DSL service where downstream bandwidth exceeds upstream bandwidth
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Le Millenium ! Il y a 25 ans tout rond, nous venions de le passer, ce fameux réveillon de l'an 2000 qui allait être le truc le plus extraordinaire jamais vu et que finalement … bon vous savez. Du moins pour ceux qui étaient déjà en âge de faire réveillon, de rester éveillé jusqu'au 31 décembre 1999 à 23 heures 59.Et franchement, combien ont dit : J'ai bien réfléchi, partez sans moi, je reste au XX° siècle ! Je vous rejoindrai p't'être. Ils auraient eu tort, hein ? Ils auraient raté les smartphones et la révolution du numérique qui s'est installée dans nos vies quotidiennes à coup de réseaux sociaux, d'infos et d'images en tout genre. Non, pas sûr que beaucoup d'auteurs de science-fiction des années 50 à 70 qui nous ont fait rêver avec leurs mondes futurs aient vu venir cette génération perpétuellement collée à une petit planche électronique qui tient dans la poche. Je n'exagère pas. De 2001, où on était censé partir en odyssée dans l'espace à 2010, on est passé de 500 millions de personnes possédant un GSM à 4 milliards six cents millions. Voilà qui a changé nos sociétés et notre vie. Connectée qu'ils disent. Aux autres, au monde, disent les optimistes, à un monde virtuel, en d'autres mots “pas la vraie vie” disent les autres.C'est vrai qu'on ne regarde plus les disques tourner en écoutant la musique qui est devenue un fond sonore et non plus une occupation. C'est vrai aussi qu'on ne doit plus attendre le journal télé du soir pour connaître les infos du jour. Et c'est vrai qu'on peut même regarder des films et écouter de la musique sans avoir à payer (et entre parenthèses en toute illégalité). On peut même parler à certains d'entre eux sur un site nommé MySpace. C'est étonnant mais ils y ont ouvert chacun leur compte pour y déposer des sons, des photos, des images, des infos et parfois, ils répondent à vos messages. Ca fait tout drôle d'être dans son espace, un contact direct avec un musicien ou une chanteuse. Le nombre des chaînes télés explose sur nos téléviseurs, les jeux vidéos passent en haute définition, l'internet en haut débit (vous vous souvenez des 4 lettres ADSL?), les films deviennent des séries de Harry Potter aux Super Héros Marvel, DC Comics et autres. Un besoin de super héros sans doute rassurant avec la montée de super méchants, bien ancrés dans le monde réel, eux. Et donc, un nouveau monde baptisé 2.0 s'éveille comme en témoigne ces nouveaux leaders héros entrepreneurs, comme Bill Gates et Steve Jobs. Des nouveaux leaders et des nouvelles stars, nées à la fin des années 80, et qui ont grandi dans ce nouveau monde digital avec Toy Story comme la jeune Taylor Swift, 18 ans et déjà un deuxième album. Les lendemains qui chantent toujours dans cette nouvelle ère, avec cette nouvelle version de Roméo et Juliette qui vont finalement se marier et qui vont hisser son interprète à un niveau jamais atteint par une chanteuse dans le coeur du public.
Text Us!In this episode we talk to Abbey Luckett Benjamin from Louisiana about raising her daughter Avery. We talk about her daughter's diagnosis of Adenylosuccinate Lyase Deficiency or ADSL, her seizures, living with a medically complex child in a rural area, Avery participating in dance classes, and how she finds joy in the midst of trials.Follow her Instagram at @abbeybenjPlease subscribe, leave a review, and follow us on social media to know about upcoming episodes and to participate in this podcast.Instagram - @raisingdisabledpodcastFacebook - Raising Disabled Podcast
durée : 00:03:34 - La fin du réseau ADSL - Bientôt la fin du réseau cuivré, et donc de l'ADSL. Découvrez avec Pierre Nuss à quelle date vous ne pourrez plus profiter d'une offre ADSL dans votre commune.
This week we'll examine the French President's planned multi-million euro revamp of the world famous Louvre gallery in Paris and also… why is Emmanuel Macron even getting involved in museum refurbishments anyway?We'll also discuss the end of the internet in France, well not quite, but there are major changes afoot that listeners should be aware of.And we'll explore France's love-hate relationship with mega cruise ships. They love building them but do French cities still love welcoming them and their thousands of passengers? Resistance appears to be growing against the so-called floating cities.We'll also find out a strange quirk of French law that could see you in hot water at French motorway toll booths and answer the key question of who decides whether French words are masculine or feminine.Host Ben McPartland is joined by three people worthy of having their portraits hung in the Louvre: Emma Pearson, Gen Mansfield and John Lichfield.Extra reading:France to raise price of Louvre tickets for non-EU visitorsExplained: Will other French museums follow the Louvre in charging more to non-EU visitors?Is France moving towards a ban on cruise ships?Calendar: France begins work to disconnect ADSL internet cablesMacron responds to French driver fined for using phone to pay at tollboothFrench grammar tips: Guessing the gender of nouns Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Le développement de la fibre optique pousse les entreprises de télécommunications à accélérer chaque année le remplacement de leur réseau de câbles en cuivre. La vente de cet or rouge pourrait leur rapporter collectivement 10 milliards de dollars dans les 15 prochaines années. La tendance est inévitable : le développement de la fibre optique signe la fin des anciens réseaux de câbles à base de cuivre qui ont permis l'essor des téléphones, fixes puis l'accès à internet par ADSL. En France par exemple, Orange, propriétaire du réseau de câbles en cuivre, prévoit de le mettre hors service d'ici 2030, selon l'Arcep, l'autorité de régulation des communications électroniques, des postes et de la distribution de la presse. Dans le monde, la plupart des entreprises de télécommunications auront tourné la page du cuivre d'ici 2035, selon le cabinet Analysys Mason, cité par le Financial Times.L'année dernière, la revente du cuivre a rapporté 720 millions de dollars, selon TXO, une société qui aide les opérateurs à recycler le métal. D'ici 15 ans, la manne qui sera perçue par les groupes de télécommunications est estimée 10 milliards de dollars. Cela ne signifie pas pour autant le jackpot. Plusieurs opérateurs assurent même faire un bénéfice négligeable en raison de la complexité du procédé d'extraction du cuivre des câbles, avant de le recycler pour en faire une matière première à nouveau commercialisable. Un recyclage complexe, mais qui s'intensifieMême si l'opération est coûteuse, les prix du cuivre sont appelés à augmenter dans les prochaines années, et cela n'a pas échappé à ceux qui ont intensifié déjà leurs efforts de recyclage, comme l'entreprise américaine AT&T.L'industriel annonce avoir extrait et revendu plus de 32 000 tonnes d'or rouge depuis 2021. La liste de ceux qui se sont engagés sur le même chemin est longue : on peut citer le Suédois Telia, qui annonce avoir perçu déjà 25 millions d'euros via la revente de cuivre issu de ses câbles, ou encore le Norvégien Telenor, qui espère récupérer dans les prochaines années 68 millions d'euros selon le Financial Times.Ce cuivre recyclé vient s'ajouter à l'offre minière existante, sur un marché qui est appelé à se tendre dans les prochaines années. Parce qu'il conduit l'électricité comme aucun autre métal, le cuivre est un composant clé des batteries des véhicules électriques, et donc directement associé à la transition énergétique.L'industrie pourrait avoir besoin de 70% de cuivre supplémentaire d'ici 2050 par rapport à 2021, pour atteindre 50 millions de tonnes par an, selon le grouper BHP. Mais faute d'investissements miniers suffisants ces dernières années, le déficit en cuivre pourrait arriver plus vite que prévu.À lire aussiLe cours du cuivre au plus haut depuis 14 moisÀ lire aussiLa flambée du cuivre aiguise l'appétit du géant australien BHP Billiton
Foundations of Amateur Radio As you might know, a little while ago I started a new project. "The Bald Yak project aims to create a modular, bidirectional and distributed signal processing and control system that leverages GNU Radio." In embarking on this adventure I've been absorbing information as I go whilst explaining what I've learnt to anyone who will sit still long enough. Credit to Glynn VK6PAW and Charles NK8O for their patience. For most people, me included, the introduction to GNU Radio happens via a graphical user interface where you build so-called flowgraphs. These are made up of little blocks that you wire together to get from a Source, where a signal originates, to a Sink, where it terminates. Each of these blocks does something to the signal, it might be a filter, an amplifier, it might encode or decode a signal like FM, AM, Wideband FM, or some other modulation like Phase Modulation or OFDM, Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing, a way of transmitting digital information using multiple channels. It's used in places like WiFi, ADSL and DSL, Digital Television as well as modern cellular systems. Those blocks generally expect a specific type of input and generate some particular output. After you save your design you can run the flowgraph and behind the scenes some magic happens. Your visual representation of signal flow is translated into either Python or C++ and the resulting application is what is actually run, which is why the user interface that you design your flowgraph in is cunningly named, GNU Radio Companion. So, what if you want to do something that doesn't yet exist? As it happens, that's where I came across a YouTube video by John VE6EY called "GNURadio Embedded Python Block" which neatly describes a fundamental aspect of how the GNU Radio framework actually operates. One of the blocks available to you is one called "Python Block", which you can add to your flowgraph just like any other block. What sets it apart from the others is that you can open it up and write some Python code to process the signal. When you first insert such a block, it's already populated with some skeleton code, so it already does something from the get-go and that's helpful because if you break the code, you get to keep both parts. Seriously, it allows you to figure out what you broke, rather than having to worry immediately about how specifically the code is wired to the outside world, which let's face it, is not trivial. If you're a programmer, think of it as the "Hello World" of GNU Radio. If not much of that means anything, think of it as a variable electronic component. If you need it to be a capacitor, it can be that, or a transistor, a whole circuit, or just a filter, all in software, right there at your fingertips and no soldering required. Now I'm under no illusion that everybody is going to want to get down and dirty with Python at this point, and truth be told, I have a, let's call it "special" relationship with the language, but that is something I'm just going to have to get over if this project is going to go anywhere. For my sins this week I attempted to recreate the intent of John's video on my own keyboard and discovered that debugging code in this environment might be tricky. It turns out that you can actually print out Python variables within your code and in the GNU Radio environment they'll show up in the console inside the companion window, which is handy if you committed one of many Python sins, like say attempting to compare an integer against a list. Don't ask me how I know. One thing I'm planning to attempt is to get the same thing going for C++ output. By default GNU Radio Companion uses Python, but you can change it so instead of generating Python, it can generate C++. Whilst I have no immediate need for that, I do know that at some point it's likely that I will, like say when I want to run something on an embedded processor, or some other contraption. So, whilst I have nothing to lose, I want to try out the boundaries of my new toy, besides, I have form, in testing boundaries that is. I'm Onno VK6FLAB
Brian Croucher, EntrepreneurSupport the show
Nonostante la diffusione di fibra ottica e di internet a banda ultra larga, in Italia non facciamo contratti, ci facciamo bastare anzi la connessione dello smartphone o le più lente ADSL. Sarà perché usiamo internet soltanto per svago? #InsalataMistaPodcast Leggi la puntata su Insalata Mista: https://www.insalatamista.blog Per supportarmi: lascia una recensione su Spotify o Apple Podcast, oppure condividi la newsletter o questo podcast! ----------- Iscriviti gratuitamente a Insalata Mista, la newsletter di tecnologia, intrattenimento e attualità da cui questo podcast prende spunto. Iscrivi subito qui
Los datos 0924 CNMC se han publicado y es muy difícil sacar conclusiones. Como la misma nota de prensa recoge MASORANGE ha corregido su serie histórica (desde enero) y ha actualizado los criterios de reporting en #BAF, de forma que está reflejando una bajada histórica en número de clientes conectados. Es un nuevo mercado y necesitamos un nuevo reporting, pero vamos a estar bastante ciegos durante una temporada. Hay 15,6M de Hogares conectados por #FTTH. Eso supondría un crecimiento frente agosto de solo 37K. El menor crecimiento de la serie histórica. Y eso para septiembre, que es el mes en el que más altas BAF se dan (129K en 23). El ajuste introducido por MASORANGE altera toda la lógica del mercado. Quedan 151K hogares conectados por #ADSL. Vodafone España logra dar 15k AN #BAF y encadena 3 meses positivos, después de muchos años. Logra incluso crecer en #HFC algo inaudito (1,5K). No obstante, esa tecnología pierde 4,2K clientes (MASORANGE continúa la migración en el norte) MASORANGE declara 21,7M de clientes #BAM, mientras que Telefonica 12,8M. Los #OMV (que incluyen a Digi Spain Telecom) 5,6M. En altas netas Vodafone España viene casi empatando con Telefonica (56K frente a 66K). MASORANGE pierde 11K en el segundo mes consecutivo de pérdidas. Esta campaña de verano ha sido muy especial y la información de portabilidad móvil nos da algunas pistas adicionales. Telefonica consigue su mejor septiembre en portabilidad neta desde 2018 con 23K. Mientras que MASORANGE registra un valor de -71k, Vodafone España de -11K. Los #OMV (que incluyen a Digi Spain Telecom) son los líderes también en este tipo de captación con 58k. La vista septiembre a septiembre señala que el cambio más notable se produce para Telefonica que, a diferencia del resto de los grandes abandona la categoría donante. La combinación de captación neta y portabilidad neta da lugar a algunos escenarios inesperados: la portabilidad solo es el principal elemento de captación para los OMV (que incluyen a Digi) con 58K port para 93k AN. Telefónica está en valores históricos tanto de portabilidad como de captación (23k porta para 66K altas netas). Pero el posicionamiento de Vodafone ESP es completamente diferente para conseguir 56k Altas netas debe añadir 10k clientes más, que son los que pierde por portabilidad. Otra diferencia: tanto Vodafone Esp como MásOrange son cada vez menos convergentes (su ratio de líneas BAM frente a BAF crece, aunque muy levemente) mientras que Telefónica y los OMV lo son cada vez más. En septiembre los OMV casi empatan en ese ratio con MasOrange
On revient en août 2004 pour vous parler de l'actualité tech de l'année passée. Virus, Spam, les nouvelles menaces ADSL 2 Mbit/s : tout sur IP Né sous DivX Toujours plus de bits Jeux vidéo Participants Références
¿Por qué es importante wordpress en tu estrategia de comunicación digital? - Jaime GármarLa creación de sitios web ha evolucionado desde que se masificó Internet a finales de los 90 hasta la actualidad. Contruir un sitio web antes de que terminara el siglo solía ser complejo, hasta que llegó wordpress. ¿Por qué es importante wordpress? El experto Jaime Gármar nos responde.¿Por qué es importante wordpress? (y la evolución de los sistemas de Administración de Contenidos)Los sistemas de administración de contenidos (CMS, por sus siglas en inglés) han sido fundamentales en la transformación en la manera como se crea un sitio web. Pasamos de herramientas complejas y especializadas a plataformas accesibles para cualquier persona con una formación digital básica. Los primeros sistemas: un territorio exclusivo para ingenieros y diseñadoresEn los primeros días de la web, la creación de páginas era un proceso arduo y técnico. Los desarrolladores y diseñadores web debían tener un profundo conocimiento de lenguajes de programación como HTML, CSS y JavaScript, además de familiarizarse con protocolos y servidores. La gestión de contenido implicaba editar directamente el código fuente de las páginas, lo que requería una precisión meticulosa y una gran inversión de tiempo.Los primeros CMS que surgieron en los años 90, como Vignette y Documentum, estaban diseñados para grandes empresas y requerían equipos de profesionales para su implementación y mantenimiento. Estas soluciones eran caras y complicadas, enfocadas en ofrecer funcionalidades robustas para la gestión de grandes volúmenes de contenido, pero lejos del alcance de usuarios individuales o pequeñas empresas.La democratización del desarrollo webEl cambio significativo comenzó a principios de los 2000 con la aparición de CMS más accesibles y fáciles de usar. Sistemas como Joomla y Drupal marcaron un punto de inflexión al ofrecer soluciones más amigables y flexibles. Estos CMS proporcionaron interfaces de usuario más intuitivas y funcionalidades que permitían a los usuarios agregar y gestionar contenido sin necesidad de escribir código.Aun así, la instalación y configuración inicial de estos sistemas seguía siendo un desafío que generalmente requería la ayuda de un profesional. Sin embargo, el verdadero catalizador de la democratización de la creación de sitios web fue WordPress, lanzado en 2003.WordPress: la revolución del CMSWordPress comenzó como una plataforma de blogs, pero rápidamente evolucionó para convertirse en el CMS más popular del mundo. Su éxito radica en varios factores clave:Facilidad de uso: WordPress se distingue por su interfaz intuitiva que permite a los usuarios crear y gestionar contenido de manera sencilla. Con un conocimiento básico de informática, cualquier persona puede empezar a usar WordPress en cuestión de minutos.Versatilidad: La plataforma ofrece miles de plugins y temas que permiten a los usuarios personalizar sus sitios web sin necesidad de programar. Esto ha creado un ecosistema vibrante donde los desarrolladores pueden ofrecer soluciones para casi cualquier necesidad.Flexibilidad: Desde pequeños blogs hasta grandes sitios corporativos, WordPress puede adaptarse a cualquier tipo de proyecto. Su estructura modular permite que los sitios crezcan y evolucionen con las necesidades del usuario.Nuestro invitadao Jaime Gármar nos cuenta ¿Por qué es importante wordpress en tu estrategia de comunicación digital?Jaime Gármar ha trabajado como comercial y coordinador de equipos de venta durante más de 15 años en distintas empresas y sectores como la Banca Privada o la venta de Servicios Telemáticos (de la época del fax y los inicios del ADSL). Mientras tanto, en el 2013 empezó a “cacharrear” con WordPress en sus ratos libres, enamorándose poco a poco del gestor de contenidos.En 2017 dejó un trabajo fijo en una multinacional y creó su primera empresa, Destaca SL, donde hoy trabaja como Asesor WordPress para empresas que usan (o quieren usar) WordPress para sus proyectos online; soporte & mantenimiento WordPress, desarrollo web o mejoras usabilidad y optimización. Desde entonces ha venido dando charlas, formación y colaborando de forma activa en la comunidad WordPress.En 2017 comenzó a impulsar su marca personal con la ayuda del podcast «Club WordPress», donde realiza entrevistas a emprendedores y empresarios del mundo online y que tienen algo que ver con WordPress, de una forma u otra. https://clubwpress.com/Jaime es speaker habitual en eventos de tecnología y emprendimiento donde habla, sin filtros, de sus conocimientos y experiencia en WordPress y el mundo online.Por Qué Es Importante Wordpress, Jaime Gármar, Wordpress, Sistemas De Administración De Contenidos, Sitios Web, Páginas Web, Blog podcast, Podcast Corporativo, Comunicación Organizacional, Recursos Humanos, Desarrollo Profesional, Desarrollo Personal, Comunicación Efectiva, Santiago Ríos, Mil PalabrasRecuerda por favor escucharnos y suscribirte en la plataforma que más te guste:Apple Podcast Spotify Google Podcast SpreakerDeezerPara participar, escríbeme tus comentarios a santiagorios@milpalabras.com.coRecursos recomendados en este PodcastLinkedIN: https://es.linkedin.com/in/jaimegarmarInstragram: https://www.instagram.com/jaimegarmar/Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@JaimeGarmaWeb: https://clubwpress.com/Suscríbete al Podcast de Mil Palabras enwww.milpalabras.comDescarga GRATIS el ebook “Cómo Crear un Podcast Corporativo”https://milpalabras.com.co/ Otros podcasts recomendados de nuestra redExperiencia Tech.Las voces de los líderes que hacen posible la evolución y la transformación digital. Casos de éxito, innovación, nuevos modelos de negocio y soluciones tecnológicas prácticas para crecer las empresas.https://open.spotify.com/show/77wLRAuRqZMuIiPcaBNHsJHistorias que NutrenConversaciones con profesionales que tienen algo para nutrir tu vida en lo personal, lo profesional, lo espiritual y lo físico.bit.ly/historiasquenutrenSomos CancionesEntrevistas e historias divertidas y personales con Gente que ama la música y sabe de música. (suenan canciones completas al lado de las historias).spoti.fi/3hWr020Logística que Trasciende Aquí encuentras las voces del sector logístico con las mejores prácticas e historias que han contribuido al crecimiento económico de industrias, negocios y naciones.https://bit.ly/logisticaquetrasciendeIdeas Sin editar Reflexiones, opiniones y anécdotas interesantes sobre “cualquier cosa” que se emite en vivo, y claro, sin editar.Conviértete en un seguidor de este podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/mil-palabras--4898895/support.
This is a recap of the top 10 posts on Hacker News on May 17th, 2024.This podcast was generated by wondercraft.ai(00:35): Bend: a high-level language that runs on GPUs (via HVM2)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40390287&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(02:32): Ex-OpenAI staff must sign lifetime no-criticism contract or forfeit all equityOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40394778&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(03:29): OpenAI departures: Why can't former employees talk?Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40393121&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(05:38): Toon3D: Seeing cartoons from a new perspectiveOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40389445&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(07:30): Thinking out loud about 2nd-gen emailOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40392709&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(09:13): ADSL works over wet string (2017)Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40387318&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(11:06): A Trial HIV Vaccine Triggered Elusive and Essential Antibodies in HumansOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40390820&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(12:42): HIV Life Cycle – animated and narrated [video]Original post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40393107&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(14:00): Beekeeper furious over destruction of $2M honey cropOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40389548&utm_source=wondercraft_ai(15:39): Multi AI agent systems using OpenAI's assistants APIOriginal post: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=40395107&utm_source=wondercraft_aiThis is a third-party project, independent from HN and YC. Text and audio generated using AI, by wondercraft.ai. Create your own studio quality podcast with text as the only input in seconds at app.wondercraft.ai. Issues or feedback? We'd love to hear from you: team@wondercraft.ai
El listado del disquete VOL 45 es: Presentación: 00:55:00 Autoexec.bat: 00:05:30 Noticias: 00:06:55 Bases concurso creación de juegos DOS: 01:05:41 El debate: 01:32:55 Publicidad: 02:05:57 Juegos – Trinity: 02:20:41 Juegos – Aventuras gráficas españolas de los 90: 02:36:03 Ese loco Hardware: 03:37:17 Readme.txt: 03:56:49 Este podcast está patrocinado por ACTSL, puedes visitar su sitio en actsl.com. Comenzamos el programa con las noticias que han ocurrido en nuestro mundillo desde el último programa. Hemos salido en Fallo de Sistema, el programa dirigido por Santiago Bustamante en Radio 3. Flynn's Arcade ha sacado dos juegos nuevos: Looking Up I See only a Ceiling y Attack of the Karens y sorteamos su juego 8 Colors Star Guardians +. Hablamos de las aventuras eróticas de Clippy en su novela «Conquistada por Clippy«. Ha pasado el 40 aniversario de King's Quest. Comentamos el remake de Dark Forces. Hablamos de los puntos de Game. Se han votado los mejores videojuegos españoles de todos los tiempos en una gran gala presencial a la que no nos han invitado ;). Se acaba el ADSL en España. Y un par de cosillas más. Comentamos las bases de nuestro concurso de programación de videojuegos en MS-DOS. Seguimos con el tema de debate que os propusimos: ¿Cuándo es licito piratear un juego para preservarlo? Hacemos un corte publicitario con un mensaje del propio Son Goku. En la sección de juegos Logaran nos habla del título de Infocom Trinity, un juego que le da una vuelta de tuerca a las armas nucleares. También haremos un repaso de las aventuras gráficas españolas de los 90. En la sección de Ese loco hardware Martín Gamero nos hablará de su nuevo Kickstarter El Legado de las Olvidadas. Acabaremos el programa con el readme.txt de este mes. Ayúdanos a mantener MS-DOS Club. Agradecemos en este episodio a: Sonia Chaves (@DubbingSonia) por su voz para las cortinillas. Canal de Sonia en Ivoox: Órbita Arrakis. Web de Sonia: soniachaves.es. Xabi San Martín (@laorejadevgogh): Por la sintonía «Tino's Theme» del programa. Christian Jacobsen (@ch_jacobsen): Por el cover metalero de Tino's Theme. Dani Nevado (@DanySnowyman): Por el logo del programa. Javier Sancho (@kalzakath1): Por su dedicación y participación y editar esto. Antonio Lozano (alias Logaran): Por ser el ayatolá de la emulación y un tío cojonudo. Martin Gamero (@3dfxlegacy) por traernos su sapiencia sobre hardware. Podéis ver los libros de Martin en su web: kentinelstudios.com A los productores de este podcast en Patreon: Alfonso, Cocorotta, MrZapato_hdfg10, iXuacu y Marcelo García. Al resto de Patreons que nos echan una mano para que esto no nos cueste dinero y a la gente que nos escucháis y apoyáis recomendando el programa y comentando.
España dice adiós al ADSL. La tecnología que implantó Telefónica en los años 90 para llevar internet a las casas está a punto de desaparecer tras un proceso de nueve años en los que la compañía ha ido dando pasos en esta dirección. El apagón llegaba través de la red de cobre está fijado para el próximo 19 de abril, fecha en la que la compañía cumple 100 años, aunque se trata de un plazo testimonial porque el proceso no está previsto que se culmine hasta mayo del 2025. Queda algo más de un año, pero las distintas operadoras llevan, en todo caso, avisando a sus clientes desde hace meses para facilitarles el cambio en la instalación, un servicio que es gratuito.
https://lateclatec.com/adsl/
Jeudi 1er février, François Sorel a reçu Yves Maitre, operating partner Jolt capital et consultant, ancien PDG de HTC, Frédéric Simottel, journaliste BFM Business, et Raphael Grably, rédacteur en chef adjoint du site Tech&Co. Ils ont abordé l'arrêt programmé de l'ADSL avec le lancement de son démantèlement par Orange, et la sortie du Vision Pro d'Apple aux États-Unis demain, dans l'émission Tech & Co, la quotidienne, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Mardi 30 janvier, François Sorel a reçu Yves Maitre, operating partner Jolt capital et consultant, ancien PDG de HTC, Cédric Ingrand, directeur général de Heavyweight Studio, et Frédéric Bianchi, journaliste BFM Business. Ils se sont penchés sur l'intégration du Wi-Fi 7 dans la nouvelle Freebox et la richesse des contenus de celle-ci, dans l'émission Tech & Co, la quotidienne, sur BFM Business. Retrouvez l'émission du lundi au jeudi et réécoutez la en podcast.
Tu peux soutenir sur le podcast sur KissKissBankBank ou en mettant 5⭐️ sur Apple Podcasts ou Spotify !Zalihata est Design Ops Manager chez Glovo.Zalihata n'était pas du tout destinée à faire du design… Elle arrête les études très jeune et rejoint Orange, où elle vend des accès ADSL. Elle se spécialise dans les parcours de vente et apprend a écouter et répondre aux besoins et attentes de ses clients, à trouver des solutions à des problèmes et faire dialoguer les personnes entre elles.Par la suite, elle s'occupe de faire des achats. Mais ce n'est pas ce qui la passionne le plus.Ce qui la passionne, c'est les outils qu'elle utilise au quotidien : les comprendre, les faire fonctionner et en tirer profit au maximum. Grâce à ça, elle évolue en interne et donne des formations. Que ça soit sur les outils internes, les process ou encore d'autres sujets comme la comptabilité, Zalihata aime former les gens et partager ses connaissances. En parallèle d'Orange, Zalihata passe une licence d'anglais. Puis, elle s'inscrit et obtient le CAPES. Elle décide alors de mettre en parenthèse sa vie professionnelle chez l'opérateur téléphonique, pendant 4 années, et devient professeur d'anglais.Après cette expérience, Zalihata revient chez Orange et devient coach en expérience utilisateur. Zalihata revient sur la manière dont elle a appris cette nouvelle compétence avant de la mettre en application pour les clients d'Orange Business Services.Au bout de 2 ans, Zalihata souhaite avoir une reconnaissance de son expertise. Elle suit alors la formation d'un an en UX Design à l'école des Gobelins, toujours en parallèle de sa mission chez Orange.Après 11 années chez Orange, Zalihata sent qu'il y a un plafond de verre qu'elle ne peut pas dépasser. Au même moment, Payfit publie une offre pour un poste de Design Ops. Zalihata s'identifie totalement au rôle, y postule et obtient le poste. L'occasion d'expliquer ce qu'est une Design Ops, en quoi ce rôle se distingue de celui d'une personne en charge de l'équipe design et ce qu'il apporte au quotidien. Etant la première Design Ops de l'entreprise, Zalihata a tout mis en place à son arrivée. Elle détaille ce qu'elle a fait, ce qu'elle a mise en place et comment elle s'y est prise.Au bout d'un an, Zalihata qui Payfit et rejoint la start-up espagnole Glovo, en tant que Design Ops Manager. Elle nous explique son arrivée dans l'entreprise en plein plan social ou le fait me manager une Motion Designer et une Illustratrice alors qu'elle n'a jamais fait ce métier.On aborde dans cet épisode la création du Design System de l'entreprise espagnole, qui doit servir pour 3 produits différents, être utilisé par plus de 60 designers et pour lequel les développeurs ne veulent pas investir de temps.Aussi, parle-t-on de la création d'une typographie dédiée à l'entreprise, crée en interne avec des besoins très spécifiques : garder les proportions de la typographie actuelle pour ne pas casser le produit ou encore s'adapter à aux alphabets latin, cyrillique, arabe, géorgien et arménien.Enfin, on parle de la mise en place d'un process pour les designers afin d'être plus efficace dans leur communication avec les designers et les développeurs.Les ressources de l'épisodeGlovoTime to Listen, Indi YoungLeading Content Design, Rachel McConnellThe Systems View of Life, Fritjof Capra & Pier Luigi LuisiLes autres épisodes de Design Journeys#24 Mathilde Gauthier, User Researcher @ Payfit#32 Léa Mendes Da Silva, VP Design @ Payfit#48 Marie-Aline Millot, Design Ops @ Agicap#60 Gladys Diandokie, Freelance Content DesignerPour contacter ZalihataLinkedIn
Soutenez-nous surpatreon.com/iweek! Voici l'épisode 165 d'iWeek (la semaine Apple), le podcast. iOS 17.2, macOS 14.2, watchOS 10.2 disponibles et le Vision Pro dès février ? Enregistré le mardi 12 décembre 2023 à partir de 18h. Présentation : Benjamin Vincent avec la participation de Fabrice Neuman, mentor en technologies (pro-fusion-conseils.fr) et Elie Abitbol (co-fondateur MCS à Nice, Cannes et Aix-en-Provence et président des Apple Premium Resellers en France). Au sommaire de cet épisode 165 : Vision Pro, et s'il sortait dès le mois de février ? C'est la dernière hypothèse de Mark Gurman de Bloomberg selon lequel la formation de vendeurs têtes de pont dans certains Apple Store américains sont programmées pour commencer à la mi-janvier. On va envisager le timing de la sortie du masque de réalité mixte tant attendu. 2e mise à jour intermédiaire pour les nouveaux OS arrivés fin septembre : 17.2 pour iOS, iPadOS et tvOS ; 14.2 pour macOS ; 10.2 pour watchOS. Parmi les nouveautés, l'application Journal avec deux trains de retard. En revanche, il faudra attendre l'an prochain pour bénéficier d'AirPlay dans sa chambre d'hotel. Une nouvelle chronique : la fonction de la semaine ! Une fonction apparue dans un ou plusieurs OS, qu'on a adoptée ou, au contraire, qui est passée inaperçue et qui mérite d'être connue. Pour cette première, Fabrice va vous raconter l'intérêt des profils dans Safari, notamment par rapport aux autres navigateurs. Le test de la semaine : deux tests en un, cette semaine, au cœur d'une zone blanche, sans ADSL et sans réseau mobile, Benjamin a essayé l'association d'une parabole Starlink et d'un kit Orbi 860 signé Netgear. Alors, a-t-il réussi à couvrir toute la maison jusqu'au jardin et à la piscine avec du haut débit en wifi de qualité ? Et puis, ne manquez pas le bonus exclusif Patreon : cette semaine, la polémique autour de l'appli Beeper mini qui permet, sous Android, de recevoir et d'envoyer des iMessage mais Apple tente de la bloquer. Pour pouvoir en profiter : patreon.com/iweek ! Rendez-vous la semaine prochaine pour l'épisode 165 !
ポッドキャストはコチラで最新更新 https://nanashi.fanbox.cc/
Bruno y Arturo repasan la actualidad. Arrancamos con los clickbait y las nuevas API de Tesla. Mucho Disney y decimos adiós al ADSL en España.
In the mix for the best DJ I know, Estimulo “Timo and I met first online in the times of the early ADSL era in the beginning 00s. Back then he was already running (and still is!) the influential deep house mix page DeepRhythms.com that nobody only remotely interested in electronic music wouldnt be aware […] Whole Entry: https://deeprhythms.com/special_mixes/estimuloshow_guest_mix_timo_deeprhythms/
In the mix for the best DJ I know, Estimulo "Timo and I met first online in the times of the early ADSL era in the beginning 00s. Back then he was already running (and still is!) the influential deep house mix page DeepRhythms.com that nobody only remotely interested in... Whole Entry: https://www.deeprhythms.com/special_mixes/estimuloshow_guest_mix_timo_deeprhythms.php
Joshua Benadiva hosts Chen Amit, the founder and CEO of Tipalti. We deep-dive into Chen's journey, from finding initial success in tech and product management, to his role today as the leader of a billion-dollar company. Chen offers fascinating insights on how to craft the initial solution for significant enterprise problems, and how being an outsider can bring a fresh, innovative perspective. He also speaks candidly about his learnings from starting Tipalti and the critical elements of structuring an early-stage company and hiring the right team. Chen is a veteran high tech executive and repeat entrepreneur. Prior to Tipalti, Chen was CEO of Atrica, a Carrier Ethernet company that Nokia-Siemens acquired. Before Atrica, Chen was co-founder and CEO of Verix, a provider of business intelligence software. At ECI Telecom, Chen founded their ADSL business unit and led it from inception to $100 million in annual sales. He earned a BSc from the Technion, Israel Institute of Technology and an MBA from INSEAD.
Terugkerend meester-vertellers Bert Hubert en Dave Aaldering slaan met ons de microfoons ineen om nostalgisch te meanderen door herinneringen aan het internet van vroeger. We hebben het over de tijd van inbellen, hoe je omging met vreselijk trage verbindingen en hoe snel de ontwikkeling is gegaan als je er met de kennis van nu op terugkijkt.Bert en Dave hebben beiden een belangrijke bijdrage geleverd aan hoe het internet er in Nederland nu bij ligt. Bert werkte jaren voor Casema en schreef onder meer PowerDNS om het vinden van websites in goede banen te leiden, Dave maakte min of meer per ongeluk van Arnhem de snelste internet-stad ter wereld.Tijdschema0:00:00 Reclame: ICT Group0:00:43 Voorstellen: Bert Hubert en Dave Aaldering0:04:02 Waarom we deze podcast maken0:07:05 Hoe duur en traag inbellen eigenlijk was0:12:11 Overgang van inbellen naar ADSL en kabelmodems0:14:42 Communiceren met ouders verandert met de jaren0:15:25 Een avontuurlijke bezoek aan de Universiteit Leiden0:17:36 Eerste programmeerervaringen met games0:22:55 Eerste baan in 1997 bij Casema0:24:24 Pionieren op internet met HP storage solution0:25:57 Het begin van werken met servers en datacenters0:29:52 Evolutie van domeinregistratie van handmatig naar volledig online0:33:53 Quarantaine en andere tactieken om wanbetalers aan te pakken0:38:01 De samengang van organisaties en de technical debt0:40:58 Internetproviders en technologische ontwikkelingen0:44:51 Uitleg over vertraging bij live televisie uitzendingen0:47:34 Bereidheid om extra te betalen voor live sport0:51:09 Horrorscenario's en PTSD van menig IT'er0:54:04 De voordelen van regelmatige reboots0:57:19 Nina Brink en de internetbubbel van de jaren '901:00:49 Glasvezel in huizen en afsluiting van de afleveringZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The software-defined WAN (wide area network) is a piece of networking technology that simply makes life easier (and safer) for any organization with a distributed network.Instead of struggling to join MPLS, ADSL, and other interconnects together and then blanket the whole thing in encryption, SD-WAN handles all the details. Primary among SD-WAN suppliers is Nuage Networks, the SD-WAN specialist division of Nokia.Our guests in this episode of the Tech Means Business are Saurabh Sandhir, the Vice President and General Manager of Nuage Networks, and Arun Pathak, Vice President of Managed Network and Collaboration Services for NTT. Arun speaks as the enterprise-scale expert in India of SD-WAN technology and software, one that partners with Nuage as its de facto supplier.We talk about the effects of the cloud on networks, the advantages of SD-WAN, and how this layer of software abstraction increases cybersecurity at the network level.Learn more about Nuage Networks here:https://www.nuagenetworks.net/NTT Global is here:https://services.global.ntt/Saurabh Sandhir is on LinkedIn:https://www.linkedin.com/in/ssandhir/NTT's Arun Pathak is here:https://www.linkedin.com/in/arun-pathak-4a730a14/The host of Tech Means Business can be found here:https://www.linkedin.com/in/josephedwardgreen/
Esta semana se han publicado los datos correspondientes a marzo del 23 de la CNMC para el mercado Telco en ESP. Al revisarlos podemos entrever ciertos cambios en las tendencias del mercado que probablemente tendrán efectos a largo plazo. Nos surgen preguntas sobre qué está pasando exactamente con el mercado M2M/IoT y a qué se deben las cifras de crecimiento que se están viendo, mientras que otros mercados vinculados, como la telefónia móvil y la banda ancha móvil los comportamientos son diferentes. También revisamos la reaceleración que para algunos operadores se está produciendo en el ratio de clientes de telefonía móvil que efectivamente usan la banda ancha móvil. Y en el mercado fijo revisamos como la fuente principal de altas #FTTH parece consolidarse como "los nuevos hogares" desbancando al tradicional "migración de ADSL" y los impactos a largo plazo que esto puede tener en el mercado. También examinamos cómo se están produciendo las migraciones desde HFC a Fibra por parte de los diferente jugadores afectados
Hoy arrancamos charlando sobre el fin del ADSL, a Bruno le vacilan por el tamaño y Whatsapp da el salto a múltiples dispositivos.
È possibile allevare un gatto-bonsai? E che un piccione possa recapitare messaggi più velocemente della connessione internet ADSL? Dietro i loro camici bianchi, provette e alambicchi, quanto sanno essere burloni gli scienziati? Con Vito Tartamella abbiamo cercato di scoprire l'ironia e gli studi "non convenzionali" di molti primo aprile (e non solo).Vito Tartamella è filosofo, caporedattore a "Focus" e autore del volume "Il pollo di Marconi e altri 110 scherzi scientifici” (edizioni Dedalo).Ospiti: Vito TartamellaRedazione: Elisa Baioni, Diego Martin, Alex Ordiner, Chiara Vitaloni, Dasara Shullani, Enrico Zabeo, Cecilia Penelope ZambelliAltri riferimenti: https://www.vitotartamella.it/ Sito Web di Vito Tartamellahttps://www.vitotartamella.it/category/scherzi/ Scherzi scientificihttps://www.edizionidedalo.it/la-scienza-e-facile/il-pollo-di-marconi.html Il pollo di Marconi di Vito Tartamella, Edizioni Dedalo, 2022https://www.movaglobes.com/flatearth/ Mappamondo per terrapiattistihttps://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ci2bFFGM8T8 Pigeons vs. Australian Internet (Hungry Beast) di Real Human StoriesSigla ed effetti: https://www.zapsplat.com/ ZapsplatMusiche: https://www.epidemicsound.com/ Epidemic SoundSeguiteci sui profili social del CICAP:Facebook: @cicap.orgTwitter: @cicapInstagram: cicap_it
La première actualité décodée dans cet épisode concerne Kyocera, entreprise japonaise importante dans le secteur des semi-conducteurs, dont le patron a affirmé que la Chine en tant qu'usine du monde n'est plus viable. La deuxième actualité est sur l'Arcep, autorité française des télécoms, qui propose à Orange un nouveau cadre pour accompagner la fin de son réseau ADSL. Sans oublier : TCI veut qu'Airbus retire son offre d'entrée dans la branche cyber d'Atos, et des scientifiques chinois auraient trouvé comment contrecarrer les sanctions américaines sur les semi-conducteurs.Les épisodes de Signaux faibles, ainsi que l'épisode de Culture Numérique sur l'Inde, sont disponibles sur Siècle Digital et les plateformes de streaming. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
Abbiamo parlato spesso di internet e connettività, cercando di sottolineare quanto sia importante investire in una infrastruttura nazionale all'avanguardia. Oggi la quantità di informazioni che scambiamo tramite la rete aumenta a vista d'occhio. Un aspetto che però non deve essere sottovalutato è quello della nostra rete internet domestica, che se non viene correttamente configurata rischia di limitare molto l'esperienza di navigazione in rete. Di questo tema abbiamo parlato con Gianni Garita, country manager per l'Italia di AVM, che ci ha raccontato quali sono i loro prodotti e le loro soluzioni per creare una buona rete internet domestica. Nella sezione delle notizie parliamo del nuovo sistema a circuito integrato per smartphone Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 e di una Intelligenza Artificiale di Intel per riconoscere i deepfake. --Indice-- • Il nuovo Snapdragon 8 Gen 2 (01:20) - DDay.it - Matteo Gallo • L'IA di Intel per riconoscere i deepfake (02:44) - DDay.it - Luca Martinelli • AVM: soluzioni per Internet veloce in tutta la casa (04:12) - Gianni Garita, Davide Fasoli, Luca Martinelli --Contatti-- • www.dentrolatecnologia.it • Instagram (@dentrolatecnologia) • Telegram (@dentrolatecnologia) • YouTube (@dentrolatecnologia) • redazione@dentrolatecnologia.it --Brani-- • Ecstasy by Rabbit Theft • No Pressure by Tim Beeren & xChenda
NBN home internet in Oz. Fixed internet in Australia. Adsl. ADSL+. Fiber or fibre optics. Copper cable. 4G back up and 5G Network. Experiences for the last years and what has happened, the evolution and latest tech available. Please follow/subscribe, share with friends and family.
Internet es un misterio. Uno enorme. O, al menos, lo parece,muchos utilizamos esta red todos los días, y, además, lo hacemos durante muchas horas sin ser realmente conscientes de la complejidad que la hace posible. Sin ser conscientes de todo lo que hay debajo. Hasta que algo falla y nos obliga a dejar de utilizar algunos de sus servicios, algo que ha sucedido durante los últimos meses con Amazon, Facebook, Instagram, Twitch,con WhatsApp, entre muchas otras plataformas. Y el problema es que esta red es tan grande, involucra tanta tecnología, tantos equipos de red, tantas personas y tantos intereses que, inevitablemente, de vez en cuando algo falla. Y el origen del error puede ser humano o estrictamente técnico. todo en internet tiene un nombre: las direcciones IP Todos los dispositivos que tienen la capacidad de conectarse a internet, bien sea a través de nuestra fibra óptica doméstica, bien utilizando una conexión 4G o 5G como las de nuestros teléfonos móviles, deben ser capaces de identificarse con un nombre único que no esté siendo utilizado por ningún otro dispositivo. De lo contrario, si dos o más equipos tuvieran el mismo nombre se produciría una incongruencia debido a que no sabríamos a cuál debemos entregar un paquete de datos determinado. Ese nombre único es, precisamente, la dirección IP. Su función es esencialmente la misma de las direcciones postales que nos permiten recibir paquetes en nuestra casa, y que nos identifican con precisión para evitar que vayan a parar a un destino erróneo. Sin embargo, hay una diferencia importante entre las direcciones IP y las direcciones postales: las primeras pueden variar, y las segundas no (o no suelen hacerlo a menos que se cambie el nombre de la calle en la que residen). Las direcciones IP que no cambian se conocen como fijas, y las que varían son dinámicas precisamente debido a la posibilidad de que cambien en un plazo de tiempo determinado. La mayor parte de los proveedores de acceso a internet nos proporciona una dirección IP dinámica, y, además, los dispositivos que tenemos en casa, y que se conectan a la red a través de nuestra conexión ADSL o de fibra óptica, también suelen tener una dirección IP dinámica. Sin embargo, estos dispositivos no tienen la capacidad de elegir qué dirección IP quieren tener; el responsable de asignársela es un equipo que forma parte de la red y que utiliza un protocolo conocido como DHCP (Dynamic Host Configuration Protocol) para decidir cuál debe entregar a cada dispositivo. Todos sabemos que aspecto tiene una dirección postal, y que aspecto tiene una direccion IP El protocolo que se responsabiliza de describir qué formato tienen y cuál es su significado se conoce como IPv4 (Internet Protocol version 4), pero tiene algunas limitaciones importantes debido a que es la primera infraestructura de direccionamiento implementada en internet, y esta red ha crecido una barbaridad durante las últimas dos décadas. De hecho, ha crecido tanto, y crecerá aún mucho más en el futuro, que ha sido necesario diseñar una infraestructura de direccionamiento más avanzada que sea capaz de acoger la enorme cantidad de dispositivos que se conectarán a ella durante los próximos años.
ADSLのサービスが終わると言うことで家のパソコンにつなぐ、光じゃなくてAIRと言うものに変えたんですけども、接続を現在、行っていますが… #ADSL終了 #ソフトバンクAIR #接続中 #Twitter #MZDAO
La box de l'opérateur Free fête ses 20 ans. En 2022, l'arrivée de la première version de cet appareil a tout changé. Retour sur l'époque héroïque des débuts d'Internet en France avec la journaliste Delphine Sabattier. Le 18 septembre 2002, l'opérateur Free lâche une véritable bombe : une "box" qui permet de se connecter à Internet, de téléphoner et de regarder la télévision via une connexion ADSL. C'est l'arrivée du triple play en France. En plus, Free propose son offre à prix cassé : moins de 30 euros par mois. Un véritable coup de tonnerre dans le paysage de l'époque où les abonnements tournent plutôt autour de 70 euros. Avec cette offre spectaculaire, Free prend de court tous ses concurrents. Certains mettront même la clé sous la porte. C'est le début de la démocratisation d'Internet. Souvenirs avec une témoin de l'époque qui a vécu l'événement au plus près...
Apple no quiere RCS / Maletas para sillas de ruedas / Un año de Bitcoin en El Salvador / Shopee se despide de Latam Patrocinador: La gama Volvo Recharge te ofrece una tecnología con la que podrás realizar tus trayectos diarios al trabajo utilizando únicamente el motor eléctrico sin contaminar y sin hacer ruido. Y también viajes largos utilizando únicamente el motor eléctrico sin contaminar y sin hacer ruido. — Descubre más en VolvoCars.com. -
Es viernes. Está a punto de acabar la semana en la que todo empieza de nuevo, pero aún no es tarde para entonar una oración por los difíciles tiempos que, según los expertos, se avecinan. Aniquila Dios a los idiotas. Especialmente, señor, a los idiotas ideologizados. Fulmínalos atravesándoles el cerebro con un rayo de inteligencia que los convierta en personas razonables.
Es viernes. Está a punto de acabar la semana en la que todo empieza de nuevo, pero aún no es tarde para entonar una oración por los difíciles tiempos que, según los expertos, se avecinan. Aniquila Dios a los idiotas. Especialmente, señor, a los idiotas ideologizados. Fulmínalos atravesándoles el cerebro con un rayo de inteligencia que los convierta en personas razonables.
Es viernes. Está a punto de acabar la semana en la que todo empieza de nuevo, pero aún no es tarde para entonar una oración por los difíciles tiempos que, según los expertos, se avecinan. Aniquila Dios a los idiotas. Especialmente, señor, a los idiotas ideologizados. Fulmínalos atravesándoles el cerebro con un rayo de inteligencia que los convierta en personas razonables.
Dos tipos de agua líquida / El meteorito de los dinosaurios tenía un hermano / Apple trae el derecho a reparar a Europa / Mapa de los océanos de Marte / Banco australiano no dará préstamos para coches de gasolina Patrocinador: En las estaciones de servicio de BP puedes conseguir un ahorro de hasta 40 céntimos por litro y participar en el sorteo de 1.000 repostajes gratis cada día. Descárgate la app Mi BP para tu Android o iPhone, y úsala cuando vayas a repostar BP Ultimate con tecnología Active. — Lo mejor para tu coche y tu bolsillo. Dos tipos de agua líquida / El meteorito de los dinosaurios tenía un hermano / Apple trae el derecho a reparar a Europa / Mapa de los océanos de Marte / Banco australiano no dará préstamos para coches de gasolina
Introduction Hosts: MrX Dave Morriss We recorded this on Sunday March 6th 2022. The last time we set up a chat like this was back in March 2021, almost exactly a year ago surprisingly! Note on the title: we spoke a little on the subject of the Scots language in the show - when speaking of the current census - so the title uses a Scots term. Topics discussed COVID: Losing track of time Christmas: A quiet time for both of the hosts, with some family time Dave's family matters: Son graduated after doing an MSc and got a job quite quickly last year Daughter had graduated from an MSc the year before and also got a job this year. Dave had a bout of shingles in early January, which lasted about 6-7 weeks overall. If you can get a shingles vaccination as you age, get one! UK heating, boilers, etc. MrX's in-laws had a boiler failure during the cold weather, and a gas leak! Dave had a leak in his cold water tank in the attic which flooded the room below. He decided to completely upgrade the heating system, remove all tanks and put in a new pressurised condensing gas boiler. See the Wikipedia page for an overview of central heating systems. Old-style plumbing; coal fires, back boilers and dampers. The era of coal: Gas poker used for starting domestic (usually coal) fires Coal gas made from coal, superseded by natural gas Gasometer storage device for coal gas Internet connectivity: Dave has transitioned from ADSL to fibre since the last show Fibre to the Premises, with up to 1 Gbit/s if desired New router using Wireless 6 MrX has Fibre to the Cabinet Dave's new router doesn't allow the Pi-hole to work at the moment Chromebook: MrX has acquired a Chromebook since our last show It is convenient to use. Made answering the online Scottish Census quite straightforward. Census and Scots Language: The Census asks about the Scots Language, whether the person can speak and understand it. Dave follows @lenniesaurus on Twitter who introduces a daily Scots word. According to Wikipedia: Scots is recognised as an indigenous language of Scotland, a regional or minority language of Europe, and a vulnerable language by UNESCO. In the 2011 Scottish Census, over 1.5 million people in Scotland reported being able to speak Scots. Links Scots words: Scots Language The online Scots dictionary (English to Scots) @lenniesaurus on Twitter - poet and Scots language enthusiast Plumbing, heating: Central Heating Hot water tank Immersion heater Gas poker Coal gas Gas holder/gasometer Internet connection: ADSL - Asymmetric digital subscriber line Fibre to the X - different types of fibre connection
Charla con Leandro "Chino" Torres futbolista profesional, en la cual hablamos sobre sus inicios en su natal Argentina, las dificultades que paso para llegar a profesional, sus experiencias jugando para el ADSL, así como su nueva academia de fútbol.
Easy Greek: Learn Greek with authentic conversations | Μάθετε ελληνικά με αυθεντικούς διαλόγ
Η Μαριλένα κι ο Δημήτρης συζητάνε για αστεία ονόματα (κυρίως επίθετα, για να λέμε την αλήθεια) που έχουν συναντήσει στη ζωή τους. Γείτονες, επαγγέλματα, καθηγητές... Και φυσικά, αστεία ονόματα από τον τηλεφωνικό κατάλογο! Αλήθεια, υπάρχουνα ακόμα τηλεφωνικοί κατάλογοι; Σημειώσεις εκπομπής (show notes) Four Hour Body (https://fourhourbody.com/) Slow Carb Diet (https://www.eatingwell.com/article/7827628/what-is-the-slow-carb-diet/) Χωλλ: Στα ελληνικά, χολ ή χωλ είναι ο διάδρομος σε ένα διαμέρισμα ή σπίτι που συχνά ενώνει τα υπόλοιπα δωμάτια. Χωλλ με δύο λλ είναι η παλιά ορθογραφία. Εξίσου: σημαίνει "equally" Σαβούρης: «σαβούρα» σημαίνει "junk" Ποδάρα: από το «πόδι» (μεγάλο πόδι) Μπουρδάρα: από τη «μπούρδα» (ευγενέστερο συνώνυμο του «βλακεία») Μαλακατές: θυμίζει τη διάσημη λέξη «μαλάκας» Κολλαρού: «κωλαρού» είναι η γυναίκα με μεγάλο κώλο (ass) Ψολιάς: «ψωλή» είναι αρκετά χυδαία λέξη για το πέος Χάρος: σύγχρονη εκδοχή του «Χάρων» Κοπάνα: όταν οι μαθητές δεν πάνε σχολείο γιατί τεμπελιάζουν, κάνουν κοπάνα Λαός: «λαός» σημαίνει people αλλά σαν μια ενότητα, συχνά χρησιμοποιείται σε πολιτική συμφραζόμενα Πεφτουλίδης: «την πέφτω σε κάποιον/κάποια»: to hit on someone, πέφτουλας: κάποιος που το κάνει αυτό πολύ Ακίνδυνος Αλβανός: είναι αστείο γιατί οι Αλβανοί έχουν τη φήμη στην Ελλάδα, ή την είχαν περισσότερο κάποτε, ότι είναι συχνά εγκληματίες. Μπουφές: «μπουφές» σημαίνει buffet. Τίμιος Τέλειος: τα λόγια περισσεύουν! Κροίση Πετρελαίου: ακούγεται σαν το «κρίση πετρελαίου» (oil crisis) Πέτσας Καλοψημένος: «πέτσα» είναι το δέρμα στο κρέας. Ολυμπία Φάρσαλα/Τρίκαλα: είναι τοπωνύμια. Τσουτσούνη: «τσουτσούνι» είναι χαϊδευτική λέξη για το πέος - συχνά τη χρησιμοποιούν παιδιά. Πόθος Καρπός: ακούγεται σαν «νόθος καρπός» που αναφέρεται συχνά σε εξώγαμα παιδιά. Ζήσης Γεράσης: είναι σαν το «ζήσεις γεράσεις» ("whether you live or you grow old"). Αντωνία Χατζηρούφα: «ρουφάω»: to suck. Ξεσφίγγης/Ξεσφιγγούλης: «σφίγγω»: stiffen, tighten up. Ακριβή Γουρούνα: "expensive sow". Χαριτωμένη Ταράτσα: "cute rooftop". Διαλεχτή Κατσίκα: "choice goat". Ποθητός Κωλαράκος (είτε υπάρχει, είτε όχι): "delectable little ass". Λαγουδάκος: «λαγός» = hare. Απομαγνητοφώνηση Δημήτρης: [0:20] Γεια σας και καλώς ήρθατε στο Easy Greek podcast, το podcast που σας μαθαίνει ελληνικά με αυθεντικούς διαλόγους. Είμαι ο Δημήτρης. Μαριλένα: [0:32] Και είμαι η Μαριλένα. Γεια και από εμένα. Δημήτρης: [0:36] Τι ωραία που μιλάμε για πρώτη φορά, νομίζω ότι είναι η πρώτη φορά που μιλάμε με οπτική ίνα. Ή είναι η δεύτερη; Μπορεί και στο προηγούμενο επεισόδιο να είχαμε αυτή την σούπερ γρήγορη σύνδεση. Μαριλένα: [0:48] Ναι, δεν ταλαιπωρούμαστε πια για να φτιάξουμε ένα podcast οπότε όλα καλά. Δημήτρης: [0:53] Είναι μαγικό, παιδιά, δεν ξέρω τι ίντερνετ έχετε στο σπίτι σας, αλλά εγώ για πολλά χρόνια είχα κάτι τραγικές ταχύτητες ίντερνετ στο σπίτι, μιλάμε πληρώναμε για 24 ADSL που είναι και ακριβή, αλλά τέλος πάντων, ας μην μπούμε στις τιμές των εταιρειών τηλεπικοινωνιών, και συνήθως είχα κάτω από 8 mbps, δηλαδή... Και αυτό ήταν μόνο για το download, στο upload ήτανε πάντα 1 mbps και χειρότερο, οπότε φανταστείτε, μου παίρνανε ώρες, το ανέβασμα των επεισοδίων του Easy Greek μού έπαιρνε ώρες, αλλά τώρα μπορούμε να μιλάμε και να γράφουμε σε πραγματικό χρόνο, αυτό είναι απλά φοβερό. Τι σου κάνει η τεχνολογία. Και είμαι πάρα πολύ ενθουσιασμένος. Μαριλού, εσύ τι κάνεις; Μαριλένα: [1:50] Εγώ σήμερα δεν θα μιλάω πάρα πολύ μάλλον όπως το βλέπω, γιατί είμαι σαν το κοτόπουλο, που σημαίνει ότι νιώθω μία τρομερή κούραση από το πρωί, γιατί χθες έκανα το εμβόλιο για τη γρίπη, το Η1Ν1, όχι για τον Covid, και δεν έχει πάει πάρα πολύ καλά, το ξέρεις. Γκρινιάζω από το πρωί ότι πονάω και, ναι, νιώθω λίγο αποσυντονισμένη οπότε μπορεί να 'μαι λίγο πιο ήσυχη σήμερα, μπορεί και όχι, μπορεί να με βοηθήσει το podcast οπότε γενικά είμαι καλά, απλά σήμερα είμαι λίγο ζαμπόν. Δημήτρης: [2:28] Το εμβόλιο της γρίπης που έκανες δεν είναι μόνο για τον Η1Ν1, είναι για όλες τις γρίπες φαντάζομαι που υπάρχουν. Μαριλένα: [2:34] Α δεν ξέρω. Α, οπότε δεν θα αρρωστήσω καθόλου; Τέλεια. Δημήτρης: [2:38] Φαντάζομαι. Μαριλένα: [2:39] Δεν ξέρω, δεν έχω ιδέα τι έκανα, έκανα αυτό που μας είπαν ότι πρέπει να κάνω για το μωρό, οπότε ναι σήμερα δεν είμαι πολύ στα κέφια μου. Δημήτρης: [2:48] Κοίτα, ούτε εγώ είμαι και το ξέρεις καλά. Μαριλένα: [2:50] Α ναι, πες τι κάνεις. Δημήτρης: [2:52] Εγώ έχω ξεκινήσει μία νέα διατροφή για την οποία διάβασα σε ένα βιβλίο που λέγεται "The Four Hour Body" από έναν κύριο Tim Ferriss. Αυτός είναι ένας τρελός, είναι τρελός και παλαβός, προσπαθεί να βρει τα μυστικά και τα κόλπα στα πάντα, να χακάρει τη ζωή του για να την κάνει πιο εύκολη και πιο αποδοτική, είναι τέρας αποδοτικότητας και hacking, ας πούμε, της ζωής. Σ' αυτό το βιβλίο βρήκε τον πιο εύκολο τρόπο, ας πούμε, για να χάσεις βάρος ή για να χάσεις λίπος βασικά και να χτίσεις μύες, και συγκεκριμένα προτείνει μία δίαιτα στο "Four Hour Body" που κόβει τελείως τους υδατάνθρακες και σου λέει: «Δεν πρέπει να τρως τίποτα από υδατάνθρακες, πρέπει να τρως μόνο πρωτεΐνες και μόνο λιπαρά». Αλλά εγώ επειδή δεν τρώω κρέας, οι πρωτεΐνες μου είναι όλες από φασόλια και από τόφου και από τέτοια πράγματα, άμα δεν μπορώ να αγγίξω καθόλου τα ζωικά προϊόντα, ούτε καν το γάλα επιτρέπεται σε αυτή την δίαιτα, οπότε μπορείτε να φανταστείτε χτες έφαγα για βραδινό τόφου με κουνουπίδι και φασόλια και, παιδιά, γίνεται... θάλαμος αερίων, έχει γίνει το γραφείο μου. Για την υπόλοιπη απομαγνητοφώνηση, γίνετε μέλη μας στο Patreon (https://www.patreon.com/easygreek).
Charla con Uziel García jugador del Atlético San Luis, en el cual hablaremos sobre su experiencia de visorias en diferentes equipos, su llegada y estancia en fuerzas básicas en Chivas, torneos internacionales, su llamado a selección mexicana Sub- 20 y su paso actual en el ADSL.
Episode Summary:Elon Musk Sells $5 Billion of Tesla Shares$500 Shiba Inu Giveaway Guests:Ben Rabizadeh StoryTrading 10:00Vivi Biotech Queen https://twitter.com/Biotech_SD 24:00Zandy Forbes, Ph.D. President & CEO of MeiraGTx (NASDAQ: MGTX) 41:00Ronen Samuel, CEO of Kornit (KRNT) 55:00Scott Mathis, CEO and Chariman of Guacho Holdings $VINO 70:00Renato Capelj, Benzinga, Physik Invest 110:00https://physikinvest.com/Hosts:Spencer IsraelTwitter: https://twitter.com/sjisraelAaaron BryTwitter: https://twitter.com/aaronbry5Subscribe to all Benzinga Podcasts hereClick here for BENZINGA TRADING SCHOOL Get 20% off Benzinga PRO here Become a BENZINGA AFFILIATE and earn 30% on new subscriptionsDisclaimer: All of the information, material, and/or content contained in this program is for informational purposes only. Investing in stocks, options, and futures is risky and not suitable for all investors. Please consult your own independent financial adviser before making any investment decisions.Unedited Transcriptwe got a lot of guests today. Here's that's what I said. Here's what we got. We got Ben from story trading in like eight minutes. We've got Vivi biotech, uh, or the Bio-Queen at, uh, 1215. We've got Zandi Forbes from Mira GTX. She's a presidency yet.We're talking gene editing at 1230. We got Ronan Senor from Coronet digital we're talking, uh, fashion and the fashion supply chain at 1245. Did I get all that right? As far as timing goes. Yep. We got Scott Mathis from Gaucho holding sicker V I know, uh, at one and that Renato, uh, Capella, he is a Benzinger writer and also does some really, really cool options trading on the side.Uh, he'll be on the show at one 30. So we got what we got. 1, 2, 3, we got six guests today. We have all that's a lot, frankly. Uh, maybe a few too many, but nonetheless, here we are. So before we get to those guests, uh, we're going to talk about what's what's moving. We're going to talk about, uh, crypto. We're going to do a guest that sharp sediment.Cause we got some good feedback from that yesterday. So, um, AB where should we start? Um, well, let's start with just looking at the overall market. Spencer. I see Christian in the chat asking who do we have on for a guest today? You just ran through them, but you can also check the description in the YouTube, uh, the YouTube description for the guests for the day.Um, and shout out to the chat yesterday. We had some good trade ideas thrown out in the chat yesterday. We did, uh, easy Mike was talking about Uber puts. I played those. They were up nicely. Um, and we were talking about playing Disney for a big move on either side. We got talked out of it by our main man, Nick Shaheen.But yeah, I don't know. Maybe we should have done it. Yeah. I felt bad about that one going and they got talked out of it, but, uh, you know, it was a pretty brutal quarter. So, um, anyway, I don't even know why I look at Disney it's in my never sell portfolio. That's my first mistake is don't look at and stuff and your never sell portfolio.Otherwise you're just giving yourself anxiety. Rowan DAS pips is saying audio levels. Are we good, Bruce? Or Ron? Are you awake? I'm here. Okay. Oh, he's coming through us through the sky. I did not know that was coming from Terminator. I'm hanging out on the background, like a good idea. Hey, uh, while we figure out those levels, if you all want to do a solid, as DK suggested and hit that like button ladies and gentlemen, we'd appreciate that.Thank you very much. Um, Hey, what's do a guest, that chart segment. We're going to start doing this every day yesterday. Wasn't it easy one a B I don't even remember what it was. It was D whack. Oh yeah. That was that. That was yours. Full disclosure, I guess the one today. No, because I changed it. Shoot. So beforehand Spencer showed me the guests that chart and I guessed it and he didn't like the fact that I got it so easily.So he went out and picked a new one. I don't know what it is. I went out and I picked her from, Ooh, this will be a good drawer. And then he gets to like right away. So it's not a firms that don't get that, um, drop your answers on the chat and whoever's right. Uh, email us afterwards and we'll send you some swag.Um, here is two days chart of the day. This is going back to like February, or actually this is going back to the start of the year. This is going back to the interests of the start of the year. Now I will give you some hints because otherwise it'd be impossible. I feel like, um, in some respects, this is a technology stock in some respects.Oh man, we can have a winner already. Holy moly. Christian Gallagher. Wait, it was PayPal. This is PayPal. How so are we looking at weekly candles right now? Is this a daily PayPal has gotten beat up over the past month or so it looks like, yes, it has gotten beat up is, is, is, is a nice way of putting it, but yes, Christian Gallagher.Did anyone yesterday? No, Frendo on yesterday. Christian email us shows app benzinga.com. Hey, why is PayPal down so much? Didn't they just announce a Venmo, Amazon integration. So yeah, you would think that tell me you don't own PayPal or maybe you do and you don't know it. Um, I think in my like real portfolio, the one that I don't manage it's in there scourge.It's too easy with showing prices. Well, that's an idea. I take the price off ridiculously hard, but we could do that. Should I buy? I like calls on PayPal. No, it's gotta be coming back up at some point, right? That's one way of putting it. Um, you want to throw out like, uh, you know, you want to buy the, the, the, the, the two 80 strikes expiring and like six months.Really worth looking at. I'm sure it's not very much money. I do think though we have to, um, you know, keep up, like if we start doing obscure biotech stocks, you know, it'd be nearly impossible. So what we'll probably try to stick to, I dunno, S and P 500. Yeah. That's, that's, that's a good plan. Stick to the S and P 500.So we're going to do this everyday. Christian email us shows up and it's going to come. We will hook you up with some schwag before we go to our first guest AB I seem working backstage. Let's do our first crypto update of the day. Sure. Yeah. So yesterday Bitcoin spiked on the CPI data and then gave up all those gains and more.Let's take a look today to see how the, the crypto markets are responding to that yesterday. Uh, we, we have a lot of people in the chat that have been asking kind of how are they supposed to be trading crypto right now? So I know you and I, Spencer are in that boat where we're just like adding Ethereum and not really touching it or selling it.I haven't even added recently. It's been a while for me. I hadn't bought a theorem. I wanted the board. So yesterday, w like I've mentioned, once that CPI data came out, Bitcoin spiked and actually hit brand new, all time highs, um, gave all those gains up is currently trading about $65,000 a coin down 4.8%.Ethereum is also down, albeit not as much Ethereum currently, right around $4,800. So we talked about that $5,000 level being a big level for Ethereum. I think once we see a theory and finally breakthrough that $5,000 level, we can really see it run. Um, but yeah, everything pretty much in the red, like you can see from this heat map Sheba, he knew though in the green up 5%, um, we're actually going to have a big Shiba Inu guest on the show tomorrow.Uh, his name is Ross. He was an early investor and also a kind of co-developer of Sheba. So he's someone that I think I can say confidently knows more about Shiba Inu than 99.9% of people in the world. Um, so if you're interested in Sheba or what's next for the coin tune in tomorrow, he'll be on about one 30, uh, Spencer, any thoughts on this crypto heat map?I I'm trying to get a link right now because we're actually doing a sheep giveaway. I'm trying to get the link for that. I don't have it handy, but we're giving away some free shipping. I hope somebody gets me that link so I can get it to you. Uh, that's my thought, my thought is no. I mean, Bitcoin is an inflation hit crypto isn't inflation, hedge.Um, I don't quite understand the why it's down like this today, but you don't. All you need to do is look at the reaction to Bitcoin at 8:30 AM. Eastern time yesterday, right? Inflation comes out. It's harder than expected. It's it's more than expected. What does Bitcoin do? It goes up. Mike is saying, Hey, be it.It's a good play. Definitely go for PayPal options. Um, so I don't know if he's, you know, facetiously saying that he wants to see me lose some money, but I'm looking at him. I'm looking at the calls. Um, but yeah, Spencer, like you mentioned get some free Bitcoin we'll we'll throw that zing token up real quick.Go to Voyager. You put in a hundred dollars, you get $50 free Bitcoin, if you use the code zing. Uh, so not a bad deal at all. I mean, who doesn't want $50 of free Bitcoin checkout Voyager for that? Use the code zing. Um, all right. Real quick before we get to Ben. Yeah. Yeah. And, and I'm going to post the link to the ship giveaway.Um, when I, once you find that I find it. Yeah, no problem. Somewhere out there, easy Mick, you might be the guy who knows technicals what they're talking about when it comes to technicals, I'm watching a. Dash, which has been up a lot over the past, I don't know, week or so. Is this, is this, this the kind of subtle head and shoulders forming on the, on the one day chart?I think we're looking at five minute candles right here. I see one shoulder here. This could be the head, if this is the, the second shoulder, um, you know, could it start falling down or should I be looking at some dash puts, I need someone who knows technicals better than I do to let me know if this is, uh, you know, I'm not a big patterns guy, so I'm not really know, but we have some people out there that are outsourcing.And I know, I know when I need to listen to someone that knows more than I do. Yeah. Um, Alvin say, and he's looking at Wayfair puts an ADSL. K what's ADSL desk. Autodesk. Yeah, by the way, I just put the link in the chat for the ship giveaway. There it is. There it is. You can't click it on the screen, but it's in the chat.I'm just throwing up there. So y'all know it is there. All right. Y'all so story train. If you guys have watched a show before you've seen Ben on the show, he gave us a E H R at, I don't know, four bucks, three bucks. What does it now? It's like, I like 20 let's check real quick before he comes on. He'll give us an update on AHR.Um, it's at $23. So let's see. I mean, it's, it's up. I want to say like at least 200% since he pitched us to us on the show, he's got a couple more stocks. We're going to talk about, uh, Should we bring them on easy MC RSI? Isn't it. If the RSA is 90, isn't that a sign it could come to? I don't know. You, you know, more about technicals than I do.Let me know. All right. Without further ado, let's go ahead and get BenOh, Ben, what was the, what was the price of AHR when you first came on the calendar? What's up guys? Yeah. When I first came on, the show was around $5, five 40, somewhere that somewhere in the low fives, I believe it was. Yeah. And when we first presented it to our VIP community, when I presented as a trade idea, it was $2 and 74 cents.What, all the way up to 27. So it was a 10 bagger if you captured that. And I happened to pretty much captured that I was done. I'm handing this from 2 74. I didn't sell my first shares until 16. And then, um, I sold a lot more in the, in the 20 to 25, 26 weeks and maybe even gotten a little bit at 27. So, um, yeah, I've got a few updates for you on, on that.And a couple other sucks. Yeah. You got a new background. This is the first time we're seeing this. It looks pretty good. Yeah. A lot more work to do. We got to get that our mikes and cameras and everything, but yeah, this is the first time anyone's seen this background. Cool. And you said too, it looks like we did.It took us far too long, but we eventually got it together. You get a zoom out so Ben can see our beautiful. Oh, wow. That's great, man. Um, all right, Ben, you want to go ahead and get your screen shared and we can go ahead and run through those slides real quick. I know we only got about 10 minutes, so we've got a few I'll work.I'll be fast. All right, there we go. All right. So yeah, first we got that quick disclaimer, we got to always do that. A story is not investment advisor and missing his spirit is in most gimmick where some losses of you who are new to store trading, what is associate is the practice of understanding market pricing.We also call that the story behind the trade through the four pillars, which we say are sentiment catalyst, fundamentals, and technicals. That allows us to take a holistic look at markets and make choices based on all of these factors, not just one of them. So air story, trade idea, update. I officially opened that in my community on July 8th of 2 74, I did close it on November 8th of 25, 79.I still own some shares. Uh, I ended up selling about nine giving 95% of my shares. Um, Monday morning was really the trigger for me and that's because I saw something, the technicals and also the sentiment, which caused me to say, let me, let me lock in these games. And the technicals last Friday was the.Solid green candle on the chart, you can go look it up the first solid green channel and then tire run-up, which, which means it started the day high and then went down lower throughout the day. And throughout this entire run, it was starting low and going higher throughout the day. I took that to be a reversal sign plus the sentiment, I think when reached peak Eby sentiment for now, for this cycle with, uh, Elon Musk selling shares of Tesla with the Caribbean IPO, with excitement, but Eby infrastructure.I'm trying to time that sentiment top. So I took my profits. I am keeping about 5% of my shares because it could go much higher still if they get the right contracts in the future. Got it. Um, so it took some money off the table, trim some of your position and air took those profits, never a bad move. Uh, Ben, what else?I was on your radar today. I wanted to give you an update on side, cause I was on your show. July 26, we presented this at $5 and 70 cents. Uh, this is stuff that's been up 66% since it was initiated in our community. At the time we said, Hey, T-Mobile's come in. End of month in August. It didn't happen then.But it happened last night. Uh, so a few updates. They have earnings last year. Um, so this T-Mobile deal came three months late, but it's finally here. Now, key, this was announced last night on the conference call only. There's no PR yet. So people who are in the know who are listening to the conference call, they have a big edge getting into the stock right now.Um, there probably will be a PR at some point in the future, and there's also tremendous traction with their other customers, 18 T and Verizon. Um, there was an upgrade today to $9 and I'm not even sure that Benzinga caught it, that upgrade by the analyst and $9 by lake street. But we think in our community, it can go much higher.Uh, there's uh, estimates out there in our community saying we can do go up to a dollar 33 DPS by 2024, which would be a $40 price target. So that's the update on SSI. You know, our investigative research worked and we're read about T-Mobile just a few months late. So this company is going to start printing lots of tests going to be a very profitable company.Do, do you have a target? Um, yeah, no, I don't have to stop losses. God forbid men. No, I do stories yet. I never do stop losses. So I've been holding the stock for like two or three years. I increase in decrease my position around catalysts. So, um, I was buying and after hours last night I bought a lot more today.It's now my largest position actually. And uh, I'm not going to put a price target. I see how it goes. I, I assess the fundamental sets of metallics and technicals on an ongoing basis to determine. There you have it. Yep. So I do have a new pig that I'll get to in a second. But before that, just a little quick alert, maybe something for you guys to look into and talk about, because this is a big kind of big cap for us.At $1.5 billion company GoPro. We presented it to our community Sunday night, um, because the fundamentals are super strong. They had earnings last Friday and we have anticipated a technical breakout of the 200 DMA, which just happened this morning. And this is really, it could be a really fun situation, wanted to bring your attention because it has, this has short and gamble, squeeze potential, very high, short position.He has sense of it has been very, very low, but the financials have completely turned around with this company and they're printing tons of cash. Now you see the technicals broke. The options are very liquid, very cheap. And if it gets into the right hands and the Reddit community, et cetera, this could be a crazy profit potential, you know, with shorten game of squeezes.So keep your eye on that. But go. So GoPro's up about 9% today on the strong earnings. Um, so I, I mean, I, I don't know, personally, Ben, if I'm going to go in and try to chase GoPro and it's already up 10%, but I, or 9% today, but I definitely like having it on my radar. Uh, J rice in the chat was also talking about GoPro saying that he thinks it could be a long-term turnaround play.Uh, I don't know. Munis has been one of those stocks that has just been like beaten down over time historically. Um, but you know, at some point I don't think you can ignore the fundamentals or Fridays when I got in added more Monday, uh, I got a little bit messed up on the options than playing the options.So I actually lost some money. Cause I got scared with the whole inflation thing yesterday, but I'm in it now and yeah, the sense of it's sport, that's the only thing people hate this company, but they're printing cash like crazy. The technicals are turning and shorting, given squeeze potential, such that this, yeah, my all hold back a GoPro has always been that.I feel like they have a very limited, uh, customer base, you know, it's like who, who who's going out and buying GoPros. It's people that take part in extreme sports, you know, mountain bikers, snowboarders, skiers, et cetera, outside of that. Um, I don't, I don't know how many, you know, everyday people are GoPro customers.It's absolutely correct. And I'm not, you know, I wouldn't take issue with that, but the amount of earnings they have like 60 million EBITDA this last quarter. And if you compare it with their market cap, I mean, this thing can easily be 17 bucks. Even with that knock against it. Got it. Um, I been, what else is on the radar?I have a presence. It's my first story. Trade ideas. Since air. I presented this to my VIP community last week. Okay. Listen to the presentation. Don't just jump into buying guys. Okay. Because of what happened with their, every stocks, not air, I can guarantee you, this is not going to go a thousand percent in the next three months, like heritage.Okay. So that sock is Gaia, ticker symbol, G a I a. All right. So we're going to look at it and yeah, it's a smaller company on the ground, 200 million market cap or so, but you know, what's the story behind the trade. That's what we're trying to figure out. And again, we look at the sentiment, the fundamentals, catalyst and technical.So let's start with the fundamentals guys, digital video subscription service, like in some ways like, like Netflix, they sell, um, they make original content for yoga, alternative health, holistic healing, nutrition. It's a monthly subscription service. They've been growing steadily over the last many quarters.They're profitable. Uh, fundamentally I think their inflection really happened to a quarter or two ago when they became profitable. And you can see some of the, uh, the trends here in terms of their, um, their revenue and their EPS, although in the right direction. So in our community, we collaborate with people who are really steeped in fundamentals, just charts, courtesy of Mark Holmes.He has a risk reward chart here in terms of what is the value of this stock and. You know, it's worth, it could be worth at least $17 a share. And the stock is very cheap here. So, so that's the fundamentals. You can check it out on your own. Go look at the earnings report and you'll be able to verify everything I'm saying about, uh, the growth and the subscriber growth and money they're making written it now.And it could potentially be, uh, you know, Netflix may buy them out one day. You know, there's, there's a lot of opportunities here. So, um, yeah, catalyst let's go to the next pillar. Uh, in these sorts trading four pillars, they had their earnings just recently, November 1st, it was 20, 20, 20 2% revenue growth, uh, year to date compared to last year Q3 EBITDA of $4 million.Uh, even a margin of 20% was their fifth straight quarter positive earnings in cashflow. Um, and then they had an additional catalyst the next day. So we'll talk about that catalyst in just a second. What happened the day after earnings, but first let's go to sentiment. So the sentiment is kind of poor with the stock because fundamental investors are frustrated at the price action.I know a lot of fundamental investors saying this should be worth 17, 20, 25 bucks. Why is it $10? Why is it moving yet? So I listened to other participants. I say, I talked to people in social media. I talked to people in my community. Why aren't you interested in the stock? And this is what I'm hearing.The total adjustable market may be too small. It may be too niche, their content. We talked about alternative medicine, yoga, meditation, and things like that. So it feels like I'm just not interested. It doesn't seem like a huge part. Other people say, Hey, the content, they have some content that's kind of fringe on their French content.Like some of that alternative medicine, there might be some videos on, you know, some vaccine hesitancy type stuff or who knows, like some things are it's alternative content, right? So some ESG, uh, buyers, uh, may stay away from that environmental social governance. So that's another knock on the sentiment.The other knock is this is just slow and steady growth it's and where's the hockey stick potential on that. So just remember, this is the poor sentiment. This is what happened. Going back to the catalyst the next day after earnings, after we know the fundamentals are great, the next day another catalyst hit the other, the catalyst was there was a PR that Demi Lovato became a brand ambassador for.And there was a press release that a lot of people didn't see a where Demi Lovato says I'm excited to be one of Dias. First celebrity ambassadors, and honor to join a platform. I've been a fan of for some time she has 118 million followers on Instagram. And the market cap is again like 189 million. So this company has been growing slow and steady.And all of a sudden, they hit you with this news of Demi Lovato is a huge mainstream personality, that and company, I want to go back to this. Airpoints the one thing I saw that the thing about Demi Lovato, uh, in, and I, I guess I didn't realize this was the same company, but like they got a lot of weird shit on their platform.And that was the sentiment I was talking to. They're saying, oh, there's stuff is weird. I just don't want to own this company. But you know, I think that, you know, they're growing steadily, they're getting to a place where they can really focus on growth now, and to me, and let me go back to that bad point.You just made that pinpoint. You brought it up for me, right? Yeah. They have weird stuff. It's too niche. The French content. They keep some buyers away. But this is where I think that Demi Lovato news is really significant because they're in a financial position now to really grow the company. And to me, this signals.And in fact, in that PR said, I'm excited to be one of guys. First celebrity ambassador, And I have a feeling this company is going to start growing their content and start getting into more mainstream content. And based on what you're saying, I think they may be looking for more celebrity ambassadors.And it's just a great situation because the downside is so limited. You have a fundamental floor here and now you have optionality upside. If the company starts doing things to get that hockey stick growth potential. And that's why I really add it to my position here. And I'm very excited for the next several months on this stuff.Um, let me just go to the last or technical resulted with her awesome technician Rex. And this is a monthly chart is saying, uh, this can go to the twelves if it breaks out of the yellow.here, which thought is that shorter than I think the current breakout circled right there. It's got a breakout of, I guess, 10 70 area.He thinks it can go to 12 for the month. And here's another view which looks much more bullish. This is a long view of the monthly chart is a sometime in the future. When the 12 to 13 breakout at the blue line, it should proceed to break out the all-time trend at the white line. And he thinks this is a several month play for that to happen, but you can kind of see where this can go.Uh, if that happens. Uh, any questions on that or any of the other stops, man? I didn't see this one coming. I didn't realize this. I read about this company and I was like, man, I didn't even realize they were a public company until you came on here. So, um, I'm all I'm putting two and two together here. Uh, Ben, thank you as always for coming on the show, we appreciate it and uh, and have a good rest of your day.Please follow us on YouTube. Thank you guys. Thanks a lot, Dan. We got to get moving. We got our next guest. She's already here. We're going to talk biotech guys. I know that we, we always get asked. We always get questions like when's Vivian. When's Vivian. When well she's on right now. Not right now. She'll be on in like five seconds when we bring her on.But Vivi Bio-Queen will be joining us every Thursday. At this time, I told you all to save your questions for your bites. The questions for right now, let's bring her on Vivi. How are we doing today? Good. How are you guys? Can you hear me? Well, we hear you. We see you and we have questions. Oh, awesome. And before we do any questions, I think, um, we can do some updates.I did have a request on Twitter to cover it stock. Um, like at my old good lawyer friend, mellow at Twitter, I, this is out for entertainment purposes. So, uh, is only my opinions are for entertainment, purpose, not a financial advice. So I wanted to, uh, first of all, um, talk to you guys, um, just given up a date, we just had the, uh, ER, on KMP.H can you guys put that up over there? Yeah, this is a daily chart. Okay. And P Hit's quiet. So, yeah, so we just had the ER and I want to, so when I, when everybody kept asking me, like, what do you, what are you going to do for 'em? What are you going to do for K MPH? My position was this small because he is a, some of the concerns I had. I spoke to the manager and he interviewed me. And, uh, he said, you know, we're not going to put any reps in New York yet.And it's just going to be certain regions in the United States. And for me, it showed a little bit of a weakness because for me, if you launching a drug, you should have put reps all over the map. But I think they're just trying to be cautious. So they report around like, I think 2 million in revenue, but here's what I'm bullish.Now. They just launched the rest of the Salesforce. And this company here, you know, their burn rate is really, really small because Korean is doing all the selling. So the burn rates is like a million a quarter and they have a, still have 135 million. And he is what I'm bullish of. Um, there's a company that sells a scripts and there's a guy that, uh, his friend works for this company and feeds him all the script.So for you guys to have an idea, right, the, the feedback has been amazing. So July, they had a nine scripts for the monthly and then August, they had 173 scripts, um, September 416, October 886, still low because there were not out throughout the nation. But I think the feedback has been tremendous from psychiatrist, from the drug and the differentiator.And I feel like as they deploy, uh, the other sales reps, we going to just ramp up the sales. So I feel like at this moment, I wanted to add a little bit more to my position because I, I see the future being very bright here, KMBH. And I think that, um, we gotnot yet. Not yet. I, I should have now I have an, I am waiting for some of my swings to flourish, so I haven't been able to, to add, but I wanted to for sure. Okay. And then I want it to put you guys out. Somebody asking me to, uh, to, uh, cover a, uh, a N N S. Hmm. Okay. Now I want I'm familiar with, but it is biotech.So it's a biotech it's under the radar. So I wanted to explain to you guys some of the reasons how I invest in biotech, and I told you guys, if there's no commercial products, there's, there's got the most important thing you can look at is cash, right? Because if you don't have a cash, no product, are they going to burn too much?And they also gonna have a, to do offerings. And if the stock is low, they do reverse the split. So the first thing I do is to look what was the cash burn and how much cash they have left in a would the future and what the catalysts are going to be. So this company here, the first thing that got me to, to look at it was they have a $271 million in cash.So they're really the city really strong. So I thought that was a really, really, uh, um, uh, valid, uh, information, very important. Then I look at a financial institution on. EVestment, which is a goblin, was the director of FDA is a partner on their firm. So they own 2.5 million shares. So I thought that was another very important information because goblet is well connected to FDA.Not that you know, it nobody's going to be bought out, but when you have investors that work with FDA, they know what it takes to, to be compliant, to get a drug approved, right. Because it's just so much behind to get a drug approved. So manufacturing, you know, how the studies are designed. So I like the fact that there's Nia investment behind.And then I also know VOD is, oh, 2.1 million. So Novartis has some interested and, and the pipeline, it looks really, really amazing is all CNS, um, uh, and mass. Um, they're going to have, uh, Gilliam Barre syndrome, which is a very rare disease. So I really like this company. I really do. I, I'm not, uh, obviously I can't be in every single stock.Uh, but I, I, I, I think this is a really good a long-term, uh, stock to hold for sure. So that would be one. And then if you can, um, bring back, uh, pro GPRO G we have a lot of fans PRG. It's like almost like a min stock, but also a really good stock to hold long and, um, really. Yes. Yes. So, so what, what do you see that the market doesn't see, um, what I see that the market doesn't see.Um, I will tell you why this company is going to be huge. They have a two types of, of delivery system. They have a, um, on, I'll tell you guys, they have a two to two technologies and I wanted to bring to you guys, let me see. I can share a screen. Okay. But I have it here right in front of me. So they have two things.They have the OBDs okay. Which is oral Biotherapeutics delivery system. So what it does is, is able to take big formulations and put in a form of a pill. So for example, Humira is one of the biggest blockbuster drugs in the world. If they found a $10 billion. So you imagine if Abby, I think Abby is a Humira honor.If, imagine if Humira is loses patterns and five years, right. And all of a sudden, because doctors love the efficacy of this drug, and that's why it's so well prescribed. Right? But it's an injection. Imagine for this company sell their technology. And all of a sudden you can have a drug, like a Humira being, um, given orally, all of a sudden you create a whole new patent for that drug.Do you follow me? Because a different formulation. So all of a sudden you gaining another 15, 20 years. I have a patent on that drug. Now imagine how many pharmaceutical companies would have be jumping all over because they like, geez, I have this, this drug that's high formulation. And now I have a, I would love this drug to be an oral form because patients do prefer to be an oral form.So I see, um, they announced that they have three partnerships with the big pharma, but they have announced who, so everyone is kind of on a suspense, like who are going to be the big pharma. So they have, uh, right now with the Pfizer there, just to have an idea, they, the not only the delivery, the delivery system does this to the big formulation, but also one of the drugs of four in any boat to the second one, the oral bio biotherapeutic delivery system.The OBDs, what it does is it's designed it to, to, um, to take it a pill and the pill, the way this delivers it, doesn't go all over your bloodstream. So it's it's for the GI tract. So is GI specific drugs and there's one. For for, for, uh, uh, Pfizer they're there. The preclinical, what they found was not only that, that would their delivery system, that drug was 25 times more potent than the Pfizer drug, but had a no toxicity because it doesn't go to the bloodstream.Like the other drugs would go. So you have a less toxicity, less, less side effects. So imagine what they can do if they already doing this with Pfizer drug, they're studying the Humira. Imagine like for me, this drug should have just literally like get royalties for every farmer, choose the technology instead of it being bought out.Right? So I believe this, the future of this company is super, super bright. Uh, you know, it's heavily shorted. So I think that a lot of people are here for the, the, the, the gum is squeezed because if you look at the amount of, of, uh, of, uh, options, that the options chain is crazy, uh, for this, for this company.But I, I will, like, I have a big position because I wanted to, you know, to trade around my core, but it's some, it's a company that I wanted to keep it. And, um, and a long term, uh, option, because I feel this company is going to be huge. So they just appointed also geo hall, believe it or not do, how do you, how, um, she's in a board of directors and this woman, it's like a powerhouse in biotech, a friend of my work.As so maximum, so messenger gas sold. So she comes in with a lot of experience in pharma and a lot experience in acquisition. So, uh, the team is fabulous. They are four miles away from my house. I should have just bring them a bottle of champagne when we hit $10. But I believe in this company, this company has a bright future and that, um, right now there's a lot of people on it, you know, waiting for that short squeeze.But, uh, it's been keeping really it's being holding like it dipped to, to like 2, 3 0 3 today and it went right back up. So it's been keeping, you know, I think the short sellers were expecting after der cause you know, there's, you know, a yard for a state, uh, initial stages of biotech doesn't produce revenues.Right? So it, it dipped to fund 360 2 all the way to three, but it's been holding for weeks at that average. So people are not selling people believe in this company for sure. Uh, can I ask you, what do you, what do you get, do you have any favorites in the, in the gene therapy space? I do. I, um, I, uh, I, I'm a loan holder for ADP and they have the, uh, it's one of the car T therapies, but it's not the car T is the RTC, uh, ADP.And, uh, the reason I like this company is, uh, not only they have a partnership with Genentech, uh, the Genentech partnership is up to three. And, uh, they already have enough funny from Genentech cause they got, they gave them a prompt payment payment. They have funded into 2024. So I feel like this is a very safe play in regards to not having offerings and that they are sitting with 285 million in the bank and they do have, uh, some, um, some, uh, catalyst coming.And, uh, I, I believe this company will be a multibagger on day, you know? Uh, so it's one of those that you set and forget it, but I like the position of cash because it gives me the comfort that they're not going to be throwing in offerings after a big catalyst. You know, they, they have they're in a really strong position.And when you look at, uh, um, institutional ownership matrix, all 15 million shares of this company, baker brothers owned 18 million, the institutional ownership. It's so strong in this company. And obviously Jen at that has a huge, huge portion of the company and has their eyes on the company. So, uh, this, this is a big one for me.I got to ask you about, about BCR X here. That's the rule. Every week we got to talk about BCR ex of course, it's this year access to my unicorn. You guys, for sure. So, um, it's, it's funny. I held this space as on Twitter yesterday, and I was talking to a pharm D you know, I do respect, they have a lot more knowledge than me, you know, uh, in terms of a clinical.And he validates my position on the CRX and GRTs, which is great stone. And he says to me, you know, be CRX is, is a rare diseases monster in the making. So they, um, they just released the earnings. They put 38 million for the quarter, and people, BU people were really upset that it wasn't 7 million like this huge numbers, but for the mentally long-term, it's still there, right.Because the science hasn't changed. So I see this as an amazing opportunity, uh, if you're not in the CRX, but, uh, just, you guys have an idea. Uh, the biggest drug for, um, for Alex yawn is, uh, Alto Morris. And they are not even that good because it's not only an infusions for PNH, but patients still need transfusion, uh, taking this infusion every eight weeks.Uh, BCRA X has the competitor, which is going to be an oral oral, uh, competitor factor D and not only patients that have been on this study up to now, not only they jumped from phase one to phase three, because they did so. Patients to this date. I think there's 40 weeks, 30 weeks of, could it be this fusion to this date?So imagine having a drug that is, it's already a rare disease for PNH and patients only at the choice on the available is in Jackie, no infusions. And you still have to go through the transfusions. Imagine having an oral pill that you don't have to have a transfusion at all. So just make them do the math and Alex, the on 70% of its revenue, 70 was on PNH for this drug and they got bought out for $39 billion that would have put the CRX at a $230 a share.And B CRX has a better pipeline with a more potential and it's going to be all oral. So you guys do the math, if you don't think this is a monster in the making. Alright, Vivi the bio queen, she joins his every single Thursday at biotech. Underscore SD is for Twitter handle it's up on the screen. And uh, and then please.Yeah, please, if you, I will post my DD there because this is a very short, so you guys searched the bioclean on Twitter and you can find me all right. Thanks a lot. Viva, talk to you again next week, next week. All right. Uh, Hey, let's stick with biotech for a second here because our next guest is the CEO of a gene editor.Company, hence why I asked to VV about that one to get her thoughts. So, uh, if we can, let's go ahead and, uh, and, and, uh, bring her on guys. Andy Ford. She's the president CEO of Mira GTX. His company is a lot going on right now. They're at a very critical point. So let's get Zandy onum, Ford,by the way. Yes. Thank you. Thank you. Where we're actually, it's on our to-do list to get new music, but, um, thank you for, for, for the compliment. Uh, so as I said, it's a pretty critical time for, for mirror DGX. Uh, you guys just presented at, uh, uh, the virtual, uh, oh gosh, uh, the European society of gene and cell therapy Congress, right?Uh, yes, we did add three abstracts. Yes. Right. And then there's a, we're due for another, a little bit surprised when I found out you're on the calendar. Cause I thought you guys, you have another, uh, presentation coming up in a few weeks. I, I, I think I believe right. We do. So we have, um, quite a number of presentations in the second half of this year, uh, which included, uh, some presentations at the meeting.You just mentioned on our programs and our switch that allows you to switch gene therapies on and off with a pale. Um, related to what video was just talking about, actually, that's what I do want to talk about. I'm sorry about, and then, uh, at the beginning of December, we, uh, having a clinical update on our xerostomia program for patients who've been cured of had a neck cancer, but don't make saliva.So we'll be completing that study this year and we'll be updating on the clinical progress so far at the beginning of December. And then a couple of weeks later in mid December, we're having a science day to discuss in some more detail, uh, Ribas switch technology and our promoter platforms, which allow us to really optimize gene therapy.And for the first time switched gene therapies on and off with an oral drug and not just switched them on and off, but quite precisely dose the amount of gene therapy at a particular time with a dose of an oral pill. So let's talk about the switching via via pill. Yes, exactly how that. So obviously gene therapies are a virus which contain a gene and there's a coding sequence of the gene, which will make your protein, whether it's Epogen for example, or whatever, uh, gene therapy, it might be RPG or for the eye.And that gene is activated by a promoter, a regulatory sequence at the beginning of the gene. So that's the normal gene therapy promoter and a gene, the promoter switches the gene on, and it remains on for the rest of that patient's life, all that sells life. So you have persistently expressed gene therapy, but what we've been able to do for the first time is we do everything.I've just told you with the promoter that regulates the gene therapy and switches it on. But on top of that, we put into the gene sequence, a small sequence of DNA, which instructs the entire RNA produced from that gene to degrade. However, if we give a small molecule, but via pill, and we've got many small molecules, because we've developed this as a platform, it stops that degradation.It cuts the entire degrading sequence out of the gene. Produced RNA and you'd get the gene switched on as if it was never there. So for the first time we can deliver gene therapies, which are not on, so they're not producing weird proteins or bits of proteins. And we give a pill and bomb that I'll call it.The degrading signal is cut out of the RNA and you get a perfectly normal protein product.I guess I have so many questions. I don't even know where to, I like that all sounds incredibly complicated. Um, I guess, uh, how can you make sure that it works? So it's, we've when we set up the company, this was one of the technologies that we, um, we wanted to build and these switches made of RNA shape.There are thousands of them and bacteria. And for, for decades, people have tried to take bacterial switches and make them work in human cells. And rather than doing that, which hasn't worked very well. We built, we use the theory of Reiber switches and we built based by base our own switch. So we built it in mammalian cells.We then tested many switches and we have a platform of switches we can control. We were able to make these really simple switches, which switched on and off to high dynamic range. So 5,000 fold above the off level when they're switched on. And as a consequence of that, we were then able to change the drug that we activated with.So now we have multiple genes that we've put our switches in sitting in our freezers. So, uh, various antibody, PCSK nine antibody. You'll be aware of, uh, PD, one antibody, the, the very large drugs we can regulate. And then other drugs like GLP one, obviously a diabetes and obesity drug, which we can regulate.So we've got those genes and we can now put them into vivo in mice and NH PS, and we give those animals small molecules and we've already shown. Based specifically on the dose of the small molecule, we see our drug switched on to exactly the right level in each animal, depending on the dose of the small molecule you give.So we have built this over the last five years and we have moved from cells to mice, to non-human primates. And we're currently in a position to start doing I N I N D enabling studies for both the small molecule, all drugs and the genes that they regulate. Uh, and then as far as use cases, I know you're working on, um, you know, you're working on applying this, um, to, uh, I disorders, right.Uh, but is that the only use case right now? Tell us about the other one. No. So, um, we developed this technology of controlling gene therapy with a pill in order to much more broadly open up the space that gene therapy could be used in. So. We do have a lot of expertise in the eye and a partnership with Johnson and Johnson for our rare eye disease programs, but in diseases like wet AMD or dry AMD or uveitis, those large diseases.These are targets for regulation with our cassette and small molecules. In the case of our wet AMD program, we inhibit VEGF like other companies do. But what we're able to do potentially is when we put that gene that blockades by Jeff into the eye, we can formulate one of our small molecules. That's otherwise oral into eyedrops.So what we're working on now is turning our small molecules into eyedrops. So we can put a wet AMD drug or uveitis drug into the eye as a gene and switch it on each day with an eyedrop. So the eye is an excellent place to be able to regulate gene therapy with a small molecule, another place, which is really important is in the brain because it's very difficult to get antibodies or biologics across the blood-brain barrier.But what we're able to do potentially is we have regulated antibodies and we can put the. By an injection into the brain, just a one-time injection within the blood brain barrier. And then all you need is a pill which crosses the blood brain barrier. So it allows us to deliver drugs that really hard to deliver by other routes.And there are many, many more applications. It, it hugely expands what you can use gene therapy for, because for the first time you can control how much you gave. And at what time, uh, it seems like broadly speaking Zandy, um, gene therapy, like what, like as an investment, it was like super sexy a couple of years ago.Right. And then it sort of, it was super hot and then came down a little bit and was like, oh, wait a minute. This is still really days. Where, where are we now? Are we like back to, is gene therapy being like the hot, the hottest topic in biotech? Or, or are we still sort of, is it like the off cycle? I dunno how else to phrase it?W well, I think there are, there are many different gene therapy companies and there is cell therapy companies. There are very, very large number of, of, uh, therapies in the genetic medicine space. And, um, and there are some companies that just have a product or a platform or a particular organ that they focus on and that.Is a somewhat higher risk to those companies that depend on data around a particular study, right? What is quite different about mirror is that we established the company to really innovate in gene therapy and shows indications in the clinic that had good proof of concept and highly likely to work and to support a future pipeline.We built everything you need to be a gene therapy company in-house so we have multiple promoter platforms, multiple capsid discovery efforts. We have our own internal manufacturing, which is probably the broadest engine therapy today in that we manufacture our own GMP plasmid. We have two, uh, viral vector manufacturing facilities, which are flexible and scalable to commercial scale.And we do our own QC and analytics as well as potency assays. So we have a very, very broad, I suppose, toolkit that's required for