POPULARITY
Coming up in this episode * Style it Like it's 1999 * It Violates Freedom 0! * We Turn it off and on again * and You Can Send it to LUS! 0:00 Cold Open 2:10 Going Back to 1999 23:32 Bitwarden Says "BOO!" 39:11 Turn It Off and On Again 56:02 The Windows Cliff 1:16:41 Next Time! 1:20:05 Stinger And the video version! (https://youtu.be/wXODmWq9ZZU) https://youtu.be/wXODmWq9ZZU Warm Up How to make a web page? CSS (https://www.w3.org/TR/CSS/#css) and HTML? (https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/) A static site generator like Jekyll (https://jekyllrb.com) or Hugo? (https://gohugo.io) A CMS like Drupal (https://www.drupal.org) or Joomla? (https://www.joomla.org)
OpenAI Denies Imminent Launch of the "Orion" AI Model. ‘hallucination problems’ still plague A.I. tech Google’s ‘Jarvis’ browser assistant is coming AI Days returns to the University of Florida Artificial Intelligence Can Now Take Full Control of Your PC
This week, we discuss something near and dear to our hearts - RDP Shortpath! What is it, even? TCP and UDP? Get out of here! We touch on the current enterprise landscape, the need for BYOD, Microsoft's remote working capabilities, and how RDP Shortpath rules them all. Mostly. Also, Tobi asks Jussi an unexpected question.(00:00) - Intro and catching up.(04:50) - Show content starts.Show links- RDP Shortpath- Ctrl+Alt+Azure | 176 - Let's talk about Azure Virtual Desktop- Ctrl+Alt+Azure | 094 - Your PC in the cloud with Windows 365- Ctrl+Alt+Azure | 149 - Developing in the cloud with Microsoft Dev BoxWe want feedback!- Give us feedback!
Episode:Title: Show: ohmTown Daily - Science, Technology, & SocietySeason: 2Episode: 359Date: 12/25/2023Time: Weekdays 8PM, Weekends 6PM ET@ohmTown Episode Article Vote: https://www.ohmtown.com/elections/Past Episode Votes: https://www.ohmtown.com/past-elections/Live on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/ohmtownYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/ohmtownPodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ohmtown/id1609446592Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ohmTownDiscord: https://discord.gg/vgUxz3XArticles Discussed:[0:00] Introductions...Last Christmas Hits Number 1https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/last-christmas-finally-hits-no-1-in-uk-for-wham/Animal Shelter Empty for Christmas.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/an-animal-shelter-in-pennsylvania-is-empty-for-the-first-time-in-nearly-50-years-it-is-a-true-miracle/What does Fake Ozempic Do to Youhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/fake-ozempic-warning-issued-by-fda-as-thousands-of-units-already-seized/Your PC is Leaking PIIhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/warcrafters/f/d/ever-wondered-what-your-gaming-pc-is-telling-the-world-about-you-heres-why-your-privacy-matters-and-what-you-can-do-to-protect-it/Copyright Cases for Christmashttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/rightprotect/f/d/christmas-copyright-cases-a-look-at-past-rulings-on-bubble-santas-holiday-light-displays-and-hit-songs/High Tech Mail Boxes in the UShttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/usps-unveils-12000-high-tech-collection-boxes-to-combat-mail-theft/How 75 cents uncovered a spy ring.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/how-a-minor-accounting-turned-into-an-unlikely-spy-thriller/Rocks are the next hot energy source.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/can-hot-rocks-become-the-future-of-clean-energy-storage/China Military Fans Face Prisonhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/this-cool-hobby-could-land-you-in-jail-chinas-spy-agency-warns/Piracy creates a toll.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/major-shipping-firms-are-imposing-surcharges-to-reroute-ships-from-the-red-sea-attacks-just-as-inflation-is-starting-to-stabilize/Broadcasted live on Twitch -- Watch live at https://www.twitch.tv/ohmtown
(Originally aired 7.21.2023) Social media is a meaningful, powerful tool in our hobby. It also can create the misconception that everyone's collection is better than yours. It's not. Your PC is just fine.
In this week's episode, we talk about Azure Virtual Desktop. It's a VDI (Virtual Desktop Infrastructure) in the cloud, like Windows 365 and Microsoft Dev Box, which we've covered previously. We cover deployment options, configuration, pricing, and other considerations. Also, Tobi reflects on his CD burner and Nero. Jussi asks Tobi an unexpected question. This episode sponsored by Sovelto.(00:00) - Intro and catching up.(03:50) - Show content starts.Show links- Episode 94: Your PC in the cloud with Windows 365 | Ctrl+Alt+Azure- Episode 149: Developing in the cloud with Microsoft Dev Box | Ctrl+Alt+Azure- Enterprise-scale support for Azure Virtual Desktop - Cloud Adoption Framework | Microsoft Learn- Tutorials for getting started with AVD- AZ-140: Microsoft Certified: Azure Virtual Desktop SpecialtySPONSORThis episode is sponsored by Sovelto.We at Sovelto support your personal growth, keep your Azure skills up to date and increase your market value. Learn or expire: sovelto.fi/pro
Imagine a world where your computer makes you money when you are NOT using it. Imagine a world where you can reduce your cloud computing expenses by 90%. Salda.com is a company that is making this into a reality. Salad activates the latent resources of idle gaming PCs on the web's most trusted "AFK-for-pay" marketplace. Salad's users (or “Chefs”) turn a wealth of dormant processing power into games, DLC, gift cards, subscriptions, and more. Every year, Salad's users redeem over 50,000 digital and real-world items, and contribute thousands to charities across the globe. More than 400 million gaming PCs sit inactive for 22 hours a day. With Salad, that's 11 minutes of pay to every minute of play. With a quarter million users already earning, they've made substantial inroads into a mostly untapped global market. Their community is powered by blockchain protocols and high-trust infrastructure to ensure our Chefs chop through any task—while remaining safely anonymized. Soon they will democratize financial access through SaladPay, a payment platform that takes Salad Balance web-wide. In five years' time, “Pay with Your PC” will be ubiquitous. In this episode I interview Bob Miles, Bob is the Founder and CEO of Salad Technologies. Starting his career as a pilot before studying Aeronautical Engineering, Bob joined Qantas a Performance Engineer before pivoting into the startup world soon after. Cofounding a digital marketing company called the Green Way Up, this project morphed into a 12 part television series aired internationally on both National Geographic and Netflix, a journey where Bob powered a cross-continent expedition using a waste-to-fuel system he designed and built. Bob is an avid traveler, has visited North Korea twice and completed several week-long solo bicycle trips in Russia, South Korea and Myanmar. In this episode we also talk about Decentralized computing AWS, Google cloud Economics of decentralization Internet, Web3 Antiviruses Competing against giant competitors NFTs OpenSea Kubernetes Centralized infrastructure Connect with Bob & Salad team here:- Website: www.salad.com Website (Cloud): www.salad.com/cloud Discord: SaladChefs Twitter: Salad_Chefs TikTok: Saladchefs Join our Web3 Discord community - "https://discord.gg/2eJ7DVGcx6" It is free for only the first 100 members, after that entry will be only for people who hold a speaker badge NFT from this podcast. In true Web3 fashion, I will be minting and selling this episode on OpenSea.io You can find it here - unless it is already sold - https://opensea.io/SamKamani Connect with me here - https://twitter.com/samkamani
Microsoft Windows Goes Password-less, and the Productivity and Technology News This Week (If you're reading this in a podcast directory/app, please visit https://anythingbutidle.com for clickable links and the full show notes and transcript of this cast.) Enjoy! Give us feedback! And, thanks for listening! If you'd like to continue discussing any news from this episode, please click here to leave a comment down below (this jumps you to the bottom of the post). In this Cast | Microsoft Windows Goes Password-less Ray Sidney-Smith Augusto Pinaud Headlines & Show Notes | Microsoft Windows Goes Password-less Resources we mention, including links to them, will be provided here. Please listen to the episode for context. Schedule Time for Self-Reflection Google Workspace vs. Microsoft 365: Which Is Better for Productivity? Why A “Time-Crunched” Mindset Backfires—and How Leaders Avoid It The New Yorker: The Frustration with Productivity Culture The Power of Imagination: A Lesson From David Yonggi Cho Catching the waves of creativity iPadOS 15 Allows Apps to Use Up to 12GB of RAM on High-End iPad Pro, Up From Just 5GB Apples jab at Chromebooks in their iPad keynote is misleading and a little flatteringNew Microsoft Office is coming: Release date, pricing and major changesNew Microsoft Office 2021 sides on October 5Gaming accessories that can also be productivity accessories from IKEA Productivity Resource of the Week Audials AppsStream Great Music and TV to Your PC or Phone With Audials Parallels Desktop 17 for Mac Featured Story of the Week Microsoft accounts can go passwordless, making “password123” a thing of the past Announcements Microsoft Event: 9/22/21ABI 082 Microsoft Special Event: California Streaming with Art Gelwicks Introducing the GoodNotes Community: A Notes-Sharing Platform to Get Inspired and Study BetteriOS 15, iPadOS 15, TVOS15 and WatchOS 8 released today.Ah Smell the Roses | GTD Other News Kobo Forma is on sale for $219 in the US4 Remote Work Lessons to Boost Your Productivity in the Future TooGmail Material You redesign widely rolling out on Android [Updated]151 productivity apps for remote work Raw Text Transcript | Microsoft Windows Goes Password-less Raw, unedited and machine-produced text transcript so there may be substantial errors, but you can search for specific points in the episode to jump to, or to reference back to at a later date and time, by keywords or key phrases. The time coding is mm:ss (e.g., 0:04 starts at 4 seconds into the cast's audio). Read More Raymond Sidney-Smith 0:00 Hello personal productivity enthusiasts and community Welcome to Anything But Idle the productivity news podcast. Today's show is brought to you by co working space by personal productivity club. I'm Ray Sidney-Smith. Augusto Pinaud 0:12 I'm Augusto Pinaud. Raymond Sidney-Smith 0:14 And we're your hosts for Anything But Idle. This is episode us at 1081. On September 20 2021, Microsoft goes Microsoft Windows goes password lists, and of course the productivity and technology news this week. Each week, we bring you the productivity blogosphere news first and then we go into our productivity technology headlines. And so Okay, so let's get into our headlines for the first part of the show. What productivity article Do we have up first? Augusto Pinaud 0:46 So the first article we're going to discuss is scheduled time from self reflection from ions, messy desk, and I told you it was the beginning, we talked about this show and I talked relentlessly about self care. And I mentioned self care consistently. And this is what this article is, you know, take an honest look at the search and questions How do we feel about today, what I have achieved, what I have enjoyed what I have done, to look after me what I have done anything that I regret, what I have thrown my values, and I have been myself, and it is really,
Video Game News I Can Finally Use Bluetooth Headphones with My Switch Don't Look for a Price Drop on Switch's in the US Switch Online Might Be Getting More Interesting Soon Get Either PS5, You'll be Fine C'mon Marty I Guess Things Haven't Gotten Better at Blizzard Since Our Last Episode Stream Xbox Games to Your PC! What We're Playing Colby: Pokemon Go, Dead Space 2, Grounded, Omno, Kitaria Fables, Dead Space 3, Cris Tales, Homefront: The Revolution, Nuclear Throne, Golf Club Wasteland Cliff: Ummmmm, Tetris? Questions DA VINSTER (Vinny): What game do you think would benefit most from coming to a service like Xbox Game Pass or PS Now? Rdeacon: What do you think is the best way for gamers to give developers feedback about their games? I just heard a podcast where the developer from Escape from Tarkov creator wants the feedback but said it's a tedious process to weed through all the trolls to get to valuable insights. Primefan: Which character that isn't in the mortal kombat universe be best the doom slayer or kratos JoeColeslaw: How stoked are you for Psychonauts 2...Short point... you MAY want to play 1 first, but NOT required... just freshen up on controls. They do a good job to recap Princess_Megan: Which real world animal or fictional creature would you like to see better utilized in video games and how would you like to see this accomplished? Cheap/Free Games Epic Games The Escapists PS Plus Overcooked: All You Can Eat! Hitman 2 Predator: Hunting Grounds PS Now Tekken 7 Killing Floor 2 Final Fantasy VII Windbound Pathfinder: Kingmaker – Definitive Edition Ghost of a Tale Moonlighter Xbox Games with Gold Warhammer: Chaosbane ($39.99 ERP): Available September 1 to 30 Mulaka ($19.99 ERP): Available September 16 to October 15 Zone of the Enders HD Collection ($29.99 ERP): Available September 1 to 15 Samurai Shodown II ($9.99 ERP): Available September 16 to 30 Game Pass Craftopia (Game Preview) (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 2 Final Fantasy XIII (Console and PC) – September 2 Signs of the Sojourner (Cloud, Console, and PC) – September 2 Surgeon Simulator 2 (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 2 Crown Trick (Console and PC) ID@Xbox – September 7 Breathedge (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 9 Nuclear Throne (Console and PC) ID@Xbox – September 9 The Artful Escape (Console and PC) ID@Xbox – September 9 Flynn: Son of Crimson (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 15 I Am Fish (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 16 SkateBird (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 16 Superliminal (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 16 Aragami 2 (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 17 Lost Words: Beyond the Page (Cloud, Console, and PC) – September 23 Sable (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 23 Subnautica: Below Zero (Cloud, Console, and PC) ID@Xbox – September 23 Tainted Grail: Conquest (PC) ID@Xbox – September 23 Lemnis Gate (Console and PC) – September 28 Astria Ascending (Cloud, Console, and PC) – September 30 Unsighted (Console and PC) ID@Xbox – September 30 Phoenix Point (Console) ID@Xbox – October 1 --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/byte-me-podcast/message
In This Pancakeswap Metamask Tutorial, you'll learn how to use Pancake Swap with Metamask on Your PC to Buy Crypto.
