![]() ![]() ![]() Or even worse, end up resorting to email like it’s the 90s. When this is the case, it becomes extremely unproductive moving out of Teams, into your external contact’s choice of app, and starting the conversation again. If the answer is yes to both of these questions, according to research, they’ll likely be using Slack or Cisco Webex. 1 – Mioĭo you communicate with people outside your organization?ĭo they use apps other than Microsoft Teams? With more bots appearing on the Microsoft Teams store all the time, here are our top 10. There’s a bot to poll your staff members. Need to track employee engagement and surveys? There’s a bot to sync their conversations. Got employees using different chat apps at the same time? What are bots in Microsoft Teams?īots allow you to interact with external apps without having to leave Microsoft Teams. With 91% of companies now using at least 2 messaging apps, there’s a good chance you’ll want to extend the functionality of your Teams with some plugins, add-ons, and bots. More from our Marijuana archive: " High Times Medical Cannabis Cup in Denver: Editor Dan Skye's preview (PHOTOS, VIDEO).Microsoft Teams bots are crucial to get the most out of your collaboration stack. Here are two surveillance photos of the truck that drove away with the GrowBot. Those who do can phone the Denver Police Department's Crime Stoppers number, 720-913-STOP (7867), or one of Childre's associates at 30. No clues about the GrowBot's whereabouts have surfaced thus far, but Childre's hoping his offer of up to a $5,000 reward will help inspire people with knowledge of the incident to step forward. They were in and out of there in less than ten minutes." "This was most definitely planned in advance," he believes. Due to their high angle, however, the cameras failed to capture good images of faces or the license plate on the truck - something Childre believes the thieves factored in. Security personnel were prevalent nearby, Childre says, and so were security cameras. How did it disappear? About twenty minutes after the conclusion of the Cannabis Cup, which took place at Denver's EXDO Event Center, Childre was preparing to leave as men wearing hoodies and driving a black Dodge truck pulled up to the GrowBot "and just drove off with it." The model was manufactured in November and first used in Denver. "It's white, with various stickers on the side, although they may have pulled those off by now." ![]() "It's twelve feet tall, 28 feet long, eight-and-a-half feet wide, and weights about 7,000 pounds," he notes. You can be hundreds of miles away and still grow and monitor it."Īs a High Times Medical Cannabis Cup vendor, Childre brought a top-of-the-line GrowBot for display. It can be controlled from a cell phone, from a laptop. ![]() All the pH is measured, and it's computer controlled. Any type of growing application can be done in it, and it has its own built-in feeder system. We've got people who grow blueberries and mushrooms in them, but cannabis is the most popular thing, because it's so fragile." The trailer is "totally sealed off, and cannabis can be grown ebb and flow, hydroponic, with various dirts. He describes the GrowBot as "a controlled environment for anything you want to grow - any particular vegetation. "We took on this project for the fun of it," he says. But when he was contacted by GrowBot, a Los Angeles firm specializing in mobile grow facilities, he eagerly designed something new for the firm. According to him, "We make all kinds of different trailers," most of them for pretty conventional uses. But Greg Childre's memories of the bash will be tainted by what happened right afterward: Suspects unknown pulled up to a giant GrowBot trailer worth $50,000 that he showed off at the event and drove away with it.Ĭhildre is the man behind Covered Wagon Trailers, a company based in Fitzgerald, Georgia. The High Times Medical Cannabis Cup this past weekend earned high marks from William Breathes, our medical marijuana critic. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |