The male organ of a flower
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Anther fun week in the Playhouse - get the hightlights, commercial free, here!!!
The Big Hit: Murph & Markus recap the Warriors blowing anther double-digit lead and discuss why the Dennis Schröder trade has not worked out.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The Big Hit: Murph & Markus recap the Warriors blowing anther double-digit lead and discuss why the Dennis Schröder trade has not worked out.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In the 3rd hour of today's show, the guys hit the Dawg Report, and the latest driving related arrest in Athens.
This week we laugh at ourselves and other douche bag podcasters because you have to laugh at yourself! we also talk about what this podcast is. its an outlet for passion and to inspire passion, for humour, and to try and shed light on ideas to other people whoa re like minded or who have been living blissfully ignorant up until not. Tune in and check it out
Anther episode with Superman and a lot of Jimmy Olsen for Jimmy fans! Superman Podcast (Story 013) 1940-09-23 to 1940-10-04 (ep97-102) Curse of Dead Man's Island
In our new podcast episode, recorded in Córdoba, Spain, we talk about programming certifications and how they might not represent real developer skills.Chapters:00:00 Intro01:01 Wins02:57 About programmer certifications04:14 Concern 1. Do they stand the test of time?06:52 Concern 2. Theory, where is the implementation?09:35 Anther practical example of seeking ability over certificate12:00 Wrap up, why it's important to show your skills!13:30 Pybites is going to address this gap :)14:20 Wrapping up, how the Spain road trip is going15:42 Outro musicStay tuned for our new certifications that will prove that you have tangible skills that a real world Python developer is expected to have these days.And/or already join one of our coaching programs to be ready when we launch them (our certificates will be backward compatible!)
“For Anther Generation“ was given by Brother Donathan Layell from the pulpit of Calvary Baptist Church on September.24.2023. Thank You for Listening For PRAYER or Questions please respond. contact@cbcuniongrove.com Call 704-327-5662 P.O. Box 298 Union Grove, NC 28689
“For Anther Generation“ was given by Brother Donathan Layell from the pulpit of Calvary Baptist Church on August.24.2023.Thank You for ListeningFor PRAYER or Questions please respond.contact@cbcuniongrove.comCall 704-327-5662P.O. Box 298 Union Grove, NC 28689
Dr. Peter A. McCullough is a board-certified cardiologist. Spike Protein Formula spikeformulapm | mcculloughfnd.org | substack.com |petermcculloughmd.com | IG | Another pandemic on the way? Dr. McCullough was one of the first on top of COVID-19 with the famous McCullough Protocol. New Mask coming soon, flights, etc. Dr. McCullough pointed out that all aspects of transgender medicine lead to mental and physical harm in children, including suicide. When young women have double mastectomies to look like men, roughly 1/3 report having issues and 40% of these women had psychiatric diagnoses. Poor peer relations are a key determinant of gender dysphoriaIn addition to being at the forefront of the battle against COVID-19 vaccines, he also writes and speaks out against transgender ideology. Why it's so dangerous. The misconceptions do parents have about gender reassignment surgery? The shocking truth about these surgeries and aftermath.It seems very soon masks will be back, flights delayed, and maybe even lockdowns. 1/3 of European shots are placebos, and did Pfizer know? According to data, 1 of 3 things will happen if you have gotten the vaccine. Which of the 3 is most likely as to what, based on what happened after the injection?Why won't they just tell the truth? There is no one better to talk to than my friend, Dr. Peter A. McculloughPlease go to: MCCULLOUGHFND.ORGSpike Support Protein Formulahttps://www.petermcculloughmd.comhttps://petermcculloughmd.substack.comhttps://www.instagram.com/petermcculloughmdTwitterBook: Courage to Face COVID-19Courageous Discourse Substack➔Please check out our Sponsors : Try BlueChew FREE when you use our promo code MSCS at checkout--just pay $5 shipping. BlueChew.com, promo code MSCS to receive your first month FREE ➔ZBiotics: 15% off on your first order with code: MSCSMEDIA Go to https://sponsr.is/biotics_mscsmedia_0723 ➔MAGIC SPOON: h
Dr. Peter A. McCullough is a board-certified cardiologist. Spike Protein Formula spikeformulapm | mcculloughfnd.org | substack.com |petermcculloughmd.com | IG | Another pandemic on the way? Dr. McCullough was one of the first on top of COVID-19 with the famous McCullough Protocol. New Mask coming soon, flights, etc. Dr. McCullough pointed out that all aspects of transgender medicine lead to mental and physical harm in children, including suicide. When young women have double mastectomies to look like men, roughly 1/3 report having issues and 40% of these women had psychiatric diagnoses. Poor peer relations are a key determinant of gender dysphoria In addition to being at the forefront of the battle against COVID-19 vaccines, he also writes and speaks out against transgender ideology. Why it's so dangerous. The misconceptions do parents have about gender reassignment surgery? The shocking truth about these surgeries and aftermath. It seems very soon masks will be back, flights delayed, and maybe even lockdowns. 1/3 of European shots are placebos, and did Pfizer know? According to data, 1 of 3 things will happen if you have gotten the vaccine. Which of the 3 is most likely as to what, based on what happened after the injection? Why won't they just tell the truth? There is no one better to talk to than my friend, Dr. Peter A. Mccullough Please go to: MCCULLOUGHFND.ORG Spike Support Protein Formula https://www.petermcculloughmd.com https://petermcculloughmd.substack.com https://www.instagram.com/petermcculloughmd Twitter Book: Courage to Face COVID-19 Courageous Discourse Substack ➔Please check out our Sponsors : Try BlueChew FREE when you use our promo code MSCS at checkout--just pay $5 shipping. BlueChew.com, promo code MSCS to receive your first month FREE ➔ZBiotics: 15% off on your first order with code: MSCSMEDIA Go to https://sponsr.is/biotics_mscsmedia_0723 ➔MAGIC SPOON: https://www.magicspoon.com/MSCS to grab a variety pack and try it today! And be sure to use our promo code MSCS at checkout to save $5 off your order! ➔Hormone levels falling? Use MSCSMEDIA to get 25% off home test: https://trylgc.com/MSCSMEDIA ➔Manscaped: Get 20% Off and Free Shipping with the code MSCSMEDIA at https://Manscaped.com ➔Fiji: https://Fijiwater.com/mscs $5 off free shipping Unleash ➔Monster Energy: https://www.monsterenergy.com/us/mscsmscsmedia ➔Aura: See if any of your passwords have been compromised. Try 14 days for free: https://aura.com/MSCS Thank you to Aura Clips of all episodes released: https://www.instagram.com/mscsmedia | mscsmedia.com | https://www.reddit.com/r/mscsmedia ➔ Stay Connected With MSCS MEDIA on Spotify Exclusive: ALL ► https://spoti.fi/3zathAe (1st time watching a video podcast on Spotify when you hit play a settings pop-up will show, tap under the settings pop-up to watch the video playing.) ► All Links to MSCS MEDIA:https://allmylinks.com/mscsmedia Please support the show.
Blue Collar Black Listed - A Blue Collar Take on America's Political Disarray.
Anther one in the books. Please remember to share our show, rate it and subscribe for new episodes every Monday morning. Also you can email Captain Reverse at captinreverso@gmail.com
On this episode of DTC POD, Pontus joins Blaine to take an in-depth look at the world of ecommerce platforms and the players driving these marketplaces. We discuss the pros and cons of starting a brand, solving for inventory management, distributed sales and more. We also explore the potential of creating a platform-agnostic approach to creator led commerce, existing infrastructure, legacy solutions, opportunities for brands to leverage creator distribution, simplifying collaborations for creators, and more on where the industry is headed.Timestamps[00:02:39] Creator commerce rapidly growing; enablers of starting own brands; marketplace builders and enablers; decentralization, social curation, transparency, financial rewards.[00:07:20] Social-centric commerce enabled through Shopify, dropshipping of modern retail products.[00:11:08] Drop shipping, marketplaces, and curated marketplaces are terms used to describe online retailing.[00:13:35] Pontus started with interest in retail, studied Business and Business of Fashion, then worked in management consulting and start up accelerator incubator, Anther, leading to current project, Offscript.[00:16:06] Started with scrappy ecommerce for influencers, built integrations for ecommerce platforms, focused on working with creators to build marketplaces.[00:21:13] Build marketplace with decentralized user acquisition and existing integration to supply side or brands for network effects; single platform for storefront and marketplace technology for virality.[00:23:07] Marketplace Connectors: connect brands to other ecommerce platforms, such as Miracle and Walmart, or building one platform with checkout powered by Stripe.[00:28:37] Shopify and enablers enabling marketplace and distributed salesforce for creators, brands, and collaborative conversations.[00:35:17] Onboarding relevant brands for creators to sell through multiple creators using a simple app.[00:39:42] Creators with a niche can use their existing traffic to increase their revenue by introducing readers to a curated marketplace.Quotes00:07:20-00:10:19 The Rise of Decentralized, Social-Centric CommerceThe end customer is kind of struggling to say, find the product that someone has recommended and just as you're on to here, you can obviously use affiliate links and then you're directed away. But then that product gets out of stock or the link dies or the tracking has some issues and whatever it might be, So then the insight was like, why can't I just basically buy this product from the person that has inspired me to buy the product?"00:02:39- 00:05:49 Creator CommerceI think that ecommerce has still some innovation to tap into, especially in the west. If you compare to how the behaviors look in east, in the Asia and so on, it's much more catered around kind of individuals curation and trusting other peoples and recommendations and so on.Some Key takeaways from the show:1/ Starting out as a scrappy operation, Off Script has become a sophisticated platform that allows influencers to build their own marketplaces and sell products from brands they already have relationships with. The platform supports many of the world's most prominent ecommerce platforms and makes it easy for entrepreneurs, creators, curators and other communities to sell relevant products. Offscript has a niche focus, allowing them to work closely with creators and build the marketplaces for them. They also have a unique go to market approach to acquiring brands and creators for their platform.2/ Creator commerce is a rapidly growing industry, with enablers such as Pietra helping people to start their own brands. Poosh and Goop have paved the way for creating strong, community-centric ecommerce destinations. In the future, shopping is expected to be more decentralized and social, with shorter conversion funnels so customers can buy products they see on social media platforms quickly. Additionally, creators will likely receive more financial rewards, and customers will be able to find brands that match their values and preferences.Shownotes powered by castmagic---Past guests & brands on DTC Pod include Gilt, PopSugar, Glossier, MadeIN, Prose, Bala, P.volve, Ritual, Bite, Oura, Levels, General Mills, Mid Day Squares, Prose, Arrae, Olipop, Ghia, Rosaluna, Form, Uncle Studios & many more.Additional episodes you might like:• #175 Ariel Vaisbort - How OLIPOP Runs Influencer, Community, & Affiliate Growth• #184 Jake Karls, Midday Squares - Turning Your Brand Into The Influencer With Content• #205 Kasey Stewart: Suckerz- - Powering Your Launch With 300 Million Organic Views• #219 JT Barnett: The TikTok Masterclass For Brands• #223 Lauren Kleinman: The PR & Affiliate Marketing Playbook• #243 Kian Golzari - Source & Develop Products Like The World's Best Brands-----Have any questions about the show or topics you'd like us to explore further?Shoot us a DM; we'd love to hear from you.Want the weekly TL;DR of tips delivered to your mailbox?Check out our newsletter hereFollow us for content, clips, giveaways, & updates!DTCPod InstagramDTCPod TwitterDTCPod TikTokPontus Karlsson - Co-founder and CEO of Off ScriptRamon Berrios - CEO of Trend.ioBlaine Bolus - Co-Founder of Seated
This week's show is with Anthar Kharana Navarro, native from Ocaña in the north of Colombia, he is a music composer, sound healer and ceremonial leader of the Eagle and Condor Nations. Anthar is also a Sundancer and a member of the Native American Church. He started at an early age, guided by wise elders from his land and during the last 20 years of travel, Anthar have visited 16 countries, particularly active in the UK, leading retreats, workshops, conferences, ceremonies and concerts. Anthar is the director and founder of the Ancestral School in Colombia (Escuela Ancestral Colombia) and both Tribal Sound Healing and the Tambora Foundation in the UK and Colombia. He is also co-director of the first school of sound healing in Scotland ANSU School of Sound and the Ancestral Pathways School in England. In the last 19 years of traveling the world, Anthar has shared the wisdom and the connection between the Sacred Fire and the Ancestral Sound with the animal, mineral and plant kingdom. He leads traditional ceremonies, workshops, sacred music concerts, private healing sessions, conferences and retreats in various countries including Colombia, Chile, England, Scotland, Wales, Ibiza, USA, Poland, France, Portugal, Switzerland, Korea, Bali - Indonesia, Romania and Italy. In this show, Anthar and Lian explored how outside change begins with what's inside. We explored practices and ways of being that connect us with the old ways, how some people are here to be the bridges to the new, and the importance of connecting with our land and ancestors. I'd love to know what YOU think about this week's show. Let's carry on the conversation… please leave a comment below. What you'll learn from this episode: When we want to change the world, we can begin with ourselves… clean our own blood and we clean the river. What kind of seed are you? One that is here to spread prolifically now or one that's here to grow slowly, with the results of what you plant being something that your ancestors many generations from now will benefit from? I love how Anther spoke about the importance of connecting to our land and our ancestors - that we care about our relations and they care about us Resources and stuff that we spoke about: Anthar's Website: antharkharana.com Tribal Sound Healing Thank you for listening! There's fresh episode each week, if you subscribe then you'll get each new episode delivered to your phone every Tuesday (that way you'll never miss an episode): Subscribe on Apple Subscribe on Android Thank you! Lian & Jonathan
Ivan Law Law is best known for his book The Hollyhood Cover Up, which explores his ideas on the murders and controversies circling popular artists such as Eazy E, Tupac, and Bigge. Ivan dug up Suge Knight on Jimmy Kimmel talking about Eazy E, we compare the bullet holes in Tupacs car and Biggies truck. Extremely accurate in both, especially Tupac for someone leaving the Mike Tyson fight at midnight... We compare. Ivan is a pastor and a musician based in the United States. He currently works at one of the oldest churches in Los Angeles – Travelers Rest Missionary Baptist Church. Stay In Touch With Ivan Law: Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/@monsterbeats Blog Including Suge Knight On Jimmy Kimmel Talking About Eazy E: https://robocopsong.blogspot.com/2016/01/dr-dre-luckiest-man-in-world-or-killer.html Website: https://monstersbeatsofficial.com/ https://sway.office.com/mdLqvWHpj98Ohhoo?ref=Link https://sway.office.com/qRiu0EOQpAv8WGql?ref=Link https://sway.office.com/Yz48ZJFg0pZSh3UL?ref=Link (Hip Hop Homicides) of Holly Hood : Who Killed Tupac Amaru Shakur and Christopher Biggie Smalls Wallace - Kindle edition by Law, Ivan , Law, Ivan. Professional & Technical Kindle eBooks @ Amazon.com. https://www.reddit.com/r/monsterbeatspress/ Pre-order https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/holly-hood-who-killed-tupac-amaru-shakur-and-christopher-biggie-smalls-wallace-ivan-law/1141304364?ean=2940161120651 ➔Please check out our Sponsors ➔Aura: See if any of your passwords have been compromised. Try 14 days for free: https://aura.com/MSCS Thank you to Aura ➔Horome levels falling? Use MSCSMEDIA to get 25% off home test: https://trylgc.com/MSCSMEDIA ➔Fiji: https://Fijiwater.com/mscs $5 off free shipping Unleash ➔Monster Energy: https://www.monsterenergy.com/us/mscs
O destino do bibliófilo é terrível: tudo o que toca se transforma naquilo que ele tanto preza, O LIVRO. Filmes, música, mesmo objetos cotidianos se convertem em grimórios malditos, em manuscritos perdidos, nas formas retangulares, divididas em páginas preenchidas por caracteres compreensíveis ou não. Esse destino terrível, contudo, reserva algo como um “plot twist”: ao transformar todos objetos em livros, extrai disso um estranho, requintado deleite — a transfiguração dos prosaicos e tenebrosos objetos de consumo em algo diferente, singular, cuja essência é outra. Mesmo que tudo isso dure apenas um instante, vale a pena. RARIDADES INUSUAIS, nova série do podcast da Raphus Press, celebra tais transformações. Objetos de hoje: “The Anther's Fire”, Autumn Richardson (Corbel Stone Press, 2020); série incompleta “The Doomed House of Abraxas” (Mount Abraxas, 2021-2022); coleção de chapbooks Zagava (incompleta; de 2020-2021). “L'Ymagier” no site Gallica: https://gallica.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb32894159s/date. Nossa nova campanha no Catarse: https://www.catarse.me/hierophantes1 Esta série não seria possível sem o apoio dos leitores de nossa editora na campanha recorrente RES FICTA, que traz periodicamente aos leitores surpresas magníficas, impressas ou em formato digital. Link: https://www.catarse.me/res_ficta Nosso podcast também está disponível nas seguintes plataformas: - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/4NUiqPPTMdnezdKmvWDXHs - Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-da-raphus-press/id1488391151?uo=4 - Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy8xMDlmZmVjNC9wb2RjYXN0L3Jzcw%3D%3D Apoie o canal: https://apoia.se/podcastdaraphus. Ou adquira nossos livros em nosso site: http://raphuspress.weebly.com. Dúvidas sobre envio, formas de pagamento, etc.: http://raphuspress.weebly.com/contact.html.
