Place in Greece
POPULARITY
In deze aflevering neemt prof. dr. Alwin Kloekhorst van de Universiteit Leiden ons mee naar het oude Anatolië - naar de ontwikkeling van de Anatolische talen. We hebben het dan over onder andere het Hettitisch en het Luwisch. Maar welke talen behoren nog meer tot die taalfamilie? Hoe verspreiden en ontwikkelen (oude) talen zich? En hoe verhouden die Anatolische talen zich tot het Indo-Europees? Alwin neemt ons mee in de interessante wereld van de vergelijkende taalwetenschap met nieuwe inzichten en fascinerend onderzoek!Shownotes
Millised olid Stalini-järgse ajastu vangilaagrid? Anatoli Martšenko oli esimene teisitimõtleja, kes oma vanglakogemused kirja pani ja avaldas. Tema raamat teadvustas kogu maailmale, et Stalini surm ei tähendanud Gulagi lõppu.
AVISO: (El presente episodio pueda romper esquemas académicos, pero está fundamentado en sólidas bases a tener en consideración, que puedan cambiar no solamente ciertos paradigmas personales y colectivos, sino igualmente demoler unos falsos cimientos sobre los cuales se ha construido la propia historia de la humanidad). Desde hace tiempo tenía muchas ganas de compartir con todos vosotros la Nueva Cronología propuesta por Anatoli Fomenko, matemático ruso nacido en Donetsk, antigua Unión Soviética, el 13 de marzo de 1945. Anatoli es miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia y desde el año 1969 trabajó en el departamento de geometría diferencial de la Facultad de Mecánica Teórica y Matemática de la Universidad Estatal de Moscú “Lomonósov”. En el año 1970 obtuvo el grado de candidato a doctor en ciencias y en el año 1972 el de doctor en ciencias. En 1980 obtuvo el grado de catedrático del departamento de geometría superior y topología y en 1992 de jefe del departamento de geometría diferencial. Ha sido galardonado con el premio de la Sociedad de Matemática de Moscú en el año 1974, con el premio de matemática del Presidum de la Academia de Ciencias de la Unión Soviética en el año 1987 y Premio Estatal de la Federación Rusa en 1996. En 1991 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias Naturales de Rusia, en 1993 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia Internacional de Ciencias de la Escuela Superior y en 1994 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia. En definitiva, un impresionante currículo en torno a alguien a tener en consideración, especialmente por cuanto en el presente episodio se expondrá en torno a su figura. Para tan especial ocasión he deseado compartir un valioso documental, el cual consta de 24 partes que han sido dobladas del ruso al castellano por los chicos de Pachamama Flat, basado en la obra de Anatoli Fomenko “Historia: ¿Ficción o ciencia?”. Una extensa obra que consta de 34 libros a través de 40 años de rigurosa investigación y por supuesto catalogada como “teoría pseudohistórica” por los medios oficiales. Hasta el momento se han presentado 7 de las 24 partes, las cuales he deseado dividir en tres episodios suficientemente contundentes para tener en consideración un serio revisionismo de la propia historia de la humanidad. En esta cuarta parte podréis escuchar el séptimo capítulo. Capítulo 7: ¿En qué siglo vivió Cristo? Un importante episodio que establece la fecha exacta en la cual vivió Jesús de Nazaret, al igual que la fecha exacta en la cual fuera crucificado, todo ello de manera absolutamente concordante con otras fuentes, lo cual respalda el minucioso trabajo de Fomenko y sus colaboradores. Un valioso documental que merece la pena no solamente ser escuchado, sino igualmente razonado y ante todo constatado por uno mismo, dado que cambiar un paradigma fraudulento es tan solo responsabilidad en primera instancia individual, sin ánimo de convencer a nadie de absolutamente nada. Tan solo abran su mente y escuchen, para en última instancia decidir por ustedes mismos cual es la verdad. DOCUMENTAL (cuarta parte): CAPÍTULO 7 - FOMENKO: ¿EN QUÉ SIGLO VIVIÓ CRISTO?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=N6J9gXxTo9k&t=102s ENLACES RELACIONADOS: LA ESTRELLA DE BELÉN – UNA EXPLICACIÓN ASTRONÓMICA: https://www.nationalgeographic.com.es/ciencia/la-estrella-de-belen-una-explicacion-astronomica_19316 LA NEBULOSA DEL CANGREJO: https://www.cosmoaventura.com/nebulosa-cangrejo/ LA ICONOGRAFÍA DEL ZODIACO DE DENDERA: https://elnocturnario.com/el-zodiaco-de-dendera/ ¿CUÁNTOS AÑOS TIENE EL SUDARIO DE TURÍN?: https://www.latercera.com/que-pasa/noticia/cuantos-anos-tiene-el-sudario-de-turin-cientificos-dudan-de-historica-datacion-de-1988-que-dice-que-es-de-la-edad-media/754251/# LA PRUEBA DEL CARBONO-14 Y LA SÁBANA SANTA: https://themysteryman.com/la-prueba-del-carbono-14-y-sabana-santa-fraude-o-contaminacion/ UNA NUEVA INVESTIGACIÓN ASEGURA QUE EL SANTO SUDARIO DE TURÍN PODRÍA SER VERÍDICO: https://www.infobae.com/sociedad/2024/08/23/una-nueva-investigacion-asegura-que-el-santo-sudario-de-turin-podria-ser-veridico/ ¿POR QUÉ ANTES EL AÑO NUEVO COMENZABA EN MARZO?: https://www.nationalgeographic.es/historia/2021/12/por-que-antes-el-ano-nuevo-comenzaba-en-marzo LOS AÑOS EN OTROS PAÍSES SEGÚN DISTINTOS CALENDARIOS: https://www.laviajeraempedernida.com/los-anos-en-otros-lugares-del-mundo-segun-los-distintos-calendarios/ BIBLIOGRAFÍA DEL EPISODIO: FOMENKO, A. Historia: ¿Ficción o realidad? MÚSICA DEL EPISODIO: JOHN DEBNEY CONTACTO: eliniciado@yahoo.com Este programa no tiene ánimo de lucro ni será monetizado, por el contrario el único afán es la máxima divulgación de cuestiones que nos atañen a todos.
AVISO: (El presente episodio pueda romper esquemas académicos, pero está fundamentado en sólidas bases a tener en consideración, que puedan cambiar no solamente ciertos paradigmas personales y colectivos, sino igualmente demoler unos falsos cimientos sobre los cuales se ha construido la propia historia de la humanidad). Desde hace tiempo tenía muchas ganas de compartir con todos vosotros la Nueva Cronología propuesta por Anatoli Fomenko, matemático ruso nacido en Donetsk, antigua Unión Soviética, el 13 de marzo de 1945. Anatoli es miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia y desde el año 1969 trabajó en el departamento de geometría diferencial de la Facultad de Mecánica Teórica y Matemática de la Universidad Estatal de Moscú “Lomonósov”. En el año 1970 obtuvo el grado de candidato a doctor en ciencias y en el año 1972 el de doctor en ciencias. En 1980 obtuvo el grado de catedrático del departamento de geometría superior y topología y en 1992 de jefe del departamento de geometría diferencial. Ha sido galardonado con el premio de la Sociedad de Matemática de Moscú en el año 1974, con el premio de matemática del Presidum de la Academia de Ciencias de la Unión Soviética en el año 1987 y Premio Estatal de la Federación Rusa en 1996. En 1991 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias Naturales de Rusia, en 1993 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia Internacional de Ciencias de la Escuela Superior y en 1994 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia. En definitiva, un impresionante currículo en torno a alguien a tener en consideración, especialmente por cuanto en el presente episodio se expondrá en torno a su figura. Para tan especial ocasión he deseado compartir un valioso documental, el cual consta de 24 partes que han sido dobladas del ruso al castellano por los chicos de Pachamama Flat, basado en la obra de Anatoli Fomenko “Historia: ¿Ficción o ciencia?”. Una extensa obra que consta de 34 libros a través de 40 años de rigurosa investigación y por supuesto catalogada como “teoría pseudohistórica” por los medios oficiales. Hasta el momento se han presentado 7 de las 24 partes, las cuales he deseado dividir en tres episodios suficientemente contundentes para tener en consideración un serio revisionismo de la propia historia de la humanidad. En esta tercera parte podréis escuchar el sexto capítulo. Capítulo 6: Señor Veliky Nógvorod, ¿quién es usted? Un revelador episodio que muestra cómo Nógvorod no fue una sola ciudad, sino toda una región que actuaba como capital de la antigua Rusia y cómo hasta el siglo XVII gran parte del mundo civilizado se encontraba integrado en un mismo Estado, siendo a partir del siglo XVI cuando dicho antiguo Orden establecido comenzó su declive y derrumbe, dando lugar a pequeños Estados disgregados. Fue a partir de entonces cuando figuras como Josephus Scalinger y Dionisus Petavius, este último jesuita, establecieran una flagrante manipulación reconstruyendo la historia, a gran escala, alterando toda la documentación existente hasta el siglo XVIII. Pero no fueron solamente los jesuitas los únicos manipuladores de la historia, sino igualmente la francmasonería. Un valioso documental que merece la pena no solamente ser escuchado, sino igualmente razonado y ante todo constatado por uno mismo, dado que cambiar un paradigma fraudulento es tan solo responsabilidad en primera instancia individual, sin ánimo de convencer a nadie de absolutamente nada. Tan solo abran su mente y escuchen, para en última instancia decidir por ustedes mismos cual es la verdad. DOCUMENTAL (tercera parte): CAPÍTULO 6 - FOMENKO - SEÑOR VELIKY NÓGVOROD, ¿QUIÉN ES USTED?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Jts-G9il6tg&t=9s ENLACES RELACIONADOS: LA RUS DE KIEV: https://www.worldhistory.org/trans/es/1-16603/la-rus-de-kiev/ EL PUEBLO QUE LE DIO A RUSIA SU NOMBRE: https://www.bbc.com/mundo/vert-tra-41792562 RÚRIK – EL PADRE DE RUSIA: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tndbr0eytuw ¿POR QUÉ FUE NÓVGOROD UNA CIUDAD ÚNICA EN LA RUSIA MEDIEVAL?: https://es.rbth.com/historia/92989-novgorod-ciudad-unica-rusia-medieval NÓVGOROD – UNA SORPRESA RUSA: https://www.nuevatribuna.es/articulo/cultura---ocio/novgorod-sorpresarusa-turismo-viajes-rusia/20210415144056186734.html VELIKI NÓVGOROD – LA CIUDAD RUSA DONDE NACIÓ TODO (O CASI TODO): https://www.economiadigital.es/tendenciashoy/destinos/veliki-novgorod-la-ciudad-rusa-donde-nacio-todo-o-casi.html EXPLORANDO LA CATEDRAL DE SANTA SOFÍA EN NÓVGOROD: https://es.rbth.com/historia/92614-explorando-catedral-santa-sofia-novgorod JESUITAS Y FRANCMASONES - LOS INVENTORES DE LA HISTORIA: https://heraldodeoregon.wordpress.com/2022/12/16/los-inventores-de-la-historia/ BIBLIOGRAFÍA DEL EPISODIO: FOMENKO, A. Historia: ¿Ficción o realidad? CONTACTO: eliniciado@yahoo.com Este programa no tiene ánimo de lucro ni será monetizado, por el contrario el único afán es la máxima divulgación de cuestiones que nos atañen a todos.
AVISO: (El presente episodio pueda romper vuestros esquemas académicos más esenciales, pero está fundamentado en sólidas bases a tener en consideración, que puedan cambiar no solamente vuestro paradigma personal, sino igualmente demoler unos falsos cimientos sobre los cuales se ha construido la propia historia de la humanidad). Desde hace tiempo tenía muchas ganas de compartir con todos vosotros la Nueva Cronología propuesta por Anatoli Fomenko, matemático ruso nacido en Donetsk, antigua Unión Soviética, el 13 de marzo de 1945. Anatoli es miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia y desde el año 1969 trabajó en el departamento de geometría diferencial de la Facultad de Mecánica Teórica y Matemática de la Universidad Estatal de Moscú “Lomonósov”. En el año 1970 obtuvo el grado de candidato a doctor en ciencias y en el año 1972 el de doctor en ciencias. En 1980 obtuvo el grado de catedrático del departamento de geometría superior y topología y en 1992 de jefe del departamento de geometría diferencial. Ha sido galardonado con el premio de la Sociedad de Matemática de Moscú en el año 1974, con el premio de matemática del Presidum de la Academia de Ciencias de la Unión Soviética en el año 1987 y Premio Estatal de la Federación Rusa en 1996. En 1991 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias Naturales de Rusia, en 1993 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia Internacional de Ciencias de la Escuela Superior y en 1994 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia. En definitiva, un impresionante currículo en torno a alguien a tener en consideración, especialmente por cuanto en el presente episodio se expondrá en torno a su figura. Para tan especial ocasión he deseado compartir un valioso documental, el cual consta de 24 partes que han sido dobladas del ruso al castellano por los chicos de Pachamama Flat, basado en la obra de Anatoli Fomenko “Historia: ¿Ficción o ciencia?”. Una extensa obra que consta de 34 libros a través de 40 años de rigurosa investigación y por supuesto catalogada como “teoría pseudohistórica” por los medios oficiales. Hasta el momento se han presentado 7 de las 24 partes, las cuales he deseado dividir en tres episodios suficientemente contundentes para tener en consideración un serio revisionismo de la propia historia de la humanidad. En esta segunda parte podréis escuchar el cuarto y quinto capítulo, indicando su inicio exacto: Capítulo 4: Alquimia de las pirámides o cómo se construyeron. 2:50 Capítulo 5: El secreto del zodiaco egipcio. 59:48 Un episodio que gira en torno al antiguo Egipto y cómo fueron construidas sus imponentes estructuras, al igual que la fraudulenta forma de datación oficial sin rigor científico alguno, en contraposición a un revelador método fundamentado en la propia astronomía y el zodiaco egipcio. Un valioso documental que merece la pena no solamente ser escuchado, sino igualmente razonado y ante todo constatado por uno mismo, dado que cambiar un paradigma fraudulento es tan solo responsabilidad en primera instancia individual, sin ánimo de convencer a nadie de absolutamente nada. Tan solo abran su mente y escuchen, para en última instancia decidir por ustedes mismos cual es la verdad. DOCUMENTAL (Segunda parte): CAPÍTULO 4: FOMENKO – ALQUIMIA DE LAS PIRÁMIDES O CÓMO SE CONSTRUYERON: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V-ErV-292Jo&t=143s CAPÍTULO 5: FOMENKO – EL SECRETO DEL ZODIACO EGIPCIO: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FIN1GVtjZSQ&t=1s ENLACES RELACIONADOS: ASTROLOGÍA EN EGIPTO: https://historia.nationalgeographic.com.es/edicion-impresa/articulos/astrologia-egipto_17226 EL ZODIACO – UNA MARAVILLA DE LOS EGIPCIOS: https://www.culturamas.es/2013/06/26/el-zodiaco-una-maravilla-de-los-egipcios/ LAS BASES DE LA ASTROLOGÍA EN EL ANTIGUO EGIPTO: https://www.revistaesfinge.com/2018/11/las-bases-de-la-astrologia-en-el-antiguo-egipto/ DESCUBREN EL PRIMER ZODIACO COMPLETO DEL ANTIGUO EGIPTO: https://www.espaciomisterio.com/historia/descubren-primer-zodiaco-completo-antiguo-egipto_57416 EL TEMPLO DE DENDERA – EL MISTERIO DE LA ASTRONOMÍA EGIPCIA: https://egyptmagictours.com/es/el-templo-de-dendera-el-misterio-de-la-astronomia-egipcia/ EL TAPIZ DE BAYEUX: https://www.worldhistory.org/trans/es/1-16892/el-tapiz-de-bayeux/ EL BORDADO DE BAYEUX COMO FUENTE HISTÓRICA: https://diposit.ub.edu/dspace/bitstream/2445/66376/1/TFG%20Gomez%20Esquinas%2C%20Yeray.pdf BIBLIOGRAFÍA DEL EPISODIO: FOMENKO, A. Historia: ¿Ficción o realidad? CONTACTO: eliniciado@yahoo.com Este programa no tiene ánimo de lucro ni será monetizado, por el contrario el único afán es la máxima divulgación de cuestiones que nos atañen a todos.
AVISO: (El presente episodio pueda romper vuestros esquemas académicos más esenciales, pero está fundamentado en sólidas bases a tener en consideración, que puedan cambiar no solamente vuestro paradigma personal, sino igualmente demoler unos falsos cimientos sobre los cuales se ha construido la propia historia de la humanidad). Desde hace tiempo tenía muchas ganas de compartir con todos vosotros la Nueva Cronología propuesta por Anatoli Fomenko, matemático ruso nacido en Donetsk, antigua Unión Soviética, el 13 de marzo de 1945. Anatoli es miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia y desde el año 1969 trabajó en el departamento de geometría diferencial de la Facultad de Mecánica Teórica y Matemática de la Universidad Estatal de Moscú “Lomonósov”. En el año 1970 obtuvo el grado de candidato a doctor en ciencias y en el año 1972 el de doctor en ciencias. En 1980 obtuvo el grado de catedrático del departamento de geometría superior y topología y en 1992 de jefe del departamento de geometría diferencial. Ha sido galardonado con el premio de la Sociedad de Matemática de Moscú en el año 1974, con el premio de matemática del Presidum de la Academia de Ciencias de la Unión Soviética en el año 1987 y Premio Estatal de la Federación Rusa en 1996. En 1991 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias Naturales de Rusia, en 1993 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia Internacional de Ciencias de la Escuela Superior y en 1994 fue elegido miembro numerario de la Academia de Ciencias de Rusia. En definitiva, un impresionante currículo en torno a alguien a tener en consideración, especialmente por cuanto en el presente episodio se expondrá en torno a su figura. Para tan especial ocasión he deseado compartir un valioso documental, el cual consta de 24 partes que han sido dobladas del ruso al castellano por los chicos de Pachamama Flat, basado en la obra de Anatoli Fomenko “Historia: ¿Ficción o ciencia?”. Una extensa obra que consta de 34 libros a través de 40 años de rigurosa investigación y por supuesto catalogada como “teoría pseudohistórica” por los medios oficiales. Hasta el momento se han presentado 7 de las 24 partes, las cuales he deseado dividir en cuatro episodios suficientemente contundentes para tener en consideración un serio revisionismo de la propia historia de la humanidad. En esta primera parte podréis escuchar los tres primeros capítulos, indicando su inicio exacto: Capítulo 1: ¿Conocemos nuestra historia? 6:45 Capítulo 2: ¿En qué se basa nuestra historia? 1:01:52 Capítulo 3: La verdad se puede calcular. 1:57:24 Entrevista Garry Kaspárov. 2:59:06 En dicho documental podamos encontrar preguntas de una lógica aplastante que remueven los propios cimientos de nuestra cronología, tales como: ¿Por qué infinidad de objetos de bronce son atribuidos a la “Edad de Bronce” cuando en dicha época era imposible fabricar bronce? El bronce es una aleación de cobre y estaño. El estaño fue descubierto en la Edad Media, por lo tanto imposibilita la fabricación de dicha aleación en la época asignada. Esta y muchas otras preguntas de pura lógica se dan a lo largo de la historia misma que se nos ha transmitido, pero de manera sistemática se rehúyen las respuestas o se imposibilita un abierto debate, relegando asuntos tan cruciales a un oscuro ostracismo. Un valioso documental que merece la pena no solamente ser escuchado, sino igualmente razonado y ante todo constatado por uno mismo, dado que cambiar un paradigma fraudulento es tan solo responsabilidad en primera instancia individual, sin ánimo de convencer a nadie de absolutamente nada. Tan solo abran su mente y escuchen, para en última instancia decidir por ustedes mismos cual es la verdad. DOCUMENTAL (Primera parte): CAPÍTULO 1: FOMENKO - ¿CONOCEMOS NUESTRA HISTORIA?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMeYvQNnsW0&t=320s CAPÍTULO 2: FOMENKO - ¿EN QUÉ SE BASA NUESTRA HISTORIA?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3jGb7bnbuQY&t=241s CAPÍTULO 3: FOMENKO – LA VERDAD SE PUEDE CALCULAR: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_KhB5qaUwM4&t=14s ENLACES RELACIONADOS: FELIZ AÑO 869: LA TEORÍA DE LA NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA: https://www.jotdown.es/2019/07/feliz-ano-869-la-teoria-de-la-nueva-cronologia/ NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA GLOBAL DE ANATOLY FOMENKO: https://repositorio.unal.edu.co/handle/unal/3308 LA NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA GLOBAL DE ANATOLY FOMENKO (PDF DESCARGA): https://www.academia.edu/25045870/LA_NUEVA_CRONOLOG%C3%8DA_GLOBAL_de_ANATOLY_FOMENKO ANATOLY FOMENKO Y LA INVENCIÓN DE LA HISTORIA: https://andreumarfull.com/2017/12/21/anatoly-fomenko-y-la-invencion-de-la-historia/ NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA DE FOMENKO EN CANAL 5TV: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hky4dZkJkP0 ANDREU MARFULL – NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA: https://andreumarfull.com/nc-castellano/ REPRESENTACIÓN DEL MAPA CRONOLÓGICO GLOBAL DE LA NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA: file:///C:/Users/Hp/Downloads/1a-parte-diagrama-global-de-la-reconstruccic3b3n-de-la-historia-segc3ban-la-nueva-cronologc3ada-v2-0.pdf KASPÁROV DEFENDIENDO LA NUEVA CRONOLOGÍA DE FOMENKO EN TV: https://hermanosbarea.tv/video/kasparov-defendiendo-la-nueva-cronologia-de-fomenko-en-tv/ BIBLIOGRAFÍA DEL EPISODIO: FOMENKO, A. Historia: ¿Ficción o realidad? MÚSICA DEL EPISODIO: RIMSKY KORSAKOV TCHAIKOVSKY CONTACTO: eliniciado@yahoo.com Este programa no tiene ánimo de lucro ni será monetizado, por el contrario el único afán es la máxima divulgación de cuestiones que nos atañen a todos.
durée : 00:05:54 - Sur la route avec - Il s'appelle Anatoli, il a 19 ans, et vit à Illkirch dans la banlieue sud de Strasbourg. Promenade à l'aveugle, pour appréhender les défis quotidiens qu'il doit relever, pour gagner son autonomie au milieu d'un monde de voyants, mais aussi pour se projeter dans l'avenir.
"Anatoli Bugorski" tells the extraordinary story of the Russian scientist who survived an accident involving a particle accelerator beam passing through his head. Guest host Amanda Lynn Baez and Victor Varnado, KSN delve into the incident, its aftermath, and its implications on medical and scientific understanding.Produced and hosted by Victor Varnado & Rachel TeichmanFull Wikipedia article here: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoli_BugorskiSubscribe to our new newsletter, WikiWeekly at https://newsletter.wikilisten.com/ for a fun fact every week to feel smart and impress your friends, and MORE! https://www.patreon.com/wikilistenpodcastFind us on social media!https://www.facebook.com/WikiListenInstagram @WikiListenTwitter @Wiki_ListenGet bonus content on Patreon Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
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17.07.2024 19:30: Anatoli Uschomirski - Schalom für Israel - Gott ist gerecht (Ps. 34) - Bibelstunde
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/military-history
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/russian-studies
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/eastern-european-studies
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/book-of-the-day
The spring 2022 battle for Kyiv was "one of the most tragic – and the most bizarre – events in modern history," writes Illia Ponomarenko. "Outnumbered and outgunned, Ukraine sustained the most critical blow and unexpectedly delivered Russia the greatest and most defining defeat of this war. It spelt a stunning end to the Kremlin's megalomaniac plans of an easy conquest of a 40-million-person nation. Ukraine did it alone, by itself, still with very little defence aid from the West, And that uneven victory altered the course of European history". In I Will Show You How It Was: The Story of Wartime Kyiv (Bloomsbury, 2024), Ponomarenko recalls life in Ukraine's capital during the delusional, extended Christmas leading up to Russia's full-scale invasion, after the shock and awe of the first night and the fight for the northern suburbs, and amid the joy of victory. It is the story of a nation, a city, a reporter and his friends, family, and colleagues. A founder and defence editor of the Kyiv Independent, which he left last summer to write the book, Ponomarenko mixes reporting with polemic. The mixture has turned this 32-year-old native Russian speaker from southern Donbas into one of the war's biggest media personalities with 1.2 million Twitter followers. *The authors' book recommendations are Babi Yar: The Story of Ukraine's Holocaust by Anatoly Kuznetsov as "A. Anatoli" (first published in Russian in 1966; in English translation by David Floyd with Vintage Classics, 2024) and Our Enemies Will Vanish: The Russian Invasion and Ukraine's War of Independence by Yaroslav Trofimov (Penguin, 2024). Tim Gwynn Jones is an economic and political-risk analyst at Medley Advisors, who also writes the twenty4two newsletter on Substack. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Agradece a este podcast tantas horas de entretenimiento y disfruta de episodios exclusivos como éste. ¡Apóyale en iVoox! Uno de los protagonistas de esta semana en el episodio del domingo ha sido Anatoli Karpov, un jugador que todavía tendrá muchos momentos álgidos en la serie, pero que, más allá de ella y en la actualidad, tiene una historia también muy interesante por su actividad política. El elegido del poder comunista en detrimento de jugadores como Korchnoi, es curiosamente también hoy una figura de apoyo al gobierno actual de Putin, muy alejado de los postulados de la Unión Soviética. El superviviente Karpov parece que ha sabido moverse en estas procelosas aguas del poder político. Lo comentamos entre otras cosas en este episodio para mecenas junto al profesor Boris Brull. Gracias por hacer posible El Abrazo del Oso. Si tú también quieres escuchar este episodio y muchos más que nunca retiramos puedes hacerlo aquí en iVoox en el botón azul Apoyar en nuestro perfil: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-abrazo-del-oso-podcast_sq_f13737_1.html www.elabrazodeloso.es www.latostadora.com/elabrazodeloso Canal de Telegram para estar informado: https://t.me/+T6RxUKg_xhk0NzE0 Grupo abierto de Telegram para conversar: https://t.me/+tBHrUSWNbZswNThk Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/elabrazodeloso Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
This is an expedition into an artistic duo who create magic - two artists had a vision to conceive a world that hovers within and between photography and embroidery, traversing and immersing both arts with an almost palpable dynamism - yet the images are static, serene, and stationary.
Müstilistele ja vahel ka maistele teemadele pühendunud saate „Puuduta mind“ külaliseks on seekord 2022. aasta „Eesti selgeltnägijate tuleproovi“ võitja Anastasia Kaldussova. Anastasia on mitteklassikaline nõid mitme teraapilise haridusega. Naine nimetab end maagiks ja biohäkkeriks ehk inimese sisemaailma eksperdiks. Anastasia missioon on suurendada inimeste teadlikkuse taset, avada nende südameid ja anda infot kõrgematelt tasanditelt. „See on ju võistlus. Inimesed näevad telekast üht, aga tegelik tuleproov käib kulisside taga – seal üritatakse konkurenti erinevate võtete ja maagiatega eest lükata või hävitada,“ paljastab Anastasia selgeltnägijate saadetes toimuva kohta karmi tõe. „Näiteks tehakse midagi sellist, et inimene ei jõuagi võtetele. Te ei pannud tähele, et Anatoli nägu oli finaalis ühel hetkel nii paistes, nagu oleks herilased teda üle näo nõelanud?“ Saadet juhib Anu Saagim.
De 1964 à 1985, plusieurs adolescents disparaissent. Anatoli Slivko, directeur d'un club de jeune, s'avère être l'un des pires tueurs en série de l'époque. Voici son histoire. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.
On this episode of We Effed Up, Theresa flips the script on Cody and explores the 1996 Mount Everest Disaster.SourcesBoukreev, Anatoli. (1997) The Climb: Tragic Ambitions on Everest. New York: St. Martins. Claypole, Jonty (Director); Kunzru, Hari (Presenter) (2003). Mapping Everest (TV Documentary). London: BBC Television.Krakauer, Jon. (1997) Into Thin Air: A personal account of the Mount Everest disaster. Doubleday.Lewis, Jon E. (2012). The Mammoth Book of How it Happened – Everest. Little, Brown Book Group. Turning Point: Mountain without Mercy. ABC, 27 Apr. 1997, Season 4, Episode 14.Weathers, Beck. (2000) Left for Dead: My Journey Home from Everest. New York: Villard. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dr. Willemijn Waal (Universiteit Leiden / directeur NINO) laat ons uitgebreid kennismaken met de Hettieten. Tussen 1650 en 1180 voor Christus bestond het Hettitische Koninkrijk uit grote delen van Anatolië (het huidige Turkije) en Syrië. We maken in deze aflevering kennis met de bronnen, taal en schrift, koningen, horen meer over de beroemde slag bij Kadesh (1274/1275 v.Chr.) tussen de Hettieten en Egyptenaren, verkennen Myceens Griekenland aan de westkust van het rijk en meer... want wat heeft Troje met de Hettieten te maken?Shownotes
Räägime vene teadlasest füüsikust Anatoli Pugorskist ja temaga juhtunud õnnetusest. Sellest, mis juhtus siis kui ta töötas osakeste kiirendiga. Uus osa igal neljapäeval. Mulle võib teemasoovitusi ja oma lugusid saata cookieplaystudios@gmail.com
HIDDEN Strength Phil. 4:13 #Nightlight #RTTBROS Title: Hidden Strength Scripture: "I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." - Philippians 4:13 (KJV) Devotion: Anatoli, a weight trainer and fitness model, disguises himself as a janitor and pranks big, strong bodybuilders in the gym by moving and lifting weights that are almost too heavy for them to lift. This is surprising to them because Anatoli is small framed but incredibly strong. His hidden strength is a source of amazement and inspiration to those who witness his feats. As Christians, we too have a hidden source of strength - the Holy Spirit of God. The Holy Spirit is the third person of the Trinity, and He is the source of our power, wisdom, and guidance. He is the one who empowers us to do all things through Christ who strengthens us. Just as Anatoli's hidden strength surprises and inspires those around him, our hidden strength in the Holy Spirit can surprise and inspire those around us. When we face challenges and difficulties, we can tap into the power of the Holy Spirit to give us the strength we need to overcome them. The apostle Paul knew the power of the Holy Spirit in his life. He wrote, "I can do all things through Christ which strengtheneth me." (Philippians 4:13, KJV). Paul faced many challenges and difficulties in his life, but he knew that he could do all things through Christ who strengthened him. As we face challenges and difficulties in our own lives, let us remember that we have a hidden source of strength in the Holy Spirit. Let us tap into His power and allow Him to strengthen us to do all things through Christ. Just as Anatoli's hidden strength inspires those around him, our hidden strength in the Holy Spirit can inspire those around us to trust in God's power and provision. Prayer: Heavenly Father, thank You for the gift of the Holy Spirit. Help us to tap into His power and strength to face the challenges and difficulties of life. May our hidden strength in the Holy Spirit inspire those around us to trust in Your power and provision. In Jesus' name, Amen. Our Podcast, Blog and YouTube Links https://linktr.ee/rttbros Be sure to Like, Share, Follow and subscribe it helps get the word out. RSS feed https://anchor.fm/s/127be410/podcast/rss https://linktr.ee/rttbros
In der Nacht vom 10. auf den 11. Mai 1996 kämpften mehrere Menschen in eisiger Höhe ums Überleben. Die Teilnehmenden von vier Expeditionen waren alle gleichzeitig aufgebrochen, um zum Gipfel des Mount Everest zu gelangen. Doch als das letzte Sonnenlicht auf dem Berg verschwand, waren sie noch immer nicht zurück im rettenden Lager. Mit ihren schwindenden Sauerstoffvorräten, der hereinbrechenden Dunkelheit und dem aufziehenden Schneesturm sanken ihre Chancen, zu überleben, mit jeder weiteren Minute...........Das Folgenbild zeigt den Sonnenuntergang am Mount Everest.........WERBUNGDu willst dir die Rabatte unserer Werbepartner sichern? Hier geht's zu den Angeboten!........LITERATURBoukreev, Anatoli & G. Westen DeWalt: Der Gipfel: Tragödie am Mount Everest [orig. „The Climb“], München 1998 [1997].Krakauer, Jon: In eisige Höhen: Das Drama am Mount Everest [orig. “Into Thin Air: A Personal Account of the Everest Disaster”], München 1998 [1997].Weathers, Beck: Für tot erklärt: Meine Rückkehr vom Mount Everest [orig. „Left for Dead: My Journey Home from Everest], München 2003 [2000].Knell, Niave: The 10 May 1996 Mount Everest Climbing Disaster: A Failure in Risk Management, SSRN 2003 [https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=3371173].Savage, David A. & Torgler, Benno: The Times They Are A Changin': The Effect of Institutional Change on Cooperative Behaviour at 26,000 ft over Sixty Years, Basingstoke 2015.Statistiken zu Bergbesteigungen im Himalaya gitb es in der Himalayan Database..........UNTERSTÜTZUNGIhr könnt uns dabei unterstützen, weiterhin jeden 10., 20. und 30. des Monats eine Folge zu veröffentlichen!Folgt und bewertet uns bei Spotify, Google Podcasts, Apple Podcasts, Podimo, Instagram, Twitter oder über eure Lieblings-Podcastplattformen. Über diesen Spendenlink oder unseren Fanartikel-Shop könnt ihr uns auch finanziell unterstützen!Wir freuen uns über euer Feedback, Input und Vorschläge zum Podcast, die ihr uns über das Kontaktformular auf der Website, Instagram und unsere Feedback E-Mail: kontakt@his2go.de schicken könnt. An dieser Stelle nochmals vielen Dank an jede einzelne Rückmeldung, die uns bisher erreicht hat und uns sehr motiviert..........COPYRIGHTMusic from https://filmmusic.io: “Sneaky Snitch” by Kevin MacLeod and "Plain Loafer" by Kevin MacLeod (https://incompetech.com) License: CC BY !Neu! Jetzt hier His2Go unterstützen, Themen mitbestimmen und Quiz2Go mit Moderatorin Chiara erleben! https://plus.acast.com/s/his2go-geschichte-podcast. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Oktoberman 3: Politiek gekonkel, de Russische geheime dienst en heel veel rookgordijnen omhullen een van de meest merkwaardige moordaanslagen uit de geschiedenis: 24 mei 1940, de eerste aanslag op kopstuk van de revolutie Leon Trotski in Mexico-City. Een uitstekend voorbereide aanval van 20 oorlogsveteranen mislukt faliekant. Volg mij op het dwaalspoor tussen de schilderende kolonel, een bloedende teen en de minnaar van Frida Kahlo. Een comedy of errors in true crime, met vuile spionnen, corrupte agenten en valse beschuldigingen. Dit is het derde en afsluitende deel van Oktoberman. Hoe liep het af met onze vrienden? Wie was de Franse Jood? Waarom liep de broer van Siqueiros in vrouwenkleren rond? Wat doet Jef Last nou weer in dit verhaal? Gaat de politie de daders vinden? Staat je geweten in dienst van je idealen? En waarin verschilt een verfpistool van een mitrailleur? En wat heeft de wereldberoemde Chileense dichter Pablo Neruda er nou weer mee te maken? Met de stemmen van David Lucieer en Anne Gehring. Voor inhoudelijk commentaar dank ik Alex de Jong van het IIRE. Tekst, opname, montage, sounddesign: Patrick Bassant. contact: vriendenvandevlinder[apenstaart]gmail[punt]com Voor Oktoberman gebruikte ik de volgende literatuur: Patenaude, Bertrand M, Trotsky. Downfall of a revolutionary. Harper Collins 2009 Sanchez Salazar, Leandro A. & Julian Gorkin, De GEPEOE slaat toe, Amsterdam G.W. Breughel 1946, vertaling Jef Last Serge, Victor & Natalya Sedova Trotsky, The life and death of Leon Trotsky, London Wildwood House, 1975 transl. Arnold J. Pomerans (or. 1973) Service, Robert, Trotsky. A biography, London Macmillan press 2009 Siqueiros, David Alfaro, Man nannte mich den "Grossen Oberst". Erinnerungen. (Me llamaban el Coronelazo. Memorias) Dietz Verlag Berlin 1988. (oorspr. 1977 Mexico) Stein, Philip, Siqueiros. His Life and Works. 1994 NY International Publishers Sudoplatov, Pavel and Anatoli, with Jerrold L. and Leona P. Schecter, Special Tasks. The memoirs of an unwanted witness - a Soviet Spymaster. Boston e.a. Little, Brown and Company 1995 Updated edition Trotsky, Leon, ‘Communazi Columnists' In: Time van 3 juni 1940, Trotsky, Leon, ‘The May 24th Attempt to Assassinate Trotsky.' Written: 1 June 1940. First Published in: Fourth International, Vol.1 No.5, October 1940, pp.138-139. Trotsky, Leon, ‘The Comintern and the GPU. The Attempted Assassination of May 24 and the Communist Party of Mexico.' Written: 19 August 1940. First Published: Fourth International, Vol.1 No.6, November 1940, pp.148-163. Trotsky, Leon, ‘Stalin Seeks My Death.' Written: 24 May, 1940First Published: Fourth International, Vol. 2 No. 7, August 1941, pages 201-207
Libor Kukal představí nového kolegu v Českém rozhlase, sympatického Vietnamce Ngo Thang Xuana. O řecké hudbě a o zapomenutých podnicích Kafe-amán si bude povídat Barbora Kroutilíková s Řekem Alexandrem Knápkem, členem kapely Anatoli. Připravila a moderuje Tajana MančalováVšechny díly podcastu Mezi námi můžete pohodlně poslouchat v mobilní aplikaci mujRozhlas pro Android a iOS nebo na webu mujRozhlas.cz.
Anatoli Voleanschi is from Chișinău, Moldova. Anatoli has been a part of Campus Crusade (CRU) since 2010 and is now the National leader of the Global Church Movement Ministry for Cru in Eastern Europe. Anatoli plays an integral role in the deveolpment and workings of church growth and discipleship in Moldova. Anatoli is married and together he and his wife, Liuba, have four children. Two twin boys and two girls. Anatoli made a special trip to appear on The Believer's Journey and it is an honor to have him here. You don't want to miss this program. Our Discussion is on Obedience. anatolii.voleanschii@cru.mdSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
With over 80% developer growth the past year, the Solana ecosystem has never been stronger. Chase Barker, Head of Developer Ecosystem at The Solana Foundation joins Brian Friel to talk about the current initiatives happening on Solana that excite him the most, along with the biggest opportunities he sees for Developers on Solana in episode 20 of The Zeitgeist. Show Notes:00:05 - Intro 01:56 - Background / Start with Solana 11:49 - Highlights from last year with the developer ecosystem16:13 - Latest exciting initiatives in Solana 20:56 - Opportunities for devs in Solana 25:03 - Opportunities to build a project on Solana27:36 - Solana plays Pokemon" game 30:43 - Where will Solana be in 5 years 32:55 - A builder he admires Full Transcript:Brian Friel (00:00):Hey, everyone and welcome to The Zeitgeist, the show where we highlight the founders, developers, and designers who are pushing the web 3.0 space forward. I'm Brian Friel, developer relations at Phantom and I'm super excited to introduce none other than the man, the myth, the legend, Chase Barker of Solana Foundation. Chase, welcome to the show.Chase barker (00:24):Hey man, thanks for having me.Brian Friel (00:26):This has been a long time coming. For those who don't know, Chase is the head of developer ecosystem at Solana Foundation. He's one of the earliest guys you could have seen if you were a developer coming into Solana. And it's special for me personally because Chase was the first person I reached out to on Solana. We actually did an episode on your old podcast, Chewing Glass at one point. It's great to be on the other side of the mic though, but officially welcome to the show, Chase.Chase barker (00:49):Thanks man. Yeah, it was super cool and it's also wild for me to be on this other side because we met in some interesting circumstances, you trying to dive into the whole ecosystem and I had no idea what I was doing and I needed help. And you wrote some really cool shit for me for the Solana Cookbook and here you are, leading Phantom. So anyways, I won't dive into that too much. Maybe we'll talk about it later, but it's super cool to be here, so thanks for having me.Brian Friel (01:15):Yeah, thanks for coming on. No, I couldn't agree more. Probably a good place to start, is maybe rewinding time a little bit, going back to some of those early days. Solana's pretty unique from a developer perspective. There was always, having worked in the industry pre-2018, it was always... If you're doing something development wise, solidity is the only game in town you got to be working in EVM. And Solana basically struck it out on its own and completely changed that narrative and you were around to see pretty much that whole evolution. Can you talk a little bit about your journey to finding Solana? Who are you, what were you doing, and what have you seen evolve in Solana since you've been there?Chase barker (01:56):Yeah, for sure. So I've told this story a lot and I'm going to keep this one shorter than I normally do, but I was an engineer for 12 years and then started trading crypto in 2017, made a bunch of money, lost it all in 2018, like most people. And then along that journey I found this project, Kin, who now exists on Solana, but they had their own fork of Stellar and I was into crypto and the bear market in 2018 and they had this hackathon thing and I built a tip bot with a group of other people to be able to tip on Reddit, discord, Twitter and Telegram. And I was like, okay, this is really cool. I really sort of hate my web2 job right now. I'm doing this government contracting work working on legacy Spring VC systems. It was miserable and I've talked about this a lot before and I just got everybody's email addresses and started saying, give me a job.(02:47):And they told me that all the jobs were based in Tel Aviv, but they have this developer relations role for Kin. And I was like, okay, that sounds great. What the hell is that? I had no idea what developer relations was at the time. So did a little bit of research, ended up taking the role and really just started working. They had an SDK, but documentation tried to grow a community. It's a little bit different. I'll get into this from Solana because Kin was like, this is the ICO days. Nobody really gave a shit about use cases. It was just like how am I going to be the most degenerate thing here. It was way ahead of its time, but eventually flash forward after a couple years of really loving what I was doing, traveling around the world, speaking at conferences, and helping people learn how to build in crypto.(03:31):And I heard, and it's March or April 2020 way early, and I'm talking, nobody that I knew, knew about Solana. So they were like, we're going to migrate to Solana this new blockchain. Nobody knows about it, but it's going to be super fast. Our tech team says it's great. So I followed along. Around December, I was involved in the migration process and I had spoken with Dan Albert, who's now the head of the Solana Foundation, and Raj and I engaged with a bunch of these guys but didn't really know them, but I was part of that migration. And then a little bit later into 2021, early 2021, people don't know this, but actually I was leaving Kin and I was looking for another role and I got hired by Circle for one week as a developer advocate. And then I saw Solana had a developer relations role, applied.(04:21):So I actually had an awkward situation where I had to tell Circle that “I know I just started, but I'm going to go work at Solana.” But the reason I worked at Solana is because I just DMed the shit out of Raj and Dan until they finally submitted into saying, okay, finally we're we're going to let you take this role. And at that time all that existed was the core documentation and the PaulX Escrow tutorial, aka the Solana Bible. And that was the start. May 5th, the day after my birthday of 2021, I joined Solana as the first sort of developer advocate and that's sort of the entry point.Brian Friel (05:01):Wow. So yeah, it's not really that long in calendar days. Chase barker (05:07):It's been 20 years. It's been 20 years.Brian Friel (05:09):Yeah, exactly. 20 years in crypto years for sure. A lot has changed since then. Maybe the only thing that hasn't changed is the strategy of just spam DMing somebody to try to get a job. I definitely tried to employ that with you back in the day. I know a few other people who have successfully deployed that strategy as well. But yeah, it's been crazy. There's a lot to talk about here. Maybe we just focus on the last year in particular because you mentioned 2021, it's a pretty crazy year. There was just the public tutorial on the docs and then all these people come in, you get anchor that gets built around that time. Solana takes off, a bunch of independent teams.Chase barker (05:49):Actually, let's go a little bit before that because I think this is just a really interesting thing and I like telling this part because when I started at Kin I was begging people to build on it because nobody was really building on blockchain except Ethereum at the time. And then I started with Solana and I had the exact opposite problem. You had a ton of people that were like, hell yeah, this sounds really awesome, but how the hell do you build on this thing? What the hell is rust? There's no documentation. You go into the Discord and the cord devs are just “go read the tests, that teaches you how to build on Solana.” And that's literally the world that we lived in at the time. And then started putting together this sort of part-time dev advocate team, if you want to call it that. I just skimmed Discord and looked for people who were helping others and be like, hey, come over here into this private discord with me.(06:39):And I'm like, help me scale myself. Because I was starting to write some example code and there was none of that. And then luckily I met Donnie and then Jacob and a couple other guys that are now full-time at Solana Foundation and they were helping in dev support. Jacob was working on the Java STK with Skynet Cap, if any of you guys know him. He was really one of the early OGs there. And then this whole group formed and they were writing content and then you reached out and contributed to the Solana cookbook and this whole thing just came out of nowhere. And I was literally sinking. The demand for Solana was so high because the tech was so new and the sort of hardcore engineers just really wanted to build, and the Dafi's and the Max's and the Armani's just figured the shit out.(07:28):But everybody else was like, let me, let me. And I could not do that on my own. I didn't even have the brain big enough to supply the knowledge to all these people. And then long story short, or maybe long story long is that you and I started talking and you wanted to be part of it and you wrote some really important stuff for the Solana Cookbook, I think retries, possibly PDAs and some of these other things. And it's like, thank you. And I do remember you being like, hey, can I work at Solana? And I didn't have any approval of power at the time and you left me and probably a month later I got approval to hire somebody else, but by that time you were at Phantom, but it seems like it worked out. So it is what it is.Brian Friel (08:12):I think you're right about the demands being so strong for people to figure it out that you just saw people coming together. A lot of times, you look at people who are evangelizing new tech and they're like, hey, here's this awesome thing. Try to explain it. And the first reaction of everyone is like, okay, cool, but then they just move on. And I feel like Solana was one of the few cases where that was the opposite, where everybody was like, this is incredible. How do I use this thing? How do I build this thing? And it was just this hive mind of people coming out of the woodwork to try to make it happen.Chase barker (08:43):Even me leading into Solana, and I say this a lot too because it's true in my mind, and I was like, listen to Anatoli and all this stuff, and I'm one of two things. This is the giant scam, or this is actually really fucking awesome. And luckily my instincts were right on that one and everything sort of worked out. And when I met you and then we started doing this part-time DevRel team that you were a part of for a while, first Solana Foundation.(09:09):And the next thing, my Twitter account became this thing where people would create content and I would share it and then somebody else would be like, oh, I want my shit shared. And then they would make content and I would share it. And this was this huge flywheel and that's really what turned into my account was this person who, you do cool shit, I'm going to share it. And then I became this other guy where I'm also, I do stupid shit and then I also share good shit. So it's this perfect mix of this idiot and then this guy who knows where the good stuff is.Brian Friel (09:46):You either die a developer or you live long enough to be a Twitter celebrity, I guess in your case?Chase barker (09:52):Yeah, I mean I don't necessarily love the celebrity side, but I do love getting DMs from people to say, Hey, all the things that you shared, and you probably hear some of the same like, hey, I got a job here because of this tweet that you made or this thread because I started making threads, who's looking for a job or who's whatever. And in the early days that's all we had, was Twitter. There was no other way to connect. I made a Twitter developer list and I added 300 people to it so that not everybody had to come into Solana Twitter and be like, follow each individual person and these were such manual, weird, really hard... I had no idea what I was doing. Luckily people showed up and were there and then just ran with it. I mean, looking back, dude, it's just awesome to look and see what's happened since then.Brian Friel (10:40):Yeah, no, I couldn't agree more. Lots of connections made in those early days, like you said too, where people get jobs, all this kind of stuff happens and it's crazy how little interactions like that go really far.Chase barker (10:49):Yeah, exactly.Brian Friel (10:50):So I guess taking it now to this past year, so we're recording this January 2023. The past year in particular, if you were just an outside observer looking at crypto, you're like, wow, prices are way down, everything's dead. And there's a report that comes out just the other day, Electric Capitalist Developer Report, which says Solana developers grew over 80% in the year. You and I... I had an intuition for this, I'm sure you did too. It was just developer activity.Chase barker (11:20):I didn't have intuition. I actually knew.Brian Friel (11:23):Yeah, you knew. But other people I'm sure had intuition if you're around the developer ecosystem, it's not stopping. Developer activities keeps picking up, summarize a little bit in your words over the last year, what has stood up to you? What are some of the highlights? You mentioned you started this thing and it's just you and DMing people on Twitter and getting this thing going. Now it's a serious operation of a developer ecosystem here going. What are some of the things you're most proud of that stood out to you?Chase barker (11:50):Yeah, so I think the start of the year in January of 2022, we're all sitting there, and the crypto markets nuke, and the blockchain literally is devastated. And that was any sort of pre any sort of ideas about what is wrong, what is it? Basically it was all these sort of liquidators, spamming to try to liquidate people and that just turned into this thing. And I think by that point in time though, we had some really high conviction developers that were already super invested themselves in Solana. So they stuck around and I think that's very unique for that to happen. Everybody's like, when are you going to fix this? But it literally took two to three months before they even identified what those solutions might be and those solutions to many of you, the devs out there were quick and fee-markets and some of these other things that improved.(12:45):But even though these solutions were being built, that shit takes time. So during that same time, Solana NFTs were going through the roof and these bots were spamming the network. Luckily we're flash forward briefly to right now all of those things have been implemented, but the work is never complete. But we've been pretty battle tested and recently, but I think to your original question, what I'm most proud of is being able to keep that morale up, being able to really build out this sticky community and I'm focused on devs, but it's not just the devs. Without that normal diehard community, without the Dev community, without the NFT community, we would've failed miserably like every other blockchain that tried to do what we did failed.(13:33):But I think a lot of this really comes down to personal relationships and when you come into Solana and you get involved, people really cheer you on and there's that sort of camaraderie there that kept people here, even in the darkest of times. I'm just really happy. Like I said, I knew that those numbers were high and to be honest, a lot of the reason while I've been memeing about the 75 developer ridiculous reports that have been coming out, I was memeing it so hard in the last couple weeks because we crawled GitHub internally and we know where our dev numbers are and we always make sure that we know where those things are. So it was sort of funny to me to just keep memeing that and then knowing Electric Capital was going to put out a report that sort of reflected... at least they have some pretty strict rules around what they constitute a dev. Our numbers are slightly higher, but their rules are strict. As a full-time dev, you have to commit code X amount of days per month or whatever that is.(14:32):I'm sure they have that somewhere and the way that they do it, but yeah man, it takes a village to do this and there's not one person you can point to, but there's obviously some champions out there that really made people inspired to continue building. The proudest thing I can think of is all the shit we took this year and we're still here and now we just have been pretty much named and given the silver medal of the second strongest developer community in crypto and you got to give a shout-out to Eat the Kings, fully open source and putting up numbers for devs, so you got to give them credit.Brian Friel (15:06):Yeah, we mentioned a little bit early on about how it was a narrative violation for Solana to have a completely different programming paradigm to not be using Solidity to get into an account model lower level dealing with Rust.Chase barker (15:20):There was FUD that was like “Solana's using Rust? Good luck. You guys are basically screwed.” Nobody's ever going to build on Rust. So that was false.Brian Friel (15:29):Yeah, most loved GitHub developer language though I'm pretty sure that's another narrative violation for you there. So talking a little bit more about what you guys have been up to you, you mentioned you guys have been crawling the GitHubs and you've seen this dev activity, you now have a full-time team like you said that, that you're working with, but it's not just you guys at Solana Foundation, there's all these other ecosystem teams now. There's people like Super Team Dao who are doing their own thing, coordinating devs and building devs. I'd say there's stuff on the community side getting devs and raising awareness there. There's Lamport DAO, I might be giving you too many answers here, but the community side and the tech side, what are some of the initiatives that are happening right now in Solana that have you most excited?Chase barker (16:14):I think one of the most important things to note about Solana Foundation and Labs in general is the headcount stays low. This sounds weird to a lot of people, but our job is to make ourselves irrelevant in the next five to 10 years as an organization, the super team and the Lamort DAOs and Meta Camp and Singapore in these different groups, a lot of them will get grants from the foundation to get themselves up and running. But after that they basically become these sort of miniature Solana foundations where they start growing their community from the inside out and giving out grants and doing all these really cool things. But you think of Solana as this giant bubble and every time one of these new miniature groups spins out, the Solana Foundation bubble gets smaller, and then these other bubbles start getting more and plentiful to eventually you reach a point where Solana Foundation bubble was the size of the rest of these small groups.(17:08):This is the antithesis of Web 2.0, hiring as many people in as much headcount as you can and trying to own everything. I don't want to own everything. I want to find Mertz, I want to find Super Teams. I want to find Meta Camps and I don't want to just go find them and ask them. I want to find these guys that just put everything they have into Solana the blockchain and they're just so passionate about it, that it's like this is the team that we want to put our energy behind. In the beginning it really was a lot of us at Foundation and Labs doing a lot of the talking, but now you have these stronger voices and I'm not going to lie, it makes my life a lot easier to not have to be doing all that talking online anymore, but I still do it.(17:53):And I think the important point here is that if we're going to become a decentralized blockchain, we also want to become a decentralized organization itself and that means nobody has to get our permission. I think one of the greatest examples of no permission is Hacker House was kicked off, everybody's like, when my city and MTN DAO was like, fuck this, I'm just going to make my own thing. And they actually built the best thing that's really happened out of our community to date and they produced multiple, clockwork previously, Kronos, mtnPay, all these guys won hackathons.(18:33):Because T.J. Littlejohn literally came up with mtnPay at MTN DAO and a food line being like, Solana Pay just came out. Oh shit, maybe I should just build a payment thing with this new thing. And then he set up the system and people were paying with USD right there. So if that trajectory keeps happening through Solana, and I know other blockchains are trying to emulate what we do, but there's no way to emulate this unless you actually do this organically and it's happening. And anytime I just find somebody like a TJ or a MERT or whoever or a Brian or whatever, I'm going to put all my time and energy behind them and that's literally my philosophy and the foundation's philosophy in general, I think.Brian Friel (19:15):Yeah, for sure. No, I've seen that too. It feels like there's more... Solana is the only ecosystem I know outside of Ethereum really is there are these factions not the best word, but it's these unofficial groups of people that... Maybe it started as simple as we like to ski in February and we want to get together and hack. MTN DAO, but it's becoming an official collective now. People are identifying with it. And it has influence in the community. I mean I totally see what you're saying too about the Hacker House is I know we had our own last summer, we kind of piloted the Summer Camp Hackathon fan of Sponsor [inaudible 00:19:51]. But I just see that model continuing to go and more and more teams coalescing around certain regions and sponsoring their own thing.Chase barker (19:57):And for everybody listening here, don't ask for permission, don't ask when, just literally do it. And if you do it and you do it well, the attention will get drawn onto you and then I'll come find you and I'll knock on your door and ask you how I can help. So that's really the sort of mentality that I personally have.Brian Friel (20:15):Yeah, I couldn't agree more with that. That was my approach trying to work in this space, just do it and then ask for help or permission. Someone will find you. That's so much better than trying to ask somebody for permission to do something. So I guess that's a good transition to, let's put ourselves in the shoes of a developer who's looking at Solana right now. There's a lot of devs out there that might see Solana and they still think, oh, Rust and scary. That's probably not true. We can talk about that. But there's also probably a lot of devs who maybe know a little bit about Solana, they're kind of like right on the cusp, because they want to jump in. What do you want to say to these devs? What are some of the biggest opportunities that these devs should be looking at right now in Solana?Chase barker (20:56):Yeah, I think there's a couple things here. I think it depends on your demographic and age range. I mostly meant age range. So if you're in college right now, look up solanau.org and it's @SolanaUni on Twitter because Dana is our university relations person who is absolutely crushing it, sponsoring and participating in hackathons, doing workshops, just really bringing in my opinion, the next generation, the most risk averse group of people are students who are still funded by their parents that can make some sort of mistakes early on. So they're the next generation that's going to take this forward and luckily they have some really tech heavy guys out there that are just so dedicated to this, the Solana core engineers and the Jito team and all these different groups that are there to mentor them when they're ready to get in this. But I think SolanaU is probably a really high leverage thing.(21:54):We spend a lot of time working with Build Space who's built Solana Build Space Core, which is an amazing program. Things are getting easier. We're still in that place where new things are coming around the corner and I get a lot of shit for this, especially from Rust maxi's, but there's Seahorse Lang where you can build smart contracts on Python right now, not fully ready for production. There's a version of this in typescript coming. We're doing whatever we can to make it easier because the Chewing Glass thing is true and it's mainly true not because of Rust, not because of Solana, it's because learning Rust and Solana and all those concepts at the same time, is literally painful as hell. But content and all these other things combined put together right now and all of the sort of tooling that different groups are building like indexers and all these things are making the lives easier because as adapt dev you want to deal with “get program accounts and all that stuff”, it's not...(22:56):We're getting to a better place and it's coming right now there's a couple places, I mean solana.com/developers we're curating our own list, but I cannot negate what ELO from SOL Dev has done at soldev.app and the whole entire thing that he's built out. So I'm super bullish on a lot of the stuff they're doing. I think there's just too many things to name of how many independent contributors are out there just building shit. I said this the other day on Twitter, I know when things are getting really good when I can't even keep up with the retweets of the things that are being built that I have no idea about. And then you have this other guy that most people don't really know yet. His name's Jonas and I think it's Soul Play Jonas on Twitter,Brian Friel (23:40):He's our hackathon winner.Chase barker (23:41):Is he?Brian Friel (23:42):Yeah. So when we hosted the Summer Camp Hackathon last summer, we had a Deep Links prize and he won as the best use of Deep Links because he was the first to build a Unity game on Solana using it.Chase barker (23:53):I'm not going to dox his location, but I'm going to tell you this mfr is legend and really going to try to push the gaming world forward on Solana, which I think is the blockchain that has the best ability to actually scale. And I want to give credit where it's due, zk-Tech is going to be fucking amazing, but Solana as is right now, has the best chance to scale if a big top tier sort of gaming company hits and decides to leverage that tag.Brian Friel (24:24):Yeah, let's talk about that a little bit because I had Anatoly on as the first guest and he always talked about how his dream was blockchain at Nasdaq speed and it was like “it's DeFi all the way". Then you and I are both around for the 2021 craze where it was just all of a sudden it's the world's greatest JPEG trading machine, it's all NFTs. Now we're seeing stuff about gaming. Is there a certain type of developers interested in something they should come to Solana? It's just like everybody... It's not necessarily specialization here, but what are some of the biggest opportunities maybe if you're looking to start a company on Solana, build a project on Solana?Chase barker (25:03):Yeah, I think we're being honest here. If your use case does not necessarily require high throughput, then the options are pretty unlimited in blockchain. But if you want to be able to have fully on chain games.. And not to say that we both know this, when you're building a game on any blockchain, not everything has to be on chain and it's almost like not necessary to the extent, but DeFi, we need to reignite that on Solana. There's been a series of unfortunate events that–whatever, but I think there's a really strong group of people that are working on this open book DEX and this massive amazing thing that came true. But for me personally, I think that the big unlock comes in gaming and the real original use case of crypto that has never actually been solved, which is payments. I mean it's been solved but not in a usable way. If you're going to bring payments to new and emerging markets, the fees and stuff are important because the fees on some of these different chains is more money than is-Brian Friel (26:12):Not feasible. It's a non-starter.Chase barker (26:13):It's not feasible. And Solana Pay and a lot of these other payment options are starting to enable that. And I think it honestly just has the potential to change a lot of lives, JPEGs and all these other things. That's cool. And I love that people are having fun on blockchain also. Solana is definitely the funnest chain by the way, but payments, man payments, we have to do it. We have to get payments, remittances done on chain and Solana's the most equipped to do it, especially related to fees.Brian Friel (26:45):Yeah, I love you said it too about it being the most fun chain, priding yourselves with that because for a while, and I think you noticed this, with every new blockchain, something that starts, the first thing everyone does is copy what worked before. We're going to have an AMM, we're going to do some DeFi thing, we're going to have an NFT marketplace. But I'm starting to see now on Solana things that are uniquely Solana and just couldn't be done elsewhere. And it definitely feels like there's a unique culture. And I'll shout out too, one, we talked about T.J. Littlejohn and you mentioned payments, the Solana pay spec. Yeah, you can send payments to anyone, but you could send any transaction. So he built that NFT photo booth. You take a photo, scan it, and it mints as an NFT using the payment protocol. It's pretty cool. There's another one though, we just had him on as a guest, which will launch fairly soon on this podcast. Have you seen the “Solana Plays Pokémon” game?Chase barker (27:37):Yeah, I have briefly, but I don't know a ton about it.Brian Friel (27:40):I don't know. It's a game like that... It's like you said, it doesn't have to be crazy. It's not everything on chain, but it's almost like a new genre of game because here you have this emulator that's sitting off chain, it's playing Pokémon and it's like anyone can permissionlessly show up and just start voting to say, press this button, press up, press down. And Solana's so fast that it's basically processing these very quickly and all of a sudden you have people warring over, should we train a Squirtle? Should we release the Squirtle? Should we fight this gym leader? It's a toy today, but you can kind of see how wow, this could become kind of a new game genre where it's multiplayer and, you don't know who you're even playing with or against and it's all real time. It's all being coordinated. It's pretty wild.Chase barker (28:22):I think a lot, and I'm a big advocate of looking at the Web2 world and seeing what is possible on Solana, and also what makes sense because not every use case makes sense, but for example, like I said, I mentioned Shek earlier and Wordcel Club, which is the blogging platform and they're doing some other cool social primitives and it's like they're starting to open source those primitives, but why would you do something on web 3.0 that you could do on Web 2.0? And the answer is sort of incentives. And you look at some of these bigger social platforms that absorb 99.9% of the value and there's a way to distribute that value on web 3.0 that there never was in web 2.0. So I think that's an important one. There might be some disagreement here, but I think the group that really got closest to some sort of web 2.0 success was Stepn, because they went product first instead of... You see a lot of stuff in web 3.0 of it's like, developers first developing for developers, they're developing for things like that.(29:27):But Stepn was like, what does everybody do that we could reward them for and get this on chain? And that was working out, this is an incentive mechanism. Obviously it didn't fully work out and I think there's probably... They're working on that, but at the same time, we need to start thinking what in the web 2.0 world is working, how can we do that on web 3.0, and why would that app make sense in web 3.0? And then usually it's incentive mechanisms that give the user a reason to use it, but they're not going to do that with massive delays or lag times or all this stuff. It better work just like web 2.0 if not better if you're going to do that. So really focusing on things that Solana can do that other blockchains can't at this current moment is probably going to be some of the highest rate of success or at least some more of the higher impact things I think.Brian Friel (30:21):Yeah, I agree. It's got to be seamless in the background. There's people in crypto who care, but the vast majority of people don't want to sit around and wait for something to load. So we talked a lot about the state of Solana today, what you're excited about all these different people building. You alluded to this a little bit, but paint a picture for us. What do you see the Solana ecosystem five years from now?Chase barker (30:43):Five years from now, I see myself not having a job anymore, and I'm okay with that because I've said this since day one. If I do my job the way that I'm supposed to do my job by empowering, enabling others, then there's no need for a me anymore. And any true ecosystem that has a foundation or a labs, whatever, there should be a point that they're looking towards. The North Star is literally being able to walk away and that community in those small groups that you've sort of empowered and sort of distributed out, you can walk away and that shit just runs itself forever.(31:19):That's not just the blockchain that's actually distributed community, not just the distributed blockchain. So that's the North Star. Five years, probably not likely, but I do think in the next five years that it's going to be about as easy to build on Solana as it is to build on React. That's what I have in my mind. And we have the firepower in the ecosystem and the dedicated people that I already see completely just trying to push with Seahorse and all these other things. People are just thinking, how can I make this easier for people if we're already there two to three years in from [inaudible 00:31:59] Beta Solana, we're progressing rapidly right now and if we keep that rate in the next five years, it's going to be insane.Brian Friel (32:09):Love that. And yeah, the beta tag, I'm sure given all the trials and tribulations, we will be shedding that beta tag soon.Chase barker (32:17):I haven't seen the Bernie meme in a while and if anybody listening to this doesn't know, Anatoly said that we're going to drop the beta tag after one year from the Bernie meme that he posts about validators.Brian Friel (32:27):Zero days since last Bernie meme. Really? Okay.Chase barker (32:31):I mean who knows if that happens, but I haven't seen him post that Bernie meme in a while, so we'll see. We'll see.Brian Friel (32:36):Yeah, I'll miss that Bernie meme. We'll put some pit vipers on Bernie again, just for all time sake. Well Chase, this has been an awesome discussion, really great having you on, and it's been a long time coming. One closing question we ask all of our guests, I want to hear it from you, is who is a builder that you admire in the Solana ecosystem?Chase barker (32:55):So my initial sort of instinct is to probably mention somebody that's never been really mentioned before, but I can't not just talk about Armani because he was part of the first wallet. He was part of the framework that made Solana better in terms of developer experience with Anchor. And I mean I know he's now building another wallet and it's just the truth. Armani, his whole sort of ethos and what he is trying to do is just trying to make crypto usable and better for a lot of people.(33:34):And I think that's just an important thing for me and I really respect that about him. So I truly think that Armani is one of the people that I really respect the most in the space for what he's done and transparently and just like everybody who has a very large voice gets a lot of shit. And for people like that to stick around, it's incredible. We all deal with it. You work at Phantom, I work at Solana Foundation. Armani has worked at various groups or whatever and we have to just continue what we're doing and just deal with all the that shit we get and you just got to respect that, man. So that's pretty much my answer.Brian Friel (34:17):That's Awesome. I couldn't agree more. Well, Chase, it has been awesome having you on. Thank you so much for your time. Where can developers go to get started with Solana?Chase barker (34:27):Solana.com/developers or I'll also not show our own stuff and you can go to soldev.app as well. We have different offerings like soldev.app has a lot more, solana.com/developers has a little more curated smaller list, but both are very good options. So yeah man, that's the place. So check it out and let's get going.Brian Friel (34:53):Love it. Chase Barker, head of developer ecosystem at Solana Foundation. Thank you so much.
