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    vms

    Explore "vms" with insightful episodes like "Venture Minerals Limited - Getting Closer to the Julimar look-alike.", "Update on Meleya Project - Discovery and Proof of Concept - Tempest Minerals Limited (ASX: TEM)", "Revolver Resources Limited - An Elephant Copper Deposit - Discovered in Queensland - Australia", "Transitioning to a Tin Mining Company." and "Discovered the VMS System - The Reward for Believing Management - Tempest Minerals Ltd (ASX: TEM)" from podcasts like ""Coffee with Samso", "Coffee with Samso", "Coffee with Samso", "Coffee with Samso" and "Coffee with Samso"" and more!

    Episodes (41)

    Venture Minerals Limited - Getting Closer to the Julimar look-alike.

    Venture Minerals Limited - Getting Closer to the Julimar look-alike.
    Rooster Talk Episode 62 is all about why Chalice Mining Limited (ASX: CHN) chose those targets.
     
    Venture Minerals Limited (ASX:VMS) has just received some interesting news on their Thor JV with Chalice Mining.
     
    The Thor JV has been one of the company's assets that has an active exploration program. It is an important part of the portfolio of assets which is worked by Chalice Mining. We have had a Coffee with Samso that was dedicated to that topic (Julimar's Twin Brother - The Thor Project - Venture Minerals Limited (ASX: VMS) - Episode 83) as there is a lot of interest riding on what Chalice is doing at the project.

    To me, the recent announcement that was published on the 13th July has something that is very interesting. The area that they have identified is at what I thought was a jog or an area where some extension may have happened. This is fairly observant from the magnetic image where is this distinct bend.

     
    This is a very early stage target and I am not saying that there is a X on the ground to discover. What is nice to see is the coincidence with the geophysics. The subtle nature of the wording in the announcement is not consistent with my observation.
     
    What I mean is that if they did not find anything geochemically at that spot, I would have been disappointed. I encourage viewers to watch and listen to Andrew as this has some good points for investors to consider with the "tough" times current on the market.
     
     
    Chapters:
     
    00:00 Start
    00:20 Introduction
    01:01 Andrew updates
    02:55 The Two Targets.
    07:26 Maybe Chalice have found the sweet spot.
    12:05 The Western Yilgarn margin?
    14:16 Factors that create mineral exploration discoveries.
    19:48 Market and Exploration Expectations.
    20:36 Other Venture projects?
    24:24 The need to understand market sentiment and mineral exploration.
    26:40 The need for investors to play the patience game.
    27:37 Andrews last words.
    29:05 Conclusions

    Update on Meleya Project - Discovery and Proof of Concept - Tempest Minerals Limited (ASX: TEM)

    Update on Meleya Project - Discovery and Proof of Concept - Tempest Minerals Limited (ASX: TEM)
    Rooster Talk 58 is with Don Smith, Managing Director, Tempest Minerals Limited (ASX:TEM)
     
    Its been a while since the excitement of the discovery of a large sulphide system at Meleya. I have been very keen to get to see the rocks and have a discussion with Don. In my opinion, the rocks will be the key to the continuation of the story.
     
    Prior to the drilling, the general discussion was primarily on the the potential of the geology being similar to Golden Grove VMS deposit. When Tempest announced the drilling results on the 28th March 2022, there was general excitement in the market.
     
    The realisation from the concept was now closer to fact, however, there is still a wait on the actual numbers of the assays. Irrespective of the numbers, I think there is no denying that there is some sort of a discovery at Meleya.
     
    In this episode of Rooster Talk, I asked Don about the geology. The geology from the drilling is the key factor. I asked Don, if this was a Discovery or a Proof of Concept. We also talked about the numerous alteration within the length of the hole which points to a large cooking system that could be endowed with metals.
     
    The main takeaway for this episode is to have an understanding of the geology of the area. The assay numbers will be interesting. However, I suspect that will not be the conclusive answer for or against the project.
     
    There will be more drilling and more discussion. In my opinion, this is proof that the geology is similar and it is mineralised. This has been a great conversation and I like their method of understanding the geology first before rushing out to drill holes.
     
    Chapters
     
    00:00 Start
    00:20 Introduction
    02:10 Discovery or Proof of Concept
    03:16 Lets talk geology of both drill holes.
    06:03 Where is the geological thinking now?
    07:15 How can Investors understand your geology?
    08:50 What is Tempest thinking now?
    10:27 Is there any issues with the progress of Tempest?
    11:23 Other Projects
    14:25 News Flow
    15:21 Why Tempest?
    16:20 Conclusion

    Revolver Resources Limited - An Elephant Copper Deposit - Discovered in Queensland - Australia

    Revolver Resources Limited - An Elephant Copper Deposit - Discovered in Queensland - Australia
    Coffee with Samso Episode 142 is all about Revolver Resources Limited (ASX: RRR) discovering what is looking like a giant Copper Deposit in Queensland.
     
    In this episode of Coffee with Samso, we explore a company that is developing a great copper deposit. Revolver has two assets in north western Queensland, Australia that seem to be little know. The company had worked on these projects for 7 years in a private capacity and were listed in 2021.
     
    The company is well funded, cashed up and is in the process of unlocking the value of Dianne and Osprey. The two projects headline the company with both showing enormous potential.
     
    Pat Williams, the managing director of the company speaks to us about the dedication of the company to produce value for shareholders by systematically going through the process of exploration while keeping a tight reign on costs.
     
    The recent discovery of the Green Hill corridor speaks volume of the potential of Dianne. Green Hill prospect is not looking to emulate a size of 3 football fields and the results are indicating that the size could grow further.
     
    Operation on site commenced 1st half of Oct 2021-2022 and continuous in the wet tropics. The work completed include surface mapping, regional surface sampling, an extensive IP program and a 17 hole DD program.
     
    Diane is open in 3 remaining directions.
     
    Osprey is poised to be a Tier 1 project. The company has conducted 3 IP programs & continues building the geophysical signatures. The project is already showing indicators of a halo typical of an IOCG (Iron Oxide Copper Gold) system.
     
    The talented and experienced Board of Management are hands on actively exploring its tenements and pursuing further acquisitions as well as creating additional Shareholder value.​
     
    Let's listen to these chapters:
     
    00:00 Start
    00:20 Introduction
    01:10 The Dog with two Tales.
    01:30 Pat Williams Introduction.
    04:50 Transition from private company to public listed
    07:03 The Dianne Copper Project
    14:56 The prospectivity of projects like Diane.
    16:50 Dianne project is an underexplored system?
    24:11 The Green Hill prospect?
    26:43 The other project - Osprey?
    34:12 The value of WMC projects.
    36:17 The pedigree of Osprey.
    40:48 What could hamper your project and how are you countering these issues?
    45:21 What are the news flow that investor can expect?
    49:14 Why RRR?
    50:21 Conclusion

    Transitioning to a Tin Mining Company.

    Transitioning to a Tin Mining Company.
    Coffee with Samso Episode 141 is all about the progress to a Feasibility Study and creating a World Class Tin producer
     
    Venture Minerals Limited (ASX:VMS) is starting to build the long path for production and this is a great conversation with Andrew Radonjic, the Managing Director.
     
    In this episode of Coffee with Samso, Andrew share with us the progress and what he sees as the building steps to making Venture Minerals as a World Class Tin and Tungsten producer.
     
    Andrew and I discuss what has been happening and he gives an update on Thor (Julimar look-alike), Kulin, and Golden Grove North. These are what we call the other projects but we know that all these projects have the potential to have a life of their own.
    What I like about Venture Minerals at this stage is that the volatility that has been a common theme with its share price appear to have abated. This is a great time for potential investors to start doing their DYOR.
     
    I urge all interested readers and viewers to reach out to Andrew and satisfy their questions. Patience is the key to looking at the company's future.
     
     
    Let's listen to these chapters:
     
    00:00 Start
    00:20 Introduction
    01:09 Thor Update
    01:43 The Thor JV is now confirmed.
    04:44 Thor could get bigger.
    06:14 Team getting ready for upcoming Feasibility Studies.
    10:26 What's the difference in the study now and in 2012.
    14:18 Is the current resource robust enough?
    19:22 Is the margin better now ? Can the other metals be a credit to the process?
    23:46 What are the potential of non-Tin and non-Tungsten metals?
    30:10 What are the exploration potentials?
    31:35 Could the current Geopolitical Issues can be positive for the Tungsten market?
    37:02 Thoughts on nationalism on metal mining.
    39:53 Is the Green Tin still a possibility?
    45:11 Rehabilitation can be positive for the environment.
    46:46 Other projects.
    49:24 News flow
    51:03 Why the feasibility study should be "easier".
    52:26 Conclusions

    Discovered the VMS System - The Reward for Believing Management - Tempest Minerals Ltd (ASX: TEM)

    Discovered the VMS System - The Reward for Believing Management - Tempest Minerals Ltd (ASX: TEM)
    Coffee with Samso Episode 133 with Don Smith, Managing Director, Tempest Minerals Limited (ASX:TEM)
     
    Tempest Minerals Limited (used to be called Lithium Consolidated Limited) has made many ASX companies watching with envy. The company made the announcement on the 28th March 2022. The 709m drill hole that has come up with massive sulphides cannot be ignored. This is in no doubt a discovery hole.
     