Ilya Sutskever, a computer scientist and statistician at Google, discusses how his atheism has impacted his understanding of religion.
Anther interesting Star Trek episode to talk about, Spock Amok!
Chris Fury and Traci talk with Popcorn Da Zombie from The Trapnerds Podcast. We reflect on the impact Nichelle Nichols left on the world besides her role on Star Trek, an update on the Breonna Taylor news, Brittney Griner, The implosion of news from Warner Bros./Discovery and their ongoing shake up, Wakanda Forever trailer and more!! EOazCbGVD1VxF7Yy50F1
Chris Fury and Traci talk with Popcorn Da Zombie from The Trapnerds Podcast. We reflect on the impact Nichelle Nichols left on the world besides her role on Star Trek, an update on the Breonna Taylor news, Brittney Griner, The implosion of news from Warner Bros./Discovery and their ongoing shake up, Wakanda Forever trailer and more!! EOazCbGVD1VxF7Yy50F1
Anther shootout on Durban's roads has left two suspected robbers dead. The men were killed in a gun battle with police and private security on the M13.
Anther superior reading of a truly fantastic book.Lots more over at our lovely website too!www.tale-teller.club
Anther superior reading of a truly fantastic book.Lots more over at our lovely website too!www.tale-teller.club
Aleandro Solari – Senza te Alex Wellkers – What keeps me alive Steve Markoff & Patricia Lazzara – Nights in White Satin Chris St John with Leah Haley - I Just Knew (Wedding Version) Pete Miller "A Light Out There" Skip Martin – People Get Ready – Musicians Come Together on Anther of Hope Steph Delz - 19-Ninety Darrell Kelley - You Gotta Live Taylor McClaine - Hustle & Thrive Los Musick x P.A.T. feat 4-IZE – Too much fire Tommie Leveal - As You See Me Walking TiTo Esposito – Good Riddance (Time of your life) Matthew Schultz – Can't Stop Gary Pratt - You Gotta Jump In HeIstheArtist "Colored" John McDonough "Love You Just for You" Lady Redneck "Come thou Fount of Every Blessing" Lorenzo Gabanizza feat. Jeff Christie "I am the Only One" Tia McGraff "Go Your Own Way" Ed Roman "I Have a Dream" Sofia Martynova – Diva Sarantos "Looking Up at the World" Ananda Xenia Shakti "Cosmic Quiver" Miss Freddye "Something To Believe In" See Your Shadow "Missing West Virginia" Deborah Beccari – Memorie Melissa Pettignano – Blessed Lord Jesus Luigui Bleand – Gomelo President Hill – I Decided Aleandro Solari – La regola del cuore Claire Odogbo – Robed in Righteousness Alin Dragu - Dance, dance Anthony Casuccio – Love is the Answer
Listen to Tales from the Break Room today and discover the horrifying things people experience at work! https://pod.link/1621075170 Experience Destination Terror today and explore terrifying and haunted locations all over the world! https://pod.link/1622394203 Rocky mountain monsters and creepy monsters under the bed - Today's episode is packed with assorted terrors which are sure to keep you up ALL night long. Follow and Rate Tales from the Break Room please! SPOTIFY: https://open.spotify.com/show/4BGHdnQuX6frU5SfKXCi0T APPLE: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/tales-from-the-break-room/id1621075170 OTHER: https://pod.link/1621075170 Join EERIECAST PLUS to unlock ad-free episodes and support this show! https://www.eeriecast.com/plus SCARY STORIES TIMESTAMPS (Automatic Ad Placement May Change start times of stories) 0:00 INTRO 1:07 The Quiet Being of Wulf Creek from oM3RLINo 5:33 Regretful Words from IamMWH 22:10 Creature in the Clearing from koalas.co 26:34 The Thing Outside my Window from Buffalo411 28:42 It Lived in the Trees Behind my Neighbor's House from Travis the Hunter 30:58 Cabin in the Rocky Mountains of Albuquerque (Manzanos) 33:50 The Paranormal and Unexplained Happenings in my Life from Hmm_ok 41:05 Scratching from Under the Bed from Frankie G. 47:01 The Hitchhiker from Anther. M. 50:14 Screaming Sue from Marz 52:30 Was That a Leprechaun from Silver Bullet54 56:11 The Shadow Person from Dark_Hei 1:00:36 Early Morning Encounter from Sunshine CREDITS: Music by me aka Dark Music! LINKS: Join my DISCORD: https://discord.gg/5Wj9RqTR3w Follow us on Spotify! https://open.spotify.com/show/3mNZyXkaJPLwUwcjkz6Pv2 Follow and Review us on iTunes! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/darkness-prevails-podcast-true-horror-stories/id1152248491 Submit Your Story Here: https://www.darkstories.org/ Get Darkness Prevails Podcast Merchandise! https://teespring.com/stores/darknessprevails Subscribe on YouTube for More Stories! https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCh_VbMnoL4nuxX_3HYanJbA?sub_confirmation=1 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Daniel Bohn – Divinity MonkeyRat – Isolation Sam Bucca – You'll Find Oneo Fakind - Life in the Background Makram – Girl Trent Peltz - Crossing Bridges Steve Andrews – They say Josy B – BTW A Lone Acacia – Hemispheres Pulse Park – Antibody Emma Rose – Flawless Rayzr feat. Mike Walla – Ousside Metal Refectory – Mainstream Sano Hill - Starting Over Deborah Beccari feat. Piermatteo Carattoni – Amici d'Infanzia Giacali – Uccelli senza ali Savet – Tornadi Sfocati Steve Markoff & Patricia Lazzara – Nights in White Satin Terry Isaiah Johnson & The Flamingos ft. Theresa Trigg – Friday Night Chris St John with Leah Haley - I Just Knew (Wedding Version) Alec Blake – I Believed in You Lance Mitchell – Dance Phillip Sanders-If I didn't love you girl Pete Miller "A Light Out There" Skip Martin – People Get Ready – Musicians Come Together on Anther of Hope Steph Delz - 19-Ninety Saitta – Bedda Alin Dragu - Dance, dance Jean-Christophe Moroni – L'amore è irrazionale Anthony Casuccio - Love is the Answer
Alberto Mons - Hanno tutti ragione Aleandro Solari – Bullo omofobo razzista Alessandro Tolone Feat. Federica Tallinucci – Verità in bilico nell'aria Aleandro Solari – La regola del cuore Aleandro Solari – Senza te Alex Wellkers – Maybe we Marry Phil Joseph – Babe you are mine Summer Mix Bluesex – Barcollo Jerry Impini - Been Bad for Me (Extended Version) Bernadett – Redemption Lisa G. Allen – Big Momma Gabriele Saro - Can't Fight The Feeling Matthew Schultz – Can't Stop Carlito Panama - OG CP 7154 Chris St John – Hold On Steve Markoff & Patricia Lazzara – Collide 360 Fuego Music feat. Shaken Sanity - Dad's pledge (Country) Isabella Switon – Dall'altra parte del telefono Lance Mitchell – Dance Sung Eun Choi – Let me stop Sung Eun Choi – Come Bless Parco Rodriguez – Powerful Lance Mitchell – Poison Phillip Sanders-If I didn't love you girl Pete Miller "There's A Light Out There" Skip Martin – People Get Ready – Musicians Come Together on Anther of Hope Ed Roman "I Have a Dream" Hannyta "Fluctuating" Sofia Martynova – Diva Alin Dragu - Dance, dance Jean-Christophe Moroni – L'amore è irrazionale Anthony Casuccio - Love is the Answer
Bless Parco Rodriguez – Powerful Lance Mitchell – Poison Phillip Sanders-If I didn't love you girl Skip Martin – People Get Ready – Musicians Come Together on Anther of Hope Ed Roman "I Have a Dream" Hannyta "Fluctuating" Vuola "Laugh Vivid Often Adore Unity" Lady Redneck "Pray for Peace" Sarantos "Looking Up at the World" Tennessee Outlaw Country "Ghost Train" Ananda Xenia Shakti "Cosmic Quiver" Miss Freddye "Something To Believe In" Steph Delz - 19-Ninety See Your Shadow "Missing West Virginia" Deborah Beccari – Memorie Melissa Pettignano – Blessed Lord Jesus Luigui Bleand – Gomelo Luckie Boy – Oceans Deep Luca Sammartino - Scintilla e benzina Grand Bite - Long Live Rock & Roll Lance Mitchell – Litty Lior Holzman - If I Hadn't Met You Legacy City x Spazoutbeatz - The Greeting Louise Cappi "Keep That Dream Alive" Jerry Bogan – I Promised her a honky tonk Jerry Impini – Beauty Queen MOVIE VERSION Gabby Gabanna – Ballers Club Alin Dragu - Dance, dance Jean-Christophe Moroni – L'amore è irrazionale Anthony Casuccio - Love is the Answer Carlo - Il tuo sorriso in un cassetto Bisturi - Comete
Feeling indicators, how they can give you misinformation. But feelings will tell us stories, labels, meanings that are wrong I'm running errands and going by Garmin directions and I'm closing up old work relationships. Thank you for following along with me on my topic of a work adventure. I'm transitioning from one boss to a new job and work place. I'm glad to be closing the chapter of dog sitting to. We all go through transition and change. Train your feelings to want healthy , wholesome things from wholesome people. Be careful how feelings can give you a false truth, that are negative. People in your life may be that source of false truth , they tell you you are all bad, when you really NOT. Anther thing, when you speak bad, or meanness about someone, or something. That goes against the law of attraction. Like attracts like, what every you fixate on, you will get more of. If you talk bad about people, that type of "bad" will come to you. Because it's like you are calling MORE of those type of things you talk bad about. I hope the podcast episode helps where my description is lacking. I compare the way I was raised up on how to be or not be supportive, I describe when I'm needing a recharge, I go to depression and that's my indicator to self isolate. Is that how it is for you? Could you do a podcast? The world may need your specific story style, your story. Think about it. I know my mz.selfluv gave me that same advice. Come join me on the drive back home, you might see yourself in me or someone else you might recognize. Hugs my right time friends!! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/yolanda254/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/yolanda254/support
Dervilla McGowan had always loved science, ever since she was a kid. She went on to study microbiology at uni and even completed a PhD. But at the end of her studies, she realised a career in academia wasn't for her… and instead she wanted to use her scientific skills to make craft gin! Derv and her hubby launched Anther in 2016, an award-winning gin brand that celebrates Australian botanicals and employs mostly women. More recently, they built their own distillery and bar at the historic woollen mills in North Geelong. Derv is now a leader in Australia's craft distillation industry and is passionate about supporting and empowering more women to join her. In this episode, Derv chats with host Jacqui Ooi about: · What drew her to study science and why she eventually gave it up· How her early days as a bartender in London developed her palate and interest in spirits· The process of making a career change in her 40s and starting a business with no formal training· Why she loves making gin and championing women in the distillation industry· Her best tips and recommendations for aspiring career changers and business owners For more inspiring career change stories, tips and resources, sign up to our newsletter: https://whatshedidnext.com.au/ DERV'S RECOMMENDATIONS Read, listen or watch:Brené Brown https://brenebrown.com/ Inspired by:Marie CurieBrittany HigginsGrace Tame CONNECT WITH DERV Visit her website: https://www.anther.com.au/ CREDITS Host and producer: Jacqui OoiAssociate producer: Catherine Cavill Join us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/whatshedidnextpodcast/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/whatshedidnextpodcastLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/what-she-did-next-podcast What She Did Next acknowledges the Traditional Custodians of the Land on which this podcast is made, the Wodi Wodi people of the Dharawal nation. We pay our respects to their Elders, past, present and emerging. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
John Leslie Hulcombe – Sanctuary Wotts – Domino My Friend The Chimpanzee – I Love This Place Liedogs – Sea Forest Prince of Sweden – Garrison Lane Maejis Mind – Watch The Rain groan room – tesco roof Frank Bramble – Spaced Out DAMIEN – Melbourne Afternoon Retrograde Conversations – Midnight Alfonso Carabina - Destini da riscrivere Giuseppe Palmeri – Improvviso Avalanche The Architect – Crazy Zarbo – They Lie Vyola – Dirty Love Vineet – Turning Back Time TiTo Esposito – Good Riddance (Time of your life) The Dream Logic – I'll Be Back Right Back Stephen Wrench – Plow Spooky Action at a Distance – Every Sensation Vineet – So New Robert Minott – Yuh Mek Me Feel Good Robert Minott – You Are Richard Lynch "Radio Friend" Skip Martin – People Get Ready – Musicians Come Together on Anther of Hope Francie Conway – Peace, Love & Rock n roll President Hill – I Decided Alin Dragu - Dance, dance Anthony Casuccio - Love is the Answer Bisturi - Comete Carlo - Il tuo sorriso in un cassetto
for some reason during Dec and Jan, it was hard to convince people to join. so I tapped my father's shoulder and said ok anther round. so enjoySupport the show (https://www.patreon.com/The_Josh_Bolton_Show)
sent $$$ this week to Sac Punks With Lunch for rain relief.instagram.com/p/CXulg7Ko6Ur“Forecast shows that there is going to be lots of rain this week. We’re assembling to get tools and pallets for our neighbors to elevate their homes, to prevent them from flooding. We are fundraising for camp reinforcements before this weeks storm (platform making from the pallets we got with the uhaul @sacramento_soup and @sacramento.homeless.union helped us rent) to provide materials for a sleeping pad project @greatgreensea is doing. We are still needing some materials and lots of funds to get them! No help needed with building, but we may need some helpers to distribute! Please consider donating to our Venmo / Cashapp: @SacPWL and add "rain relief” to memo. Thank you @sacramento_soup and @sacramento.homeless.union for helping fund the uhaul rental, allowing us to collect about 40 pallets to distribute.“DOWNLOAD RECORDINGsubscribe to the podcast here: http://feeds.feedburner.com/5432fun(intro by omar)Personality Cult "Heart Attack” STMuch Band with Katie Weissman “Hot Cider” Much Quintet Vol. 1 and 2Violent Bloom “You Have to Say” Not Any ThingAmerican Nudism “Future 5-0” NEGATIVE SPACEVACATION “Taking Out The Trash” Mouth Sounds #2699Rob Magill “Rhythm and Roll is on the T.V., The Radio” Songs For Healthy Women Slash Sick BoysSharkmuffin “Receptionist” Gamma GardeningMARBLED EYE “Open Hand” LEISUREShannen Moser “Joanna” I’ll SingPlant Legs “Day Gloom” Plant MatterStop Clicking “Brain Right” First Banned on MarsThe Coltranes “Firefly” White HagAnther “Ready or Not” Ready or NotFuture star “honk honk” i went home and all i got pt 3Primo! “A City Stair” Primo Amicigenerifus “And of an Era” And of an EraMiserable “High” Loverboy / Dog DaysTracey Read “All the Wrong Shoes” Everything Is RealStiff Love “Out of Control” Attitudes/Out of ControlHuman People “Black Flowers” Butterflies Drink Turtle TearsData “Stupid Horse” Invisible WitnessesSonoda “go” karaoke lifeYoung Jesus “Bell” The Whole Thing Is Just There
Anther lesson in Jamaican Patwah. Obeah is an occult practice. Joan, my views: Obeah and all that (joan-myviews.blogspot.com)
A quick climb to the top, having success in a short amount of time other comics work decades to achieve being at the top of your game but none of it being able to overcome the disease called mental illness. Anther great gone before his time and the world left with the question what would he have gone on to do?
I guess you could call it bitter-sweet news. Jack Michaels joins Amy & JJ to discuss the recent exodus of FM Redhawks players. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Recorded at KDNK --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/carbondale/message
Anther great episode of Lion and the Truth with your host Reuben And Jaskirt as they take you through the trip of life.
Matthew Cox - Sentenced to 26 Years - Movie War Dogs Lawsuit - Dateline Interview - MSCS MEDIA #81Matthew Cox - Full Video Interview : https://bit.ly/3nhyfmW MSCS MEDIA #81 Matthew Cox returns. Matthew explains his massive 26-year sentence for mortgage fraud. Matthew was interviewed with Dateline by Keith Morrison, everyone loves Keith Morrison, well Matthew explains how the interview went the edits and angles they played to be able to cut the show up into the way they wanted it to be portrayed. Matthew wrote the script for the blockbuster movie War Dogs, which was stolen from him and has been sued by Universal for years, Matthew gives an update on that situation and in detail explains.Matthew B Cox is known as the Kings Of Mortgage Fraud, Bonnie & Clyde. He was on the Americas Most wanted list for 3 years, plastic surgery, hair implants, and more while on the run.We go through Matthews's art, which is as good as anyone by far. I also get introduced to Face Swap that was interesting. Thanks again as always to the fraudster, alternative motive, genius, talented and he wants to be a great man, Matthew Cox! Anther thanks to Matt primarily and Joe Rogan for getting me into YouTube, no Matt no MSCS MEDIA.Check out Matt:Books:https://amzn.to/3gyD4XqOnce a Gun Runner...: The Efraim Diveroli Memoir ( The actual War Dogs Story )The Program: How a Con Man Survived the Federal Bureau of Prisons’ Cult of RDAPShark in the Housing Pool ( Matthews actual story ) Frank Amodeo, It's Insanity: The Bizarre Story of a Bipolar Megalomaniac's Insane Plan for Total World Domination ( we did a podcast all about this ) Bent: How a Homeless Teen Became one of the Cybercrime Industry’s Most Prolific Counterfeiters (John Boseak)And many more IG: COXPOPART (Matthews Art which you can purchase through DM it is good) https://bit.ly/3esifdxYouTube: COX POP ART - https://bit.ly/3azZHqJIG: INSIDE TRUE CRIME - https://bit.ly/3nbXNBMYouTube: MATTHEW COX & INSIDE TRUE CRIME - https://bit.ly/3gyE6mgFollow me on:Please subscribe: https://bit.ly/30rUAEdlinktr.ee: https://linktr.ee/mscsmediaIG: https://www.instagram.com/mscsmeida/Reddit: https://www.reddit.com/r/mscsmedia/FB: https://www.facebook.com/mscsmediafirm/Spotify: https://spoti.fi/2RyscyoApple Podcast: https://apple.co/3gm6QP9Website: https://www.mscsmedia.com/KW: matthew cox,matthewcox,matthew b cox,mattcox,matthewbcoxtruecrime,matthew b cox true crime,matthew cox fraud,mattcoxfraud,matthew cox podcast,sentenced to 26 years,movie war dogs lawsuit,dateline interview,matthew cox american greed,koncrete podcast matthew cox,matthew Cox returns,mscs media,mscs media youtube,true crime,matt cox,matthew cox dateline interview,mscs media matt cox,matt cox interview,true crime stories,true crime youtubers,john boseak
Anther big week on the show! Andy Lee joined Scudda to chat about The Cube, Scudda sorted out the logistics for the convertible car he won in a wager and Frank from The Mallee Fowl dropped by!
She wants another baby. He does not. Now what?
We discuss all things from this weeks fusion, from the tag team championship match, to Filthy island and More. We also welcome "The Aerial Artist" Zenshi to the show to talk all things him , Mlw, Leo Rush and More. As Always Enjoy this one And don't forget to check out my socials, FACEBOOK: straight talk wrestling INSTAGRAM: @straighttalkwrestling TWITTER: @_Straighttalk and my Merch on: https://www.prowrestlingtees.com/related/straighttalkwrestling.html
Happy New God’s richest blessings --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
This week was pretty fun, we have had a pretty heavy flow of athletes on the show lately. But we love to show the diverse talent of all our friends across the spectrum. This week we had an extremely talented, and funny friend on the show. Preston Burroughs. Preston is a cinematographer for various lifestyle companies and huge action sports brands. Yet Preston also brings a life of being in commercials on TV, Holds a SAG Card and is also a Stand Up Comedian. We love sitting down with various backgrounds, and hear peoples stories, Preston definitely brought a lot of humor to this episode, with great traveling stories, acting stories and becoming a master of his art. We are looking forward to a amazing Vlog with Preston in the weeks to come. - This is an 18+ episode Explicit Content - Be sure to follow @justanotherfailurepod on Instagram, Just Another Failure Podcast on Facebook, Subscribe on youtube, spotify, apple and anchor.fm and where ever you Find your podcast. Also Follow @prestonburroughs on instagram, @fronzy686, @matty_sill - You can also support us a few different ways, Head over to www.justanotherfailure.com and grab one of our latest Tee Shirts, Also you can head over to Anchor.fm and support us for as little as a Dollar. A month. - One of our main goals is giving back to our followers, So when we partner with a brand, we want you guys to get a hook up as welll. We currently have a few promo codes running with some amazing brands. Head over to manscaped.com use promo code "fail" at check out to receive 20% off plus free shipping on your orders! Make sure you follow them instagram @manscaped. Anther one of our awesome brands we have Partner with is Muertos Coffee, Amazing fire fighter owned coffee company out of winters california. Better yet every time you buy from Muertos 5% of there proceeds goes back to firefighters an our first responders. Use Promo code "Justanotherfailure" at check out to receive 15% off!!! Follow them @muertoscoffeeco on instagram. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/justanotherfailure/support
#350 Busy, busy but not busy enough to not think about what 2021 holds.You can find me, Werner Puchert on LinkedIn and Twitter.
Hugs that will make it all better ! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kristen-haws/support
Welcome to the Two Hundred and Nineteenth episode of Daily Daf Differently. In this episode, Rabbi Joshua Heller looks at Masechet Eruvin Daf 64. Is it fair to prefer one teaching over another? Is it right to say this Jewish text is more attractive than other? Anther major focus- may one drink before praying or […]
Welcome to the Two Hundred and Nineteenth episode of Daily Daf Differently. In this episode, Rabbi Joshua Heller looks at Masechet Eruvin Daf 64. Is it fair to prefer one teaching over another? Is it right to say this Jewish text is more attractive than other? Anther major focus- may one drink before praying or […]
Rest In Peace Chadwick Boseman #wakandaforever YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC7_k3f8xBvYZyZhgS7QBjkA?view_as=subscriber Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/the_throwdownsports_podcast/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/ThrowDownSport Augey's Twitch to talk to him live: https://www.twitch.tv/shotsheart --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/throwdownsports/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/throwdownsports/support
Hello, brilliant entrepreneur. It's Tash Corbin here, and welcome to another episode of the Heart-Centred Business podcast. This is episode number 206, which means that all the relevant show notes and links will be available for you over at tashcorbin.com/206. In today's episode of the podcast, I'm going to be sharing with you some signs that your niche is too big and how to refine your niche so you can scale your business with ease. Let's jump in! It is such a common question that people ask me, especially when they are in startup or wanting to scale their online business: "Why does my niche have to be so specific and so narrow?" You've probably heard some of those lovely catchphrases before, such as “the riches are in the niches” or one I like to use, “if you want to scale your reach, you need to know your niche.” These statements are trying to explain why niching is so important and why it's such an important part of online business in particular, but they don't give you a lot of detail. I want you to explain first and foremost why niching is so powerful when you are starting to grow your and scale your business online, and share some signs that your niche is just too big. Your niche is “whom you serve.” When I ask people what their niche is, sometimes they'll talk about being a kinesiologist, or helping people with social media, or being a Facebook specialist. Those things may be your service, but your niche is the specific group of people you focus on when you are marketing. It's important to understand that niching is not about who you could help with your products and services because, for a lot of people, their modality or service or product could help a wide array of people. Just because you can help everyone doesn't mean that your marketing should be that broad as well. So your niche is who you focus on when you are marketing your products and services. The more specific we make this, the more resonant your messaging can be. If you try and create messaging that speaks to anyone who could benefit from this, then it isn’t resonant for anyone in particular. A great example of this would be if you are a coach and you offer a one month coaching package that could help anyone who wants to make a life change – including leaving a partner, changing careers, going on a health kick, or starting a business. With this in mind, let’s compare the difference if you were to craft two ads: The first one says, “Do you want to make a big change in your life? Well, I can help you with transition coaching and here is how it can help you with that.” And then you craft another offer that says, “Are you a woman who wants to change careers, worried you're just jumping from one bad job to another, and you want to make sure you do your career change wholeheartedly to maximise the results?” Now you might assume that a woman who is wanting to change careers would see both ads and resonate with both because she fits in the broad category of wanting to change as well as the very specific category of wanting to change careers. But the specific ad is the one that's actually going to stop and grab her attention because it's speaking to a specific experience. Put yourself in that person's shoes, seeing these two separate ads that look like they're from two separate providers. One says I can help you with any change you want to make. And another says, you want to change careers, but you're worried you’re making the wrong decision. Which ad would you be most drawn to? It's the one that's hyper-specific. Not only is the one you're most drawn to, but from a pricing perspective, generalist coaching versus someone who really specialises in people changing their careers, people will pay more to work with the specialist. This is where niching is so powerful. By trying to speak to everyone, you deeply resonate with no one. Clients that you do get tend to see you as a generalist, and therefore it's more difficult to charge premium prices and be seen as an expert in the market, even if you are the best coach in the whole wide world! You will not be able to charge as much as someone who's just starting out as a coach but decides to go really specific. So you can see that it's really powerful, not only for your marketing, but also for your business growth and business model, and the way you’re perceived online. What are some of the signs that maybe your niche is too broad? 1. How you describe your niche. When you try to describe your niche, do you find yourself putting “slashes” in there? I actually have a ban on slashes when we do niching work in my programs. It's a little bit of a joke because people try and find the sneakiest ways to get a slash in there. But if you say, “it's men or women,” or you say “maybe they're going through this or they might be going through that,” it’s just not specific, powerful niching. Even just by paying attention to the way you describe your niche helps you to see whether you’re being specific and clear enough, or are still just a bit unsure and trying to hedge your bets! 2. Can you specify your niche quickly and easily? You should be able to sum up your niche in five key decisions, and I'm going to give you those five key decisions in this podcast episode. If you are asked what your niche is and you give a broad sweeping statement like “busy moms,” that's not a niche! Or if you end up spending a few minutes trying to explain it, then chances are you aren't 100% clear, and you don't have a specific enough niche. 3. You use irrelevant demographics to narrow it down because you're not willing to narrow down in the most important ways. A lot of people, when asked to explain their niche, will say things like, “it's women aged between 35 and 42.” They believe this is the way to get specific for their niche. However, age range isn't a big influence on the way you market your products and services. Remember, your niche is whom you focus on when you're marketing your products and services. If it's not relevant, then don't include it as a demographic. Anther common niching misfire is using descriptions like, “she does yoga every day.” This happens when you make up a picture of this person, and that’s what you see, so you think it’s a niche. If you’re using weird niching descriptors that actually aren't relevant, then I would say your niche isn't specific enough. Instead, I recommend that you niche through three layers. The first layer is the demographic layer, and within that layer, there are two important decisions you need to make: women or men, and do they work for themselves, someone else, or are not working. None of the other demographic decisions matter unless they're relevant to your services, so I wouldn't worry about them. The second layer of niching is psychographics. This includes their goals and dreams, their personality traits, etc. And then the third layer is a word that I totally made up, which is sensor graphics – meaning their five senses telling them what their lived experience is. I've also got five key questions or decisions you need to make about your niching that address those three layers in the most critical spaces. I will get to that at the end of this podcast episode! 4. You’re not getting an “oh my goodness yes” from your audience. You want to create the feeling that you know their situation so well it’s almost like you were peeking in their window last night. Almost like you know them better than they know themselves. That kind of feeling is totally possible when you have a really specific niche. It helps people feel that you are the expert who is best to help them because you deeply understand exactly what they are experiencing right now. That is the power of niching. When I'm working with people, and they tell me they've got an issue with their marketing or their offers aren't selling or they don't know how to craft offers, or they don't know how to talk about their work or they're struggling with their messaging, the first place I go is niche. If you’re experiencing any issues with your messaging, your offers, the way you market, getting more reach, getting better conversions - start with reviewing your niche! Check that it’s specific enough, because chances are it's not. And most likely that is what's causing issues at the other layers of your business. By the way, you don't have to tell people what your niche is. It doesn’t have to be public, it’s just what determines your messaging and your offers. That is where you create resonance. Talking about a woman who's aged in her late 30s, and lives in such and such, and has her own business, and blah, blah, blah – this is not what creates the feeling that you understand me. It’s about actually crafting messaging and offers through the lens of knowing what that specific niche is that you're speaking to. So here are the five decisions that you need to make. Decision number one is gender. This can be contentious for people because you think you can help both men and women. But remember, your niche is who you focus on when you are marketing. The way you market to men is very different from the way you market to women. Now, just a little side note here, as I am an intersectional feminist. In relation to gender identity, it doesn't necessarily need to be "born as a man" or "born as a woman." So when I am identifying my niche, it's people who resonate with feeling mostly female, or mostly women, and / or non-binary. That is my descriptor, and I use womxn with an x as a way of clarifying that for myself. I don't necessarily go out and share that publicly, but that is my descriptor. You don’t need to go out immediately and say, I work with women or I work with men. I just want you to make the decision when you are marketing. Choose whether you are going to be focused on niching to men or niching to women. And if you niche to women, and a man comes along and wants your help and you want to work with him, you can. But that doesn't mean you then need to broaden your niche. Decision number two is job status. Again, this is critical in your demographics because of how it frames your messaging and your marketing. The job status decisions relate to whether this person has their own business or works for someone else or is not working. You need to make a decision of one of those three things for niching. Decision number three is a trait. This is a long-lasting, permanent personality trait. You want to create a business with marketing and messaging that attracts the kind of people you want to hang out with and that you want to help. That trait might be extroversion, introversion, people who are hyper generous, or it could be people who are deeply creative. People who are colourful people, or are deeply spiritual, are deep thinkers, or they surround themselves with hundreds of hundreds of people. Think about the kinds of traits of people you like hanging out with - it doesn't necessarily need to be related to your business. For example, if you're a parenting coach, you could choose a personality trait of raging extrovert - it doesn't need to be specific to the work that you do. Maybe they sell eco-friendly products, and that makes you really want to hang out with them. It may make them more open to your messaging. The trait that I chose is people who are really generous, people who give almost to a fault! I don't necessarily go out there and put it in my messaging. But when I craft my messaging for offers, or choose the types of podcast episodes to create, or the type of language to use when discussing my products and services, I really want to speak to people in that space - the giving type people. That means the majority of people who come to work with me are in that space, not because I said you have to be a giver to work with me, but because my messaging really resonates with those types of people. It also means that it's a really great space to hang out in when you join my programs. And I absolutely love and adore everyone that I work with. They fit the other decisions that I've made, and so it's really easy for me to help and serve them. But we're all these beautiful givers, and it's just this really gorgeous connected community-driven space, and it makes my business a joy. Decision four is their priority goal you can help them to achieve. If your ideal client has a number one priority goal they're trying to achieve, and you can help them achieve that, start focusing on the core thing that's important to them. For my ideal clients, they want more clients, right? They want to make more sales. Yes, their business is more heart-centred and more aligned. But the core of why they want to work with me is because they want their business to be more successful. They want more paying clients, they want to serve more people. If I were to talk about creating a business with purpose, and sales that don’t feel sleazy, and all those sorts of things, without getting to the point of you making more money and getting more clients, then I'm just speaking around the periphery, and not getting to the core priority. That is the one thing my ideal client is looking for. Ultimately, you need to get to the core of your ideal client’s priority. If their priority goal is to lose weight and you're talking about getting more energy, you are speaking at the periphery. If their priority goal is to make sales online and have a really simple, easy to use website, and you're talking about user experience and SEO, you're not getting to the point of what they want. There's a difference between your what your ideal client’s goal is, what their top priority goal is, (in their words), and what you can see is what they really need. Decision number five is establishing why they don't have it yet. For my ideal client, they want to be making more sales online. They really, really want to be serving more people. But there are so many things they need to do that it feels like marketing is too hard. See how simple and straightforward that is? It might be that your ideal client wants to lose weight, but they can't stick with any plan that they ever pick up. Or your ideal client wants to have a really easy to use website, but they don't have the budget to pay for a fancy-pants web developer. Or they want to grow their reach on Facebook but think they need a $10,000 a month Facebook ads budget so they're just waiting till they have the budget. Or it might be that your ideal client wants to feel more aligned with their soul's purpose. You can see how the priority goal and why they haven't achieved it yet are so intertwined. When you're talking about the challenge, don’t talk about them "not knowing where to start," because if you are focused on trying to attract people who haven't even bothered to google it yet, then you're going to attract nightmare clients. Really think about why she is saying she can't get it. Why is she saying she hasn't achieved it? Why is she saying she's not there yet? Because when you really deeply analyse that conversation and that part of your niching decision, that is where the gold is. That is really where the juicy niching gold lies. Okay, so here are the five decisions again: gender, job status, personality trait, priority goal, and why they haven't got it yet. You can see when you make those five core decisions for your niche, you're hyper-specific. Imagine how much easier it would be for you to craft resonant messaging and offers that convert when you made those five decisions. If you are finding yourself in natural resistance, remember - it's just, for now, it's not forever. Even just try an experiment for a couple of months. What if for just a couple of months, you completely focused on this specific niche. Just see what happens. Trust me, it is so much easier, and your business grows so much faster. So if you would like to review that and make some more decisions about your niche to get 100% clear, and learn how to translate that into resonant messaging and offers, I have a super juicy offer for you. It’s my Fast-Track Your Start-Up training. Even when you've been in business for a while, if you are still not making those consistent sales, and you're struggling to articulate what it is you do, or you're struggling to craft offers that really resonate with people, I want you to go and watch this training. It will help you to see where you might have gaps in the foundations of your business, and get those plugged so that you can fast track the sales and the income you're bringing in in your business. It's available here: https://tashcorbin.com/fasttrack. And if you have any questions or "aha" moments, make sure you come over to the Heart-Centred Soul Driven Entrepreneurs group, and use the #podcastaha. Make sure you let me know you’ve been listening to podcast episode number 206! Until next time, I cannot WAIT to see you SHINE.
Anther podcast from Indulis, sharing what l’ve been up to last week.
Sebastian Reaburn is the owner of Australian gin distillery, Anther. Reusable face masks are here - https://bit.ly/QTMasks - Please note: the recording quality isn't always to our network standard - instead, we're focused on distributing information from those affected as quickly as possible, to find solutions together.
Ever wondering how you can become one of the people that can wake up at 5am with no issue? This podcast is about the morning's and how having a morning routine can set the tone for the day. But I think that we all know this, we have seen it time and time again. The most successful people in the world have morning routines. Blah, blah, blah. In order to have a morning routine, we must first combat the war inside that starts when even THINKING about waking up early. Waking up early is hard fucking work. In today's Girl, You Got This! EpisodeI go over the different ways - mostly unspoken - ways of becoming a morning person and how you can wake up earlier. Getting ahead of your schedule and prioritizing your goals by working on them before you go and work on someone else dream and I go over my currently morning routine with you all. I also go over natural holistic ways that will really help you become a morning person! Things like the 3-2-1 rule can really help you get shit done in the morning and taking natural herbal supplements can help you start waking up and going to bed early. Depression sucks, and we are less likely to get out of bed and up early when we are going through some really hard days. Just know that you shouldn't be so hard on yourself and your worth is not dictated by your ability to wake up and be productive. So I get it, if you're at that point. Love you. *Warning: I do curse a bit in this podcast, this is not your regular, cute self help podcast. I get real, raw and honest and sometimes it requires a curse word, or five*
Anther classic performance from the archives. www.AdamRoxby.co.uk --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/adamroxby/message
The Mississippi State Bulldogs ended their search for a defensive coordinator this week when they hired Zach Arnette. Host Justin Strawn gives his thoughts on the hire, plus he breaks down the hot streak the Men's Basketball team is on and what it means as the team heads into the SEC/Big 12 Challenge. He also looks back on the performance by the Women's team in Columbia South Carolina and how it might impact the rest of the season. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/justin-strawn/message
Speaker: Fitz. The post WE over ME: Love One Anther appeared first on Okolona Christian Church.
You hear that voice? Sound familiar? We're not talking about Wood or Keith, we are talking about the one and only DJ Sam S with that tickles the airwaves with his voice and DJ skills. Tune in to this weeks episode and listen to how to give yourselves a proper party this holiday season. Anther great Mask Off in the books. Check him out at asskradio.com and don't forget to reach out to us at sowhutchusayin@gmail.com , sowhutchusayin.com , anchor.fm/sowhutchusayin . As always, share and like, rate and review. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sowhutchusayin/support
It's the most wonderful time of the year! That's right we're talking about gin christmas or as it's more commonly known Junipalooza. Join us as we try new gins and chat to the wonderful people who make them! Thanks to Imbue Distillery, Anther, Never Never, Tiny Bear, Applewood and Mountain Gin for chatting to us.
To close out October's "Month of Horror" for 2019, we give you two stories from truly the scariest place either Art or I could think of....The Internet. As time goes on, people's online life becomes more real and influential in the physical world . The two cases we examine this week are examples of crimes that have become far too common in today's society. The Isla Vista Massacre (by Elliot Rodger) and the murder of E-girl/social media influencer Bianca Devins are both cases in which an Internet Incel (Involuntary Celibate Male) takes their online anger and frustrations out on the innocent in the real world. Anther great episode that sparks another great discussion. As always follow us on the stuff Website-https://artandjacobdoamerica.podbean.com/Instagram-https://www.instagram.com/artandjacobdoamericaYouTube Channel- https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0rT6h3N2pWtlkxaqgIvaZw?view_as=subscriberTwitter-https://twitter.com/ArtandJacobDoA1Facebook-https://www.facebook.com/artandjacobdoamerica/Patreon-https://www.patreon.com/Artandjacobdoamerica ALSO! Make sure you're checking out our sponsors and using promo code "AMERICA" for 15% and 10%https://cavemancoffeeco.com/https://www.fightbackcbd.com/
Anther trip to The Swamp resulted in another loss - an this time Tennessee's starting quarterback was benched. Who is the signal-caller moving forward and how can the Vols win the BYE week? Colin Castleberry joins Eric Cain for PTF: episode 121. Follow Eric on twitter at @_Cainer. PTF is avaliable on Apple Podcast, TuneIn and SoundCloud.
When Vanity Fair wanted a diamond heist expert they found our pal Punch, the world's second greatest diamond thief -- his dad is #1 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/burl-barer/support
Another home loss is nothing to get worried about, right? Another transfer window with less than monstrous name signings is nothing to be concerned about, right? Anther match facing off against a coach who regularly takes the Sounders to school is nothing to be nervous about, right?
A very special Mother's Day episode. Slim sits down with his mom and tells stories from his childhood. Anther very personal episode that you don't want to miss. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Anther episode where I fail to sexually assault anyone, but I did try it in with Meryl This episode me and the big joke Ed take a tour of the police episode and talk a lot about the drug problem... IN SPACE!!!! This podcast is a production of the We Can Make This Work (Probably) Network follow us below to keep up with this show and discover our many other podcasts! The place for those with questionable taste! Also we have a Game Jam starting soon!!! Check out the link below for more info: https://itch.io/jam/we-can-make-this-work-probably-game-jam Twitter, Facebook, Instagram: @ProbablyWork Email: ProbablyWorkPod@gmail.com
Anther great episode full of insight on working with parents. Tim is joined by Faye Harris to unpack this topic. Enjoy!!
Anther moment in parenthood
I LOVE this phone but omg wtf come on?!?!
Click on the link below to discover tricks and ideas to make more money with affiliate marketing. http://www.trustthelink.com/ Hey, today I want to talk about positive sales words for affiliate marketing that can put money in your pocket. Do you want to put money in your pocket? Before I begin, down below is a link and if you click on it you can get more tips and ideas on how to make more money with affiliate marketing. When you think about words you use them not just for writing sales copy to get people to buy stuff, but for blog posts, videos, articles, social media posts and everything. If you think about it we have all have built up a resistance. You walk around and you are being hit up with marketing messages. It's part of human nature to build up a wall to stop words from effective us. We can't buy everything we see. We as marketers want to get through the wall. We do this by using words that give people a gut reaction and emotion. This can make people take notice and do something. The end goal is you want words that make people take action. With words all you are doing is painting a picture. We as humans we are motivated really by 2 things. We go towards pleasure and move away from pain. Use words the will evoke some image in someone's mind. Think about “The Commission Machine” – what comes to your mind? A machine that spits out commission machine right? It's a good idea to turn what you are selling into an object someone can visualize. If you make it into something someone can relate to then it's going to make more sense. Breakthrough is used a lot in copy – so that might not be good to use. I'm thinking of the book “Breakthrough Advertising.” Another idea for positive words that sale is to use slang terms and words that are informal. Formal, boring words for school or a corporate job is not a good idea. Boring is bad and just being yourself is a great idea, write how you think and talk about paint the picture that you want. Another word to use is “illegal.” It can make someone stop and take notice, because we don't hear that word a lot and it creates curiosity almost like rubbernecking on a highway accident. Now if everyone starts to use these words then it's going to lose some of it's power because it's mainstream. The main take away is that it's good to be different sort of like how everyone uses custom thumbnails for YouTube videos and I don't, just to be different. Anther tip I have for you and I've noticed this on my Facebook feed is to use questions. When you read a question – you will want to know the answer and it draws you in. Why is there a country in the middle of South Africa? It draws you in right? There is actually a great story behind that. A few other ideas and this one I got from Joe Sugarman is the whole purpose of the first sentence is to get people to read the second sentence. His first sentence is sometimes a few words and not even complete. The whole purpose of the second sentence is to get people to read the next sentence. It's a slippery slope that pulls people in. In the end affiliate marketing is a skill and one of the best things to do with any skill is to find someone really good and copy them. If you want to know who I recommend you should follow and why when it comes to making money online with affiliate marketing then please click on the link below to watch a short 4 minute video. I hope you got some value from this content on positive sales words for affiliate marketing and have a great day.
24th October - Anther beautiful day on the Pacific Coast Highway
We’re back everybody! Sorry for the ghosting, but the Still Talking team was extremely busy for most of September–Colton and I went to Australia, Zeno moved to New Orleans, and Brian had yet another child (jk, he already has 79 of them). While we were...
Tone worked on Wall Street for almost 10 years starting as a Risk Analyst at Bear Stearns and later becoming a VP at JP Morgan Chase, in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis. His expertise is in Economic Trends, Trading and Risk Analysis. Ever since getting involved in the Crypto Currency ecosystem in early 2013, he has been very active in spreading the relevance and importance of this technology as it helps promote economic freedom. Tone has been featured in several Documentaries like Magic Money & Bitcoin - Beyond the Bubble. Tone is now an independent content creator at ToneVays.com and on his YouTube Channel focused on sound economics & finance. Tone holds a Masters Degree in Financial Engineering from Florida State University along with Bachelor Degrees in Mathematics and Geology.Twitter: https://twitter.com/ToneVaysWebsite: https://tonevays.comTrading Information: http://LibertyLifeTrail.comFollow the podcast on Telegram!https://t.me/ToneVaysPodcastBotBitcoin: 3Hk9cR6p8XAAbmD2GkvSdcbznhqXvLDX4oLearn Trading: http://www.libertylifetrail.com/education/learntrading/Upcoming Seminars: https://tonevays.com/workshopsPrivate Consulting: http://www.libertylifetrail.com/consulting/Please Support via Affiliate Codes:Trading View: http://tradingview.go2cloud.org/aff_c?offer_id=2&aff_id=4905&url_id=3BitMex 10% Off: https://www.bitmex.com/register/cMvHXgTrezor/Ledger: https://www.cryptohwwallet.com/?acc=70efdf2ec9b086079795c442636b55fb&bannerid=3TorGuard VPN 50% off code & link = tone50: https://torguard.net/aff.php?aff=3782Buy The Dip Store 20% Off: http://sh1030.ositracker.com/75271/6304CryptoMatic Bitcoin Watch: Discount Code = TONEhttps://cryptomatic.io/en/1Broker: https://1broker.com/?r=14766Magic Money Film: Vimeo Discount Code = TONEhttp://www.magicmoneyfilm.com/Disclaimer: The 1Broker & BitMex affiliate links are to be used at your own risk, I mostly use them to just place trades for less than $100 and I'm ready for all my bitcoins being hacked. (best is to always hold your own keys)Tone Vays is available for consulting at the rate of 0.1 btc per hour. Please email Tone@protonmail.ch for additional info.Follow the best podcasts from the best minds in the Bitcoin and Cryptocurrency space on twitter.https://twitter.com/bitcoinpodcasts
We're back and we've brought on another warm body! Anther week of alcohol fueled speculation and F1 whimsy.
Countdown to Infinity: a Marvel Avengers podcast ENDGAME EDITION
John, Andrew, and Manny are joined by Sofia the inspiration for this podcast! We talk about the direct precursor to Infinity War, Marvel Studios' "Black Panther". We talk about the US Box Office's #1 superhero film ever! Ryan Coogler's unique vision, Michael B. Jordan as Killmonger, and Chadwick Boseman's turn as the richest Avenger! We play a trivia game too. IF YOU WANT TO BE A PART OF OUR INFINITY WAR SHOW, LEAVE A VOICEMAIL REVIEW 30s LONG AT (512) 937-3763! We will play our favorite ones on the show!
Today we spoke about some excellent eating we'd experienced during the week, at places such as Mahjong in St Kilda and Po Boy Quarter on Smith St.Our good buddy Sebastian Reaburn had some great news during the week; his Anther gin just won AUSTRALIA'S BEST GIN at the recent Australian Distilled Spirits Awards, and we had a chat about what's happening in his post-win world.We caught up with John at the Vic Market.We finished today's show speaking with winemaker Duncan Buchanan. Almost all of the 2018 grapes are now off the vines and in the sheds, but it's been a really busy few weeks!
Anther night in the league which means it’s time for more shit talking.
Chris and guest co host Matt Redbeard welcome Connor Marshall, Elio and Andrew Holmgren.Anther quicky and kind of sloppy but hey here it is!editor@savagehenrymagazine.com791 8th St. Suite NArcata, CA 95521
Here we are again. Anther episode. This time from my hotel room at PAX Prime 2015. We take this chance to sit down with Jay Fernandes who does audio and audio QA and talk about some of that and loudness standards and a couple of twitter questions and this is a really long run on sentence.
Yehuda Katz and Tom Dale join us to talk about the road to Ember 2.0 and "Fast Boot". They share insight about why they stick to a 6 week release cycle, and why they think JS frameworks might be the future of all web apps (especially content sites). We also chat about what "indie open source" means, and exactly how much design goes into the Ember project and community. Yehuda Katz (Twitter) Tom Dale (Twitter) Tom Dale's Klout score is 66 Tilde.io Erik Bryn Yehuda at Hack Summit: "Indie OSS" HTMLBars FastBoot: Ember's Server-Side Rendering solution Tom on Shop Talk Show on Server-Side Rendering Rendr JS Yehuda's RailsConf keynote: "10 Years!" Skylight.io: Make your Rails apps faster with actionable insights Transcript: FILE NAME: The Frontside 16 - Yehuda Katz & Tom Dale Talk About Javascript DURATION: 55:59 minutes CHARLES: Everybody, welcome to Frontside the Podcast, Episode 16. We've got Brandon and Stanley here with me on the podcast and some very special guests who need no introduction, so I'll let them introduce themselves. TOM: Maybe we just start with Yehuda because he's the most famous. Are we starting by number of Twitter followers? STANLEY: Actually, Cloud score. TOM: Yeah, it's Cloud score based. YEHUDA: I think Tom has a higher Cloud score than me. BRANDON: All right, Tom. Go for it. TOM: Hey, what's up? I'm Tom. I had the idea for Ember JS in the shower. [Laughter] YEHUDA: Hey. I'm Yehuda. I work on standard stuff and Ember a lot these days, and now Rust also. TOM: Yehuda just joined the Rust core team. I don't know if you guys saw that. BRANDON: I did see that. Rust is a programming language. YEHUDA: Programming language. STANLEY: Are we going to get to talk about that later? BRANDON: Sure. TOM: We can talk about whatever you want. I'm not going to have any insights on that. YEHUDA: We'll have some insights. TOM: Yeah. I don't know if you guys ever saw the Pokemon Movie, but basically Yehuda is reenacting that with core teams. You've got to catch them all. [Laughter] BRANDON: That's great. STANLEY: That's not just the movie, Tom. That's literally everything around Pokemon. TOM: Oh, okay. STANLEY: That is the tagline. TOM: I will definitely defer. You seem like an expert here, Stanley. STANLEY: You know; I know the most important facts of all time. BRANDON: Stanley is on the Pokemon core team actually. STANLEY: I actually just made a new Pokemon that's like a guitar, a chair, and a microwave put together. BRANDON: What's it called? STANLEY: Rock-On. TOM: That is the worst Pokemon name I have ever heard. [Laughter] TOM: Oh, my gosh. BRANDON: All right, well, off to an auspicious start here. So the two of you and Leah formed the original core team for Ember. Is that fair to say or were there other people involved at that time when you kind of were switching SproutCore 2.0 to Ember? YEHUDA: I don't think I would call the original group that switched SproutCore over to Ember necessarily the core team. I would say that there was a bunch of people that were working on what was called SproutCore 2 at the time at Strobe, and it doesn't -- what we were doing there doesn't really meet my requirements for a good core team or a good Indie Open Source project. But one of the things that we did after switching over to being Ember and announcing the separate project was to make the core team more like what I would want. TOM: Well, I would say that there was never one moment where we were like, hey, let's create a core team. I think one thing that I learned from Yehuda about managing an open source project is that it is extremely important to start delegating way before you feel ready or comfortable. So there was a point early on where we were just totally overwhelmed as people started using it and people came along and were interested. And so we just gave them commit bit without really thinking about the bureaucracy of it or the structure of it. And then it definitely got to a point where it was like, "Why is there no core team yet?" because there's a ton of people with commit. So we should probably think about this a little bit more. YEHUDA: Of the people who are on the core team now, Erik, Chris, and Steph were all involved extremely early. I think Erik Bryn was the second contributor. Well, the first contributor after people working at Strobe, and Chris and Steph got involved really early because they were building an app on Ember that was very, very mobile focused. Well, it's a mobile app, and so they needed heavy performance, and we were not necessarily focusing on that, so they got involved pretty early also. BRANDON: And you gave a really awesome talk about this recently at Hack Summit. We'll throw the link to that in the show notes. I thought it was terrific, and I thought there was a lot of amazing ideas that were clearly born of painful experience. And I want to talk about that in a moment and kind of basically running and maintaining an open source project that keeps the open source ethos, I think, was kind of the thrust of the talk and keeping the Web and Open Source Indie. But before we jump into that, I wanted to get kind of a -- without going into, like, a full state of the union, there's a really lot going on in the world of Ember right now. It can be actually kind of hard for individual developers to just keep up with the news of it. There are just so many cool things happening at once. And there are a few things in particular that I wanted to get an update about. You guys are doing some really interesting stuff right now, but some things that are shipping soon: HTMLBars is actually happening. YEHUDA: It's in the beta. BRANDON: Yeah, it's in the beta, so people -- we tested it in our app already, and with one exception with, I guess, Ember list view isn't quite ready for it yet, but. YEHUDA: I think that's ready now too. BRANDON: Oh, really? TOM: Yeah, that just got updated. BRANDON: So, yeah, it was phenomenal. I mean it just works. Like, it was pretty amazing. So the benefit to users for that has been kind of already gradually been implemented where the metamorph tags in the DOM were gone. TOM: Right. BRANDON: What else can people expect to see once HTMLBars is in place? YEHUDA: So let me just reiterate a thing that you just said that maybe people weren't clear about before I let Tom a little bit about HTMLBars, which is, one of our major goals now and probably forever is to continue to update things incrementally and without breaking apps. And that's something that takes a lot of effort, so I want to reiterate it because it's probably the driving force of everything that we do, so like you said, there's a lot of news. We've been talking about a lot of stuff. We can talk for hours on it, probably. But the key thing is that a lot of times you hear there's a lot of news in a project, and it feels overwhelming. It feels like, oh, my God, if there's that much news, it probably means I'm going to have to spend the next five years catching up with all the things that are happening. And with Ember, our major goal is to make sure that all that, all those new features don't affect your app. I mean there will be a 2.0, and at 2.0 there may be some breaking changes, but even with the 2.0, all the breaking changes will land before 2.0. They'll land on the 1x brands together with deprecation warnings so you'll learn about them as you upgrade. TOM: Yeah. YEHUDA: And so I think this is the driving force of everything we're doing now. TOM: Yeah, I think, with 2.0, it's not like oh, my gosh, there's all this new stuff I have to learn. Instead, what it's going to be is us removing stuff that you probably never even learned about anyway. YEHUDA: Or that we told you in 1.10 or 1.11 to switch away from and you had plenty of releases to remove. TOM: Yeah, you'll have ample warning, and you'll definitely -- it's not going to blindside anyone. But I think this is exactly the point is we're on a six-week release cycle, and it is impossible to do big bang stuff in six weeks. Right? Think about any big software project anyone listening to this has worked on. It's hard to build a huge thing in six weeks, which maybe seems like a limitation, but actually I think we both see that as a huge strength, which is that it really forces you, as an engineer, to think about, okay, I want to move mountains. But I need to do it six weeks at a time, so how do I basically touch back down to reality as often as possible? With HTMLBars, if you think about it, it's a pretty dramatic thing, right? We're basically entirely replacing the rendering engine of this pretty large JavaScript framework, which in some sense is like trying to change the engine on a 747 mid flight. And the only way that we can get away with doing that is to do it very incrementally. And the only way we can do it without breaking people's apps, I should say, is to do it incrementally. Step one was metal-views, which removed metamorphs. But, fundamentally, all view rendering was still string concatenation. And then the next step after that was to get actual HTMLBars in with creating DOM instead of creating strings. YEHUDA: There was actually another step in between, which was to change all the -- so the internal, whenever you use a curlies and handlebars, those curlies, in the old version of the templating engine, would go and they would have ad hoc code to observe something, observe paths, and there was all this complicated code at each point where a curlies was used anywhere in the templating engine, and the new system -- and this is again behind the scenes, so it's easy for even Tom to have forgotten about it. We refactored everything internally so that it used a stream-based system so that all the parts of the templating engine don't have to know exactly how that's all structured internally. And that makes it a lot easier to do performance optimizations, but also makes it a lot easier to avoid mistakes and bugs that cropped up from time-to-time. So that was another step in the direction that was necessary to get all the way to the end. TOM: So now that's in, and I think the next step is to actually -- the next step will be now that we've got HTMLBars integrated in a backwards compatible way, the next step is introducing nice, new syntax. So just one example of this is this gives us the ability to remove the bind-attr helper. Most people that I've noticed when I'm teaching them Ember intuitively think that they should be able to do attrf equals curly, curly URL, and that doesn't work together. You have to do bind-attr. But because HTMLBars is a much smarter parser, we're able to have that context, and we can actually just dramatically simplify the whole model. BRANDON: Okay. And you also answered another question I had, which was, there are a lot of people basically talking about how they should be building apps for 2.0 friendliness, but it sounds like if they stay with the point releases, there'll be very little work involved in moving to 2.0. So you don't have to kind of like today sit and architect your app in a certain way as long as you're staying up to date with the point releases. Would you say that's relatively accurate? TOM: Yeah, I think so. 2.0 is not going to have any new features, and one feature that Teddy Zeenny is working on for the Ember Inspector, you know the Chrome and Firefox plugin for the developer tools, is adding a deprecations pane. So what we expect to happen is that people should just keep upgrading their apps on the 1x point releases and then, every upgrade, you may see one or more deprecation warnings pop up, either in the console or in this pane in the developer tools. And you just fix those at your leisure. Then when 2.0 comes out, all that will happen is that the payload size of Ember will shrink. YEHUDA: Yeah. I think another way to put all that is, when we looked at React, so we looked at React a lot as part of the run-up to 2.0 for the past, like, six months. And when we looked at React, initially we saw a programming model that actually wasn't that different from how we thought people should build Ember apps, so things like you should have data flowing down from a single point and, in Ember, that single point is the model hook in your route, and then we always thought about data flowing down. And you should have events bubbling up, and you should use actions mostly for communication. I remember Erik Bryn very, very early on said, "I think people are overusing data bindings. People should use events more." And that's when we started adding the evented system to a bunch of the parts of the framework. TOM: Actions. Actions weren't there originally … two-way bindings. YEHUDA: Well, we added actions, but we also added, like, Ember.evented. TOM: Yeah. YEHUDA: And I think we kind of knew all this, right? And so idiomatically the way that Ember 2.0 works is actually not that different from how we thought Ember 1.x should work, but I think one of the things that ended up happening is that because data bindings are so -- two-way data bindings can be very nice and clever, a lot of times people would reach for two-way data mining because it was the first thing that was sitting there. And then they would end up building somewhat complicated systems that rely on communication through two-way data mining. TOM: The syntactic sugar pushed you in that direction. YEHUDA: And so a lot of what Ember 2.0 is is about making syntactic sugar more honest about what is the right default, and that does mean that there may be applications that were heavily relying on communication, especially communication channels through two-way data bindings. And that will work much less nicely in Ember 2.0, and it might feel painful to upgrade if you're trying to be both idiomatic and upgrade to 2.0 at the same time. But I think, for most people who are using actions and were using data down through the model hook, I think a lot of it will feel very familiar, will feel very much like how you've been doing things all along. CHARLES: Cool. I actually had a question about HTMLBars landing, and that's when we upgrade our apps, everything should just work seamless. Like Brandon said, we actually did a spike of that, and it mostly seems to be the case. You said that there are no new features, but are there more, like, newer development stories around? Like, given that the templating engine or the view layer understands the DOM, what power or APIs will users have to interact with it, like to do animations or bring things in and out and stuff like that? YEHUDA: Oh, yeah. CHARLES: Is there any of that stuff planned? YEHUDA: I don't think we meant to suggest that there are no new features in number 2.0. Just that they will land in the 1x series, I think, is the point. CHARLES: Ah, right, right. I see. TOM: I think probably the biggest feature is just speed. And I think, also, what HTMLBars' architecture unlocks is the ability to better integrate with other libraries by adopting kind of a diffing approach similar to what React does with the virtual DOM. Basically, in my mind, HTMLBars is all about a bunch of infrastructure work that allows us to make the programming model feel more natural for people who are…. YEHUDA: One way to think about it is that it's the first templating engine that was ever built specifically for Ember. Handlebars templating engine before was built as a general-purpose templating engine, and we pushed it as far as it could go to be real useful for Ember. But things like bind-attr and the metamorph tags kind of crept in as necessary because the templating engine wasn't really built for this purpose, the exact purpose that Ember was designed for. And the HTMLBars engine, part of it is that it's DOM based, and part of it is that it supports diffing, and part of it is that it's faster. But I think, ultimately, it allowed us to look at a lot of areas that are annoying about using templates in Ember and make them nicer. And, yeah, so I think that it's -- TOM: I'd say it also unlocks things like we're working on server side rendering right now, and a lot of that is due to the power of HTMLBars because we can run it in so many different environments, and we can model all of these things as streams internally. It gives us a lot of flexibility about what we can do with your applications. You know, we can do things like server side render your applications even though, of course, you never designed your app for that case in mind. But because of how expressive the templating and, in fact, the entire application architecture is, and because we all agree as a community that this is how we architect our apps, it unlocks a lot more stuff. And I think there'll be more things like server side rendering in the future that we all benefit from by sharing this very declarative application structure and very declarative templating language. YEHUDA: Yeah, I mean honestly, under the hood, the fact a lot of the innovations of the templating engine are not things that any user will ever see directly because they're just implementation. And if we wanted to go around pimping things like streams or the way that the diffing algorithm works internally and the way we clone fragments and all this stuff, we could probably spend a lot of time pimping it, and maybe that would even make a lot of people, some people happy. But I think you'll see, over the next year or so, these things will all lead towards better features or to more features that will be nice, and that's how I think we'd like to roll -- TOM: I think Web components integration is a big one. YEHUDA: Ah, yeah, that's a good point. TOM: I think HTMLBars makes it very easy. And so, in terms of actual improvements coming on top of HTMLBars, the component syntax, instead of being curly, curly to indicate that you want a component, you'll be able to use just regular angle brackets, so that'll be nice. And another thing that we're really keen to get rid of is: You know how today when you're building an Ember component if you want to customize the element associated with that component, you have to say, like, tag name, class name, bindings. You guys know what I'm talking about? BRANDON: Mm-hmm. TOM: So that's kind of annoying because all of those special properties on the component class that you used to customize the element are all duplicating features that already exist in the templating language. So it's just kind of this weird bifurcation of the programming model where, if you want to customize the element for this top level, do it in JavaScript. Everything else, do it in the template. So HTMLBars will allow us to allow you to customize your component element purely in the template, and you won't have to -- basically there are far more cases now where you'll be able to get away with a component that's just a template file, and you'll reduce the number of JavaScript classes in your app. YEHUDA: Yeah, I think, from a high level, the biggest -- the high level of the internal technical improvements are largely that it allows for contextual work. So the old templating engine wouldn't necessarily know that you're inside of an attrf when you have curlies, so we would have to spit out a bunch of extra stuff and maybe make you use extra helpers. It wouldn't necessarily know that you're in image FRC or a video tag or a component. It wouldn't be able to tell if you were using a polymer component that implements the bind protocol, right? But the new templating engine basically lets us see exactly what's happening at every curly, and that just has a large number of positive effects. BRANDON: So you said something else that I felt like was a good segue into the next part of the discussion that this basically allows you to do server side rendering, which you guys are really, like, in the thick of it right now. But for me, a lot of the talk I've seen a about server side rendering comes across as a little inside baseball. There's this sort of discussion between people who are really into React because they're suddenly doing a lot of stuff with server side rendering, and they're seeing some benefits out of it. And you see this stuff kind of pop up in the JavaScript community, but I'm curious to know if you guys can explain a little bit about the benefit of server side rendering that this is a major new feature coming to Ember now. YEHUDA: I'll let Tom maybe give the full pitch, but I think one thing that I feel somewhat strongly about is that, for most people, if you don't have a system that actually gives you something that works pretty well out of the box, in other words it doesn't ask you to do a lot of the work yourself, the idea of isomorphic server side rendering where you run your same app on the client and the server, I don't think that that ends up being worth it. And if you look at a lot of apps that use Ember today, a lot of them have spent relatively little time building non-isomorphic solutions for specifically SEO that have been very, very cheap in terms of time and very, very effective. But I think there's the: I want to not have to write that, even that little bit, and I think that that you get a lot of benefits out of if you just have your framework do it. In other words, if it's not just like your framework does 20% and you do 80%. If it's your framework does 95% and you do maybe a little bit, or you have some constraints, I think that is worth something. And I think the rehydration of fast boot is worth something, although that has even more issues and even a larger percentage that most people have to do on their own. Basically, I think the TLDR for me is that I've always saw server side rendering as indeed somewhat inside baseball because, for most people historically, and I think this is even true largely about React, the solution that you're offered is the framework will do a little bit for you, and you have to go figure out a lot of the details about how to make this work for real. And I think most people just don't have the time to figure all those details out. TOM: So it's been kind of interesting to watch this play out over the last year or two because I think there's been a big split between the JavaScript application community and old school people that create content for the Web who are really keen on this idea of progressive enhancement. And so there's kind been this split. And, for me, for a long time, I personally didn't really care about this case because, in my mind, JavaScript apps were really good for what I'll call workspace apps, which is most of them are behind a login. You log in. You have these very rich interactions. You're editing something. You know, I worked on the iCloud apps. It's a feature, not a bug, that Google can't index your calendar and your email, right? So to me that was the use case for JavaScript apps. But that was until I saw content sites. Like, I remember the first time thinking, "Wow, maybe JavaScript apps are actually the future of all Web applications," was when I saw Bustle, actually. When I saw Bustle, it was just a content site. It was just news articles. And if you would've asked me, I would have said you should probably use Rails or some other server rendered framework for this. But then I saw it, and it felt just like a website. I couldn't actually tell the difference other than how damn fast it was. And I kind of had to step back and question all of my opinions about how people should be building these kinds of applications. And especially for content sites, I think that the server rendering is really important, right, because historically your user has had to download all of this JavaScript and all that JavaScript had to be downloaded and evaluated and run before they saw anything. So having the ability to bootstrap that process on the server and have the first bits that the user starts downloading not be the JavaScript payload, but be HTML and CSS, so that the first thing that they see is useful, I think that's really going to change how people build applications because you get the benefits of server rendering while still retaining the kind of interactions that you can build with something like Ember that you just can't do with Rails. YEHUDA: But again, I think people trying to do this on their own and taking maybe a half solution and then trying to figure out how to make this work reliably ends up producing things that are pretty buggy and feel pretty bad on first boot, or they end up requiring tremendous amounts of engineering resources. And it's possible that, like, huge companies can make this work. But I mostly think about startups, and startups simply do not have the engineering resources to take on the server side rendering task on their own, so this is why I think we care about it for Ember because, as Tom said before, Ember is already pushing you down a pretty conventional path, and we think -- our hope is that by having people do that conventional path and us taking charge of server side rendering will have something that works mostly out of the box for a lot of users. Again, assuming they follow some additional constraints about what you're allowed to do on the server. TOM: And I think we should be clear here because there's, as always happens, there's ambiguity in the terminology. So first is the term isomorphic app, which I don't really love that term, but I guess we better get used to it, Yehuda. YEHUDA: Yeah. TOM: But there's really a spectrum. On the one side of the spectrum you have something like Airbnb has a library for Backbone called Rendr (with no e - well, one e, but not the second e). And that kind of lets you wire up some of the server side rendering. But again, it's very, very manual. And the whole purpose of this is just to make sure that the first thing that you deliver to the browser is HTML and not JavaScript so that the user, even if they don't have JavaScript enabled or they're on a slow connection or whatever, they get something useful. But then on the other side, you have things like Meteor or Asana where the whole idea is -- and to me, I'll be honest with you. It strikes me as extremely silly, but the idea is that you're writing both your server and your client in the same code base, and then you're deploying them both. You describe it, and it sounds like this magic bullet, but it also just seems really silly to me. YEHUDA: Well, I think the fact that even the first releases of Meteor had if Meteor.isClient and if Meteor.isServer, and even the first demos had large blocks of content…. TOM: Yeah. Conditionals. Yeah. YEHUDA: Basically means that people hadn't really figured it out exactly right yet. TOM: Yeah, the point is that even if you have a client side app, your server still has a lot of responsibilities, especially around data access to the database, authorization, authentication, and so on. And putting that in the code base with your UI and your drag and drop code just does not make any sense to me. So I want to be clear to everyone listening that that is not what we're going for. The idea is not that you're writing your json API server in Ember. The point is that you're writing the same old app. In fact, we hope that you don't have to make any changes to your app. And you can deploy it, and it will do a render using the same code. It's basically like your app running in a browser on the server, and then we'll have some way of -- YEHUDA: Except not actually a browser. TOM: -- it's actually a transferring state. YEHUDA: Except, importantly, it's much, much cheaper than being an actual browser. We're not using phantom JS or a zombie or anything. TOM: Right. Conceptually a browser, but we don't want to pay the cost. Phantom JS is a source of great pain for many people, ourselves included, so we want a pure JavaScript environment. But conceptually it's a browser. YEHUDA: I think the reason I hopped in there is I just want to be clear that the goal of conceptually a browser is actually not to be a browser, but to make Ember itself internally abstract enough so that the most expensive parts of being a browser can be replicated in a cheaper way on the server. Obviously the most important part of that is the DOM. And that's the part that React worked out for server side rendering is use the virtual DOM on the server and not a real DOM, right? And that means you don't need real phantom JS and the full scope of DOM. But there's also other stuff like how your routing works and how the model hook runs and how it makes requests, how it makes "XHRs" to get the data in the first place. Right? There are a lot of details if you think about what it takes to boot up an app in the first place. For us, the goal is to go through that whole process of booting up an app all the way through, but not including the did insert element hooks in your DOM and make sure that all that stuff doesn't require -- it has really constrained and clear abstractions, right? So rendering has a render abstraction and routing has a location abstraction, and the DOM has the HTML bars, little dom, lower case dom abstraction, right? So instead of saying we're running it inside of something that pretends to be a browser, we're saying Ember doesn't actually care whether it's in a browser or not, but it has very, very clear abstractions for what it means to be a browser. BRANDON: Okay, so is there--? It sounds like it could be a little like -- is this a little ways off? It sounds like there are a lot of benefits. Like, if you see the hand rolled stuff that Discourse has done, clearly this is something that Bustle cares enough about to sponsor, this is probably a little ways off for Ember developers. Is there anything that you want people doing Ember to know right now about server side rendering in terms of how it's going to affect them or some of the technical stuff that you're learning through this or anything like that? TOM: I think we've been thinking about this particular problem for a very long time. And in fact, we've intentionally designed the architecture of Ember specifically to handle this case, even from the beginning, even like three years ago. We knew that this is something that we wanted or at least we didn't want to paint ourselves into a corner around. So I think there are two aspects of this, and one of them, I think, is pretty well bounded and pretty straightforward. The other one is definitely going to require a little bit more research. The first step is simply getting rendering happening on the server. So because we designed Ember for this case, we were actually able to get Ember as a framework booting up in node in about a day's worth of work. So a couple things have crept in. There were areas where we had been a little bit sloppy and introduced dependencies on things like document.body, jQuery, things like that. So it was about a day to kind of encapsulate those, make sure that they weren't hard requirements for booting the framework, and that was about a day's worth of work. And then, by the end of the week -- we've only been working on this for about a week now -- at the end of the week, we actually had an app booting in node and handling route requests. So in terms of progress, it's been really great. But I guess all that we're saying is that, in a week, we were able to capitalize on the last three years of work we've been doing. That's not as impressive as it sounds. YEHUDA: It was nice that there were relatively few regressions, right? TOM: Yeah. YEHUDA: That the list of things where people were accidentally doing things that assumed the browser was actually relatively small. TOM: Yeah. And the way that we did that is basically introducing an abstraction that provides your environment to you, so a node that's different than in a browser. So that's the first part is to get the app booting, and the second part is to get it rendering. I think what's really cool is that, even though HTMLBars, of course, is a DOM based rendering engine, or despite that, we still use an abstraction around DOM access. What we're going to be able to do when we start, again, in earnest tomorrow, on Monday, is basically replace that DOM helper that we used to create DOM in the browser with something that we'll be able to build up strings so that you can build up your HTML on the server and serve that to the client. That's step one: rendering. I think we'll be able to make quite quick progress on that. I would guess probably about -- I don't know if I should give timelines here. I think we're ballparking around a month before we can at least beta it, the server rendering. BRANDON: That's a little faster timeline than I had assumed. TOM: That's purely rendering. I want to make clear that that is purely for things like SEO, for Web crawlers, for curl, things like that. Then the next phase after that, and this is where it gets into the tricky bit, is being able to -- YEHUDA: Rehydration. TOM: -- is rehydration, what people call it. What we call fast boot. And with fast boot the idea is that whatever state that we use to build up your application on the server, we also transfer that state, not just the HTML, not just the output, but the state that we use to build that output is somehow seamlessly transferred from the server to the client. And the client basically just takes the HTML that we've given it and reconnects all these bindings and goes from there, so it's totally seamless to the user. YEHUDA: And I think there's some complexity there. For example, there may be some part of your page that you can't actually render on the server because it says, like, "Hello, authenticated user," with the user's name. So thinking about ways to make sure that you can mark those as needing to be rendered on the client without causing jank. There's a bunch of stuff like that where, at first glance, it seems not too bad, but I guess the high level if there's a determinism issue, right? So the goal is to make sure that roughly what you did on the server is the same thing that you do on the client because if it's too far off, then you end up having to throw -- no matter how smart our algorithm is, we're going to end up having to throw away everything and replace it again. The idea is how to structure your app, how to structure the way that you set up your app in Ember CLI so that you tend to be putting out output that's deterministic on both sides. And, like Tom said, I think state is maybe overbroad. It's mostly modeled batter, right? Making sure that the model batter that you got on the server is equivalent and transferred together with the HTML payload so that the model hooks that you have in your client will not have to go make another XHR. They'll just have the data that the server already collected, and then hopefully rerender an equivalent DOM on the clients with relatively low…. TOM: There are just a lot of tricky cases, like imagine you have a bound helper that shows relative dates, like 30 seconds ago. So you have a clock on the server, and then you have a clock on the client. How do you reconcile those two? YEHUDA: Yeah, so the good news there -- the good news with all that, without getting too much into the weeds, is that the HTMLBars' engine is already broken up between rendering the parts of your DOM that are static, that are like the hello, the text hello inside of an H1, and updating the static parts with dynamic content. And today that's purely a performance optimization, and so that we could use the same document fragment over and over again after cloning, but that will also allow us to use server rendered content where, instead of expecting to have an empty text node that is to be filling in with dynamic content, we'll have a filled in text node. And we see, in that case, Tom, that the time that is in there already is not the correct time. It's not the equivalent time, and so we'll update it. So that's sort of like the React diffing strategy. I'm less worried about, like, there's a single text node with the wrong content because I know we can deal with that. And I'm a lot -- although if it's too much changes, it will look very bad. It will look very janky. I'm more worried about, like, this entire conditional change. So you're looking at something and then, like, your sidebar swaps out for a different sidebar, which I think would be a pretty unacceptable UI. CHARLES: Obviously there are a lot of different server side environments that people use. What requirements of the server is there going to be if I'm using a Rails app or something in Python or Java or whatnot? How am I going to interface to this? TOM: Well, you definitely need a JavaScript runtime, right, because your Ember app is written in JavaScript. Unless you're planning on pouring it into Ruby or whatever, we're definitely going to require JavaScript runtime. And I think we're starting with just supporting node. But what I would like to see, and maybe you guys can write this, is a Rails gem that you can install that will install dependencies in everything and basically get set up in a production environment. YEHUDA: I think one thing people often forget is you can definitely -- you could you have a node app running. People try to embed JavaScript. They try to use, like, The Ruby Racer, and embedding JavaScript is quite a disaster. BRANDON: [Laughter] I'm sorry. I don't know if you know. Charles wrote The Ruby Racer, and it is a disaster. STANLEY: It's cool. It's a disaster. YEHUDA: So let me be clear. It's a great idea. I use it a lot, but it just fundamentally doesn't now work. Right? It fundamentally cannot -- you cannot embed two VGCs in the same process. BRANDON: Right. YEHUDA: Okay. BRANDON: This is the greatest moment in the history of our podcast. I just want to say that. CHARLES: No, I know. There's no way to collect…. YEHUDA: Yes, exactly. CHARLES: -- for example. YEHUDA: I was about to use cycles as an example. CHARLES: The APIs just don't exist. YEHUDA: Yeah, so basically cycles, so this is why. The reason why I feel strongly about this is that we use Rust for Skylight, which is our product. And we need to embed something, and I would never in a million years embed something with a garbage collector. And I think The Ruby Racer was a pretty good -- I think, for constrained cases, it works fine if you know what you're doing, but people basically tried to use it as, "Oh, I'm just going to write part of my program in JavaScript. And, by the way, both languages have closures, so good luck," basically. The Ruby Racer is cool, but I would not -- I don't think that that's the correct strategy for having long-running JavaScript programs like Ember, like complicated stuff like Ember. I think a better thing for people to do would be to figure out a simple IPC protocol so that they could run their Ember app and then have a simple way of talking over a socket or something with the node app, so booting up your Rails app will also boot up the node app. And, if necessary, and you're serving through your Rails app, you could communicate. TOM: I think, to be clear, the Ember app, even when running on the server, still talks to the database server using json, right? So it's the exact same data marshalling flow. It's just presumably it'll be a lot faster because probably your API server and your application server are in the same data…. YEHUDA: Well, at a minimum, it'll be a lot more consistent, right? TOM: Yes. YEHUDA: I think when people -- when Twitter complained about somebody from some country connecting and getting a really slow connection, the issue there was that they were downloading the app shell and then who knows how long it took to download the json payload, right? But if the json payload is coming from the same data center, then it's, by definition, going to be downed within some range, reasonable range. BRANDON: Okay. Awesome. I'd like to shift gears and spend a couple minutes talking about something that most of the questions that I had originally for this were actually answered in your talk. But I'd like to go over it just a little bit. You alluded earlier to the way that you're running Ember as an ideal, sort of your ideals, discovering your ideals about open source projects and the Indie Web. And I think it's a really important topic, and I want to ask a little bit about that because I don't think a lot of people understand this. I think, especially I see in the JavaScript community, a lot more people establishing open source projects that are corporate run and that being considered a benefit rather than a drawback. And I've seen you push back on that a little bit, and I wanted to ask you, Yehuda, about what your definition of the Indie Web is and why you specifically run the Ember project the way that you guy run it. YEHUDA: Sure. I think there are basically two parts of what it means to be Indie, and the second one sort of derives out of the first one, but I think it's -- you wouldn't necessarily arrive at it yourself, so I'll make it explicit. The first one is that you have a diversified core team. What I mean by that is essentially diverse in all the ways you could possibly think of, and things that I learned from other projects are, like, functionally diverse. So make sure that if there's a person on your team -- if there's a person around somewhere running your events or doing documentation or doing evangelism or running user groups, make sure that if there's a person who is very skilled at doing that that they are the top person on your team in charge of that. The counter, the alternative that I've seen a lot in the open source community is that the person running events essentially reports to the core team, right? There's a person who is maybe a professional event runner, and they are not in charge of events. They're in charge of coming up with ideas for events that they run by the core team, and the core team decides yes or no. The problem is the core team has no skills in doing that, so this person ends up spending huge amounts of time being frustrated trying to explain to the core team something or other, right? That would be the equivalent of somebody on the core team writing some area of code, having to come to the rest to the core team and talking about really tiny, nitty-gritty implementation details. Of course, unlike code where I think people have an intuitive sense that you're deep in the weeds of some performance thing, and I don't really understand that. In a lot of areas that are not code, code people have a very high sense of their own understanding, right? The core teams, I've seen a lot of core teams that people come and they say, well, I happen to know a lot about how people want to read docs in this country and so I'm going to help with the translation effort. All of a sudden the core team is an expert on, like, Indian documentation. And they have all these opinions that are totally unwarranted. Step one is have a functionally diverse group of people, and have people that are not necessarily hardcore coders, but are talented and professionals in their area. Have them do that work at the top level. And I spent a little time on this just now because I feel strongly that this is an area that people miss, and it's just an area that code people are too high on their own supply. They're too impressed with their own skills. They cause a lot of pain for the people who are good at areas that are not hard-core code, so that's one. Two is be diverse in terms of the set of people that own decision-making in your project, so this is what you were talking about with the company run open source, and this is something companies can do. I've seen, for example, I worked with the Rust Project, and the Rust Project originally started at Mozilla. But they've been spending tremendous amounts of effort to try to increase the set of people who are on the core team of Rust that are not working at Mozilla. And this is something that maybe takes a lot of effort once you have an established project at a company. There's all the internal company politics you have to deal with. But the reality is that if you have a project that's at one company, you're kind of at the whims and the mercies of that one company's how they do resourcing, whether they think it's important, what their actual goals are. Maybe the thing that they built the project for doesn't necessarily match what the community is doing, right? So become diverse in the companies that own it. I think projects like Rails, Postgres, Ember, increasingly Rust are good examples of this. And, of course, I mean the regular meaning of the word diverse here, just because if you become more diverse in all areas, you actually find yourself being more function diverse just because of who ends up being in what areas. You end up finding yourself having a lot better insight. You end up sitting in a room, and when there are people of diverse backgrounds, the kinds of questions that people ask. And I can only say this. This is the thing that I've noticed personally. It's not a thing that I can empirically measure. I've just noticed that the kinds of questions that people ask, when you're diverse in all kinds of ways, ends up being -- they end up being stronger, better, and they end up pushing back on the kinds of decisions that you can make as a monoculture with group think, right? The harder it is to have group think, the harder it is for everyone to sit around and say, "You know what we're going to do? We're going to rewrite everything," right? That kind of thing is hard to do when you have a lot of people with a lot of different backgrounds with a lot of different interests. So that's, I think, the higher order bit of what in the open source means is be very diversified in a lot of different ways. But there's a specific thing that I think comes out of it that is very important, which is to do the work that you're doing incrementally. Again, the reason I think that this is a derive is that if you have a lot of people with a lot of different interests with a lot of different projects, I think it becomes very difficult for you to do full on rewrites because everybody has interests, and maybe a few people are excited about doing a rewrite, but everyone else says, "Oh, my God. What about my app?" Then you have the docs guy saying, "Oh, my God. Now we have to maintain two sets of docs?" And you have the evangelism guy hearing all the pushback from the community about the rewrite. So it becomes very difficult for you to have this situation where you're not doing things incrementally. But I think, in my talk, I spend some time on what it means to do things incrementally and what the benefits are and how to adopt the six-week release cycle and all that. I talked about that in more detail because, even though I think it's a natural consequence of being diversified, it's also something that you have to think about if you want to do it well. BRANDON: Yeah. It seems to me that that would require, like it's kind of a chicken and egg deal, but to me it seems like there was a lot of discipline in switching to a six-week release cycle, and that's important. It seems, for us at least as consumers of Ember as an open source framework, that's benefited us greatly. We find the framework much, much easier to keep up with on the six-week release cycles than pretty much most other open source projects we've worked with. YEHUDA: Which is kind of like a paradox, right, because you expect that six-week release cycle means you can never keep up with it because it's always changing. But in fact, six-week release cycle means you don't have time to ever change that much. BRANDON: Well, and even for apps that go dormant for a while, we find that, okay; we'll bring it up to one. Bring it up to the next one. The upgrade path becomes extremely obvious. YEHUDA: Yep, exactly, and there's deprecation warnings, and there's ... I think people should watch my talk on this specific area because it took me 15 minutes or something to lay out the whole thing. But I think the basic idea of just doing things incremental, and incrementally has this bad sense. It's like, oh, maybe you're hunting for the local maximum or something. All I mean by incrementally is the same way that the human body replaces its cells, right? You don't do it all at once. Maybe over an extended period of time, the thing that you're looking at is completely different. But because you did it a little at a time, you were able to move the whole community together in the direction instead of people, many, many people getting left behind, which is what used to happen a lot with Rails. I think Rails has gotten better at this over time. But it used to happen, like Rails 3 came out and a lot of people were stuck on Rails 2.3. BRANDON: I think when people hear incrementally, they can think about possibly incrementally be led in circles, right? You could incrementally be every day wake up and decide to change one degree or the other. What matters is if you have a compass that's pointing somewhere. For the Ember project, that incremental stuff doesn't work unless it's pointed somewhere very clear. And you and Tom are basically the keepers of that vision. And I wanted to ask about that, what the vision of the framework is that keeps guiding everybody. Is it sort of implicit to the project? As you use it, you recognize it. Or is it something that you've explicitly outlined somewhere? YEHUDA: I'll take this for a second and then Tom can jump in. I think, fundamentally, the main vision is just we ultimately wanted to have a full stack solution that solved the majority, the vast majority of the problems that a regular person would have writing a Web app, but we knew from the beginning that if we tried to take on that whole project, I mean even Meteor, who took on that whole project, is still struggling to have to complete the vision. And they tried to sort of boil the ocean. And so, we knew from the beginning that we were going to get it wrong if we tried to do a CLI tool and a framework and a data library and all this stuff all at once. And so I think we started off with the V in MVC, basically, right at the beginning and added routing and other stuff