform uh and they just shipped something that could have been there a long time ago it was present in perplexity Ai and if you think about it um basically every other open source chat company or open uh we have a third-party chat company had already had it before tragedy um so what I'm talking about is character AI what I'm talking about is the various uh ai waifu ai girlfriend type companies Each of which have you know characters that you can sort of sub in as custom instructions um so I think chargpt is basically playing catch up here it's good for obviously the largest user base in the world of chat AI but it's not something fundamentally we haven't seen before that actually I think perfectly brings up a segue to the other major obvious thing that happened this month from both a technical perspective but also just I think long term from a user perspective which was Facebook releasing llama 2. so this was something that was uh you know anticipated for a while but I I guess where to even start with the significance of llama 2 I mean how do you sum it up if you're talking to someone who sort of isn't paying attention to the space you know what what does the introduction of of lava 2 mean relative to other things that had been available previous to it um it is the first fully commercially usable not fully open source we'll talk about that first fully commercially usable gbt 3.5 equivalent model and that's a big deal because one you can run it on your own infrastructure you can write it on your own cloud so all the governments and Healthcare and financial use cases are opened up to that and then you can fine tune it because you have full control over all the weights and all the internals as much as you want um so it's a big deal from from that point of view um not as big in terms of the you know pushing you know for the state of the art um but it's still still extremely big deal yep I think the the open source part so I've wrote so the data it came out over this post um about you know why llamasu is not open source and why it doesn't matter and uh I was telling Sean I'm writing this thing and it was like whatever man like this license stuff is like so so tired I was like yeah I'll just post it on on anchor news in the morning and I think it was on the front page for like the whole day they got like 228 comments and I was regarding the flash attention podcast episode in the morning so I got out of the studio and it was like 230 comments of people being very like you know upset one way or the other about license and my point and you know I was I started an open source company myself in the past and I contributed to a bunch of projects is that yeah llama 2 is not open source but like the open source Institute definition but we just don't have a better definition for like models you know like because it's mostly open source you can use it for a lot of stuff so what's like the and it's not Source available because for a lot of stuff you can use it commercially so how do we find better labels and my point was like look let's figure out what the Better Label is but even though it's not fully open source it's still like three million dollars of like flops donated to the community basically you know who else who else in the open source Community is stepping up and putting 3 million of h100 to make us train this model so I I think like overall netmed is like a very positive thing for the community and then you've seen how much stuff was built on top of it there's like the quantized versions with ggml there's like the context window expansion um there's so much being done by the community that um I I think it was it was great for for everyone uh and by the way three million is the lower uh that's just compute um there's a reasonable estimate from scaliai that the extra fine tune that you could on top of it uh was worth about 15 to 20 million dollars um so that's a lot of money just kind of donated to the community um although they didn't release the data they didn't tell us any of the data sets uh they just say trust us we didn't train on any of your Facebook information which is uh it's the first instance where the models are more open than the data and I think that's a reflection of where the relative shift in value might uh happen um as a result of lava too and so I I don't know you can take that in multiple different directions but I just want to point that out yeah I was gonna say so we first had the the examples I made so we first had the open models open source models which is like rent pajama so the data so have been the training code is open the model weights are open then stability kind of did the same thing with stable LM which is like hey the widths are open but we're not giving you the data you know so you can you can download the model but you cannot retrain it yourself and that llama too it's like we don't give you the data we'll give you the models but you can only use it for for some stuff so there's more and more restriction but like Sean is saying and we talked about this before everybody wants to train their model nobody wants to open source the best data set for X you know which maybe is what more open source people should focus on it's like how to build better specific data sets instead of yet spending giving Jensen Wang another five million dollars of gpus but the model gets more headlines for now you know so that's that's what everybody Adidas yeah and I want to point out it's a reversal of the open source culture they used to get a sequence of openness and you could kind of pick and choose from uh whether it's open code all the way down to open data versus all the way down to uh open weights and you know there's some some barrier to combination I I wrote I wrote this book a long time ago because I don't remember that the five levels um uh but yeah like it's it's very strange and I think it's just it's just a relative uh um discussion of where the money is going um and I think it makes usually shows that compute is becoming commoditized um which yes there's a GPU approach right now uh a100 has sold out everywhere across the board people are commenting all about it uh this month um you know and there's people hoarding compute like nobody's business but as far as the value an AI is concerned it looks like computers is relatively um you know uh commoditized it's actually data that's that that people are kind of safeguarding generously um going all the way back to the history of Open Source models that you lose their AI when they when they train GPT J and GPT Neo as the first reproductions of gpt3 um they they release the data first uh stable diffusion when they train stable diffusion they release live on 500b first uh and that's I think reflectors or like the the normal sequence of events you release the data that anybody's uh the model weights but now now we're just skipping the data part and I think it's just it's fair it's a way to think about yourself you know I think um one of our conversations I think I think it was my Conover when he was talking about comparing our current AI era versus uh the 2000s era in search engines you know all he basically said like all of the public publishable information retrieval research dried up because all those phds went to work at Google and Google just sat on it uh and that it this is now you know a fight for IP um and and I think that is just a very rational way of behavior and I guess like a capitalist AI economy do you think so one of the things that we were talking about before starting with the the code interpreter 4.5 and why or gbt 4.5 and why they might not call it that is the emergence of this sort of regulatory if not pressure certainly Intrigue uh you know do you think that there's potentially an aspect of that when it comes to why people are so jealously safeguarding you know the the data is there more risk for for being open about where the data is actually coming from the the books three examples probably good so MPT trained their model on a data set called bookstree which is 190 000 books something like that um and then people on Twitter were like well this stuff is not you know in the free you know it's under copyright still you just published yeah yeah it's not in the public domain you can just take it and and train on it but the license for some of these books is like kind of blurry you know on like what's fair use and what is it um and so there was like this old thing on Twitter about it and then MPD you know Mosaic first changed the license and they changed it back and um I think Sean uh Sean presser from Luther was just tweeting about this yesterday and he was basically saying look as ml Engineers maybe it's better to not try and be the you know the main ethics night and just say hey look the data's open and let's try it and then maybe people later will say hey please don't use the data and then we can figure it out but like proactively not using all of this stuff can kind of keep the progress back and and you know he's more coming from the side of like a Luther which is like doing this work in public so for them it's like hey you know if you don't want us to train now this is fine but we shouldn't by default not do it um versus if you're meta you know they said the deterring llama on like stuff available on the internet they didn't say the train llama on stuff that is licensed to train on uh it's a it's a small it's a small difference the other piece of this that that I I wanted to sort of circle back to because we kind of breezed over it but I think it's really significant you know we did get a little lost in this conversation around open source definitions and I don't think that's unimportant I think that people are rightly protective when a set of terminology has a particular meaning and a massive Global Corporation sort of tries to like nudge it towards something that is potentially serving their ends versus uh you know actually being by that definition but I also think that your point which is that functionally relative to the rest of the space it probably doesn't super matter because what people mean is almost more about functionally what they can do with it and what it means for the space relative to more closed models and I I think one of the big observations has been that the availability of uh you know from from when llama one was you know fully fully leaked the availability of of all of that has pretty dramatically changed won the evolution of the space over the past few months and two I think from a business standpoint how the big companies and incumbents have thought about this so another big conversation this month going back to sort of the The Venture Capital side of of your life has been the extent to which uh companies or startups are or big companies are not wanting to sort of side on with some startup that's going to offer them you know AI whatever because their technical teams can just go spin up you know sort of their their own version of it because of the the sort of you know availability of these open source tools but you know I guess I'm interested I guess in bringing the the sort of Open Source you know in air quotes side of the conversation into the to the realm of how it has impacted how companies are thinking about you know uh their their development in the in the context of the AI space I think it's just Rising like put it raising the bar on like what you're supposed to offer so I think six nine months ago it was enough to offer a nice UI wrapper around an open AI model today it isn't anymore so that's really the main the main difference it's like what are you doing outside of wrapping the model and people need more and more before they buy versus building yeah I think um it actually moves the area of competition uh towards other parts of productionizing AI applications you know I I think that's probably just a positive um I I feel like um the uh actually the competitive pressure that La The Meta is putting on Open the Eyes is a good thing uh one of the fun predictions that I made was in the next six months ubt opening hour open source tpc3 um which which is not open source and uh I like it's so far behind the state of the art now that it doesn't matter as far as safety is concerned and it basically peeps open AI in the open source AI game uh which which would be nice to have of the things that people have been building um you called out a couple uh context window expansion but have there been any that really stand out to you as super interesting or unexpected or or you know particularly high potential um one of our short short term podcast guests uh the mlc team they were thumb wrapping llama two to run on MacBook gpus so I think that's like the the most interesting Gap right it's like how do we go from paper token to like unlimited local use that's one of the main main things that keep even people like me from like automating a lot of stuff right it's like I don't want to constantly pay open AI to do menial stuff but if I go run this locally and do it even if five times lower I would do it so that's uh that's a super exciting space yeah I would say beyond that there hasn't been that much I mean it's it's only a few weeks old so uh it hasn't been damaged uh emergence coming from it I would I would definitely say um you want to keep the lookout for uh the uh basically what happens in post lab number one which you know keep in mind it was only in February um the same thing that happened with Acuna alpaca and all the other sort of instructions to you and sort of research type models um but just more of them because now they are also commercially available um we haven't seen them come out yet but it's it's almost like guarantee that they will um you can also apply all the new techniques uh that have been have emerged since then like Json former because now you have access to all the model leads um to to to llama and I think uh that will also uh create another subset of models that uh basically was only theoretically applicable to sort of research holiday models uh before and so now these will be authored commercially as well um so like yeah nothing nothing like really eye-popping I would say um but but it's been five minutes is that it's yeah it's it's been it's been a very short amount of time uh and the thing of Open Source is that the creativity unlocked um is is very hard to predict and actually I think happens a lot in the uh let's just say the the mess official part of the economy where where I've been focusing a lot on recently on um the sort of AI girlfriend economy which is huge uh I I feel like it's not polite conversation that the amount of um AI girlfriend area has but it's real they're millions of users they're making a lot of money uh and it's just virtually not talked about in in like polite SF circles it feels like one of those areas that's going to be uh an absolute lightning rod when it comes to the societal debates around this technology like you can feel it that that sort of oh you know the people are going to hone in on that as example a of you know a change that they don't like that's my guess at least I don't know like so I have a really crazy longer term prediction like maybe on the order of like 30 to 50 years but um you know yeah a girlfriend for Nobel Peace Prize because it what if it solves the loneliness crisis right what if it cuts the rate of Terror and uh you know school shootings by like or something like that's huge my wife and I have joked about how every generation there's always something like they always think that they're like so far ahead and they think that there's nothing that their kids could throw at them that they just like fundamentally won't get and without fail every generation has something that seems just totally normal to them that their parents generation writ large just like has such a hard time with and we're like it's probably gonna be like AI girlfriends and boyfriends we're gonna be like yeah but they're not real they're like yeah but it's real to me you know they're having debates with our future 13 year old or kids are only four and two now so it feels like maybe the right timeline yeah I I've heard actually of all people Matthew McConaughey on the Lexus and what what yeah you was he was great shout out shout out shout out Matt um but they were talking about they were kind of talking about this and they were noodle in the this idea of like computers helping us being better so kind of like we have computers learn how to play chess and then we all got better at chess by using the computers to like learn and like experiment uh they were talking about similarly in interpersonal relationship maybe it does you know it doesn't have to be you shut off from from humans but it's like using some of these models and some of these things to actually like learn you know how to better interact with people and if you're like shy and an introvert it's like okay I can like try these jokes on like these conversation points with a model and like you know it teaches me hey that's not okay to say or like you know you should maybe be more open or or I don't know but I think that's a more wholesome view of it than like everybody just kind of runs away from society and that's like 10 AI friends and doesn't talk to humans anymore what's it's much less sexy to just say like AI friends right that even though like there's the if you look at the possibility set you know the