A first look at Windows 11, Duck Duck Go improves on-line privacy, GS0tW: USB Oblivion! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel, Microsoft steals an Open Source project for their updater, the June 24th Windows 11 Event, will YOUR PC run Windows 11? An overview of Anycast! (Jun 28, 2021) Links that pertain to this Netcast: TechPodcasts Network International Association of Internet [...] The post DrBill.TV #494 – Video – The Microsoft AND Windows Are Evil Edition! appeared first on Dr. Bill | The Computer Curmudgeon.
A first look at Windows 11, Duck Duck Go improves on-line privacy, GS0tW: USB Oblivion! Subscribe to our YouTube Channel, Microsoft steals an Open Source project for their updater, the June 24th Windows 11 Event, will YOUR PC run Windows 11? An overview of Anycast! (Jun 28, 2021) Links that pertain to this Netcast: TechPodcasts Network International Association of Internet [...] The post DrBill.TV #494 – Audio – The Microsoft AND Windows Are Evil Edition! appeared first on Dr. Bill | The Computer Curmudgeon.
Your PC will restart several times. This may take a while. | PhoneBuzz Podcast #90 by PhoneBuzz Podcast
In this episode of What That Means, Camille has Abhilasha Bhargav-Spantzel, principal engineer at Intel, on the show to discuss Fearless Computing. In addition to her work at Intel, Abhilasha is also working with the kids who will be tomorrow’s engineers, and the conversation touches on: • What fearless computing is • Why kids are naturally better at fearless computing • Fearless computing in the time of COVID • Biometrics and privacy • Identity, cryptography, and security • Multi-factor authentication • Virtualization • Hypervisors ... and more! Don’t miss it! Here are some key take-aways: • Computers are no longer just tools for tasks – they’re an integral part of our lives. But there’s a lot of fear around being hacked or downloading the wrong thing. Fearless computing is about eradicating that fear. About making it possible to innovate, experiment, and try new things, without that constant fear. • Kids are great with fearless computing because they question everything. Adults are often more trusting, but kids often start with a sense of distrust. • Biometrics rely on more than just an image to determine legitimacy and authentication. • Multi-factor authentication relies on multiple different things (i.e. voice, how you speak, how you type, etc.) for verification that you are, in fact, who you say you are. • The cloud is already virtualized. Now, we’re working on virtualizing the client/computer. When you virtualize a PC, you can isolate your applications and workspaces. • Virtualizing workspaces allows you to create partitions that prevent the spread of malware to entire systems. That way, you can try new things within workspaces with more confidence, privacy, and security. Virtualization also allows you to try new things, without being tied to a specific operating system. • With remote learning, WFH, and telehealth, we don’t have big firewalls or intrusion detection systems protecting us. We have to rely a lot more on our PCs to do the protecting, which is why we’re (at Intel and elsewhere) starting to build more of these capabilities into the actual systems. • To learn more about cybersecurity programs for kids – like the ones discussed during this episode – check out Fuse Breakers and Echelon Catapult. Some interesting quotes from today’s episode: “My experience, working with the kids, is that they start from scratch. They're not afraid of anything, which is what we want to continue.” “I like to tell the kids, ‘Think bad, but do good.’ So, think what else could go wrong, but at the same time, see how you can protect yourself better and protect others.” “It's about local authentication, not releasing this information. Your PC, for example, is in your control. It's not going anywhere and not too many people will have access to it and potentially use it in ways that you did not expect it to be used. But if that same information was in the cloud somewhere, just fundamentally, by design, you don't have control. You’re just trusting that the cloud entity that has collected this information is only going to use it for that purpose and nothing else.” “Server-side, as you say, the cloud is already virtualized. And they did it primarily for consolidation and using applications in a much more efficient way, scaling the cloud. But on the client side, this is the new thing that is happening, which is: just like the server, we are working on virtualizing the client itself.” “When you virtualize the system, there are actual partitions that allow you to work on different types of workloads and isolate them. Fundamentally, they're isolated. So, if something goes wrong in one, it doesn't impact the other.” “It [malware] loves to spread. It loves to find its way into every application, down into the kernel levels and across the systems that it can reach. And if you isolate them fundamentally, its reach has already been contained.” “Virtualization not only brings you the security through isolation, but it can also basically allow you to do a lot more experimentation and creativity, like we talked about. You can try new things and you're not tied to an operating system environment. And that's another benefit.” “All of us became remote workers in a day's time. And a lot of the times, there was a break the glass scenario, where we just needed the users to be able to access these contained applications in some way or fashion. And that's not sustainable, because the threat landscape continued to grow. Nobody was waiting for things to stabilize before they can start trying to attack the systems.” “That's what we want to do is to build this next generation of citizens and engineers who have security mindset and [are] doing the right things for the community.”
Your PC needs protection against malware and other dangerous attacks, so loading your Windows computer with antivirus software is just what's called for. Check out our recommendations for the best Windows 10 antivirus apps.
Your PC needs protection against malware and other dangerous attacks, so loading your Windows computer with antivirus software is just what's called for. Check out our recommendations for the best Windows 10 antivirus apps.
James Di Virgilio talks to Daniel Barousse, the founder of Slice, a company that makes components for 3D printers that help improve their performance. Daniel and his co-founder Chris Montgomery literally started in a garage, tinkering their way to solutions to problems they encountered with 3D printers at work. In just over a year of existence, Slice is now distributing its product in 12 countries. TRANSCRIPT: Intro: 0:01 Inventors and their inventions. Welcome to Radio Cade a podcast from the Cade Museum for Creativity and invention in Gainesville, Florida, the museum is named after James Robert Cade, who invented Gatorade in 1965. My name is Richard Miles. We’ll introduce you to inventors and the things that motivate them, we’ll learn about their personal stories, how their inventions work, and how their ideas get from the laboratory to the marketplace. James Di Virgilio: 0:39 For Radio Cade, I’m James de Virgilio. My guest today is Daniel Barousse. He is the CEO and co-founder of Slice Engineering. Daniel, welcome to the podcast. Daniel Barousse: 0:48 Thanks for having me. James Di Virgilio: 0:49 Now, it says on your website and elsewhere, that what you do is you supercharge 3D printer technology. What does that actually mean? Daniel Barousse: 0:58 We’re a manufacturer we design and manufacture components for 3D printers. Your PC has an Intel sticker on it. More than likely Intel makes the chip that goes inside of your computer, your , for your PC. So we’re doing similar things for 3D printers. We’re making components for 3D printers, specifically ones that help to improve the performance either with higher temperature materials or more capable engineering grade materials, or allow you to print faster, better resolution, things like that. James Di Virgilio: 1:25 Well, let’s talk about 3D printers for a second. This is a topic that confuses and confounds me. Cause when I think of 3D printer, I still think of like trying to print something out and now comes a sheet of paper with things on it. It’s called a printer, but what really is a 3D printer? What is it capable of? Is the sky the limit here? I mean, what is this device that you’re improving? Daniel Barousse: 1:45 So one of the cool things about 3D printing is that you mentioned limits. Essentially the limit is sort of your imagination. Anything you can design on a computer with CAD, you can pretty much 3D print and turn into a physical object. So that’s really the appeal, especially for like a DIY consumer type person. They’ve made me have an idea of, Oh, I want to create a new product or I want to just make a bracket for something in my garage. If you can think of it and design it in a computer, you can pull the real object in your hand within a few hours. So that’s pretty amazing in terms of what it is. If you imagine plastic being on a spool, like a spool of thread, and then that plastic being fed through a hot glue gun, the hot glue gun would melt the plastic and then squirted out onto what’s called the build plate or like a sheet of paper, basically where the object is being created. And instead of doing it in two dimensions, it builds it in three. So the build plate goes down or the hot glue gun it’s called the hot end goes up and builds layer upon layer until you come out with a 3D object at the end. James Di Virgilio: 2:45 So if I want to print a bumper for a car, this can be done? Daniel Barousse: 2:49 That can be done. Yep. James Di Virgilio: 2:50 And how does Slice improve my 3D printing of a car’s bumper? Sure. So we could allow you to print it out, have a better material, for example. So if you like the water bottles that are sitting in front of us, those are made of a plastic called PETG. If you wanted to print a PETG bumper, it’s a lower temperature plastic, it’s kind of easy to do. It’s not the best material for your bumper. If you run into somebody else with your PETG bumper, it’s not gonna survive the impact. So you want to use a higher temperature and engineering grade plastic that can survive the impact. So you can print it . Can you 3D print metal objects? Daniel Barousse: 3:24 Yes. With an asterisk . So we can print metals that are embedded into a plastic carrier. So if you imagine metal as a pure metal and a fine particle form, being embedded into that same spool of plastic, that plastic thread, and you could print that plastic thread and then put your final object into what’s called a centering oven, and what it does is it evaporates the plastic and leaves behind the metal that was printed. So you do have a metal object at the end, but you’re not directly manipulating metal. If that makes sense, James Di Virgilio: 3:56 It does make sense. And let’s talk about how we got to this point of your story. Obviously you’re an expert in 3D printing. Your company helps to assist and supercharge these processes once upon a time that wasn’t the case. So you went to school at UF? Daniel Barousse: 4:09 I did. Yeah. James Di Virgilio: 4:10 You have a degree in mechanical engineering, and then what happened from there? Daniel Barousse: 4:14 A couple Internships in different types of industries. I worked in aerospace for a little bit and worked in power generation for a little bit, but I was doing a bunch of research in biomechanics atF while I was an undergrad and I decided from those disparate experiences, I was going to try and pursue something in the medical arena cause I wanted to make an impact and help people. So I ended up staying in Gainesville. I worked for Progress Park. If you’re familiar with the area, RTI Surgical is up there as well as Oxygen. So I worked for both of those companies for about six years. And during that experience I ran into, or I met the gentleman who became my co-founder, same as Chris Montgomery and his family has been in the area for a really long time. We basically encountered some problems with 3D printing. We were using it at work and we encountered some problems that we couldn’t solve or nobody that we talked to could solve. So Chris said, well, I bet you , I could figure out a way to fix this. And we went back to his garage and he came up with a great idea that we then launched into a company. James Di Virgilio: 5:06 So had you done extensive research to see if anyone else had solved this problem already and come to the point to where definitively there was no solution? Daniel Barousse: 5:14 Yeah we had phone calls with companies in Germany, the UK, had email traffic going back and forth with people all over the world to try and find somebody to solve this. James Di Virgilio: 5:23 And no one could. So then you decide to solve it, create a prototype in the garage, take the prototype where? Daniel Barousse: 5:30 So we built the first prototypes in the garage. And then there was a local company here, a little machine shop that built six of them for us. So we could test more. And then we found a manufacturer here in the U.S. That built first pre-production. Once we built like 40 ish of them and went to a trade show, sold out in a couple of hours. So we were like, okay, validated the concept that there was a need for this, that it wasn’t just us that recognized, Hey, we have this weird problem that nobody else does. This is a real problem that other people have as well. James Di Virgilio: 5:56 And so at this show, you weren’t necessarily sure how many people were going to have this problem and unbeknownst to you, they’re saying, Oh, this is the exact solution that I need. Now from there, did you take on investor funding? Is this a self funded company? How did you wind up financing the next level of production for these pieces? Daniel Barousse: 6:13 It’s all been bootstrapped so far. So myself, Chris, who I mentioned, and we have a third partner and three of us have basically funded it from our savings and revenue coming in. James Di Virgilio: 6:21 And how old is Slice now? Daniel Barousse: 6:23 We, launched, I guess, publicly in March, 2018. So just a little over a year and a half. James Di Virgilio: 6:29 And you’re in multiple countries, correct? Daniel Barousse: 6:30 We are yeah. We have distributors in 12 countries, I believe. James Di Virgilio: 6:34 What does it look like in the next five years for Slice? What problems are you trying to solve? Or are you at the curve where you’re trying to say, we need to continue to produce this prototype or what we have, or are you at a next level already saying, we can do this and now make this that much better? Where are you in that curve? Daniel Barousse: 6:48 So we’ve already launched a second generation version of the first product that we built. The first one we launched was sort of like our flagship model and we’ve built a less expensive version. That’s more targeted at a desktop market as opposed to an industrial market. We just had a successful Kickstarter campaign for that, that finished up on the 1st of January of this year. And we’re continuing to look at the future for other future product developments. There’s multiple types of 3D printing and we’re in one right now. So we’ve been focused on that and we will have more innovations coming out this year and in the following years in that realm, but we’re also looking at other types of 3D printing. And how can we expand into those in a way that is value added, right? Where we’re coming up with a new innovation in the market that nobody else is doing. James Di Virgilio: 7:27 And how does slice get it’s customers? Are you actively marketing? Do they find you because it’s this niche situation where they need to solve this problem? How does that happen? Daniel Barousse: 7:36 So we do a lot of trade shows and that’s the way we get mostly our industrial customers is through trade shows, but we’re also doing marketing. We were on Facebook and Google ads. We reach out to people that we find on forums. We’ve established an online presence that allows us to extend our reach. And that’s probably the biggest struggle in growing a business of any kind is how do you expand your customer base? And so that’s something we ask ourselves every single day. James Di Virgilio: 8:00 And your customer is really anyone who’s using the 3D printer. It’s not just a large industrial operation. If you’re at home printing things and you need to solve this problem or have this certain capability, your product solves that. Daniel Barousse: 8:12 Yep absolutely. Yeah. So we have customers that have a $800 , small 3D printer in their garage. And then we also have customers that have a massive operation, a room and array of three D printers that are printing either prototype parts or even production parts for a specific application. James Di Virgilio: 8:27 Okay. Now, so far, your story seems exceptionally smooth. Start a company, get a prototype, go to a trade show , sell out. Have there been any difficult moments in the journey of Slice? Daniel Barousse: 8:37 I think everything looks smooth from the outside. Looking in always. It’s easy to look at an entrepreneur Ford and say, Oh, his journey was smooth. He started with the model A and everything was great. And boom model T and now it’s a 300 something billion dollar company, but the reality is takes a lot of time. It’s a lot of sleepless nights for the first half of Slices existence. I was working two jobs. So I was working on Slice nights and weekends. And during the day I had my nine to five normal engineering job. And that takes a toll. That’s hard. That’s not easy when everybody else is like, Hey, let’s go out and have a good time. And you’re like, I haven’t seen my friends in a month, but I’m going to keep working. There’s a lot of personal sacrifices there. My wife is extremely understanding and wonderful. I have a son now, so he’s too young to quite understand yet what’s going on. But someday there will be a story of like, Hey, I worked a lot of hours before you were born so that I could hopefully work fewer once he’s able to understand, and I can be home on time. James Di Virgilio: 9:34 What’s the hardest part about being a co-founder? So your organization has several people in it. There’s benefits. I know in fact, we’re going to talk later about some teamwork, but what’s the hardest thing about being a co-founder. Daniel Barousse: 9:44 There’s a lot of frontload Would work in the sense that you need to pick the right person to be a co-founder. If you’re not going to do something on your own, you need to find the right team. I have this bowling pin in my office that is for winning a bowling tournament. I’m a terrible bowler, but I picked the right people to be on my team because I knew if I pick these guys, I could win the tournament. And so we picked the right people and we won. So I’ve got that in my office to remind me every day that if I pick the right people, even if I’m not the best at something, if I was trying to be the best at everything, I’d probably be not good at anything. So picking the right people to be on your team is huge. And then maintaining the relationship. A partnership is like a marriage. You’ve got to have a conversation and you’ve got to talk. You’ve got to make sure you’re on the same page, spent time together that isn’t just, Hey, we need to get these 10 tasks done. But also remember that they’re a person, they have feelings. They have issues that they’re dealing with they’re in their own life. And I think being cognizant of that goes a really long way towards making things smooth, James Di Virgilio: 10:39 Do you have any special guidelines as co- founders, like communication rules maybe where we say, Hey, look, if stuff is difficult, we’re always gonna make sure we talk about it first. Or we’re not going to let bitterness or resentment creep , and we’re going to have conversations. Do you have any sort of overarching mission or philosophy for how we would communicate as co-founders? Daniel Barousse: 10:56 So you mentioned bitterness. That’s a huge one, right? So if you let resentment bitterness set, it causes a huge issue. So one of our ground rules is if we’re offended at something, we have to one not communicated via chat or text or something like that. But it has to be either a phone call or in face to face and be able to say, Hey, this ticked me off when you did this, let’s talk about it. Why did you do this? Maybe I’m being insensitive. Or maybe I just misunderstood what the other person said, that’s common, right? So, yeah, that’s our main ground rules . Like you’re not allowed to pull something over somebody’s head and just not talk about it. You have to talk about it. So spill the beans all the time. That’s that’s, that’s the main ground rule. James Di Virgilio: 11:34 That’s very wise. Let’s talk about your childhood. So you grew up or born in New Orleans and then you went somewhere far, far away. Where was it that you went? Daniel Barousse: 11:43 My family moved to Siberia, very far away. James Di Virgilio: 11:46 Very, very far away . How did you wind up in Siberia? I’ve been to Russia and even amongst the Russians, you don’t really go to Siberia, but you in fact grew up there. Daniel Barousse: 11:54 So my parents are missionaries, so they planted churches and started orphanages in drug rehab facilities in various places. They still do that. Now to this day, when I was a child, specifically, we were going to Siberia. There was a huge need after the iron curtain came down for services like that, there’s a massive, even to this day, a drug and alcoholism problem in Russia, and in Siberia, in particular. So they went where the need was most. And we spent about 10 years in a city called Irkutsk, which is near the deepest Lake in the world called Lake Baikal, which is an absolutely stunning, beautiful place. If you ever have the opportunity to go to the middle of nowhere in Siberia. James Di Virgilio: 12:35 And what was it like as a child there. And did you have neighbors? Did you have a community of friends? What was it like growing up as an American deep in the heart of Russia? Daniel Barousse: 12:42 Generally try to not tell people you’re an American. Uh , I had the benefit of having grown up there from an early age. I didn’t have an accent. So I was able to communicate as if I was another Russian. My parents did not have the same benefit. So they kind of stood out quite a bit elementary and middle school kids are more vicious maybe than adults. I think when an adult Russian met an adult American in the early nineties, it was like, Oh, this is such an amazing anomaly. This is cool. I want to have a conversation. Whereas a Russian kid was more like, you’re my enemy. So there were a lot of interesting adventures. I certainly made friends there. You still have Russian friends. I went to a Russian school for awhile and that was complicated. I don’t like bullies. Let’s just say that. James Di Virgilio: 13:21 Are there any experiences from your time in Siberia that you feel have positively impacted who you are today ? Daniel Barousse: 13:27 Absolutely. I think growing up in another place, one , you get an appreciation for what we have here in the States. If we think from the fact that you can go to the store and there’s always bread on the shelf to, the fact that there are things like traffic rules that people obey. And if you get in an accident, if you’ve seen any Russian dash cam videos on YouTube, that you sort of know what Russian roads are like, and it was worse in the nineties, there’s a lot of things to be very, very thankful for. And I think having an attitude of thankfulness, no matter what the circumstances are, is something very positive that came out of that. And just having a cultural experience outside of one’s own is pretty cool. James Di Virgilio: 14:03 Yeah. I’m sure that totally changed how you saw the world around you coming from there. And then coming back to America, now putting your co-founder and CEO hat back on, what are some words of wisdom you could give to aspiring entrepreneurs or people that are early in the curve. Maybe this is during the first six months of their Slice story. What are some words of wisdom? Daniel Barousse: 14:22 Again, going back to the team, find the right people to be on your team. It’s very seldom that somebody says, okay, this was a solo journey. Maybe there’s some situations of that, but generally it’s always a team effort, right? To get something off the ground, whether you’ve got the packaging guy, who’s shipping out orders, you can’t do the job without him. And you want to make sure that you’re packing your guy’s the right guy. So having the right people on your team is extremely critical. Especially going back to the co- founder discussion, if you have the right co-founders, it can mean the world. And if you have the wrong ones, your business is probably gonna fail. Having people that you can trust is a really big deal. And then I think the other part of it is just having the tenacity to keep going. Sometimes it feels like, okay, we didn’t hit our targets for revenue, or we didn’t hit our targets for sales, or like we’re having some big issue with Amazon or any sort of those issues can shut down a business if not addressed properly and quickly. If you don’t have the resilience to last through that, then you’re not going to make it. I had lunch with a local entrepreneur here recently. And he gave me a stat and he said, 80% of businesses fail in the first year. And then of those 20% that survive another three quarters of them fail within the first five years. What makes you think you’re going to survive? I’m an optimist maybe. And he said, well, you are not only an optimist. You have to be a gladiator. So if you think about coming into the business realm is like, all right, I’m walking into the arena. And no matter what the circumstances are, I’m going to walk out of here alive Russell Crowe style. You think that changes your perspective of how you can survive. James Di Virgilio: 15:45 Alright one last question. I love the gladiator, by the way, one of my, one of my favorites. If you could go back to 2017, your current self could give one piece of advice to the Daniel in 2017, what would it be? Daniel Barousse: 15:57 Hmm, that’s a great question. Only one, huh ? So many things. I think it would have to be gilaround marketing and having a more complete marketing strategy going into it rather than we sort of figured things out as we went along. And I’m not sure that there’s a great way to fully know your market when you’re first starting off. But if there is a way to have a more complete marketing strategy from the get go, I think that would have gone a really long way from getting the jumps in revenue that we have to maybe five or 10X that because of better marketing, getting the word out there. James Di Virgilio: 16:32 Well, Daniel, thank you so much for joining us today. It was very enlightening to learn, not only about 3D printing, but also Siberia and your story. Good words of wisdom for fellow entrepreneurs. Thanks for coming. Daniel Barousse: 16:41 Thanks James. For having me. James Di Virgilio: 16:42 He is Daniel Barousse, the CEO and co-founder of Slice Engineering. And I am James Di Virgilio and for Radio Cade signing off. Outro: 16:49 Radio Cade is produced by the Cade museum for Creativity and Invention located in Gainesville, Florida. This podcast episodes hose was James Di Virgilio and Ellie Thom coordinates, inventor interviews, podcasts are recorded at Heartwood Soundstage and edited and mixed by Bob McPeak. The Radio Cade theme song was produced and performed by Tracy Collins and features violinist, Jacob Lawson.
“Your PC falls 120′ and suffers 60 points of damage”. No problem, I still have 60 left. Sometimes it’s a small thing that throws us off, and sometimes it’s something bigger. What are the boundaries/levels of “Suspension of Disbelief” that we’ll put up with and where does it break, and ruin a game for us? ... The post Suspending Belief in Role-Playing Games appeared first on Gaming and BS RPG Podcast.
Get your first refill pack free at http://getquip.com/games Make sure you go to http://harrys.com/gamesdaily to redeem your offer and let them know I sent you to help support the show! Tim is having the best week ever thanks to his engagement, the new Detective Pikachu trailer, and a Pokemon Direct tomorrow. Greg's wearing an ugly Portillo's sweater. Time Stamps - 00:01:37 - Housekeeping The Roper Report - 00:02:15 - Pokemon! 00:17:56 - Your PC is about to play Xbox Games? 00:25:10 - Watch Dogs 3 in London? 00:35:37 - GOG.com Woes 00:40:45 - Out today 00:42:53 - Quip 00:44:02 - Harry’s Reader mail - 00:45:35 - You guys talk all the time about how there’s no room for 7s anymore and that you only have time for great games... - jonbx32 00:52:32 - What types of games do you think you are an expert in? - maddockjr 00:55:18 - Squad Up: Dillon Young - Xbox One - DYoung - Anthem 00:56:11 - You‘re Wrong Tomorrow’s host: Greg and Tim
Craig joins Ken and Matt as he does every Wednesday morning. They talked about robocalls and the Super Mario Brothers video game that sells for $100,000. Craig also shared with Ken and Matt his best malware advice. These and more tech tips, news, and updates visit - CraigPeterson.com --- Related Articles: Robocalls And Phone Scams Are All The Rage In 2019 Unopened Copy Of Super Mario Bros Video Game Sells For Record $100k --- Transcript: Below is a rush transcript of this segment, it might contain errors. Airing date: 02/20/2019 Best Malware Advice - What's My Mario Brothers' Worth - Spam Phone Calls Craig Peterson 0:00 Hey everybody, bOy getting busy this week, I'm putting together all of the content for our course. And this is really exciting. This is, I'm so excited because this is gonna be the best course ever. Anyways, so everybody who signed up for this welcome aboard. Glad to have you here this morning I spoke with Mr. Ken and Matt we went over the this whole problem that we're having with frankly, these robocalls that are coming in. The spam calls the junk calls, what does it mean? What can we do about it? So we talked about that this morning. We also talked about our friends over at Nintendo here and is your game your Super Mario Brothers game worth $100,000 or more? A kind of an interesting question right. If you have one of those sitting around in your in your attic or your basement also I did some tech support help this morning for Ken which is kind of interesting because it ties in exactly with the course I'm doing right now but if you want little tech support help and want to know how to use secure your machines what's the best browsers and stop did that this morning with Ken as well. So here we go with Ken and Matt. Happy Wednesday. Unknown 1:27 Back again and Craig Peterson is with us now as he always is Wednesdays at this time 7:38 on Wednesday Wednesday Wednesday. Craig, how are you this morning sir? Unknown 1:37 I am I am I'm doing pretty well this morning. It's been a busy week and now almost winter again. Unknown 1:45 Before, I have a question to ask you because I you know I was using Firefox and I started using Chrome and I opened this link and all these you know Orbits drops. It says, don't you want to buy an airplane ticket? Unknown 2:01 Your PC may be infected right now. Unknown 2:05 So what is the spyware clean your computer program to put on, Unknown 2:12 or we learned a lot from Wreck It Ralph. And Ralph breaks the internet. And I don't know if you've seen that movie. You Unknown 2:19 know, Unknown 2:24 the problem is, there's a little green guys running around trying to get you to click on things. So I think you're real question is, how do I stop those little green guys? Right? Yeah. Okay. Okay. How Unknown 2:36 do I do my computer? How do I get rid of them? Do I get pest modern pest services? Unknown 2:43 Yeah, that's kind of what you have to do. The pop up stuff is fairly easy to stop. Famous last words and what you do what I always do, and I do this in, in Firefox, which is a little better I should Unknown 2:56 go back to Firefox. I don't know why my daughter told me to use Chrome stopping and going back to Yeah, Unknown 3:03 yeah, it is. Firefox is much much safer with your information just in general, right? They're not out there trying to watch everything you do and sell it all in fact, they're they're very good about making sure they're up to date and blocking things but what's the best malware? That's such a good question and last week I started I had what four different cult courses classes last week for people free ones that I did. And that's one of the top questions and it's a kind of a difficult one to ask. It's kind of like you know, what's the best helmet to wear? Well, it depends and what it depends on is what you're trying to protect against because there's a lot of nastiness out there but here goes the drum roll because if you're running Windows you have a Windows machine then you're looking for the basic protection you can turn on Microsoft software and it's got Windows Defender get that turned on and Windows Firewall get that turned on and you're pretty safe as far as everything in general goes and then there's one more piece of software that I advise everybody to get and put on their machines and that's Malwarebytes. Malware-B-Y-T-E-S. It's very very good that was Unknown 4:21 what Unknown 4:23 that's what Matt suggested Malwarebytes Unknown 4:25 ladies Florio Yes. Yes, exactly. And I got a great tip from Matt last week to with this this of Facebook plugin though. Are you enjoying? It Unknown 4:37 isn't it's life changing? But Unknown 4:39 whatever. What's that one? Unknown 4:41 That's the one where you can filter your Facebook feed and get rid of all i don't Unknown 4:45 i don't do Facebook. So I don't care. Maybe you would if you could filter? No, I'm not. No. Unknown 4:50 Yeah, it actually works quite well. Yeah, Unknown 4:54 Malwarebytes is really, really good. And then, you know, the Facebook stuff, there's a few the little filters, but built into Chrome, you can turn on pop up blocking, and I do that as well. So with Chrome, you go to your settings. And there's got to be there's a great search bar inside of the settings and look for pop up blockers. You can do the same thing on Safari, you can do the same thing on Firefox, it makes life much easier. Now, if you're a business, you can certainly use those basic pieces of software and Apple, if you keep up to date with your patches on Apple. It's even safer from the standard virus and hacker standpoint. And then Microsoft is, but since Windows seven Microsoft to ship with some of the stuff turned on. So there's your basics I really like. And this is what we use for our professional customers. I really like Cisco's, what they call AMP, which is their anti malware protection stack. And it's a bunch of different software. But there's one other thing you guys got to do, right? So I mentioned carry on all of your default stuff right now, at least on turn it off use Malwarebytes, but there's something out there called OpenDNS. And this is a lifesaver. This