Wednesday 31 August 2022

Sushi Kamon's First Ever Omakase Guest Chef 🥢

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YASUHIRO MINENO GUEST OMAKASE
Sushi Kamon is excited to welcome sushi master Yasuhiro Mineno to their first Omakase Guest Chef event

In this interactive counter experience, Chef Mineno will prepare, serve and talk through his nine-course menu. Expect dishes such as Salmon with Namasu, Hirame Nigiri with Smoked Vinegar, and Seabass with Matcha Salt, showcasing the freshest ingredients and highest quality seafood.

This limited series will be held over Friday 2 and Saturday 3 September with two seatings each evening at 7pm and 8.30pm. The menu is £75pp and a Japanese sake pairing will be available on the evening at an additional cost. 

If you can't make the pop-up, omakase with Sushi Kamon's head chef Michael Nonato runs every week from Tuesday-Saturday. 
IN THE KITCHEN WITH CONNOR FRANCIS
As the Middle East's answer to a grab-and-go meal, there is no shortage of variations on shawarma. Every region has their own take on spice blends, choice of meat and bread. Last week, in search of the answer to what makes the perfect shawarma, we spoke to man of the Shatta & Toum grill Connor Francis, who talked us through the secret to nailing this anytime meal.
THE TOP THREE
There's always something going on at Arcade. To make sure you don't miss a beat, we've rounded up the hottest things to catch this week:

1.  We're launching two limited edition vegan dishes with Symplicity Foods: The Vegan Burger with a 100% natural 3-month aged barley miso patty and Dirty Waffle Fries with smoky plant-based chorizo mince and creamy cheese.
2. A NEW food brand is joining us later this month. We'll be announcing further details later this week. Keep your eyes peeled on our socials for the latest.
3. Yasuhiro Mineno takes guest residency at Sushi Kamon's counter for a very limited omakase experience this Friday and Saturday. Book here
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Tech: Shopify’s Slack surveillance

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10 THINGS IN TECH

You're halfway through the week, readers. Reporting to you from Montana, I'm your host, Jordan Parker Erb.

When corporate America was forced to shift to remote work during the pandemic, we all had a lot to learn. For me, it was learning how not to WFB (work from bed).

For Shopify, however, the challenge has been building a transparent and genial culture while making sure employees are staying productive and focused online. So far, employees say, it hasn't gone well — and stories of the company surveilling workers on Slack are starting to emerge. 

Let's dive in.


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Eyes, ears, and mouths on laptop screens with emoji bubbles popping out 4x3

1. Shopify employees say it's increasingly moderating Slack conversations. As the company has embraced remote work over the past two years, employees said Shopify has implemented measures to discourage negative and off-topic discussions of the company and its plans.

  • Before the company transitioned to remote work, Shopify's culture was supported by typical tech-company perks, like free lunches, as well as some unique ones, like a yoga studio and a massage room.
  • But now, as the company grapples with building a genial culture while keeping employees productive and focused online, some employees say its open communications have become restrained.
  • Shopify even appointed "channel champions" — or volunteer employees — to keep channels focused on their stated purpose, with the intent to shut down conversations and even whole channels that became contentious. 

Inside Shopify's Slack monitoring.


In other news:

Snap Inc. banner hangs on NYSE as people walk past

2. Snap is planning layoffs. As first reported by the Verge, Snap plans to lay off 20% to 25% of its workforce, meaning roughly 1,200 to 1,500 people will lose their jobs. Workers have not been officially informed about the layoffs, but will find out more today, according to a person familiar with the situation. Get the full rundown here.

3. Hundreds of Facebook contractors in the US are set to lose work. About 400 contractors doing content moderation for Facebook through Accenture are expected to lose their jobs as the company shifts to sourcing more out of Singapore. Inside the upcoming layoffs.

4. The latest Twitter news: Elon Musk's legal team subpoenaed Twitter's ex-head of cybersecurity, Peiter Zatko, who filed an explosive whistleblower complaint against the company last week. Plus, Musk's lawyers told the company he now has fresh reasons to walk away from the $44 billion deal.

5. VCs share the most promising climate-tech startups of 2022. We asked investors which startups are doing well this year, and they named 37 companies working on everything from improved toilets to gene-edited crops. Check out the 37 startups poised to take off this year.

6. A Google worker accused the company of "creating an environment of fear" for employees who support Palestine. In a letter announcing her departure, the employee, who is Jewish, said Google retaliated against her and other workers who spoke out in support of Palestine. Here's what else the employee said. 

7. A woman shares how she landed job offers at EY and Google right out of college. After earning a degree at UNC Chapel Hill, Caitlyn Kumi started at EY, and is now an associate product-marketing manager at Google. From utilizing social media to earning certifications, here are four steps she took to boost her résumé and confidence.

8. Twitter considered a plan to compete with OnlyFans. The company reportedly shuttered the plan for an OnlyFans copy, citing the platform's growing problem with harmful sexual content. What we know about the axed plans.


Odds and ends:

Daniel Craig in sunglasses, people behind him on a bridge to a boat

9. Get ready: Netflix is releasing 43 original movies before the end of the year. The streamer just laid out its film slate for the rest of the year — and it's more than the number of films Hollywood studios are sending to theaters, combined. See which films are coming out soon.

10. We explain how to track your music listening stats on Spotify. By connecting Last.fm to your Spotify account, you can analyze your listening history and see your top artists, albums, and more. How to connect Last.fm to your Spotify.


What we're watching today:


Keep updated with the latest tech news throughout your day by checking out The Refresh from Insider, a dynamic audio news brief from the Insider newsroom. Listen here.


Curated by Jordan Parker Erb in New York. (Feedback or tips? Email jerb@insider.com or tweet @jordanparkererb.) Edited by Hallam Bullock (tweet @hallam_bullock) in London.

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Tuesday 30 August 2022

Tech: Unpacking ‘quiet quitting’

The biggest tech news and scoops.
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10 THINGS IN TECH

Hello there, tech fans. If I had a dollar for every advertisement or promotional email I've seen that says summer is over, I'd have enough money to buy, I don't know, like a million Starbucks' pumpkin spice lattes. (They are back on the menu starting today, by the way).

I'm your host, Jordan Parker Erb, and I'm wistfully holding onto the final weeks of summer. And while cooler days are surely on the way, one thing still is hot: the conversation around "quiet quitting."

Let's talk about it.


If this was forwarded to you, sign up here. Download Insider's app here.


Woman quitting her job

1. So, what's up with "quiet quitting"? The term, which gained traction after Insider published a story on "coasting culture" back in March, describes a phenomenon of workers refusing to go above and beyond for their companies, and choosing instead to focus on their work-life balance

  • Quiet quitting has been around, under different names, for generations. Gen Xers might have called it "slacking off" or "coasting," while millennials might have said it was "having boundaries" — so it's not just a "Gen Z thing."
  • Nor is it necessarily a bad thing, Ed Zitron writes. In his latest piece, Zitron argues that quiet quitting isn't a nefarious rebellion against well-meaning employers. It's workers doing exactly what they were paid to do — in the hours they're told to do it.
  • Looking to focus more on your own boundaries with work? We outlined 25 large companies with the best work-life balance, and the list includes firms like Squarespace and Chegg. 

Here, three generations of workers talk quiet quitting.


In other news:

joe rogan mark zuckerberg

2. Mark Zuckerberg sat down for a rare interview with Joe Rogan. In the eclectic, free-wheeling interview, the two discussed the metaverse, exercise habits, and those jokes about Zuckerberg being a robot. Read all the biggest revelations.

3. The directors of UC Berkeley's startup accelerator share what they're looking for.  SkyDeck's founding partner and executive director review more than 1,000 applications for each cohort, but only accept about 2% — and are looking for founders who think big, not safe. Here's what else they want in an application.

4. Revolut salaries have been revealed — with senior talent earning as much as $300,000. The banking unicorn is currently hiring for over 200 positions across the firm. Here's how much certain roles could earn, from management to marketing.

5. Microsoft's MIT blackjack whiz who was accused of treating women unfairly is leaving. According to a leaked internal memo, Microsoft for Startups boss Jeffrey Ma is leaving the company. Insider previously reported Ma's leadership led to an "exodus" of senior women execs from the organization. What else we learned from the leaked memo.

6. NASA's Artemis I launch was delayed by technical issues. The launch, which was scheduled for Monday, has been pushed back until Friday at the earliest. When it does blast off, there will be no humans on board — but a plush Snoopy and a "Shaun the Sheep" doll will be

7. Why are more early-stage startups raising "supergiant" seed-funding rounds? Seed-funding rounds are typically around $1 million, but lately, some startups have been fetching more than $10.5 million in seed funding. We explain why the massive funding rounds are all the rage in Silicon Valley.

8. Elon Musk wants fully self-driving Teslas to go on sale by Christmas. While speaking at the ONS conference, Musk said he'd like the cars ready by the end of the year, but his hopes are dependent upon regulatory approval. A look at what else he said.


Odds and ends:

Apple headset VR

9. We may have just gotten a hint at what Apple's new product could be called. Corporations tied to Apple filed trademarks for "Reality One," "Reality Pro," and "Reality Processor," and Bloomberg reports that the filings signal what the company could name its unreleased mixed reality headset. Everything we know about the new gadget.

10. You won't recognize Netflix's very first logo from 25 years ago. As the streaming app turned 25 yesterday, we took a look at some of the changes it's experienced during the past quarter century. See all the iterations of Netflix's logo.


What we're watching today:


Keep updated with the latest tech news throughout your day by checking out The Refresh from Insider, a dynamic audio news brief from the Insider newsroom. Listen here.


Curated by Jordan Parker Erb in New York. (Feedback or tips? Email jerb@insider.com or tweet @jordanparkererb.) Edited by Hallam Bullock (tweet @hallam_bullock) in London.

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