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First of all, Aaron is a pretty cool young man with a love for family, faith and golf!The title: “Humility doesn't come naturally!” In this episode, Aaron is fully transparent with his struggles of pride, but God is fully at work in his life and it shows! Please Subscribe and Download this ONE on Apple Podcast! #ConversationsWithBuddy#JesusFollower #discipleship#grateful#golflover #relationshipsmatter
Seth Buechley is a serial-entrepreneur and business founder focused on connecting high-potential leaders with the ideas, resources, and people they need to grow their enterprise and have lasting leadership impact. He currently serves as Chairman and CEO of Cathedral Consulting leading a team of consultants focused on providing financial systems, strategy, and merger & acquisition support to emerging businesses and non-profit under $20M in sales Quotes To Remember: "Get clear on your purpose." "Satisfaction is on the other side of gratitude." "When you get there, you can see past it." What You'll Learn: Pursuing your ambitions Feeling gratitude along the way Daily gratitude exercises Getting clear in your purpose Success habits Key Links From The Episode: Want to see how we can work together? Schedule a free strategy call here. Seth's book Ambition Seth's site Grow Your Influence Book Series
Vipers are found in numerous corners of the globe, and in this episode we explore a little about how they’ve managed it. Starting with pit viper’s use of their heat sensing abilities, moving on to viper reactions to climatic shifts, and finishing up with how they are doing now. Naturally our Species of the Bi-week is a new viper, this time from Africa. FULL REFERENCE LIST AVAILABLE AT: herphighlights.podbean.com Main Paper References: Martínez-Freiría, F, P.-A. Crochet, S. Fahd, P. Geniez, J.C. Brito, and G. Velo-Antón. 2017. “Integrative Phylogeographic and Ecological Analyses Reveal Multiple Pleistocene Refugia for Mediterranean Daboia Vipers in North-West Africa.” Biological Journal of the Linnean Society 122 (2): 366–384. Maritz, Bryan, Johannes Penner, Marcio Martins, Jelka Crnobrnja-Isailović, Stephen Spear, Laura R.V. Alencar, Jesús Sigala-Rodriguez, et al. 2016. “Identifying Global Priorities for the Conservation of Vipers.” Biological Conservation 204: 94–102. Safer, Adam B., and Michael S. Grace. 2004. “Infrared Imaging in Vipers: Differential Responses of Crotaline and Viperine Snakes to Paired Thermal Targets.” Behavioural Brain Research 154 (1): 55–61. Species of the Bi-Week: Gower, David J., Edward O.Z. Wade, Stephen Spawls, Wolfgang Böhme, Evan R. Buechley, Daniel Sykes, and Timothy J. Colston. 2016. “A New Large Species of Bitis Gray, 1842 (Serpentes: Viperidae) from the Bale Mountains of Ethiopia.” Zootaxa 4093 (1): 41–63. Other Mentioned Papers/Studies: Alencar, Laura R.V., Tiago B. Quental, Felipe G. Grazziotin, