-
Marc Andreessen: A Masterclass to Fuel Your Online Writing | How I Write Podcast
Marc Andreessen deserves a place on the Mount Rushmore of Silicon Valley. His presence in the tech space is unprecedented and he's one of the most prolific investors. The world of online writing is in debt to him.
He co-founded Netscape, where he created one of the first web browsers. He invented the tweetstorm, and has helped form the internet. He coined the idea “software is eating the world”, which has defined humanity's evolution over the last decade.
Marc isn’t just a mad man creator. He’s a passionate historian and cultural critic too. Name the topic. Marc has an opinion.
This episode is a masterclass into a combination of tech and liberal arts in a way to fuel your writing. I came to chat with him about writing, but left with a PhD in obscure Silicon Valley history and a list ...
published: 04 Oct 2023
-
Ep. 4 — An Interview With Dr. Bruce Gilley
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Bruce Gilley, a professor of political science at Portland State University. His article "The Case for Colonialism", published in a 2017 online edition of Third World Quarterly, was highly controversial for its thesis. Gilley has also authored numerous best-selling books, including his most recent work, “The Last Imperialist: Sir Alan Burns's Epic Defense of the British Empire.”
published: 05 Jan 2023
-
Haydn: Klaviersonate Hob. XVI:7, 2. Satz (Fake book)
Joseph Haydn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Haydn" redirects here. For other uses, see Haydn (disambiguation).
Portrait of Joseph Haydn by Thomas Hardy (1791)[1]
(Franz) Joseph Haydn[n 1] (/ˈdʒoʊzəf ˈhaɪdən/; German: [ˈjoːzɛf ˈhaɪdən] ( listen); 31 March[n 2] 1732 – 31 May 1809) was a prominent and prolific Austrian composer of the Classical period. He was instrumental in the development of chamber music such as the piano trio[2] and his contributions to musical form have earned him the epithets "Father of the Symphony" and "Father of the String Quartet".[3]
Haydn spent much of his career as a court musician for the wealthy Esterházy family at their remote estate. Until the later part of his life, this isolated him from other composers and trends in music so that he was, as he pu...
published: 09 Feb 2016
-
Ep. 6 — An Interview With Dr. Michael Robillard
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Michael Robillard, an American philosopher, writer, and Army veteran. Dr. Robillard has been published in Oxford University Press, The New York Times, Aeon, Fox News, and Quillette. His most recent book, "Don't Go To College: A Case For Revolution", examines how American colleges have become hostile to those who seek truth and wisdom.
published: 05 Jan 2023
-
THRIVE Machine Learning in the Context of COVID-19 and Beyond
Welcome to the Targeted Healthcare Innovation Fellowship (THRIVE).
In this video, Benjamin Glicksberg, PhD, presents Machine Learning in the
Context of COVID-19 and Beyond at MSHS, and the innovative work done
by their team in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
published: 07 Oct 2020
-
The Bridge: Deep-Dives. S2. Embodied Practice: Bridging Mind and World w/ Evan McMullen
January 11th, 2021
In this series, Evan will lead us on a tour of the broader architecture of the Bridge and its implications, including deep-dives into the neurophilosophy, embodied practice, and the potential for communitas contained within the architecture of the Bridge.
Session 1)
Neurophilosophy: Bridging Models and Reality
Session 2)
Embodied Practice: Bridging Mind and World
Session 3)
Bridge and Communitas: Tensegrity and Mutual Support
Session 4)
Where do we Bridge from Here? Bridging Science and Magic
Why are the YouTube comments disabled? Answer: https://thestoa.substack.com/p/stoic-punk-or-why-you-should-stop
thestoa.ca
patreon.com/the_stoa
thestoa.substack.com
published: 13 Jan 2021
-
SICSS 2017 - Topic Models and Beyond (Brandon Stewart) (Day 3. June 21, 2017)
The first Summer Institute in Computational Social Science was held at Princeton University from June 18 to July 1, 2017, sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation.
For more details, please visit https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2017/
published: 25 Jul 2017
-
RISE Seminar 9/25/20: Relational Knowledge Graphs (...), a talk by Molham Aref of RelationalAI
published: 28 Sep 2020
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Quantum Computing Introduction with Zlatko Minev
Visit our website
https://softwareengineeringdaily.com
Computer chips have physical limitations. When transistors get too small, electrons start to behave in ways that make the hardware modules less reliable. Our reliable technological progress has been enabled by Moore’s Law: the idea that the number of components we can fit on a chip doubles roughly every 12-18 months.
We can’t keep shrinking the size of these components, because physics is no longer complying.
Quantum computing allows us to operate on qubits rather than bits, giving us better parallelism and continued reliable technological progress. Quantum computing is still mostly an area of research rather than production systems–but it is rapidly approaching usability, and Zlatko Minev joins the show to explain how quantum comput...
published: 27 Jan 2018
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Dr. Walter Fischler-Ruiz: The Smell of a Place: Odor Landmarks in a Cognitive Spatial Map
On Tuesday, October 12, Dr. Fischler-Ruiz spoke at Monell Chemical Senses Center on odors as landmarks that define a cognitive spatial map. Dr. Fischler-Ruiz is an associate research scientist at the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain and Behavior Institute of Columbia University.
published: 20 Oct 2021
1:17:30
Marc Andreessen: A Masterclass to Fuel Your Online Writing | How I Write Podcast
Marc Andreessen deserves a place on the Mount Rushmore of Silicon Valley. His presence in the tech space is unprecedented and he's one of the most prolific inve...
Marc Andreessen deserves a place on the Mount Rushmore of Silicon Valley. His presence in the tech space is unprecedented and he's one of the most prolific investors. The world of online writing is in debt to him.
He co-founded Netscape, where he created one of the first web browsers. He invented the tweetstorm, and has helped form the internet. He coined the idea “software is eating the world”, which has defined humanity's evolution over the last decade.
Marc isn’t just a mad man creator. He’s a passionate historian and cultural critic too. Name the topic. Marc has an opinion.
This episode is a masterclass into a combination of tech and liberal arts in a way to fuel your writing. I came to chat with him about writing, but left with a PhD in obscure Silicon Valley history and a list of book recommendations large enough to fill The Library of Congress.
TIMESTAMPS:
00:00:00 Intro
00:00:37 It's Time To Build
00:03:00 Editing
00:04:00 Frustration
00:05:00 Outline
00:06:30 Reading
00:08:00 Audiobooks & podcasts
00:10:00 Information intake
00:10:38 Groupchats
00:14:25 Writing
00:16:20 Twitter
00:16:50 Meme Lord & Software is eating the world
00:18:40 Distribution
00:19:50 Tweetstorm
00:23:30 Personal Blog
00:24:00 Lateral Thinkers (Venkatesh Rao, Balaji Srinivasan, Peter Thiel)
00:27:40 LLM
00:28:00 Software as a literary genre
00:33:30 Learning to code as a kid
00:34:45 Constraints
00:36:40 Roman a Clef
00:39:00 Writing at a16z
00:43:40 Hyperlinks
00:45:40 Comments
00:50:00 Reading
00:54:40 Science Fiction
00:58:00 Green Tea
00:58:30 Office
00:59:45 Music
01:01:00 Walking
01:01:20 Ben Horowitz
01:04:50 Manifesto
01:05:00 The Kanye of Blogs
01:09:30 Feedback
01:10:40 Critique
01:13:50 Twitter
01:16:00 Pmarca screenname
SPEAKER LINKS:
Website: https://www.a16z.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/pmarca
WRITE OF PASSAGE:
Want to learn more about the next class Write of Passage?
Click here: https://take.writeofpassage.school/writing-sprints
PODCAST LINKS:
Website: https://writeofpassage.school/how-i-write/
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-i-write/id1700171470
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2DjMSboniFAeGA8v9NpoPv
ABOUT THE HOST:
I’m David Perell and I’m a writer, teacher, and podcaster. I believe writing online is one of the biggest opportunities in the world today. For the first time in human history, everybody can freely share their ideas with a global audience. I seek to help as many people publish their writing online as possible.
https://wn.com/Marc_Andreessen_A_Masterclass_To_Fuel_Your_Online_Writing_|_How_I_Write_Podcast
Marc Andreessen deserves a place on the Mount Rushmore of Silicon Valley. His presence in the tech space is unprecedented and he's one of the most prolific investors. The world of online writing is in debt to him.
He co-founded Netscape, where he created one of the first web browsers. He invented the tweetstorm, and has helped form the internet. He coined the idea “software is eating the world”, which has defined humanity's evolution over the last decade.
Marc isn’t just a mad man creator. He’s a passionate historian and cultural critic too. Name the topic. Marc has an opinion.
This episode is a masterclass into a combination of tech and liberal arts in a way to fuel your writing. I came to chat with him about writing, but left with a PhD in obscure Silicon Valley history and a list of book recommendations large enough to fill The Library of Congress.
TIMESTAMPS:
00:00:00 Intro
00:00:37 It's Time To Build
00:03:00 Editing
00:04:00 Frustration
00:05:00 Outline
00:06:30 Reading
00:08:00 Audiobooks & podcasts
00:10:00 Information intake
00:10:38 Groupchats
00:14:25 Writing
00:16:20 Twitter
00:16:50 Meme Lord & Software is eating the world
00:18:40 Distribution
00:19:50 Tweetstorm
00:23:30 Personal Blog
00:24:00 Lateral Thinkers (Venkatesh Rao, Balaji Srinivasan, Peter Thiel)
00:27:40 LLM
00:28:00 Software as a literary genre
00:33:30 Learning to code as a kid
00:34:45 Constraints
00:36:40 Roman a Clef
00:39:00 Writing at a16z
00:43:40 Hyperlinks
00:45:40 Comments
00:50:00 Reading
00:54:40 Science Fiction
00:58:00 Green Tea
00:58:30 Office
00:59:45 Music
01:01:00 Walking
01:01:20 Ben Horowitz
01:04:50 Manifesto
01:05:00 The Kanye of Blogs
01:09:30 Feedback
01:10:40 Critique
01:13:50 Twitter
01:16:00 Pmarca screenname
SPEAKER LINKS:
Website: https://www.a16z.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/pmarca
WRITE OF PASSAGE:
Want to learn more about the next class Write of Passage?
Click here: https://take.writeofpassage.school/writing-sprints
PODCAST LINKS:
Website: https://writeofpassage.school/how-i-write/
Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/how-i-write/id1700171470
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2DjMSboniFAeGA8v9NpoPv
ABOUT THE HOST:
I’m David Perell and I’m a writer, teacher, and podcaster. I believe writing online is one of the biggest opportunities in the world today. For the first time in human history, everybody can freely share their ideas with a global audience. I seek to help as many people publish their writing online as possible.
- published: 04 Oct 2023
- views: 39090
1:05:01
Ep. 4 — An Interview With Dr. Bruce Gilley
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Bruce Gilley, a professor of political science at Portland State University. His article "The Case for Colonialism", publi...
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Bruce Gilley, a professor of political science at Portland State University. His article "The Case for Colonialism", published in a 2017 online edition of Third World Quarterly, was highly controversial for its thesis. Gilley has also authored numerous best-selling books, including his most recent work, “The Last Imperialist: Sir Alan Burns's Epic Defense of the British Empire.”
https://wn.com/Ep._4_—_An_Interview_With_Dr._Bruce_Gilley
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Bruce Gilley, a professor of political science at Portland State University. His article "The Case for Colonialism", published in a 2017 online edition of Third World Quarterly, was highly controversial for its thesis. Gilley has also authored numerous best-selling books, including his most recent work, “The Last Imperialist: Sir Alan Burns's Epic Defense of the British Empire.”
- published: 05 Jan 2023
- views: 405
2:27
Haydn: Klaviersonate Hob. XVI:7, 2. Satz (Fake book)
Joseph Haydn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Haydn" redirects here. For other uses, see Haydn (disambiguation).
Portrait of Joseph Haydn by Thomas Hardy...
Joseph Haydn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Haydn" redirects here. For other uses, see Haydn (disambiguation).
Portrait of Joseph Haydn by Thomas Hardy (1791)[1]
(Franz) Joseph Haydn[n 1] (/ˈdʒoʊzəf ˈhaɪdən/; German: [ˈjoːzɛf ˈhaɪdən] ( listen); 31 March[n 2] 1732 – 31 May 1809) was a prominent and prolific Austrian composer of the Classical period. He was instrumental in the development of chamber music such as the piano trio[2] and his contributions to musical form have earned him the epithets "Father of the Symphony" and "Father of the String Quartet".[3]
Haydn spent much of his career as a court musician for the wealthy Esterházy family at their remote estate. Until the later part of his life, this isolated him from other composers and trends in music so that he was, as he put it, "forced to become original".[n 3] Yet his music circulated widely and for much of his career he was the most celebrated composer in Europe.
Joseph Haydn was the older brother of composer Michael Haydn, a friend and mentor of Mozart, and a teacher of Beethoven.
https://wn.com/Haydn_Klaviersonate_Hob._Xvi_7,_2._Satz_(Fake_Book)
Joseph Haydn
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
"Haydn" redirects here. For other uses, see Haydn (disambiguation).
Portrait of Joseph Haydn by Thomas Hardy (1791)[1]
(Franz) Joseph Haydn[n 1] (/ˈdʒoʊzəf ˈhaɪdən/; German: [ˈjoːzɛf ˈhaɪdən] ( listen); 31 March[n 2] 1732 – 31 May 1809) was a prominent and prolific Austrian composer of the Classical period. He was instrumental in the development of chamber music such as the piano trio[2] and his contributions to musical form have earned him the epithets "Father of the Symphony" and "Father of the String Quartet".[3]
Haydn spent much of his career as a court musician for the wealthy Esterházy family at their remote estate. Until the later part of his life, this isolated him from other composers and trends in music so that he was, as he put it, "forced to become original".[n 3] Yet his music circulated widely and for much of his career he was the most celebrated composer in Europe.
Joseph Haydn was the older brother of composer Michael Haydn, a friend and mentor of Mozart, and a teacher of Beethoven.
- published: 09 Feb 2016
- views: 24
1:00:01
Ep. 6 — An Interview With Dr. Michael Robillard
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Michael Robillard, an American philosopher, writer, and Army veteran. Dr. Robillard has been published in Oxford Universit...
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Michael Robillard, an American philosopher, writer, and Army veteran. Dr. Robillard has been published in Oxford University Press, The New York Times, Aeon, Fox News, and Quillette. His most recent book, "Don't Go To College: A Case For Revolution", examines how American colleges have become hostile to those who seek truth and wisdom.
https://wn.com/Ep._6_—_An_Interview_With_Dr._Michael_Robillard
In this episode, Jason interviews Dr. Michael Robillard, an American philosopher, writer, and Army veteran. Dr. Robillard has been published in Oxford University Press, The New York Times, Aeon, Fox News, and Quillette. His most recent book, "Don't Go To College: A Case For Revolution", examines how American colleges have become hostile to those who seek truth and wisdom.
- published: 05 Jan 2023
- views: 29
32:47
THRIVE Machine Learning in the Context of COVID-19 and Beyond
Welcome to the Targeted Healthcare Innovation Fellowship (THRIVE).
In this video, Benjamin Glicksberg, PhD, presents Machine Learning in the
Context of COVID-19...
Welcome to the Targeted Healthcare Innovation Fellowship (THRIVE).
In this video, Benjamin Glicksberg, PhD, presents Machine Learning in the
Context of COVID-19 and Beyond at MSHS, and the innovative work done
by their team in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
https://wn.com/Thrive_Machine_Learning_In_The_Context_Of_Covid_19_And_Beyond
Welcome to the Targeted Healthcare Innovation Fellowship (THRIVE).
In this video, Benjamin Glicksberg, PhD, presents Machine Learning in the
Context of COVID-19 and Beyond at MSHS, and the innovative work done
by their team in response to the COVID-19 pandemic.
- published: 07 Oct 2020
- views: 216
1:26:53
The Bridge: Deep-Dives. S2. Embodied Practice: Bridging Mind and World w/ Evan McMullen
January 11th, 2021
In this series, Evan will lead us on a tour of the broader architecture of the Bridge and its implications, including deep-dives into the ne...
January 11th, 2021
In this series, Evan will lead us on a tour of the broader architecture of the Bridge and its implications, including deep-dives into the neurophilosophy, embodied practice, and the potential for communitas contained within the architecture of the Bridge.
Session 1)
Neurophilosophy: Bridging Models and Reality
Session 2)
Embodied Practice: Bridging Mind and World
Session 3)
Bridge and Communitas: Tensegrity and Mutual Support
Session 4)
Where do we Bridge from Here? Bridging Science and Magic
Why are the YouTube comments disabled? Answer: https://thestoa.substack.com/p/stoic-punk-or-why-you-should-stop
thestoa.ca
patreon.com/the_stoa
thestoa.substack.com
https://wn.com/The_Bridge_Deep_Dives._S2._Embodied_Practice_Bridging_Mind_And_World_W_Evan_Mcmullen
January 11th, 2021
In this series, Evan will lead us on a tour of the broader architecture of the Bridge and its implications, including deep-dives into the neurophilosophy, embodied practice, and the potential for communitas contained within the architecture of the Bridge.
