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ON TODAYS PROGRAM… WITH GIANPIERO LAMBIASES LEAVING RED BULL THE MAX ERA IN F1 COMING TO AN END… WHEN FERRARI PLAY CATCH UP…WELL WE'VE SEEN THAT COMEDY OF ERRORS BEFORE MERCEDES WILL NEVER SHOW ALL THEIR CARDS AND… FERNANDO KNOWS THE FAT LADY IS ABOUT TO SING! THIS WEEK'S NASIR HAMEED CORNER WE HAVE: ZACK BROWN before he joined McLaren and BOB BONDURANT… AND YES….OUR BONUS IS HIRO MATSUSHITA OF FORMULA 1 AND CHAMP CAR FAME! Bob Bondurant was one of America's most influential racing figures — a driver who succeeded on the world's greatest circuits, competed for legendary teams including Shelby American, Ferrari, and Eagle, and ultimately shaped generations of racers through education. Rising from the fiercely competitive Southern California road racing scene of the 1950s, Bondurant achieved significant success on both sides of the Atlantic and became a pivotal ambassador for American road racing. His enduring legacy lives on through the Bob Bondurant School of High Performance Driving, which trained hundreds of thousands of drivers — from future professionals to Hollywood royalty. Career, Bondurant was born in Evanston, Illinois, but his competitive instincts emerged early and loudly. As a teenager, he raced Indian motorcycles on dirt ovals, learning car control the hard way. By 1956, he shifted his focus to sports cars, initially racing a Morgan, and soon made his mark by winning the West Coast “B” Production Championship in a Chevrolet Corvette, claiming an extraordinary 18 victories in 20 races. His growing reputation caught the attention of Santa Barbara Chevrolet dealer Shelly Washburn, who hired Bondurant in 1961 to drive his #614 1959 Corvette. Over the next several seasons, Bondurant became a dominant force on the West Coast. His on-track rivalry with David McDonald produced some of the era's most memorable Corvette battles. At the 1962 L.A. Times Grand Prix, Bondurant debuted Washburn's new 1963 Corvette Z06 Stingray, and between 1961 and 1963, he won an astonishing 30 of 32 races in Washburn's Corvettes. Shelby, Europe, and international success In 1963, Bondurant joined Carroll Shelby's Ford Cobra team, immediately delivering results. He won his first race for Shelby at Continental Divide Raceway in Colorado, followed by an overall GT victory at the L.A. Times Grand Prix at Riverside later that year. The following season propelled him onto the global stage. After finishing second in GT at Sebring, Bondurant spent 1964 racing in Europe, campaigning Shelby's new 289 FIA Cobras at iconic events including the Targa Florio, Spa-Francorchamps, and the Nürburgring. His most celebrated triumph came at the 1964 24 Hours of Le Mans, where he and Dan Gurney won the GT class in the revolutionary Cobra Daytona Coupé. Bondurant reached the peak of his international racing career in 1965, when he played a key role in Shelby American and Ford winning the FIA Manufacturers' World Championship. He won seven of ten races, defeating the class-dominant Ferrari 250 GTOs across Europe. That same year, Bondurant expanded his résumé further, driving a works Ferrari Formula One car at the United States Grand Prix at Watkins Glen, followed by a start in a Lotus 33 for Reg Parnell at the Mexican Grand Prix. Formula One, film, and defining moments In 1966, Bondurant's expertise took him beyond the racetrack. He served as technical consultant for John Frankenheimer's film Grand Prix and personally trained lead actor James Garner to drive Formula cars for the movie's racing scenes. That same year, Bondurant was involved in one of the most consequential moments in motorsport safety history. Alongside Graham Hill, he helped extract Jackie Stewart from his fuel-soaked wreck during the 1966 Belgian Grand Prix — an incident that directly inspired Stewart's later campaign for improved safety standards. Bondurant also competed in five Formula One Grands Prix with Team Chamaco Collect, driving BRMs and achieving an impressive fourth-place finish at Monaco. He rounded out his Formula One involvement in North America with two races driving an Eagle for Dan Gurney's Anglo American Racers. The crash that changed everything In 1967, Bondurant competed in the Can-Am series and returned to Le Mans in a Corvette L88 Coupé, leading the GT class until a wrist pin failure ended his race in the early morning hours. Later that year, disaster struck at Watkins Glen. While driving a McLaren, a steering arm failed at approximately 150 mph approaching the Loop-Chute section (today's Turn 5). The car flipped eight times, leaving Bondurant with severe injuries to his ribs, legs, feet, and most critically, his back. Doctors warned he might never walk again. Bondurant refused to accept that verdict. Through determination and relentless rehabilitation, he recovered — and in the process, envisioned a new chapter. LAMBIASE TO LEAVE ORACLE RED BULL RACING IN 2028 Oracle Red Bull Racing confirms that GianPiero Lambiase will leave the Team in 2028, when his current contract expires. “GP” is a valued member of the Team, which he joined in 2015. Until his planned departure, “GP" continues in his roles as Head of Racing and as Race Engineer to Max Verstappen. The Team and he are fully committed to add more success to our strong track record together. Miami and Montreal to host FIA Formula 2 Championship Rounds in 2026 FIA Formula 2 announce that Miami and Montreal will host Rounds 2 and 3 of the 2026 calendar, alongside Formula 1 – the first time the Championship will race in North America. The opportunity for Miami and Montreal to join the F2 calendar has come about following the news that the Sakhir and Jeddah Rounds will not take place in April. The FIA Formula 2 championship will go to Miami, USA, on May 1-3 for what will be the second Round of the 2026 season, followed by Montreal, Canada on May 22-24, as Round 3, before returning to Europe, starting with Monte-Carlo, Monaco, on June 04-07. Stefano Domenicali, President & CEO of Formula 1, said: “While it has not been possible to go ahead with the two races in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia this month, and we look forward to being back with our passionate fans there as soon as possible, it is great news for our fans, the drivers and the teams that Formula 2 will be racing in Miami and Montreal. Bruno and the whole F2 family have done a great job, working closely with us, the FIA, and the Miami and Montreal promoters, to ensure we limit the gap in racing for the championship this season and I want to thank them for making this possible. It is going to be fantastic to restart the racing in a few weeks' time and to have F2 alongside Formula 1 as we return to the US for the first time this season.” Mohammed Ben Sulayem, FIA President, said: “Following the necessary changes to the calendar at the start of the season, the addition of these new rounds ensures the FIA Formula 2 Championship remains strong and balanced, and able to deliver for our teams, drivers and fans. Bringing the championship to North America via Miami and Montreal for the first time marks an important step in its continued global growth, strengthening the pathway alongside Formula One and connecting with new audiences. I thank all those who worked tirelessly to make these rounds possible. “Our thoughts remain with all those affected by the ongoing events in the Middle East and we continue to hope for a swift return to stability. We look forward to racing in Bahrain and Saudi Arabia very soon.” Bruno Michel, FIA Formula 2 CEO, said: “We always love to race in Sakhir and Jeddah, and we wish them well and look forward to returning to both as soon as circumstances allow. We are now going to Miami and Montreal for the second and third rounds of the 2026 season, respectively. I would like to thank Stefano Domenicali and Formula 1 for their support in making this possible, and also the FIA, the promoters of the Miami and Canadian Grands Prix, and of course my team, who have worked hard to put in place two new Rounds in such a short amount of time. It was not an easy thing to do, but bringing F2 to North America for the first time is really fantastic. It's something we have been wanting to do for a long time, and it enables us to ensure we're back racing as quickly as possible. It will be a great new challenge for our teams and our drivers, who have all welcomed the news with enthusiasm. I am certain that the quality of racing will bring a lot of excitement to the fans and to everyone attending both Grands Prix.” Revised 2026 FIA Formula 2 Championship Calendar Date Venue 06-08 March Melbourne, Australia 01-03 May Miami, USA* 22-24 May Montreal, Canada* 04-07 June Monte-Carlo, Monaco 12-14 June Barcelona, Spain 26-28 June Spielberg, Austria 03-05 July Silverstone, Great Britain 17-19 July Spa-Francorchamps, Belgium 24-26 July Budapest, Hungary 04-06 September Monza, Italy 11-13 September Madrid, Spain** 24-26 September Baku, Azerbaijan 27-29 November Lusail, Qatar 04-06 December Yas Island, UAE ASTON MARTIN ARAMCO FORMULA ONE™ TEAM EXPANDS DRIVER ACADEMY LINE-UP, WELCOMING AVA LAWRENCE & ROLAND NAGY AMRTC, UK, 9 April 2026: The Aston Martin Aramco Formula One™ Team is pleased to announce the expansion of its Driver Academy, welcoming DPK Racing karters Ava Lawrence and Roland Nagy to the programme. The team's latest signings reflect its ongoing commitment to identifying, supporting, and developing the next generation of motorsport talent. The team's Driver Academy offers a clear pathway to the highest levels of racing, supporting drivers both on and off the track. It helps them develop, learn and grow, while providing the opportunities needed to succeed. The programme focuses on building long-term partnerships and actively scouting the brightest young talent across all levels of motorsport. At just 11 years old, Australian born Ava Lawrence has established herself as a rising force in international karting. Competing across Rotax, IAME and FIA-aligned categories, she has claimed multiple podium finishes and broken new ground as the first female MENA Cup Champion, the first female winner of a Mini race in ROK Cup Italy, and the first female driver to reach the podium in the Mini class of the Champions of the Future Academy. Ava, who races under an Emirati licence, was recently selected to represent F1 ACADEMY DISCOVER YOUR DRIVE in this year's British Champions of the Future Academy (COTFA) Programme having also been chosen to represent the initiative over the previous two seasons in the international series. 13-year-old Roland Nagy has emerged as a standout competitor in the premier OK-Junior category, making his mark on the international karting scene. Roland, from Hungary, is a regular contender in the sport's most prestigious series, including the FIA Karting European Championship and the WSK Super Master Series. He has demonstrated his exceptional race craft and speed, notably securing heat victory at the opening round of the Champions of the Future Euro Series at La Conca. Roland frequently qualifies for highly competitive finals, marking him as one of the most promising young Hungarian talents as he continues his progression toward the higher echelons of professional motorsport. The Aston Martin Aramco Driver Academy's strategic partnership with DPK Racing, the official team of FA Alonso Kart chassis, provides access to a combined wealth of karting expertise and a global network, including that of Fernando Alonso. This collaboration strengthens the Academy's ability to identify and nurture promising young talent from the earliest stages of their motorsport careers, and reflects the trust placed in the team's karting expertise to help identify and develop these young drivers as they progress through the ranks. Nuno Pinto, Racing Director, Aston Martin Aramco Formula One™ Team Driver Academy: “Bringing in talent at a junior level is an important part of our strategy, and Ava and Roland are excellent examples of the calibre of young driver that we want to bring in the programme. Both drivers have already shown impressive potential on the international stage, with strong performances in highly competitive categories. Having the opportunity to contribute to a driver's development from such an early stage is incredibly important, allowing us to help shape their progression both on and off the track as they continue to grow in the sport.” Ava Lawrence, Aston Martin Aramco Formula One™ Team Driver Academy: "I'm really excited to join the Aston Martin Aramco Driver Academy. It's going to be such a huge step to help me improve my driving and become even better on track. I'm looking forward to meeting everyone on the team and learning from them. “Getting to visit the AMR Technology Campus (AMRTC) for my announcement was so cool. My favourite part of the day was seeing the different materials they use on the Formula One cars and actually getting to touch parts of the car. It was so interesting to see how it's all made!” Roland Nagy, Aston Martin Aramco Formula One™ Team Driver Academy: “I'm really pleased to be a part of the Aston Martin Aramco Driver Academy. The team will be giving me a lot of support, which will be really important for my career, and I'm excited to learn as much as I can from everyone I meet inside the team. “It was really cool to visit the AMRTC. I really liked how it looks, both outside and inside – it's very futuristic. My favourite part was seeing how the cars are made. It's amazing seeing Formula One cars up close and what they look like on the inside.” Ava and Roland join current Aston Martin Aramco Driver Academy members Mari Boya, competing in FIA Formula 2, and Mathilda Paatz, F1 ACADEMY driver.
Business architecture stands at a critical crossroads as AI-driven disruption and accelerating change challenge traditional practices. In this live recording from the Twin Cities Business Architecture Forum, four industry veterans debate whether the profession is properly equipped for the future, examining everything from framework fatigue to the irreplaceable human skills that no technology can automate. Watch for 5 things you must know about the future of business architecture... We Discuss:Is business architecture too rigid and dogmatic to adapt to current challenges like AI disruption? Are we overthinking frameworks and tools instead of just doing the workWill AI replace business architects? How do we manage the expectation that AI can help us when models always have inherent latency? Should we train business relationship managers (BRMs) to do business architecture instead of maintaining separate architecture practices? 5 Takeaways: Business architecture is at an inflection point where the profession must evolve beyond documenting current state to strategically designing organizations with intent across people, process, and technology in an era of unprecedented AI-driven disruption. AI will transform the architect's role by automating artifact generation and model creation, allowing practitioners to spend more time on irreplaceable human activities like stakeholder engagement, asking the right questions, and strategic thinking. The most critical non-negotiable skills for business architects are storytelling ability, epistemic humility, and the capacity to replace judgment with curiosity while maintaining principles of systemic thinking over siloed approaches. Organizations risk failure when they eliminate dedicated architecture roles under the false assumption that "everyone should think like an architect," because without accountability and specialized focus, strategic architectural thinking simply won't happen. The profession must urgently address talent pipeline challenges by increasing visibility through university programs, hackathons, and mentorship models, as most people are familiar with building architects but have never heard of business or enterprise architects.
Harga emas global kembali menunjukkan tren kenaikan di tengah ketidakpastian ekonomi global, inflasi tinggi, dan ekspektasi penurunan suku bunga The Fed. Momentum ini membuat saham-saham emiten yang bergerak di sektor emas, seperti ANTM, HRTA, MDKA, dan BRMS, menjadi sorotan investor karena kinerja mereka cenderung berkorelasi positif dengan harga emas dunia. Lalu seperti apa dampaknya? Bagaimana strategi cuan di saham-saham tambang emas, juga saham mana aja yang valuasinya masih menarik, juga tips and tricknya bagi pemula atau investor yang ingin cari peluang baru di tengah pasar yang lagi nggak pasti dengan berinvestasi. Temukan jawabannya di Episode Bareksa Insight kali ini bersama Content Creator/Founder Indonesia Investment Education, Rita Effendy. Install sekarang!https://bareksa.onelink.me/bLEI/YTBareksa
Technovation with Peter High (CIO, CTO, CDO, CXO Interviews)
In this episode of Technovation, Peter High speaks with Mark Sherwood, Chief Information Officer at Wolters Kluwer, a €6B global professional services and software firm headquartered in the Netherlands. Mark joined as CIO in December 2024 and has helped accelerate the company's transition from a traditional publishing business to a tech-centric organization. Mark discusses how his global team supports the company's AI- and cloud-first strategy, the role of business relationship managers (BRMs) in bridging tech and business, and how a strong innovation culture helps Wolters Kluwer stay ahead in the digital age. With nearly half the company's products leveraging AI and a robust multi-cloud foundation, the firm is redefining access to expert content in legal, tax, healthcare, and finance. Key topics include: Building a multi-cloud foundation for global resilience and innovation The evolution from a holding company to a unified operating mode Scaling AI across products while protecting intellectual property Driving cultural change through transparency, inclusion, and BRM alignment Balancing cutting-edge tech with ethical AI and data governance
See what I did there? BROOMS? We're talking Ben Cherington's comments about the team, coaching staff, and Derek Shelton. We're talking Paul Skenes and his Rookie of the Year case. And we'll do our first of 6 shows talking about preparing for the offseason. Tonight, we're talking Starting Pitching. In order to act, you must first prepare!https://linktr.ee/bridgetobuctoberSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/bridge-to-buctober/donations
The 9x BRMS track champ loads up on race stories, plenty of non racing stories and other things. Mike's 'job' at the race track when he was 9 His family wasn't keen on him racing Digging up Beech Ridge Why he never went 'tour' racing
Hai, Sobat Cuan.. Siapa nih yang punya emiten BRMS? Nah, kalian udah pada tau belum sih, kalau konglomerasi bisnis raksasa milik Anthoni Salim dikabarkan menjadi pembeli aktif emiten pertambangan milik Grup Bakrie tersebut.. Bahkan, kabarnya diborong dengan nilai jumbo lho Sobat Cuan.. Nah, kira-kira gimana nih ya masa depannya BRMS ini? Apakah sudah waktunya untuk atur ulang portofolio? Hehehe… Nah, biar makin cuan, simak dulu yuk segmen PAHAM (Pantauan Saham) kali ini, bareng Maria Katarina dan Tri Putra Wijaya, selaku Researcher CNBC Indonesia berikut ini.. Sobat Cuan, jangan lupa ya untuk follow IG @cuap_cuan, dan juga subscribe youtube channel Cuap Cuap Cuan, kemudian di like, comment dan share ya. Salam cuan!
Ajay Mendes one of the pioneers who is contributing to the growth of the sport of cycling in Goa. He is one of the founding members and owners of the team Equipe Goa, the most promising cycling team currently from Goa. I sat down with him when he was here along with his team Equipe Goa that was taking part in BBCH Kolar Express race. In this episode he shares a bit about his endurance journey. But, we mainly focus on how cycling in Goa has changed over the years. We also talks about how teams like Equipe Goa are working towards unearthing raw talent and nurturing it for future. 0:00:00 Intro 0:02:14 His early entry into fitness with weight training and weight loss 0:06:10 Cycling as part of a wholistic fitness routine, doing BRMs etc 0:09:40 Cycling in Goa over the years 0:11:05 Equipe Goa formation and Tour of Goa 2020 0:16:20 Equipe Goa races; Equipe Goa Racing Acadamy 0:20:40 Equipe Goa the road ahead 0:22:26 Cycling in Goa growing over the years with Cycling Goa, Xaxti rider and Equipe Goa 0:25:30 Closing remarks! Some Links Below: Working Athlete Community on FB. Link to Anchor Voice messages About the Podcast The working athlete podcast is a podcast with and for working athletes from all walks of life and various sports. The goal is to provide inspiration, training tips, mental hacks, time management and life-style advice through conversations with some of the best in sport, from athletes to coaches. If you think you can benefit from this, please consider subscribing so that you don't miss the weekly episodes in future. If you like this, share with friends who could be interested. For the visually inclined, a video version of the podcast can be found here: YouTube Other Places you'll find the podcast on: Anchor | RSS | Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Google podcasts | Pocket Casts | Radio Public | Breaker
Wrapping up season 2 with another Maine Motorsports Hall of Famer. - Fowlers invade Funkmaster Flex - Dream season with Mike Rowe - Team sells, but stays in the family's - Dick's side of the BRMS story. Share, screenshot, rate, review, and tell a friend! Thank you for the support!
One of Beech Ridge's most decorated characters tells his story...all of it. Stage 1: - Selling programs in the 60's - Digging up the old BRMS surface - How to grow a proper potato (I wanted to know) - The balance of family, farming, and fast cars - 80's and 90's domination - The boys step onto the scene Please support! Patreon MVRCA
When your home away from home suddenly vanishes, what's next? Is there a second act? Without skipping a lap, do you go to the nearest track? Is it just...over? Beech Ridge Motor Speedway was an active facility from 1949 - 2021. Stars like Chris Smith, Keith Petrin, Brandon Johnson, Gary Smith, and Rusty Poland are among those moving on. For the first time, we hear many of them speak on the fateful night, their closure, what BRMS meant to them, and where they're going next. Thank you for your continued support on Patreon Keep racing history alive by subscribing to MVRCA
We pick up Dan's story with more stories on the Maine Motorsport Report How Dan ended up getting a TV he didn't try out for Dan's son becomes a BRMS champion Showmanship The economics of racing and current challenges Your support: https://www.patreon.com/opentrailerpodcast MVRCA - https://mainevintagerace.org/
Are you interested in learning about Business Relationship Management? Relationships are everywhere and why not learn from two professionals who have been in this space since 2013. I HIGHLY recommend Lead The Pack Consulting with Peter Lijnse and Elka Schrijver. Lead The Pack Consulting is focused on training BRM courses, advanced courses, workshops, and coaching for individuals, larger organizations, multinational organizations and non-profit organizations. Peter has received the Trailblazer award from BRM Institute in 2015 and 2016. In 2017 he received the BRM Excellence award for the impact he has made in the BRM community through the Knowledge team, weekly videos, BRM Cafe podcast and presentations around the globe. In 2021, Peter was awarded the BRMLegend Award called the Arnie. Recipients receive the Arnie for going above and beyond to get involved at BRM Institute, assume leadership positions within their BRM practice, establish mentoring relationships with other BRMs, and set an example within the global BRM community. https://leadthepackconsulting.com You can follow the I Can Do Anything Podcast at: Like us and subscribe on Facebook - https://bit.ly/3bG0Efk Follow us on Twitter - https://bit.ly/2yqZczb Find us on Instagram - https://bit.ly/2xDFIa4 Get your merch here - https://bit.ly/teespringicdapod Watch our faces on YouTube - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCeI1EHGodsDgwYbvHuOxLQQ Email us at – icandoanything@gmail.com And then there is always our website - www.icandoanythingpod.com Join us on Goodreads – ICDA
You know I love epistemology — the study of how we know what we know. It was high time I dedicated a whole episode to this topic. And what better guest than Aubrey Clayton, the author of the book Bernoulli's Fallacy: Statistical Illogic and the Crisis of Modern Science. I'm in the middle of reading it, and it's a really great read! Aubrey is a mathematician in Boston who teaches the philosophy of probability and statistics at the Harvard Extension School. He holds a PhD in mathematics from the University of California, Berkeley, and his writing has appeared in Pacific Standard, Nautilus, and the Boston Globe. We talked about what he deems “a catastrophic error in the logic of the standard statistical methods in almost all the sciences” and why this error manifests even outside of science, like in medicine, law, public policy, etc. But don't worry, we're not doomed — we'll also see where we go from there. As a big fan of E.T Jaynes, Aubrey will also tell us how this US scientist influenced his own thinking as well as the field of Bayesian inference in general. Our theme music is « Good Bayesian », by Baba Brinkman (feat MC Lars and Mega Ran). Check out his awesome work at https://bababrinkman.com/ (https://bababrinkman.com/) ! Thank you to my Patrons for making this episode possible! Yusuke Saito, Avi Bryant, Ero Carrera, Brian Huey, Giuliano Cruz, Tim Gasser, James Wade, Tradd Salvo, Adam Bartonicek, William Benton, Alan O'Donnell, Mark Ormsby, Demetri Pananos, James Ahloy, Robin Taylor, Thomas Wiecki, Chad Scherrer, Nathaniel Neitzke, Zwelithini Tunyiswa, Elea McDonnell Feit, Bertrand Wilden, James Thompson, Stephen Oates, Gian Luca Di Tanna, Jack Wells, Matthew Maldonado, Ian Costley, Ally Salim, Larry Gill, Joshua Duncan, Ian Moran, Paul Oreto, Colin Caprani, George Ho, Colin Carroll, Nathaniel Burbank, Michael Osthege, Rémi Louf, Clive Edelsten, Henri Wallen, Hugo Botha, Vinh Nguyen, Raul Maldonado, Marcin Elantkowski, Tim Radtke, Adam C. Smith, Will Kurt, Andrew Moskowitz, Hector Munoz, Marco Gorelli, Simon Kessell, Bradley Rode, Patrick Kelley, Rick Anderson, Casper de Bruin, Philippe Labonde, Matthew McAnear, Michael Hankin, Cameron Smith, Luis Iberico, Alejandro Morales, Tomáš Frýda, Ryan Wesslen and Andreas Netti. Visit https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats (https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats) to unlock exclusive Bayesian swag ;) Links from the show: Aubrey's website: https://aubreyclayton.com/ (https://aubreyclayton.com/) Aubrey on Twitter: https://twitter.com/aubreyclayton (https://twitter.com/aubreyclayton) Bernoulli's Fallacy: https://aubreyclayton.com/bernoulli (https://aubreyclayton.com/bernoulli) Aubrey's probability theory lectures based on E.T Jayne's work: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9v9IXDsJkktefQzX39wC2YG07vw7DsQ_ (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL9v9IXDsJkktefQzX39wC2YG07vw7DsQ_) What Society Gets Wrong About Statistics: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDulF2MzsIU (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fDulF2MzsIU) The Prosecutor's Fallacy: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosecutor%27s_fallacy (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prosecutor%27s_fallacy) The Theory That Would Not Die -- How Bayes' Rule Cracked the Enigma Code: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10672848-the-theory-that-would-not-die (https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/10672848-the-theory-that-would-not-die) LBS #18, How to ask good Research Questions and encourage Open Science, with Daniel Lakens: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/18-how-to-ask-good-research-questions-and-encourage-open-science-with-daniel-lakens (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/18-how-to-ask-good-research-questions-and-encourage-open-science-with-daniel-lakens) LBS #35, The Past, Present & Future of BRMS, with Paul Bürkner: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/35-past-present-future-brms-paul-burkner (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/35-past-present-future-brms-paul-burkner) LBS #40, Bayesian Stats... Support this podcast
Richard Pharro, CEO of APMG International, and special guest Pez Kooner, Global Head of IT at Rolls Royce Civil Aerospace, discuss the role of IT Partners and Business Relationship Managers; how an organisation like Rolls Royce keeps pace with technology; and the difference between a Business Relationship Manager and a Project Manager.They further discuss some of the roles that feed into business relationship management - such as Business Analysts - and Pez describes his perspective on the kind of person that makes a great relationship manager including understanding the business, understanding technology, being a problem solver and of course, great at relationship management.The Practice of Business Relationship Management embodies a set of competencies (e.g. knowledge, skills, and behaviors) to foster an effective, value-producing relationship between business functions and their business partners.BRM Institute has partnered with APMG to promote wider adoption of world-class Business Relationship Management training and facilitate widespread availability of BRM Institute professional certifications.→ apmg-international.com/product/brm→ rolls-royce.com/products-and-services/civil-aerospace.aspx
You wanna know something funny? A sentence from this episode became a meme. And people even made stickers out of it! Ok, that's not true. But if someone could pull off something like that, it would surely be Chelsea Parlett-Pelleriti. Indeed, Chelsea's research focuses on using statistics and machine learning on behavioral data, but her more general goal is to empower people to be able to do their own statistical analyses, through consulting, education, and, as you may have seen, stats memes on Twitter. A full-time teacher, researcher and statistical consultant, Chelsea earned an MsC and PhD in Computational and Data Science in 2021 from Chapman University. Her courses include R, intro to programming (in Python), and data science. In a nutshell, Chelsea is, by her own admission, an avid lover of anything silly or statistical. Hopefully, this episode turned out to be both at once! I'll let you be the judge of that… Our theme music is « Good Bayesian », by Baba Brinkman (feat MC Lars and Mega Ran). Check out his awesome work at https://bababrinkman.com/ (https://bababrinkman.com/) ! Thank you to my Patrons for making this episode possible! Yusuke Saito, Avi Bryant, Ero Carrera, Brian Huey, Giuliano Cruz, Tim Gasser, James Wade, Tradd Salvo, Adam Bartonicek, William Benton, Alan O'Donnell, Mark Ormsby, Demetri Pananos, James Ahloy, Jon Berezowski, Robin Taylor, Thomas Wiecki, Chad Scherrer, Nathaniel Neitzke, Zwelithini Tunyiswa, Elea McDonnell Feit, Bertrand Wilden, James Thompson, Stephen Oates, Gian Luca Di Tanna, Jack Wells, Matthew Maldonado, Ian Costley, Ally Salim, Larry Gill, Joshua Duncan, Ian Moran, Paul Oreto, Colin Caprani, George Ho, Colin Carroll, Nathaniel Burbank, Michael Osthege, Rémi Louf, Clive Edelsten, Henri Wallen, Hugo Botha, Vinh Nguyen, Raul Maldonado, Marcin Elantkowski, Tim Radtke, Adam C. Smith, Will Kurt, Andrew Moskowitz, Hector Munoz, Marco Gorelli, Simon Kessell, Bradley Rode, Patrick Kelley, Rick Anderson, Casper de Bruin and Philippe Labonde. Visit https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats (https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats) to unlock exclusive Bayesian swag ;) Links from the show: Chelsea's website: https://cmparlettpelleriti.github.io/index.html (https://cmparlettpelleriti.github.io/index.html) Chelsea on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ChelseaParlett (https://twitter.com/ChelseaParlett) Michael Betancourt's sparsity case study: https://betanalpha.github.io/assets/case_studies/modeling_sparsity.html (https://betanalpha.github.io/assets/case_studies/modeling_sparsity.html) LBS #31 -- Bayesian Cognitive Modeling & Decision-Making, with Michael Lee: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/31-bayesian-cognitive-modeling-michael-lee (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/31-bayesian-cognitive-modeling-michael-lee) Projection predictive variable selection R package: https://mc-stan.org/projpred/ SelectiveInference R package: https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/selectiveInference/selectiveInference.pdf (https://cran.r-project.org/web/packages/selectiveInference/selectiveInference.pdf) Statistical learning and selective inference: https://www.pnas.org/content/112/25/7629 (https://www.pnas.org/content/112/25/7629) LBS #29 -- Model Assessment, Non-Parametric Models, with Aki Vehtari: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/model-assessment-non-parametric-models-aki-vehtari (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/model-assessment-non-parametric-models-aki-vehtari) LBS #35 -- The Past, Present & Future of BRMS, with Paul Bürkner: https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/35-past-present-future-brms-paul-burkner (https://www.learnbayesstats.com/episode/35-past-present-future-brms-paul-burkner) BRMS R Package: https://paul-buerkner.github.io/brms/ (https://paul-buerkner.github.io/brms/) Bayesian Item Response Modeling in R with BRMS and Stan: https://arxiv.org/pdf/1905.09501.pdf (https://arxiv.org/pdf/1905.09501.pdf) BAyesian Model-Building Interface (Bambi)... Support this podcast
We all know about these accidental discoveries — penicillin, the heating power of microwaves, or the famous (and delicious) tarte tatin. I don't know why, but I just love serendipity. And, as you'll hear, this episode is deliciously full of it… Thanks to Allison Hilger and Timo Roettger, we'll discover the world of linguistics, how Bayesian stats are helpful there, and how Paul Bürkner's BRMS package has been instrumental in this field. To my surprise — and perhaps yours — the speech and language sciences are pretty quantitative and computational! As she recently discovered Bayesian stats, Allison will also tell us about the challenges she's faced from advisors and reviewers during her PhD at Northwestern University, and the advice she'd have for people in the same situation. Allison is now an Assistant Professor at the University of Colorado Boulder. The overall goal in her research is to improve our understanding of motor speech control processes, in order to inform effective speech therapy treatments for improved speech naturalness and intelligibility. Allison also worked clinically as a speech-language pathologist in Chicago for a year. As a new Colorado resident, her new hobbies include hiking, skiing, and biking — and then reading or going to dog parks when she's to tired. Holding a PhD in linguistics from the University of Cologne, Germany, Timo is an Associate Professor for linguistics at the University of Oslo, Norway. Timo tries to understand how people communicate their intentions using speech – how are speech signals retrieved; how do people learn and generalize? Timo is also committed to improving methodologies across the language sciences in light of the replication crisis, with a strong emphasis on open science. Most importantly, Timo loves hiking, watching movies or, even better, watching people play video games! Our theme music is « Good Bayesian », by Baba Brinkman (feat MC Lars and Mega Ran). Check out his awesome work at https://bababrinkman.com/ (https://bababrinkman.com/) ! Thank you to my Patrons for making this episode possible! Yusuke Saito, Avi Bryant, Ero Carrera, Brian Huey, Giuliano Cruz, Tim Gasser, James Wade, Tradd Salvo, Adam Bartonicek, William Benton, Alan O'Donnell, Mark Ormsby, Demetri Pananos, James Ahloy, Jon Berezowski, Robin Taylor, Thomas Wiecki, Chad Scherrer, Nathaniel Neitzke, Zwelithini Tunyiswa, Elea McDonnell Feit, Bertrand Wilden, James Thompson, Stephen Oates, Gian Luca Di Tanna, Jack Wells, Matthew Maldonado, Ian