

- #CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER HOW TO#
- #CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER FULL#
- #CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER FREE#
Ocean will be featured in an upcoming episode (tentatively 017). For Tim’s story with Ocean in this episode, begin listening at. Ocean is a faith-based accelerator providing seed funding, mentors, legal assistance, a well-attended demo day, a 5-month curriculum focused on founders first and business second, and more.

#CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER HOW TO#
Tim takes inspiration from this book about how to interact with his customers. It was mentioned by Tim Sinclair in this episode. Love Does* – This book by Bob Goff is about showing love in remarkable ways.EarPods are mentioned in this episode as a good interface for recording on an iPhone using RingR. I do not know if they work with Andriod phones since the jack has four bands (left ear, right ear, microphone, and common). EarPods do not close the ear canal and allow you to listen to your surrounding environment while talking and listening.

Apple EarPods* – EarPods are my favorite in-ear listening and speaking device for iPhone.
#CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER FREE#
AWS has a free tier that may not be exactly what Tim describes in the episode but seems like a reasonable option to explore.
#CRUSH THE INDUSTRY DRUM COBER FULL#
Full episode transcript follows Resources Mentioned.Please see Disclosure* (below transcript) concerning affiliate links on this page.On the website, click any timestamp to start listening to the episode at the noted location.RingR has come out of beta, and I wanted to get the story from Tim of how he developed the product and stood the company up. In the end, host and guest sound as good as the local recording. Tim conceived RingR as a way to get high-quality, recorded audio for all parties by recording each person’s audio locally on a smartphone, transmitting the data to a server, and syncing the audio files together. If the host records the guests from Skype, internet artifacts such as warble and drop out often occur. If the host records the guests from the telephone, audio quality is generally low. For such interviews, the host can produce a high-quality recording on one end, but if the guests do not have good recording equipment on their end, the audio quality for the guests’ recording is often low. The idea for RingR grew out of Tim’s frustrations with trying to get high-quality recorded audio for interviews conducted electronically using the telephone or Skype. Before founding RingR, Tim had an established career in broadcast radio. Tim Sinclair is founder and CEO of RingR.
