#wuf studio
Explore tagged Tumblr posts
Photo
Conclusiones y “The Tipping Point” de Malcolm Gladwell
Durante este semestre aprendimos muchas cosas, tanto por el contenido de las nuevas materias como el contexto nuevo en el que nos encontramos. Particularmente, en esta materia fue muy interesante estudiar cómo, de dónde surgen y hacia dónde van ciertos fenómenos.
Para cerrar todas las lecturas y miradas atravesadas me gustaría recapitular lo visto. A lo largo de mi bitácora se puede ver, por un lado, un hilo de conexión entre las lecturas y los distintos fenómenos como, la percepción que se tiene del cuerpo, el género y la sociedad; y cómo estas evolucionaron. Por otro lado, vincule otras lecturas con la evolución del diseño y la percepción que se tiene del mismo.
Con respecto a la evolución y percepción del diseño, se puede concluir que, luego de leer los textos y hacer el reporte de tendencias grupal, el diseño es algo que se transforma constantemente, tanto por contexto, como lugar y tiempo, pero que también transforma su contexto, lugar y tiempo. Es algo definido que cambia su definición mil veces.
El diseño híbrido surgió de diversos contextos y perfiles, desde Bauhaus y Walter Gropius hasta IDEÓ y Tim Brown, o Neri Oxman, pero siempre tuvo esta mirada horizontal de solucionar y buscar problemáticas. En un futuro, gracias a las problemáticas actuales y devinientes, la carrera de “diseño híbrido” será mucho más solicitada y por ende masificada. Esto explicado, sucede tal como afirma Gladwell, “ una, contagió; dos, (..) pequeñas causas pueden tener grandes efectos; y tres, ese cambio no ocurre gradualmente sino en un momento dramático”.
El diseño es todo y está en todas partes, como afirma Bruce Mau ``design is at the heart of the way we live and work. Design is not fancy expensive things. Design is what makes an airplane fly and a cell phone work. Design is how we succeed”. Lo que lleva a mis otras miradas en la bitácora, el diseño atraviesa nuestra sociedad, es capaz de intervenir en la manera que pensamos y reaccionamos.
Como plantea Jhonson, existen muchos patrones que conectan diversos sistemas. En la sociedad capitalista encontramos que surgió un sistema opresor para hombres y mujeres, unido por el patrón de adoctrinamiento reflejado en la religión, lenguaje y belleza. Pero, los sistemas, hoy en día, están inclinándose a funcionar como un moho de fango, sin una idea líder que rige a los demás. Con un pensamiento más horizontal.
Como bien visto en el análisis Velben, buscamos objetivizar y diferenciar todo a nuestro alrededor. A medida que evolucionamos como sociedad, la mujer fue cada vez más objetivizada teniendo que cumplir con ciertos estándares vistos en el texto de Bourdieu. No solo la mujer, pero los hombres, tenían que cumplir con ciertos estándares de fuerza, vestimenta y modales dependiendo de cómo querían ser vistos en la sociedad.
Finalmente, si bien estos estándares opresores siguen presentes en nuestra sociedad están siendo transformados por esta tendencia vista en Boris Groys a buscar la esencia en las cosas. Para llegar a estar más cerca de los modelos horizontales, con ideas de géneros fluidos, rompiendo con estereotipos de sexos y una única definición de belleza, entre otros. Estamos rediseñando la forma de nuestra sociedad, economía y cultura, sumado con los pensamientos e ideologías que la representan.
3 notes
·
View notes
Text
A-T-2 301 Disco Rap Pt.2
These are disco rap tracks over original material
Cold Crush Brothers - Weekend. The debut studio single from the legendary Cold Crush Brothers. They're probably better known for their live performances, they would break outside New York (for me anyway) when the movie Wild Style is released in 1983. Here's an article on Cold Crush https://hiphopgoldenage.com/artists/cold-crush-brothers/
youtube
South Bronx - The Bottom Line. Follow up to The Big Throwdown, like Brother D's How Do You Make The Black Nation Rise? they were both very early conscious rap records, released in 1980. The Bottom Line is also "conscious rap", it was written by Bill Moore
youtube
Wuf Ticket - Ya Mama is their debut single released on Prelude Records. Wuf Ticket were James Mason, Mustafa Ahmed, Earl McField, and Karin Wolf. Mason is best known for his 1977 rare groove brilliance Sweet Power Your Embrace and the single I Want Your Love backed by proto-house record Nightgruv which was reissued by Rush Hour in 2012. Percussionist Mustafa Ahmed played on various Mason releases and frequently appears on Arthur Russel/Peter Zummo/Peter Gordon projects. Keyboardist and producer of Ya Mama, Jack Malken had been in rock group Thirty Days Out and produced Bette Midler. Ya Mama is a track with a moral, it's like Sick Rick advises against 'being a dumb dummy and disrespecting your mummy' in Hey Young World
youtube
#1982#cold crush brothers#wuf ticket#south bronx#james mason#mike serrette#hip hop#disco rap#conscious#new york#usa#80s music
1 note
·
View note
Text
https://www.change.org/p/bethesda-game-studios-immortalize-shirley-curry-as-an-npc-unique-weapon-or-location-in-the-elder-scrolls-vi?recruiter=12316794&utm_source=share_petition&utm_medium=copylink&utm_campaign=psf_combo_share_initial.pacific_abi_select_all_contacts.select_all.pacific_email_copy_en_gb_4.v1.pacific_email_copy_en_us_3.control.pacific_email_copy_en_us_5.v1.pacific_post_sap_share_gmail_abi.control.lightning_2primary_share_options_more.control
Wuf normally does not post stuff like this but this sweet little old lady is probably one of the biggest fans of Elder Scrolls out there and for many including wuf she has brought joy in her youtube lets plays of the Elder Scrolls series. Sadly from the way it looks she may not be around for the next game or be unable to play it due to her age and slowly declining fine motor skills. So while yes wuf understands there are far more pressing matters out there perhaps could add to the petition to see if Bethesda can do this and add this wonderful elder to their next Elder Scrolls game.
1 note
·
View note
Text
Sooo I was tagged by @aqua-lance to do this thing,, wild
Nicknames: Cat, Sonny, Meme, literally anything
Star Sign: Leoo
Gender: cis Fem
MBTI Type: hold on while i retake this quiz...ENFP-T
Height: 5′7 ish
Time: 7:01 pm?? wow i have no concept of time
Birthday: August 1
Favorite Band: BTS ?? does that count and Gorillaz
Favorite Solo Artists: Bruno Mars, Dodie Clark,
Song Stuck in my Head: Intertwined by Dodie Clark and Flamingo by Kero Kero Bonito
Last Movie I Watched: Tales of Earthsea (its a Studio Ghibli film really good in my opinion)
Last Show I Watched:Last show i watched was probably Skin Wars but the new season of My Little Witch Academia just came out so,,,,
Other Blogs: Shhh no one needs to know about my other trash blogs
When I Created my Blog: i think 2015?? I’m not sure though i think i was first a homestuck blog *chills*
What I Post About: Voltron, Castlevania, Miraculous Ladybug, My Hero Academia, relatable things
Last Thing I Googled: I think it was a word in french or something to do with my online class
Following: alot
Followers: many
Favorite Color: Blue, Yellow, Green,?? who knows
Average Hours of Sleep: anywhere between 8-5 depends if i want to hate myself when I wake up
Lucky Number: 6
Instruments: electric guitar, but i want to try piano?? or Ukulele
What I’m Wearing: A theater shirt and no pants,, its hot don’t judge me
How Many Blankets: a comforter and a sheet but pillows??? 700000000
Dream Jobs: I want to be in a Broadway show that sounds fun or like someone that gets paid for petting animals
Dream Trip: anywhere?? I really want to go to Hawaii with friends or to France
Favorite Food: askdfjafhapoufh uh most food
Nationality: as white as they come
Time to tag: @crunchbox7 @lia-goes-wuf @sounds-like-a-you-problem @thedockmaster and everyone else bc why not
6 notes
·
View notes
Photo
Multicultural . Talent : @moby @sitihasreena11 @asyraffarhanadi @ernieshaheerah Studio Setup by : @syedfaeez @arifuddinhashim . #teamwork #photography #photographer #multicultural #productionlife #capture #potrait #photog #photos #photoshoot #studio #workinglife #wuf #photographerlife
#workinglife#photographer#wuf#photog#teamwork#photos#productionlife#photoshoot#photography#capture#photographerlife#potrait#multicultural#studio
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Text
Is Denver a New Kind of Tech Town? Positively.
Denver has long been the playground of craft brewers and the outdoorsy types, but thanks to a booming economy, growing metro area, and intelligent workforce, it’s now also a technology hotspot. Yet unlike Silicon Valley with its cut-throat reputation, Denver is a *different* kind of tech town: one that’s as supportive as it is smart, an idea as refreshing as the Rocky Mountain air.
It’s no secret that Denver’s a peak business destination. U.S. News and World Report named it a top place to live in 2018 based on a healthy job market, cost of living, and perception as a desirable place to live, and Forbes includes Denver among the nation’s best cities for business and careers. What’s new is the influx of tech over the past decade in the form of startups, incubators, and innovative companies — and the welcoming community that greets them. “Anyone’s welcome here, as long as they remember to be kind, give back, and respect our nature,” says Lizelle van Vuuren, founder of celebrated learning platform Women Who Startup.
Like other technology hotspots, Metro Denver has become a connected sprawl, drawing in places like Boulder, Centennial, and Louisville. And the area is booming; according to the Denver Chamber of Commerce, the region added about 39,000 jobs in 2017 and employment growth was 1.2 percentage points higher than the national average.
The City of Startups
Many of those jobs have been created by startups. The Denver Business Journal reports ventured capitalists invested a record $1.1 billion in Colorado startups in 2017. But the VCs have had plenty to choose from over the years; the original Startup Week took place in Boulder in 2007. (It was so successful that the founding company, Boulder’s Techstars, is now running Startup Weeks globally.) What makes the area so great for startups? “Greater Denver has everything an entrepreneur might need, most importantly population density and free thinkers,” says Brad Feld, Co-Founder of Techstars and Managing Director at Foundry Group. “You’ve got all of the resources here, but none of the ego.”
And then there’s the “other” startup week — Denver Startup Week — an unrelated conference which has become the country’s largest free entrepreneurial event; this year’s event boasts 20,000 attendees and 376 sessions (chosen from 1200 submitted). This one is unique in that the entire thing is run by a community of passionate volunteers who manage the agenda, content, and more. Founders Ben Deda and Erik Mitisek — both University of Denver alums — drew on the area’s supportive nature in creating the event: “Whether you’re talking sports, business, skiing, or technology, Denver is such a supportive place. I’ve always been taken by the idea of collective community leadership, and this is a perfect example of what can happen when a community collaborates to support all walks of entrepreneurs,” says Mitisek.
Leading the Internet of Things
Thanks to a great deal of those successful startups, Denver is now a recognized leader in the internet of things (IoT), or the industry building devices enabled with electronics, software, and connectivity. Denver is home to Rachio, which added the internet to sprinkler systems, and Remote Lock, which added the internet to door locks. Then there’s Boulder’s Chui, which created the smart doorbell, and Wuf, which makes smart dog collars, along with many more.
Combining Denver’s love of the outdoors with its penchant for IoT is Louisville-based Clean Energy Collective (CEC), which is pioneering environmental IoT via intelligent software and community-shared clean energy facilities. “Living in such a beautiful area, you can’t help but care about the environment and how to preserve it. It’s in our DNA,” says Paul Spencer, Founder and CEO of CEC. “That’s why we’re taking solar energy mainstream.”
Who’s helping all these companies get started? For many of them it’s Boomtown Accelerator, which created the area’s first IoT lab, complete with design and software work stations and equipment like 3D printers and scanners, plus a library of every available IoT device — tablets, smart thermostats, lightbulb, and appliances — so developers can test their devices with existing IoT objects.
If You Build It, They Will Come
In addition to IoT, Denver is now home to a number of other subsets — like secondary tech offices and tech transplants — all seeking to bask in the all-for-one-and-one-for-all mentality. Most notably there’s tech giant Salesforce, which has an office in Louisville. “We love the opportunities the Denver area affords,” says Salesforce SVP Marie Rosecrans. “Louisville is a great place to be thanks to reasonable real estate costs and high quality of life, but really the whole area jives with our company and values.”
And then there’s transplant Guild Education, which helps large employers offer college education benefits and tuition reimbursement as an employee work perk. The female-founded company began in San Francisco, but migrated to Denver thanks to a lower cost of living and a supportive community. “Denver fits our model, our mission, and our people,” says Guild CEO and Co-Founder Rachel Carlson. “We believe it’s the best place to build a mission-driven, high growth company, both because of the amazing people who live here and the city itself.”
Collaboration Is Contagious
The collaborative nature of the city is inspiring. Take a group of entrepreneurs and add a little kumbaya, and you get the Downtown Denver Partnership, a collaborative city-building organization that ensures all of Downtown Denver’s stakeholders — businesses, employees, residents, and visitors — are connected. Their vision of togetherness projects Denver as one of the most economically powerful center cities in the country, and by all accounts, they’re making it happen.
And then there’s Galvanize, a Denver-based tech education business that combines classroom space with co-working areas and community-building events for startups. Galvanize has 8 offices nationwide, but keeps Denver as it’s flagship area thanks to the cohesive community. Case in point: This month Galvanize is teaming up with Salesforce to host a Business Growth conference in Denver on June 14; anyone curious about using technology to connect systems and serve customers can attend for free.
Wondering where AI fits into all this helpfulness? Here’s a company that combines both: Iterate.ai is a platform that connects executives with entrepreneurs through an AI-based search engine matching enterprise challenges with startup success stories. “Our team is based both the Silicon Valley and Denver. We were drawn to Denver thanks to its easy-going lifestyle yet thriving business community, particularly when it comes to IoT,” said Iterate Studio Co-founder and Chief Digital Officer Brian Sathianathan.
A New Kind of Tech Town
Maybe it’s the entrepreneurial spirit or maybe it’s that Rocky Mountain air, but great things are happening in Denver. It’s positively a new kind of tech town — one that’s collaborative, friendly, and booming with innovation.
https://ift.tt/2HzXY3C
0 notes
Photo
Thank you Seattle for the good times and amazing happenings! I am looking forward to coming back soon.Thank you Andy for Letting me do my thing! #henrylewistattoo #reaper #skull #blackclawlife #reapinontheweekend #wuf #wolf #neotraditionaltattoo (at Artcore Tattoo Studios)
0 notes
Text
2017
Prince Albert • Brighton • w Pom Poko for Love Thy Neighbour • 18/9/17
Cavern Club • Exeter • 23/9/17
Mono • Falmouth • 24/9/17
The Nines • London • w/Good Guy Clarence & Mike Clark for Parallel Lines • 26/9/17
Hyde Park Book Club • Leeds • 27/9/17
AATMA • Manchester • 28/9/17
Little Buildings • Newcastle • 29/9/17
Latest Music Bar • Brighton • w/Porridge radio for Brighton Noise • 30/9/17
Pub Le Bacchus • Paris • 25/10/17
Le Pop In • Paris • 26/10/17
Le Baraka • Clermont • 27/10/17
Le Lapin Blanc • Reding • 28/10/17
Noch Besser Leben • Leipzig • 31/10/17
Fake Empire • Hanover • 1/11/17
The Vinyl Frontier • Eastbourne • 4/11/17
Art Is Hard Birthday Party, Bristol •w/Happyness/GirlRay • 27/8/17
ArcTanGent Festival, Bristol • 15/8/17
LANGALAND Festival, Newton Abbot • 5/8/17
The Joker, Brighton • w/ Blush for BE NOTHING • 1/8/17
YNOT Festival, Derby • 30/7/17
3 Wheel Drive Festival, Basingstoke • 29/7/17
Leopallooza Festival, Cornwall • 28/7/17
The Dover Castle Street Party, Brighton • 22/7/17
Private Party, Wales • 8/7/17
2000trees Festival, Withington • 7/7/17
The Brunswick, Brighton • w/Gallivan & LEC • 6/7/17
St Mary’s Church for Alt Escape, Brighton • Brighton’s Finest Showcase • 20/5/17
The Hub for Alt Escape, Brighton • 20/5/17
Sticky Mike’s, Brighton • Bitch Craft • 18/5/17
The Haunt, Brighton • One Inch Badge • 17/5/17
Shacklewell Arms, London • Be Nothing • 10/5/17
The Prince Albert, Brighton • w/ Lafayette Regency, Mind Of A Lion • 18/4/17
The Green Door Store, Brighton • For Brighton Noise • 30/3/2017
Roundhouse, London • w/ GILLBANKS for Roundhouse Rising • 25/3/17
Le Pop In, Paris, France • w/ God Save Clermont • 23/3/17
La Regency, Clermont Ferand, France • w/ God Save Clermont • 22/3/17
Note Bene, Clermont Ferand, France • w/ God Save Clermont • 21/3/17
The Finsbury, London • w/ FOURS for Lost in the Manor • 17/3/17
The Hope & Ruin, Brighton • w/ Moonoversun, Lingua Nada for Sugar Free Promo • 9/3/17
The Montague Arms, London • w/ GILLBANKS, Pictures of Belgrade • 21/2/17
The Prince Albert, Brighton • w/ GILLBANKS, Pictures of Belgrade • 20/2/17