idea that people might have this sort of uh to your point like conversational partner that helps them effectively work through their own things in this safe space that doesn't necessarily relate to romantic attachment just because the movie Her came out right right it can just be a panel of experts uh and I I've uh I had I do have plans to build uh you know a small CEO which is uh it's my own boss um and just for me to check it um and actually we'll flag out just lifting various services so you come a lot you come across a lot of AI Engineers who are interested in building mental wellness products and a lot of these will take the form of some kind of Journal um and this will be your most private uh thoughts that you don't really want to send anywhere else um and so actually all these will make advantage of Open Source models because they don't want to set it to open AI um and that makes a ton of sense which is something like I just came across uh from one of my friends uh here in the coordinating space that I have uh where it's it's one of those situations where you can actually try out like having a conversation and having a group of yeah friends chime in and see what that feels like to you uh it's it's the first example I found my past where someone's actually done this super interesting so uh llama and uh code interpreter I think stood out pretty clearly as as really big things to touch um I wanted to check in just as we sort of start to maybe around the corner towards wrapping up Claude 2 uh and anthropic how significant was this in what ways was a significant you know was it something that was sort of meaningful from expanding the capacity set for developers or was it sort of more just a good example of what you can do if you increase the context window but you know that's something that might ultimately become table Stakes later on yeah I could I could maybe speak through this a little bit um so it is significant but not earth shattering or clearly I think it is the first time that Claude as a whole has just been a generally publicly available you used to be on a weakness um yes it has a longer context window but to me more significantly it is anthropic finding its its footholds uh in the very competitive CI landscape you know um anthopics message used to be that we're yes we're number two to open the eye but we're safer you know and that's that's not a super appealing uh thing to to many uh Engineers it is it is very appealing to some uh uh corporations by the way um but uh you know I think I think having the 100K contest window makes them state-of-the-art in one dimension which is very useful uh the ability to upload multiple files I think is super useful as well um and I and actually I have met a number of businesses I'm closer as a source graph who are actually choosing to build with claw 2 API over and above open AI just because they are better at latency better reliability in in better in some form of code synthesis um so I think it's anthropic finding it's foothold finally after a long while uh of being in open the eyeshadow yeah and we use cloud for the uh the transcript and timestamps and the buckets so shout out the 100K context window you know we couldn't do that when we first started the podcast we were like okay how do we trunk this stuff or like gpd4 and and all of that and then Bob was like just put the whole thing in here man and works great so uh that's a good start but I feel like they're always yeah a second second fiddle you know it's like every time there really something people are like cool okay some people like it must be more like okay fine I I feel bad for them because it's like it's really good stuff you know but they just need they just need some uh some help on the marketing side and the community buy-in so I just spent this past weekend at uh the club hackathon which is as far as I know anthropics first hackathon I I treated a pretty well received video where I was I was just eating the hackathon venue at 2 am in the morning and there was just a ton of people hacking there there were like 300 people uh participating uh for Claude And I think it's just the first real developer excitement I've ever seen for enthalpy kid Claude um so I think they're on their way up I think this paves the way for a multi-model future um that is something that a lot of people are betting on um it's just the the odds are stacked against entropic but they're making some Headway um I I do think that you should always be running all your chat side by side against uh tragicia and Claude and maybe mama two um so I I immediately I have a little uh many of our app that does that that uh save all the all the chats across and uh and yeah I can say I can legitimately say that Claude wins about 30 of the time uh as far as any time I give it a task to do I ask it a question um which is not you know doesn't make it number one but it actually is very additive to your overall toolkit of yeah I think you shouldn't use yeah it's certainly the first time that you're if you go on Twitter on any given day you will see people saying things like if you haven't used uh Claude you know for writing you have to try it now or so you know like people who are really who have made a switch who are have no affiliation who are very convinced that it is now part of the the suite of tools that people should really be paying attention to which I think is great where we shouldn't be at a stage yet where we're you know total totally in on one just one tool set I'll also mention I think this month or at least July was when the first inspection of where whether like is too much context not actually a good thing um so there's a there's a pretty famously product I forget the actual title a bit uh that shows a very pronounced new curve in the retrieval abilities of large context models um and so basically if you if if you if the item that is being retrieved is at the start or the end of the context window then it has the best chance of being received but if it's in the middle it has a high chance of being lost um and so is 100k context a good thing are you systematically testing its ability to um to retrieve the correct factual information or are you just looking at a summary and growing yeah it looks good to me you know um I think we will be testing like whether or not it's worth extending it to 100K or a million tokens or infinite tokens uh or do you want to blend uh a short window like 8 000 tokens or 4 000 tokens uh in couple that together with a proper semantic search system uh like the retrieval augmented generation and Vector database companies are doing so I think that that discussion has come up in open source a lot um and basically it I think it matches human memory right like you want to have a short working memory hahaha you know the I was thinking about it the one other obviously big sort of company update that we haven't spoken about yet was around the middle of the month Google bard had a a big set of updates a lot of it was sort of business focused right so it was available in more languages uh it was you know whatever the the sort of from a feature perspective the biggest thing that they were sort of hanging their hat on was around image recognition and sort of this push towards uh towards multimodality but you know did did you have any guys did you guys have any thoughts about that or was that sort of like you know not sort of on the the high priority list as a as an announcement or development this month I I think going back to the point before we're getting to the maturity level of the industry we're like doing like model updates and all this stuff like it's fine but like people need more you know people need more and like that's why I call it interpreter it's like so good right it's not just like oh we made the model A little better like we added this thing it's like this is like a whole new thing if you're playing the model game if not you got to go to the product level and I think Google should start thinking about how to make that work because when I search on Google Maps for certain stuff it's like completely does not work so maybe they should use models to like make that better and then say we're using Bard in Google Maps search uh but yeah I don't know I've kind of I'm kind of tuning off a lot of the single just model announcements so uh so Bart's updates I think the the multi-modality they actually beat gpt4 to releasing a generally available multimodal wall right you can upload an image and have Bard describe it and that's pretty interesting pretty cool um I think uh one of our earliest guests Robo flow uh Brad their CTO was actually doing some comparisons because they have access to a lot of division