    What is for certain is that this is a Volcanogenic Massive Sulphide (VMS) system. What is yet to be ascertain is in regards to the potential size, the endowment and if this will be an economic system.
     
    According to Don Smith, the Managing Director of Tempest Minerals Limited, this is an exciting time for the company. The discovery is from a location that was never thought of to be productive. Management discovered that the greenstones that hosted the Golden Grove VMS deposit may have diverted to the tenements that the company hold.
     
    The drilling that was announced is prove that this theory is well thought of and could make the difference in creating a new mineralised province. This area has never been pegged and previous explorers have ignore and thought of the place as not mineralised.
     
     
    00:00 Start
    00:20 Introduction
    02:26 Discovery Hole
    02:56 How does the core compare to a typical VMS geology?
    03:45 What does the geology tell you about the potential?
    06:20 Was this a geology drill hole?
    08:24 How much confidence do you draw from what you know now to your initial theory?
    09:31 Any structural offsets?
    10:05 Is depth of mineralisation a concern for you?
    10:53 How will this discovery affect your other projects?
    12:55 Mount Magnet Projects.
    15:43 Where is the focus now?
    16:41 Is this a VMS project?
    17:08 How big is this system?
    17:38 What is the news flow coming for Tempest?
    18:25 Patience is paying off for shareholders. Exploration activities will be speeding up.
    19:11 Don's sales pitch to Investors.
    21:18 Conclusions

    Episode 611: A Conversation with Dan Beck, Co-Founder and COO of Utmost

    Episode 611: A Conversation with Dan Beck, Co-Founder and COO of Utmost

    This week’s Future of Work Exchange podcast, sponsored by PRO Unlimited, features a discussion with Utmost co-founder and COO, Dan Beck. Dan and I chat about the continued growth and impact of the extended workforce, why VMS has to become more progressive, and how the “talent revolution” will shape the workforce for months and years to come.

    #10 Turning Healthcare Rightside Up, Starting with People; Translating Science Into Improved Health

    #10 Turning Healthcare Rightside Up, Starting with People; Translating Science Into Improved Health

    Healthcare is upside down. What can the scientific breakthroughs of COVID-19 vaccines mean for further wellness innovation? Hear from Oscar Franco, MD, as he shares his own journey to wellness, providing insights about barriers to optimal global health, and what it is going to take to create positive health trajectories for consumers and communities. This episode will inspire consumer healthcare companies to continue to support people’s decisions to lead healthier, happier lives through holistic, responsible self-care. A must listen!

    Hosted by:

    John Troup, PhD

    #6 The History of DSHEA and Its Founding Mothers and Fathers

    #6 The History of DSHEA and Its Founding Mothers and Fathers

    Ever wonder how DSHEA became the regulatory framework for the dietary supplements industry? Join pioneers Patricia Knight, Scott Bass, and Loren Israelsen — three of the most influential people who advocated for this legislation in 1994 — as they share stories on how they got it done and why the industry can benefit from its modernization 27 years later.

    Hosted by:

    John Troup, VP of Dietary Supplements, CHPA

    CHPA Chat Trailer

    CHPA Chat Trailer

    How has consumer empowerment, trust, and confidence in personal healthcare products contributed to growth in the self-care aisle? How is policy shaped inside-the-beltway and out in the states? What are CHPA’s regulatory priorities? The role of wellness, prevention, and personal health management is changing; are you ready to dig in with us and have some fun along the way?! Welcome to CHPA Chat, the podcast of The Consumer Healthcare Products Association, where we bring you stories and insights from staff, industry thought leaders, and those who pioneered some of the brands we know and love in ways you’ve never heard before!

    VMS

    VMS

    VMS and OpenVMS Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because understanding the past prepares us to innovate (and sometimes cope with) the future! Today we’re going to talk through the history of VMS.

