logo
Shining skill

Shining skill

Yahoo09-06-2025
Jun. 9—MOSES LAKE — This isn't exactly the Columbia Basin Technical Skills Center's first trip to the nationals.
"For 11 years straight we have placed at state competition, and eight of those years we've qualified for nationals," said Terri Pixlee, who teaches video game programming at CBTECH. "We've been all over the country. We've been to Chicago, Utah, Georgia twice, Florida (and) Maryland and this will be our second time in California."
Pixlee's students Alex Meyer, Hailey Harper and Ethan Huntley competed in April at the Future Business Leaders of America game programming competition in Bellevue, she said. One team of three students took second place and will go on to nationals in Anaheim, California. Another team of two, Neri Hernandez and Jaden Salazar, placed seventh, not high enough to be assured of a berth but enough to be alternates in case some other Washington team doesn't show. So far, that doesn't seem likely, Pixlee said.
"It doesn't happen very often, but it does happen," she said.
In addition, Felix Neutzhorn and Zander Leasher from the CBTECH Fire Sciences and Roan Prentice from the Automotive program qualified for nationals at the SkillsUSA state competitions in Spokane in March. They'll go to the national competition in Atlanta, Georgia in July.
Prentice took first place at the state competition, said instructor Lonny Steinmetz. He and teammate David Couture also won first place at the Top Tech Challenge in Yakima. CBTECH was the first school to take first at the Top Tech Challenge twice in a row, Steinmetz added.
Prentice came away from the competitions with more than just bragging rights, Steinmetz said.
"He won about $56,000 in scholarships along with some tools," he said.
For the video game competition, the students divide themselves into teams of three, usually including an artist, a programmer and a level designer, Pixlee said. At least one of those students also needs some serious presentation chops, she said.
"It's like 'Shark Tank,'" she said. "They have to present their game and sell it as if they're selling it to one of the gaming houses, so it's really kind of important they have a speaker as well."
The video game creators will be in Anaheim June 29-July 2, Pixlee said. They can't afford a side trip to Disneyland, she said, but there are other things they can occupy their off-time with.
"There's plenty of attractions they want to see," she said. "Venice Beach, they want to, you know, things like that that don't cost much. We'll find a little arcade."
The students going to Atlanta will be there June 23-27, said Fire Sciences teacher Lynn Dodd.
"It's huge for these kids," Dodd said. "The student we took last year had barely ever been out of town. It's one of their first times getting to stay in a hotel, getting to go to these fancy restaurants, and then we were taking them on their first flights across the United States. And it's like, this is cool that these kids get this opportunity to compete with the best students of the state. That we get to be a part of that is pretty awesome."
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Self-made multimillionaire behind $4 billion Skims empire says she was ‘using AI like a 42-year-old woman'—until Mark Cuban gave her a wake-up call
Self-made multimillionaire behind $4 billion Skims empire says she was ‘using AI like a 42-year-old woman'—until Mark Cuban gave her a wake-up call

Yahoo

time3 days ago

  • Yahoo

Self-made multimillionaire behind $4 billion Skims empire says she was ‘using AI like a 42-year-old woman'—until Mark Cuban gave her a wake-up call