anything. That you need to do in gene therapy and went out, positioned with this regulation ability with a deep pipeline of regulated genes that we can then take through to the clinic with our vector ecology and our own GMP manufacturing,not of the regulatory by putting all that in house. I was just gonna ask, as, as we get more developed in this space, like Spencer said, it seems like a couple of years ago, you know, that the gene editing space was huge for investors. Uh, what advice would you give investors that are looking at different, uh, you know, genomics companies to, to be able to discern which ones are going to have an advantage in the, in the field once the industry does become more hot among investors?Again, I do think that right now, manufacturing is not just a bottleneck with respect to capacity, but, um, Dealing with regulatory agencies globally and an expertise in manufacturing process. And, uh, and the assets required to show the release and stability of your products is very, very important. And to be able to either have that, to have as much of that as possible in house dearest clinical programs that you'll see, particularly if you have those sorts of capabilities at the time of D you really don't want to see companies that are starting manufacturing their product in one way.And then at phase two, switched to another way and then have to scale it later. Ideally, you would look for companies that have capabilities that allow them not to necessarily rely on CRS for plasmid manufacturing or in DQC. And we learned that over the last five years, it's one of the reasons we've bought, uh, so many of these capabilities in house, but I do think that's very important.Um, in addition to obviously, you know, do the targets work or is this, is this an appropriate, um, disease for gene therapy, the nuts and bolts of being able to produce and show the agencies that you've produced the right thing, a really important. Zanni Forbes is the presidency of Mira GTX. As I mentioned, there's a lot going on.You guys also got some positive in Canberrans over the weekend and, uh, uh, a lot of presentations after being in stealth mode for quite some time. So, uh, looking forward to seeing how things develop here and, uh, and, and, and good luck going forward. Thanks a lot for coming on today. Thank you so much. All right.Hey, w we got to keep the train running on time here. We've got so many guests today, back to back to back to back let's pivot. If we can, maybe we just spent the last half hour or so talking biotech, uh, let's pivot to like supply chain, specifically, uh, supply chain of textiles, right fashion. And what exactly is going on there?What to find out? We're going to bring on our next guest here in just a second and running Samuel. He is the CEO of a cornea technology, and, uh, let's bring coordinates and a Ronan. W that's been running on this show. Now, if we can guys, I guess I'm Spencer, I guess I'm doing that. All right. I got you right.There you go. Good morning for us this afternoon for you it's later on in the evening. So I appreciate you, uh, coming on, uh, the, the, uh, the show here today. So, uh, let's talk about textile supply chains, right? Uh, what exactly is going on there right now are things as bad there as they are in other areas of the.Well, um, yeah, it's bad. And it has to change the supply chain is broken, but even more than that textile industry and fashion industry in particular is the second most polluted industry in the world. Um, from different reasons. One of the reason is that 30% of whatever put use on textile is actually never been sought.Uh, and this create a huge amount of waste, both of materials and water, and we have to save the world. Um, uh, so we have to change the industry. Now, the reason for that is some of it is because the supply chain of today doesn't meet or doesn't fit the need of the consumer of today. The supply chain of the textile industry is like centuries ago, you produce in large quantities in forest, in China, in Magilla dish, you trying to forecast what the consumer, what the people would like to buy a year in advance, sometimes 18 months in advance, which is impossible.It's crazy to think that you can predict what the consumer today would like to wear in a year and a half from now. So we have to change it. The world move to digital in many, many industries. And in this industry is still fully. Yeah, I'm glad you brought up the, uh, you know, the environmental impact of the textile industry, because that's something that's gained a lot of attention over the past year or so.I mean, you have a quote unquote fast fashion companies, such as sheen and people have kind of started attacking the, the idea that, oh, buying, you know, a cheap t-shirt for $15 or some pants for $15 that you see an ad for an Instagram, uh, causes a lot of environmental distress. So what do you think needs to be done in the industry to address that?So they, this would need to change in order to try to predict what the consumer would like to buy and put, use Lauder moms of products, which will never been sold is to produce, to demand, to produce after the consumer.But that's not efficient. I mean, it you're saying it is, but that's not a necessarily inefficient use of capital though, right? No, no. It's, it's actually a very, very efficient, um, hold on, explain to me, explain to me, yeah, let's begin with, first of all, what we see that production is really moving on shore.Why it's moving on shore, not only because the, the, the supply chain is broken because you have to be closer to the consumer. You have to react fast for the consumer trends. Now, the world of fashion and textile move is moving online today. 30% of all purchases being done online. So e-commerce the focus by 2025, that it will be more than 60%.Now, the online the e-commerce of today is still trying to sell you what they have in the inventory or what they have in the shops, in the stores. Uh, and if you going to order products, sometimes it does not exist at all. Um, and uh, sometimes, um, for the brands is really, really difficult to. Okay. Can you hear me okay?Yeah, we, we, you we're fine. We just got disconnected, but we're back. Okay. So, so I missed everything you just said. Okay. Okay. So let me try to explain again. So the world is moving digital. What does it mean? The consumer today's buying? So e-commerce online. 30% of all sales is being done online and the focus by 2025, that it will be 60%, but the online is today's actually a mirror of the store.Doesn't allow you to choose your product. They're trying to sell you what they have in inventory, which doesn't fit what this consumer would like, what we believe needs to be done, that the online should be filterable. You shouldn't have any real physical products. You can have endless amount of product virtually and connect the virtual wall to the physical world.And this is exactly what committee's doing is enabling on demand, production. You order what you want only. Then you produce it. You produce it close to the consumer. Onshore and delivering, you know, the same day on the next day to the consumer, the product, I feel like this is I'm in now. It sounds great. I think that, but that's like, that's more difficult, right?Well, I give it a few examples. Well, one example, great example. Thinking about the books book markets, um, back at 25 years ago was fully analog. You went to a bookshop, you tried to buy a book. You only have them, the shelf, the books that we're selling in millions of copies, Amazon disrupt this market. They created a digital world.You could go to Amazon buy any type of book, even from 200 years ago. But what they create is actually much more, the impact was much more than that because now everybody can become a writer. You can write a book about your family, about cooking, about anything you like, you publish it. Virtually doesn't cost you anything.Only when someone is ordering, then you print it and send it to the consumer. So the same thing is happening now in the fashion world, you don't need to have it physically. You actually unleashing creativity because you can have endless creativity and each one of the consumer can choose whatever they want in any Colleen, any design.And once you choose it only, then you produce. So this is efficient and there is no way. And you produce it using coordinate technology, which is a fully sustainable green technology. That was my next question was just if you to clarify that, so I come up here like Amazon, for example, uh, could have used your technology, right.Or, or any retailer, right? Could just buy your technology and, and use that along their supply chain to make it more and more green, more efficient. Right? Actually, Amazon is our biggest customers. Okay. Amazon is our biggest customer, but we have many, many more customer. We are worth more than 1000, 300 customers that using our technology all over the world.Some of them very big companies like Amazon, like Adidas, like fanatics, but using our technology. And you can go online and order products and customize the product and order your t-shirt here. You can see with coordinate on top of that or on any color, any size, any shape. And this is the new world. Look what the world is moving into.What is moving into metaverse. So metaverse is everything is virtual. You will have. Your image in the metaverse. Yeah. You will be able to dress it as you wish with any, any type of, of, of goods. Uh, and only when you feel that you lack it, then you order it and then it would connect it to the physical world, which will be big produce next to you.If you are in New York, it will produce in New York. If you are in Beijing, will be produced in Virgin and shipped to you the same day. So the impact on the environment in terms of sustainability is huge and their efficiencies and believable, and the creativity is unleashing the creativity for the designers and for the brands.W why is no one else doing this? Or are they well, uh, there are some, uh, companies, our customers that using our technologies like Amazon are doing it. If you go to Amazon and you're doing what you're doing, right. That's what I meant because, well, we are kind of unique festival in terms of the physical world.We out technology, what we have developed is systems Inc services that is all sustainable, which are digital systems that can produce one off. If you want it to produce a t-shirt or any, any government or any fabric in the, in, in the past using analog technology, you had to print where to produce hundreds of meters in order that it will be economical and.The sustainability impact is huge. Um, there's a lot of pollution and consumption of water for every meter without technology, because it's digital, you are not limited. You can print one t-shirt, you can print one meter, one fit, there's no limitation and every feed can be different design. So this is the advantage of digital is unleashing the limitations that you had before, and we are not using water.So there's no, there's no water consumption. It's pigment ink. So it's fully green. So no impact on the environment. So like who couldn't use corny Amazon obviously, but they're the largest retailer in the world could, could, could I use it on my online Shopify store that make, that sells? I dunno, 10 shirts a year.Exactly the point it's off form. The biggest retailers, biggest e-commerce biggest brands like Adidas, Nike. They of course can use it to anyone, any consumer that would like to open a shop in Shopify. Now, what is the problem with Shopify? If you are now at this time? And you see somewhere in India and you would like to, to sell your product.You open the shop in Shopify in five minutes, you put your design, what is the problem? Once you get the order, what are you going to do with it? How are you going to produce it? Are you going to ship it out? We can compete against other marketplaces. What call Nita Naples is to connect all those and marketplaces all those designers in to a network of fulfiller that can fulfill for them.So you need to take care of only on the design, open a shop, and then connected to Coney ticks. And kinetics is a platform that connect them to a network or fulfiller that using our technology and can produce it anywhere around the world. And it sounds good. The market clearly likes it. Cause if you, if you look at your stock, it's had a pretty tremendous run actually, even, even last year, uh, seemed to, uh, COVID, didn't seem to hold it down too long.So, uh, the market agrees with you. Uh, so I, I guess keep doing what you're doing. Uh, running Samuel was the CEO of, uh, coordinate, uh, digital. Uh, we will have to get you back on the show. Uh, hopefully, uh, now maybe next year when, when the supply chain starts to work itself out a little bit, but I, I I'm, I'm very curious about this space because, uh, you're, you're one of the best performing stocks, uh, I think out there probably right now.So, uh, Ronan, thank you so much for coming on the show today. Thank you very much. Pleasure being here. All right. Uh, it is, uh, 1259. We've got our next guest coming on in couple minutes. Whenever minute when it, whenever they join, to be honest, cause they're not even here yet, but that's okay. Uh, Scott Mathis is the CEO and chairman of Gacha holdings, ticker V I N L a.And then we have, I'm very excited for our one to 30 guests, but we're not a Capels from Benzinga and, uh, really Benzinga is, is a side it's his side gig. His main gig is, uh, is doing really complex. Trading stuff, strategies. So, uh, I'm, I'm very, I'm very much looking forward to that, uh, in a half hour. Uh, if we can think of who executive though, and I have not grabbed, voted for likes yet this hour as we enter our two of our show keyword yet, uh, if you could be so kind and hit that thumbs up button on your screen, I'm not sure where we're at on the light counter right now.Let's look, we're at the de come on computer 74, 75. We can do better than that. We do over a hundred easy, easy. The goal for the goal for the day is 200, but we can get you a hundred right now. I suspect. Yeah. So before we get to Scott Mathis with a wild show holdings, um, the, uh, the previous guest, I liked that idea of cause basically what he's saying is that companies now are producing clothes for a year down the line, right?But they don't know what's going to be hot on Instagram and Tik TOK and what the trends are going to be efficient. It's not efficient. So what, what he's saying they're doing is waiting and basically it's print on demand, but on a huge scale, like what Shelly was talking about in the chat with the economies of scale, they're able to produce, uh, the goods for cheaper when they're doing it on a large scale.If everyone, if they're, if their technology is able to kind of shift that whole industry, it would have a tremendous impact on, uh, the environmental right now, the negative environmental impact that the textile industry has. Another fun fact. Spencer, did you know this, that a lot of luxury brands, um, such as, you know, Gucci, Louis Vuitton, do you know what they do with their extra extra goods?No, I don't want to say something that's politically incorrect, but I know I have no idea. What could, what would the, I don't know. They, they, they, they give it the, give it to animals. I don&
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Todos los gobiernos del mundo han anunciado que en un mes nos quedaremos sin internet. Ni fibra, ni ADSL,ni wifi ni nada. Durante dos años. Después nos la devolverán. Tendremos tecnología pero NO internet. Esta es la distopía que hemos creado para esta edición especial del podcast. Y sobre ella reflexionamos, aprendemos y nos echamos unas risas. ¿Sería un regreso total al mundo ochentero o más bien una readaptación de las tecnologías? ¿Qué harían Amazon o Facebook esos dos años? ¿Echaríamos todo de menos o agradeceríamos alguno de los cambios? Pasen y disfruten de otra apasionante entrega de El Futuro Era Mejor. Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals