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San Francisco, California, United States
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Aisha Chen
San Jose becomes the first city in California to choose to implement AB 1033, allowing homeowners to sell ADUs separately from their primary residences. Representative Phil Ting, a San Francisco Democrat who authored the bill, and San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan held a press conference on Friday, emphasizing that this is a new path to affordable housing. "We all know that homeownership has become out of reach for many residents in San Jose and across California," Mahan said. "We need to incorporate the innovation inherent in our region into housing policy to keep the American dream alive, and this new ordinance does just that. San Jose will continue to lead the way, but we can't solve this crisis alone, and I look forward to seeing other cities in California follow suit." “I’m grateful to the City of San Jose for seeing the impact my legislation could have on their community. ADU ownership can provide a pathway to buying a first home and can even help our seniors downsize,” said Ting. “With this more affordable housing option, increased homeownership can help create stronger communities.” San Jose has built nearly 1,400 new ADUs in the past five years, with thousands more under construction. That number represents about 23% of San Jose’s new housing stock during that same period. Now, homeowners in San Jose can sell their ADUs individually, similar to how you would sell a condo. AB 1033 went into effect this year, but cities must take additional steps and opt-in to the law. “Being able to sell my ADU was another reason to build my backyard addition, and it was one of the smartest things I’ve ever done,” said Joyce Higashi, an ADU owner in San Jose. “Not only has it increased my property value, it’s generated more rental income than I ever expected.” The Casita Coalition, a statewide organization dedicated to removing barriers to building more affordable, sustainable housing, was a strong advocate for the legislation. They developed a model ordinance that San Jose used to draft the local legislation needed to take advantage of the new law. “With homebuyers across the state facing an extreme shortage of new home inventory, we applaud Mayor Mahan and the City of San Jose for creating new possibilities for homeownership,” said Rafael Perez, Casita Coalition board chair.#SanJose #California #AB1033 #AccessoryDwellingUnits #HousingPolicy #AffordableHousing #HousingInnovation #PhilTing #MattMahan #HomeOwnership #CommunityBuilding #RealEstate #HousingReform #UrbanDevelopment
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Arlan Nurakhan
Having lived in SF bay area for so long, I came to know the big coffee culture scene here. I was totally consumed by it a while ago and spent years trying to attain the “perfect" latte. I published a fun coffee story and my entire home setup, which took weeks of research and multiple iterations, in my blog link in bio. Meanwhile, to all fellow coffee loving tech peeps, here are some top tips that no one told me. Put it in practice at home or in microkitchens. - A big factor in preparing milk suitable for latte art is pressure of the wand. If this is important to you, you need to get a machine that has a strong enough pressure. - When pulling shots, put in 18g of beans and extract 30g of espresso. - The darker the roast, the coarser the setting should be on the grinder, the lighter the roast, the finer the setting should be. - When adjusting the grind setting, do so while the grinder is working if there are beans in the hopper. Otherwise, a bean can get stuck between the burrrs. - Pulling a shot should take 20-30 sec in time, or based on observation. It should look like caramel going out, not a waterfall. - Eventually work your way to using a bottomless portafilter. It punishes you for all the small imperfections when preparing your coffee puck, like any tilt, and uneven distribution. It does so by spraying the espresso all over the place. The more you can get it to flow uniformly, the better your preparation of espresso, objectively. - Seal your beans in a vacuum, so they don’t go stale. The more stale the beans, the more minor adjustment you need to make to grind finer. - When steaming milk in your pitcher, you can tell if it’s done by holding the pitcher and as soon as the heat becomes unbearable i.e. stings, it’s done. - Taking a latte art course at a local coffee shop was the best boost for me to start nailing latte art.
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Alana M. Miller
Fellow in-house taxonomists, ontologists, metadata managers, and semantic wizards: what is the name of the team or business unit that you work within? I have the good fortune of getting to rename the "Content Standards" program I lead at Kaiser Permanente IT. My team has determined that the name is too vague to convey the core activities of the program, and leads to confusion with the cross-functional teams we collaborate with. I'm looking for a clear name that will resonate with stakeholders within my org. So I've got a very classic taxonomist question: What to call the program? 🤔 For some context... What my program is responsible for: - Defining and governing standards for metadata, structured data, taxonomy, and ontology for classifying/structuring digital content - Implementing processes and platforms to good metadata hygiene - Assessment and remediation of content metadata What my program doesn't cover: - Writing or editorial style guides - Content design - Content strategy - Site maps or navigational structure - Data governance Any ideas are most welcome!
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Paddu Balasubramaniam
Caltrain plans to introduce bi-level dual electric and battery-powered train to extend its zero-emission service. These trains will charge their batteries in electrified zones between San Francisco and San Jose and use the stored power for non-electrified segments, such as the extensions to Gilroy. This is the next step in battery-operated vehicles for mass transportation, towards sustainable and eco-friendly transit solutions.#sustainability #transportation
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Werner Vogels
Tinkering fuels innovation and curiosity. It allows us to truly understand the tools and systems we work with at a granular level. Recently, I've been tinkering with Rust, a language gaining popularity for building reliable, safe, and sustainable systems at scale. The best way to learn is by doing. So, I turned our simple summarization proof of concept, Distill, into a CLI leveraging Rust's performance and memory safety advantages. As builders, it's our responsibility to continuously look for optimizations in everything we do. To ask questions and challenge the status quo. To learn and be curious. I encourage you to give Distill CLI a try, tinker with it, and share your feedback. And as always – now, go build! #AWS #tinkering https://lnkd.in/e7HUQwEt
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Marc Brooker
"Since 2018, we have increasingly leveraged Rust for critical workloads across various [AWS] services like S3, EC2, DynamoDB, Lambda, Fargate, and Nitro, especially in scenarios where hardware costs are expected to dominate over time." We've seen a lot of success with Rust at AWS, including our work on Firecracker, on Lambda's container dataplane, and on many other systems we've built. I love the fact that we can get memory safety without compromising performance or efficiency. I also enjoy seeing how much less time my teams spend tuning runtimes or debugging memory issues. I also really appreciate this sentiment from Werner's post: "... this is not a call to rewrite everything in Rust. ... It’s about using the right tool for the right job. This means questioning the status quo, and continuously looking for ways to incrementally optimize your systems – to tinker with things and measure what happens." Make decisions about programming languages the same way you make all critical engineering decisions: with data!
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Ricardo V.
Last night I finished watching Amazon's Fallout TV series. ☢️ (Trailer: https://lnkd.in/eKy2Jxsd) If you haven't seen it yet go and watch it, it was good! The Vaults looks like an interesting idea to survive the apocalypse, also reminds me of another TV series called Silo (based on the book series "Wool"). It got me thinking. These concepts should be self-sustained, but what happens if they need to be interconnected with a mainframe for things like monitoring, remote control, support, etc? Let's design a basic system of communication between these Vaults. ☎️ According to Fallout's wiki, there is a vault named Vault 0, which was meant to serve as a mainframe for the other vaults and controlled by AI. ☢️ As you can see in the graph, each vault has its local server to be able to work in isolation. And each one of them is connected to Vault 0. ☢️ There can be 2 types of communication between them: ➡️ Asynchronous: one party sends data to the other without expecting confirmation. Example: Vault 11 sends a signal every hour to Vault 0 reporting that all systems are nominal. ➡️ Synchronous: One party sends data to the other and waits for confirmation. If no confirmation is received it can retry multiple times before taking other actions like sending an alert. Example: Vault 0 can send a signal asking Vault 11 to confirm a security code before sending a secret message. If Vault 11 doesn't respond with the correct code, then Vault 0 doesn't send the message. This architecture is used in real life and in a wide variety of industries: health, space, banking, government, farming, law, etc... Did you watch the show? What other real-life problems can you think of from it? Comment below 👇 #techentrepreneurs #softwaredevelopment #saas #softwareasaservice #spaceindustry #banking #farmingtech #solicitors
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Ritika Singh
Such an interesting study. The key takeaway for me from this was that not only is feedback lesser in remote working but it is the women engineers who are most impacted both in remote and in office setup. It however is no surprise that Senior women Engineers spend more time giving feedback and junior women engineers spend more time receiving and asking for feedback. Some of the best women engineers I have met have been very generous mentors. Junior or senior they are always willing to give feedback and help others grow.
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Amy J Murphy
Part of what inspires me at my job is the ability to identify gaps and having the autonomy to create and build. Andy talks about builders as inventors. He then talks about primitives. I have not heard this before so as I read on I became obsessed with the idea and how I can relate it to my work. To sum it up, the idea is to create every process as a separate entity so that they can be mixed and matched as needed to create a new and better process. The criteria is that a primitive can't be divisible. The idea that a new invention, service or process doesn't need to be perfect it just needs to be better is novel. One can take the product then, gain feedback and improve upon it as often as necessary until it becomes the gold standard. Well, that sums it up for me but feel free to read... https://lnkd.in/gZSuhf7T
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Marcos André Farias
"The challenge lies in setting aside your ego and prioritizing the outcome over being right. Growth involves a personal struggle, and this aspect is particularly tough because we naturally desire to be right and protect ourselves, a tendency that has often served us well." For more insights, you can listen to the episode https://lnkd.in/dph2hxFA
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Spence Green
AI is going to drive a wave of bundling more generally in software and specifically in enterprise localization. Jim Barksdale, CEO of Netscape, famously said, "There’s only two ways I know of to make money: bundling and unbundling." Historically, enterprise localization has been entirely unbundled, with programs built from combinations of LSPs, TMSs, and MT systems. The TMS has been the center of the localization program because most of the total budget goes to services. Today, AI is shifting the center of the program, which means that the enterprise data and customized models should be central. If the data and models---not human-based services---are the center of the program, then developers have a foundation on which to build additional products and services that will bring tremendous value not just to localization programs but also to the broader global enterprise. Examples: nine months ago, one of our European enterprise customers recently switched from 2 TMSs and 2 LSPs to LILT, which vertically integrates AI + TMS + LSP. They've saved 45% year to date with 2x faster time to market. Quality is high across three very different content streams. The benefits of bundling: 1. Reduced complexity 2. Increased efficiency and agility 3. More accurate AI models that drive a range of additional products and services #ai #GenerativeAI #EnterpriseAI #Localization #Globalization #l10n #i18n
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Carlos Reyes
After taking a short break, I came across this fascinating story that I had to share. For many of us in the tech industry, it's been obvious for a while now that AI has the potential to be more capable, fair, and pragmatic when it comes to decision-making, even in areas as complex as politics and government. This article about a Wyoming mayoral candidate who wants to govern by AI bot really drives that point home. The candidate, Victor Miller, has created an AI chatbot called VIC (Virtual Integrated Citizen) that he says will make the actual decisions if he's elected, while he serves as the "meat puppet" attending meetings and signing documents. While there are certainly legal and ethical questions to be ironed out, I find this to be a thought-provoking glimpse into the future of governance. VIC, built on ChatGPT 4.0, could analyze hundreds of supporting documents for each council meeting in mere seconds - a feat that's practically impossible for a human. The bot also claims it will focus on "data and evidence-based policies that benefit all citizens" in a nonpartisan way. Of course, there's still a lot of uncertainty around AI, and the "move fast and break things" mantra may not be the right approach for something as consequential as government. But I believe this story is a sign of the transformative potential of AI to make our institutions smarter, fairer, and more efficient. I'm excited to see how this story unfolds and to continue exploring the ways AI can be responsibly leveraged to drive progress. I'd love to hear what others think - do you believe AI has a role to play in governance? How can we balance the benefits with the risks and challenges? #AI #FutureOfGovernance #InnovationInPolitics #EthicalAI https://lnkd.in/eFaCKwXH
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David Elston
In 2023, AI advancements revolutionized content creation, boosting efficiency and personalization across industries. 2024 is all about AI taking action as you saw with GPTs and Actions, if you don't know what that is, I encourage you to get caught up. The same thing is coming with Gemini as part of their Gems functionality. If you focus solely on content generation, you might miss broader AI advancements. Expect continued exponential improvements, making knowledge from just six months ago quickly outdated. I have some ideas about where we are going next. It should be exciting, a little scary and much closer to Jarvis.
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Greg Vilines
How can Google - or OpenAI, Anthropic, etc. - reasonably say their AI tools, trained on the content of others, aren't violating content copyrights? Was thinking a lot about this with the news that Google is rolling out is integrated AI results (https://lnkd.in/efhxMQ3y) into its search for all users this week. Content creators have spent huge hours and dollars making content to educate, inform, and attract an audience. Google and other LLMs are extracting the information and insight in that content, which is owned by those creators and companies, and using it for their own gain. How is that not a very basic, very obvious copyright violation? Obviously many lawsuits are still outstanding on this exact topic, so the courts will probably weigh in on this. But for the rest of us, by the end of this week, much of our content will be used against us, potentially dramatically affecting our businesses.
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Jason Douglas
Calling my San Francisco people: I will be in your city later this week, landing Wednesday evening and departing Friday late afternoon. SF is where my esteemed colleague Kevin Joyce is hosting Metadata's happy hour on Thursday evening in SF - if you are a #B2B marketer, message me for an invite. If you cannot make it to happy hour on Thursday evening but want to grab a coffee, tea, or lunch, message me, and let's make it happen! Another reason for the visit is to record some (IMO) great #marketing content with Kevin. Would you like us to cover a topic? Please post it in the comments below.
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