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Eine Podcast-Aufnahme der anderen Dimension: Wir waren zu Gast In Googles Podcast Studio in Berlin und durften Erika Root interviewen, die dort als Account Managerin arbeitet. Aber was bedeutet das eigentlich? Und wie ist es so, bei Google zu arbeiten? Wir werfen einen Blick hinter Googles Kulissen und sprechen über Emotionen, Ambiversion und wie wir uns in einer männerdominierten Welt durchsetzen können, ohne uns zu verbiegen. Über Erika: Erika, Account Executive for ClimateTech Startups at Google Cloud, 28 years old. Focusing on expanding the business of Startups with new Google's leading technology and growing the GreenTech Community. Studied Digital Pioneering & Entrepreneurship at Zeppelin University in Friedrichshafen. Living in Berlin but grew up im schönen Schwabenländle. CHAPTERS (00:00:00) Intro (00:00:52) Einstiegsfrage (00:03:22) Wer ist Erika? (00:06:39) Was begeistert dich an der IT? (00:07:50) Was macht man als Account Executive? (00:11:55) Wie ist es bei Google zu arbeiten? (00:14:32) War der Kundenkontakt gewöhnungsbedürftig? (00:16:19) Ist dir mal etwas besonders schwer gefallen? (00:20:50) Hattest du das Gefühl dich im Kundenkontakt verbiegen zu müssen? (00:23:39) Emotionen, Ambiversion und Redeanteile (00:36:35) Wie ist die Frauenquote bei Google? (00:40:10) Tipps an unser früheres Ich (00:49:21) Wie setzt du dich in einer männerdominierten Welt durch? (00:52:10) Machst du Pläne für die Zukunft? (01:01:33) Was wünscht du dir für die Zukunft für Frauen in der IT? (01:03:40) Outtakes
Julius Palm is the Deputy Managing Director and Head of Strategy & Brand at the sustainable food brand followfood. He is largely responsible for the brand development and restructuring of the last five years.During his studies at Zeppelin University, he was already researching the question of the good life and the sustainability of modern societies. Today, he is putting this into practice and working with followfood to solve socio-ecological problems through a business model. The goal: regenerative entrepreneurship.Julius was also recently honored with the title Green CMO of the Year by a German magazine.Are you curious to make your company's marketing ready for the future? Then I have the some simple and exciting options for you:First, this is exactly what I do for my clients - I help them build their future strategies with workshops and coaching sessions.I also have a very simple entry offer for founders and aspiring marketing experts: The Simple & Sustainable Marketing Academy, with a ridiculously cheap entry ticket price, because I love sharing what I have learned.And if you enjoy reading: Check out my newsletter where I write about marketing, strategies and sustainability available every two weeks in the FutureStrategies newsletter.About Florian Schleicher: I'm a marketing strategist - over the last 15 years I've led and helped shape marketing at McDonald's, Greenpeace and Too Good To Go. Now I help forward-thinking companies take their marketing to the next level.With FutureS, the Impact Marketing Studio, I help brands achieve their goals and sustainable growth. All without the usual hustle.
A SPECIAL EPISODE TODAY! Sam Ginn discusses with Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Pierre Cassou-Noguès, Jan Söffner and our students on the topic of “EMERGENCE” Sam Ginn, Founder and CEO of Vetspire, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, internationally renowned literary and cultural theorist from Stanford University, Pierre Cassou-Noguès, French philosopher and writer and Jan Söffner, professor of cultural theory and analysis at Zeppelin University are in these following episodes of the podcast talking about the four topics of Emergence, Alignment and Coexistence, whereby one podcast episode will cover one topic. The discussion format stems from Giovanni Boccaccios Decameron: Each of the four speakers presents their own topic, on which they speak as the “king” of this round. Following the king's speech, each of the three remaining speakers also give a short impulse on his topic. Thereafter the round is opened up for mutual questions, including also the audience, in this case the students of our course. The overall topic in this first episode will be: Emergence, by Sam Ginn _______________________________ THEORETICAL BACKGROUND OF THE PODCAST SEMINAR: "What is called thinking?" The question Martin Heidegger asked in his lecture of 1951/52 reads like a counter-question to the one Alan Turing had asked a year earlier in his essay Computing Machinery and Intelligence: "Can a machine think?“ Both ways of asking the same question are more relevant today than ever before. The attempt to define ‘thinking' by the Turing Test has sort of „programmed“ computer development in such a way that software seems to be able to perform more and more human thinking without having developed a consciousness or what Heidegger called a Da-Sein (being there). But is AI therefore really thinking? Or vice versa: Is the human consciousness still needed under these conditions? And what for?The course was dedicated to the comparison and interplay of artificial and human intelligence, addressing the latest theories and newest software solutions. It was designed as a podcast seminar to which proven experts in the field were invited. In this new podcast, renowned experts in the field of AI will be invited as guests to talk with Jan Söffner (Zeppelin University). The podcast makes a course of ten sessions available to a broader public. _______________________________ Enjoy listening to this episode! We are looking forward to your feedback, suggestions and comments: Either as a direct message via Instagram: @welle20radio at: https://www.instagram.com/welle20studio/ Or simply by using the comments function in the podcast app. "Luft zum Denken: Artificial Intellegence and Human Intellegence. Sam Ginn, Hans Ulrich Gumbrecht, Pierre Cassou-Noguès and Jan Söffner on “Emergence”. Episode 5" is a cooperation between Welle20 and the Chair of Cultural Theory and Analysis at Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen Content and Preparation: Prof. Dr. Jan Söffner Executive Production: Chiara Keßel A Welle20 Podcast
THE MOST IMPORTANT INFO IN ADVANCE: In this new podcast on artificial intelligence and human intelligence, renowned experts in the field of AI will be invited as guests to talk with Jan Söffner (Zeppelin University). The podcast makes a course of ten sessions available to a broader public. After an approximately 60-minute interview with the guest in part 1, part 2 is a 30-minute follow-up discussion and Q&A session with the students. For background information on the topic, just scroll down a little. _______________________________ IN THIS EPISODE: Today's guest in our Welle20 Studio: Larry Stapleton. A senior academic and international consultant in advanced information systems, organisational culture and business at Waterford Institute of Technology and founder of “Knew Futures” explains the recent developments in AI. _______________________________ CONTENT BACKGROUND OF THE PODCAST SEMINAR:"What is called thinking?" The question Martin Heidegger asked in his lecture of 1951/52 reads like a counter-question to the one Alan Turing had asked a year earlier in his essay Computing Machinery and Intelligence: "Can a machine think?“ Both ways of asking the same question are more relevant today than ever before. The attempt to define ‘thinking' by the Turing Test has sort of „programmed“ computer development in such a way that software seems to be able to perform more and more human thinking without having developed a consciousness or what Heidegger called a Da-Sein (being there). But is AI therefore really thinking? Or vice versa: Is the human consciousness still needed under these conditions? And what for?The course was dedicated to the comparison and interplay of artificial and human intelligence, addressing the latest theories and newest software solutions. It was designed as a podcast seminar to which proven experts in the field were invited. _______________________________ Enjoy listening to this episode! We are looking forward to your feedback, suggestions and comments: Either as a direct message via Instagram: @welle20radio at: https://www.instagram.com/welle20studio/ Or simply by using the comments function in the podcast app. "Luft zum Denken: Artificial Intellegence and Human Intellegence. Episode 4: Larry Stapleton" is a cooperation between Welle20 and the Chair of Cultural Theory and Analysis at Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen Content and Preparation: Prof. Dr. Jan Söffner Executive Production: Chiara Keßel A Welle20 Podcast
THE MOST IMPORTANT INFO IN ADVANCE: In this new podcast, renowned experts in the field of AI will be invited as guests to talk with Jan Söffner (Zeppelin University). The podcast makes a course of ten sessions available to a broader public. After an approximately 60-minute interview with the guest in part 1, part 2 is a 60-minute follow-up discussion and Q&A session with the students. For background information on the topic, just scroll down a little. _______________________________ IN THIS EPISODE: Today's guest in our Welle20 Studio: Jeffrey White Philosopher and Researcher at Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, Japan, his paper “Simulation, self-extinction, and philosophy in the service of human civilization” argues that simulations afford a unique potential to secure a post-human future and may be necessary for a pre-post-human civilization like our own to achieve and to maintain a post-human situation. _______________________________ CONTENT BACKGROUND OF THE PODCAST SEMINAR:"What is called thinking?" The question Martin Heidegger asked in his lecture of 1951/52 reads like a counter-question to the one Alan Turing had asked a year earlier in his essay Computing Machinery and Intelligence: "Can a machine think?“ Both ways of asking the same question are more relevant today than ever before. The attempt to define ‘thinking' by the Turing Test has sort of „programmed“ computer development in such a way that software seems to be able to perform more and more human thinking without having developed a consciousness or what Heidegger called a Da-Sein (being there). But is AI therefore really thinking? Or vice versa: Is the human consciousness still needed under these conditions? And what for? The course was dedicated to the comparison and interplay of artificial and human intelligence, addressing the latest theories and newest software solutions. It was designed as a podcast seminar to which proven experts in the field were invited. _______________________________ Enjoy listening to this episode! We are looking forward to your feedback, suggestions and comments: Either as a direct message via Instagram: @welle20radio at: https://www.instagram.com/welle20studio/ Or simply by using the comments function in the podcast app. "Luft zum Denken: Artificial Intellegence and Human Intellegence. Episode 3: Jeffrey White" is a cooperation between Welle20 and the Chair of Cultural Theory and Analysis at Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen Content and Preparation: Prof. Dr. Jan Söffner Executive Production: Chiara Keßel A Welle20 Podcast
THE MOST IMPORTANT INFO IN ADVANCE: In this new podcast, renowned experts in the field of AI will be invited as guests to talk with Jan Söffner (Zeppelin University). The podcast makes a course of ten sessions available to a broader public. After an approximately 60-minute interview with the guest in part 1, part 2 is a 60-minute follow-up discussion and Q&A session with the students. For background information on the topic, just scroll down a little. ______________________________ IN THIS EPISODE: Today's guest in our Welle20 Studio: Juliet Floyd Professor of Philosophy at Boston University, Juliet Floyd takes a critical look at the latest developments in AI from the perspective of the humanities. _______________________________ CONTENT BACKGROUND OF THE PODCAST SEMINAR: "What is called thinking?" The question Martin Heidegger asked in his lecture of 1951/52 reads like a counter-question to the one Alan Turing had asked a year earlier in his essay Computing Machinery and Intelligence: "Can a machine think?“ Both ways of asking the same question are more relevant today than ever before. The attempt to define ‘thinking' by the Turing Test has sort of „programmed“ computer development in such a way that software seems to be able to perform more and more human thinking without having developed a consciousness or what Heidegger called a Da-Sein (being there). But is AI therefore really thinking? Or vice versa: Is the human consciousness still needed under these conditions? And what for? The course was dedicated to the comparison and interplay of artificial and human intelligence, addressing the latest theories and newest software solutions. It was designed as a podcast seminar to which proven experts in the field were invited. _______________________________ Enjoy listening to this episode! We are looking forward to your feedback, suggestions, and comments: Either as a direct message via Instagram: @welle20radio at: https://www.instagram.com/welle20studio/ Or simply by using the comments function in the podcast app. "Luft zum Denken: Artificial Intellegence and Human Intellegence | Juliet Floyd | Episode 2" is a cooperation between Welle20 and the Chair of Cultural Theory and Analysis at Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen Content and Preparation: Prof. Dr. Jan Söffner ExecutiveProduction: Chiara Keßel A Welle20 Podcast
NEW WELLE20 PODCAST! THE MOST IMPORTANT INFO IN ADVANCE: Luft zum Denken [Air to Think]: Artificial Intellegence, Human Intellegence. In this new podcast, renowned experts in the field of AI will be invited as guests to talk with Jan Söffner (Zeppelin University). The podcast makes a course of ten sessions available to a broader public. After an approximately 60-minute interview with the guest in part 1, part 2 is a 60-minute follow-up discussion and Q&A session with the students. For background information on the topic, just scroll down a little. ______________________________ IN THIS EPISODE: Today's guest in our Welle20 Studio: James Bridle His latest book "The Inconceivable Variety of Being. Beyond Human Intelligence" opens up a radically new perspective on the relationship between ecology and technology, one that cooperatively rethinks nature and technology in the digital technological future. This episode was livestreamed on Lumbung Radio/ Station of Commons on November 27 https://lumbungradio.stationofcommons.org SPECIAL THANKS to Station of Commons Radio Collective for Livestreaming this episode! _______________________________ CONTENT BACKGROUND OF THE PODCAST SEMINAR"What is called thinking?" The question Martin Heidegger asked in his lecture of 1951/52 reads like a counter-question to the one Alan Turing had asked a year earlier in his essay Computing Machinery and Intelligence: "Can a machine think?“ Both ways of asking the same question are more relevant today than ever before. The attempt to define ‘thinking' by the Turing Test has sort of „programmed“ computer development in such a way that software seems to be able to perform more and more human thinking without having developed a consciousness or what Heidegger called a Da-Sein (being there). But is AI therefore really thinking? Or vice versa: Is the human consciousness still needed under these conditions? And what for? The course was dedicated to the comparison and interplay of artificial and human intelligence, addressing the latest theories and newest software solutions. It was designed as a podcast seminar to which proven experts in the field were invited. _______________________________ Enjoy listening to this episode! We are looking forward to your feedback, suggestions and comments: Either as a direct message via Instagram: @welle20radio at: https://www.instagram.com/welle20studio/ Or simply by using the comments function in the podcast app. "Luft zum Denken: Artificial Intelligence and Human Intelligence | James Bridle | Episode 1" is a cooperation between Welle20, the Chair of Cultural Theory and Analysis at Zeppelin University Friedrichshafen, and /Lumbung Radio/Station of Commons/2022 Content and Preparation: Prof. Dr. Jan Söffner Executive Production: Chiara Keßel A Welle20 Podcast
Currently over 50% of the world's population is undernourished. There is generally not a shortage of food calories but a shortage of nutrients. This issue exists in rich countries, middle income countries, and poor countries. The traditional solution that has provided these nutrients to human populations for thousands of years is animals, both farmed livestock and hunted wild species.In recent decades the vast increase in the numbers of farmed livestock and how they are produced has created severe environmental burdens which are unsustainable. The larger the concentration of these systems the higher is the risk of environmental hazards. However, with good management these risks can be mitigated.I recently caught up with Dr. Peer Ederer to discuss the complex role livestock systems have in our food systems, the positive and negative environmental and social burdens of these systems, and the vital role they provide nutritionally. In our conversation Dr. Ederer the role of small holder family farms in our food systems and the need for empathy when developing innovations and solutions to these global challenges.
Prof. Dr. Dirk Baecker is a sociologist and holds senior professorship for organization theory and theory of society at Zeppelin University in Friedrichshafen at Lake Constance. He studied systems theory with Niklas Luhmann. He has been recognized as one of the most prominent German sociologists with important works on cultural theory, sociological theory, economic sociology and organizational sociology. He is the author of numerous books, including KATJEKTE, published at Merve. In this conversation we talk about Luhmanns system theory and his media theory in context of Internet, digitalization and AI as well as how we can meaningfully differentiate between construction of media as a system property and fake news. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/podcast-c709ee4/message
In the fourth episode of "Power, Wealth or Purpose?" Oscar interviews entrepreneur and scientist Peer Ederer. Peer's impressive career includes studying at Sofia University in Tokyo, working as a trader at Deutsche Bank, pursuing an MBA at Harvard, joining McKinsey, starting a business in the “new economy”, and currently working as a scientist and teaching at the University of Luxembourg and Zeppelin University. In their conversation, Oscar and Peer discuss Peer's diverse career, his entrepreneurial experience and the value of failing. He shares advice on university choices, why he wouldn't pay for an Ivy League MBA today and his opinion on the importance of actively seeking opportunities. In the end, Oscar and Peer go into depth about freedom and wealth, and why opportunities arise automatically when you do whatever tasks are in front of you to the best of you ability. Don't forget to share your feedback with us using the Q&A tool or by contacting us directly via email or DM. We always appreciate your input and strive to improve with each episode. Make sure to subscribe and rate us on Spotify or Apple Podcasts, and share this episode with anyone who could benefit from Peer's valuable insights. Hosts: Oscar Schuller & Paul Greitemann.
