[DrunkAndRetired.com Podcast] Episode 82 - Tex-Mex, Twitter, Jyte, PGP Boners, and Fuzzy Trust

On the Shore

In this episode, we see what Coté is like after a double Americano. Here’s Twitter, and jyte.

(This episode edited by Coté.)

Tags: , , , , , .

Comments 3

  1. BJames wrote:

    Dudes thanks for the show. It’s both informative and funny. I’ve just started listing again after a couple months of missing the show and you guys are still the shizit (I’m not sure what “shizit” means, but I think it’s what I hear you kids are saying and it’s intended as a compliment). I’m going to try twitter. It sounds cool.
    Have you guys had any experience with .net or C#? or mentioned it on one of you podcasts? If so, let me know.

    Most recently I’ve been doing java development but now I’ve been put on a .net/C# project and I’d love to hear you’re prospective.

    Posted 16 Mar 2007 at 10:49 AM
  2. Cote' wrote:

    I have not used .Net or C#. Charles has though. This dude also knows about .Net/C#. I saw him doing it on OS X!

    Posted 19 Mar 2007 at 10:52 PM
  3. gp6dquva wrote:

    http://4my8.blogspot.com http://081h.blogspot.com

    Posted 20 Apr 2007 at 5:57 PM

Trackbacks & Pingbacks 2

  1. From People Over Process » Blog Archive » Podcast on Twitter, Jyte, and Fuzzy Identity on 16 Feb 2007 at 10:35 AM

    [...] Speaking of the spread of online services like Twitter, those of you who don’t mind “sailor talk” (I don’t keep my own blog “clean” as I do this one) might be interested in this week’s DrunkAndRetired.com podcast. After a large cup of coffee, I found myself in a 30 minute tear about Twitter (both the “basics” and theory of why it got so popular), Jyte, and crowd-sourced identity. [...]

  2. From People Over Process » Blog Archive » Jyte as a Futures Market and Rumor Mill on 19 Feb 2007 at 6:41 PM

    [...] Chip pointed out what should have been obvious from the get go about Jyte: it’s great for a rumors and predictions market. Here I was just thinking that it was a clever way to establish “assertions” (claims) using crowd sourcing instead of just central authorities. [...]

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