Self-made multimillionaire Emma Grede has built billion-dollar brands with the Kardashians (including shapewear and clothing brand company Skims), sits on the board for the Obama Foundation, and has just teamed up with tennis champion Coco Gauff on a mentorship campaign with UPS. But while scaling businesses and mentoring others come naturally to her, Grede admits she needed a mentor moment of her own when it came to artificial intelligence. And that moment came courtesy of fellow Shark Tank investor Mark Cuban, Grede exclusively tells Fortune. The British-born entrepreneur Emma Grede, best known as the founding partner of Kim Kardashian's $4 billion shapewear empire Skims and the CEO of denim brand Good American, has built a reputation on spotting cultural shifts before they hit the mainstream. When her and Khloe Kardashian's Good American denim line dropped, it made $1 million on day one, making it the biggest denim launch in apparel history. Grede has helped redefine inclusion in retail and became the first Black female investor on Shark Tank—all before turning 45. Now she's bringing that same playbook to small businesses through a new UPS campaign alongside tennis star Coco Gauff. The initiative sees Grede mentoring creators of emerging female-led brands and offering one-on-one coaching to help them scale. But while mentoring others comes naturally to her, Grede admits that when it came to AI, she was the one who needed a pep talk—and fellow Shark Tank star Mark Cuban was the one who gave her the push to come to grips with the new technology. In an exclusive interview with Fortune, Grede talked about an episode of her hit podcast show Aspire that hadn't aired yet, where the two sat down and compared their AI usage. 'I was already kind of getting there, but if I'm really honest, that episode where we really delved into AI gave me a new urgency around how I use AI,' she recalled, adding that Cuban had a staggering 60 AI apps on his phone. 'Yeah, he gave me a kick.' As soon as the recording wrapped up, she said that she started looking into AI courses at the Wharton School and Harvard for this fall. 'I need to figure this out, because I'm using AI like a 42-year-old woman,' Grede candidly admitted while laughing. Grede gave her staff a cash bonus for using AI—long before she realized she was behind Grede isn't completely new to AI. In fact, she was ahead of the curve when it came to encouraging AI adoption within her companies. 'About two years ago I put a note out in my office giving a cash bonus to anyone that uses AI in their work,' she explained, adding that the incentive was a big hit—especially with the marketing and finance teams. 'It changed the office. It changed the way people presented their work. It changed the way people did their work.' But as her Gen Z and thirtysomething staff embraced experimenting with ChatGPT and other new AI launches at the time, Grede admitted that she perhaps leaned too heavily on them. It meant that until recently, she's been using AI more as a search engine and leaving her staff to handle the rest. 'I was like, Emma, you need to sort that out.' It comes as many other CEOs are scrambling to appoint AI leaders, future-proof their business, and brace for change. Billionaire Microsoft cofounder Bill Gates says AI is moving at a speed that 'surprises' even him and that even if workers learn how to use the latest tech tools, they may still find themselves out of a job. Meanwhile, an ex-Google exec says CEOs are currently too busy 'celebrating' their efficiency gains to see they're next on AI's chopping board. But she's not using AI to make her more productive As one of America's richest self-made women—with a reported net worth of nearly $400 million and at least four major businesses to her name—Grede is clearly ruthlessly efficient. But in her eyes, AI isn't about squeezing even more productivity from her day. 'I'm probably the most productive person in the world. I don't know that I can be that more productive,' she said, noting that her time is mostly spent making high-stakes decisions—not executing tasks. 'There's no amount of AI that can help me with that.' But where it can help, she said, is in making smarter strategic choices and reshaping how she leads. 'I think it's a reframing of how we're going to do things,' Grede added. 'So much of my job is about making really big bets and decisions. And so if I can put data in places to optimize that decision making, I think that that's probably where I'm going to be using it most. 'When you start to think about my role as a merchant and as a planner, it's really those things that I think are going to fundamentally shift.' In her podcast episode with Cuban, which has since been released, the television personality and Dallas Mavericks owner had a stark warning for founders who don't embrace AI: 'You're f–ked…That's like saying, back in the day, 'I don't need to use a PC, I don't need to use the internet. I don't need a cell phone.'' He added, 'If you're an entrepreneur, or want to be an entrepreneur, start playing with it to get a sense for how it works, how to prompt. It becomes like having an entire staff of 1,000 business professors.' This story was originally featured on Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data

Shark Tank: What Happened To The MTailor App?
Shark Tank: What Happened To The MTailor App?

Yahoo

time4 days ago

  • Yahoo

Shark Tank: What Happened To The MTailor App?

Entrepreneur Miles Penn knows shopping for clothes online can be difficult, and this idea is the inspiration for MTailor: a retail clothing app that utilizes a user's cellphone camera to obtain body measurements that Penn claims are 20% better than an actual tailor. Taking the company to investors during Season 7, Episode 17 of "Shark Tank," the appearance doesn't go well in the slightest. Despite the entrepreneur starting arguments and leaving after rejecting offers from Daymond John and Kevin O'Leary, the MTailor company still sees success to this day. Rejecting or losing a deal doesn't always guarantee failure. Just like the creators of MuteMe walking away without a deal in Season 13, MTailor is doing just fine without the Sharks. After acquiring more investors after its television appearance, the company currently receives favorable reviews online and continues to turn a profit. In a time where online businesses can come and go faster than Hawaii sinking, being in business since 2014 says a lot, and Penn may be more savvy than the Sharks originally thought. Read more: 5 Expert Tips To Get The Most Out Of ChatGPT Every Time You Use It How Does The MTailor App Work? Founding the company alongside his Stanford pal Rafi Witten, Miles Penn's MTailor app makes taking measurements of yourself incredibly simple. After changing into form-fitting clothes, all a user needs to do is lean their cellphone against a wall and then stand back six feet. A 15-second video scan of their front and back then produces 60 measurements, including both the upper and lower body. For a shirt, these measurements include areas such as the neck, chest, sleeve length, and cuff, among the five other points the app targets in this area. MTailor proudly claims that each article of clothing passes through a quality control team that performs a manual 26-point inspection, ensuring everything is right for the customer. The company is so confident in their measuring software that they provide a 90-day money-back guarantee. During this time, customers also have the option to submit a request for the company to make new garments should they not be the right fit. How Is MTailor Doing? Despite Miles Penn rejecting the offers made during his appearance on "Shark Tank," and Rafi Witten leaving the company in 2019, things are going well for MTailor. In 2018, the company successfully raised $7.2 million in venture capital, and were able to raise an additional $8.3 million in January, 2022. In April, 2024, MTailor reported $13 million in yearly sales and the company is valued at nearly $25 million. Not bad for a guy Kevin O'Leary described as a "dead shirt walking". Around the web, critics praise the company for the materials it uses, but still report that not every shirt is going to be a perfect fit. In a 2023 article from "The New York Times," Dan Jones gives high praise for the materials used by the company, but notes that the shirt he received was too loose for his body. Within the Apple App Store, the MTailor app has a 4.6 out of 5-star rating with close to five thousand reviews. The app also has a respectable 4.1 out of 5-star rating on the Google Play Store with just over two thousand reviews. While not every product on "Shark Tank" can reach the same levels of success as the Bug Bite Thing Suction Tool, Penn and MTailor's story is still proof that determination can get you farther than you may realize. Read the original article on BGR. Error while retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data Error while retrieving data

Mark Cuban says the winners of the 2026 midterms are those 'already working' to integrate AI into their campaigns
Mark Cuban says the winners of the 2026 midterms are those 'already working' to integrate AI into their campaigns

Business Insider

time4 days ago

  • Business Insider

Mark Cuban says the winners of the 2026 midterms are those 'already working' to integrate AI into their campaigns

Mark Cuban has said AI will become the most powerful weapon in political campaigning — and he says Democrats are falling behind. In a series of BlueSky posts on Sunday, the billionaire investor and " Shark Tank" star said that Republicans are outpacing Democrats in leveraging digital platforms and emerging tech. "The winners of the midterms are already working on how to integrate ChatGPT, Gemini, etc. into their campaigns," Cuban wrote. "Millions of voters will simply ask, 'Who should I vote for this election.'" In the 2024 campaign, Donald Trump said AI rewrote one of his speeches in 15 seconds. He also circulated AI-generated posts of cultural figures, including fake images showing Taylor Swift and her fans appearing to support him. Cuban shared a Substack article by a researcher at the University of Maryland's Applied Research Lab for Intelligence and Security, Caroline Orr Bueno, who argued that Trump's allies take advantage of algorithms by producing content that stokes outrage and dominates people's social-media feeds. "This is exactly why Dems get their ass handed to them by Trump's world," Cuban wrote. "They have no clue how to leverage social media algos to their advantage." The Democratic National Committee didn't immediately respond to a request for comment from Business Insider. The National Democratic Training Committee recently launched an AI "playbook" to teach candidates how to use AI for social content, outreach, and research, while warning against tactics such as deepfakes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store