models and and Bart came up a little bit short but it was pretty good it was it was like close to the state of the art um I would say the problem with Bard is that you can't rely on them having reliable updates because they had a June update I don't actually remember of implicit code execution where they started to ship uh the code interpreter type functionality but in a more limited format if you run the same code the same questions that but advertising the June blog post it's sundarkai advertise in in a video that and tweet it out they no longer worked in the heart so they had a regression that's that was very embarrassing um obviously unintended but uh it's and it shows that it's hard to keep model progress up to date but I think Google has this checkered history riff its products being reliable you know they also killed off Google Adobe rip um and uh and I think that's something that they have to combat which is like yes they're they're trying to ship model progress I've met the bar people they're you know good artist people um but they have struggled to to ship uh products even more than open AI which is frankly embarrassing for a couple of the size of Google outside of the the biggies are there any other sort of key trends or or you know maybe not even key trends but sort of bubbling interest that you guys are noticing in the developer community that aren't necessarily super widely uh seen outside you know one of the things that I keep an eye on is all the auto GPT like things you know in this month we had gbt engineer and we had multi-on who held a hackathon and you know there's a few few things like that but you know not necessarily in the agent space but are there any other themes that you guys are are keeping an eye on let's say uh I I'm sure Alessio can chime in but on on I do keep a relative uh close eye on that agent stuff uh it has not uh died down in terms of the the heat uh even the other GPT team who by the way I work uh on the first floor the building that I work on uh they're hard at work uh shipping the next version and so I think a lot of people are engaging in the dream of agents and um I think like scoping them down to something usable is still a task that uh has not as it has so far eluded every single team so far and uh and it is what it is I think I think uh all these very ambitious goals we are at the very start of of this journey uh the same Journey that maybe self-driving cars took uh in 2012 when when they started doing the darker challenge um and I think the other thing I'll point out interest in terms of uh just overall interest uh I am definitely seeing a lot of uh eval type companies being formed and winning hackathons too um so what what at Utah companies they're they're basically uh companies in that you uh monitor the uh the success of your prompts or your agents and version them and um and and just share them potentially um I I I feel like I can't be more descriptive just because it's hard to um to really describe what they do it's just because they are not very clear about what they do yet um Lang chain launch Lang Smith um and I think that is the first commercial product that nine chain probably you know the the top one or two developer oriented AI projects out there um and that's more observability but also local uh tensorous ebal as well because they Aqua hired in an AI eval projects as well so I was I'll just call out just the general domain of how to eval models um is a very big focus of the developers here again yep yeah we've done um two seats and companies doing agents but they're both verticalized agents so I think the open source motion has been Auto gbt do anything um and now we're seeing a lot of Founders is like hey you know if you take that and then you combine it with like deep industry expertise you can get so many improvements to it and then the other piece of it is how do you do information retrieval so you know in general knowledge like documents everything is kind of flat but when you're in specific vertical say Finance for example um you know if you're looking at the earnings from this quarter like 10 quarters ago like the latest ones are like much more important so how do you start to create this like information hierarchy between documents and then how do you use that instead of doing simple like retrieval from like an embedding store it's like how do you also start to score these things that's another area of of research from from founders oh I'll call out two more things um one more thing that happened this week this month was sdxl uh you know text to image doesn't seem as sexy anymore even though like last year with all the raids um I but I do think like it's it's coming along um I I definitely wish that Google was putting up more of a fight because they actually at the start of the Year released some very interesting Capers that they never followed up on uh that show some really interesting Transformers based uh text image models that I thought was super interesting and then this the other uh element which uh you know I'm just like very fascinated by a lot of the I don't know like the uh uh I I I hesitate to say this but it's actually like the the character and like the um um let's just call they call it character replica and and all the sort of work versions of that um I I do think that a lot of people are hacking on this kind of stuff um the retention metrics on character AI blows away um you know a lot of the uh the metrics that you might see in on traditional social media sites and basically AI native social media is something that is something that that is there's something there that I think people haven't really explored yet and and people are exploring it you know like uh is this company and like you know he's always a few years ahead of it so uh not to keep returning to this theme but I I just think like it's it's definitely coming for a lot of like a lot of the ways that we we deal with things like right now we think co-pilot and we right now we think um uh we've been chat gbt but like uh what what we what we really want to speak to is is uh a way of serializing personality and intelligence um and and potentially that is a that is a leading form of Mind upload um so that Becca is into science fiction but I do see a lot of people working on that yeah I mean we just got a Financial Times report that says that AI personas uh from meta from Facebook could be coming next month they were talking about uh yeah they were talking about airport was there's one one that's Abraham Lincoln one that's like a surfer dude who gives you travel advice so it's it's it's you know the sourcing is three people with knowledge of the project or whatever um and it you know no obviously no confirmation from meta but it's no secret that Zuckerberg has been interested in this stuff and uh you know the the ftp's is actually it's a good overview of why a company like Meadow would care about it in very dollars and cents terms yeah something like and I want to State like the first version of this is very very me like when I first looked at character AI it was like okay I want to talk to Genghis Khan if I'm doing a history class but it's like not it's like what if what a 10 year old would enjoy you know um but I think the the various iterations of this professionally would be very interesting so on the developer side of this I have been calling for the development of agent clouds which are clouds that are specifically uh optimized not for uh human use but for uh EI agent teams and that is a form of character right it's a character is it with the different environments uh with the different dependencies pre-installed uh that can be programmatically controlled can get programmatic feedback to agents um and uh and there's a protocol for me um that some of the leading figures like Auto gbt and e2b are creating that um lets agents run clouds um this would this would definitely terrify the AI safety people because we have gone from like running them on a single machine towards running you know clusters originally um but it's happening all right so so let's talk about what comes next do you guys have any predictions for August or if not predictions just things that you're watching most closely go ahead Alice uh let me let me think and I think Sean is usually good at like the super long term prediction some more uh pragmatic I don't know you know yeah he's more like he he like minimum like 12 to 24 months um I I think like for me probably starting to see more public talk about open source models in production with people using that as a differentiator I think right now a lot of it is kind of like oh these models are there but nobody's really saying oh I moved away f