The Old Blue Last, London • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour/ Leach Presents • 7/2/17
The Green Door Store, Brighton • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour/ Brighton Noise • 4/2/17
Unit 21, Totnes • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 3/2/17
Woodlane Social, Falmouth • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 2/2/17
Stag & Hounds, Bristol • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 31/1/17
Maguire’s Pizza Bar, Liverpool • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 30/1/17
Canary Wharf, Leeds • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 28/1/17
Cookie Jar, Leicester • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 26/1/17
Tooting Tram & Social, London • For Penelope Isles’ Winter Tour • 25/1/17
2016
Sticky Mike’s Frog Bar, Brighton • w/ Skinny Girl Diet for WUF • 10/12/16
Ministry Of Startups, London • For Sofar Sounds, London • 6/12/16
The Victoria, London • w/ Few bits, Dama Scout for ROAR • 7/12/16
The Lock Tavern, London • For Black Cat White Cat Promotions • 3/11/16
The Plant Room, Brighton • 3/11/16
The Old Blue Last, London • w/ Holy Oysters • 25/10/16
The Green Door Store, Brighton w/ GILLBANKS, Mind Of A Lion for Wavey Head • 24/10/16
Patterns, Brighton • w/ Twin Peaks, Happyness for BE NOTHING Promotions • 20/10/16
Chats Palace, London • w/ Fear of Men for Parallel Lines • 14/10/16
Together The People Festival, Brighton w/ Brian Wilson (The Beach Boys), Suede • 3/9/16
The Montague Arms, London w/ Jerkurb • 28/8/16
Knee Deep Festival, Cornwall • w/ Whitney, Dreamwife, Mothers • 26/8/2016
Y NOT Festival, Derby w/ Noel Gallagher’s High Flying Birds, Editors • 29/7/16
Paddle Round The Pier, Brighton • 3/7/16
The Victoria, London • w/ Bison Bonuses for Famous Friends Records • 30/6/16
Beach Dreams Festival, Shoreham • 25/6/16
Brighton Dome, Brighton • For Spectrum Promotions & Resigned Records • 18/6/16
The Joker, Brighton • w/ Martha Gunn • 16/6/16
The Nines, London • w/ GILLBANKS, Mellah • 9/6/2016
WILD LIFE Festival, Brighton w/ Disclosure, Rudimental • 5/6/2016
Fiddler’s Elbow, Brighton • For Alternative Escape • 20/5/2016
North Laine Brewery, Brighton w/ Mind Of A Lion for Alternative Escape • 19/5/2016
The Hope & Ruin, Brighton • w/ King Kat • 9/5/2016
The Green Door Store, Brighton • w/ Sulky Boy for GDS presents • 3/5/16
The Hope & Ruin, Brighton • w/ Mind of A Lion • 16/4/16
Patterns, Brighton • w/ Isles for Eyes & Ears • 14/416
Marwood Cafe, Brighton • For Brighton’s local Record Store Day • 11/4/16
The Victoria, London • w/ The Black Tambourines for Art Is Hard label mates • 12/3/16
The Hope & Ruin, Brighton • w/ The Rocking Horse Club • 8/3/16
Sebright Arms, London • w/ Promise & The Monster for Parallel Lines • 7/3/16
Space 37, Falmouth • w/ Oscar Lewis • 20/2/16
The Hope & Ruin, Brighton • w/ The Rocking Horse Club • 19/2/16
The Prince Albert, Brighton • w/ Air Waves for Melting Vinyl • 31/1/2016
Tooting Tram & Social, London • w/ M.A.BEAT • 19/1/2016
Zigfrid Von Underbelly, London • w/ Sarah Tonin • 15/1/2016
BBC Studio, Brighton • w/ BBC Introducing • 9/1/16
The Green Door Store, Brighton • w/ Atlas Wynd for GDS presents • 6/1/16
2015
Maggie Mae’s, Brighton w/ Cosmic Flo • 14/12/15
Beer Wolf Books, Falmouth • w/ The Hipshakes for Wax Music • 4/12/15
The Dover Castle, Brighton • w/ Pecho • 3/12/15
Four Quarters, London • w/ GILLBANKS • 27/11/15
The Green Door Store, Brighton • w/ Meet The Sloths Promo • 25/11/15
The Joker, Brighton • w/ Narjiday • 24/11/15
Bleach, Brighton • w/ Atlas Wynd • 19/11/15
The Prince Albert, Brighton • w/ Lost Dawn • 10/11/15
The Prince Albert, Brighton • w/ Gallivan • 23/10/15
Basement Bar, Brighton • w/ Kathryn Joseph • 17/9/15
0 notes