John and I welcomed back Anatoli Zak to discuss the possible Russian interest in rejoining the Lunar Gateway project. Anatoli had much to say about this and related topics during our 11 minute segment. Please read the full summary of this program at www.thespaceshow.com for this date, Wednesday,Nov. 9, 2022.
His sefer מַלְמַד הַתַּלְמִידִים עַל פָּרָשַׁת הַשָּׁבוּעַ loved and hated down the centuries
Deze aflevering gaat over de Myceense beschaving. Het was de eerste Griekse beschaving. Van de Oude Grieken waren de Myceners de oudste. De oudste Grieken waren echter wel het nakomertje van de bronstijdbeschavingen. De heldhaftige strijdbare Grieken werden een machtsfactor in Griekenland, de Egeïsche eilanden en de westkust van Anatolië. De Grieken die de stad Troje veroverden, de Trojaanse helden, dat waren de Myceners.
Suzi talks to UCSB labor historian Nelson Lichtenstein to get his analysis of the impending rail strike and the tentative deal reached to prevent it by labor leaders, the government, and the freight rail companies. The workers are demanding paid sick days and more predictable and humane schedules, but they weren't at the table forging the tentative agreement. They are, however, the ones who will decide whether or not to ratify or reject the deal. Nelson says rail workers are shaking up labor once again: his title for the op-ed that appeared in the LA Times on September 15 was “We need a railroad strike!” Suzi then talks to Ukrainian writer and documentary filmmaker Anatoli Ulyanov about his LeftEast article, “The Superfluous People of Eastern Ukraine.” Anatoli addresses a crucial question about what happens once the war ends, however that may turn out, when the question of reintegrating the Donbas—not just territory but people—becomes primary. He extends his analysis to include all those who will be strangers in their own country.Jacobin Radio with Suzi Weissman features conversations with leading thinkers and activists, with a focus on labor, the economy, protest movements. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
For the official first episode, I invited my best friend Anatoli to come join me in my closet as we talk about friendships that help you grow and songs we would jam to when the apocalypse inevitably swallows us whole.Follow The Awaze Podcast Instagram to stay updated on uploads: https://www.instagram.com/theawazepodcast/ And follow me at https://www.instagram.com/tinsaeteferi/All music featured on this episode follows the terms of fair use.
Steven Laver (Solana Mobile Engineering Lead) joins The Zeitgeist to discuss how Solana Mobile Stack and the Saga phone will enable the user experiences and rich ecosystem that we need for the future of Web3.Show Notes00:05 - Intro00:45 - Background01:27 - Before Solana02:24 - Why mobile and SMS?04:12 - What is SMS ?06:15 - Seed Vault08:39 - ARM TrustZone10:06 - Security with Seed Vault11:44 - Restrictions with Seed Vault12:46 - Importing and exporting keys15:02 - Mobile wallet adapter21:39 - Plans for deep linking23:27 - The dApp store27:31 - Plans for Solana pay31:18 - Saga33:16 - Expanding SMS to other devices and blockchains38:54 - Working with TJ from Mountain Pay40:18 - Where to connect with Steven and SMS41:14 - OutroTranscriptBrian (00:06):Hey, everyone. And welcome to the Zeitgeist, the show where we highlight the founders, developers, and designers who are pushing the Web 3.0 space forward. I'm Brian Friel, developer relations at Phantom, and I'm super excited to introduce my guest Steven Labor. Stephen is the lead software engineer for a suite of new Solana developer tools known as SMS. The Solana mobile stack. SMS was unveiled recently at NFT NYC alongside a flagship smartphone that will be powered by this new suite of technologies. Stephen, welcome to the show.Steven (00:37):Thanks Brian. Excited to be here.Brian (00:39):Thanks for coming on. We have a lot of ground to cover today. Couple really great announcements that you guys just released, but before we dive into all that, could you give us a brief background of who you are and how you became involved with building mobile software for so Solana?Steven (00:52):Sure. So I have been doing professional engineering now for round about 20 years, but about 15 of those have been spent working on phones in one fashion or another. Right after college, I kind of fell backwards into a job. I just crossed the road rom my university and started working for research in motion and back then worked on Blackberries back when they were cool. And since then I've had a long career building, all kinds of phones and software for phones. Few forays out into some other areas of consumer electronics, but I keep seeming to be dragged back into phones. So I must love it.Brian (01:28):Right before Solana. What were some of the companies you were just working at?Steven (01:31):When, when I took the call from Anatoly for this cool new, exciting opportunity for Solana mobile, I was sitting in a beige conference room at a very large company that likes to make very monochromatic products. And when he started selling me on what Solana labs was building here and the what the vision for the SAGA device was at the time under a very cool code name, but I was pretty quickly sold on that. And previous to that, I spent a few years working at Google, working on the Android products there. So like I said, long background, lots of different smartphones and phone software in there, but this is the most excited I've been about a phone project in a long, long time.Brian (02:09):Oh, that's awesome to hear. Most people who interact with crypto today do so on a desktop from a browser extension. Maybe they're signing with a ledger, maybe they're signing with a web wallet like Phantom. And on Solana specifically, mobile wallets only launched a little over six months ago. Why is the time right now for push into mobile and why SMS specifically?Steven (02:29):So this is actually exactly what the problem statement that convinced me that I should join Solana labs and help build this awesome product. Our phones are everything to us. They're our web browsers. They are cameras. We watch TV on them. We play games on them. They're the first place we go to for everything, they're even our alarm clocks now. And the fact that the Web 3.0 ecosystem just isn't present on our phones the same way it is on our desktops. That to me, is what really gets me excited and got me interested in building this. We're really at the square one here, as far as building for a rich ecosystem for Web 3.0 and for Solana on mobile devices. And we get to use this at use SAGA and use SMS. This is our stake in the ground.Steven (03:13):This is us saying, this is how we should be building for mobile devices. These are the user experiences we need to offer. These are the technologies we need to offer. And being on the ground floor of that, getting to build these fundamental building blocks and then giving them to the community. So the community can then go build all the great, amazing ideas that are honestly, things I would never have thought of. But when I look back at them, I'm like, wow. We have such a rich and exciting community of builders for Solana. That's what I'm most excited about for building SAGA and building the Solana mobile stack.Brian (03:45):That's awesome. Yeah. From Phantoms side, we've seen just in the last six months that even though that foundation for building mobile apps, isn't really there today, SMS hopefully will be able to lay this great foundation. Like you said, we've seen that mobile has been our fastest growing segment by far. So we're super excited for this as well. SMS covers a lot of new developer features here. It's kind of this umbrella term for this whole suite of products that you guys are building in your own words, what is SMS and how should developers be thinking about this new suite of tools?Steven (04:17):I think of it from two angles. So first of all, let me talk about it just briefly from a consumer angle. Or Web 3.0 ecosystem for consumers. Many of us are very in the know about what that means, but for some others, they may be a little less so. They're new to the space, they're still learning it. There's a lot of words and phrases and sayings and memes that are very unique to this ecosystem that people take a little while to get onboarded with. From a consumer perspective, SMS really allows them to understand what a phone offers in terms of its capabilities with Solana. And so it's really by participating in an ecosystem or on a device that has the SMS technologies on it, to a certain extent, they know what they're going to get there. They know they're going to get a device that is going to work well and is they're going to be able to fully participate in the Solana ecosystem.Steven (05:06):For developers, SMS is a collection of technologies, the big ones being, we have Seed Vault for secure key custody. We have mobile wallet adapter for connecting adapts to wallets. We have deeper richer integrations with the OS for Solana Pay, and then the Solana DAP store, which people are really, really excited about.Steven (05:25):And so from the developer perspective, we have this collection of tools which will continue to grow over time. We're going to put more libraries in there. We're going to have more samples for developers, and we're going to keep expanding on this initial set of technologies. And I'm happy to talk about each of those in detail, but as far as SMS for developers, we've got an SDK out now and we're going to be continuing to enhance that. And each of those technology offerings within SMS has value to offer to a different slice or a different segment of our developer ecosystem.Brian (05:55):That's awesome. They're very complimentary as well. Let's dive into each of them. So you mentioned four of those there. We have the Seed Vault. We have the mobile wallet adapter, the DAP store that you guys are launching and then better integrations around Solana Pay, which you guys recently unveiled earlier this year. Let's start with the Seed Vault. I feel like this is the foundation upon which everything else is built. Can you describe a little bit of more, like, what is the Seed Vault? Is it related to what a secure enclave is on iOS or a key store? How should people be thinking about this new term?Steven (06:25):So there's a pretty big gap between the level of security that a hardware wallet offers. Something like a device like a ledger or a treasure. Those are great devices, they're purpose built hardware, and they offer the maximum level of security for users. I think they do a fantastic job with that, but ultimately they are a little bit limited by the fact that they're a separate device. It needs to be connected to your wallet. It's got a very limited user interface in terms of LCD displays or buttons, et cetera. Whereas on the other end of the spectrum, we have the software wallets running on Android or iOS devices, like Phantom for example. User experience is top notch, but the environment that they're running in the Android or iOS high level operating systems, they are general purpose operating systems. They're connected to the network. They run other user code on them.Steven (07:15):And so while they can offer that great user experience because of the environment they operate in, they don't have that quite that same level of security as a hardware wallet would. Seed Vault allows us to bring a lot of those benefits that a hardware wallet is able to, in terms of custody of keys, in terms of taking advantage of extremely secure hardware on mobile phones. And bring those to the software wallets. And so I think that's actually an important point for Seed Vault. We aren't actually building any new or novel hardware into phones to bring this technology up to wallets. Instead, we're taking advantage of the very high secure elements that already exist on phones. And we're integrating those into the system layer and we're integrating Solana blockchain operations into the system to support these functionalities. So as a concrete example, when your seeds are sort of the root of all your secrets on the Solana blockchain, all your wallet accounts, all your private keys, everything is derived from those seeds.Steven (08:13):We use a secure element on SAGA to secure your seeds in a way that's very protected, even down to the level of forensic attacks. Those are the kind of attacks that would go on in like a lab. And they take your device apart and use all kinds of equipment to try to extract your secrets from that device. So we use the secure element, specialized hardware, very similar to the secure enclave that you would hear about on an iOS device, for example. And then we combine that with a very secure operating environment that is available on most Android devices. So it's called Arm Trust Zone, and it's an environment that is running below the level of Android. So everything the user sees and is used to seeing in terms of the Android operating system, there's actually another operating system running below that on the device, it's a very specialized environment.Steven (09:02):It's very secure and it's called Arm trust zone. We run a trusted application within that environment that cooperates with the secure element to do all of your signing operations. So all of your key derivations from that initial seed and all of the secure signing operations, based on that. Design transactions on behalf of the wallets that are running in the Android OS. We make use of a bunch of specialized secure technologies, such as secure input and secure display. So if you have a password associated with your seed, when you type in that password, you're actually not even typing that into Android. You're typing that into a specialized OS, highly secure. It actually takes over the display temporarily. And so that when you enter your password, it's only going into environment that is secure and ready to accept it. And then once we sign a transaction on behalf of the user, we hand that back to the wallet, for example, Phantom running in the Android operating system, and then Phantom takes that and is able to submit it to the Solana blockchain for processing.Brian (10:04):That's a great overview. Thanks for that. So is it safe to say from like an end user's perspective, is this a Seed Vault, essentially bringing the same security guarantees or even more than a traditional hardware wallet would, but with kind of an added ease of use component being that it's directly embedded into your phone.Steven (10:21):So the hardware wallets are designed from the ground up to be the most secure wallets possible. And so certain design choices that they've made such as not having network connectivity on them, their air gap devices and being designed with very, very optimized hardware specifically for security means that those are pretty much the perfect devices for the security of seed storage. But as we all know, the trade off comes in terms of the user experience.Steven (10:48):Seed Vault gets us most of the way there. We get to take advantage of secure elements for seed encryption and specialized processing environments. It's still running inside a general purpose device, which does have network connectivity, although the secure environments themselves on the device, don't. So cold storage wallets are definitely going to still have a place in the ecosystem for very, very secure storage of high value assets, high value wallets, for example, but Seed Vault gets us a substantial distance closer to that on phones. And it also does it in a way that remains readily available and easy for users to use. So this is Seed Vault is very much a day to day technology that will allow the users to bring a huge amount of security to their seeds and their keys while still maintaining all the usability of an Android device.Brian (11:37):That's fantastic. I think anyone who's been around in crypto long enough deeply understands that problem between security and ease of use trade off. Can this Seed Vault handle all types of signing or is it restricted in any way as to what types of transactions or messages this can sign?Steven (11:53):For the initial launch we're focused on the Solana chain. All the operations that are built into Seed Vault are all designed, are all the cryptographic operations that are necessary for key generation, key storage, and transaction signing on. That said, like I said before, we're not building any new hardware into phones to support this. We're making use of hardware, very, very secure hardware that was already present. This is a systems integration problem. And so we're building this really, really secure and specialized system deep into the OS below the level of Android so that users can have a secure Solana experience. But there's nothing that would stop us in the future from expanding this as well. So what I would say to users is, go to Solanamobile.com. We have a wait list there, but you can also leave comments as well. So please, if other chains are an area you have an interest in, that would be a great place to let us know about it.Brian (12:45):That's fantastic. And one final point on the Seed Vault, is it possible to import or export your keys to another phone or is this sea fault tied to essentially one device?Steven (12:56):So the Seed Vault will support the standard BIT 39 seed phrases. So those 12 or 24 word seed phrases that we're all intimately familiar with. A big part of key custody is understanding the importance of protecting your own keys. And so for users who... We strongly believe in self custody of keys and secrets with the SAGA device. And so when you first set up the device, the user will be guided through a process to either create a new seed or to import an existing seed. As part of that process, we'll be guiding the user to back up, write down in some, for example, a reference card, all of the words in their seed phrase. And store that somewhere safe and secure. That seed phrase can be used to recover your seed later. If you were to get another SAGA device, it could be used to import your seed into that other