Session 1)
Neurophilosophy: Bridging Models and Reality
Session 2)
Embodied Practice: Bridging Mind and World
Session 3)
Bridge and Communitas: Tensegrity and Mutual Support
Session 4)
Where do we Bridge from Here? Bridging Science and Magic
Why are the YouTube comments disabled? Answer: https://thestoa.substack.com/p/stoic-punk-or-why-you-should-stop
thestoa.ca
patreon.com/the_stoa
thestoa.substack.com
- published: 13 Jan 2021
- views: 1310
1:02:50
SICSS 2017 - Topic Models and Beyond (Brandon Stewart) (Day 3. June 21, 2017)
The first Summer Institute in Computational Social Science was held at Princeton University from June 18 to July 1, 2017, sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundat...
The first Summer Institute in Computational Social Science was held at Princeton University from June 18 to July 1, 2017, sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation.
For more details, please visit https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2017/
https://wn.com/Sicss_2017_Topic_Models_And_Beyond_(Brandon_Stewart)_(Day_3._June_21,_2017)
The first Summer Institute in Computational Social Science was held at Princeton University from June 18 to July 1, 2017, sponsored by the Russell Sage Foundation.
For more details, please visit https://compsocialscience.github.io/summer-institute/2017/
- published: 25 Jul 2017
- views: 792
1:00:22
Quantum Computing Introduction with Zlatko Minev
Visit our website
https://softwareengineeringdaily.com
Computer chips have physical limitations. When transistors get too small, electrons start to behave in w...
Visit our website
https://softwareengineeringdaily.com
Computer chips have physical limitations. When transistors get too small, electrons start to behave in ways that make the hardware modules less reliable. Our reliable technological progress has been enabled by Moore’s Law: the idea that the number of components we can fit on a chip doubles roughly every 12-18 months.
We can’t keep shrinking the size of these components, because physics is no longer complying.
Quantum computing allows us to operate on qubits rather than bits, giving us better parallelism and continued reliable technological progress. Quantum computing is still mostly an area of research rather than production systems–but it is rapidly approaching usability, and Zlatko Minev joins the show to explain how quantum computing works, and why software engineers should care.
Zlatko is a PhD candidate at the Yale Quantum Information Lab. Today he describes how qubits work, which algorithms quantum computing impacts, and which parts of modern computer architecture will work on a quantum computer. We may have to throw out the Von Neumann architecture when it comes to quantum!
Transcript
Transcript provided by We Edit Podcasts. Software Engineering Daily listeners can go to weeditpodcasts.com/sed to get 20% off the first two months of audio editing and transcription services. Thanks to We Edit Podcasts for partnering with SE Daily. Please click here to view this show’s transcript.
Sponsors
Dice helps you accelerate your tech career. Whether you’re actively looking for a job or need insights to grow in your role, Dice has the resources you need. Dice’s mobile app is the fastest and easiest way to get ahead. Search thousands of tech jobs – from software engineering to UI/UX to product management. Discover your worth with Dice’s Salary Predictor based on your unique skill set. Uncover new opportunities with Dice’s new career pathing tool which can give you insights about the best types of roles to transition to – and the skills you’ll need to get there. Manage your tech career and download the Dice Careers app on Android or iOS today. So check out Dice and support Software Engineering Daily, go to Dice.com/sedaily. Thanks to Dice for being a sponsor of Software Engineering Daily.
You are programming a new service for your users. Or, you are hacking on a side project. Whatever you are building, you need to send email. For sending email, developers use SendGrid. SendGrid is the API for email, trusted by developers. Send transactional emails through the SendGrid API. Build marketing campaigns with a beautiful interface for crafting the perfect email. SendGrid is used by Uber, Airbnb, and Spotify–but anybody can start for free and get 100 emails per day. Just go to SendGrid.com/sedaily to get started. Your email is important–make sure it gets delivered properly, with SendGrid, the most reliable email delivery service. Get started with 100 emails per day at SendGrid.com/sedaily.
Incapsula can protect your API servers and microservices from responding to unwanted requests. To try Incapsula for yourself, go to incapsula.com/2017podcasts and get a free enterprise trial of Incapsula. Incapsula’s API gives you control over the security and performance of your application–whether you have a complex microservices architecture or a WordPress site, like Software Engineering Daily. Incapsula has a global network of over 30 data centers that optimize routing and cache your content. The same network of data centers that are filtering your content for attackers are operating as a CDN, and speeding up your application. To try Incapsula today, go to incapsula.com/2017podcasts and check it out. Thanks again, Incapsula.
Thanks to Symphono for sponsoring Software Engineering Daily. Symphono is a custom engineering shop where senior engineers tackle big tech challenges while learning from each other. Check it out at symphono.com/sedaily. Thanks to Symphono for being a sponsor of Soft
https://wn.com/Quantum_Computing_Introduction_With_Zlatko_Minev
Visit our website
https://softwareengineeringdaily.com
Computer chips have physical limitations. When transistors get too small, electrons start to behave in ways that make the hardware modules less reliable. Our reliable technological progress has been enabled by Moore’s Law: the idea that the number of components we can fit on a chip doubles roughly every 12-18 months.
We can’t keep shrinking the size of these components, because physics is no longer complying.
Quantum computing allows us to operate on qubits rather than bits, giving us better parallelism and continued reliable technological progress. Quantum computing is still mostly an area of research rather than production systems–but it is rapidly approaching usability, and Zlatko Minev joins the show to explain how quantum computing works, and why software engineers should care.
Zlatko is a PhD candidate at the Yale Quantum Information Lab. Today he describes how qubits work, which algorithms quantum computing impacts, and which parts of modern computer architecture will work on a quantum computer. We may have to throw out the Von Neumann architecture when it comes to quantum!
Transcript
Transcript provided by We Edit Podcasts. Software Engineering Daily listeners can go to weeditpodcasts.com/sed to get 20% off the first two months of audio editing and transcription services. Thanks to We Edit Podcasts for partnering with SE Daily. Please click here to view this show’s transcript.
Sponsors
Dice helps you accelerate your tech career. Whether you’re actively looking for a job or need insights to grow in your role, Dice has the resources you need. Dice’s mobile app is the fastest and easiest way to get ahead. Search thousands of tech jobs – from software engineering to UI/UX to product management. Discover your worth with Dice’s Salary Predictor based on your unique skill set. Uncover new opportunities with Dice’s new career pathing tool which can give you insights about the best types of roles to transition to – and the skills you’ll need to get there. Manage your tech career and download the Dice Careers app on Android or iOS today. So check out Dice and support Software Engineering Daily, go to Dice.com/sedaily. Thanks to Dice for being a sponsor of Software Engineering Daily.
You are programming a new service for your users. Or, you are hacking on a side project. Whatever you are building, you need to send email. For sending email, developers use SendGrid. SendGrid is the API for email, trusted by developers. Send transactional emails through the SendGrid API. Build marketing campaigns with a beautiful interface for crafting the perfect email. SendGrid is used by Uber, Airbnb, and Spotify–but anybody can start for free and get 100 emails per day. Just go to SendGrid.com/sedaily to get started. Your email is important–make sure it gets delivered properly, with SendGrid, the most reliable email delivery service. Get started with 100 emails per day at SendGrid.com/sedaily.
Incapsula can protect your API servers and microservices from responding to unwanted requests. To try Incapsula for yourself, go to incapsula.com/2017podcasts and get a free enterprise trial of Incapsula. Incapsula’s API gives you control over the security and performance of your application–whether you have a complex microservices architecture or a WordPress site, like Software Engineering Daily. Incapsula has a global network of over 30 data centers that optimize routing and cache your content. The same network of data centers that are filtering your content for attackers are operating as a CDN, and speeding up your application. To try Incapsula today, go to incapsula.com/2017podcasts and check it out. Thanks again, Incapsula.
Thanks to Symphono for sponsoring Software Engineering Daily. Symphono is a custom engineering shop where senior engineers tackle big tech challenges while learning from each other. Check it out at symphono.com/sedaily. Thanks to Symphono for being a sponsor of Soft
- published: 27 Jan 2018
- views: 169
48:47
Dr. Walter Fischler-Ruiz: The Smell of a Place: Odor Landmarks in a Cognitive Spatial Map
On Tuesday, October 12, Dr. Fischler-Ruiz spoke at Monell Chemical Senses Center on odors as landmarks that define a cognitive spatial map. Dr. Fischler-Ruiz is...
On Tuesday, October 12, Dr. Fischler-Ruiz spoke at Monell Chemical Senses Center on odors as landmarks that define a cognitive spatial map. Dr. Fischler-Ruiz is an associate research scientist at the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain and Behavior Institute of Columbia University.
https://wn.com/Dr._Walter_Fischler_Ruiz_The_Smell_Of_A_Place_Odor_Landmarks_In_A_Cognitive_Spatial_Map
On Tuesday, October 12, Dr. Fischler-Ruiz spoke at Monell Chemical Senses Center on odors as landmarks that define a cognitive spatial map. Dr. Fischler-Ruiz is an associate research scientist at the Mortimer B. Zuckerman Mind Brain and Behavior Institute of Columbia University.
- published: 20 Oct 2021
- views: 235