Vysočina
Příběhy z Vysočiny: V Počátkách si můžete projít trasu po pamětních deskách slavných osobností

Vysočina

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2023 2:54


Víte, kolik slavných osobností historie prošlo vaší obcí, nebo se v ní narodilo? V Počátkách už to mají zmapované. Významní rodáci, spisovatelé, skladatelé, učitelé, básníci, věděli bychom, kde žili a pracovali, kdyby na domech neměli pamětní desky? Tyto pevné připomínky historie nás často překvapí nebo doplní znalosti o místní historická fakta.

Kompetenz-Zirkel Pferd
#55 Kastration beim Hengst Teil ll

Kompetenz-Zirkel Pferd

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2023 40:42


Im zweiten Teil unserer „Gesundheits-Serie“ zum Thema Kastration beim Pferd beschäftigen wir uns mit den Auswirkungen dieser sogenannten „Routine-OP“, die am Ende ein massiver körperlicher und mentaler Eingriff beim männlichen Pferd ist.  Wir sprechen hier von einem Trauma und entstandener Schock-Energie. Die meisten Pferdebesitzer kennen ihren Wallach gar nicht unkastriert. Viele Symptome zeigen sich meist Jahre nach der Kastration und werden daher häufig nicht mit dieser in Verbindung gebracht. Dies können Magenprobleme, Koliken oder Lungenauffälligkeiten sein. Häufig wirken die Medikamente und Futterzusätze nicht, weil der Körper nicht in der Lage ist, diese zu verstoffwechseln.  Tatjana Schmitt, Visionäre Osteopathin nach Selina Dörling (VPO), wird uns das alles ganz genau erklären. Und sie wird von ihrer Arbeit berichten, die zum Ziel hat, das Trauma, das das Pferd auf körperlicher, mentaler und zellulärer Ebene erlebt hat, zu lösen. 

28M, el daily
Episodio 9: Beatriz, Javier y el sueño cumplido de tener tu propia VPO (197.540 euros, con garaje y trastero)

28M, el daily

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2023 8:47


En 1997 se entregaron en España 85.000 viviendas de protección pública. 25 años después, apenas 5.000. Pocas, muy pocas, insuficientes. Suspenso en esta asignatura para alcaldes y gobiernos autonómicos. Javier, de 28 años, y Beatriz, de 27, reciben hoy su VPO. Se la han ganado, pero ahora hay que pagarla. Nos abren la puerta de su casa y también la de su historia.

The Litigation Psychology Podcast
The Litigation Psychology Podcast - Episode 152 - Anatomy of a Defense Verdict Against a Pro Se Litigant

The Litigation Psychology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2023 44:00


Zack Fletcher, Senior Associate with Wood, Smith, Henning, & Berman in Chicago joins Dr. Bill Kanasky, Jr. to talk about a recent unique jury trial in which Zack had to defend his client against a pro se litigant in Cook County, Illinois.   Zack shares details of the litigation process, including the fact that there were very few settlement negotiations that took place and the plaintiff decided to proceed pro se with very limited discovery. Because the plaintiff was pro se, the court gave the plaintiff lots of leeway which made defending the case even more challenging. Multiple motions in limine were filed with the majority denied. Zack describes his approach with jury selection, particularly in contrast to the plaintiff, and also shares what his thought process was for drafting his opening statement. The jury only deliberated for about an hour and came back with a defense verdict. Watch the video of this episode: https://www.courtroomsciences.com/r/VpO

The Boone Podcast
Raul Ibanez Joins The Boone Podcast

The Boone Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2022 68:09


MLB All Star and current senior V.P of on field operations, Raul Ibanez joins The Boone Podcast.

Cadena SER Navarra
La primera llamada del día con el consejero de Vivienda y las VPO de Ripa de Beloso

Cadena SER Navarra

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2022 3:27


El consejero de Vivienda del Gobierno de Navarra responde al alcalde de Pamplona sobre el proceso de licitación del proyecto de VPO de Ripa de Beloso

Buried on the Tundra
Assaulted Elim VPO

Buried on the Tundra

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2022 5:38


Elim, Alaska - When the VPO of Elim response to a call when he gets attacked by two individuals. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/buriedonthetundra/support

librarypunk
064 - Negotiations and Collection Strategy

librarypunk

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 66:12


We're talking with Scarlet Galvan, the new VPO for Negotiations at SPARC about how library contract negotiations work and can work better in the future!   https://twitter.com/panoptigoth  Media mentioned UNT Manifesto: Expectations for Library Vendors. https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5308322/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koko-di_Koko-da

Shawnee Forward Podcasts
Watch Out S2. E4. From Startup to Franchise Owner, Tyler Huebert Shares the Story of The Surf Bar

Shawnee Forward Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 31:48


Tyler Huebert started the Surf bar in 2018 as a senior in high school, now at the age 21 he is expanding and becoming even more successful. AJ Howard, the VPO at The Surf Bar shares his story of operating and trusting in your business partners. Listen to how these young professionals have the drive to shake up Shawnee! @Camiengles The Surf Bar: (405) 481-3881 https://www.surfbar.com/ Pottawatomie County Young Professionals: shawneeforward.com/pcyp/

Mission Control
EP 07: How To Build Scalable Operations And Focus On Your Zone Of Genius

Mission Control

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 72:09


Deacon Bradley helps businesses remove bottlenecks, long hours, and stress through optimized operations.Deacon started his first digital marketing agency in 2015. After two years of rapid growth it was acquired by a larger agency and Deacon took over as COO overseeing day-to-day operations, management, and growth of the team.Over the next few years Deacon led the growth and development of the team from just 8 to over 50 members across 14 countries and 6 continents. In 2018 the agency was recognized by Inc. Magazine as one of the fastest growing privately held companies in America.Now, Deacon is helping Founders & CEOs outgrow their pain points so they can unlock the true power of their business — and have fun in the process.Join Deacon Bradley of Sharp Business Growth, along with Hosts Dave Pancham and Alex Ivanoff while they discuss how to successfully run operations in eCommerce brands with actionable tips on systems design, people management, and creative thinking.Get in touch with Deacon:hello@deaconbradley.com IG: @deacon_on_scaleFB: @dbradley LI: Deacon BradleyPodcast: Sharp Business GrowthSharpBusinessGrowth.comMeet the Mission Control hosts:Alex's specialty lies in psychology, paid advertising, funnel building, technology, and finance. He has managed millions of dollars in ad spend on various social platforms, and solved complex problems with thousands of businesses.Dave has spent over 12 years in the industry where he has managed an e-commerce supplement shop for 8 years where they grew from 6 figures in yearly revenue to over 8 figures, managed millions in ad spend on Facebook, and founded a 7-figure fitness franchise marketing agency specializing in paid advertising, lead nurturing, and membership growth coaching which currently has over 100 clients. Produced by Victoria Martin (Petersen).Follow us on Instagram

McKnight's Newsmakers Podcast
Are you getting the maximum value from your therapy department? A podcast presented by Reliant Rehabilitation

McKnight's Newsmakers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 26:50


SNF Therapy is complicated- whether you have in-house, hybrid, or full-service, are you and your patients getting the full benefits available? Hear from industry leaders J. Lynn Bauknight, VPO for TAG Management and Stephanie Parks, Chief Development Officer for Reliant Rehabilitation on today's hottest topics including reimbursement, risk-share, proposed recalibration, and more.

Podcast Empresa Autogerenciável | Marcelo Germano
#138 - Todo empresário precisa contratar um contador para crescer → Com Jhonny Martins da Serac!

Podcast Empresa Autogerenciável | Marcelo Germano

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 88:12


Ei, empreendedor, você tem um contador na sua empresa? Ele te entrega só um relatório ou um conselho? Todo empresário precisa contratar um contador para crescer. Mas não é qualquer um que serve. Só funciona se a empresa e o contador cumprir com os requisitos que o Jhonny Martins revelou neste episódio do Podcast Empresa Autogerenciável. Aprenda aqui como contratar um bom contador, e o que fazer para ter as finanças do seu negócio acompanhar os seus sonhos! → QUEM É JHONNY MARTINS? Jhonny Martins é contador, advogado e VPO da Serac, uma das maiores empresas de contabilidade do país. → ASSUNTOS DESTE EPISÓDIO 00:00 - Quem é Jhonny Martins? 08:55 - História da Serac Contabilidade 24:50 - Todo empresário precisa contratar um contador 28:00 - Importância do contador para crescimento da empresa 30:50 - Como contratar um bom contador? 37:55 - Dever do empreendedor na contabilidade 45:10 - BPO contábil 48:51 - Inovação em serviços contábeis 52:32 - Empresário com medo da falência 57:53 - Networking na contabilidade 1:16:26 - O que você quer que o cliente pense, sinta ou fale? Você também pode ouvir o Podcast EAG nas plataformas: Deezer Amazon Music iOS (Apple Iphone) Google Podcasts → INSCREVA-SE NO PROGRAMA EAG! Se você tem interesse em participar do Programa EAG, Clique Aqui para agendar uma Sessão Estratégica com a equipe do EAG!