Costley, Ally Salim, Larry Gill, Joshua Duncan, Ian Moran, Paul Oreto, Colin Caprani, George Ho, Colin Carroll, Nathaniel Burbank, Michael Osthege, Rémi Louf, Clive Edelsten, Henri Wallen, Jonathan Sedar, Hugo Botha, Vinh Nguyen, Raul Maldonado, Marcin Elantkowski, Tim Radtke, Adam C. Smith, Will Kurt and Andrew Moskowitz. Visit https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats (https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats) to unlock exclusive Bayesian swag ;) Links from the show: Allison's website: https://allisonhilger.com/ (https://allisonhilger.com/) Allison on Twitter: https://twitter.com/drahilger (https://twitter.com/drahilger) Allison's motor speech lab: https://www.colorado.edu/lab/motor-speech/ (https://www.colorado.edu/lab/motor-speech/) Timo's website: https://www.simplpoints.com/ (https://www.simplpoints.com/) Timo on Twitter: https://twitter.com/TimoRoettger (https://twitter.com/TimoRoettger) Bayesian regression modeling (for factorial designs) -- A tutorial: https://psyarxiv.com/cdxv3 (https://psyarxiv.com/cdxv3) An Introduction to Bayesian Multilevel Models Using brms -- A Case Study of Gender Effects on Vowel Variability in Standard Indonesian: https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8624552/file/8624553.pdf (https://biblio.ugent.be/publication/8624552/file/8624553.pdf) Longitudinal Growth in Intelligibility of Connected Speech From 2 to 8 Years in Children With Cerebral Palsy -- A Novel Bayesian Approach:... Support this podcast
Episode sponsored by Tidelift: https://tidelift.com/ (tidelift.com) One of the most common guest suggestions that you dear listeners make is… inviting Paul Bürkner on the show! Why? Because he’s a member of the Stan development team and he created BRMS, a popular R package to make and sample from Bayesian regression models using Stan. And, as I like you, I did invite Paul on the show and, well, that was a good call: we had an amazing conversation, spanning so many topics that I can’t list them all here! I asked him why he created BRMS, in which fields it’s mostly used, what its weaknesses are, and which improvements to the package he’s currently working on. But that’s not it! Paul also gave his advice to people realizing that Bayesian methods would be useful to their research, but who fear facing challenges from advisors or reviewers. Besides being a Bayesian rockstar, Paul is a statistician working as an Independent Junior Research Group Leader at the Cluster of Excellence SimTech at the University of Stuttgart, Germany. Previously, he has studied Psychology and Mathematics at the Universities of Münster and Hagen and did his PhD in Münster about optimal design and Bayesian data analysis, and he also worked as a Postdoctoral researcher at the Department of Computer Science at Aalto University, Finland. So, of course, I asked him about the software-assisted Bayesian workflow that he’s currently working on with Aki Vehtari, which led us to no less than the future of probabilistic programming languages… Our theme music is « Good Bayesian », by Baba Brinkman (feat MC Lars and Mega Ran). Check out his awesome work at https://bababrinkman.com/ (https://bababrinkman.com/) ! Thank you to my Patrons for making this episode possible! Yusuke Saito, Avi Bryant, Ero Carrera, Brian Huey, Giuliano Cruz, Tim Gasser, James Wade, Tradd Salvo, Adam Bartonicek, William Benton, Alan O'Donnell, Mark Ormsby, Demetri Pananos, James Ahloy, Jon Berezowski, Robin Taylor, Thomas Wiecki, Chad Scherrer, Vincent Arel-Bundock, Nathaniel Neitzke, Zwelithini Tunyiswa, Elea McDonnell Feit, Bertrand Wilden, James Thompson, Stephen Oates, Gian Luca Di Tanna, Jack Wells, Matthew Maldonado, Ian Costley, Ally Salim, Larry Gill, Joshua Duncan, Ian Moran, Paul Oreto, Colin Caprani, George Ho, Colin Carroll, Nathaniel Burbank, Michael Osthege, Rémi Louf, Clive Edelsten, Henri Wallen and Jonathan Sedar. Visit https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats (https://www.patreon.com/learnbayesstats) to unlock exclusive Bayesian swag ;) Links from the show: Paul's website: https://paul-buerkner.github.io/about/ (https://paul-buerkner.github.io/about/) Paul on Twitter: https://twitter.com/paulbuerkner (https://twitter.com/paulbuerkner) Paul on GitHub: https://github.com/paul-buerkner (https://github.com/paul-buerkner) BRMS docs: https://paul-buerkner.github.io/brms/ (https://paul-buerkner.github.io/brms/) Stan docs: https://mc-stan.org/ (https://mc-stan.org/) Bayesian workflow paper: https://arxiv.org/pdf/2011.01808v1.pdf (https://arxiv.org/pdf/2011.01808v1.pdf) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Podcorn - https://podcorn.com/privacy Support this podcast
Nigel Smith is a Level 3 British Accredited Cycling coach & the head coach of Scott India Race Development team ! He puts light on how the cycling culture is prevalent in the European countries and what needs to be done to grow the cycling culture in India. We answered some training specific questions on how to buildup for BRMs, Time Trials, Mass Start and other races. Including how to work on VO2 Max, Cadence and much more. Nigel extensively spoke about fueling the body and what to eat when you are out on the saddle. We covered some cross-training tips as well. Here are few stretches that we would suggest you to do: -https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VCM7xnL2QY This episode is must-listen for anyone who wants to get the boost in performance. Make sure you follow @eplogmedia on Instagram to get updated about our latest releases. Listen to our other shows as well on www.eplog.media Music Credit Rockin Till Morning- HOOKSOUNDS ORIGINALS See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Nigel Smith is a Level 3 British Accredited Cycling coach & the head coach of Scott India Race Development team ! He puts light on how the cycling culture is prevalent in the European countries and what needs to be done to grow the cycling culture in India. We answered some training specific questions on how to buildup for BRMs, Time Trials, Mass Start and other races. Including how to work on VO2 Max, Cadence and much more. Nigel extensively spoke about fueling the body and what to eat when you are out on the saddle. We covered some cross-training tips as well. Here are few stretches that we would suggest you to do: -https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1VCM7xnL2QY This episode is must-listen for anyone who wants to get the boost in performance. Make sure you follow @eplogmedia on Instagram to get updated about our latest releases. Listen to our other shows as well on www.eplog.media Music Credit Rockin Till Morning- HOOKSOUNDS ORIGINALS
"FRÜF – Frauen reden über Fußball" heißt der neue Podcast – und wir fragen uns: Warum gibt's den erst jetzt? Endlich! Typen, die ganz unter sich ins Mikrofon quatschen, gibt's schließlich genug. (Wir wissen, wovon wir sprechen, Leute!) Becci hat uns über das Projekt und das Kollektiv dahinter erzählt. Mit welchen Themen sich die Podcasterinnen in den monatlichen FRÜF-Ausgaben beschäftigen, warum Frauenfußball eigentlich total unterrepräsentiert ist, ob wir für unsere Rubrik "Neues von den Spielerfrauen" Absolution erhalten und wie die Frauen mit dumm-dämlich-abschätzig-männlichem Geschwätz umgehen, berichtet Becci im Gespräch mit Stefan. ♀+⚽+🎤=♥💡 Hausaufgabe für uns: Rubrik "Neues von den Spielerinnen-Männern" einführen!