over time. But the mission always has been to build the thing that's a full stack of what you need to build front-end tools. Tom, you can take it from there. TOM: Yeah. I think, in the JavaScript world, I think, because JavaScript for so long was treated as a toy language that people didn't do serious stuff in, it attracted a certain type of developer who is -- which is a totally legitimate opinion, but they tended to be kind of hackers who would do these one-off experiments. And because of that, the notion of convention over configuration and having shared solutions is still a somewhat surprisingly controversial opinion in the JavaScript community. And so I think the role, as you said, for Yehuda and I, is to basically be willing to stand up and take the tomatoes that get thrown at us and say, "You know what? No, there is benefit in having a shared solution, especially when it's not just one-off hackers in their basement, but when it's a team of engineers working at a company, and you have a product that you need to ship, and it needs to have good interaction. It needs to be done yesterday. Those people need tools too. People like that deserve tools." And I think that's our goal is to have a framework that will last for at least the next ten years that is willing to incorporate good ideas as they come out and as they're embedded, move the community together, as Yehuda was saying, but without chasing the hype dragon where every six months: "Throw away everything you know because the next big thing is coming out. Rewrite your apps." I see Ember as a way of kind of tempering that instinct for engineers to chase the new and shiny constantly in a way that basically we have a community that agrees together what the next big thing is, and then we start moving towards that. I think, right now, major things that we're thinking about are one server rendering, as we talked about. Getting the CLI tools in place, that's a thing that we've wanted for a long time. But as Yehuda said, we didn't want to try boiling the ocean. And then the new HTMLBars view layer, which unlocks a lot of the cool things that React is able to do around, like, DOM diffing and so on. YEHUDA: Yeah. I usually tell people -- recently, I've come to a line, which is, if you want to tell me that there's not a place for shared solutions in some area or some abstraction, I think the burden is on you, actually. I think people in the JavaScript community, and there's a small group in the Rails community that feels the same way, they assume that the burden is on the person who is trying to abstract, right? If there's a common problem that a lot of people have, they think it's your job to prove that abstraction is a good idea. I think it is your job to prove that a particular abstraction is a good idea. But I think my de facto, my default position is that if a lot of people are solving the same problem that there's a shared solution worth hunting for. And I would say the JavaScript community is really -- big chunks of the JavaScript community are pretty anti this approach. But I think it's really the only way that you could build -- like Tom said, the only way you could build projects with large teams is to have some sense of what the shared answer is and to not have it be some genius on the fourth floor somewhere that does everything. And if you want to make any changes, you have to go to them. I've seen a lot of companies that work like this, and it works fine. Anther facet of this is that pretty much every company deciding to adopt, like, Ember, Angular, React, or Backbone, whatever, they do like this "taste test," right? A taste test is like a two-week project where they see which one is faster. By definition, the taste test doesn't successfully analyze what happens over a longer period or when you have a bigger set of developers, right? It's by definition optimized for short projects with a small number of developers, and so -- TOM: And usually it's the guy on the fourth floor conducting the taste test. YEHUDA: He's either conducting it or he is actively attacking it, right? He is saying we should not -- for example, Firefox OS refused to adopt any framework for an extended period despite the complaints of many people on the Firefox OS team because of the fact that they had a religion against frameworks. They didn't like frameworks as a concept. I've heard this from large numbers of people working on the periphery of Firefox OS and many complaints, right? And so I think we, Ember, one of the things we had to learn was that we can't get away with just saying that. We can't get away with saying, oh, you'll learn. If you just use Ember for a year, you'll figure it out. We had to really improve the getting started experience. But I think, on the flipside of that, there's no way that we could ever -- even if we get to be as nice as to optimal getting started framework, getting started tool, we're always going to have benefits that are not part of that that are very difficult to see when you're doing a quick analysis. Actually, recently we've seen a lot more big companies come out and talk about the benefits of Ember for long-lived projects, and I think that helps a lot just having people testify that they used Ember for a year within a team that wasn't three people, and they found it to be productive in these specific ways. I think that's helped a lot of people feel comfortable. BRANDON: That's been my experience, certainly, as well, just seeing that increase. I think everybody should -- honestly, I believe everybody listening to this should drop what they're doing and go watch the Hack Summit talk. I thought it was phenomenal, and I think it made me think a little differently because it's a little confusing out there, like what some of the tradeoffs are in these open source projects that are run in that kind of echo chamber. And the fact that you guys work so hard to pierce the echo chamber is really cool. I know that there may be some technical questions. We don't get a chance to have you guys on the podcast very often, obviously, so I wonder if anybody has any more questions. STANLEY: Before we get back to technical questions, I just want to cut in and say I really like Yehuda's talk from Rails Conf as well. It was really eye opening for me as somebody new to the Rails community, even though Rails has been around for a while, and kind of understanding the value of shared solutions and kind of the philosophy behind that. YEHUDA: Yeah, that was definitely the first time I tried to formulate a general theory for what shared solutions look like and why they're good, and essentially why Rails hit the nail on the head with the right amount of shared solutions and where the experimentation is happening and all that stuff. STANLEY: Cool. Back to you, Charles. CHARLES: I just had a quick question I wanted, before we wrap up. I had another question about the server side rendering, kind of a general one. I know I've definitely been burned by server side rendering in the past, you know, because it's been something that people talk about on and off, it seems like, for the last five, six years. I remember when mustache first came out. The first time that I tried it, it's like, oh, I've got this templating thing that I can run inside on my Rail server, and I can run it. There's a JavaScript implementation too. One of the things that I found was I was able to get up running very quickly, but then I felt like I was eaten alive by the edge cases. It was actually -- I think it was a blog post that you wrote, Tom, where you were talking about kind of the justification for resolving, always resolving RSVP promises asynchronously. Because, to not do so, have a different context, different stack sitting on top of the resolution was like releasing Zalgo into your application. I actually, when I read that thing about promises, it actually made me harken back to my experience with server side rendering. I was like, oh, with server side rendering I was releasing Zalgo onto my client. I had a very different context. TOM: Yeah, the thing you're describing is sharing templates across two different apps, right? CHARLES: Right. TOM: The data model diverges, and then the things that you need diverge. That specifically is something that we are going to avoid. The idea isn't, oh, you can reuse your model on the server, and you reuse your templates on the server. The point is it's your app, the same exact app, same code base that you would run in the user's browser just happens to be running on the server. YEHUDA: And I think there's also -- I think there's another important point, which is that if you look at how people do SSR, I think historically people have said, "Well, I'm going to use a view layer that's very good at SSR." And then you would have this pile of hacks that was involved in booting up your app. Honestly, Ember, in the beginning, had piles of hacks used to booting up your app. I definitely remember that period. Now the view layer maybe is very good at running on the client server and, like you said, originally was just like the template. But now maybe the whole view layer is good at it. But now the process of actually booting things is a source of non-determinism. You're saying Zalgo. I'm saying non-determinism. Zalgo is a better word. CHARLES: [Laughter] YEHUDA: And Ember has definitely held off on tackling server side rendering seriously until we felt confident that we had the full stack handled. In other words that, as a framework, we had the whole lifecycle handled. Then actually, if you look at technically what we've been doing recently, a lot of it is like separating out. We have an application right now, an application only -- there's only ever one instance of it. Now we're saying, well, there could be multiple sessions. And so we're really looking at the whole lifecycle of the application and, because we own the whole lifecycle of the application, we can actually feel confident that the path that we're going through is correct, so that's one part of it. The other part of it is essentially what React figured out at a high level. I think what we're doing is equivalent, which is you don't necessarily assume that you got exactly the same thing on the client server because probably in practice there's always going to be some thing or other, like the clock case that Tom talked about, or the hello Yehuda case that I talked about before, the authentication case. What you do is you rerender the template, and you don't say if it's not exactly the same, throw it away and start over. You say parts that are the same you can keep, and parts that are different you replace. Therefore, it's not so much a whack-a-mole problem. It's more like how much replacement can I tolerate and have it not feel janky, right? So you go use it, and if you see that there's an area that's popping in and replacing, that's an area that you have to go and figure out so, first of all, it will work. Right? It will work. It will not be broken. It might feel a little bad, and that's an area for you to go and improve the Zalgoishness of your solution. In practice, in Ember, it will almost always be something weird like you're relying on a non-deterministic DOM API or something like this, or you're relying on some XHR that even though we serialized it, you're getting a push notification, and it's different, and it happens quickly, so it's janked. Right? I think the basic point of try to control everything and also only replace things that are needed will get you to a much better starting place out of the gate with Ember than you will have if you try to do the old solutions. It may turn out to be a lot of work. And if it turns out to be a lot of work regardless, then I think it will still, even with Ember, be a thing that is used by people who really need it and not so much by people who don't. But I'm hopeful that the fact that we own the whole lifecycle of your application will let it be useful for a bigger set of people than people who are desperately in need of it as a solution. BRANDON: Awesome, so I think we're going to wrap up. Is there anything you guys want to give a shout-out to or anyone? YEHUDA: Please sign up for Skylight to make your Rails apps faster. TOM: Yeah, please. Make my Christmas a merry one. YEHUDA: We didn't talk about this at all. TOM: And sign up for Skylight. YEHUDA: We didn't talk about this at all, but Tom and I, much of our day job is working on Skylight. And if you watched my talk at Hack Summit, one of the things that I advocate and I really feel it in my gut because of Skylight is I advocate spending, even if you're full time in open source, spending some time, even a day a week or two days a week, would help a lot working on something that you have to maintain over the long haul because, like I said before, maintenance over the long haul is very difficult for you to market. It's something that you have to feel in your heart. If you're working on an open source project, work on -- use it for a real thing that you spend significant time on that you have to maintain over the long haul so you could feel, in a year, whether you're practice is holding up to being maintainable. And, yes, now that I've talked about Skylight for a second, please sign up. This is how we fund our ability to do any open source. Working on Skylight has definitely been the most enjoyable thing I've done in my career so far in the sense that I've had a lot of control over it, but it's also the most harrowing in the sense that we are responsible for getting all the revenue, so please sign up. BRANDON: All right, well, thanks very much, you all, for coming on. Everybody, go sign up for Skylight. It's very cool, very beautiful, and very actionable insight for Rails apps. Tom, Yehuda, thank you so much for joining us on this. It's been super enlightening. Again, everybody, please go watch Yehuda's talk on keeping the Web Indie. And if you've got a little extra time, the Rails Conf talk on layers of abstraction is also, I found, something that changed my views on a lot of stuff as well. Thanks again, both of you all, for coming on. YEHUDA: Thanks a lot. TOM: Thank you, guys. BRANDON: All right, talk to you later. CHARLES: Thank you, guys.
In addition to numerous opportunities to see the world while playing professional baseball, there are opportunities to see the world and lend a helping hand to the less fortunate baseball markets around the globe. Organizations like the Kosovo Baseball Initiative and Baseball Without Borders do just that, provide lesser known baseball markets with the opportunity to learn the game and use the equipment that they otherwise do not have access to. Through these non-profit organizations, baseball players and coaches from around the world have the opportunity to travel to Kosovo, the Dominican Republic, Cuba, Israel, Ecuador to share their knowledge of the game. It's time to sacrifice playing baseball at a higher level for the sake of helping the game grow in markets that need our help the most while also having the experience of a lifetime. On the International Baseball Community website, there are nearly 100 member in the "walk-on" group, a group created for players and coaches who are willing to pay their flight overseas for a chance to play or coach on a team. With that being said, there are plenty of baseball destinations that would love to take on these players and coaches with open arms, particularly clubs at destinations mentioned in this podcast episode. The Bothasig Knights of South Africa are one of those clubs and in this episode I interview their head of marketing and long term member Patrick Stark. I also mentioned destinations throughout Europe that are actively seeking players who will pay their flight in exchange for accommodations and sometimes a food allowance. I also introduce a concept in the works that I am putting together called the Import Exchange Program. This is somewhere between professional baseball and travel baseball. A number of clubs from around the world have contacted me seeking players who are willing to finance their way in exchange for a place to stay and sometimes a job or small food salary. This demand has led me to the idea of a arranging a cooperation between clubs from different countries who will combine their resources to support the trip of a player or coach who is willing to pay their flight over. Another problematic situation in European baseball is the visa issue. Within the Schengen zone, a group of EU countries where a traveller can pass borders freely with a visitors visa, players can stay up to three months but then they have to leave. Some countries are more relaxed with this law and others are very strict, such as the Netherlands. Then there are countries in the EU that are not part of the Schengen zone which allow travellers to stay up to 6 months. I am currently exploring an import exchange cooperation between clubs who currently do not import because of either visa or budget issues that are inside and outside the Schengen zone. For example, a club with a budget in the Netherlands that does not import due to tough visitor laws, can provide the financial backing for a player to live while in Europe, while the club with no budget in England (outside the zone) provides that same player a job and housing in exchange for play. Anther example, would be a club Spain on a low budget that can house you from March through May and provide an opportunity to earn a little money while playing baseball and coaching their youth. When the three months are up (visitor visa limit) the player can then fly out or take the train to a club in Ireland who put them up for 3-6 months and provide a job while playing baseball. This program will take some time to build but the purpose of this episode is to get the word out there that if you have some cash flow, there are opportunities. If you are interested in being a part of the program, whether a club or a player, please email me with the subject heading "import exchange program" to d.burns@baseballjobsoverseas.com
Welcome to the Two Hundred and Nineteenth episode of Daily Daf Differently. In this episode, Rabbi Joshua Heller looks at Masechet Eruvin Daf 64. Is it fair to prefer one teaching over another? Is it right to say this Jewish text is more attractive than other? Anther major focus- may one drink before praying or […]
Well Million Dollar Audience we did it again. Anther great summer of Radio, can only mean one thing. Season 2 of THA BEST DAMN SHOW IN RADIO is here!!! In this Season 2 Premier will will get back to basics. BARBERSHOP TALK like only we can. Joning us 1st as we kick of the second season here on THA BEST DAMN SHOW IN RADIO we'll be the beautiful Diana Hart of the great HART family, as she talk family the bizz & what is next for her. Then we kick off the season 2 premier of the JMO segment for the love of sports & entertainment. Why do we love it so HARD!!! And much much more so get in early the BARBERSHOP will be packed this week Season 2 here we GO!!! LOOKING FOR AUTHENTIC BARBERSHOP AND SPORTSBAR-STYLE INTERACTION?. THA BEST DAMN SHOW IN RADIO IS MADE UP OF TRUE SPORTS FANS, NOT JUST PEOPLE WHO SIT AROUND QUOTING STATISTICS AND PREJUDICES. WE HAVE SPORTS, HUMOR, ENTERTAINMENT AND MORE! SATURDAYS 6:30-8:30