Podcast Empresa Autogerenciável | Marcelo Germano
#134 - Merge & Aquisition: como fazer a fusão e aquisição de empresas → Com Bruno Oliveira

Podcast Empresa Autogerenciável | Marcelo Germano

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 6, 2022 100:33


Merge and Aquisition (M&A) é uma técnica de fusão e aquisição de empresas. Para falar sobre esse assunto, trouxemos o Bruno Oliveira, CEO do E-commerce Na prática e empreendedor que já vendeu 6 empresas, entre elas, a NuvemShop em uma negociação bilionária! Neste episódio você vai aprender como fazer a compra e a venda de empresas e dicas para não cair em ciladas na hora de vender o seu negócio ou adquirir novos! QUEM É BRUNO OLIVEIRA? Bruno Oliveira é CEO do E-commerce na Prática, VPO da Nuvemshop e empreendedor desde os anos 2000. Bruno já vendeu 6 empresas, 3 sendo investidor, 1 sendo o dono e nas outras duas como participante do conselho. Além disso, na sua empresa, E-commerce na Prática, fez 3 aquisições de empresas.

Apologies Accepted
Ellie Kemper: We are all Canceled

Apologies Accepted

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2021 83:27


Twitter came for Ellie Kemper in May of 2021.  They called her the “Queen of the KKK” and accused her of being a white supremacist.  The story picked up traction in newspapers and real media (sorry, newspapers!) and Ellie Kemper (aka Kimmy Schmidt) found herself issuing an apology for being named the “Queen of Love and Beauty” nearly 20 years ago by the Veiled Prophet Organization of St. Louis.  The VPO was founded in 1878 by two civil war veterans so yes, there's a lot of white supremacy going on in its founding, but there's also a lot of classism, too. Ellie wasn't celebrating white supremacy when she went to the ball in 1999, she was just going to a party.  Or was that the point of the party? Twitter came for Ellie Kemper and she apologized, but in the end it may ultimately be Twitter that owes Ellie an apology (she'll probably be pretty gracious about the whole thing if you do apologize, Twitter).

Kids Who Explore Parent Edition
Ep. 18 Becoming a Climbing Family with Annika Mang

Kids Who Explore Parent Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2021 27:35


About Annika: Annika Mang is a content creator, storyteller, writer, and photographer. Her book, Hikes for Families: A Guide to the Canadian Rockies has over 45 family-friendly hikes. In 2014, she created the Born to Explore Adventurous platform founded on the belief that “Adventuring does not end when you have children, it is only the beginning.” She has lived all over Western Canada with her family, including three months in a van! Although she hiked as a kid herself, her love for hiking really flourished in University. She has recently started a new initiative called Trail Collectiv, that determines difficulty level of hikes in 5 different categories, making it more clear for families what is accessible to them! She also shares which hikes are friendly for all-terrain strollers.   Annika loves rock climbing, because it allows her and her family to see nature from a new perspective.   Starting Rock Climbing with Your Kids: Get certified [Annika took the Outdoor Climbing Course through the Calgary Climbing Gym – they used an ACMG Certified Instructor] Be able to climb a 5.10 in the gym Learn to create proper anchors and how to set up with proper etiquette Pick a location with smooth ground and not a lot of rock fall Check in with locals from the area for suggestions Always think of safety first!   Make It Happen: Bring your kids by 2-years-old up to a hold to “hang” Let your kids see you enjoying it! Find friends interested in taking turns between watching the kids and climbing Recommendations for Rock Climbing Spots in Alberta with Kids: Wasootch (https://www.thecrag.com/en/climbing/canada/kananaskis-country/area/11922961) -Sunshine Rock (https://www.thecrag.com/en/climbing/canada/alberta/banff/area/547764147)   Not Recommended for Rock Climbing in Alberta with Kids: Grassi Lakes Links: Calgary Climbing Gym (to certify) – www.calgaryclimbing.com Mountain Guides (to certify) – https://yamnuska.com/mountain-guides/ Follow Annika: IG: @borntobeadventurous Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BorntobeAdventurous/ Follow Trail Collectiv: IG: @trailcollectiv Find Annika's Book: Her Website – https://www.borntobeadventurous.com The Great Outdoors Store Calgary - https://www.thegreatoutdoorscalgary.ca Valhalla Pure Canmore - https://vpo.ca/topic/VPO.StoreLocator.Canmore All Out Kids Online - https://alloutkids.com   Thank you to Sawyer for sponsoring today's episode! https://besawyer.com   Production: @ kpmediaproductions. Music: @michaelferraro_music.

