Podcasts about ALUS

  • 97PODCASTS
  • 161EPISODES
  • 36mAVG DURATION
  • 1WEEKLY EPISODE
  • May 31, 2025LATEST

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Best podcasts about ALUS

Latest podcast episodes about ALUS

Contracultura
Para Quem o Fim Tem Chegado | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L10 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2025 34:31


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 10/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 10 – Para Quem o Fim Tem Chegado Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje chegamos ao décimo episódio da nossa [...]

Contracultura
Nos Salmos – parte 2 | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L9 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later May 24, 2025 32:43


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 09/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 09 – Nos Salmos – parte 2 Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje chegamos ao nono episódio da nossa série [...]

Contracultura
Nos Salmos – parte 1 | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L8 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later May 17, 2025 29:40


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 08/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 08 – Nos Salmos – parte 1 Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Esse é o oitavo episódio da série “Alusões, [...]

Contracultura
Fundamentos proféticos | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L7 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later May 10, 2025 32:21


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 07/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 07 – Fundamentos proféticos Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje chegamos ao sétimo episódio da nossa série do trimestre, com [...]

Contracultura
Compreendendo o Sacrifício | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L6 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later May 3, 2025 33:14


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 06/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 06 – Compreendendo o Sacrifício Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Seja bem vindo ao sexto episódio da nossa série do [...]

Contracultura
As nações – parte 2 | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L5 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2025 36:24


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 05/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 05 – As nações – parte 2 Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje chegamos ao quinto episódio da nossa série [...]

Vai zini?
Vai zini, ka piebaldzēni pēc dabas ir lieli avantūristi?

Vai zini?

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2025 6:10


Mākslas vēsturniece, publiciste, "Piebalgas kultūrtelpas biedrības" vadītāja Elvita Ruka turpina stāstus par aizraujošām piebaldzēnu dzīves epizodēm. Tās tiek smeltas brāļu Kārļa (1904–1990) un Voldemāra (1912–2004) Ruku atmiņās, kas glabājas Jaunpiebalgas novadpētniecības muzejā Darbība notiek īsi pēc Pirmā pasaules kara Ruku dzimtā. Lūk, kā mazais brālis Voldemārs jeb Ruku Valdis apraksta lielā brāļa atgriešanos lauku sētā… "Kārļa pirmā aizraušanās jeb iziešana tautā plašākas publikas priekšā bija atturības propaganda. Viņš lasīja priekšlasījumus, dibināja skolās cerību pulciņus. Kad lektors jau bija iededzies citos pasākumos, vēl ilgi "Vecseviķu" istabaugšā glabājās uzskatāmības līdzekļi: mākslīgās sirdis, aknas un nieres. Alus dzērāja sirds bija pietūkusi, veidota divas reizes lielāka par normālo, bet šņabotājiem tā bija maza, sažuvusi, sačervelējusies." Kārlis bija pametis mācības lauksaimniecības skolā un ar plašu žestu piemājas tīrumā ierīkoja stādu audzētavu jeb kokskolu, ābeļu sēklaudžu atlasē nodarbinot arī mazāko brāli. Kārlim plāni bija kā Napoleonam un viņš bija sacerējies saimniecību pārveidot par īstu paradīzes dārzu. Tam bija vajadzīgi lieli līdzekļi. Tēvs pret aizņemšanos no bankas bija kategoriski pret, un Kārlis lepni devās pasaulē. Pabeidza lopkopības pārrauga kursus un braukāja pa Vidzemes sētām pienu svērdams, mērīdams un analizēdams. Braucienos līdzi bija gluži vai burvju mākslinieka kaste ar dažādiem instrumentiem. Voldemāram īpaši patika piena tauku procentu noteicējs, kas rūca kā aeroplāns. Kad to sāka darbināt, drebēja grīda un logi. Drīz vien Kārlis bija kļuvis par Madonas rajona lopu pārraudzības instruktoru, ar visu enerģiju cīnoties vispirms par Latvijas raibaļām un tad par brūnaļām. Šajā propagandas darbā viņam dzima gaiša doma – sekmīgai tirdzniecībai nepieciešams izdot sugas lopu biļetenu, kur drukātos gan sugas lopu pircēji, gan pārdevēji. Savu ideju Kārlis gribēja realizēt tikai savā vārdā, taču viņam vēl nebija 25 gadi un viņš nevarēja būt izdevuma galvenais redaktors. Kārlis ar visu dedzību un padevību metās pie tēva, arī Kārļa. "Tajā laikā politiskiem izdevumiem, it sevišķi sarkanajiem "strādnieku – zemnieku", galvenie redaktori ar nodomu bija izraudzīti tādi, kas par labu samaksu labprātīgi atsēdēja piespriestos soda mēnešus par savu pretinieku nepatiesu apvainošanu un pastāvošās iekārtas graušanu. Izdevuma vadošās personas darbu turpināja, sameklējot jaunus atsēdētājus. Tēvs, visu to labi pārzinādams, nebija pierunājams. Kad Kārlis svēti nosolījās, ka šajā biļetenā nebūs neviena vārda no politikas, tikai govslopu pirkšana, pārdošana un ciltsraksti, tēvs beidzot piekrita. Biļetenu drukāja, tā atbildīgais redaktors bija Kārlis Ruks, un neviens jau nezināja, ka juniors." Drīz vien jaunais censonis pārdeva sev atdalīto zemi, iegūto naudu ieguldīja spiestuves labiekārtošanā un Madonā atvēra izdevniecību "Provinces prese" Tajā iespiestas 14 rajona avīzītes, sarīkojumu programmas, dziesmu lapiņas, uzsaukumi un pat grāmatas. Šajā laikā arī mazais brālis ģimnāzists iesaistīts darbā, par ko uzrakstījis savu pirmo literāro darbu "Sludinājuma vācēja piedzīvojumi". Darbībai paplašinoties, Kārlis spiestuvi pārcēla uz Pļaviņām Daugavas krastā, vīnrūpnieka Upīša mājās. Blakus spiestuvei pagrabos gatavojās vīns pāri cilvēka augumam lielos traukos, bet nerimtīgā Kārļa darbīgais gars jau meklēja jaunus apvāršņus. Turpmākie brīvvalsts gadi viņu aiztriec uz Rīgu. Kārlis (un viņa pēdās Voldemārs) kļūst par dievturi, iesaistās politikā, audzē un tirgo redīsus, tad uzsāk dāliju selekcionēšanu un drīz vien "Mājas viesis" par viņu raksta tā: "Pašlaik lielākais dāliju šķirņu skaits esot dārzkopim K. Rukam, kurš paraugdārzos iestādījis ap 2000 stādu no 540 šķirnēm." Kārlis ir pret "sarkano mēri", taču kara laikā nokļūst gan Centrālcietumā, gan Salaspils nāves nometnē. Kā dzīves paradokss ir 1949. gads, kad Kārli viņa Aspazijas bulvāra dzīvoklī pamodina brutāli kareivji un ielādē vagonā uz Austrumiem. No šī notikuma viņš maz atceras, jo kādreizējais atturības sludinātājs esot bijis stipri piedzēries. Uz Sibīriju viņš izsūtīts brāļa Voldemāra vietā, kurš kā "Piebalgas budzis" bija paspējis sentēvu mājas pamest. Kad Kārlis no Jakutijas raksta, ka "pārtikas iegādei būtu vajadzīga bise", Voldemārs pa detaļām izjauc 12. kalibra divstobreni un pa porcijām aizsūta. Pēc brāļa atgriešanās abu avantūrisms izpaužas selekcijā un paraugdārzos, kā arī fotografējot Latvijas kultūras mantojumu. Par spīti 20. gadsimta spaidiem, abi brāļi saglabā Piebalgas zemnieku sīkstumu, optimismu un avantūras garu, to visu vēl cītīgi aprakstot – šķiet, ka mūzām piebaldzēni patīk. "Visā savā nodzīvotā dzīvē brālis bija kā kūsājošs, enerģijas pilns, pastāvīgi putojošs vīna trauks. Viņa dotības un aicinājums bija vadīt, iet pa priekšu, būt pirmajam. Runāt, dominēt, likt pakļauties savai domai un uzskatiem," Voldemārs formulē Kārļa Ruka dzīves kopsaucēju.

Contracultura
As nações – parte 1 | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L4 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2025 34:42


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 04/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 04 – As nações – parte 1 Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje começamos mais um episódio da nossa série [...]

Contracultura
Imagens do casamento | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L3 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2025 32:55


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 03/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 03 – Imagens do casamento Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados! Graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje começamos mais um episódio da nossa série do trimestre, [...]

Contracultura
O fundamento de Gênesis | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L2 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 34:38


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 02/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 02 – O fundamento de Gênesis Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala, seus cristãos cansados, graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Hoje começamos mais um episódio da nossa série do [...]

Juhtimiskvaliteet on konkurentsieelis
Andero Keronen: juhtimise alus on julgus endale otsa vaadata

Juhtimiskvaliteet on konkurentsieelis

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2025 49:44


Minu seekordseks vestluspartneriks on Andero Keronen, ettevõtte No Bananas tegevjuht, kes jagab ausalt ja mõtestatult oma kogemusi inimeseks ja juhiks kasvamise teekonnalt. Anderoga räägime sellest, kuidas sisemised äratundmised ja julgus iseendaga aus olla loovad eeldused tegelikuks muutuseks – nii inimese kui juhina. Arutleme, miks juhtimise kvaliteet sõltub eneseteadlikkusest, kuidas toime tulla määramatuse ja haavatavusega ning miks eneseareng ei alga mitte muutmisest, vaid märkamise oskusest.

Contracultura
Alguns princípios da profecia | Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – L1 | 2Tri25

Contracultura

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 29, 2025 46:44


  Série: Alusões, Imagens e Símbolos – 01/13Lição da Escola Sabatina – CPB – 2º Trimestre de 2025Lição 01 – Alguns princípios da profecia Faça nossos cursos: [Introdução] Fala seus cristãos cansados, graça e paz a todos os santos da internet! Que alegria estarmos juntos para mais um momento de [...]

Kerem Önder
En güzel evler? - Nur 36, 37 tefsiri / Kerem Önder

Kerem Önder

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2025 40:03


“Allah'ın, yüceltilmesine ve içlerinde adının anılmasına izin verdiği evlerde hiçbir ticaretin ve hiçbir alışverişin kendilerini, Allah'ı anmaktan, namazı kılmaktan, zekâtı vermekten alıkoymadığı birtakım adamlar, buralarda sabah akşam O'nu tesbih ederler. Onlar, kalplerin ve gözlerin dikilip kalacağı bir günden korkarlar.” (Nur 36-37) Müfessirler, ayette geçen “evler” den maksadın mescitler ve müminlerin evleri olduğunu söyler. (Maverdî, Şevkânî; İbn Aşur, ilgili ayetin tefsiri). Ebu Hayyan'a göre, ayetteki “evler” sözcüğü içinde namaz kılınan ve ilmî sohbetler yapılan bütün evler için geçerlidir. (Ebu Hayan, Alusî, ilgili ayetin tefsiri). İkrime'ye göre de bu evler, içinde iman meşalesi yanan bütün mescit ve evlerdir. Lambaların ışığında geceleri namaz kılınan ve ilmî sohbetler yapılan her yer buna dahildir. Diğer taraftan, Ayette “mescid” yerine “ev” sözcüğünün kullanılmış olması dikkat çekicidir. Bundan, “Biz de Musa'ya ve kardeşine ‘Kavminiz için Mısır'da evler edinin' diye vahyettik. Evlerinizi mescid haline getirin. Namazlarınızı dosdoğru kılın. Müjdele o müminleri.” (Yunus, 10/87) ayetindeki emrin gösterdiği hedefe uygun şekilde, müminlerin evlerinin içlerinde Allah'ın anıldığı ve sabah akşam Onu tesbih eden adamların bulunduğu birer mescide benzemesi gerektiği sonucunu çıkarmak daha uygundur. Bu da, ideal bir Müslüman aileye yakışan şeyin, sabah ve akşam vakitlerini Allah'ı anarak, Onu tesbih ederek, Onun kitabını okuyarak ve Onun rızasına ulaştıracak bilgileri kazanmaya çalışarak değerlendirmek olduğunu ve bunda başlıca sorumluluğun evin reisine düştüğünü gösterir. Yine dikkat çekicidir ki, âyet hayatın dışında bir model önermemekte, ticaret ve alışverişi devre dışı bırakmamaktadır. İbni Abbas'ın da dediği gibi, “Allah'ın nurunu kendilerine misal olarak verdiği bu kimseler, halk içinde en çok ticaretle uğraşan, en fazla alışveriş yapanlar da olabilir; ancak bu meşgaleler, Allah'ı anmaktan onları alıkoymaz.” (Müstedrek, 2:432, no. 3506.) “Onların durumları değişir ve böylece kalpleri, anlamaz bir halden anlar hale; gözleri görmez halden, görür hale gelirler. Dolayısıyla onlar, şüpheden zanna, zandan yakîne, yakînden de, muayene ve müşahedeye (bizzat görmeye) geçmişlerdir. Çünkü Hakk Teâlâ, "Onlar için Allah´tan, hiç beklemedikleri nice şeyler, zuhur edip gelecek” (ûnm, 47) ve "Andolsun ki sen (dünyada) bu hususta bir gaflette idin. İşte senden perdeni kaldırıp açtık" (Kaf, 22) buyurmuştur. Kalpler, yerlerinden oynar ve boğazlara dayanır; gözler de masmavi kesilir. Nitekim Dahhâk şöyle der: "Kâfirleri, gözleri keskin olarak hasredilirler, sonra gözleri kayar, derken kör olurlar. Kalpleri de korkudan, bir çıkış yolu bulamaz ve ancak gelip boğaza dayanır. Nitekim Allah Teâlâ, "O zaman yürekleri gamla dolu olarak, gırtlaklarının yanındadır" buyurmuştur.” Razi Hz. Ebü Hüreyre (radıyallâhu anh) anlatıyor: "Resülullah (aleyhissalâtu vesselâm) buyurdular ki: "Allah'ın, yollarda dolaşıp zikredenleri araştıran melekleri vardır. AIIahu Teâlayı zikreden bir cemaate rastlarlarsa, birbirlerini "Aradığınıza gelin!" diye çağırırlar. (Hepsi gelip) onları kanatlarıyla kuşatarak dünya semasına kadar arayı doldururlar. Allah, onları en iyi bilen olduğu halde meleklere sorar: "Kullarım ne diyorlar?" "Seni tesbih ediyorlar, sana tekbir okuyorlar, sana tahmid okuyorlar. Sana tazim (temcid) ediyorlar" derler. Rabb Teâla sormaya devam eder.

Analytic Dreamz: Notorious Mass Effect
"SNOOP DOGG, EMINEM, & 50 CENT - GUNZ & SMOKE"

Analytic Dreamz: Notorious Mass Effect

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 14:34


Linktree: https://linktr.ee/AnalyticIn this segment of Notorious Mass Effect, Analytic Dreamz dives into the key points and highlights of Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre's latest album, 'Missionary.' Released on December 13, 2024, through Death Row Records, Aftermath Entertainment, and Interscope Records, this album marks a significant reunion since their seminal work 'Doggystyle' in 1993, which shaped the West Coast rap scene.Analytic Dreamz discusses the album's 15 tracks, emphasizing the eclectic mix of collaborations that span genres, including singles like "Gorgeous" featuring Jhené Aiko, which peaked at No. 26 on Billboard's R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart, alongside other tracks like "Outta da Blue" with Alus and "Another Part of Me" featuring Sting. The segment outlines notable collaborations with artists such as BJ the Chicago Kid, Jelly Roll, Method Man, Eminem, 50 Cent, and even Tom Petty, showcasing how 'Missionary' blends rap with elements of soul, rock, and Middle Eastern music. Innovative samples, including The Police's "Message in a Bottle" in "Another Part of Me" and Suzanne Vega's "Tom's Diner" in "Sticcy Situation," are highlighted as creative touchpoints.Analytic Dreamz explores Dr. Dre's production approach, where he treats Snoop's voice as an "instrument," leading to a G-Funk sound that's both classic and modern. Snoop's lyrical maturity at 53 is a focal point, balancing his iconic "gangsta" persona with thoughtful content, all underpinned by diverse musical dynamics like piano hooks, brass sections, and string arrangements.The cultural and historical context of 'Missionary' is analyzed, presenting it as a sequel to 'Doggystyle' and a celebration of their influence over three decades. The album's themes of nostalgia mixed with innovation aim at a broad appeal across generations, with its cross-genre collaborations breaking traditional hip-hop boundaries.Promotion efforts are covered, including social media teasers like previews of "Gunz N Smoke" and strategic appearances linked to Snoop's business ventures. 50 Cent's role in marketing through humor and social media is noted as pivotal.The reception and impact of 'Missionary' are discussed, positioning it as a "cultural moment" with critical acclaim for tracks like "Hard Knocks" and "Pressure." Analytic Dreamz also reflects on how this album signifies broader trends in music towards genre blending and challenging stylistic norms.In summary, 'Missionary' is described as a landmark release that reaffirms Snoop Dogg and Dr. Dre's enduring legacy in hip-hop, offering listeners a blend of nostalgia and fresh creativity in 2024.Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/analytic-dreamz-notorious-mass-effect/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy

The Soil Matters With Leighton Morrison and Dr. Av Singh
Conversations In Ken's Café with Christine Campbell from ALUS

The Soil Matters With Leighton Morrison and Dr. Av Singh

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2024 99:27


Conversations In Ken's Café with Christine Campbell from ALUS   Christine Campbell Senior Hub Manager, Western Hub   Christine liaises with our community coordinators and serves as a management resource for local ALUS projects throughout Alberta. Christine has extensive reclamation and project-management experience with collaborative research groups working in the Athabasca Oil Sands Region. She has also worked extensively with non-profits, chairing boards for animal rescue and many local events and initiatives. Christine obtained her B.Sc. in Biological Sciences from the University of Calgary, where she focused on wildlife conservation and genetics, and holds a Diploma in Animal Sciences. An entrepreneur with her own consulting agency, Christine continues to act as wildlife and biodiversity expert and advocate for First Nations stakeholders in Northern Alberta. Christine is based in Calgary, Alberta.   https://alus.ca/ https://x.com/ALUS_Solutions https://www.facebook.com/ALUSCanada https://www.youtube.com/user/ALUSCanada https://www.linkedin.com/company/alus-canada/   Your Host Ken Somerville “It's All About The Biology” https://www.instagram.com/kensomerville/ https://twitter.com/KenSomerville1 https://www.itsallaboutthebiology.ca Contact email itsallaboutthebiology@gmail.com https://www.linkedin.com/in/ken-somerville-6b9945239/ https://www.facebook.com/itsallaboutthebiologytour   Help support the mission: patreon.com/user?u=104510089   Discount codes available at: https://www.itsallaboutthebiology.ca/discountcodes #flowers,#plants,#nature,#gardening,#garden,#growing,#koreannaturalfarming,#naturalfarming,#jadam,#naturalfertilizer,#naturalfarminginputs,#permaculture,#regenerative,#foodforest,#biodynamic,#bioactive,#organic,#notill,#knf,#organicgardening,#urbangardening,#containergardening,#homegardening, For Full: Disclaimer

The Media Slayers
This ain't that

The Media Slayers

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2024 65:02


Send us a textIn Episode 135 of The Media Slayers, the crew kicks things off by recapping their Thanksgiving celebrations—from the food to the family drama. They also address some podcast drama: why the All Done Podcast isn't releasing the episode they recorded together.Next, the hosts dive into Druski's controversial comments towards a kid on live stream and reflect on their nostalgic McDonald's memories from childhood. The conversation heats up as they reveal their top 10 favorite rappers of all time, debating legends and personal favorites.The music talk continues with Drake's lawsuit against record label UMG and a breakdown of Snoop Dogg's new single “Outta Da Blue” featuring Dr. Dre and Alus. On the TV front, the hosts share the new shows they're excited to review, including “Cross,” “Yellowstone,” and “The Lincoln Lawyer.”To round things out, Mr. Unlimited PTO gives a shoutout to college football, highlighting South Carolina's big win over Clemson. With laughs, hot takes, and so much more, this episode is packed with all the pop culture and commentary you love from The Media Slayers! Tune in now!https://instagram.com/weaintdonepodcast?igshid=YmMyMTA2M2Y=

TK PRODUCTIONS/MUSIC CRITIC
Snoop Dogg, Dr. Dre , Alus “Outta Da Blue” (LET'S TALK ABOUT IT: MUSIX REVIEWS)

TK PRODUCTIONS/MUSIC CRITIC

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 28, 2024 7:45


#SnoopDogg #DrDre #Alus #OuttaDaBlue #Rap S10. PART 2 BEGINS! TWO EPISODES A DAY. WE ARE GOING OUT WITH A BANG. GET READY FOR COMPELLING MUSIC REVIEWS. ,outta da blue,outta the blue reaction snoop dogg dr dre alus,outta the blue review snoop dogg dr dre alus,snoop,snoop dogg,snoop dogg & dr dre - outta da blue,snoop dogg - outta da blue,snoop dogg dr dre alus outta da blue,snoop dogg dr dre alus outta da blue reaction,snoop dogg dr dre alus outta the blue reaction,snoop dogg dr dre alus outta the blue review,snoop dogg feat dr dre & alus outta da blue,snoop dogg outta da blue lyrics

Micadam
EP90 (nouveautés FR/US)

Micadam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2024 61:06


EP89 nouveautés FR/USIl y a certaines choses qui ne bougent pas. Comme devoir évoquer Kendrick Lamar dans quasiment chaque émission par exemple. Cette fois-ci c'est pour une bonne raison. Il vient de publier GNX, son tant attendu album après cette année rythmée par son beef avec Drake. Pour accompagner cet instant classic, une sélection des sorties récentes de novembre, la côte ouest mène cette sélection. 2024 c'est How The West Was Won.TracklistSnoop Dogg "Outta Da Blue" (feat. Dr. Dre & Alus), MissionaryTyler, The Creator "Rah Tah Tah, ChromakopiaAb-Soul "B.U.C.K.O. Jr", Soul BurgerKamaiyah "The Code", Ms EverythingJay Worthy & DJ.Fresh "Kalifornia" (feat. Mitchy Slick, Menace & Bart Oatmeal), The Tonite Show Part 2Kendrick Lamar "tv off", GNXPaul Wall "Underground Ambassadors" (feat. Big K.R.I.T., Termanology, Rich the Factor, Berner & Freeway)Maxo Kream "Drop Top Impala" (feat. Z-Ro), PersonificationBoldy James & Harry Fraud "Shadowboxing", The BricktionaryDenzel Curry "ANOTHA LATE NITE" (feat. 454), KING OF THE MISCHIEVOUS SOUTHKiller Mike "'97 3-6 Freestyle", Michael & The Mighty Midnight RevivalYoung Nudy & Pi'erre Bourne "10pc Teriyaki", Sli'merre 2Zek "Le Manuel", LocalisableToera "ISABELLE ADJANI", Petite Conne vol.2Takis RT & Mileslepretre "old subaru", MLLCSameer Ahmad & Mani Deïz "Secteur Ouest", Ras el HanoutDemi Portion "Ça parle de" Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

Palavra pra hoje
Cuidando de você - Outubro Rosa

Palavra pra hoje

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 27:01


Alusão ao Outubro Rosa - Dicas de saúde física e mental para o cuidado com o corpo.

Vikerhommiku intervjuud
Ivar Soone: inimese tarbimise alus on kaubale antud tähendus

Vikerhommiku intervjuud

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2024 21:01


Notícias MP
MPAC e parceiros promovem “Manhã de Direitos” em alusão ao Dia da Pessoa Idosa

Notícias MP

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 1, 2024 1:13


O Ministério Público do Estado do Acre (MPAC), por meio da Promotoria de Justiça Especializada de Defesa dos Direitos da Pessoa Idosa e Pessoa com Deficiência, em parceria com o Serviço Social do Comércio (Sesc) e a Secretaria Municipal de Assistência Social e Direitos Humanos (Sasdh), realizará nesta terça-feira (01), das 7h30 às 11h30, o evento “Manhã de Direitos”.

Notícias MP
MPAC promove palestra sobre saúde mental em alusão ao “Setembro Amarelo”

Notícias MP

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2024 1:25


O Ministério Público do Estado do Acre (MPAC), por meio da Corregedoria-Geral, realizou nesta terça-feira, 17, a palestra “Bem-estar e promoção da saúde mental”, em alusão ao “Setembro Amarelo”, mês dedicado à prevenção do suicídio. O evento, que ocorreu no auditório da instituição, foi destinado a membros, servidores, estagiários e colaboradores, como parte do projeto “Saúde Mental Importa”.

Notícias MP
MPAC participa de Sessão Solene em alusão ao Dia da Indústria

Notícias MP

Play Episode Listen Later May 28, 2024 1:11


O Ministério Público do Estado do Acre (MPAC), representado pela procuradora-geral adjunta para Assuntos Administrativos e Institucionais, Rita de Cássia Nogueira, participou, nesta sexta-feira (24), da Sessão Solene em alusão ao Dia da Indústria, comemorado anualmente no dia 25 de maio.

Viimased 10 teenistust - Valguse Tee Vabakoguduse Podcast
"Püha Vaimu isik ja tegevus kui kristliku usu alus" - Valguse Tee Jumalateenistus 19.05.2024 Pühapäev ( Mart Metsala)

Viimased 10 teenistust - Valguse Tee Vabakoguduse Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2024 117:58


Mart Metsala Valguse Tee Jumalateenistus 19.05.2024 Pühapäev Püha Vaimu isik ja tegevus kui kristliku usu alus (CC) Avalikuks ja kommertskasutuseks küsida luba

Reflexões Para Cada Dia, Na Voz De Reginaldo Lucas.
19-04-24 Resumo de Jo 6,52-59 - Alusão à Eucaristia, o Pão da Vida.

Reflexões Para Cada Dia, Na Voz De Reginaldo Lucas.

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2024 8:20


“Se vocês não comem a carne do Filho do Homem e não bebem o seu sangue, não têm a vida em vocês.” --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/reginaldo-lucas-rodrigues/message

LHV
LHV äriminutid #2 - kas hea idee on edu alus?

LHV

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 13:17


Seekordsete äriminutite jooksul teeme juttu ideedest. Äri alustamine võib sageli takerduda just idee puuduse taha. Samas ei ole pelgalt heast ideest mingit tolku, kui sellega midagi peale ei hakata. Kui suur roll on ikkagi heal ideel ja kuidas ideest tegudeni jõuda? Saadet viivat läbi LHV ettevõtete finantseerimise juht Marko Kiisa ja B2B-turundusspetsialist Johannes Kanter. "Äriminutid" on ettevõtlusest ja ettevõtjatest rääkiv lühisaade, mis ilmub kaks korda nädalas.

AWR Javanese - Radio Suara Kebahagiaan
“BAB-BAB SING NGRUSAK AWAK BISA NGRUSAK JIWA” “SIH-RAHMAT ALUS BEBUDEN”

AWR Javanese - Radio Suara Kebahagiaan

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2024 29:00


“Kanggo ngolehake sandhangan sing paling nyehatake, kebutuhan saka saben-saben perangan awak kudu digatekake kanthi teliti” “cara Rama Abraham tanggap kanggo ngebaki misine yakuwi saka aluse bebuden lan andap-asor”

Podcasts FolhaPE
11.03.24 - Procon-PE realiza mutirão de renegociação de dívidas em alusão ao dia do consumidor

Podcasts FolhaPE

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2024 7:20


Em alusão ao Dia do Consumidor, na próxima sexta-feira (15), o Procon-PE realiza o mutirão de renegociação de dívidas. A ação, que visa oferecer ao consumidor a oportunidade de quitar suas dívidas e voltar a ter seu nome limpo na praça, teve início nesta segunda-feira (11), e segue durante toda a semana, das 8h às 14h, na sede do órgão, localizado na Rua Floriano Peixoto, 141, bairro de Santo Antônio. Para falar sobre o mutirão, Neneo de Carvalho conversa no Folha na Manhã com o secretário executivo de Justiça e Promoção dos Direitos do Consumidor, Anselmo Araújo.

Tuzinas
Tuzinas. Ornitologas Marius Karlonas apie kasdieninius nuotykius gamtoje: įlūžau į užšalusį dumblą esant -20°C

Tuzinas

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2023 48:24


„Net vaikštant gatve girdžiu kiekvieną trakštelėjimą ir judesį“, - apie savo darbą pasakoja ornitologas Marius Karlonas.Kaip atrodo ornitologo kasdienybė? Ar tai iš tiesų toks romantiškas darbas? Marius teigia, kad tai kaip meilė: pirmus metus esi apsvaigęs, o vėliau pradedi pastebėti problemas. Jis yra įsitikinęs, kad visų pirma gamtininkas turi būti visuomenės švietėjas, nes žinios apie nykstančias rūšis ir kenčiančią gamtą gulėdamos stalčiuje problemų neišspręs.Pokalbis apie gamtinį turizmą, paukščių genialumą ir kasdieninius nuotykius su „Ornitostogų“ įkūrėju, ornitologu Mariumi Karlonu.Ved. Ignas Klėjus

Kinnisvarajutud
#167 | Kuidas alustada maaklerina ja panna alus vägevale karjäärile?

Kinnisvarajutud

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2023 85:24


“Kinnisvarajutud” podcasti 167. osas keskendume taas maakleritele, kui lisaks Algisele on stuudios veel kaks 1Estate Kinnisvara maaklerit Danek Bergmann ja Rasmus Remiküll. Tegemist on veel üsna noorte maakleritega, kes on aga juba näidanud, et on valmis tegema kõik, et selles ametis läbi lüüa. Kõige tähtsama avastusena saame saatest teada, et ilma "Kinnisvarajuttude" saateta poleks need noormehed tõenäoliselt üldse sellele teele astunud ehk siis suure osa krediidist võib juba eos meie nimele kirjutada. Lisaks on mõlemad noored mehed teinud ka oma esimesed sammud investeerimises ning loomulikult pinnime me kogu sellekohase info neilt välja. Põhilise osa saatest proovime aga Danekilt ja Rasmuselt teada saada, mis tunne on olla alustav maakler ning mida ja kui palju peab tegema, et selles ametis edukas olla. Räägime maaklerite igapäevatööst, kasuks tulevatest isiksuseomadustest, maaklerite üldisest kuvandist, kehvadest maakleritest ja loomulikult ka külmadest kõnedest. --- Podcast “Kinnisvarajutud” võtab luubi alla Eesti kinnisvaraturu ning üritab erinevad teemad sügavuti lahti võtta. Eesmärk on rääkida kinnisvarast kui varaklassist (väike)investori vaatenurgast ning olla valdkonnast huvitatutele abimeheks ja meelelahutuseks. Saatejuhid on mikroinvestor ja kinnisvarahuviline Siim Semiskar ja kinnisvaramaakler ning 1Estate Kinnisvara juhatuse liige Algis Liblik. Kuulajad saavad kaasa rääkida, küsimusi küsida või saate kohta tagasisidet anda Facebooki grupis Kinnisvarajutud. Jälgi meid ka Instagramis: www.instagram.com/kinnisvarajutud/ Toeta meie tegemisi Patreonis ja saa ligipääs boonusepisoodidele ja muule lisamaterjalile: www.patreon.com/kinnisvarajutud

Rural Roots Canada
ALUS Canada Grazing Program Aims to Support Farmers

Rural Roots Canada

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2023 2:16


A new grazing program through ALUS Canada is showing promise in delivering support to producers implementing intensive rotational grazing system. Chad Ritter is the ALUS Coordinator for Parkland County. Ritter says the grazing forward program can help producers looking for support with their intensive rotational grazing systems. For more on this story go to ruralrootscanada.com This feature is powered by Proven Seed.

AWR Javanese - Radio Suara Kebahagiaan
“KRISTUS JRONING MANUNGSA” - “SIH-RAHMAT ALUS BEBUDEN”

AWR Javanese - Radio Suara Kebahagiaan

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 18, 2023 29:00


“Kristus kudu gesang jroning diri manungsa kang dadi wakilé, lan makarya lumantar panca inderane, lan lumaku lumantar kapinteranné.” - “cara Rama Abraham tanggap kanggo ngebaki misine yakuwi saka aluse bebuden lan andap-asor”

Dešimt balų
Dešimt balų. Ar tikrai mokyklų bendruomenės bejėgės prieš kvaišalus?

Dešimt balų

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2023 28:03


Dešimt privačių Lietuvos mokyklų, siekdamos užkardyti elektroninių cigarečių rūkymą, ką tik įsidiegė buvusių Kauno technologijos universiteto mokslininkų sukurtą inovaciją - specialų įrenginį, vos per keletą sekundžių aptinkantį barbitalio, fenobarbitalio, žolės, žiurknuodžių ar kitų psichoaktyviųjų medžiagų, kuriomis svaiginasi jaunimas, pėdsaką. Apie šią inovaciją galvoja ir kai kurios savivaldybių mokyklos ar net ir savivaldybės. Tiesa, jas stabdo įrenginio kaina, prasidedanti nuo 30 tūkst. eurų. O ir apskritai kiek atsargiai žvelgiama į šią lietuvišką inovaciją, kuri, tiesa, jau sparčiai diegiama Jungtinės Karalystės, Jungtinių Amerikos Valstijų, Jungtinių Arabų Emyratų, Nyderlandų, Šveicarijos mokyklose.Dar kitos privačios mokyklos perka specialius testus suolų bei kitiems paviršiams, ant kurių galima aptikti bet kokių svaigiųjų medžiagų pėdsakus.Savivaldybių mokyklos, besirūpinančios mokiniais, priimdamos naujokus pasirašo sutartis, leidžiančias, esant įtarimui, patikrinti mokinio daiktus, organizuoja galybę policijos bei sveikatos biurų specialistų prevencinių paskaitų, taip pat demonstruoja specialius 3 D akinius, kurie sukuria kvaišalų vartojusio žmogaus būseną, kviečiasi policijos pareigūnus su specialiais šunimis, apmokytais ieškoti kvaišalų... Bet toks mokyklų administracijų rūpestis patinka ne visiems tėvams. Kai kurie jų piktinasi, girdi, šios priemonės kelia jų atžaloms baimę, jos esančios perteklinės. Dar aktyviau veikti prieš bet kokias psichoaktyviąsias medžiagas mokyklų administracijas žaboja ir tai, kad atliekant tokias prevencines akcijas sklinda gandai, girdi X mokykla - narkomanų irštva, tad ten ir ieškoma kvaišalų.Kaip didinti vaikų ir paauglių atsparumą norui išmėginti tai, kas draudžiama? O jei vis dėlto nepavyksta apsaugoti, kaip efektyviai padėti besisvaiginančiam jaunam žmogui?Laidoje diskutuoja Vidita Jonaitė, Kaišiadorių rajono savivaldybės Visuomenės sveikatos biuro direktorė, Irena Baranauskienė, privačios „Saulės“ gimnazijos direktorė bei Nevalstybinių mokyklų asociacijos vadovė, Leonas Šidlauskas, Palangos Senosios gimnazijos direktorius, Virginijus Skroblas, Alytaus Adolfo Ramanausko-Vanago gimnazijos direktorius, ir Aušrinė Janovskienė, Širvintų rajono savivaldybės patarėja.Ved. Jonė Kučinskaitė

Notícias MP
MPAC participa de sessão solene na Aleac em alusão ao Dia do Professor

Notícias MP

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 24, 2023 0:57


Nesta segunda-feira, 16, o procurador-geral de Justiça Danilo Lovisaro do Nascimento participou, na Assembleia Legislativa do Estado do Acre (Aleac), da sessão solene alusiva ao Dia do Professor, celebrado nacionalmente em 15 de outubro.

The Nonlinear Library
LW - Memory bandwidth constraints imply economies of scale in AI inference by Ege Erdil

The Nonlinear Library

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2023 6:26


Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: Memory bandwidth constraints imply economies of scale in AI inference, published by Ege Erdil on September 17, 2023 on LessWrong. Contemporary GPUs often have very imbalanced memory vs arithmetic operation capabilities. For instance, an H100 can do around 3e15 8-bit FLOP/s, but the speed at which information can move between the cores and the GPU memory is only 3 TB/s. As 8 bits = 1 byte, there is a mismatch of three orders of magnitude between the arithmetic operation capabilities of the GPU and its memory bandwidth. This imbalance ends up substantially lowering the utilization rate of ML hardware when batch sizes are small. For instance, suppose we have a model parametrized by 1.6 trillion 8-bit floating point numbers. To just fit the parameters of the model onto the GPUs, we'll need at least 20 H100s, as each H100 has a VRAM of 80 GB. Suppose we split our model into 20 layers and use 20-way tensor parallelism: this means that we slice the parameters of the model "vertically", such that the first GPU holds the first 5% of the parameters in every layer, the second GPU holds the second 5%, et cetera. This sounds good, but now think of what happens when we try to run this model. In this case, roughly speaking, each parameter comes with one addition and one multiplication operation, so we do around 3.2 trillion arithmetic operations in one forward pass. As each H100 does 3e15 8-bit FLOP/s and we have 20 of them running tensor parallel, we can do this in a mere ~ 0.05 milliseconds. However, each parameter also has to be read into memory, and here our total memory bandwidth is only 60 TB/s, meaning for a model of size 1.6 TB we must spend (1.6 TB)/(60 TB/s) ~= 27 ms just because of the memory bottlenecks! This bottlenecks inference and we end up with an abysmal utilization rate of approximately (0.05 ms)/(27 ms) ~= 0.2%. This becomes even worse when we also take in inter-GPU communication costs into account, which would be at around 1 TB/s if the GPUs are using NVLink. Well, this is not very good. Most of our arithmetic operation capability is being wasted because the ALUs spend most of their time idling and waiting for the parameters to be moved to the GPU cores. Can we somehow improve this? A crucial observation is that if getting the parameters to the GPU cores is the bottleneck, we want to somehow amortize this over many calls to the model. For instance, imagine we could move a batch of parameters to the cores and use them a thousand times before moving on to the next batch. This would do much to remedy the imbalance between memory read and compute times. If our model is an LLM, then unfortunately we cannot do this for a single user because text is generated serially: even though each token needs its own LLM call and so the user needs to make many calls to the model to generate text, we can't parallelize these calls because each future token call needs to know all the past tokens. This inherently serial nature of text generation makes it infeasible to improve the memory read and compute time balance if only a single user is being serviced by the model. However, things are different if we get to batch requests from multiple users together. For instance, suppose that our model is being asked to generate tokens by thousands of users at any given time. Then, we can parallelize these calls: every time we load some parameters onto the GPU cores, we perform the operations associated with those parameters for all user calls at once. This way, we amortize the reading cost of the parameters over many users, greatly improving our situation. Eventually this hits diminishing returns because we must also read the hidden state of each user's calls into GPU memory, but the hidden states are usually significantly smaller than the whole model, so parallelization still results in huge ...

MOCRadio.com Podcasts
MOC Mix Party (Aired On MOCRadio 9-8-23)

MOCRadio.com Podcasts

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2023 58:45


Get ready for the hottest beats on the 'MOC Mix Party'! Join Metro Beatz as he takes you on a crazy musical journey every Friday afternoon. This week Metro Beatz spins tracks from Bobbi Storm, Alus, Amerie, Mary J. Blige, Victoria Monet, LL Cool J, Warren G and a whole lot more. This is the ultimate party you don't want to miss! Tune in and turn up the volume every Friday afternoon at 2pm as we unleash the energy of the 'MOC Mix Party' exclusively on mocradio.com. Feel the beats as Metro Beatz creates an electrifying atmosphere that will keep you grooving all day long!

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0

We are now launching our dedicated new YouTube and Twitter! Any help in amplifying our podcast would be greatly appreciated, and of course, tell your friends! Notable followon discussions collected on Twitter, Reddit, Reddit, Reddit, HN, and HN. Please don't obsess too much over the GPT4 discussion as it is mostly rumor; we spent much more time on tinybox/tinygrad on which George is the foremost authority!We are excited to share the world's first interview with George Hotz on the tiny corp!If you don't know George, he was the first person to unlock the iPhone, jailbreak the PS3, went on to start Comma.ai, and briefly “interned” at the Elon Musk-run Twitter. Tinycorp is the company behind the deep learning framework tinygrad, as well as the recently announced tinybox, a new $15,000 “luxury AI computer” aimed at local model training and inference, aka your “personal compute cluster”:* 738 FP16 TFLOPS* 144 GB GPU RAM* 5.76 TB/s RAM bandwidth* 30 GB/s model load bandwidth (big llama loads in around 4 seconds)* AMD EPYC CPU* 1600W (one 120V outlet)* Runs 65B FP16 LLaMA out of the box (using tinygrad, subject to software development risks)(In the episode, we also talked about the future of the tinybox as the intelligence center of every home that will help run models, at-home robots, and more. Make sure to check the timestamps

The Michael Sartain Podcast
Alus - The Michael Sartain Podcast

The Michael Sartain Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2023 149:30


Alus ( IG: @Alus ) is a latin and pop performer and composer. She produces her own music and directs her own music videos. She's been featured in People Magazine and several of her videos have millions of views on YouTube.  @OfficialAlus  ——————————————————— Michael's Men of Action program is a Master's course dedicated to helping people elevate their social lives by building elite social circles and becoming higher status. Click the link below to learn more: https://m.moamentoring.com/podcast Join Michael's free MOA group on Skool: https://www.skool.com/men-of-action-free ———————————————————— Become an affiliate for MOA Mentoring: https://www.moamentoring.com/earn Subscribe on Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/user/MichaelSartain Listen on Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/the-michael-sartain-podcast/id1579791157 Listen on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2faAYwvDD9Bvkpwv6umlPO?si=8Q3ak9HnSlKjuChsTXr6YQ&dl_branch=1 Filmed at Sticky Paws Studios: https://m.youtube.com/channel/UComrBVcqGLDs3Ue-yWAft8w  0:00 Intro 0:37 Babes in Toyland 1:10 New Jersey upbringing 2:36 Musical family 3:42 Extroverted personality 5:32 Broadway 7:51 ***Actual vs fake artists 12:19 Sampling 13:52 Moving to LA 16:38 Charity events 17:18 Rescuing cats 18:40 Experiencing LA 22:17 Showing value 23:35 **Cutting people out 27:54 ***Creating your reality 30:53 Quantum physics 32:12 Manifesting 36:27 **Being always rich vs becoming rich 39:36 LA vs NJ dating scene 42:38 No stage fright 44:41 **Who is sliding into your DMs? 48:05 ***Men are as faithful as their options 54:51 Cheating 56:48 *The biggest misogynists 59:42 Attachment styles 1:00:48 Women's pickiness 1:02:32 Dunbar's number 1:05:14 ***Unrealistic expectations 1:06:38 ***When do men fall in love? 1:10:40 The controversy of evolution and science 1:12:28 Playing with her fans 1:13:42 Using evolutionary psychology in art 1:15:28 Upper body attractiveness 1:17:23 Being in People magazine 1:18:46 Defining “Manifestation” 1:21:14 TikTok tribe 1:25:28 ***The business model 1:31:55 *Being a night owl 1:35:38 **How career affects relationships 1:38:45 Perception through social media 1:41:56 Origins of the name “Alus” 1:42:52 Wanting vs needing a man 1:44:52 Rescuing and losing pets 1:48:32 ***The decision to start an OnlyFans 1:54:20 Using OnlyFans to reinvest 1:57:07 Dealing with criticisms 1:59:42 Trip to Europe 2:00:37 Favorite books 2:02:28 Creators were on drugs 2:04:52 Biographies 2:05:28 **Marylin Monroe 2:09:45 ***Boundaries on social media 2:12:18 Two biggest fears in life 2:14:49 Making the music videos 2:19:06 Deadmau5 & Marshmello 2:20:20 Shooting 16 hours straight 2:22:43 Things coming up 2:25:21 Las Vegas vs LA 2:26:50 Social media

Pan De Vida Ontario
NÚMEROS #57

Pan De Vida Ontario

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2023 50:24


Jornada 10, la de Alus. Para entender que nuestras pruebas son para saber si amamos a Dios y a los hermanos en realidad (Nm. 33:13 y Esc. Selectas). 10/4/23

Ben Buradan Okuyorum
Sermet Muhtar Alus'un Romanlarında Mekân, Kimlik ve Hafıza

Ben Buradan Okuyorum

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2023 22:56


Yakup Öztürk ile “Sermet Muhtar Alus'un Romanlarında Mekân, Kimlik ve Hafıza” üzerine konuşuyoruz.

Passando a Limpo
A vice-prefeita do Recife, Isabella de Roldão, abre a semana de entrevistas em alusão a Semana da Mulher

Passando a Limpo

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 7, 2023 19:26


Passando a Limpo: No programa desta terça-feira (7), Igor Maciel e a bancada do programa conversam com a vice-prefeita do Recife, Isabella de Roldão (PDT) sobre os desafios para a mulher na política. O professor Jonas Rodrigues, da Universidade Federal Rural de Pernambuco (UFRPE), um dos principais pesquisadores sobre incidentes com tubarão no estado, fala sobre as medidas de segurança contra incidentes com tubarões na costa litorânea pernambucana e a colunista Fabíola Góis repercute o racha entre integrantes do Partido Republicano em relação à indicação do ex-presidente americano, Donald Trump, à presidência dos Estados Unidos em 2024.

Screaming in the Cloud
Becoming a Rural Remote Worker with Chris Vermilion

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 33:01


About ChrisChris is a mostly-backend mostly-engineer at Remix Labs, working on visual app development. He has been in software startups for ten years, but his first and unrequited love was particle physics.  Before joining Remix Labs, he wrote numerical simulation and analysis tools for the Large Hadron Collider, then co-founded Roobiq, a clean and powerful mobile client for Salesforce back when the official ones were neither.Links Referenced: Remix Labs: https://remixlabs.com/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/chrisvermilion TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Tailscale SSH is a new, and arguably better way to SSH. Once you've enabled Tailscale SSH on your server and user devices, Tailscale takes care of the rest. So you don't need to manage, rotate, or distribute new SSH keys every time someone on your team leaves. Pretty cool, right? Tailscale gives each device in your network a node key to connect to your VPN, and uses that same key for SSH authorization and encryption. So basically you're SSHing the same way that you're already managing your network. So what's the benefit? Well, built-in key rotation, the ability to manage permissions as code, connectivity between any two devices, and reduced latency. You can even ask users to re-authenticate SSH connections for that extra bit of security to keep the compliance folks happy. Try Tailscale now - it's free forever for personal use.Corey: This episode is sponsored by our friends at Logicworks. Getting to the cloud is challenging enough for many places, especially maintaining security, resiliency, cost control, agility, etc, etc, etc. Things break, configurations drift, technology advances, and organizations, frankly, need to evolve. How can you get to the cloud faster and ensure you have the right team in place to maintain success over time? Day 2 matters. Work with a partner who gets it - Logicworks combines the cloud expertise and platform automation to customize solutions to meet your unique requirements. Get started by chatting with a cloud specialist today at snark.cloud/logicworks. That's snark.cloud/logicworksCorey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. When I was nine years old, one of the worst tragedies that can ever befall a boy happened to me. That's right, my parents moved me to Maine. And I spent the next ten years desperately trying to get out of the state.Once I succeeded and moved to California, I found myself in a position where almost nothing can drag me back there. One of the exceptions—basically, the only exception—is Monktoberfest, a conference put on every year by the fine folks at RedMonk. It is unquestionably the best conference that I have ever been to, and it continually amazes me every time I go. The last time I was out there, I met today's guest. Chris Vermilion is a Senior Software Developer at Remix Labs. Chris, now that I finished insulting the state that you call home, how are you?Chris: I'm great. I'm happy to be in a state that's not California.Corey: I hear you. It's, uh—I talk a lot of smack about Maine. But to be perfectly direct, my problem with it is that I grew up there and that was a difficult time in my life because I, really I guess, never finished growing up according to most people. And all right, we'll accept it. No one can hate a place in the same way that you can hate it if you grew up there and didn't enjoy the experience.So, it's not Maine that's the problem; it's me. I feel like I should clarify that I'm going to get letters and people in Maine will write those letters and then have to ride their horses to Massachusetts to mail them. But we know how that works.Chris: [laugh].Corey: So, what is Remix Labs? Let's start there. Because Remix sounds like… well, it sounds like a term that is overused. I see it everywhere in the business space. I know there was a Remix thing that recently got sold to I think it was at Shopify or Spotify; I keep getting those two confused. And—Chris: One of the two, yeah.Corey: Yeah, exactly one of them plays music and one of them sells me things except now I think they both do both, and everything has gone wonky and confusing. But what do you folks do over there?Chris: So, we work on visual app development for everybody. So, the goal is to have kind of a spreadsheet-on-steroids-like development environment where you can build interactively, you have live coding, you have a responsive experience in building interactive apps, websites, mobile apps, a little bit of everything, and providing an experience where you can build systems of engagement. So tools, mobile apps, that kind of work with whatever back-end resources you're trying to do, you can collaborate across different people, pass things around, and you can do that all with a nice kind of visual app developer, where you can sort of drop nodes around and wire them together and built in a way that's it's hopefully accessible to non-developers, to project managers, to domain experts, to you know, whatever stakeholders are interested in modifying that final product.Corey: I would say that I count as one of those. I use something similar to build the tool that assembles my newsletter every week, and that was solving a difficult problem for me. I can write back-ends reasonably well, using my primary tool, which is sheer brute force. I am not much of a developer, but it turns out that with enough enthusiasm, you can overcome most limitations. And that's great, but I know nothing about front end; it does not make sense to me, it does not click in the way that other things have clicked.So, I was fourth and inches from just retaining a contractor to build out a barely serviceable internal app. And I discovered, oh, use this low-code tool to drag and drop things and that basically was Visual Basic for internal apps. And that was awesome, but they're still positioned squarely in the space of internal apps only. There's no mobile app story, there's—and it works well enough for what I do, but I have other projects, I want to wind up getting out the door that are not strictly for internal use that would benefit from being able to have a serviceable interface slapped onto. It doesn't need to be gorgeous, it doesn't need to win awards, it just needs to be, “Cool, it can display the output of a table in a variety of different ways. It has a button and when I click a button, it does a thing, generally represented as an API call to something.”And doesn't take much, but being able to have something like that, even for an internal app, has been absolutely transformative just for workflow stuff internally, for making things accessible to people that are not otherwise going to be able to do those sorts of things, by which I mean me.Chris: Yeah. I mean, exactly, I think that is the kind of use case that we are aiming for is making this accessible to everybody, building tools that work for people that aren't necessarily software developers, they don't want to dive into code—although they can if they want, it's extensible in that way—that aren't necessarily front-end developers or designers, although it's accessible to designers and if you want to start from that end, you can do it. And it's amenable to collaboration, so you can have somebody that understands the problem build something that works, you can have somebody that understands design build something that works well and looks nice, and you can have somebody that understands the code or is more of a back-end developer, then go back in and maybe fine-tune the API calls because they realize that you're doing the same thing over and over again and so there's a better way to structure the lower parts of things. But you can pass around that experience between all these different stakeholders and you can construct something that everybody can modify to sort of suit their own needs and desires.Corey: Many years ago, Bill Clinton wound up coining the phrase, ‘The Digital Divide' to talk about people who had basically internet access and who didn't—those who got it or did not—and I feel like we have a modern form of that, the technology haves and have nots. Easy example of this for a different part of my workflow here: this podcast, as anyone listening to it is probably aware by now, is sponsored by awesome folks who wind up wanting to tell you about the exciting services or tools or products that they are building. And sometimes some of those sponsors will say things like, “Okay, here's the URL I want you to read into the microphone during the ad read,” and my response is a polite form of, “Are you serious?” It's seven different subdirectories on the web server, followed by a UTM series of tracking codes that, yeah, I promise, none of you are going to type that in. I'm not even going to wind up reading into the microphone because my attention span trips out a third of the way through.So, I needed a URL shortener. So, I set up snark.cloud for this. For a long time, that was relatively straightforward because I just used an S3 bucket with redirect objects inside of it. But then you have sort of the problem being a victim of your own success, to some extent, and I was at a point where, oh, I can have people control some of these things that aren't me; I don't need to be the person that sets up the link redirection work.Yeah, the challenge is now that you have a business user who is extraordinarily good at what he does, but he's also not someone who has deep experience in writing code, and trying to sit here and explain to him, here's how to set up a redirect object in an S3 bucket, like, why didn't I save time and tell him to go screw himself? It's awful. So, I've looked for a lot of different answers for this, and the one that I found lurking on GitHub—and I've talked about it a couple of times, now—runs on Google Cloud Run, and the front-end for that of the business user—which sounds ridiculous, but it's also kind of clever, is a Google Sheet. Because every business user knows how to work a Google Sheet. There's one column labeled ‘slug' and the other one labeled ‘URL' that it points to.And every time someone visits a snark.cloud slash whatever the hell the slug happens to be, it automatically does a redirect. And it's glorious. But I shouldn't have to go digging into the depths of GitHub to find stuff like that. This feels like a perfect use case for a no-code, low-code tool.Chris: Yeah. No, I agree. I mean, that's a cool use case. And I… as always, our competitor is Google Sheets. I think everybody in software development in enterprise software's only real competitor is the spreadsheet.Corey: Oh, God, yes, I wind up fixing AWS bills for a living and my biggest competitor is always Microsoft Excel. It's, “Yeah, we're going to do it ourselves internally,” is what most people do. It seems like no matter what business line I've worked in, I've companies that did Robo-advising for retirement planning; yeah, some people do it themselves in Microsoft Excel. I worked for an expense reporting company; everyone does that in Microsoft Excel. And so, on and so forth.There are really very few verticals where that's not an option. It's like, but what about a dating site? Oh, there are certain people who absolutely will use Microsoft Excel for that. Personally, I think it's a bad idea to hook up where you VLOOKUP but what do I know?Chris: [laugh]. Right, right.Corey: Before you wound up going into the wide world of low-code development over at Remix, you—well, a lot of people have different backstories when I talk to them on this show. Yours is definitely one of the more esoteric because the common case and most people talk about is oh, “I went to Stanford and then became a software engineer.” “Great. What did you study?” “Computer Science,” or something like it. Alternately, they drop out of school and go do things in their backyard. You have a PhD in particle physics, is it?Chris: That's right. Yeah.Corey: Which first, is wild in his own right, but we'll get back to that. How did you get here from there?Chris: Ah. Well, it's kind of the age-old story of academia. So, I started in electrical engineering and ended up double majoring in physics because that you had to take a lot of physics to be an engineer, and I said, you know, this is more fun. This is interesting. Building things is great, but sitting around reading papers is really where my heart's at.And ended up going to graduate school, which is about the best gig you can ever get. You get paid to sit in an office and read and write papers, and occasionally go out drinking with other grad students, and that's really about it.Corey: I only just now for the first time in my life, realized how much some aspects of my career resemble being a [laugh] grad student. Please, continue.Chris: It doesn't pay very well is the catch, you know? It's very hard to support a lifestyle that exists outside of your office, or, you know, involves a family and children, which is certainly one downside. But it's a lot of fun and it's very low stress, as long as you are, let's say, not trying to get a job afterward. Because where this all breaks down is that, you know, as I recall, the time I was a graduate student, there were roughly as many people graduating as graduate students every year as there were professors total in the field of physics, at least in the United States. That was something like the scale of the relationship.And so, if you do the math, and unfortunately, we were relatively good at doing math, you could see, you know, most of us were not going to go on, you know? This was the path to becoming a professor, but—Corey: You look at number of students and the number of professorships available in the industry, I guess we'll call it, and yeah, it's hmm, basic arithmetic does not seem like something that anyone in that department is not capable of doing.Chris: Exactly. So, you're right, we were all I think, more or less qualified to be an academic professor, certainly at research institutions, where the only qualification, really, is to be good at doing research and you have to tolerate teaching students sometimes. But there tends to be very little training on how to do that, or a meaningful evaluation of whether you're doing it well.Corey: I want to dive into that a bit because I think that's something we see a lot in this industry, where there's no training on how to do a lot of different things. Teaching is one very clear example, another one is interviewing people for jobs, so people are making it up as they go along, despite there being decades and decades of longitudinal studies of people figuring out what works and what doesn't, tech his always loved to just sort of throw it all out and start over. It's odd to me that academia would follow in similar patterns around not having a clear structure for, “Oh, so you're a grad student. You're going to be teaching a class. Here's how to be reasonably effective at it.” Given that higher education was not the place for me, I have very little insight into this. Is that how it plays out?Chris: I don't want to be too unfair to academia as a whole, and actually, I was quite lucky, I was a student at the University of Washington and we had a really great physics education group, so we did actually spend a fair amount of time thinking about effective ways to teach undergraduates and doing this great tutorial system they had there. But my sense was in the field as a whole, for people on the track to become professors at research institutions, there was typically not much in the way of training as a teacher, there was not really a lot of thought about pedagogy or the mechanics of delivering lectures. You know, you're sort of given a box full of chalk and a classroom and said, you know, “You have freshman physics this quarter. The last teacher used this textbook and it seems to be okay,” tended to be the sort of preparation that you would get. You know, and I think it varies institution to institution what kind of support you get, you know, the level of graduate students helping you out, but I think in lots of places in academia, the role of professors as teachers was the second thought, you know, if it was indeed thought at all.And similarly, the role of professors as mentors to graduate students, which, you know, if anything, is sort of their primary job is guiding graduate students through their early career. And again, I mean, much like in software, that was all very ad hoc. You know, and I think there are some similarities in terms of how academics and how tech workers think of themselves as sort of inventing the universe, we're at the forefront, the bleeding edge of human knowledge, and therefore because I'm being innovative in this one particular aspect, I can justify being innovative in all of them. I mean, that's the disruptive thing to do, right?Corey: And it's a shame that you're such a nice person because you would be phenomenal at basically being the most condescending person in all of tech if you wanted to. Because think about this, you have people saying, “Oh, what do you do?” “I'm a full-stack engineer.” And then some of the worst people in the world, of which I admit I used to be one, are, “Oh, full-stack. Really? When's the last time you wrote a device driver?”And you can keep on going at that. You work in particle physics, so you're all, “That's adorable. Hold my tea. When's the last time you created matter from energy?” And yeah, and then it becomes this the—it's very hard to wind up beating you in that particular game of [who'd 00:15:07] wore it better.Chris: Right. One of my fond memories of being a student is back when I got to spend more time thinking about these things and actually still remembered them, you know, in my electoral engineering days and physics days, I really had studied all the way down from the particle physics to semiconductor physics to how to lay out silicon chips and, you know, how to build ALUs and CPUs and whatnot from basic transistor gates. Yeah, and then all the way up to, you know, writing compilers and programming languages. And it really did seem like you could understand all those parts. I couldn't tell you how any of those things work anymore. Sadly, that part of my brain has now taken up with Go's lexical scoping rules and borrow checker fights with Rust. But there was a time when I was a smart person and knew those things.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Strata. Are you struggling to keep up with the demands of managing and securing identity in your distributed enterprise IT environment? You're not alone, but you shouldn't let that hold you back. With Strata's Identity Orchestration Platform, you can secure all your apps on any cloud with any IDP, so your IT teams will never have to refactor for identity again. Imagine modernizing app identity in minutes instead of months, deploying passwordless on any tricky old app, and achieving business resilience with always-on identity, all from one lightweight and flexible platform.Want to see it in action? Share your identity challenge with them on a discovery call and they'll hook you up with a complimentary pair of AirPods Pro. Don't miss out, visit Strata.io/ScreamingCloud. That's Strata dot io slash ScreamingCloud.Corey: I want to go back to what sounded like a throwaway joke at the start of the episode. In seriousness, one of the reasons—at least that I told myself at the time—that I left Maine was that it was pretty clear that there was no significant, lasting opportunity in industry when I was in Maine. In fact, the girl that I was dating at the time in college graduated college, and the paper of record for the state, The Maine Sunday Telegram, which during the week is called The Portland Press Herald, did a front-page story on her about how she went to school on a pulp and paper scholarship, she was valedictorian in her chemical engineering class at the University of Maine and had to leave the state to get a job. And every year they would roll out the governor, whoever that happened to be, to the University of Maine to give a commencement speech that's, “Don't leave Maine, don't leave Maine, don't leave Maine,” but without any real answer to, “Well, for what jobs?”Now, that Covid has been this plague o'er the land that has been devastating society for a while, work-from-home has become much more of a cohesive thing. And an awful lot of companies are fully embracing it. How have you seen Maine change based upon that for one, and for another, how have you found that community has been developed in the local sense because there was none of that in Maine when I was there? Even the brief time where I was visiting for a conference for a week, I saw definite signs of a strong local community in the tech space. What happened? I love it.Chris: It's great. Yeah, so I moved to Maine eight years ago, in 2014. And yeah, I was lucky enough to pretty early on, meet up with a few of the local nerds, and we have a long-running Slack group that I just saw was about to turn nine, so I guess I was there in the early days, called Computers Anonymous. It was a spinoff, I think, from a project somebody else had started in a few other cities. The joke was it was a sort of a confessional group of, you know, we're here to commiserate over our relationships with technology, which all of us have our complaints.Corey: Honestly, tech community is more of a support group than most other areas, I think.Chris: Absolutely. All you have to do is just have name and technology and somebody will pipe up. “Okay, you know, I've a horror story about that one.” But it has over the years turned into, you know, a very active Slack group of people that meet up once a month for beers and chats with each other, and you know, we all know each other's kids. And when the pandemic hit, it was absolutely a lifeline that we were all sort of still talking to each other every day and passing tips of, you know, which restaurants were doing takeout, and you know which ones were doing takeout and takeout booze, and all kinds of local knowledge was being spread around that way.So, it was a lucky thing to have when that hit, we had this community. Because it existed already as this community of, you know, people that were remote workers. And I think over the time that I've been here, I've really seen a growth in people coming here to work somewhere else because it's a lovely place to live, it's a much cheaper place to live than almost anywhere else I've ever been, you know, I think it's pretty attractive to the folks come up from Boston or New York or Connecticut for the summer, and they say, “Ah, you know, this doesn't seem so bad to live.” And then they come here for a winter, and then they think, “Well, okay, maybe I was wrong,” and go back. But I've really enjoyed my time here, and the tools for communicating and working remotely, have really taken off.You know, a decade ago, my first startup—actually, you know, in kind of a similar situation, similar story, we were starting a company in Louisville, Kentucky. It was where we happen to live. We had a tech community there that were asking those same questions. “Why is anybody leaving? Why is everybody leaving?”And we started this company, and we did an accelerator in San Francisco, and every single person we talked to—and this is 2012—said, you have to bring the company to San Francisco. It's the only way you'll ever hire anybody, it's the only way you'll ever raise any money, this is the only place in the world that you could ever possibly run a tech company. And you know, we tried and failed.Corey: Oh, we're one of those innovative industries in the world. We've taken a job that can be done from literally anywhere that has internet access and created a land crunch on eight square miles, located in an earthquake zone.Chris: Exactly. We're going to take a ton of VC money and where to spend 90% of it on rent in the Bay Area. The rent paid back to the LPs of our VC funds, and the circle of life continues.Corey: Oh, yeah. When I started this place as an independent consultant six years ago, I looked around, okay, should I rent space in an office so I have a place where I go and work? And I saw how much it costs to sublet even, like, a closed-door office in an existing tech startup's office space, saw the price tag, laughed myself silly, and nope, nope, nope. Instead installed a door on my home office and got this place set up as a—in my spare room now is transformed into my home office slash recording studio. And yeah, “Well, wasn't it expensive to do that kind of stuff?” Not compared to the first three days of rent in a place like that it wasn't. I feel like that's what's driving a lot of the return to office stories is the sort of, I guess, an expression of the sunk cost fallacy.Chris: Exactly. And it's a variation of nobody ever got fired for choosing IBM, you know? Nobody ever got fired for saying we should work in the office. It's the way we've always done things, people are used to it, and there really are difficulties to collaborating effectively remotely, you know? You do lose something with the lack of day-to-day contact, a lack of in-person contact, people really do get kind of burned out on interacting over screens. But I think there are ways around that and the benefits, in my mind, my experience, you know, working remotely for the last ten years or so, tend to outweigh the costs.Corey: Oh, yeah. If I were 20 years younger, I would absolutely have been much more amenable to staying in the state. There's a lot of things that recommend it. I mean, I don't want people listening to this to think I actually hate Maine. It's become a running joke, but it's also, there was remarkably little opportunity in tech back when I lived there.And now globally, I think we're seeing the rise of opportunity. And that is a line I heard in a talk once that stuck with me that talent is evenly distributed, but opportunity isn't. And there are paths forward now for folks who—I'm told—somehow don't live in that same eight-square miles of the world, where they too can build tech companies and do interesting things and work intelligently with other folks. I mean, the thing that always struck me as so odd before the pandemic was this insistence on, “Oh, we don't allow remote work.” It's, “Well, hang on a minute. Aren't we all telecommuting in from wherever offices happen to be to AWS?” Because I've checked thoroughly, they will not let you work from us-east-1. In fact, they're very strict on that rule.Chris: [laugh]. Yeah. And it's remarkable how long I think the attitude persisted that we can solve any problem except how to work somewhere other than SoMa.Corey: Part of the problem too in the startup space, and one of the things I'm so excited about seeing what you're doing over at Remix Labs, is so many of the tech startups for a long time felt like they were built almost entirely around problems that young, usually single men had in their 20s when they worked in tech and didn't want to deal with the inconveniences of having to take care of themselves. Think food delivery, think laundry services, think dating apps, et cetera, et cetera. It feels like now we're getting into an era where there's a lot of development and focus and funding being aimed at things that are a lot more substantial, like how would we make it possible for someone to build an app internally or externally without making them go to through a trial-by-fire hazing ritual of going to a boot camp for a year first?Chris: Yeah. No, I think that's right. I think there's been an evolution toward building tools for broader problems, for building tools that work for everybody. I think there was a definite startup ouroboros in the, kind of, early days of this past tech boom of so much money being thrown at early-stage startups with a couple of young people building them, and they solved a zillion of their own problems. And there was so much money being thrown at them that they were happy to spend lots of money on the problems that they had, and so it looked like there was this huge market for startups to solve those problems.And I think we'll probably see that dry up a little bit. So, it's nice to get back to what are the problems that the rest of us have. You know, or maybe the rest of you. I can't pretend that I'm not one of those startup people that wants on-demand laundry. But.Corey: Yet you wake up one day and realize, oh, yeah. That does change things a bit. Honestly, one of the weirdest things for me about moving to California from Maine was just the sheer level of convenience in different areas.Chris: Yes.Corey: And part of it is city living, true, but Maine is one those places where if you're traveling somewhere, you're taking a car, full stop. And living in a number of cities like San Francisco, it's, oh great, if I want to order food, there's not, “The restaurant that delivers,” it's, I can have basically anything that I want showing up here within the hour. Just that alone was a weird, transformative moment. I know, I still feel like 20 years in, that I'm “Country Boy Discovers City for the First Time; Loses Goddamn Mind.” Like, that is where I still am. It's still magic. I became an urban creature just by not being one for my formative years.Chris: Yeah. No, I mean, absolutely. I grew up in Ann Arbor, which is sort of a smallish college town, and certainly more urban than the areas around it, but visiting the big city of Detroit or Lansing, it was exciting. And, you know, I got older, I really sort of thought of myself as a city person. And I lived in San Francisco for a while and loved it, and Seattle for a while and loved it.Portland has been a great balance of, there's city; it's a five minute drive from my house that has amazing restaurants and concerts and a great art scene and places to eat and roughly 8000 microbreweries, but it's still a relatively small community. I know a lot of the people here. I sort of drive across town from one end to the other in 20 minutes, pick up my kids from school pretty easily. So, it makes for a nice balance here.Corey: I am very enthused on, well, the idea of growing community in localized places. One thing that I think we did lose a bit during the pandemic was, every conference became online, so therefore, every conference becomes the same and it's all the same crappy Zoom-esque experience. It's oh, it's like work with a slightly different topic, and for once the people on this call can't fire me… directly. So, it's one of those areas of just there's not enough differentiation.I didn't realize until I went back to Monktoberfest a month or so ago at the time at this call recording just how much I'd missed that sense of local community.Chris: Yeah.Corey: Because before that, the only conferences I'd been to since the pandemic hit were big corporate affairs, and yeah, you find community there, but it also is very different element to it, it has a different feeling. It's impossible to describe unless you've been to some of these community conferences, I think.Chris: Yeah. I mean, I think a smallish conference like that where you see a lot of the same people every year—credit to Steven, the whole RedMonk team for Monktoberfest—that they put on such a great show that every year, you see lots and lots of faces that you've seen the last several because everybody knows it's such a great conference, they come right back. And so, it becomes kind of a community. As I've gotten older a year between meetings doesn't seem like that long time anymore, so these are the friends I see from time to time, and you know, we have a Slack who chat from time to time. So, finding those ways to sort of cultivate small groups that are in regular contact and have that kind of specific environment and culture to them within the broader industry, I think has been super valuable, I think. To me, certainly.Corey: I really enjoyed so much of what has come out of the pandemic in some ways, which sounds like a weird thing to say, but I'm trying to find the silver linings where I can. I recently met someone who'd worked here with me for a year-and-a-half that I'd never met in person. Other people that I'd spoken to at length for the last few years in various capacity, I finally meet them in person and, “Huh. Somehow it never came up in conversation that they're six foot eight.” Like, “Yeah, okay/ that definitely is one of those things that you notice about them in person.” Ah, but here we are.I really want to thank you for spending as much time as you have to talk about what you're up to, what your experiences have been like. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you? And please don't say Maine.Chris: [laugh]. Well, as of this recording, you can find me on Twitter at @chrisvermilion, V-E-R-M-I-L-I-O-N. That's probably easiest.Corey: And we will, of course, put links to that in the [show notes 00:28:53]. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Chris: No, thanks for having me on. This was fun.Corey: Chris Vermilion, Senior Software Developer at Remix Labs. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry comment, and since you're presumably from Maine when writing that comment, be sure to ask a grown-up to help you with the more difficult spellings of some of the words.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

YUTORAH: R' Hershel Schachter -- Recent Shiurim
Gittin Shiur #33-Shaveh Prutah, Ba'alus Haguf, Eini Zanach

YUTORAH: R' Hershel Schachter -- Recent Shiurim

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 79:24


Inside OnlyFans
047 - Watching Yourself Masturb*te and Dating Married Men w/ Alus

Inside OnlyFans

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 14, 2022 71:25


On this episode of Inside OnlyFans CJ and Kayla sit down with musician and creator Alus. Alus talks about a relationship she had with a married man, looking in the mirror to masturbate, what men want on Onlyfans and much much more! FOLLOW US! Instagram: @insideonlyfans @cjsparxx @kaylalaurenoffical @maxcomedian Twitter: @insidefans Facebook: Inside OnlyFans Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

O Antagonista
"Está defendendo apenas o interesse próprio", diz Fachin, em alusão a Bolsonaro

O Antagonista

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 1, 2022 1:46


O presidente do TSE, ministro Edson Fachin (foto), oficializou, nesta segunda-feira (1º), a retomada dos trabalhos do tribunal para o segundo semestre deste ano, a dois meses do primeiro turno das eleições. Fachin criticou o presidente Jair Bolsonaro, sem citá-lo, pelo seu costume em questionar a credibilidade das urnas caso sua reeleição não aconteça. "Quem vocifera não aceitar resultado diverso da vitória não está defendendo a auditoria das urnas eletrônicas e do processo de votação, está defendendo apenas o interesse próprio de não ser responsabilizado pelas inerentes condutas ou pela inaptidão de ser votado pela maioria", disse. Fachin ainda disse que o tribunal combaterá a desinformação e a violência. "Não ceda aos discursos que apenas querem espalhar notícias falsas e violência. O Brasil é maior que a intolerância e a violência As brasileiras e os brasileiros são maiores do que a intolerância e a violência", afirmou. Ele deixará a presidência do TSE, a ser assumida pelo ministro Alexandre de Moraes ainda em 16 de agosto. Moraes comandará o tribunal durante as eleições, cujo primeiro turno está marcado para 2 de outubro. Cadastre-se para receber nossa newsletter: https://bit.ly/2Gl9AdL​ Confira mais notícias em nosso site: https://www.oantagonista.com​ Acompanhe nossas redes sociais: https://www.fb.com/oantagonista​ https://www.twitter.com/o_antagonista​ https://www.instagram.com/o_antagonista No Youtube deixe seu like e se inscreva no canal: https://www.youtube.com/c/OAntagonista

The Makeshift Podcast
Episode 17: Who Is The GREATEST ARTIST Of ALL TIME! feat. Alus!

The Makeshift Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2022 52:04


Brian and Zach sat down with SPECIAL GUEST ALUS! We talked music, New Jersey debates, living in LA and much more! Tune in and let us know who you want to see on the podcast next! Alus's Platforms: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/alusofficial/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/OfficialAlus ------------------------------ SUBSCRIBE TO STAY TUNED!

It's Real with Jordan and Demi
Episode 112 - Alus

It's Real with Jordan and Demi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 17, 2022 39:44


Since 2015, Alus has been releasing music on her own. Although record labels have expressed interest in signing her, she has chosen to stay independent. This has allowed her to explore several different styles, including pop, EDM, and reggaton. In this episode, Alus discusses how she uses her operatic background to compose songs, her elaborate music videos, and the effect of her recent move to Los Angeles.

Vienkartinė planeta
Vienkartinė planeta. Klaipėdoje kuriamas naujas būdas išvalyti naftos teršalus

Vienkartinė planeta

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 7, 2022 28:30


Klaipėdos universiteto mokslininkės Tatjana Paulauskienė ir Marija Kataržytė neseniai užpatentavo naują būdą išvalyti nafta užterštą vandenį, panaudojant Baltijos jūros aplinkoje aptiktus mikrogrybus ir natūralias medžiagas. Mokslininkės tikisi, kad, jei technologiją pavyks pritaikyti praktiškai, bus galima surinkti ir neutralizuoti dideliame plote pasklidusius teršalus nepakenkiant aplinkai. Šiuo metu jos tęsia laboratorinius tyrimus ir planuoja tolesnius išradimo bandymus.Tuo metu Aplinkos apsaugos agentūros duomenys rodo, kad pernai Baltijos jūroje ir Kuršių mariose nustatyti 7 atvejai, kai tarša naftos produktais keliskart viršijo normas. Dauguma jų siejami su Klaipėdos uosto veikla ir laivyba.Autorė Vaida Pilibaitytė

YZ-Radio
Crónicas del escribano: criaturas de los días más fríos.

YZ-Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 25, 2021 8:54


El escribano nos contará sobre los Alus y los Kukuros. Criaturas características del folclore de algunos cuadrantes. Pero no sin antes presentarnos una grabación por parte de NicxSound y su podcast The Timeverse

Love to Heal with Dr Kim
Conquer Your Fears with Singer/Songwriter Alus

Love to Heal with Dr Kim

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 16, 2021 32:43


Psychologist Dr Kim sits down with International Recording Artist Alus to talk how to overcome fear. If you struggle with fear, anxiety, and worry you're not alone. Get inspired by hearing how a now famous singer overcame all of her fears to accomplish massive success in her industry. Alus on Instagram: @alusofficial Alus New Music Video: https://youtu.be/l9C8DyoUTrE Tags: fear (symptom), how to overcome fear, how to overcome fears, how to overcome fear and anxiety, how to overcome fear and worry, how to overcome fear and live, how to overcome fear and doubt, how to become a singer, psychologist, love to heal, how to overcome fear and depression, how to overcome fear and anxiousness, how to overcome fear of doing new things, how to overcome fear of failure, how to overcome fear in your life, fear, anxiety, overcoming fear, how to overcome anxiety --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kim-chronister/support