Thanks for sharing such valuable information! Just a quick off-topic question: I have a SafePal wallet with USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). How can I transfer them to Binance?
@jonl31614 күн бұрын
Great Interview. Thanks for posting.
@rebralhunter6069Ай бұрын
POLAND MENTIONED LETS GOOOOOO
@nlegatoАй бұрын
Such a sound practical advice 👏👏👏 - Highly Recommend watching. I am looking forward to reading the book.
@rothbardfreedomАй бұрын
One of the main problems is that the people driving these transformations never did TDD, (simple) code design, (code) metaphors, (code) planning), etc, etc. Kanban and Scrum are but highly level ideas to organize the actual work. But if the actual work is crap, they are useless and tend to make the work even crappier.
@AuthorlinkАй бұрын
Very interest, Thad. Thank you.
@tousdrАй бұрын
Poor Lean.. Neil is a nice guy but slippery as a fish to interview. 😂 I have been following him in youtube for years. After listening to him, fir thirty minutes, you got the idea. This idea could have been explained in two or three minutes. But he uses half an hour He is so. Take it or leave. 😂
@Musicdudeyoutub2 ай бұрын
Why would you upload this.. this is embarrassing and meaningless
@agnidas58162 ай бұрын
What activities increase openness factor in a human to the point of being easily detected in work performance ? Why aren't you having your team do those activities on time off instead of "pretending" to work ?
@MrJannieboy2 ай бұрын
this thumbnail sucks I have a solution
@GptWithMeNow2 ай бұрын
As someone who has spent the past year experimenting with conversational coding (AI-assisted coding), I’ve come to appreciate the value of seeing AI as a partner, not just a tool. I often leverage multimodal capabilities to build and debug code with minimal manual coding on my experimental project. One of the biggest challenges has been the seamless integration of moving code back and forth between systems. Until recently, my workflow was quite manual, but discovering Cursor has truly unlocked the co-creation potential I’ve been striving for. Looking forward to reading Michael's book here to see what further insights he has!
@andylenardshehim93592 ай бұрын
Thanks for this! I'm enjoying reading along as Michael is writing the book. This discussion has been great for framing the work. Thank you, Len.
@chrisdreng3 ай бұрын
I just thought about this how the fuck do KZbin know what im thinking
@danielnastase19843 ай бұрын
Loved this interview
@dariuszscharsig5683 ай бұрын
100%. Once you're done with the "suck ass" task, everything else becomes a breeze.
@thelenepp3 ай бұрын
LOL no idea why I was so orange for this part of the recording!
@SpeakersAnonymous3 ай бұрын
How good are the translation from English to French, German, Spanish, Italian, Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, etc.?
@leanpub3 ай бұрын
Thanks for your question! The answer authors have been getting ranges from "amazing" to "good enough", though the "amazing" feedback is probably more an expression of exceeded expectations. Here's a link to an FAQ: help.leanpub.com/en/articles/9633286-translateai-faq#h_641cc050cb
@ChibakuRikudo3 ай бұрын
Wow.... MUCH respect 🙏🏾
@gitgudsec4 ай бұрын
Instead of going to uni, just study Pavel’s books and courses full-time for 4 years - you’ll be cooking
@bugs18-l5q4 ай бұрын
He is a best writer help me write in youtube
@StefanieJarantowski4 ай бұрын
Loved listening to both of you - thx!
@StefanieJarantowski5 ай бұрын
A really great book! Great read!
@stephanschmidt23345 ай бұрын
Loved talking to Len from Leanpub!
@speakingsoftware5 ай бұрын
Thank you for hosting me! I was super nervous 😅 but had a lot of fun! Looking forward to crossing paths again in the future 😁🙌
@ChristopherOkhravi5 ай бұрын
43 views in 8 months probably explains why Hormozi isn't using Leanpub 😊😊 I think you guys are awesome and I'm currently using Leanpub myself so no offense intended 😊♥
@AndualemGosah6 ай бұрын
From which lecture of Ana on "computer science with Python " Python lecture starts
@AndualemGosah6 ай бұрын
Watching Ana Bell from Ethiopia 🎉
@MikeBifulco6 ай бұрын
Love the interview! thanks or the feature. I've really got to update my bio on Leanpub -- it's at least 3 jobs behind the times 😬
@JakobJenkov6 ай бұрын
I learned about " Iterative Development " in university already in 1997-1998. Sometimes it was also called " Incremental Development". It was not yet called "Agile Development" at that point. I remember there were development processes back then called - Rapid Application Development (RAD) - Dynamic Software Development Method (DSDM) (from IBM) - Rational Unified Process (RUP). Then came - Xtreme Programming - Scrum - Adaptive Software Development - Lean Development and then came the Agile Manifesto - to try to bring all these development approaches together around some shared, central principles - which ended up being very loose.
@McKinzieDev6 ай бұрын
Money and it’s about who you know not how hard you work.
@brianbenoit68836 ай бұрын
aaaand how do computers generate food exactly????
@robertweekley59267 ай бұрын
Willingness to learn, left Legacy Companies years ago! Not just Automotive!
@louismaddox61517 ай бұрын
Wow, great story at 53 mins, look forward to reading !
@thelenepp7 ай бұрын
I enjoy all these podcast interviews with authors, but it's always a special treat when we get to talk philosophy! In one of his books, Isaak brilliantly uses Plato's allegory of the cave to talk about the control powerful incumbent brands have over consumers' view of a market
@afsanaakther21737 ай бұрын
"Inspiring journey captured in 'The Incredible Story of Deft' by Isaak Tsalicoglou! A must-read for book lovers and podcast enthusiasts alike. 📚🎙 #books #leanpublishing #podcast"
@tigerstallion7 ай бұрын
you can definitely do hard science on people. Its generally considered immoral. But people will sign waivers for most anything, and universities and medical orgs get away with a lot. and most people would be surprised to learn how some businesses experiment with the public, no waivers, no conscious that they're participating in a study at all. Some of the methods are dubious, some are quite disturbing. But the real cream of the crop is the work militaries and govts do running population experiments, most of which is classified, but is a massive and historic area of practice. They have varied & controlled almost anything you can think of on a person or population from torture to aliens (think Nazi/CIA/etc). They maintain "fake" cities, prison research programs, space station, and all kinds of other labs to run these types of experiments on people.
@racoon2707 ай бұрын
I have submitted a request for a refund regarding the book. It appears to be incomplete and carries an artificial tone, reminiscent of content generated by an AI.
@holeman17 ай бұрын
Thanks for an interesting interview. Alex is doing interesting work, and I hope to benefit from it.
@huntersteffey96397 ай бұрын
Looks like she could invest in a better camera then just her school issued chromebook
@heebldorf53337 ай бұрын
Couple hundred to make money. Sounds familiar.
@afsanaakther21737 ай бұрын
"Exciting release! Ready to dive into the latest insights on AI application development. Congrats, Obie Fernandez! #booklaunch 📘🚀"
@afsanaakther21738 ай бұрын
"288 Viktor Farcic, Author of Crossplane: The Cloud Native Control Plane: Dive deep into cloud computing with expert insights from Viktor Farcic. A must-listen for tech enthusiasts! 📚☁ #CloudComputing #AuthorInterview"
@ricardowatkins81268 ай бұрын
👏 *Promo SM*
@LoriCiani8 ай бұрын
My ex inlaws edited the book of the television series about learning how to use the BBC Acorn computer. My ex husband tested out the computer programs in the book.
@rudymcalister77238 ай бұрын
You guys should try drinking lean
@behnamahmadi28348 ай бұрын
very informative .
@ChaiTogether8 ай бұрын
Here for it! Thanks for this podcast!
@afsanaakther21738 ай бұрын
"Unlock the keys to quality assessments with Janet Gregory and Selena Delesie's expert guidance. Essential reading for Agile practitioners! 📚🔑"
@leanpub8 ай бұрын
Here's how Gregor explained "Gregor's Law" in the podcast interview: "Gregor's Law, which basically says that excessive complexity, that is nature's punishment for organizations who are unable to make decisions. Like if you want everything all the time and all optionally, you want to write your software in any language, on any platform, running in anything, in any scale, in anything, right? You never want to lock anything down. The result is that you will drown in complexity."
@actorattila8 ай бұрын
If I'm not willing to close doors I'm going to end up in a maze, well that does make sense cuz it is usually doesn't have a door!