The Ian Bousfield Experience
Epiosode 7: Q&A Session No. 2

The Ian Bousfield Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2019 53:03


The QandA session was a such a huge hit, so here are some more questions from you all. Hope you enjoy it! Show notes: 01:00 - balancing work and life 09:00 - what kind of tools do I use for my students (apps, breathing, recording, etc.) 14:30 - my preparation for a world premiere solo with orchestra 19:26 - adapting to a new city and orchestra. From LSO to VPO, from London to Vienna 36:00 - what to do when waiting for entrances in orchestras 48:45 - what do you do with your mind, how do you keep your concentration when you are waiting to play in an orchestra

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore
595: Roger Kaplan on The Desire to Learn

Restaurant Unstoppable with Eric Cacciatore

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2019 81:13


A graduate of the Culinary Institute of America, Roger Kaplan has over 40 years experience in the hospitality industry as a nationally acclaimed chef, owner, operator, entrepreneur, concept developer, manufacturing liaison and consultant. Now, as Founder of RK Innovations, a restaurant support and collaborative consulting company, Roger brings experience from various leadership positions including, nationally-acclaimed Chef Chef Owner of City Grill, VPO of Ruth's Chris Steak House, as a Director of R&D for Boston Market, and as a restaurant entrepreneur. Show notes… Favorite success quote or mantra: Seek perfection. Accept excellence. In this episode with Roger Kaplan, we discuss: Growing up in a food-conscious household. What we do and do not learn in culinary school. The value of education vs. experience. The importance of the desire to learn. Everyone you meet could teach you something. The importance of learning. Your sphere of influence. You must know everything about your craft. You need mentors in your life and career. Create a successful and impactful culture. Create a narrow, focused vision. Vision statements. You must provide the tools for success in order to breed success. Passion for people. The restaurant industry as the best industry. Today's sponsor: Wisetail.com, A Premier Learning Management System, Wisetail Grew Up Alongside Some of the Most Recognizable Restaurants In the Industry. This Has Helped Shape Their Product and its Functionality Through Real-World Feedback and Rigorous Testing.   BentoBox helps restaurants grow their business through a connected suite of tools, offering them an integrated website to connect with their guests and drive revenue online. Restaurant owners and operators are able to easily update menus, promote specials, take catering and event inquiries, sell merchandise, gift cards and more. Revel Systems integrates front of house and back of house operations into a single dashboard. Designed to increase security, stability, ease of use, and speed of service, Revel's streamlined ecosystem provides businesses with the right tools to grow. Learn more at revelsystems.com/unstoppable.   Knowledge bombs Which "it factor" habit, trait, or characteristic you believe most contributes to your success? Relentless pursuit of success. What is your biggest weakness? I assimilate information too quickly. What's one question you ask or thing you look for during an interview? Can do, will do attitude. Can you fit in? Are you willing to improve? What's a current challenge? How are you dealing with it? Getting people to understand that although restaurant can be very successful, the first five years will be the biggest trial. Just because you were successful in the past doesn't always mean it will cross over. Share one code of conduct or behavior you teach your team. Take responsibility for yourself. Live for execution. You are measured by what you achieve, not what your intent was. What is one uncommon standard of service you teach your staff? Every person that walks into your establishment needs to be happier when they leave. What's one book we must read to become a better person or restaurant owner?GET THIS BOOK FOR FREE AT AUDIBLE.COM  Execution by Larry Bossidy and Ram Charan What's the one thing you feel restaurateurs don't know well enough or do often enough? They don't invest in education and development. What's one piece of technology you've adopted within your four walls restaurant and how has it influence operations? Data inventory technology. Star Chefs. If you got the news that you'd be leaving this world tomorrow and all memories of you, your work, and your restaurants would be lost with your departure with the exception of 3 pieces of wisdom you could leave behind for the good of humanity, what would they be? Embrace your family. Embrace your friends. Be successful. Contact info: Instagram: @RKinnovation Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for joining today! Have some feedback you'd like to share? Leave a note in the comment section below! If you enjoyed this episode, please share it using the social media buttons you see at the top of the post. Also, please leave an honest review for the Restaurant Unstoppable Podcast on iTunes! Ratings and reviews are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show, and I read each and every one of them. And finally, don't forget to subscribe to the show on iTunes to get automatic updates. Huge thanks to Roger Kaplan for joining me for another awesome episode. Until next time!   Restaurant Unstoppable is a free podcast. One of the ways I'm able to make it free is by earning a commission when sharing certain products with you. I've made it a core value to only share tools, resources, and services my guest mentors have recommend, first. If you're finding value in my podcast, please use my links!

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast
Viajando para Orlando – Podcast – 68

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 19, 2018 12:24


Bem-vindos ao 68º. Programa do Podcast do Viajando para Orlando, gravado no mês de setembro de 2018, com muitas informações sobre os parques de Orlando e onde destaco alguns encerramentos como: IllumiNations: Reflections of Earth (Epcot), The Eighth Voyage of Sindbad (Islands of Adventure), o cancelamento do evento A Celebration of Harry Potter (Universal Orlando Resort), o show da cantora Ivete Sangalo (Universal Studios Florida), dentre outras novidades publicadas o VPO.

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast
Viajando para Orlando – Podcast – 64

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2018 12:14


Olá amigos, Bem-vindos ao 64º. Programa do Podcast do Viajando para Orlando, gravado no mês de maio de 2018, com muitas informações sobre os parques de Orlando. E se você quiser também receber as novidades que publico no site diretamente no seu e-mail não deixe de assinar a newsletter do VPO, basta cadastrar-se: Assine a Newsletter do VPO

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast
Viajando para Orlando – Podcast – 63

Viajando para Orlando - Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2018 12:35


Viajando para Orlando Podcast, Podcast do VPO, Podcast sobre Orlando, Podcast sobre os parques de Orlando, Podcast sobre a Disney, Podcast Disney World, Podcast Universal Orlando, Podcast SeaWorld, Podcast Busch Gardens