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In this episode of Voices from the Field, NCAT Sustainable Agriculture Specialist Colin Mitchell talks with Matt Kutugata about using drones in agriculture. Before Matt started pursuing his Ph.D. in Agronomy from Texas A&M, he worked with Colin and the rest of NCAT's Southwest Regional office team on the Subtropical Soil Health Initiative as a graduate researcher at the University of Texas at Rio Grande Valley.Much of Matt's research has been driven by data gathered by drones. He and Colin discuss ways drones increasingly are being used in agriculture, including scouting agricultural operations and using multispectral cameras to monitor cover crops.This podcast was produced by the National Center for Appropriate Technology through the ATTRA Sustainable Agriculture program, under a cooperative agreement with USDA Rural Development. This podcast was also made possible in part by funding from the USDA Natural Resources Conservation Service Conservation Innovation Grant #69-3A75-17-281. ATTRA.NCAT.ORG. Related ATTRA Resources: Subtopical Soil Health Initiative Cover Crops for Hot and Humid Areas Other Resources: The Application of Advanced Technologies for Agriculture and Rangeland Management Integrating Emerging Technologies in Understanding Complex Agroecosystems: Evaluating Cover Crops Using Unmanned Aerial Systems in South Texas. Automatic Camera Trap Classification Using Wildlife-Specific Deep Learning in Nilgai ManagementAutomatic Camera Trap Classification in Nilgai Management Seed Rain Potential in Late-season Weed Escapes can be Estimated Using Remote Sensing Contact Colin Mitchell via email at colinm@ncat.org. Please complete a brief survey to let us know your thoughts about the content of this podcast. Please call ATTRA with any and all of your sustainable agriculture questions at 800-346-9140 or e-mail us at askanag@ncat.org. Our two dozen specialists can help you with a vast array of topics, everything from farm planning to pest management, from produce to livestock, and soils to aquaculture. You can get in touch with NCAT/ATTRA specialists and find our other extensive, and free, sustainable-agriculture publications, webinars, videos, and other resources at NCAT/ATTRA's website. You also can stay in touch with NCAT at its Facebook page. Keep up with NCAT/ATTRA's SIFT farm at its website. Also check out NCAT's Regional Offices' websites and Facebook Pages! Southwest Regional Office: Website / Facebook Western Regional Office: Website / Facebook Rocky Mountain West Regional Office: Facebook Gulf States Regional Office: Website / Facebook Southeast Regional Office: Website / Facebook Northeast Regional Office: Website / Facebook
Matt Graduated from The University of Arizona with a Bachelor’s Degree in Marketing. Before Matt broke into Medical Sales, he worked on the West Coast Marketing Team for McDonalds. He got to help firsthand with their TV & Radio ads. Then, he started interning for a sales company called DriveTime. After that, he broke into Medical Sales!! He started out as an associate sales rep with little experience and almost a non-existent knowledge of the medical field. As an associate rep, Matt shattered his numbers and was promoted to a full line Medical Sales Representative in under 1 year. He now manages one of the largest territories in Arizona for shoulder arthroplasty.______________Watch this Podcast Episode on our YouTube Channel HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmBjpUYtPzU&t=559s (Don't forget to subscribe)Legacy Now Coaching Linkedin Page: https://www.linkedin.com/company/legacy-now-coaching/?viewAsMember=true Legacy Now Coaching Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/legacynowcoaching/?hl=en Legacy Now Coaching Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/legacynowcoaching/?view_public_for=102904654693161______________© 2020 Legacy Now Coaching______________Song: The Odyssey AheadArtist: Dream CaveLicense Purchased By: Legacy Now Coaching LLCLicense ID: DL-0oh-yawcarn4qpSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/legacynow)
Matthew Drouin is a full time real estate investor and broker. He owns a portfolio of small apartment buildings, mixed use, and commercial buildings primarily located around the Southeast area of the city of Rochester, NY. Before Matt decided to branch out on my own, he was the Director Of Operations for a large real estate development company. Matt was responsible for assets that spanned the entire real estate investment spectrum, from Self Storage, Mobile Home Parks, Apartments, Mixed Use, Industrial, Medical Office Buildings, Student Housing, etc. Learn How to Get Started in Real Estate? Go to www.Dwellynn.com/mft SUBSCRIBE and LEAVE US A REVIEW on iTunes: http://getpodcast.reviews/id/1256786108
See below for timestamps which allow you to navigate directly to any part of the episode. 00:00:00 Intro 00:01:42 Origin Story 00:10:50 The Family Business 00:17:00 Overview of Walla Walla 00:21:08 Winemaking Philosophy 00:29:40 2017 In the Hills 00:38:36 2017 In the Rocks 00:46:55 2017 The Contender 00:53:06 2017 Vintage in context 00:57:00 Market reaction 01:03:01 Looking ahead for Walla Walla 01:05:30 Looking ahead for Washington State If you know someone who would find this episode useful please share the direct link: www.interpretingwine.com/445 If you really found it useful please leave the episode an iTunes review on the same link. Thanks!
Heads up, this was recorded BEFORE Matt's Chiefs got destroyed in the Super Bowl; check back Tuesday for the schadenfreude. On THIS episode, Matt and Adam break down yet another loss to the Kings, where it went wrong and why. A lengthy debate ensues about MPJ and what he is and isn't responsible for. Things get spicy! Then Marcus Howard and RJ Hampton talk before the duo sets the table for the week. Today's episode is brought to you by BuiltBar; get 20% off your first order with promo code LOCKEDON at BuiltBar.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Before Matt and Elizabeth got married, she had him promise that they’d be married for 70 years. Just like her great-grandparents. But years later, they were in a desperate spot. They were arguing. A LOT. There was broken trust. They had put their relationship on the back burner, and the connection was suffering. Then they opened their relationship up. Matt and Elisabeth knew that when they were good, they were really fucking good. But they needed help to find that again. So they tried everything: Working through the problems themselves. Talking to friends. Reading books. Going to individual therapists. Seeing two different couple’s counselors. Posting in a poly Facebook group (and getting eaten alive) Elizabeth wasn’t sure what else they could do. It felt like the end. Then Matt and Elizabeth found us. They were more than a little skeptical because nothing else had worked. But they decided their relationship was worth the try. Now they’ve done a complete 180. The arguments have stopped. The trust is back. They’re making time for sexy picnics with their partner. They fulfilled one of Elizabeth's nine-year dreams by buying animals together. And most importantly, they’re on track to keep that 70-year promise. ------------ Watch our interview with Matt and Elizabeth to hear the whole incredible story: Book a free breakthrough call with our team. Grandfather Vectors by Vecteezy
Before Matt and Elizabeth got married, she had him promise that they’d be married for 70 years. Just like her great-grandparents. But years later, they were in a desperate spot. They were arguing. A LOT. There was broken trust. They had put their relationship on the back burner, and the connection was suffering. Then they opened their relationship up. Matt and Elisabeth knew that when they were good, they were really fucking good. But they needed help to find that again. So they tried everything: Working through the problems themselves. Talking to friends. Reading books. Going to individual therapists. Seeing two different couple’s counselors. Posting in a poly Facebook group (and getting eaten alive) Elizabeth wasn’t sure what else they could do. It felt like the end. Then Matt and Elizabeth found us. They were more than a little skeptical because nothing else had worked. But they decided their relationship was worth the try. Now they’ve done a complete 180. The arguments have stopped. The trust is back. They’re making time for sexy picnics with their partner. They fulfilled one of Elizabeth's nine-year dreams by buying animals together. And most importantly, they’re on track to keep that 70-year promise. ------------ Watch our interview with Matt and Elizabeth to hear the whole incredible story: Book a free breakthrough call with our team. Grandfather Vectors by Vecteezy
Activist and musician Matt Oliver is our special guest today to talk about relational organizing. Before Matt joins us, we give an update on the coronavirus numbers for the week. Cases continue to rise faster than ever globally, while the unemployment rate has dropped. Another number to report: five. That's how many Texas GOP county leaders have shared racist Facebook posts and/or racist conspiracy theories this week.Next we turn to the protests in Austin, and the Austin Police Department's unacceptable response to them. The tension between citizens and the APD has been on the rise for some time; this week's protests resulted in the police seriously injuring multiple Austinites. Among the peaceful protesters hurt by police were a sixteen-year-old hit in the head with a beanbag round, a pregnant woman, and a Texas State student who was critically injured. Activists are calling for change, and hundreds of citizens spoke at a City Council meeting last night, including the brother of one of the victims. Amazingly, none of this stopped the Council from voting in favor of taking a $400,000 grant for APD, despite calls for them not to do so. Only four council members opposed the measure. If your council member supported it, you need to give them a call. Think 40% is way too much of the city's budget to be handed over to APD? Be sure to take this budget survey to let the city know where your priorities are.Next, our special guest: activist Matt Oliver, who is also husband to TX25 Democratic congressional candidate Julie Oliver. Matt talks with us about relational organizing: what it is, how it works, and why it matters. He also explains how they're using it on the Oliver campaign. Want to get started? Volunteer here.Since it's Friday, Matt also gives us his recs for what he's been reading and listening to lately (Steely Dan is involved!) Lucas, meanwhile, has a typically depressing movie recommendation, while Antoinette has begun to keep track of all of the companies emailing her Black Lives Matters statements, so that she can hold them accountable moving forward.Stay safe this weekend and we'll see you on Monday.This episode was recorded on Friday, June 5, 2020.
Still no end in sight to this quarantine? KAY! Matt breaks down the extension of California’s stay-at-home policy through July (AT THE EARLIEST!), then gets into various pandemic-related AND non-pandemic-related topics, including but not limited to: shitty spoiled brats who can’t seem to stop going to the beach, why going to the beach actually sucks in the first place, why wokeness has largely taken a backseat during quarantine, the absurd ‘controversy’ over something Tyra Banks said 14 years ago, why people believe what they want to believe instead of what is actually true, and the one man who has truly earned the title of ‘Biggest Pussy Ever To Exist In The History Of The World’— President of the United States of America, Donald J. Trump. Before Matt wraps up, he responds to a bunch of your Twitter questions! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Welcome to the inaugural BiOptimizers’ Awesome Health podcast! For our first show I’m excited to bring you Matt Gallant. Matt and I started the journey that created BiOptimizers about 13 years ago. He was a personal trainer at that time, and was also learning about online marketing. He approached me about creating an online product, which led to supplements and more products later on. Our partnership was born. On this edition of the Awesome Health podcast we break down what the Awesome health formula is, why each piece is important and why we started this podcast in the first place. Listen in for all of that and more on this episode of the BiOptimizers’ Awesome Health show. More About Awesome Health with Matt Gallant The first product Matt and I created together made money from day one, so it made sense for us to continue creating products and supplements. The real turning point for me, however, was when I dieted for 11 months and then competed in back to back to back competitions. First I was in the Western Canadian, which I won. I then went to the Nationals and won, before competing in the Mr. Olympia contest. This was a pivotal time for me not just because I won but because of what I had to sacrifice for those wins. The last 6 months before the competitions were very painful for me. I didn't want to sacrifice my health for my performance, and so I made a deep commitment to find a better way and to share it with everyone. After the event I looked at what happens to athletes after their careers, not just body builders but all athletes in a variety of sports. I discovered their physicality often gives out and it's assumed that that will happen. But I thought what if we could explore and experiment with high performance techniques and tools that have been tested at extremes with athletes and apply them universally? Those questions eventually led to the products, supplements, and programs we offer today - as well as this podcast. Before Matt and I explain what the AWESOME health formula is, we talk about how to know you've reached optimal health. If you go back to childhood, you never worried about running out of energy or just getting through the day. But along the way most people start to feel tired, or have digestive issues or gain weight which they can't lose. All of these are symptoms of the body not functioning at its ideal level. And the truth is if you want to play at a global level you have to be in awesome health. Great health means you have more energy, more endurance and better mental performance for yourself, your work and your personal life. What Is A.W.E.S.O.M.E. health? So what is awesome health exactly and what's the formula behind it? Matt and I break down what each letter stands for and why it's important. Air: This is about oxygen and breathing practices. Certain breathing techniques have been shown to increase oxygen levels in the blood, and fight off all kinds of things while building your immune system. Breathing can be done consciously or unconsciously, which is why I think it gets overlooked. Personally I got into meditation in 1996 and got a teacher in 2000. In the East the breath doesn't start with the inhale, it starts with the exhale. They believe the expulsion is where breathing starts. I learned how to deeply exhale: if you force the breathe out that forces the carbon dioxide out which allows for a deeper inhalation. Listen to today's show to hear this example and the 10-10-10 technique used for better cardiovascular health. Water: Matt explains how water helped him while he was experimenting with sleep deprivation, and we discuss why water isn't just water! Dr. Gerald Pollock has proven that water has four phases: solid, liquid, gas and crystal. It's the only substance that exists like this in nature, in 4 stages. The crystal idea is very interesting. I think there's been a lot of debate about water because most people don't think about water as a crystal, as a storage unit. The human body is mainly water and our body's well-being is determined by how hydrated we are, and the quality of that hydration. If you think of water like a DVD: you can program the disc with a horror movie, an educational workshop, or whatever you want. That DVD is going to play a different thing depending on what it is programmed with. Personally I've experimented with over 150 different systems, and out of those I have found we all need to filter our water. there's a lot of medical drugs in the tap water in North America, plus fluoride and chlorine. You want to keep those things out of your body! For example, fluoride is a chemical disruptor. The CDC has published data correlating the rise in obesity with a rise in fluoridated water. If you can't lose weight your water may be a big factor in why, the fluoride changes your hormones, as does chlorine. These also impact your thyroid's function and your body's good bacteria. In terms of how much you should drink, start off by taking a drink every 5-10 minutes, it's not about how many glasses you drink every day. 95% of the people who would come into my clinic were dehydrated. Give yourself the time to develop a good water habit, it may take a little while to reset your thirst mechanism because for most people it is broken. This explains why a lot of people are actually thirsty when they think they are hungry. Exercise: Moving on to exercise, people often ask me what the best exercise is and I tell them you have to find exercise you love to do. We've created a world where we don't exercise! We've forgotten how our bodies don't work right if they aren't moving and moving frequently. Matt suggests reframing exercise as movement and find what you love to do. Is it golf? Bicycling? Tennis? Rock climbing? Yoga? Be sure you do it regularly and consistently. Never miss a workout, otherwise your mind will tell you it's okay to miss one and then it's okay to miss two, three and more. Matt also explains momentum and how to build it, why this relevant to your movement and exercise routine, and why hiring a trainer changes everything for you. Remember this is is a lifestyle choice, it's not just for a wedding in a month or swimsuit season coming up. Having a coach can help you through the rough parts, until you love going to the gym or working out. The bottom line is until you love it you haven't arrived yet psychologically. And that should be your goal, to get to the point where you love exercise and movement, keep experimenting with different types of exercise and coaches/trainer until you get there. Sunlight: Nothing works without the sun! The planets don't move, the materials on Earth don't exist and we as humans don't exist. Both Matt and I have experimented with living in rainy, cloudy places versus really sunny and warm environments. There's data now showing sun impacts your moods, your digestion, how your body looks, and how all of it changes based on your exposure to light. I believe we are on the cusp of some amazing breakthroughs in light technology. Matt says we get much more than just Vitamin D from the sun, much of which we don't even understand yet. He knows this because he has experimented with taking Vitamin D supplements versus getting twenty minutes of sunlight. The sunlight led to increased testosterone, his fat loss doubled, and his muscle building changed significantly, none of that happened with Vitamin D. Most people are scared of the sun, but it's about finding the optimal dose. Be sure you are getting in the sun 4-5x a week for 15-20 minutes at a time, and you'll get what you need. I also discuss our exposure to blue light from technology today, and how our indoor lifestyles are affecting our well-being. Optimizers: We started a company based on this because we've been looking at optimization all of our lives! The reality is if you want more energy and get to the next level in your life you have to look at how you optimize areas of your life? Start with air, water and sun first. When those are working, you will want to optimize more which means enzymes. Enzymes are the first part of the optimizers. On this episode, I explain how this is relevant to people with all sorts of health issues from skin conditions to depression to blood sugar-challenged people. When we could see the different applications of enzymes for people, this is when optimization started to explode for us. It's important to remember optimizers are co-partners with probiotics, probiotics are single units of living organisms inside your body. Matt explains this on a deeper level and how we went from the body building paradigm to the biological optimization paradigm. They've been so impact for him that he would part with any of his other supplements before he parted with enzymes! He says it's not about what you're eating, it's about what you are breaking down, absorbing and assimilating. You could be eating the best food in the world but if you have a shortage of enzymes your body won't break your food down, that leads to health issues and digestive problems. In fact, data is showing our thoughts are being controlled by our gut, so if you have a shortage of good bacteria it can lead to decreased mental health, emotional well-being and physicality. The point is these are essential and critical! I also talk about how bad bacteria can actually cause you to eat bad foods. Mental beliefs and attitudes: This is about examining your own perceptions, our social conditioning and what we are subjecting ourselves to every day. This is one of the greatest things you can explore, and also one of the most limiting! The challenge here is we tend to hang around people who have similar beliefs and attitudes. My spiritual teacher says we are all crazy but we don't know it because we hang around people with the same craziness! Often when we're exposed to new beliefs we are resistant to them. So it's both a challenge and an opportunity. We're hoping we challenge you on upcoming episodes, not because we want to convince you of something but because we want you to try something new and find the fun in experimenting. In ancient times debates and discussions weren't looked at as an opportunity to win, but as chance for people to learn and create a "metamind" that bridges cultures and social environments. Matt adds his own thoughts on the subject. He believes the #1 attitude to incorporate is to be open-minded, be flexible and adaptable. He says he holds everything he knows to be provisional knowledge, and that most of what he believes today is wrong on some level! He knows that tomorrow, next week, next year or 10 years from now new info will reveal what he believes today to be obsolete. Nutrition is an amazing playground for this: what we thought was true 20 years ago is not true. So don't be dogmatic, be flexible and adaptive to potential new mindsets and new attitudes, which will open you up for new perspectives. I talk about Darwin's quote: he didn't say survival of the fittest, he said survival of the most adaptable. Those parts of nature that adapt the fastest and most effectively are the ones that survive. Take a look around us today and you'll see how this is true. Things require different adaptations then they did 50 years ago! We have to become flexible and experimental as a species or we're going to get left behind. Personally, this was difficult for me, I was rigid and dogmatic but I realized the results I got, while they were impressive, would only take me so far. So I had to challenge my beliefs. Both Matt and I know that you can't argue with your results. Your life is a collection of the beliefs and attitudes you have. If you accept that then you can change things and get yourself different results. And since you are here listening then you are one of the people who wants to make changes! Etc: This stands for education, testing and coaching. What we mean by this is check out some of our stuff, apply it and see how it affects you. Get coaching: you'll never get as far as possible as fast as possible without coaching. This is the triangle of courage and honesty! To truly further your education it takes more energy and resources than what you have on hand right now. You've got to get definitive data on where you are at, things like your hormones, your body fat, your endurance levels, etc. Your numbers don't lie! But when you accept your numbers, then you can fix them. Coaching plays a pivotal role in helping you acknowledge and then change your numbers. A great coach is interested in one thing and one thing only: the methodologies to activate the genius and greatness within you. Their job is to encourage you, to expose yourself to challenges and to stop seeing every challenge as a pass/fail. To get to the next level of health you're going to need coaching, your coach will help you find a methodology for you and to do it faster. This podcast is about being virtual coaches and mentors for you. We're transferring our knowledge, our passion and our experiences to you. We're excited to continue being here with you and bringing on people we know, like and trust to serve you on your journey. And if you have a guest suggestion let us know, we'd love to hear from you! Thanks for joining us on the BiOptimizers' Awesome Health podcast. Episode Resources BiOptimizers web site Masszymes web site P3-OM Probiotics Seeking Wisdom, by Peter Bevlin
Welcome to Episode 344 of the SLS Cast w/Matt and Tim. Before Matt sets out to impress his wife on her birthday with an icing-less Funfetti cake and before Tim garners another 170 likes on Twitter by posting pictures of overpriced Mexican food, join the boys as they reach into their mailsack, catch up on news and provide their takes on 'Hobbs & Shaw' and 'Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark.' Sit back, relax and take a trip through the Silver Lenticular Screen with The SLS Cast! MAILSACK: [00:07:40] Dianae of the Night (@Dianae173) NEWS: [00:09:44] It's Time for a Best Stunts Oscar (via IndieWire) Sarah Silverman: I was fired from film after blackface photo resurfaced (via The Guardian) Insiders say MoviePass changed account passwords to 'slow down power users' (via TechSpot) FLICKS: “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw” [00:35:30] SLS Cast rating: n/a / Matt's rating: 3 / Tim's rating: n/a “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” [00:40:36] SLS Cast rating: 2.5 / Matt's rating: 2 / Tim's rating: 3 NEXT WEEK! 3² Three flicks concerning: Big Brother/The Government is Watching You WAS IT WORTHY? "Shortcut to Happiness" (2003) Was it worthy for Alec Baldwin to remove his director credit from "Shortcut to Happiness" (2003)? Until Next Time Cinephiles... AUDIO LINKS: “Fast & Furious Presents: Hobbs & Shaw” Trailer (HERE) “Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark” Trailer (HERE) RSS Feed (All music within the podcast is copyrighted 2010 - 2019 by Cries of Solace and is used with permission. Additional copyrighted material used under Fair Use for the purposes of [including, but not limited to]: criticism, comment, and news reporting. Any opinions expressed are strictly those of the hosts, and do not necessarily represent the opinions of Sony or any of its affiliates and subsidiaries.)
Forget John Connor. Forget Sarah Connor. There is only..Matt Conner, our latest Final Girl contestant. Before Matt dukes it out against our slasher in next week's game show, though, he joins us to talk about -- among other things -- his role and experiences as panel director for the NC Comicon system AND (asserting his expertise as a brilliant psychiatrist) why certain horror movies imprint on our minds when we're young. It's a fun discussion that totally sets the stage for next week's whimsical episode centered around Matt's childhood favorite: Killer Klowns from Outer Space. Stay tuned, kiddies! Become a final girl contestant here. Check out our theme music's amazing creator, Zalatan. Buy a CPM T-shirt from former Final Girl champ, Amy. Check out The Unstoppable Wasp Volume 2, which Matt mentions in this Quickiesode.
For someone so popular in the running scene, how could we know so little about their history? Matthew Luke Meyer has quickly become one of the friendliest and most familiar faces in the New York City running scene. He has so much enthusiasm and energy as an instructor with Mile High Run Club and Custom Performance. He also coaches with Streets 101 – one of the newer crews on the scene that drives their runners to push their own limits while sharing in each other's successes. Before Matt became a 2:39 marathoner, he takes us to his roots in small-town Colorado. Running was still far from becoming his passion. This episode will tell his story on why he started running, how he made major changes to his life and how he’s making a positive impact in the NYC scene. You can follow Matt on Instagram here: https://www.instagram.com/matthewlukemeyer/ Check out Streets 101 here: https://www.instagram.com/streets101nyc/ Learn About Custom Performance here: https://www.instagram.com/nycustompt/ This is Runners of NYC. A new bi-weekly podcast from CITIUS MAG. Hosts Jeanne Mack and Chris Chavez look to bring you many of the untold stories behind luminaries and legends that make up New York City’s running culture. Follow the show on Instagram and Twitter: @RunnersOfNYC. Email any comments, feedback or possible sponsorship ideas to runnersofnyc@gmail.com Music for the show is by Future Generations. Podcast artwork by Kyle Klosinski.
Being creative is probably the coolest thing you can do. Before Matt and I recorded this one, we watched the SICKO MODE music video to get the juices flowing. It's so interestingly made and exemplifies a lot of the amazing things people can compose. Hear our take on creativity.
Today’s episode will be a little different. Instead of doing a typical interview, Matt Tringali and I will just have a chat about whatever comes up. We each have some topics in mind and things we want to learn from each other, but we’ll let the conversation flow naturally. I’m recording this mastermind phone call, so you’ll get to be a fly on the wall for our conversation. Before Matt got into property management about a decade ago, he worked in real estate sales. In that role, any time he didn’t get a deal, he would take that person out to lunch and ask how he could have gotten their business. The overwhelmingly common response led him to use Facebook today to stay top-of-mind for potential clients. Given the format of our conversation, you probably won’t be surprised that masterminds are one of the topics we’ll dive into today! If you’re not already sold on how effective they are, I think this conversation will help open your eyes to a way to grow both your business and your knowledge. You’ll learn how valuable peer-to-peer interaction is, and how to start a mastermind of your own if you can’t find an appropriate one to take part in. We’ll also talk about topics like appreciation, equity, and cash flow, what’s in Matt’s resident benefit package (and how tenants have reacted so far), how virtual offices can function and the learning process involved, the role of a field agent, Matt’s thoughts on review culture, and much more! Learn More About Today’s Guests: Matthew Tringali on Facebook Group 15 Real Estate on Facebook Group 15 Real Estate In This Episode: [01:18] - Matt and Steve start things off with some small talk about decor and out-of-town auto-responses. [02:12] - What is Matt doing on Facebook to get new business or brand awareness? [04:16] - Matt digs deeper into brand awareness and why it’s tricky to put a value on it. [06:56] - We hear about what Matt’s working on these days, and he and Steve chat about peer-to-peer interaction. [08:48] - Does Steve have any advice for people out there who aren’t in a mastermind on how to get started with one? [11:31] - Picking the deep-dive topic for a mastermind is pretty democratic in Matt’s case, we learn. [14:31] - Steve doesn’t want to get distracted from growing the management business, so he has some resistance to doing a deep dive into his sales process on the tenant side, he explains. [16:49] - We learn that Matt has a real estate agent who helps with the lease renewal process. [19:01] - How has Steve been doing with getting clients to buy more properties? He answers, then Matt shares his own perspective. [22:25] - Property managers have a duty to make a conversation about leverage, equity, and so on as simple as possible so owners can understand it, Steve points out. [23:11] - What does Steve use for his monthly newsletters? [23:45] - We learn about Matt’s resident benefit package, and how little pushback there has been so far. [27:01] - Steve and Matt talk about virtual offices. [30:34] - Every now and then, you get some pushback about having a virtual office instead of a physical presence, Matt points out. [32:17] - Matt explains that the field agent is designed to be the eyes and ears of the property manager. [33:48] - What are the latest tools that Steve is into for property management? [35:41] - Steve talks more about the two aspects of HubSpot. [37:22] - What is Steve doing in terms of video content to go along with the blog articles that he has been talking about? [39:26] - We learn about Kolbe scores, and how they relate to having different kinds of content for your audience. [41:21] - Matt talks more about his videographer and what they’ve been doing with video content. [42:52] - How are reviews going for Matt, and what is his thought process around them? [45:45] - We hear more about driving reviews to satellite offices. [47:18] - Which consultants that Steve has worked with has he found to be the most valuable? Links and Resources: Sign Up for LeadSimple (don’t forget to use referral code STEVE) Apply for The List Mastermind Matthew Tringali on Facebook Group 15 Real Estate on Facebook Group 15 Real Estate BDM Academy 333 Social Media Todd Breen Gary Vaynerchuk Crushing It! by Gary Vaynerchuk Think and Grow Rich by Napoleon Hill Brad Larsen Brandon Hall MailChimp HubSpot Rently Marcus Sheridan Tuft & Needle Kolbe Grant Cardone Strategic Coach Juicy Results
Former Editor-In-Chief at Rotten Tomatoes, Matt Atchity, presided over the website as it became a go-to destination for people deciding what films and television offerings they were going to watch.Matt joins Mark Thompson and comic/documentary film director, J Elvis Weinstein on this episode.Matt explains the power of “Certified Fresh”, the limited power of the superhero and tentpole films and studios generally.Finally, Matt talks about The Young Turks and his goals for TYT.Matt is one of the hosts of WHAT THE FLICK (which reviews movies and TV) on the TYT network.Before Matt, Michael Shure returns from Israel and looks at the political aspirations of Jim Jordan as Jordan attempts to succeed Paul Ryan as House Speaker. One problem Jordan may have is the trail of controversy that's shadowing him.Mark also asks Michael about the Endangered Species Act and why it's rollback is a priority for Trump and Interior Sec'y Zinke. Michael explains the politics.00-3:16 Mark welcome, summary3:16-26:06 Michael Shure on politics26:06-1:21:14 Matt Atchity, J Elvis Weinstein and Mark ThompsonEmail us at: edgewithmarkthompson@gmail.com
Former Editor-In-Chief at Rotten Tomatoes, Matt Atchity, presided over the website as it became a go-to destination for people deciding what films and television offerings they were going to watch. Matt joins Mark Thompson and comic/documentary film director, J Elvis Weinstein on this episode. Matt explains the power of "Certified Fresh", the limited power of the superhero and tentpole films and studios generally. Finally, Matt talks about The Young Turks and his goals for TYT. Matt is one of the hosts of WHAT THE FLICK (which reviews movies and TV) on the TYT network. Before Matt, Michael Shure returns from Israel and looks at the political aspirations of Jim Jordan as Jordan attempts to succeed Paul Ryan as House Speaker. One problem Jordan may have is the trail of controversy that's shadowing him. Mark also asks Michael about the Endangered Species Act and why it's rollback is a priority for Trump and Interior Sec'y Zinke. Michael explains the politics. 00-3:16 Mark welcome, summary 3:16-26:06 Michael Shure on politics 26:06-1:21:14 Matt Atchity, J Elvis Weinstein and Mark Thompson Email us at: edgewithmarkthompson@gmail.com
Former Editor-In-Chief at Rotten Tomatoes, Matt Atchity, presided over the website as it became a go-to destination for people deciding what films and television offerings they were going to watch. Matt joins Mark Thompson and comic/documentary film director, J Elvis Weinstein on this episode. Matt explains the power of "Certified Fresh", the limited power of the superhero and tentpole films and studios generally. Finally, Matt talks about The Young Turks and his goals for TYT. Matt is one of the hosts of WHAT THE FLICK (which reviews movies and TV) on the TYT network. Before Matt, Michael Shure returns from Israel and looks at the political aspirations of Jim Jordan as Jordan attempts to succeed Paul Ryan as House Speaker. One problem Jordan may have is the trail of controversy that's shadowing him. Mark also asks Michael about the Endangered Species Act and why it's rollback is a priority for Trump and Interior Sec'y Zinke. Michael explains the politics. 00-3:16 Mark welcome, summary 3:16-26:06 Michael Shure on politics 26:06-1:21:14 Matt Atchity, J Elvis Weinstein and Mark Thompson Email us at: edgewithmarkthompson@gmail.com
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
MJS 029: Matt Creager On this episode, we have another My JavaScript Story, our guest is Matt Creager. Matt works for Manifold. He's here with us today to tell us his story. Stay tuned! [01:00] – Introduction to Matt Creager Matt works for an interesting company called Manifold. They sponsored the show. [01:35] – How did you get into programming? Before Matt fell in love with programming, he was in love with technology. They bought his first computer. It was a Gateway 2000 and he got access to the internet around the same time. He spent all of his time on that computer because they were moving around so much. That became the way that he stayed in touch with people. He remembers taking it apart and formatting the hard drive accidentally. His uncle has been in the IT industry since he was a kid too. Matt was always associating him with spending time with his computer programming, a role model, and stabilizer in his life. He was switching tapes. And then, his cousin decided that he was going to start scripting his character’s actions in a game that they were playing. And now, looking back, it was some combination of Lua and C++. He started taking his cousin’s scripts apart to automate his own character in the game. He was 13 or 14. The first programming book that he bought was a result of not being able to figure out how to get his character what it wants to do. It was one of the C++ bibles. And then, he became active in the forums around the scripting language. He was sharing the scripts and he started to realize that he can harvest stuff in the game and sell it for real cash. Matt never considered himself technical and never considered programming a career. He was just translating CPU and RAM for people who were shopping for computers. And then, he wanted people to measure theirs so he built tools that took the data they had in an office and turn them into reports. When the manager started using that, it became a nationwide program and suddenly, he was on the map. He was leading a team. When Blackberry started a technical interview, he realized that he has the answers to these questions. Initially, he was just a Technical Issues Manager. He had a Data Science team and that team was responsible for identifying and prioritizing issues. They were using Node 0.4, very early version of Node. And then, he discovered Angular and dived head first to the Angular community. [13:10] – BlackBerry got Matt to JavaScript Matt looked at Node because he was trying to figure out how he could do real time analytics. He wanted these dashboards that data scientists are looking at. That was the stepping stone into JavaScript. [15:30] – Hackathon On the side, a couple of local companies started to run hackathons. Matt was going to hackathons all the time. Then, he ended up of hopping from BlackBerry to becoming a full time front-end developer at a start-up. Matt was talking with one of the organizers at LA Hacks. She was telling him that the reason why people are going to these hackathons is because they want to win and they want to put that fact on their resumes. In his day, that was not hackathons were like. The prizes can act as a negative incentive. They really work hard for the prizes. Sometimes they actually end up becoming more creative as a result because they know they need to use this specific combination of API’s. [18:45] – Contributions to JavaScript community When Matt joined GoInstant, it was very early days of RTC. Web sockets are new at that point. You’re probably more familiar with Firebase. In the early days, GoInstant and Firebase are competing for the same developers. They’re working on the same problems. The tools that they are building were real time synchronization between the state you have on the client and the state you have on the server. A lot of those that they build, open-source tools, they went with GoInstant to Salesforce. But they inspired the libraries and a lot of it is probably on the same code base that you now see in libraries that pretty much does the same things with Firebase. And then, most recently, Matt and the team built Torus. They realized that if they are going to be building smaller applications, going to start to use more cloud services, more services tailored towards developers, and going to manage a lot more credential, a lot of credentials that need to be secured and shared with the teammates, they needed to take those credentials and put them on applications wherever they are running, whether that’s a Docker container or Heroku. That’s his most recent open-source project. [20:50] – What are you working on now? Manifold is their latest project. They’re trying to build a market place for developer services. It’s been 3 months. They moved from Torus to building Manifold earlier this year. The official launch hasn’t happened yet. That’s hopefully to come earlier this year – September. If it’s something that you want to try out and experiment with, there is a coupon for My JS. Give it a try before they launch a $25 credit that they can use to provision a logging instance, monitoring, or database. You can use it with any type of services that you might need to build your app. Picks Matt Creager OpenCollective.com Scaphold GraphQL Elixir Manifold.co Twitter, Github: @matt_creager Charles Max Wood AWS Lambda Zapier Heroku Udemy course for Ionic Framework
Episode 106 - Noah Galloway lost two of his limbs in 2005. He has not let that stop him from completing obstacle races and being an inspiration to thousands, but you probably already knew that. Matt B. caught up with Noah to ask him about being on the cover of Men's Health and appearing on Ellen. Before Matt could do that, Emma and Jaxson (two of Matt's kids) had a few questions of their own. Today’s episode is sponsored by BattlefrogSeries. Check them out now to see all the cities they will be hitting in 2015. Use code BATTLEORM for race entry discounts. You can find additional episodes for the Obstacle Racing Media Podcast on iTunes and Stitcher. Show Notes Noah's Website Jeff Marier interview with Noah from 2011 Georgia Warrior Dash
Single Family or Multi Family? Which one of these property types is the right investment for you? Once you've decided the right type of property for you, should you flip it or hold it? On this episode Matt answers these questions that have been pulled directly from the Epic Real Estate Investing podcast community, and the answers will surprise you. Before Matt addresses these questions, he's joined by surprise guest Sean Terry of the very popular Ultimate Real Estate Investing podcast. Listen in on their phone conversation where they catch up a bit and talk shop. To get started investing in real estate, go to FreeRealEstateInvestingCourse.com and download Matt's free real estate investing course where he teaches the two easiest and fastest real estate strategies for creating quick cash.
Quick! Before Matt and Greg do something dumb! We've got some good ideas and some not-so-good ideas. Help us make the decision as we rename Eyes on Conservation! Tell us what to do!!! info@wildlensinc.org or leave a voicemail at 208-917-3786.