Hi, so I'm here outside, um, the wonder con convention.
Wonder…wonder woman con…Where am I at?
I don't even know.
I am here at the Long Beach Convention Center in Long Beach for the women wonder tech conference.
I wanna make sure that that joke that not only funny to me, but resonates with other
people and so, it's pretty simple, you can just punch your grandma and you'll go viral.
Don't do that.
Don't do that, but you could because that's like, shock, and shock goes viral.
But then if you want impact, um, plus relatability, it would be about making a piece of content,
whatever you're making—a video, um, you know a piece of work or art—that people
can feel, that they relate to.
And that they want to share with someone else.
And, you can't grow an audience if you just punch your grandma once, like, that video
on its own will go viral, and we all know that, but people equate Buzzfeed with vitality,
but what we make is shareable content, um, that's the most important metric in our
company is; when someone shares something on their social feed, what are they going
to say?
Are they going to say, that's so me, or are they going to say, we should make this
together.
So to making it a point, to let the stories come from a real place, uh, it
shares better and resonates better because it's honest and its real, and people gravitate
towards that.
And you can feel empowered by laughing and joking with something that you're supposed
to feel ashamed about, you know?
It was a really smart choice.
Thank you.
(laughing) And thanks for um, doing it, also what you do with your blood.
Yeah, it was fun.
Yeah, Jen and I are period sisters, we've now done a few period videos together.
We cycle together.
Uh, there's just not a ton of women you can think of that are bald by choice or bald because
of reasons beyond their control, but that are also seen out there.
So I was like, even though this was not like an actual, like a real experience that I've had,
I wanna sorta of want to highlight those women.
I read this, uh, article, on evaluating where you get your information.
So if you just took a look at your social media feeds and you, you know, evaluate where those
voices are coming from—are they coming from a very homogeneous group or are you getting
a mix of perspectives?
And it's really interesting to see when you hear the voices of different people, or different
perspectives, through just your newsfeed how much that can actually impact your perspective.
Augmented reality is putting the digital into the real world, um, so there's, of course,
phones like PokemonGo, which took over the world, which we were super happy about because
AR, uh, it made AR available to everyone.
We have a stand alone hardware that projects holographic images, so everyone in this room
could see and interact with the digital together. So we do like holograms keynote presentations and holograms
for store front windows that'll catch your attention.
So, so VR is complete emergent, whereas AR is you know, you're taking the real world
and you're implanting uh, hologram, which is super cool.
We make VR games, um, and a big thing for us, is not only being there to experience
what we're building for you, but being there and being the main character.
A cloud is again, another buzzword that has been thrown around over the past couple of
years.
But what that means is being able to leverage cloud architectures and cloud technologies
so that you can build any type of business value faster, right?
So that's number one, number two is being able to leverage what are called APIs that
makes a business digitally successful.
In Google's overall vision, is what is called the API program that a business has.
So it's about how the business utilizes APIs across its enterprise IP, across its front end channels to be
able to build great experiences for its customers, partners, and internal employees.
And thirdly, of course, is machine learning, right?
Um, the premise there, is that you can be able to use machine learning technology so
that you can collect data about how your business has been operating so far and feed that back
in sort of a feedback loop to the business so that you can improve those processes, right?
And many people say, how do you feel about becoming deaf?
And I think, I feel the same, I don't feel any different.
Because I grew up with a family that had full access to communication.
Everybody signed, we could socialize.
I had conversations, by myself.
I was in places that did not use sign language that that accessibility wasn't there and
I was in theater groups and uh, the diversity was there but we were in the south, remember?
We were in Mississippi at that time, and I was at the bar and someone told me to come
over, and I saw someone give me a card and I read it, it said, KKK.
And I'm like, what? I didn't think anything of that.
And I gave it back to him. And went to my friend who was, oh my God, oh my God.
Okay, so, for me, I grew up in a very big family.
So my family did not sign, and because of that isolation, it led me to become more creative.
I was isolated, so it made me became very creative in that.
So don't limit yourself, you have to remember, go forward, do it and it will all come back to you.
If you believe in your work people will believe in it as well.
People want to hear and see and feel what it is that you have to offer.
There are articles, videos, products, services, all kinds of things that are help and support
people with disabilities and their families but they're buried all over the internet.
So, we offer a one stop platform for people with disabilities and their families to
access resources that are customized to their interests and
the details of their disability.
If Netflix can tell us what movie to watch next, there's no reason families like mine
are left to figure everything out on their own.
But we wanted to do more, connecting people with resources is not enough to foster inclusion
in society.
We started noticing that the stories that we were sharing about people
living life to the fullest where actually humanizing and normalizing disability for people who
had no experience with it.
Please don't stand silently by while your company hastily builds a technology solution
to a problem that they haven't taken the time to truly understand, or when they don't truly understand
the beings affected by that problem.
So I just finished up the conference and heading down to the federal bar.
(upbeat background music)
Here at the Pacific of the Aquarium, ending the conference of a very awesome note.
Hi, so I'm here at the Amazon party, at the uh, Aquarium of the Pacific, or, Aquarium
of Long Beach, which was such a great time.
Um, I'm headed home, so hopefully you enjoyed this video.
Bye!
In the cave, where's it's like wonder woman, like back in the day, thousands and
thousands of years, and they're like, what?
Like this moment is when something happened.
So that's the moment that we're doing right now.
I have to have my mean face on, so don't mind me.
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