    Digital Equipment Corporation gave us many things. Once upon a time, I used a DEC Alpha running OpenVMS. The PDP-11 had changed the world, introducing us to a number of modern concepts in computers such as time sharing. The PDP was a minicomputer, smaller and more modern than mainframes. But by 1977 it was time for the next generation and the VAX ushered in the 32-bit era of computers and through the evolutions evolve into the VaXServer, helping to usher in the modern era of client-server architectures. It supported Branch delay slots and suppressed instructions. The VAX adopted virtual memory, privilege modes, and needed an operating system capable of harnessing all the new innovations packed into the VAX-11 and on. That OS would be Virtual Memory System, or VMS. The PDP had an operating system called RSX-11, which had been released in 1972. The architect was Dan Brevik, who had originally called it DEX as a homonym with DEC. But that was trademarked so he and Bob Decker over in marketing wrote down a bunch of acronyms and then found one that wasn’t trademarked. Then they had to reverse engineer a meaning out of the acronym to be Real-Time System Executive, or RSX. But for the VAX they needed more and so Dave Cutler from the RSX team, then in his early 30s, did much of the design work. Dick Hustvedt and Peter Lipman would join him and they would roll up to Roger Gourd, who worked with DECs VP of engineering Gordon Bell to build the environment. The project began as Starlet, named because it was meant to support the Startlet family of processors. A name that still lives on in various files in the operating system. The VMS Operating System would support RISC instructions, support 32-bit virtual address extension, would work with DECnet, would have virtual memory of course, as the name implies. VMS would bring a number of innovations in the world of clustering. VMS would use a modified Julian Day system to keep track of system time, which subtracts the Julian Date from 2,400,000.5. Why? Because it begins on November 17th, 1858. THat’s not why, that the day it starts. Why? Because it’s not Y10,000 compliant only having 4 slots for dates. Wait, that’s not a thing. Anyway, how did VMS come to be? One of the killer apps for the system though, was that DECnet was built on DIGITAL Network Architecture, or DNA. It first showed up in RSX, where you could like two PDPs but you could have 32 nodes by the time VaX showed up and 255 with VMS 2. Suddenly there was a simple way to network these machines, built into the OS. Version 1 was released in 1977 in support of the VAX-11/780. Version 2 would come along in 1980 for the 750 and Version 3 would come in 1982 for the 730. The VAX 8600 would ship in 84 with version 4. And here’s where it gets interesting. The advent of what were originally called microcomputers but are now called personal computers had come in the late 70s and early 80s. By 1984, MicroVMS was released as a port for running on the MicroVAX, Digitals attempt to go down-market. Much as IBM had missed minicomputers initially, Digital had missed the advent of microcomputers though and the platform never took off. Bill Gates would adorn the cover of Time that year. Of course, by 84, Apple had AppleTalk and DOS was ready to plug in as well. Bill Joy moved BSD away from VAX in 1986, after having been with the PDP and then VAX for years, before leaving for Sun. At this point the platform was getting a bit long in the tooth. Intel and Microsoft were just starting to emerge as dominant players in computing and DEC was the number two software company in the world, with a dominant sales team and world class research scientists. They released ULTRIX the same year though, as well as the DECStation with a desktop environment called UW for ULTRIX Workstation. Ultrix was based on BSD 4 and given that most Unixes had been written on PDPs, Bill Joy knew many of the group launched by Bill Munson, Jerry Brenner, Fred Canter and Bill Shannon. Cutler from that OpenVMS team hates Unix. Rather than have a unified approach, the strategy was fragmented. You see a number of times in the history of computing where a company begins to fail not because team members are releasing things that don’t fit within the strategy but because they release things that compete directly with a core product without informing their customers why. Thus bogging down the sales process and subsequent adoption in confusion. This led to brain drain. Cutler ended up going to the Windows NT team and bringing all of his knowledge about security and his sincere midwestern charm to Microsoft, managing the initial development after relations with IBM in the OS/2 world soured. He helped make NT available for the Alpha but also helping make NT dominate the operating system from his old home. Cutler would end up working on XP, Server operating systems, Azure and getting the Xbox to run as a host for Hyper-V . He’s just that rad and his experience goes back to the mid 60s, working on IBM 7044 mainframes. Generational changes in software development, like the move to object oriented programming or micro services, can force a lot of people into new career trajectories. But he was never one of those. That’s the kind of talent you just really, really, really hate to watch leave an organization - someone that even Microsoft name drops in developer conference session to get ooohs and aaahs. And there were a lot of them leaving as DEC shifted into more of a sales and marketing company and less into a product and research company as it had founded to be back when Ken Olsen was at MIT. We saw the same thing happen in other areas of DEC - competing chips coming out of different groups. But still they continued on. And the lack of centralizing resources and innovating quickly and new technical debt being created caused the release of 5 to slip from a 2 year horizon to a 4 year horizon, shipping in 1988 with Easynet, so you could connect 2,000 computers together. Version 6 took 5 years to get out the door in 1993. In a sign of the times, 1991 saw VMS become OpenVMS and would make OpenVMS POSIX compliant. 1992 saw the release of the DEC Alpha and OpenVMS would quickly get support for the RISC processor which OpenVMS would support through the transition of Alpha to Itanium when Intel bought the rights for the Alpha architecture. Version 7 of OpenVMS shipped in 1996 but by then the company was in a serious period of decline and corporate infighting and politics killed them. 1998 came along and they practically bankrupted Compaq by being acquired and then HP swooped in and got both for a steal. Enterprise computing has never been the same. HP made some smart decisions though. They inked a deal with Intel and Alpha would become the HP Itanium and made by Intel. Intel then had a RISC processor and all the IP that goes along with that. Version 8 would not be released until 2003. 7 years without an OS update while the companies were merged and remerged had been too long. Market share had all but disappeared. DECnet would go on to live in the Linux kernel until 2010. Use of the protocol was replaced by TCP/IP much the same way most of the other protocols got replaced. OpenVMS development has now been licensed to VSI and is now run by vmssoftware, which supports many former DEC and HP employees. There are a lot of great, innovative, unique features of OpenVMS. There’s a common language environment, that allows for calling functions easily and independently of various languages. You can basically mix Fortran, C, BASIC, and other languages. It’s kinda’ like my grandmas okra. She said I’d like it but I didn’t. VMS is built much the same way. They built it one piece at a time. To quote Johnny Cash: “The transmission was a fifty three, And the motor turned out to be a seventy three, And when we tried to put in the bolts all the holes were gone.” You can of course install PHP, Ruby, Java, and other more modern languages if you want. And the System Services, Run Time Libraries, and language support make it easy to use whatever works for a task across them pretty equally and provides a number of helpful debugging tools along the way. And beyond debugging, OpenVMS pretty much supports anything you find required by the National Computer Security Center and the DoD. And after giving the middle finger to Intel for decades… As with most operating systems, VMS is finally being ported to the x86 architecture signaling the end of one of the few holdouts to the dominance of the x86 architecture in some ways. The Itatiums have shipped less and less chips every year, so maybe we’re finally at that point. Once OpenVMS has been ported to x86 we may see the final end to the chip line as the last windows versions to support them stopped actually being supported by Microsoft about a month before this recording. The end of an era. I hope Dave Cutler looks back on his time on the VMS project fondly. Sometimes a few decades of crushing an old employer can help heal some old wounds. His contributions to computing are immense, as are those of Digital. And we owe them all a huge thanks for the techniques and lessons learned in the development of VMS in the early days, as with the early days of BSD, the Mac, Windows 1, and others. It all helped build a massive body of knowledge that we continue to iterate off of to this day. I also owe them a thank you for the time I got to spend on my first DEC Alpha. I didn’t get to touch another 64 bit machine for over a decade. And I owe them a thanks for everything I learned using OpenVMS on that machine! And to you, wonderful listers. Thank you for listening. And especially Derek, for reaching out to tell me I should move OpenVMS up in the queue. I guess it goes without saying… I did! Hope you all have a great day!

    NexDefense, 42Crunch, & ExtraHop - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    NexDefense, 42Crunch, & ExtraHop - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    Stackpath released new edge computing VMs, ExtraHop hires former Tenable and HPE leaders to support growth in cyber, Security professionals want to return fire to Venafi, Dragos acquires NexDefense, and 42Crunch unveils a new platform to discover API vulnerabilities and protect them from attacks!

    Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode130

    Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

    Incredibly Noisy - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    Incredibly Noisy - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    This week, in the Enterprise Security News, I am joined by John Strand to discuss how Stackpath released new edge computing VMs, ExtraHop hires former Tenable and HPE leaders to support growth in cyber, Security professionals want to return fire to Venafi, Dragos acquires NexDefense, and 42Crunch unveils a new platform to discover API vulnerabilities and protect them from attacks! In the second segment, we air some pre recorded from RSA Conference 2019 with Endgame, Virsec, and Scythe!

     

    Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode130

    Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

     

    Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly

    Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly

    Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! 

    Incredibly Noisy - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    Incredibly Noisy - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    This week, in the Enterprise Security News, I am joined by John Strand to discuss how Stackpath released new edge computing VMs, ExtraHop hires former Tenable and HPE leaders to support growth in cyber, Security professionals want to return fire to Venafi, Dragos acquires NexDefense, and 42Crunch unveils a new platform to discover API vulnerabilities and protect them from attacks! In the second segment, we air some pre recorded from RSA Conference 2019 with Endgame, Virsec, and Scythe!

     

    Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode130

    Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

     

    Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly

    Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly

     

    NexDefense, 42Crunch, & ExtraHop - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    NexDefense, 42Crunch, & ExtraHop - Enterprise Security Weekly #130

    Stackpath released new edge computing VMs, ExtraHop hires former Tenable and HPE leaders to support growth in cyber, Security professionals want to return fire to Venafi, Dragos acquires NexDefense, and 42Crunch unveils a new platform to discover API vulnerabilities and protect them from attacks!

    Full Show Notes: https://wiki.securityweekly.com/ES_Episode130

    Visit http://securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes!

    Carlos Castro-Gonzalez, Scientist & Founder "To Save 4000 Lives a Year"

    Carlos Castro-Gonzalez, Scientist & Founder "To Save 4000 Lives a Year"

    Accredited Investors, Join Boston's Leading Angels in Our Syndicates: Learn More About Our Syndicates

    Brilliant Spanish postdoc, Carlos Castro-González, goes to MIT’s “Magic Wand” lab, and joins a superb international team to address an important medical problem. Leuko, their startup, now has a device and software that can tell when cancer patients are becoming immuno-compromised. Leuko’s product has the potential of saving 4,000 lives and $1.5 billion every year by cutting in half opportunistic infections associated with chemotherapy.

    Some highlights from this charming conversation with a well-spoken scientist & founder:

    • Carlos Castro-González bio.
    • What Leuko does.
    • How the company came about.
    • How Carlos became an unlikely entrepreneur.
    • MIT’s Martha Gray Lab, often called the “Magic Wand” lab building a new approach to applying technology to real-world medical problems.
    • What the device and software actually do.
    • Potential impact.
    • Who might pay for this product?
    • How much money and time will it take to get the product to market?
    • Licensing the technology from MIT.
    • Team ideally suited to technological task, but created entirely by accident.
    • Have worked well for four years.
    • Four founders have passed up well-paid and safe positions in industry to get this company going.
    • PlenOptika came from the Martha Gray Lab as well and share space with Leuko
    • Commercial input from MIT’s Venture Mentoring Service.
    • Advice to other scientist/founders form a company more than a year before leaving academia to apply for non-dilutive funding for the company. When the funding is granted then separate from the university to avoid conflicts of interest. Heard this from another founder.
    • Carlos advises potential founders to broaden their network to investors and people with commercial experience.
    • Super-connectors.
    • Being coachable and listening to advice.
    • Reporting frequently and succinctly is valuable. Having a narrative thread that ties one report to the previous one.
    • Reports as a way of eliciting help from investors.
    • Process of interviewing physicians took care to ensure candid opinions. Concrete steps to get unguarded responses.

    VMs for Infrastructure or Isolation?

    VMs for Infrastructure or Isolation?

    Show: 36

    Show Overview: Brian and Tyler talk about the role (pros & cons) of VMs in isolation and security, as well as the broader context of security for containerized applications.

    Show Notes:

    Topic 1 - Let’s start with the basics. Can you please tell the audience the one command to run to make all containers secure?

    Topic 2 - This past week (or 2 weeks) has been a good reminder that there are certain patterns that repeat themselves in emerging technologies and open source:  hype (cool demo), binary claims of market dominance and destruction of previous technology (containers vs. VMs), buzzwords of simplicity which go against decades of experience, and then the realities of production environments.

    Topic 3 - Let’s talk about where VMs provide value in a container environment, and realities of VMs that people should be aware of in production and in multi-cloud environments.

    Topic 4 - Let’s talk briefly about a few of the recent announcements in this space (e.g. gVisor, CNV, etc.)

    Feedback?