Dr. Anke Strauß is an organisation researcher interested in relationships between the art and the business sphere, specifically with regard to differing types of knowing, inter-disciplinary collaboration and changing modes of organizing (alternative) work-lives. Having worked at the Social Science Centre Berlin (WZB) on artistic interventions in organisations, she is currently at Zeppelin University in Friedrichshafen. Together with Christina Ciupke she is working on a project founded by the Volkswagen Foundation on artist-run organizations and the performativity of utopian thinking for (re-)organizing cultural labor.
Read the full working paper: https://growthlab.cid.harvard.edu/publications/you-get-what-you-pay-sources-and-consequences-public-sector-premium-albaniaLearn more about The Growth Lab: www.growthlab.cid.harvard.eduAbout Ljubica Nedelkoska: Ljubica Nedelkoska joined the Center for International Development's Growth Lab as a Visiting Scholar in 2012 and as a Research Fellow in 2013.Before joining the CID, she worked as a post-doctoral researcher and a coordinator of the Economics of Innovation Research Group in Jena, and as a research fellow at the Zeppelin University, both in Germany.Her research area is empirical labor economics, with focus on human capital, human mobility, migration and diasporas, and skill-technology relations. By studying these topics, she aims to understand how economies change their skill portfolios through the processes of on-the-job learning, interacting with technologies, and formal education and training; and how these changes transform the countries’ levels of productivity and development. She is also interested in economic policy and has participated in several economic policy projects in Albania, Sri Lanka, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden.She holds a PhD in Economics of Innovation from the Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena, Germany and a Master's Degree in Public Administration from the Appalachian State University, North Carolina.
CID Research Assistant Sehar Noor interviews Ljubica Nedelkoska, Research Fellow at CID, who discusses the Growth Lab project in Sri Lanka and more specifically her research findings titled “Does Sri Lanka Need More University Graduates?” // www.srilanka.growthlab.cid.harvard.edu // Interview recorded on May 11th, 2018. About Ljubica Nedelkoska: Ljubica Nedelkoska joined the Center for International Development's Growth Lab as a Visiting Scholar in 2012 and as a Research Fellow in 2013. Before joining the CID, she worked as a post-doctoral researcher and a coordinator of the Economics of Innovation Research Group in Jena, and as a research fellow at the Zeppelin University, both in Germany. Her research area is empirical labor economics, with focus on human capital, human mobility, migration and diasporas, and skill-technology relations. By studying these topics, she aims to understand how economies change their skill portfolios through the processes of on-the-job learning, interacting with technologies, and formal education and training; and how these changes transform the countries’ levels of productivity and development. She is also interested in economic policy and has participated in several economic policy projects in Albania, Sri Lanka, Germany, the Netherlands and Sweden. She holds a PhD in Economics of Innovation from the Friedrich-Schiller-University in Jena, Germany and a Master's Degree in Public Administration from the Appalachian State University, North Carolina.
CID Research Assistant Sehar Noor interviews Ljubica Nedelkoska, Growth Lab research fellow at the Center for International Development at Harvard University. Ljubica presented her recently published a paper on the impact of return migration on wages and employment on Albania: http://growthlab.cid.harvard.edu/publications/welcome-home-crisis-effects-return-migration-non-migrants-wages-and Interview recorded on February 24th, 2017. About the speaker: Ljubica's research focuses on human capital, migration, lifelong learning, capital-labor relations and structural transformation. She works at the intersection of research and policy, and has contributed to several such projects in Albania, Sri Lanka, the Netherlands, Sweden, and Germany. She holds a PhD in Economics of Innovation from the Friedrich Schiller University, Germany and a Master’s Degree in Public Administration from the Appalachian State University, North Carolina. Before joining CID, Ljubica worked as a post-doctoral researcher and a coordinator of the Research Group “Economics of Innovation” at the Friedrich Schiller University and as a research fellow at the Zeppelin University in Germany.
Wir alle kommunizieren irgendwie strategisch. Doch wenn dies in Wirtschaft und Politik geschieht, werden wir zu Recht hellhörig. Hier kennt sich Arnd Florack von der Zeppelin University aus und er gewährt einen Einblick. Mit Tipps auch für Konsumenten.
Wir alle kommunizieren irgendwie strategisch. Doch wenn dies in Wirtschaft und Politik geschieht, werden wir zu Recht hellhörig. Hier kennt sich Arnd Florack von der Zeppelin University aus und er gewährt einen Einblick. Mit Tipps auch für Konsumenten.