In this episode Peter talks to Joe Topinka. Joe is a CIO and also the chairman of the board of directors of the BRM Institute. He has written a book about IT Business partnerships and is active as a consultant and coach to other CIOs. In this episode we talk about challenges of setting up BRM teams, connecting portfolio to strategy, convincing C-suite about BRM and technology, the changing IT organization and leadership skills for BRMs.
BRM Agile Lasagna. In this episode Peter talks to Aaron Monroe about Agile and BRM, role clarity about product manager, different frameworks, the challenges for BRMs working in an agile environment, being a transformationalist, business value and lasagna.
Own it. In this episode Peter talks to Stephanie Walsh, Aaron Monroe, Keri Milauskas and Leanne McGiveron to discuss the 2nd day of the BRM Connect Conference. The topics include the most impressive person at the conference, BRM Institute Playbook, advice for new BRMs and owning the role.
In this episode Peter and Starla talk to Cheri Jacoby. Importance of BRM education, Not enough BRMs, supply versus value constraint, key competencies and skills and certification
The Oil and Gas HSE podcast talks about one of the most important aspect of safety in the offshore drilling environment: BOP reliability. Garry Davis is the President of BOP Risk Mitigation Services (BRMS) where they have worked with drilling contractors, major oil and gas operators and federal regulators, for almost a decade, developing the technology to quickly and clearly troubleshoot and predict BOP faults. Because subsea well control equipment spends most of its time on the ocean floor, under thousands of feet of water, it is critical that all of the critical path and auxiliary components function properly. BOP equipment failures, most often due to human error, lead to major losses of time, money and unfortunately sometimes the loss of life. The BOP troubleshooting and simulation tools, along with the training BRMS provides can dramatically increase the reliability of not only you in service well control equipment but the people you put in charge of such vital equipment. Click Play to Hear the Oil and Gas HSE Podcast Episode 21 – BOP Reliability and Risk Mitigation [clear-line] We Have A Winner!!! Congratulations Dmitry Andreev a Production Engineer with Occidential Petroleum! You are this week’s winner of the Red Wing Offshore Bag! If you want to win one of these awesome rig bags, all you have to do is enter! Click Here to Enter [clear-line] More Information To find out more about what BOP Risk Mitigation Services is doing to help the industry keep the hydrocarbons where they’re supposed to be, check out the services they provide to the deepwater oil and gas industry. If you would like to reach out and connect with Garry, you can find him on LinkedIn. [clear-line] Upcoming Events Red Wing’s Oil and Gas HSE Podcast is hitting the road. Here are all of the upcoming events we will be attending: * Mid-Continent Digital Oilfield Conference; January 25 – 26 * NAPE Summit; February 15 – 17 * The Offshore Technology Conference (OTC); May 1 – 4 The OGHSE Podcast will also be hosting a live event in Q1-2017, in Houston, TX. Stay tuned for more details about the event and how you can get tickets. This Is Your Show Tell Mark and Patrick what topics you would like to hear discussed on the show! Click Here to Email Us [clear-line] Global Oil and Gas Network LinkedIn Group Join the number one SPAM FREE LinkedIn group for people interested in the oil and gas industry! Click Here to Join [clear-line] Get Mark and Patrick’s Monthly Events Emails Get automatically notified about oilfield and process improvements events every month. Get Mark’s Oil and Gas Events Newslett...
The Oil and Gas HSE podcast talks about one of the most important aspect of safety in the offshore drilling environment: BOP reliability. Garry Davis is the President of BOP Risk Mitigation Services (BRMS) where they have worked with drilling contractors, major oil and gas operators and federal regulators, for almost a decade, developing the technology to quickly and clearly troubleshoot and predict BOP faults. Because subsea well control equipment spends most of its time on the ocean floor, under thousands of feet of water, it is critical that all of the critical path and auxiliary components function properly. BOP equipment failures, most often due to human error, lead to major losses of time, money and unfortunately sometimes the loss of life. The BOP troubleshooting and simulation tools, along with the training BRMS provides can dramatically increase the reliability of not only you in service well control equipment but the people you put in charge of such vital equipment. Click Play to Hear the Oil and Gas HSE Podcast Episode 21 – BOP Reliability and Risk Mitigation [clear-line] We Have A Winner!!! Congratulations Dmitry Andreev a Production Engineer with Occidential Petroleum! You are this week's winner of the Red Wing Offshore Bag! If you want to win one of these awesome rig bags, all you have to do is enter! Click Here to Enter [clear-line] More Information To find out more about what BOP Risk Mitigation Services is doing to help the industry keep the hydrocarbons where they're supposed to be, check out the services they provide to the deepwater oil and gas industry. If you would like to reach out and connect with Garry, you can find him on LinkedIn. [clear-line] Upcoming Events Red Wing's Oil and Gas HSE Podcast is hitting the road. Here are all of the upcoming events we will be attending: Mid-Continent Digital Oilfield Conference; January 25 - 26 NAPE Summit; February 15 - 17 The Offshore Technology Conference (OTC); May 1 - 4 The OGHSE Podcast will also be hosting a live event in Q1-2017, in Houston, TX. Stay tuned for more details about the event and how you can get tickets. The OGHSE Podcast trip to the Mid-Continent Digital Oilfield Conference is made possible by the support of some great organizations: Oklahoma Energy Resources Board Their mission — to use the strength of Oklahoma’s greatest industry to improve the lives of all Oklahomans through education and restoration. SOER Sustaining Oklahoma’s Energy Resources [clear-line] This Is Your Show Tell Mark and Patrick what topics you would like to hear discussed on the show! Click Here to Email Us [clear-line] Global Oil and Gas Network LinkedIn Group Join the number one SPAM FREE LinkedIn group for people interested in the oil and gas industry! Click Here to Join [clear-line] Get Mark and Patrick's Monthly Events Emails Get automatically notified about oilfield and process improvements events every month. Get Mark's Oil and Gas Events Newsletter Get a FREE oil and gas digital marketing audit of your website [clear-line] Connect With Us Patrick Pistor | Twitter | LinkedIn | Email |Facebook |leanoilfield.com Mark LaCour | Twitter | LinkedIn | Email |Facebook | modalpoint.com
This week Dave and Gunnar talk about: automated swarms, automated chefs, and automated kill chains. Gunnar declares Clash of Clans and DomiNations horrible disappointments You’d think they’d be air gapped: Hackers Could Commandeer New Planes Through Passenger Wi-Fi Star Trek update It is indeed the Klingon High Council Klingon coming soon to Duolingo! “BioBot” Roaches Could Save Lives With Tiny Backpacks Just a regular day at the office: Intel CEO controls a swarm of robot spiders with gestures Runaway movie D&G Joke Kit of the Week: Soylent Blue? Fancy a tasty byte? Cookbook written by supercomputer Probably safer with Fresh Food Fast, courtesy of Gunnar’s wife. Facebook holds the largest private collection of biometric data Twitter moves non-US accounts to Ireland away from the NSA Google “find my phone” The classic Android Device Manager also still works Dave is back in Military Embedded Systems: COTS software challenges in the military electronics market “Hey everyone, look at me running Oracle on RHEL6 on RHEL7 using Docker.” BPM 6.1, BRMS 6.1 are out, announcement coming April 21st Common Criteria announced for JBoss EAP 6.2! EAL 4+ Labocki strikes! A beautiful RHCI architecture overview Red Hat Customer Portal answers in Google search results Ceph works. Just ask Yahoo. General Cartwright on organizational agility and culture change Cutting Room Floor Stephen Hawking Sings Monty Python… Galaxy Song What if Pixar Made Furious 7? Washington DC Gothic We Give Thanks JP Sherman for helping us stay authoritative!