device.Steven (13:47):Or if you do already have wallets elsewhere, you can use that seed to import those other wallets into the SAGA. There is a security caveat that comes with that, which is that your seed is only as secure as the least secure place you've ever stored it. So our recommendation will be for users to go and create a brand new seed when they get the SAGA device. We've built this great Seed Vault, super high secure storage capabilities. And we would really like for users to add, to create new seeds. But we also understand that users may already have many accounts set up and they may want to add existing seeds into their Seed Vault to facilitate the transfer of their assets, to a brand new seed for the device. And so we will support both importing and exporting seeds on the SAGA device.Brian (14:30):So I think that does a really great job of laying the foundation for the Seed Vault. You mentioned SAGA, the flagship phone upon all this is built. There's three other technologies though that you guys have also bringing the market here as part of SMS.Brian (14:43):One of the next ones which I want to cover is the mobile wallet adapter. I think anyone who's used Solana both from a development perspective, or if they're just an end user is very familiar with the wallet adapter that we have on web. Does a great job of normalizing all the different wallets on Solana, making it really easy to just click and you see a drop down menu and it's easy to connect to your favorite wallet. What is the mobile wallet adapter? How do you say it differs from the web wallet adapter and what can users expect to be seeing when they interact with one of these?Steven (15:12):First of all, mobile wallet adapter is actually the one technology in all of SMS that I'm personally most excited about. It's the least flashy. It's something that users will hopefully never even know exists because it's such a fundamental and basic thing that users will assume that this is just how things are supposed to work. Mobile wallet adapter is an analog of the wallet adapter on the web that we all have come to know and love. It's the communication fabric by which we're going to bind dApps and wallets on mobile devices together. So on the web, you're used to visiting some DAP, clicking that connect wallet button, seeing a popup of the available wallets that you have installed in your browser. And just picking one and just getting this seamless transaction signing experience. Unfortunately, the same thing doesn't exist today on mobile devices, either on Android or on iOS devices for the Solana chain.Steven (16:04):And that I think is the number one thing that is holding back broad mobile adoption for Solana and for Web 3.0 on mobile devices. So just like we built a protocol and a plug-in interface for wallet adapter on the web. We're building something very similar on mobile devices. We're going to have a web socket based communication protocol that allows for dApps to connect to wallets wherever they are for signing transaction purposes. And that wherever they are, I think is the big key difference between transaction signing on mobile devices versus transaction signing on laptops or desktops. With the traditional wallet adapter, there's one environment that everything operates in, the web browser. And it's a great sandbox. It's a super rich set of tools. But on mobile devices, the ecosystem is a little bit broader there. We have dApps that will run in your web browser.Steven (16:57):Any mobile friendly dApps should be able to work on your mobile Chrome, just like they would work in desktop Chrome. You've got native applications that have run on the device as well, whether those are written in Kotlin or Java on an Android device, or a cross platform framework like Darden fluter or like react native. And then you also, a natural extension from there is saying, well, we've built this great wallet on these SMS devices with Seed Vault. Why can't this be my only wallet? Why do I even need to have a different wallet on every platform that I want to use dApps on? And so part of what we're building with mobile wallet adapter is the concept of remote signing as well. We got this phone, you've got a wallet on there. It has network connectivity. It is a great user interface.Steven (17:42):This should be able to act as a remote wallet for dApps that are running on other nearby mobile devices, or even on your nearby laptops and desktops. So mobile wallet adapter is a protocol and it's a fabric that's going to bind all of these things together with the initial release of SMS. We have a reference implementation that we've built for Android, but this is an area we see expanding beyond Android as well. So the mobile wallet adapter protocol was designed to be agnostic to the platform on which it's running. Any platform that has some of these standard web technologies like web sockets, for example, would be able to participate in the mobile wallet, adapter protocol.Brian (18:19):Yeah, that's fantastic. That's super exciting for us. You hit on a couple of things there. One of which I think I could sense your excitement over, was the ability to do this remote signing on your phone. You're interacting with a web app, either on another mobile device or potentially on your laptop. Is this similar to what wallet connect is on Ethereum? I know we haven't really had wallet connect yet on Solana on a major DAP. How is this essentially handling this connection? Is there some middle man server involved? How are you guys thinking about that?Steven (18:49):In principle, it is similar to the functionality provided by wallet connect. Though, I think, we've definitely made some design decisions in the mobile wallet adapter space to make it very suitable for operation on mobile devices. We've really optimized it for local use cases. And as part of that, one of the design decisions we've made is that we shouldn't have to reach out to an intermediate server during the signing process, if the operations that you're performing are those that can be done entirely locally on the device. And so let's just to give a concrete example, you have the Phantom wallet installed on the device. Let's say you wanted to use magic Eden through your Chrome web browser on that same device, because they're both running locally, there's no reason we should have to reach out to an intermediate server to make that connection between those two parties.Steven (19:38):And so we've split up the process into two phases. The first of which we call association, which answers the question of, well, how does the magic Eden running in the browser, how does it even know what wallets are available on the device? How does it start up the wallet so that it's in front of the user and the user has context of what's happening. And then how does it create an encrypted channel through which communications can happen? And so on Android, we've done that through an intent based scheme and then a Diffy helmet key exchange, but we've built the protocol in a flexible way so that we can add additional types of association in the future.Steven (20:13):For example, we have the ability to use QR codes for association. You can imagine scanning a QR code from your mobile phone, and that would encode all the information necessary to inform the two parties of each other. Or alternatively there're other standards we want to explore like web Bluetooth, which gives you a great way to only connect to devices that are in proximity with you.Steven (20:35):So in terms of security, it means that you can have a connection that also has a locality element to it, which would be really interesting when it comes to making use of very highly secure operations, like signing with your private keys for your wallet accounts.Steven (20:50):The second half of the protocol is connections, and we use web sockets. We create an encrypted channel, and then all of the operations that a user would make use of through wallet adapter today, authorizing adapt, signing transactions, sending transactions across the network. All of that has been created in the mobile wallet adapter protocol as well. And so that said, all together, whole bunch of technology running, hopefully invisibly to the user. And we're even building a plugin for regular wallet adapter, so that dApps are able to get support from mobile wallet adapter with just extremely, extremely small amount of work. Rebuild, select the right plugins for wallet adapter, make sure your DAP is mobile web friendly, and you'll be ready to go on day one.Brian (21:34):That's great. That's very elegant too, getting rid of the middleman server in that using just the local network. Personally having been at Phantom for a while. We've sensed the frustration in the mobile scene. A little bit, a lot of wallets today are kind of forced to have these in-app browsers, just given the state of mobile phones and given the state of the mobile phone industry. One thing that Phantom has done to get around this in particular, in interacting with native dApps is deep linking. Does mobile wallet DAP have any plans for deep linking? How are you guys thinking about handling those deep linking protocols?Steven (22:07):Yep. So I think number one, I think the deep linking protocols are a very elegant solution to getting over this problem of how do we break out of the world of browsers inside of wallets? I think that the browsers inside of wallets, I believe is a very expedient solution, but I believe it's a stepping stone on the way to having dApps in wallets, as full participants on a mobile device, using the user experience, paradigms and patterns that users are used to. So standalone native applications that are able to directly communicate with each other.Steven (22:41):The deep linking protocols, I think do a great job. They're very straightforward and do a great job for the use cases local to the device. And so I view those as a complimentary to mobile wallet adapter. Mobile wallet adapter is designed to handle both those use cases as well, but also the broader use cases of on and off device. And so I think that is where mobile wallet adapter can take the ecosystem even one more step forward is through separation of the transport layer from the association layer. We're able to design for use cases that extend beyond the device and extend beyond what the deep linking protocols are currently able to accomplish today.Brian (23:21):That's great. So we hit a lot here with the mobile wallet adapter that will be impacting how dApps and wallets interact with one another. You guys are also releasing another initiative that'll be impacting dApps. You guys are dubbing at the DAP store. The big takeaway here is that there won't be these rent extracting fees of 30% of all commerce in apps from some of the big players that we all know and love. Can you touch a little more on what this DAP store is? What some of the plans are for this and how current DAP developers should be thinking about this DAP store?Steven (23:53):Sure. So I have received more questions on the DAP store. It just goes to show how excited developers are for this. We're all very, very intimately familiar with some of the difficulties that are posed by the current app store ecosystems for mobile devices, Google Play store for Android and the App Store for apple. And they primarily fall into two categories. There is the policies aspect, what am I allowed to do? What am I not allowed to do? Is my app going to be approved for the store? Or am I going to be rejected for what often feels like an arbitrary reason? And then the second part of it is the economic angle. A 30% cut of fees is a pretty hard pill to swallow. And especially when we come to some of the use cases like purchases of digital goods, 30% fee pretty much is a nail in the coffin of trying to do, for example, an NFT like an auction house or a marketplace on a device like an iPhone, for example.Steven (24:51):And the Solana DAP store... This is our opportunity to change that. Our north star on this is that once DAP is installed the any further interactions between that DAP and the user are a matter between that DAP and the user, we're not going to be getting involved with like ongoing fees or anything of that nature. And in fact, we're making our DAP store no fee. So there won't be transaction fees in the store if users want to purchase apps or applications from the store. And like I said, once it's installed any further relationships are between the DAP and the user. We're very much building this in the model of a permissionless Web 3.0 experience.Steven (25:32):Now that said, I do want to touch on one really important area, which is the curation of the catalog. In my background, I did work for a couple years on an app store for mobile devices when I was at Microsoft. And I was a young, slightly naive engineer at that point. And I didn't really think that the curation problem would be that substantial. And I think that in fact, the trust and safety aspect of app stores is probably the single most important topic to look into. So at the beginning, we are going to be curating the contents of the app store, and we're going to be doing that to make sure that the contents are both useful to users, but also there's a huge amount of trust that goes into users when they use an app store into, who is the publisher and what are they doing to protect me.Steven (26:21):And so Solana labs will be curating the contents at the initial release, but we do have aspirations to involve the community in the curation of this app catalog. The community's involvement is always a huge area for Web 3.0 in areas like DAOs, for example, and we have the same aspirations for the Solana mobile and the Solana mobile DAP store.Brian (26:45):That's great. I think that's really important that you emphasize that from the start, setting expectations like that. In our experience, crypto can be really exciting. It's this new world, but also it's very permissionless and that is a sword that cuts both ways. We've seen that firsthand being a wallet. We actually now run, I believe the biggest block list of all spam NFTs and essentially scam domains on Solana. It's a huge, huge issue. It really is important to kind of nip that in the bud, especially for new users when they're just getting acquainted with this ecosystem. And we found in our experience we turned that block list, open source. We get community contributions from that, especially every day now. And I think whenever you're able to kind of leverage the power of the end users here, the community that's using this every day, that's a really great way to handle it.Brian (27:33):So we hit on a lot here. We just covered the DAP store. We also went over the Seed Vault, which leads the foundation for SMS, and then the mobile wallet adapter, which you're super excited about. We're super excited about that as well. There's one final component to this, which is Solana Pay. I think most people are familiar with Solana Pay at this point. It was unveiled earlier in Q2, I believe of 2022. There's a couple great use cases, around this around making point of sale, a lot easier, using SPL tokens on Solana, getting rid of middleman fees once again.Brian (28:04):But I also think Solana Pay might at this point, be a bit of a misnomer. I've seen some really great use cases leveraging Solana Pay with NFT ticketing. I know the mountain pay guys have built this great photo booth where you can snap a photo and then scan with your Phantom wallet and it mints into an NFT right on your phone. And that's all running on Solana Pay behind the scenes. What do you guys have planned for Solana Pay as it relates to mobile and SMS? What can you tell us about that today?Steven (28:32):Mobile devices, we carry them everywhere with us and they've in the last few years, people have really, really started to use mobile payment technologies. You've got, on Android devices you have Google Pay for example. And so we have these perfect devices that you carry with you and people are already used to interacting with in the real world to effectuate payments. And that's really what we're looking at for SMS and Solana Pay. We're actually not making any protocol changes at all to Solana Pay with the SMS stack. Instead, what we're doing is providing guidance on how wallet should integrate Solana Pay into the Android system. For many wallets, there's actually almost nothing to do here. Wallets like Phantom, do a great job of already integrating some of these best practices into Android devices. But by providing a set of best practices, we can really make sure that there's a standardized way by which users can expect their phone to work with Solana Pay. In terms of snapping QR codes, in terms of tapping your phone on NFC readers or in terms of interacting with Solana Pay links that are generated from within the mobile web browser.Steven (29:40):And so, by providing that set of best practices and providing samples on how to integrate Solana Pay, those best practices will give us a foundation by which we can expect that all of these real world Solana Pay interactions that users are going to be using with their phones will be consistent across devices. And by making it consistent, we give to the other side of the equation, those who are working on merchant terminals, for example, we give them an understanding or a base, if you will, on which they know that if they develop some of these Solana Pay technologies, for example, QR codes or NFCS in merchant terminals. They know that there's a base of devices that can take advantage of those.Steven (30:21):And so, so much of the Solana Pay is going to be building out this whole network of providers, software providers, both on the merchant side, as well as on mobile devices to make sure that users can pay with Solana Pay in the real world. Just like they're used to paying with say their credit cards using Google Pay. And quick note, Google pay will also be supported on the SAGA device. And so users should expect that their SAGA device will be their mechanism by which they can effectuate real world payments, whether