The Daily Dose

laugh every day with cartoons jokes and humor
  • Home
  • About
    • Press
      • Press Release – Announcing Laughzilla the Third ebook
      • Press Release – The Daily Dose Kicks Off Its 16th Year with New Books and More Irreverent Laughter
      • Press Release – Themes Memes and Laser Beams Now Available in Paperback
      • Press Release – Announcing Themes Memes and Laser Beams
      • In The News
    • Privacy
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Shop
  • Collections
    • Galleries
      • Gallery
      • Captions
      • Flash Cartoons & Greeting Cards
        • Laughzilla’s Oska Flash Animation Cartoon Greeting Cards
        • Oska Cupid Love Humor
    • #OccupyWallStreet
    • cats
    • China
    • Food
      • Hors d’oeuvres
        • Ball of Cream Cheese
      • Entrees / Main Courses
        • Meatballs with Baked Beans and Celery
    • Gadaffy
    • Google
  • Links
  • Video
  • Submit a joke
DeviantART Facebook Twitter Flickr pinterest YouTube RSS

Subscribe for Free Laughs!


 

Latest Comics

  • This Memorial Day, Trump Meme Coin Congratulates Profit Takers
  • 25 Years of The Daily Dose
  • The Best Cartoons
  • Bitcoin sings “Fly Me To The Moon”
  • 22 years of The Daily Dose

Comic Archive

Thinking Out Of The Box

Daily Dose News Roundup

  • Jeff Bezos’s representative just left the board of a startup that raised $1.4 billion on his name. The first truck has not been built.
  • Snap lost a 400 million dollar AI deal, 20 million dollars a month to the Iran war, and 24 per cent of its stock price. The AR glasses had better work.
  • Volkswagen just became Rivian’s biggest investor. It is not buying trucks. It is buying the software its own engineers could not build.
  • Pinterest just crossed $1 billion in quarterly revenue. The bet that made it work was not social media. It was search.
  • Tesla is selling Chinese-made cars in Canada to escape the tariffs that both China and America imposed on it

Quotable

"Now that we American humans have socialized healthcare, at least we're covered for heart meds when we first feel its sticker shock." ~ Yasha Harari

Fresh Baked Goods

Get The Daily Dose's ebook: Laughzilla the Third - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the e-book on Amazon kdp. Laughzilla the Third (2012) The Third Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection Available Now.

Click here for the Paperback edition


Support independent publishing: Buy The Daily Dose's book: Themes Memes and Laser Beams - A Funny Stuff Collection of 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla from TheDailyDose. Click here to get the book on Amazon. Themes Memes and Laser Beams - The Second Volume in the Funny Stuff Cartoon Book Collection.

Click Here to get the book in Paperback While Available on Amazon

Themes Memes and Laser Beams - 101 Cartoons by Laughzilla. Get the e-book on Lulu.

Click Here to get The Daily Dose Cartoon ebook on amazon kindle

Funny Stuff :
The First Cartoon Book
from The Daily Dose.
Available on Lulu.

a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Microsoft launches Skype for Outlook.com worldwide, adds Safari for Mac support and HD video calling for PCs

Mar04
by Sindy Cator on March 4, 2014 at 2:12 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web

2013 01 10 11h15 09 520x245 Microsoft launches Skype for Outlook.com worldwide, adds Safari for Mac support and HD video calling for PCs

Microsoft today launched Skype for Outlook.com worldwide, expanding the service that was previously only available to a select few countries. At the same time, the company has added new features and fixed a few bugs in the previous version.

A preview of Skype’s integration into Outlook.com first showed up in April, but only UK users could use the full range of Skype services in their inbox: voice calls, video calls, and messaging. In August, the service arrived in the US, the UK, Germany, France, Canada, and Brazil. At the time, Microsoft said worldwide availability would come “in the near future,” which apparently translates to seven months later.

As its name implies, Skype for Outlook.com lets you connect with your Skype friends right from your Outlook.com inbox. Once a user links their Outlook.com account with Skype, they are prompted to install a plugin which enables the integration.

The latest version of the plugin now has Safari for Mac support, in addition to versions for Internet Explorer, Chrome, and Firefox. Furthermore, today’s release also now supports HD video calling for PC users, with the following fine print: “both users must have compatible HD displays, web cams, messaging clients, and broadband internet.” Among the various bug fixes, Skype has also addressed an issue with calls continuing to ring after pick-up when users had the Outlook.com plugin and Skype on their desktop running at the same time.

outlook com Microsoft launches Skype for Outlook.com worldwide, adds Safari for Mac support and HD video calling for PCs

Skype is playing an increasingly big part in Microsoft’s consumer strategy, and Outlook.com integration is a big move. Now that it’s available worldwide, we’ll be watching for usage and reliability numbers to see if the company’s bet pays off.