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about: GSA USDS 18F OMB OSS LOL BBQ & RHEL SSG, RHEL VPAT, KVM, EAP GA, IBM+BRMS. Dave gets all Chromebooked up How to Turn a Raspberry Pi into a Google Cloud Print Server Gunnar gets all RØDE Podcastered up Calling Dr. Clater: Star Trek Axanar and Star Trek Phase II Correction: MSFT wasn’t subject to EU data protections, and in fact that’s what the Judge’s decision was about: whether they could comply with the warrant given the nexus of jurisdiction GSA and 18F: Open Source First 18F goes open first. GSA follows suit. US Digital Service announced, with Playbook and TechFAR. Bonus Gunnar press hit Lessons from the UK’s Govt Digital Service Gunnar’s posts on 18F and USDS More transparency made the Fed quieter, more conservative, more worried about how smart it sounds Gunnarbait of the week: Microsoft’s Olivier Bloch Explains Microsoft Open Source (Video) This Week in Vendor Abandonment: Rackspace bows out commodity IaaS market in favor of ‘managed cloud’ Lauren’s new Raspberry Pi project’s maiden voyage: Impossible Deceptions, Charles Peachock & Jason Alan Magic on August 23 Formal ALUG Meeting: Controlling juggling pins with Raspberry Pi – Lauren Egts on September 4 Dave bait: Docker kicks KVM’s butt in IBM tests Performance Analysis of Docker on Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 RHEL 6.6 Beta is out Includes the SCAP Security Guide!!! VPAT for RHEL 7! JBoss EAP 6.3 is GA Reminder: JBoss BRMS and IBM are the only BRMS worth looking at, per Forrester OpenShift now up at UNC The copy of the U.S. Constitution that’s installed on every Mac Cutting Room Floor Fold a shirt in 2 seconds TBD: A SkyMall catalog of the future Philosophy Referee Hand Signals Beautiful Open Source Project Sites Building a Better Butter Knife
This week, Dave and Gunnar talk about: talk about: backups, media players, Amazon GovCloud, new JBoss releases, Gilligan’s Island. Subscribe via RSS or iTunes. Star Trek Continues E02 “Lolani” puts Dave in a state of euphoria The Twilight dude puts Gunnar in a state of euphoria Drobo or Dropbox or something else? Delta SkyMiles To Be Based On Price Of Ticket, Not Distance Of Flight Added to the list of Things Gunnar Won’t Buy: Keurig’s next generation of coffee machines will have DRM lockdown Apple CarPlay coming to a Volvo near you “Will Apple allow Google Maps on CarPlay?” Google opens up Chromecast with new streaming SDK for iOS, Android, Chrome cloud.cio.gov is surprisingly useful! Better than Cam Scanner? Google Drive updated with quick-scan widget and animated GIF support From the ACLU: How location data can be abused FCC To TV Companies: You Can’t Broadcast Emergency Alert Tones If It’s Not An Emergency RIT now offers a minor in open source. Red Hat and RIT have been working on this for a while! So we don’t get hate mail from Langdon White: Check out DevNation April 13-17 in San Francisco! Get the lowest rate for the Red Hat Summit by going through your Red Hat account team. Over 40 OpenStack sessions! Dave moderating Government Lunch panel and Innovation Award Finalist panel! RHEL is now on GovCloud! JBoss BPM, BRMS released: welcome, Polymida! JBoss Fuse ESB on OpenShift: You can fit the install command in a tweet! .NET support hits OpenShift Origin! Oracle 12c install guide for RHEL 6 Inktank has publicaly stated support for RHEV3.3 and RHEL OSP4 in their 1.1 release In exchange, we published benchmarks that show Gluster is 2x as fast as Ceph. We’re classy! RTM pro-tip: yearly reminder for old blog posts Clever Map Reveals Which Cities Get the Best Weather 17 Facts You Might Not Know about Gilligan’s Island Commedia dell’Arte Free nightmare are available via Google Image search for plague mask HT D&G Ambassador to Japan Adam Clater: Why do Japanese people wear surgical masks? It’s not always for health reasons Far Side classic: How Nature Says “Do Not Touch” Cutting Room Floor Choosing secure passwords by Bruce Schneier Short rib recipies don’t qualify as Massachusetts vehicle inspection stickers Download 15,000+ Free Golden Age Comics from the Digital Comic Museum World’s fastest nose typer Fake chef pranks local morning TV shows How computer-generated fake papers are flooding academia SCIgen paper generator What languages sound like to foreigners Prisencolinensinainciusol: Oll raigth! When your stab proof suit is at the dry cleaner’s, wear taser-proof clothing We Give Thanks Adam Clater for keeping us up to speed on Japanese culture.