it's through Solana Pay or through traditional payment networks.Brian (30:56):That's super exciting. So I think this is a great kind of overview we just did of SMS, the whole suite of developer tools that you guys are unveiling. You've hit on this a couple times though, though, there is a flagship phone that you guys are releasing, SAGA. This is separate from SMS, but it will be powered entirely by SMS, as well as traditional things you would expect from Android devices like Google Pay, which you mentioned.Brian (31:20):Let's talk a little bit more about SAGA. What is it like? I saw Anatoli up there on stage flashing it to the crowd. It looked pretty sleek. Would you say this is something that's purely for crypto natives, can ordinary people continue to use this for their favorite apps, say like TikTok or Instagram without noticing much of a difference. How would you characterize this phone broadly?Steven (31:40):We've designed the phone for crypto natives in mind, but it is a standard Android device in every other way. And so it's going to be a full GMS device, meaning it has Chrome. It has Gmail, it has the Google Play store. It has everything that users expect an Android device to do with the SMS stack added on top. And so there's a huge amount of value here that we're going to be able to give to the Sal Solana ecosystem to degens who live and breathe their Web 3.0 in crypto. But it's also going to be a flagship Android device. It's got 12 gigs of RAM five, 12 gigs of flash. It's got the latest and greatest Qualcomm snap drag and chip set, beautiful 6.67 inch O led display everything about this looks and feels like a flagship phone.Steven (32:31):We got that device in just before the event. And so he was able to hand it around a little bit, show some people, let them touch and feel it in person. And it's an impressive device. We have a great partner in Awesome in helping us build this device. And I am thrilled. I think that I don't know that there's any other hardware partner other than Awesome, who could have helped us realize this vision the way we've been able to realize it for the SAGA device. I've had the good fortune to have a prototype. I've been working on that for the last few months and I am thrilled for when people are able to get this device and hold it in their hands. It really does feel like a super, super premium, top end deviceBrian (33:13):Jealous. You're one of the lucky few that has the actual incarnation of this right now in their hand. What is the plan to expand SMS to additional devices though? We have SAGA, I saw, there's actually a huge backlog of pre-orders on this thing. But I'm sure a lot of people are kind of thinking themselves, well, I already have this Android phone, maybe a Google Pixel or Samsung device. Or maybe there're others who there's a lot of folks probably listening to this who are on iOS devices. What is that timeline like? Is this something you think could be running on iOS one day? How are you guys thinking about rolling this out kind of across broadly across the smartphone market?Steven (33:50):So we started our conversation on SMS talking about the collection of technologies. And that's, I think is really the point to hit on here, is that SMS isn't just one technology. It's a whole series of them. And each of them have slightly different applications and slightly different system needs in terms of integrating them. So all the way at one end of the spectrum, we have Seed Vault. For example, Seed Vault really needs the phone manufacturer to be directly involved in the systems integration process. It needs access to the secure element. It needs a trusted application that can run within the secure execution environment, arm trust zone, for example. And then it needs UI baked right into the system image, privileged UI that's able to make use of those lower layers that in the secure execution environments of the device.Steven (34:40):On the other end of the spectrum, we have technologies like mobile wallet, adapter and mobile wallet adapter actually doesn't have any hardware requirements at all. It's purely a protocol system between wallets and dApps for binding them together. And so mobile wallet adapter, the specification is currently in draft for that one. We're working with our wallet and DAP partners to finalize that, make sure we can take all of the ecosystem feedback so that when we do release it, it serves as broad a set of use cases as possible.Steven (35:10):But mobile wallet adapter will actually be available and ready to use before the SAGA launches. And so over time, what it means to be an SMS device really comes down to how many of these SMS technologies are integrated into that particular device. As I was saying, some of them do need deep integration. We would have to work directly with hardware manufacturers, the Seed Vault being the primary one of those. So it's a little bit hard to from a user standpoint, SMS has a certain branding associated with it, but from a technology standpoint, there's a whole spectrum of what an SMS device could look like.Steven (35:45):In terms of specific devices, I can't comment on that other than the fact that Awesome is an amazing partner. And we just view SAGA as the first step in many steps towards bringing all of SMS to mobile users. So that Web 3.0, really has a home with the Solana ecosystem on mobile devices. And then I just did also want to hit quickly on iOS. iOS is not as open a platform as Android is. And so some of these technologies, we just don't have the capability to independently build those into an iOS device.Steven (36:18):But we do also know how much consumers love iOS devices. And there's many people who we'd have to pry their fingers apart to get their iPhones out of their hands. And so technologies like mobile wallet adapter, we're designing them to make sure that they're not Android specific. There's things in there that we can do to make sure that becomes the fabric by which dApps and wallets communicate wherever they are, including on iOS devices. And so we're not forgetting about iOS and we want to make sure that as much of SMS as possible works on as many devices as possible, whether those are Android devices or iOS devices.Brian (36:53):Well, as speaking as somebody who's had a death grip on their iOS device for probably the last decade, I have to say, I am pre-ordering one. You guys have done a great job of convincing me. So I'm going team Android just for this. I'm super excited about it.Steven (37:07):That is great news. I want to hear your entire audience find me on Twitter and tell me the exact same thing. You'll make my week.Brian (37:13):That's great. So you hit a lot here about the plan for rolling SMS. Each of the four components broadly out across the smartphone market. You did a couple times though in our conversation hint at the idea that even though this is called SMS Solana mobile stack, really this could be applicable to a broad number of blockchains across the Web 3.0 ecosystem. How are you guys thinking about that problem? Are you guys going to be focused on Solana, is your core team focused on Solana for the time being, and you're inviting others in because it's open source? Is that the general framing of that? How are you guys thinking about unveiling this to Ethereum and potentially Bitcoin one day and more broadly across the Web 3.0 space?Steven (37:52):So we have a literal mountain of work to do to deliver the best Solana experience that we can on mobile devices. And so the Solana ecosystem remains firmly our goal right now. That said, I think I'll answer your question in two ways. This is an open phone and we would never try to prevent another chain for example, from being installed on this device. So while we are focusing on Solana, this is an Android device, everything that works on Android would work here. And we would never try to stop any of the other chains from participating on this device in all the normal ways.Steven (38:26):And then the other thing I would say there is, we're always interested to hear from the community. And so I think I mentioned it earlier in the podcast, but if you do have an interest, you can always go to Solanamobile.com, please while you're there place a pre-order, that would be awesome. But you can also register your interest in other things you would like to see on this device, whether those be features for the Solana chain or if you have interest in other chains, we'd love to hear about it.Brian (38:50):That's great. And one closing question, I think this is a good segue that we always ask to our guests, given your guys' focus on the Solana ecosystem, who is a builder that you admire in the Solana ecosystem?Steven (39:02):Oh, that's a good one. So there's someone that I've had an opportunity to work with TJ from Mountain Pay and he has been contributing to the Solana Pay side of the ecosystem. And as crazy as it seems some days when I wake up and say, oh, all we're doing is taking on the mobile phone industry by building SAGA. I think of what TJ is doing. He's just looked around and he looks at all the incumbents in the payment space and says, yeah, I think I want to go head on in this space.Steven (39:30):So he's a great guy. Every time I've had the opportunity to chat with him, I've always left thinking like, wow, I didn't even think about that. And he's like... So I really admire him that both for the work he's doing and as well as for the guts to take on the space that he's taking on.Brian (39:48):Yeah. I couldn't agree more. His energy is pretty electric. I don't know how he does it. He's around at all the hacker houses at Mountain Dow, he's in the crowd and then he's got his headphones on banging away on his laptop and still shipping code. But yeah, he's got a great infectious energy and I think there's no one better to be taking on the Stripes and the PayPals and the big payments giants of the world. He's someone I would want to have in my corner for sure.Brian (40:13):Well, Steven, this has been a really great conversation. Thank you for going deep on SMS. I'm super excited about it. I'm ready to pre-order my SAGA right now. Where can people go to learn more, both about SMS and yourself? You mentioned your Twitter. I want to make sure that people can find you and ping you with their stories of how you're prying their iOSs out of their hands right here.Steven (40:35):To find out more about the SAGA and about SMS hit up Solanamobile.com. We've got links in there to the Solana mobile Twitter, our discord community, discord.gg/solanamobile, as well as you can find a link to the mobile stack SDK, which is all in the open on GitHub. So I would say those are the best places to go to learn more about SMS and SAGA. Please join us in discord. We're a friendly community. I'm there. I hang out there. I answer questions there. Lots of people from my team as well. So looking forward to seeing all kinds of people from your audience, join our discord and help us build a really cool community around SMS and SAGA.Brian (41:16):I can't wait. Steven Laver. Thank you for your time. This has been great.Steven (41:20):Thank you, Brian. Thanks for having me.
In this week's Sowalong, world-renowned chef and convert to growing his own food, Marcus Wareing, tells us all about his passion for elephant garlic. He first discovered it when his gardener Anatoli introduced it into his kitchen garden and now considers the mild garlic-meets-onion flavour a delicacy and go-to in his dishes. Sown from bulbs kept back from the previous year, Marcus chats though planting cloves, ensuring plenty of growing space See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Ever had a high-energy proton blast through your brain? Anatoli Bugorski did, and he lived to tell the tale. In this episode the Deep Lore Boys take a look at his story, while also inspecting Russia's worst warship, and the tragic tale of the Man of the Hole. Further Reading: Novgorod: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russian... Anatoli Bugorski: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoli... Man of the Hole: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Man_of_... Intro: City Lights — Babasmas [Audio Library Release] Music provided by Audio Library Plus Watch: https://youtu.be/W9IQfypOkkYFree Download / Stream: https://alplus.io/city-lightsMusic: Jazz In Paris - Media Right Productions https://youtu.be/mNLJMTRvyj8
In this episode of Exploring Solana with Jupiter, Chris McCann gives us an idea of the what's and how's of the Solana Ecosystem before it became what we know of it today. Together with your host, Ben Chow, let's unravel the past, the present, and the future of Solana as well as learn some tips and techniques used by famous crypto core developers for the success of their crypto journey. If you liked this episode, don't forget to subscribe and show your support by rating us 5 stars.Episode timeline:[04:23] Introduction of guest - Chris McCann[06:08] What got Chris into crypto?[12:22] On Chris' convictions about investing and crypto[14:59] How did the team dynamics of Raj and Anatoli develop?[19:24] The technical choices the team had to make[23:33] Focus, focus, focus. [30:39] The biggest challenges of the Solana ecosystem in the past[35:59] What should be considered from an investment standpoint?[41:55] The changes at present [47:13] Other guidelines in making investment decisions[52:17] Is the team ready for this?[55:24] Be true to yourself.Follow Chris on on Twitter:MccannatronFor more information on Jupiter please visit:Website : jup.ag/Podcast: podcast.jup.agTwitter : twitter.com/JupiterExchangeDiscord : discord.gg/jupDocs : docs.jup.ag/
For our second bonus (and truly final) episode in our Bizarre Experiences season, we're talking about Anatoli Bugorski, a retired Russian particle physicist who is known for surviving a radiation accident in 1978, when a high-energy proton beam from a particle accelerator passed through his brain. Don't forget to follow on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter! https://www.facebook.com/thisstrangeworldpodcast/ https://www.instagram.com/thisstrangeworldpodcast/ https://twitter.com/thisstrangepod/ And check out more This Strange World links here: https://linktr.ee/thisstrangeworldpodcast A High Tops Media Podcast You can follow for more High Tops Media content on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter: @hightopsmedia Check out more podcasts on our website https://hightops.media Sources https://www.iflscience.com/health-and-medicine/the-man-who-put-his-head-inside-a-particle-accelerator-while-it-was-switched-on/ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anatoli_Bugorski https://www.discovermagazine.com/health/if-you-stuck-your-head-in-a-particle-accelerator
Anatoli Skatchkov aka Nathaniel Knop ist preisgekrönter Filmemacher, geboren 1968 in eine jüdische Familie in Czernowitz/Ukraine. Nach dem Studium der Psychiatrie sowie der Regieassistenz bei A. Kaidanovsky und K. Zanussi kam er als Nipkow-Stipendiat (Europäisches Stipendium für Professionals in den audio-visuellen Medien) nach Berlin. 1995 gründete er seine Firma KINOBRIGADA. Er arbeitete für die Fernsehkanäle 3SAT und ARTE, für Museen, u.a. das Russische Staatsmuseum in Sankt-Petersburg sowie das MAK in Frankfurt. Er lebt mit seiner Frau und fünf Kindern in Frankfurt am Main. Filmographie (Auswahl) 1. Regie: 2022 Nathan Farb & the Cold War (Work in Progress) Unterstützt von Hessen Film & Media 2022 In der Luft, da bleibt deine Wurzel (Work in Progress) Unterstützt von Hessen Film & Media 2022 Zeitzeugentheater (Work in Progress) Unterstützt von ZWST 2019 The Watson's Hotel (Audience Award, Lichter IFF, 2019) Unterstützt von der Hessischen Filmförderung und der Akademie der Künste, Berlin 2016 The Storyteller. After Walter Benjamin (Winner, On Art IFF, 2017; Best Documentary 12 IFF, 2019) Unterstützt von Hessische Filmförderung 2011 Pavlik +100 2005 Mikhail Shvartsman. Recognition 2004 Anna Staritsky. La vie collage 2001 Das Nitschewoland (Audience Award, Kassel FF, 2003) Unterstützt von der Hessischen Filmförderung 2. Kamera und Schnitt: 2016 A Gravame –Das Stahlwerk, der Tod, Maria und die Mütter von Tamburi (Winner, Lichter IFF, 2017, Nom. Hessische Filmpreis 2017, Deutsche Filmpreis 2017) 2011 Kein Vertrauen. Keine Angst. Um nichts bitten (Russische Dokumentarfilmpreis 2012), Unterstützt von Hessische Filmförderung 2011 When in Rome 2008 Leningrad – Der Mann, der singt 3. Teilnahme an Filmfestivals (Auswahl): Frankfurt, Kassel, Krakau, Leipzig, Lissabon, Locarno, Mexico, Milano, Moskau, New York, Nowosibirsk, Perpignan, Pune, Sankt-Petersburg 4. Auftragsprojekte für (Auswahl): NTV, ZDF, 3SAT, ARTE; Museum für Angewandte Kunst, WELTKULTUREN Museum und Goethe-Museum, Frankfurt; ID-Frankfurt; Russisches Staatliches Museum, Sankt-Petersburg; Hebbel Theater, Berlin; Altana Stiftung, Bad Homburg; Mousonturm; Deutsche Telekom.
In this bonus episode recorded on Sunday, February 27th 2022, Jake talks with Ukrainian comedian Anatoli Brandt about the rapidly unfolding conflict in Ukraine.
El lunes 23 de noviembre de 1998, se iniciaba en la ciudad de Zhitomir (ex Unión Soviética), el juicio de un ucraniano acusado de haber asesinado a 52 personas, ante la celosa mirada de un público enloquecido que reclamaba la cabeza del acusado.This show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/4146133/advertisement Si quieres compartirnos un suceso paranormal, de fantasmas, extraterrestres, o simplemente algo aterrador que te haya sucedido, envíanos tu historia en una nota de voz a: archivosperdidos@genuinamedia.comSíguenos en:TikTok.YouTube.Instagram.Facebook.Producido y Distribuido por Genuina Media
Today, Lovetto tells us what happens when you stick your head in a high energy proton beam.... patreon.com/stupidhydrogen
The Emerging Growth Podcast by Aronson LLC recently interviewed Anatoli Pilchtchikov, Partner, Personal Financial Services with Aronson LLC. Tune in to hear Anatoli discuss exits/IPOs/DPOs, how he's worked with c-suite executives from Peloton, Palantir, AirBnB and Uber, 2U Inc., Amazon, DoorDash and more!
The Starling Tribune: An Unofficial Arrow TV Show Fan Podcast
The Starling Tribune Reporters SP, Chris and Michelle review the finale Arrow episode “Fadeout.” In this episode the reporters discuss all the goodness of the Arrow finale episode that was 8 years in the making, the final spectacular 3 minute non-stop fight scene, the changes Oliver made for those he loved and the entirety of Star City, the conclusions of character stories as well as what's next for several characters in the Arrowverse, and how Emily Bett Rickard's return to the show turned out. The reporters also reflect on the series as a whole and it's place in the Arrowverse and the history of comicbook TV. The reporters also give their favorite memories of the Starling Tribune podcast, hear some great feedback from GonnaGeek Network owner Stephen and give a nod to all of the former Starling Tribune hosts. Episode: “Fadeout” [Season 8 Episode 10] Air Date: Tuesday, January 28, 2020 Director: James Bamford https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0051466/?ref_=tt_ov_dr Arrow credits: Uncredited stunt coordinator and fight coordinator for the pilot Fight choreographer - 7x (started 2012) Stunt coordinator - 23x Fight coordinator - 38x Supervising stunt coordinator - 21x Directing - 17x (Brotherhood, 1st) Writers: Beth Schwartz https://www.imdb.com/name/nm2584087/?ref_=ttfc_fc_wr4 Arrow credits: Current showrunner Written by: 32x - 1st: Vendetta (S1E8, 2012) Executive story editor - 23x Story by - 2x Teleplay by - 1x Co-producer - 23x (2015 - 2016) Co-executive producer - 46x (2016- 2018) Executive producer - 32x (2018 - 2020) Marc Guggenheim https://www.imdb.com/name/nm0973233/?ref_=ttfc_fc_wr5 Arrow credits: Developed by - 170 episodes Written by - 21x Teleplay - 19x Story by - 7x Executive producer - 126x (2012 - 2020) Consulting producer - 30x (2018 - 2020) Arrow premiered October 10, 2012 and ran for 170 episodes. Promo: https://www.cbr.com/green-arrow-and-the-canaries-first-promo/ Arrow Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 01 Starling City 15-Oct-19 0.84 02 Welcome To Hong Kong 22-Oct-19 0.77 03 Leap Of Faith 29-Oct-19 0.76 04 Present Tense 5-Nov-19 0.62 05 Prochnost 19-Nov-19 0.74 06 Reset 26-Nov-19 0.79 07 Purgatory 3-Dec-19 0.83 08 Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Four 14-Jan-20 1.41 09 Green Arrow And The Canaries 21-Jan-20 0.92 10 Fadeout 28-Jan-20 0.73 Arrow: Hitting The Bullseye Special 28-Jan-20 0.66 Legends Of Tomorrow Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 00 Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Five 14-Jan-20 1.35 01 Meet The Legeends 21-Jan-20 0.72 Supergirl Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 01 Event Horizon 6-Oct-19 1.26 02 Stranger Beside Me 13-Oct-19 0.97 03 Blurred Lines 20-Oct-19 0.92 04 In Plain Sight 27-Oct-19 0.95 05 Dangerous Liaisons 3-Nov-19 0.78 06 Confidence Women 10-Nov-19 0.8 07 Tremors 17-Nov-19 0.79 08 The Wrath Of Rama Khan 1-Dec-19 0.87 09 Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part One 8-Dec-19 1.67 10 The Bottle Episode 19-Jan-20 0.84 11 Back From The Future – Part One 0.81 The Flash Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 01 Into the Void 8-Oct-19 1.62 02 A Flash of the Lighting 16-Oct-19 1.27 03 Dead Man Running 22-Oct-19 1.38 04 There Will Be Blood 29-Oct-19 1.48 05 Kiss Kiss Breach Breach 5-Nov-19 1.19 06 License To Elongate 19-Nov-19 1.29 07 The Last Temptation of Barry Allen, Pt. 1 26-Nov-19 1.17 08 The Last Temptation of Barry Allen, Pt. 2 3-Dec-19 1.32 09 Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Three 10-Dec-19 1.71 Black Lightning Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 01 The Book Of Occupation: Chapter Two: Birth of the Blackbird 7-Oct-19 1.16 02 The Book Of Occupation: Chapter Two: Maryam's Tasbih 14-Oct-19 0.63 03 The Book of Occupation: Chapter Three: Agent Odell's Pipe-Dream 21-Oct-19 0.61 04 The Book of Occupation: Chapter Four: Lynn's Ouroboros 28-Oct-19 0.52 05 The Book of Occupation: Chapter Five: Requiem for Tavon 11-Nov-19 0.71 06 The Book of Resistance: Chapter One: Knocking on Heaven's Doo 18-Nov-19 0.62 07 The Book of Resistance: Chapter Two: Henderson's Opus 25-Nov-19 0.65 08 The Book of Resistance: Chapter Three: The Battle of Franklin Terrace 2-Dec-19 0.60 09 The Book of Resistance: Chapter Four: Earth Crisis 9-Dec-19 0.90 10 The Book of Markovia: Chapter One: Blessings and Curses Reborn 20-Jan-20 0.54 11 The Book of Markovia: Chapter Two: Lynn's Addiction 27-Jan-20 0.66 Batwoman Episode # / Episode Title / Episode Air / Date / Rating 01 Pilot 6-Oct-19 1.86 02 The Rabbit Hole 13-Oct-19 1.45 03 Down Down Down 20-Oct-19 1.22 04 Who Are You? 27-Oct-19 1.29 05 Mine Is A Long And A Sad Tale 3-Nov-19 1.16 06 I'll Be Judge, I'll Be Jury 10-Nov-19 1.09 07 Tell Me The Truth 17-Nov-19 1.01 08 A Mad Tea-Party 1-Dec-19 1.01 09 Crisis on Infinite Earths: Part Two 9-Dec-19 1.71 10 How Queer Everything Is Today! 19-Jan-20 0.79 11 An Un-Birthday Present 26-Jan-2020 0.67 Part 1: The Plot, Themes and Characters • What was the overall theme? What was the link to the episode's name? o The series finale • Fight scenes and stunts o Getting to Bryne - 2012 This is the fight filmed for the finale Oliver doing all the things against a lot of bad dudes First room: 3 cuts - 1 (shot guy in stairwell), 2 (slide guy's head in water), backward tracking (slams guy into pipe, dent), top of stairwell, pause, shoot guy anyway, cut to next room Second room: 4 cuts - 1 (shooting up to guy at top of stairs), 2 (guys shoots, pan over, guy into pipe, cut), 3 (flip guy over pipes, jump over pipes, cut), run out and cut to 3rd room Third room: 1(slam guy into wall, cut to guy on ground), 2 (flip guy over, cut to another angle), 3 (cut during climb up stairs), slo mo surround; overhead shot, angle up to see Oliver's face, gas, arrow up; shoots guys on way up Zip to next roof; slo mo hero landing (nice butt shot); gets shot, knocks weapon out of Byrne's hand Time of sequence: 3 minutes • They're alive! o Moira Queen o Tommy Merlyn o Emiko Queen o Quentin Lance o Rory Regan - Ragman • Where are they now? o Malcolm Merlyn o Artemis o Huntress o Walter • Documentary o Nice callback to S7 (Episode 150) o Why is everyone talking about Crisis????? • Flashbacks o 2012 Tarallo Diggle not in field yet John Bryne - Diggle talks him into sending him to jail; ends up kidnapping William b/c prison ruined him (guess Oliver forgot to include prison reform in the reboot) Diggle talks to Oliver about losing himself; if Oliver listened, then was he all grimdark and brooding over the next 7 seasons? o Robert killing himself o • Oliver Queen / Green Arrow / Spectre o V/O summarizing 8 seasons and Crisis o All of 8 arrows o I made an amazing Star City. The other cities? On your own, LOL o Father's death shaped him o Power comes from the hips, Diggle o Mom's office; first saw her before he came back • Felicity o Doesn't want to meet Mia at first o Archer scanning protocol on computer o Arrives after news of William's kidnapping o Hackity hackity hack! o Scene w/Felicity and Monitor in the future o Where they first met, his office, red pen • John Diggle / Spartan o One month since crisis; mission far from over o Salmon ladder w/green shirt on o Called team together to help get William o “Suit up” o Lyla - Oliver put our family back together o Mission is over; cleaned out Bunker o Moving to Metropolis o Did they adopt Connor? o Speech at funeral; inspired us to be heroes; I was his brother; life will go on; Oliver's mission lives on; universe is bigger than we can imagine o Meteor; box w/green glow; Lantern • Thea Queen o Oliver saves Moira, but her death inspired her to train with Malcolm. How/why did she become Speedy? o Agrees to marry Roy; does Mia have any cousins? • Roy Harper o Arm!!!! o • Laurel / Black Siren o The Mark of Four tattoo o Oliver's sacrifice didn't bring back your Laurel, Quentin; Quentin - there was nothing about you that needed to be fixed o • Dinah Drake / Black Canary o Plans to move to Metropolis - being police chief of a safe city is boring. Really? o Why didn't we see her disappear? • Rene Ramirez / Wild Dog o Running for mayor • Quentin Lance o Current mayor o Speech at statue; blamed Oliver for a lot of things; hunted and persucted him; Oliver is a reminder that anyone can change o • Tommy o We buried a bunch of mementos o Why does he know about Crisis?????? • Curtis • Rory / Ragman o Clears room; “my way is scarier” o Took time for rags to work again; been doing the hero thing; says Rene is most like Oliver • Anatoly • William o Kidnapped o Does he remember meeting the future version of his sister as he grows up? • Mia Queen o Episode takes place after GAatC; she goes out as Green Arrow to rescue William. Why isn't she asked about mysterious person as Green Arrow 20 years ago and why haven't seen them since? o Lets Byrne live o Shows young William parts of bow o Introduces herself to Felicity • Sara Lance o Gets Mia to attend funeral o • Barry Allen o At funeral • Kara Danvers o At funeral • Talia and Nyssa al Ghul o Kudos to SP for willing this into existence o Marriage was father's joke - Nyssa o Nyssa calls Sara her beloved Overall feelings about the finale • Chris • SP o It was great closure to the series and great fan service Overlook the inadequacies / breaks in continuity o Oliver Queen's, Laurel and Sara Lantz's 13 year journey complete o Stephen's finale on Arrow was really episode 7 o Too bad they couldn't do a 5 year flashback for old time's sake. o Salmon ladder o Mark of 4 o • Michelle Favorite Moments from the series / What the series meant to you • Chris • SP o Allowed me to follow every moment, EVERY episode in the Arrowverse since 2012 o Crossovers were my favorite - I love world building o It wasn't perfect o Outlasted Marvel TV, and grew Simpsons and Cosby Show o Amazing villains and characters Malcolm Merlyn (John Barrowman) China White (Kelly Hu) Deadshot (Michael Rowe) Edward Fyers (Sebastian Dunn) The Huntress (Jessica De Gouw) Frank Bertinelli (Jeffrey Nordling) Theodore Graynor (Ben Browder) Billy Wintergreen (Jeffrey C. Robinson) The Dodger (James Callis) Mr. Blank (J. August Richards) Deathstroke (Manu Bennett) Isabel Rochev (Summer Glau) Shrapnel (Sean Maher) Bronze Tiger (Michael Jai White) Nyssa al Ghul (Katrina Law) Cupid (Amy Gumenick) Ra's al Ghul (Matt Nable) Damien Darhk (Neal McDonough) Vandal Savage (Casper Crump) Prometheus (Josh Segarra) Tobias Church (Chad L. Coleman) Konstantin Kovar (Dolph Lundgren) Talia al Ghul (Lexa Doig) Kirk Acevedo (The Dragon akak Ricardo Diaz) Adrian Paul Emiko Queen (Sea Shimooka) Cayden James (Michael Emerson), Anatoly Knyazev (David Nykl) LaMonica Garrett- The Montor o Building the Arrowverse o • Michelle Favorite / memorable moments from the podcast • Chris • SP o The podcast was always like a team. Like Team Arrow Chris was there from day one and helped with the video production side of things – like Diggle Michelle took on the shownotes. Sara Heather- our woman on the keyboard took care of the audio edit Wing – was like Oliver's father who started us on the journey JS like Yoa Fei Jay like Tommy Neil like Anatoli o All the voices from the intro o Back channel comms o • Michelle NEXT EPISODE Link to Promo: https://comicbook.com/dc/2020/01/22/arrow-fadeout-preview-series-finale-the-cw/ (Date: 21 Jan 2020) Episode: “Fadeout” [Season 8 Episode 10] Air Date: Tuesday, January 28, 2020 Summary: The final events in the story of the Green Arrow. Director: James Bamford Writers: Beth Schwartz & Marc Guggenheim IMDB link: https://www.imdb.com/title/tt9700192/?ref_=ttep_ep10 Join The Starling Tribune each week as we stream live on Thursday Evenings at 7:30 PM eastern or 6:30 PM Central at www.geeks.live. Join the fun chatroom and interact with the hosts live. Contact us: @StarlingTribune - starlingtribune@gmail.com - www.starlingtribune.com - www.facebook.com/starlingtribune - 612-888-CAVE or 612-888-2283. Starling Tribune is proud to be a member of the GonnaGeek network found at GonnaGeek.com. For more geeky podcast visit GonnaGeek.com. You can find us wherever you can listen to podcasting including Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Google Podcasts, Pandora, on Amazon Alexa, and iHeartRadio under ''Starling Tribune." We are very thankful for all of our positive iTunes reviews. You can find all our contact information here on the Network page of GonnaGeek.com Our complete archive is always available at www.starlingtribune.com This podcast was recorded on Thursday January 30th, 2020. Thank you for listening and we hope you enjoyed the show! Audio Production by Stargate Pioneer of GonnaGeek.com.
The DC TV Report for the week ending Saturday April 1st 2017, featuring recaps for Supergirl, The Flash, DC's Legends of Tomorrow, Arrow, Powerless, as submitted by Edward O'Hare (nickname To Be Determined): Supergirl: Someone put a contract out on Supergirl and alien bounty hunters started attacking Kara. Turns out Mon-El's mom, Rhea, put out the bounty. After Rhea attacked Kara with a Kryptonite sword, Mon-El agreed to rejoin the fam in exchange for Kara's safety. J'onn warned Kara and the gang not to go after Mon-El because President Marsdin said so. The team said “screw that”, used a Stargate (I mean… teleportal gate thingy) Winn souped up to attempt a rescue mission, and Mon-El's dad, Lar Gand, realized Earth makes Mon-El happy and let him go. Alex and Maggie bumped into one of Maggie's ex-girlfriends and Alex spent the whole episode forcing Maggie to re-open old relationship wounds. By the by, President Marsdin is actually an alien. Last Minute Reveal: Rhea stabbed Lar Gand in the heart and she is not done with planet Earth! The Flash: Abra Kadabra was running around Central City stealing from tech companies. Gypsy came hungry to take down Magic Boy for killing her former partner. After being captured, Abra Kadabra offered info on how to defeat Savitar in exchange for freedom. Caitlin took some shrapnel to the stomach, and rather than using her Frost powers to heal, she stayed awake and talked Julian through surgery removing the shrapnel. Barry decided to let Gypsy take Ab Kabs away instead of getting the dish on Savitar. Cisco and Gypsy are not so hot an item anymore. HR was away with a new girlfriend all episode. Barry thinks he can learn how to beat Savitar by running to the future. Last Minute Reveal: Caitlin went into cardiac arrest and died! Julian removed her anti-meta necklace and she woke up, but now she's gone full Killer Frost! DC's Legends of Tomorrow: It's Doomworld! The Legion of Doom controlled the world and all the Legends were scattered around with their minds wiped, working crummy jobs. Heat Wave was bored of constantly winning, saved Steel from getting killed for figuring out the truth, and used a multiplexer gun the Atom invented to restore all the Legends memories except for Dr. Stein. The Reverse Flash made Dr. Stein create a generator that could destroy the Spear of Destiny. The Legends and the other LoD members all tried to stop Reverse Flash from destroying the Spear but ultimately failed. The Legends now want to try a do-over in World War I. Rip was drunk, baking cakes on the Waverider until Gideon helped him figure out a way to send a distress signal. Last Minute Reveal: The Waverider is a small model ship on Reverse Flash's desk in STAR Labs! Arrow: Five years ago, Anatoli convinced Oliver to pull a heist for pharmaceuticals to help a hospital before he left Russia for good. In the present, Ollie packed up HQ, told the team to get out, and hired Anatoli and the Bratva to kill Adrian Chase. Diggle wasn't having any of it, kept the team together, and slowly wore down Oliver until he decided to take up the good fight again. Ollie led the team on a mission to stop the Bratva from stealing drugs and Anatoli felt betrayed. Felicity continued working with Helix, and with a huge assist from Mister Terrific, she was able to decrypt video proof Adrian Chase is Prometheus. Last Minute Reveal: Chase killed the Feds protecting him, stole their car and drove right past the SCPD squad cars coming to arrest him! Powerless: Crimson Fox announced that she was leaving Charm City and taking her talents to Metropolis (adjacent). Emily signed herself and Jackie up for a self-defense class. Jackie blew off the class because she was driving for Uber to get some extra cash to pay for her daughter's school trip, which Emily found out was bogus when she tried to give money to the teacher. Jackie was furious, but after Jack O'Lantern destroyed her car, she admitted that she's taking MBA classes and would still be Emily's friend as long as she turns the volume down on her excitement. Van interrogated everyone trying to figure out who used his private bathroom and left a magazine behind. Turns out no one used the bathroom. Jackie used the magazine to swat a bee that caused Van to squeal and hide. Last Minute Reveal: There was hours of footage showing everyone at the office using Van's bathroom but Peter the janitor deleted it all because Van kept calling him Pedro!