is probably one of the best things you can do as well. And it's also available for free or really, really, really, really cheap depending on what you're trying to do. And what OpenDNS does is when your computer tries to find where to go online. So you type in google.com, it has to turn that name into an address. So it has to be turned into an internet address, because that's the only way to get around. Right. It's not it's like a sort of Ken's house. So where's Ken's house? Well, now you have to look it up in the phone book. Right Ken? Right. And it's 123 mainstream street in Scarborough, Maine. It's the same sort of a thing. So what happens with OpenDNS, if you're using that is the computer says, Okay, well, where's Google that it's trying to find the address and sort of asks, in this case, if you set it up, right? Ask OpenDNS, OpenDNS, okay, well, he's he's 123 Main Street, and off you go, everything's wonderful. But if you have some malware, if you have some evil software on your site, or let's say it's trying to drive you to some adware based site or trying to get you to go somewhere you shouldn't have be cooked on something you shouldn't have is going to ask, Hey, how do I get to the Kaminski house over there in Moscow, Russia, OpenDNS is looking at that and say, Whoa, wait a minute, we know those Kaminski guys and they're tied into this unabomber guy and this is a bad place to go. And so it OpenDNS as at that point is it stops you from going there and pops up a little while doesn't pop up. But it comes up a little message on your browser saying that's an evil place to go but it also stops malware that's on your computer so one of the first things this evil software does matter where does is it phones home just like ET and tries to figure out what do you want me to do next to do you want me to infect next. Our evil plan to take over the world. And so it tries to call home so how does it call home it does the same thing it says hey I want to call home and it goes to mask OpenDNS. OpenDNS says I know who you are I'm not letting you call home and we're talking about even on their paid plan one or two bucks a computer a month just stop the bad guys from calling home. It's phenomenal OpenDNS look it up now there's better software than that we tend to use Cisco Umbrella which is the next level up from OpenDNS but there you go I just gave you my best tip ever can they keep faith and and it's Mac and Windows okay so is it just across the board is great Unknown 8:57 doing it Unknown 8:58 okay all right so Craig Peterson joins us at this time every Wednesday and he tells us about all the things that can needs to know about his computer I've noticed Craig by the way that on my phone I had installed a like a robo killer app which had been reasonably effective for the past few months in stopping this avalanche This is waterboarding effort of these people to try to just destroy my phone and get like a call every 30 minutes or so but in the last two weeks like I don't know if they're getting around it they got new numbers whatever but now I'm starting to get more of these stupid robo scam thing calls and whatnot again and they're always the same they're always some insurance thing or they always have a warranty to sell me or or whatnot but there's also some people that are actually like literally scamming you and saying that you know you owe money and you got to pay the police department or whatever talk to me about phone scams and 29 in 2019 Unknown 9:55 Yeah, IRS, etcetera etcetera. I've gotten most as well and the FCC just released these results of a new study. And it's a welcome to 2019 guess what half of all cell phone calls give or take this year are projected to be spam calls these these junk calls, or worse their their phishing attack phishing P-H. Not the not the kind with the line and the hook but what they're trying to do is hook you so they call up I got I was on the floor of a conference and I was actually the exhibitor and I got calls from the IRS. And like, repeatedly, you have to send money and how do you pay the IRS? Well, it turns out from this phone call that I have to buy Apple gift cards and send them to the IRS in order to make good on my debt to Unknown 10:51 it's just crazy. So what do you do? Oh, my gosh. Well, yet you're using Hiya right, Matt? Yes. Okay. Yeah. Hiya, H-I-Y-A is very good at stopping these just in general. But it's gotten so bad because they're, they're using your local area code and prefix when they're calling you. So if a call comes in, and it looks like it's from your neighbor, because it's your neighborhood phone number, you're more likely to answer it, then it's easy to fake and they're continually faking it. And there's no end to this insight. And I hate to say that, so let me tell you what I do. Okay, guys, I've set my iPhone into Do Not Disturb mode. Now, that can be a problem, because there's people who you want to call you. Well, Unknown 11:43 they want to be disturbed, right? Yes. Unknown 11:46 Yeah, exactly. So on the iPhone, what's really nice is I can put it in Do Not Disturb mode. And then I can say, if someone's in my contact list, let the call through. So I have a I have thousands of contacts in my phone. And so if any of them call me it goes right through to my phone. But you know, between us nowadays, when you call someone you kind of expect to get voicemail so if it's not someone who knows you really well, and they end up in your voicemail because you have Do Not Disturb turned on and you have habitat of culture contacts through and great, okay, so your wife's college kids calls, etc. going to come right through. But somebody that you haven't spoken to, in 10 years might go to voicemail. I don't think that's a big deal. But that's what I've done. I've got higher running, I ended up buying the paid version, which is pretty good. And then on top of it now, because it's gotten so bad. And the FCC is agreeing with us. We're not crazy, at least not about this Matt, that, hey, this is going to get worse. So take a look at that. On the Android side. There's a bunch of apps that you can put on your phone. Apple doesn't let apps begin to your phone calls away. Android does. So there's a lot of different options in the Android space. But I have found this to be very, very effective. Unknown 13:15 We are talking to Craig Peterson, he joins us every single Wednesday. Right around this time. I you know, Craig I was kind of I don't know a lot about video by new I remember Mario Brothers and and because I they were kind of cute. And they ran around a lot. Why would Why would a a video game sell for $100,000? Unknown 13:42 I mean, seriously, What? Why? Why? Unknown 13:46 Well, it wasn't 100,000 100,000 Unknown 13:55 Yeah, it's Unknown 13:56 it's interesting because this version of the video games it was sealed. It was unopened. Now just because you have one that might be sealed and unopenedn, it's not probably going to sell $100,000. This was a special version at only sold in New York. And Los Angeles was called sticker sealed so it has a special sticker on it. And it was also certified by this gaming authority of some sort. Unknown 14:25 So it's a collectors' item is what you're saying? Unknown 14:27 big time Okay, big time. But you know, a lot of people loved it. It was one of the big first big games frankly out there for the Nintendo 1985 was when of course it was this version of the game was released. There were some that were a little bit earlier than this but that's why it's sold for that so don't go out digging them up from the basement of the attic. The odds are excellent. Your Nintendo game is probably worth at least $5 okay but it's probably not 100,000 Unknown 14:58 that's such a bummer oh Unknown 15:01 alright Unknown 15:02 we're up Unknown 15:03 Craig Peterson our tech guru joins us at this time every Wednesday and this was no exception appreciate it Craig thanks so much for joining us Unknown 15:11 I'm gonna go to that Malwarebytes place Unknown 15:15 yeah hey if you guys want access to that training I did last week I did record it it's a few hours worth of it all about security stuff just send me an email just me@CraigPeterson.com and and I'd be glad to make it available to Ken or anybody else who wants to. Just me@CraigPeterson.com. Unknown 15:34 all right there it is. Ladies and gentlemen Craig Peterson the man the myth the legend is with us as usual and we'll talk again next week Craig. Unknown 15:40 happy wetness day Unknown 15:43 wetness day indeed. Alright, so coming up at 8:08. Unknown 15:48 That's part of the reason I do these. These hits here on the radio. It's just so much fun. Sometimes. I have fun with these guys. They're a little bit of play around. Anyways, hope you're going to have a great we talk to you later. I'm going back to the treadmill today. Yeah. Isn't that fun? Go Craig. Start an exercise again. Have a great day. Bye bye. --- More stories and tech updates at: www.craigpeterson.com Don't miss an episode from Craig. Subscribe and give us a rating: www.craigpeterson.com/itunes Follow me on Twitter for the latest in tech at: www.twitter.com/craigpeterson For questions, call or text: 855-385-5553
Part II of my delve into making adversaries. Today is all about how to create them. I go step-by-step, following the book, talking about how each step works, with examples along the way. Just remember two very important points: • Step 1: Develop a Concept is the most important step. It informs all the decisions you make • Your PC sheets are the best guidelines you have. What works for one group might not work for another --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/excess-advantage/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/excess-advantage/support
2-Minute Tip: Close to Open In retail, management coaches employees to Close to Open. That means to get the store clean, stocked and signed at closing time so it's ready to open up the next day and get right to business. If you are doing a series of presentations, you can do "Future You" a big favor by taking the same approach. Close to open. That means when you're done, you don't just throw everything in your bag and run out the door. Take the time to: Reset your PC to presentation state. Wrap up your cables. Pack your extension cord and presentation remote where you will find them. Fold up your branded table cloth. Reset any visual aides you have Etc. Don't leave your self with a tangled mess to deal with the next day. You don't need that stress, and you don't need that hassle. Close to Open. Post Tip Discussion: Presentation Translator Presentation Translator is a free add in for PowerPoint that you can get from Microsoft. It requires a recent version of PowerPoint, a Windows PC, an internet connection and a microphone. You can download it here. You can learn more about the tool here. It does three main things in PowerPoint. It: Provides live voice to text subtitles on your slides while you present Allows audience members to view a live translation of your talk on their smart phones (or on top of your slides, if you choose) Gives you a written transcript of your talk at the end of the presentation I saw a great demonstration of it at the Microsoft Ability Summit. I talked more about that on my stroke podcast, Strokecast. Translator does all this in the cloud. Your PC microphone picks up your voice and uses Microsoft's cloud-based artificial intelligence to do the conversion and translation on the fly. It's pretty impressive. This is complex stuff to get right. One way to improve accuracy is to let the tool scan your slides before your presentation. This takes about 5 minutes, but you only need to do it once. It's an optional step, but it's important if you have a lot of specialized language in your presentation. What I like about this function is that it reads both your slides AND your speaker notes. That means you can get the benefit of this tool even with graphic heavy slides with few words. Your speaker notes can be as text heavy as you like. Speed and accuracy are important, and I found it works pretty well most of the time. A good internet connection is important to avoid lag and keep it functional. I ran this week's episode through the tool. You can read the English transcript of this week's episode here. If you'd rather read it in Klingon, you can do that here. You can translate into 60 different languages. Here's a look at some of those screenshots. [caption id="attachment_652" align="aligncenter" width="415"] This is a screenshot showing some of the languages you can translate your slides into.[/caption] [caption id="attachment_650" align="aligncenter" width="514"] This is the dialog box you see when you start the subtitling mode. Here, you can enable or disable the prescan.[/caption] [caption id="attachment_651" align="aligncenter" width="521"] This screen shot of the dialog box shows some of the languages you can display your subtitles in.[/caption] This is not just a cool toy for speakers. Presentation Translator has some important implications for accessibility and for reaching under-served communities. It puts simple translation tools in the hands of every Windows-based PowerPoint user. It allows a speaker in one language to speak with an audience not as proficient in that language. It streamlines business and opportunities across borders. It allows the hard of hearing to consume more content. Here's a Microsoft produced video demonstrating the tool: Call To Action: What do you think of the tool? Have you tried it? Let us know in the comments here. If you find content like this interesting, be sure to subscribe to 2-Minute Talk Tips in your favorite podcast app. Close to open the next time you have a series of presentations. Don't get best...get better.
Ernest Miller is the corporate chef at Coast Packing Company, a meat packing and distributing company. Together with Ipsos Research, they surveyed Americans on their taste and acceptance of lard and tallow in cooking. You might be surprised by the results of the survey. Up next is party planning expert, Megan Megale. She provides the proper RSVP etiquette and offers some theories as to why so many people just don't bother giving the host of a party the common courtesy of a response. Afterbuzz TV's Emily Harlan and The Crash Man (Vic St. John) join Phil Hulett as co-hosts. These stories are included: Ronda Rousey to the WWE? Venomous sea snakes invade Southern California beaches. A dude plans to run the Boston Marathon with a ridiculous twist. Your PC is about to slow down. Wanna run a :30 ad during the Super Bowl? We know how much they cost. Lady tests Costco's "no questions asked" return policy. 96 year old guy has a bizarre collection. New Coke Plus contains a laxative. We'll tell you the only place that sells it, legally. Ibuprofen kills sperm. And finally, Vic's foster St. Bernard and the dozens others he's rescued.