Monday, December 08, 2025

Swimming's Geo Political $.02 - Tiny snip of a conversation with Jonty, Dennis and Mark


Take a peek at Coach Jonty’s holistic approach to athlete development and the geopolitical factors shaping swimming. This clip highlights a few insights from Jonty Skinner’s recent WAFSU seminar.

In this video you’ll learn:

  • How Coach Jonty connects with kids and leverages holistic development.

  • The genetic and regional patterns that produce world‑class runners and swimmers.

  • South Africa’s historical impact on elite athletics and its modern swimming scene.

  • Emerging swimming talent from Tunisia and broader African nations.

  • Where to watch the full two‑hour seminar on wafsu.org and how to stay updated.

 

https://WAFSU.org

 

 

 


Check out this episode!

Thursday, December 04, 2025

Christmas Break Just Got Lit - AI generated anthem to launch your holiday training with serious vibes. (#Plan Now)


The Swim Team Song You Didn’t Know You Needed

An AI Made This Swim Team Song

You won’t believe what happens when AI writes a holiday anthem for swim teams heading into Christmas break!

Christmas Break Planning Happens NOW.

Swimmers, this one’s for YOU.

Episode #68 of Heavy Or Not, The OG Swim Guide drops a brand new AI-generated song to launch your holiday training with serious vibes!

This AI-generated track is about to become your new favorite swim team anthem for winter break. Okay, we let AI take over the studio. Do you have room on your holiday training playlist, for travels, for guilt trips, for staying motivated? Happy to give you all something fun to kick off your Christmas season. Don’t skip this episode.

AI + swim culture = a podcast moment you’ll never forget.

  • Steve Friederang drops in to share his wisdom.

  • Thanks to Coach Kile for raising this concern of winter breaks in a prior episodes.


Check out this episode!

Tuesday, December 02, 2025

Fwd: Less janky AI video


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: The Frontier by Product Hunt <hi@deeperlearning.producthunt.com>
Date: Tue, Dec 2, 2025 at 5:02 PM
Subject: Less janky AI video
To: mark.rauterkus@gmail.com <mark.rauterkus@gmail.com>


Plus, five AI tools you may have missed  ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌ ‌

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WELCOME

Happy Tuesday, legends. Welcome back to another edition of The Frontier — our weekly newsletter covering the best new AI launches on Product Hunt. .

 

TOP LAUNCHES

AI video just got less janky

  • Runway Gen-4.5 is the latest version of Runway's text to video model, built to handle real motion instead of just pretty loops. It focuses on better physics, smoother camera control, and more consistent action in longer clips, while keeping the same generation speed. It also works across different styles and sits at the top of community leaderboards for text to video right now. 

  • CyberCut helps you turn scripts and long recordings into videos you can actually post. It can build a marketing video from your idea, pull highlights out of long footage, add subtitles without the usual headache, and give you assets when you don't have your own. The whole thing is built to cut out the chores so you can just make the thing you wanted to make.

  • Marengo 3.0 is TwelveLabs' biggest update so far. It is a multimodal embedding model that pulls signal from video, audio, text, images and even composed queries like image plus text together. It is built for long clips, fast sports, noisy audio and multilingual content instead of short, polished samples.

  • Calk AI gives you AI agents that actually work with your real company data without asking you to build workflows or map out diagrams. You connect your tools, describe the task, and the agent handles things like reporting, cleaning, writing and updating across your stack. It can schedule tasks, push changes back into your tools, and grow with extra abilities as you need them, all without forcing you to learn automation logic.

  • Agenta is an open-source platform that helps teams build AI features without juggling prompts in spreadsheets or guessing what breaks in production. You get a shared playground for trying prompts and models, a simple way to ship changes without touching code, test cases to check your work before it goes live, and monitoring so you actually know how things perform once users hit it.

 

SPONSORED BY

Okta

Auth0 for AI Agents Is Now Generally Available – build AI into your apps securely

As teams move quickly to ship AI agents, most start with frameworks and hard-coded API keys. Suitable for prototyping, but flawed for production. This grants AI agents with more access than necessary, poses risks, and lacks the essential authentication solution needed for robust security.Auth0 for AI Agents gives developers a secure, production-ready foundation so agents can connect to apps and data safely without slowing innovation.
Here's what you can do:

  • Authenticate users interacting with your agent

  • Give agents access to user data (preferences, history, orders).

  • Securely connect to apps on the user's behalf, such as email and calendar

  • Add human-in-the-loop approvals for critical actions

  •  Enforce fine-grained authorization for RAG based on user permissions

Auth0 for AI Agents comprises four features you can use for B2B, B2C and internal apps:
User Authentication, Token Vault, Asynchronous Authorization (CIBA), and FGA for RAG.


Start building now and ship your AI agents with confidence, precision, and real safeguards.

Signup

WHAT'S HOT

Shopping spree powered by AI

Written by Jeff Benson

Is it still a personal shopper if it's not a person?

Last Monday, OpenAI unveiled its "shopping research" feature. You say what you're looking for — e.g., "decorations for a sheep-themed birthday" or "a Christmas gift for my father who hates gifts" — and ChatGPT delivers a buyer's guide.

Not to be outdone before Black Friday, Perplexity put out its own AI shopping assistant. Want to buy the suggestions? Just click and complete the purchase with PayPal. Oh, and let's not forget about Google's AI shopping features, which came out in mid-November. Google even lets you see how prices have changed over time, kind of like you do when buying airplane tickets.

AI + shopping isn't new, but the scope and scale might be. Here are some AI-powered tools from shopping sites; 

  • Shop, Shopify's AI shopping assistant that shows you results from any stores that use Shopify

  • Agora, a "decentralized Amazon" that uses AI to scour ecommerce sites

  • Amazon Rufus, which lets you have a conversation with an AI shopping assistant and get recommendations; it also launched Amazon Buy for Me, an agent that purchases items Amazon doesn't have in stock. 

FROM THE FORUMS

Who walks away with the crown?

ICYMI yesterday: we announced the winners of the 2025 AI Dictation Orbit Awards. This first Orbit edition focused on real traction and tools that actually stuck in people's routines, not just launch buzz. Wispr Flow, Willow Voice, MacWhisper, ITO, Alter, Aqua Voice, and Superwhisper all made the cut, so now's a good time to see who walked away as the people's champ and which ones you might want to pull into your own stack.

Read the report
 
twigin
 


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Hire Coach Terry Smith, says a PSU fan, because ... (Know your why) Heavy Or Not, #67


Matt made signs and took them to the recent games and sent a letter to the President of Penn State University to support Terry Smith.

It seems like you are under a lot of pressure to deliver a national championship.

You may not remember me, but we met briefly in the Marriott lobby the day before the Rose Bowl. You were kind enough to record a quick, encouraging message for my friend’s wife while she was battling cancer. That moment stayed with me—and with my friend—for a very long time. That video meant more to their family than you could ever know.

From a fan of over 30 years who embodies what it means to be a true Penn State supporter, I’ll be brave enough to say this: it is okay if we do not win a national championship. If we define success solely—or even primarily—by that single standard, we risk losing the joy, purpose, and identity of what it truly means to be a Penn Stater. If we stay true to the mission and values Penn State Football has always stood for, the results—and the championships—will come in time.

I say that not because I don’t want to see Penn State win a national championship in my lifetime. I absolutely do. I say it because of what I’ve observed across the college football landscape—the game I love—where an unreasonable belief has taken hold among countless fan bases, a belief that has distorted—and in many cases captured—the love, enjoyment, and true purpose of what college football is all about.
There is a growing notion that because of the transfer portal and constant player movement, national championships can be won overnight. And if they are not, then the season—and even the purpose of a football program—is labeled a failure.

That belief is utterly false.

Would it be the worst thing in the world to pause for a moment and reflect on what our true mission is for Penn State Football in this process?

  • Is it to win at all costs?

  • Is it to make every last penny possible?

  • Or is it to build something we can proudly tell our kids—and the next generation—about, something “We Are” proud to protect and build?

I’ve been a Penn State fan for over 30 years. I’ve collected more than 100 game-worn jerseys, flown all over the country for bowl games, and flown back several times a year while living in Hawaii—often a 35-hour round trip—just to be in Beaver Stadium supporting my team. I also took my son to his first Penn State game at just five months old—the Rose Bowl. Along the way, I’ve formed genuine relationships with other fans, coaches, and players because my support has always been authentic and rooted in love for this program. Some people know me simply as Matt from pennstatejerseys on Instagram.

After tough losses, I still find myself asking a familiar question: Why do I watch Penn State Football?


The answer never changes—it’s the people, not just the outcome.

Every fall Saturday, Beaver Stadium is packed, and “We Are” chants unite this community in a way nothing else can.

I also want to be transparent.

I am the individual who printed 150 “Hire Terry Smith” signs and personally handed them out at the Nebraska game—followed by another 500 signs at the Rutgers game. I did this for one reason only: to show visible, genuine support for a man who has spent his career serving Penn State without fanfare, leverage, or entitlement.

This was not about attention, pressure, or influence. It was about standing up for a coach who does not have a powerful agent shaping his narrative, who is not represented by a major agency, but who has consistently served this university with humility and loyalty—without asking much of anything in return.

It was a simple gesture of respect—for service, commitment, and belief in what Penn State Football is supposed to represent.


I want my children to care deeply about things—and to see that their father did everything he could to stand up for someone he believed needed a true voice, simply to get the conversation started about being seriously considered for this job.

Over time, the bigger picture has become clearer to me, and that clarity has only made Penn State Football more meaningful.

Purpose Before Position:

We tell Penn State students—and our kids—all the time: find something you truly love, and you’ll never work a day in your life. When someone is driven by passion and purpose, that energy leads not only themselves, but everyone around them, toward success.


The opposite is also true.

When someone is motivated primarily by money, titles, promotions, or simply the next job on the résumé, they often find themselves stuck in a constant cycle—one that is never fully satisfying and never deeply purposeful.

When I look around college football today, that is exactly what I see in many coaching searches and coaching careers. Too often, coaches are not building something—they are chasing something. The result is constant turnover, fractured locker rooms, and programs that never quite know who they are.

Purpose matters. Motivation matters. And who a leader is when no one is watching eventually shows up everywhere.

Culture, Fit, and Why It Matters More Than Ever:

One of the biggest mistakes across college football today is schools cycling through head coaches like cheap shoes—constantly chasing the next résumé, the next scheme, the next quick fix—while ignoring the most important characteristic of a head coach: the ability to understand culture, lead people, mentor, and motivate young boys into men.

As the saying goes in business, culture eats strategy for breakfast. College football is no different.

Look at Kirby Smart at Georgia. He played there. He understands the expectations, standards, and identity of that program. His success is amplified because his leadership is rooted in authentic connection—something that cannot be replicated by someone passing through.

The same is true with Brent Key at Georgia Tech. He played there. He knows the institution. The culture he is rebuilding is credible because it’s personal—and it’s working.

And consider Kalani Sitake at BYU. He played there, served a mission, and embodies the values of the school. His ability to lead, motivate, and develop young men is amplified precisely because he fits the culture.

In every one of these cases, coaching ability is magnified by cultural alignment. These leaders are not installing culture—they are living it.

That brings me to Penn State.

Terry Smith is Penn State.

He represents service, success, honor, integrity, humility, and stewardship. He understands what it means to lead young men at this university—not just as athletes, but as people. He has earned trust through years of quiet, consistent leadership.
He mentors. He motivates. He holds standards. And he treats coaching not as entitlement, but as a privilege.

In an era when college football feels increasingly transactional, Penn State has the opportunity to choose alignment over impulse—leadership over trend—culture over constant churn.

If you choose to hire him and give him the time and opportunity to lead, and for some reason it ultimately does not work out, you will still have my full support—and the support of the people who matter most—to make another hire. You should not be held to the same unreasonable, reactionary standards that athletic directors across the country are holding themselves and their coaches to. No one is asking for promises or guarantees. We are simply asking for an opportunity; an opportunity to let a leader who understands this program, this culture, and this responsibility be given a chance to succeed. History shows us that the greatest athletic directors and leaders—the ones who are ultimately remembered—are those who had the courage to take chances and the conviction to believe in their own people.

In Closing:

Dr. Pat Kraft, you have a unique opportunity in front of you—one that very few athletic directors truly recognize while they are living it. By choosing to prioritize culture and purpose over short-term pressure and outside noise, you have the chance to build something at Penn State that endures far beyond any single season, record, or headline. If you choose that path, it will define your legacy here in a way championships alone never could. While many of your peers across college football continue to miss this moment—cycling through coaches, chasing trends, and slowly losing their identity—you have the opportunity to lead differently. To protect what makes Penn State special and to build something rooted in belief, alignment, and integrity. That kind of leadership does more than shape a program; it leaves a lasting legacy—one that your family can be proud of long after your time in this position has passed, and one that will be remembered at Penn State for generations.

From a fan who cares,
Matt Wolosz


Check out this episode!

Monday, December 01, 2025

Justine R speaks from the pulpit

https://youtu.be/9M2x5lgohW4?si=LJ7vjgLclIUehJnj&t=886

Recruiting Heart Over Hype


Episode #66 of Heavy Or Not, The OG Swim Guide

Check out this episode!

Sunday, November 30, 2025

Navigating Division Shifts: Swim Coach, Kile Zeller on St. Francis’s Move from D1 to D3


Now at UPJ and focused on recruiting with a local priority but international hopes.


Check out this episode!

Thursday, November 27, 2025

Head Swim Coach Kile Zeller, launching new NCAA M&W D2 squads at UPJ - Open for Opportunities


Life at University of Pittsburgh Johnstown: Campus Beauty, Close‑Knit Community, and Opportunities for Athletes

Get a behind‑the‑scenes look at Coach Kyle Zeller’s first year building a D‑II men's & women’s swim program at UPJ— from historic PSAC meet wins to the next‑gen recruiting playbook. Watch how he turns a modest pool into a squad where the person comes first. He is keeping student‑athletes front of mind.

What’s Covered:

  • Building a competitive PSAC program and historic meet qualification
  • Recruiting tactics: internal talent, high‑school stars & value propositions
  • Marketing & outreach: podcasts, local media, coach networking
  • Campus & facility snapshot: 25‑yard pool, Appalachian views, small‑school perks
  • Break‑time training, student‑athlete balance & growth roadmap for 2026 / 2027

Some mentions in this, part one of three, episode, #64 of Heavy Or Not, The OG Swim Guide:

  • The PSAC is fast – our UPJ swimmers just made history with our first PSAC qualifier, Mark DePalma, who smashed the cut by two seconds.

  • Recruiting started late April 2025, but we’ve already secured the valedictorian of Marion Center High, a 4.8‑GPA swimmer, as our inaugural college recruit.

  • We’re promoting the men’s and women’s teams across PA, hitting high‑school meets, club events, and even a Fox 8 interview to spread the word.

  • Our facility is a basic six‑lane, 25‑yard pool with stunning Appalachian Mountain views, fresh tiling, and a million‑dollar recent renovation.

  • Campus life: 729 acres of woods, ski‑chalet dorms, top engineering and nursing programs, and a close‑knit community where the AD knows every student’s name.


Check out this episode!

Tuesday, November 25, 2025

Gamma




--
Ta.
 
 
Mark Rauterkus       Mark.Rauterkus@gmail.com
Mark@Rauterkus.com    <--- causing lots of missed messages, sadly.
Webmaster, International Swim Coaches Association, SwimISCA.org
Coach at The Ellis School for Varsity & Middle School Swimming

412 298 3432 = cell

Sunday, November 23, 2025

Station Square's new owner - news from Trib

Station Square bought by Massachusetts-based real estate firm

Jack Troy
  

The core of Station Square — the struggling restaurant, entertainment and office complex on Pittsburgh’s South Shore — is under new ownership.

Massachusetts-based WS Development announced Friday it purchased a huge chunk of the center along the Monongahela River from New York-based Brookfield Properties.

“Station Square is an iconic place with incredible history and potential, and we’re excited for the opportunity to build on its strong foundation,” Eric Smookler, vice chairman and co-chief investment officer for WS Development, said in a statement to TribLive.

The firm plans to “elevate the retail, dining and entertainment experience while creating new opportunities for office and mixed-use partners,” but it’s too early to name specific tenants, Smookler said.

WS Development declined to say what it paid for its part of Station Square, which encompasses 28 of the site’s 52 acres and 646,000 square feet of mixed-use real estate.

The Sheraton Pittsburgh Hotel at Station Square, Highmark Stadium and the Gateway Clipper each remain under separate ownership.

WS Development has more than 100 properties across the country, many along the water. Its most notable holdings include several towers in Boston’s thriving Seaport District, land next to Fenway Park, home of the Boston Red Sox baseball team, and the Royal Poinciana Plaza in Palm Beach, Fla.

Station Square, a former stop on the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad, was reborn as a shopping and dining destination in the 1970s. It was quickly hailed as one of the city’s first major redevelopment success stories amid industrial decline, bringing in locals and tourists alike.

Brookfield took over the property in 2018 as part of an $11.4 billion acquisition of Cleveland-based Forest City Realty Trust. But the complex steadily lost its luster.

These days, visitors don’t seem so enthralled, according to Station Square workers and business owners.

As a barista at Yinz Coffee’s Station Square cafe, Emily Malay serves plenty of out-of-towners fresh off a Gateway Clipper tour or trip on the Monongahela Incline. They often ask about the Freight House Shops, an on-site shopping mall that Brookfield spent $30 million converting for other us

Tom Jayson, who opened Homerun Harry’s sports bar in Station Square in 1995, said it was evident early on Brookfield wasn’t committed to the site long term. Projects started by Forest City went unfinished under Brookfield, and there were minimal marketing efforts around Station Square, according to Jayson.

Brookfield also failed to pay back a $403 million loan that helped it buy Forest City, leading its lender in December to demand $143 million in a mortgage foreclosure lawsuit. Lender Wilmington Trust ended the ligitation in June.

The suit came during a string of business closures in Station Square.

Brookfield’s $30 million makeover helped to attract fried chicken franchise Tupelo Honey and climbing gym First Ascent, but twice as many tenants flowed out on its watch.

Buca di Beppo and Joe’s Crab Shack shut down their Station Square locations last year and the Hard Rock Cafe closed in February. Just last month, fast casual restaurant Terrene shuttered after seven years of business.

City Councilwoman Theresa Kail-Smith, whose district includes Station Square, said she received “very little communication” from Brookfield, unlike previous owners.

“I think Station Square needs a boost,” she said. “I’m just hoping the new owners going forward understand the importance… to the residents and the visitors that come here.”

Brookfield did not return a request for comment.

Anthony Hamby, service manager at the Melting Pot in Station Square, wants the new owners to bring more shops and parking to the site.

His restaurant faces the overhauled mall, which is plastered with advertisements courting bakeries, ice cream shops and other prospective tenants.

“Go back in time like 15 years ago, there were twice as many restaurants,” Hamby said.

Despite these challenges, Jayson of Homerun Harry’s feels a turnaround for Station Square is near.

“It’s going to come back,” he said. “There’s no doubt in my mind.”