See also – Outlook.com now has 400m active accounts as Microsoft completes Hotmail migration, including 125m mobile users and Microsoft completes Lync integration into Skype, offers one unified communications platform for Windows and Mac

Top Image Credit: Robert Scoble

└ Tags: microsoft, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Be all-in, or all-out: Steve Ballmer’s advice for startups

Mar04
by Sindy Cator on March 4, 2014 at 2:04 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider

Ballmer 520x245 Be all in, or all out: Steve Ballmers advice for startups

Steve Ballmer joined Microsoft in 1980 as the company’s first business manager, going on to replace Bill Gates as CEO in 2000. Before becoming CEO, his roles at Microsoft included senior vice president of sales and support, senior vice president of systems software and vice president of marketing. Under Ballmer’s leadership, Microsoft tripled its revenue and doubled profits.

A month to the day since Microsoft announced Satya Nadella as its new CEO, Ballmer made an appearance at the Saïd Business School, part of England’s Oxford University, where he talked about many things with his long-time friend Professor Peter Tufano, who’s now Dean of the School. And there was advice aplenty for the entourage of students in attendance.

When prompted by Tufano about what advice the Ballmer of today would impart on the Ballmer of several decades ago and, indeed, any budding young entrepreneur in attendance, this is what Ballmer had to say.

Smart people, world-leaders

Ballmerz Be all in, or all out: Steve Ballmers advice for startups

“I dropped out of school to join Microsoft, mostly because I knew Bill Gates from college, and he was the smartest guy I knew,” he says. “So I knew Bill, and his buddy (Microsoft co-founder) Paul Allen, and they were kind of world-leaders in something that I didn’t quite understand, but it sounded good. And these guys were really smart, and that sounded even better.”

Indeed, it’s this criteria Gates points to as being central to setting up your own business, or joining someone else’s. “There are a lot of criteria you might want to think about, but being world-leading at something big, with smart people, that’s a good place to be,” he says.

Working with smart people is one thing, but how do you actually get the smart people? It’s all about the recruitment.

Recruitment

“I didn’t really know much about much, but I’d interviewed for a lot of jobs, and it turns out that the most valuable thing I added to Microsoft was that I actually got the hiring machine going,” says Ballmer. “And mostly because I’d interviewed for a lot of jobs while at college and business school.

“If you’re going to be a small company in particular, everybody’s a recruiter. Everybody’s out there, ‘Who’s the best?’, ‘Who’s the brightest?’, ‘How do we get them?’. It’s the life-blood. Even up until the last minute at Microsoft, the last thing I did was a recruiting call.”

The third and final core piece of advice for startups and entrepreneurs was perhaps about as specific and practical as you could imagine.

Accounting and price

“You have to pay attention to accounting,” says Ballmer. “And I don’t just mean in a financial accounting sense. Management accounting is even more important than financial accounting – really thinking about what you’re measuring, how you account for revenue, how you think about costs. It’s fundamental.”

Over and above all this, however, Ballmer talks about the importance of understanding ‘price’.

“You know, you take all these fancy classes in lots of things, people will want to teach you about marketing, and they’ll want to teach you about finance, and now there’s a whole CRAZE about product development,” says Ballmer. “But this thing called ‘price’ is really, really important. I still think that a lot of people under-think it through. You have a lot of companies that start and the only difference between the ones that succeed and fail is that one figured out how to make money, because they were deep-in thinking through the revenue, price, and business model. I think that’s under-attended to generally.”

Best & worst advice

Ballmer says the best advice he ever received was from his father. “My dad said, if you’re going to do a job, do a job, and if you’re not going to do a job, don’t do a job,” he says. “And THAT is the key to everything. If you’re really going to do something, then put your heart, body and soul into it. You either be ‘all-in’, or be ‘all-out’.

“If you’re going to be one of those people who do their own startup, I guarantee you that unless you’re all-in – not ‘all-in for six months and see how things go’ – no startups do that well that quickly,” continues Ballmer. “You gotta be in, and stay in and take a long-term view. And that’s the best piece of advice I ever got.”

And what about the worst? “A bunch of people while I was at Stanford told me not to drop-out and join Microsoft,” adds Ballmer. “That would cosmically be the worst piece of advice I ever got.”

It’s just as well he didn’t listen to them.

└ Tags: syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice

Mar04
by Sindy Cator on March 4, 2014 at 12:38 pm
Posted In: Apps, Around the Web, Insider, Product Reviews

20140304 141117 520x245 Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice

From Hinge and Let’s Date, to Grindr and Tinder, if there’s one thing the world doesn’t need, it’s another dating app. But a new entry into the space is looking to find its niche with a dating app that uses your voice as your passport.

The lowdown

Revealr is the handiwork of London-based duo Paul Laight and Guy Harrington. The iPhone-only app requires you to log-in with your Facebook credentials and, while this in itself will likely deter many people, it’s worth noting that the same applies to other dating apps, including Tinder.

Photo 04 03 2014 11 29 09 220x316 Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice    Photo 04 03 2014 11 29 231 220x316 Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice

At any rate, Revealr is looking to set itself apart from the rest by letting users introduce themselves verbally with a 20-second gambit. This is revealed alongside a pixelated profile photo

 Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice     Forget looks, this iPhone dating app helps you find your match with just your voice

Users can browse through profiles seeing only a forename, location, age and the 20-second audio clip. Once a mutual match is made – i.e. two people ‘like’ each other – both parties are revealed to each other and they are then free to chat.

It’s an interesting concept for sure, given that ‘voice’ is certainly a key attribute that determines a person’s ‘attractiveness’. However, one can’t help but think that ‘looks’ are ultimately the more crucial factor when looking for a date initially. Only time will tell whether dulcet tones and a pixelated profile picture is enough to convince people to make that first connection.

➤ Revealr | App Store

└ Tags: news, syndicated
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

Play-i is building an ecosystem for its robots to teach coding in schools

Mar04
by Sindy Cator on March 4, 2014 at 12:30 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Education, Gadgets, robots

Bo gives a friend a flower 520x245 Play i is building an ecosystem for its robots to teach coding in schools

Play-i, a company behind two robots called Bo and Yana that aim to teach programming to children as young as five years old, is keen on building up a robust ecosystem that covers software and even educational material for schools.

This means other than building the hardware, the company is also investing in the software platform that provides the applications for children on iPads and Android devices. It announced today a partnership with more than 100 developers who have signed up for early access to its API, and plans to release the API for broader use when the robots are shipped later this summer.

Vikas Gupta, the co-founder and CEO of Play-i, tells TNW that this means developers will be able to use Play-i’s API to build apps that help control the robots, or even just create interactions within its apps.

The developers will have control over their applications and where they distribute the applications — so they can make them available in the app store (Apple App Store and Google Play). We have no immediate plans of releasing our own app store at the moment, but we will do our best to assist customers in discovering great applications created by developers.

Play-i isn’t stopping at that — it is also stepping up its commitment to mainstream education in schools by setting out to create a curriculum for teachers to hand on to their students.

Gupta says that the company is currently working with schools in the US, and more than 200 have already signed up to use Bo and Yana to teach programming in their curriculum.

Our immediate plan is to create curriculum and teacher material by working closely with a subset of schools. We are first focusing on launching this pilot program. Once we are ready to go broader from our pilot program, we will initiate with schools outside the US as well to explore similar pilot programs to expand further.

This comes as Play-i also announces a $8 million Series A funding round  from Madrona Venture Group and Charles River Ventures, soon after it crowdfunded $1.44 million to bring Bo and Yana to the world. So far, the company has received orders for over 14,000 robots from 80 different countries.

The funding will go towards growing the company, in particular hiring software engineers and designers.

For a look at Bo and Yana in action after the engineering team worked on its software platform API for tablet devices and developed it in collaboration with a high school, check out this video:

Headline image via Play-i

└ Tags: news, syndicated, united states
a couple of laughzillas on a blue diamond background

How CareerFoundry wants to put the personal touch back into online education

Mar04
by Sindy Cator on March 4, 2014 at 12:12 pm
Posted In: Around the Web, Insider, Profiles and Interviews

cf 520x245 How CareerFoundry wants to put the personal touch back into online education

Berlin-based startup CareerFoundry has launched its mentor-driven “zero-to-job-ready” vocational training platform for those who aspire for a career in tech. The startup’s offer consists of a 3-month long program, during which students are paired with mentors from the relevant industry who help them in the course of their studies.

The project, known earlier as DoBranch, has started off with two programs offering students the chance to learn Ruby on Rails and UX design, with iOS software development, marketing and another as-yet unrevealed discipline in the pipeline. The cost for each is €300 ($413) per month, which means the full course costs €900 ($1,240). Programs don’t have fixed deadlines, as students can enroll and start learning at any time.

“We did a lot of research with job boards, and Ruby on Rails and UX design are the areas with the highest job demand in the whole digital economy, and the lowest level of people who have these skills,” explained CareerFoundry CEO Raffaela Rein.

CareerFoundry has already teamed up with a few recruiting agencies and the Startupbootcamp accelerator, which will help future graduates to find jobs after the program. The startup’s CEO said that students’ fees at the moment are the company’s only source of income, though in the future it may “also earn something at the recruiting end.”

CareerFoundry 730x445 How CareerFoundry wants to put the personal touch back into online education

As noted in the press release, CareerFoundry, which raised €250,000 from German investor Stefan Glaenzer, is supposed to “defy the MOOCs trend and bring the personal touch back to online learning.” Surprised by such a bold claim, I sat down (on Skype) with Rein to see how exactly CareerFoundry’s model is better or more efficient than other forms of learning.

Massive courses with massive problems?

The traditionally conservative field of education has seen quite a bit of disruption in recent years. Arguably the most significant attempt to bring tech innovation into the field was the introduction of massive online open courses, usually referred to as MOOCs. Think of Coursera, Udacity, edX and many others — these have gained quite a bit of popularity of late.

With hundreds of thousands users signing up to learn about everything from basic mathematics to rocket science, MOOCs seemed to be the solution of every problem the world education system ever had, be it high prices or little accessibility beyond developed countries.

However it seems now like education is not as easy to disrupt as some may think. In a recent interview, Udacity’s Sebastian Thrun, pioneer and avid advocate of MOOCs, has shown that not everything is going as smooth as it was supposed to in the world of free massive online learning. The biggest problem faced by MOOCs is their awfully low retention rate — according to Thrun, no more than 10 percent of Udacity’s students would make it to an end of the class, and only about a half of those would actually receive a passing grade.

cf4 220x146 How CareerFoundry wants to put the personal touch back into online education

CareerFoundry’s Raffaela Rein

CareerFoundry’s Rein agrees that MOOCs’ breed of largely unsupervised learning is fundamentally flawed.

“There’s a lot of studies that show that if you just learn and […] there’s no one to correct your learning, then the outcome is not half as good as if there is,” she says.

To resolve the issue, the startup has hired 50 mentors across the globe who are ready to accompany students through the courses (which are also put together by mentors). Each mentor is being paid by CareerFoundry and can supervise up to five students at a time. In weekly one-on-one online meetings, mentors give students feedback on their homework, which is 100 percent practical and consists of developing a fully functional website (or its UX).

Who needs universities?

Probably the most controversial claim that CareerFoundry is built around is that anyone with desire can get ready to take a junior programming or UX design position in just three months, even if he or she had no previous experience and/or education in the field.

“We’ve had 250 students so far [as DoBranch]. Most of them have university degrees, to be honest. And they did [the program] because they want to either change careers or level up in their career, that’s the majority,” Rein says. “But we also had people who worked for McDonald’s, with no degree whatsoever […], we have single mothers… Most of students have an education, but not in digital area.”

Career Foundry course 730x438 How CareerFoundry wants to put the personal touch back into online education

Going further, Rein expresses an opinion that in respective areas vocational education programs like those offered by the startup can successfully replace not only MOOCs, but also traditional universities.

“I’ve been in management positions for the last five years, I’ve started three companies for Rocket Internet and one company here in Germany for Axel Springer,” Rein says. “Altogether I must’ve hired about 50 people or more; especially in web development, unless you come from maybe Stanford, it really does not matter which university you come from or what degree you have.

“All that matters is your experience, and […] how good is your code. Same with UX design. I think, the more technical you get, the less important your education becomes. It’s more about your experience.”

First of its kind

It’s a dangerous sign for a startup to say that it has no competitors, but that’s exactly what Rein told me in the interview.

“There’s surprisingly no vocational digital education online. Nothing. Even though the field is booming like crazy, and in fact the digital economy has the highest job growth of all industries.

“There’s no one who has said ‘we will provide the full immersive training program to get people job-ready.’ There are bootcamps that offer a similar service, but they’re offline, so they’re not really competitors. And they’re also extremely expensive.”

It’s not hard to see though that CareerFoundry is not the only company trying to occupy the niche that MOOCs couldn’t fit into. For example, the aforementioned Udacity is already offering paid versions of its courses, which have improved in exactly the way Rein was talking about. For about $150 per month, the MOOC offers among other things “personal guidance” from a pool of coaches available for chat every day.

That being said, it’s easy to predict that the field of online education programs with a “personal touch” is about to get quite crowded, and startups moving there now should expect to compete not only with each other, but with much bigger and more experienced players.

It’s also a good sign for those willing to learn — if you wanted to change or boost your career, today seems to be a great time to start.

└ Tags: europe, syndicated
  • Page 14,369 of 14,641
  • « First
  • «
  • 14,367
  • 14,368
  • 14,369
  • 14,370
  • 14,371
  • »
  • Last »
The Daily Dose, The Daily Dose © 1996 - Present. All Rights Reserved.
  • Home
  • About
  • Archive
  • Books
  • Collections
  • Links
  • Shop
  • Submit a joke
  • Video
  • Privacy Policy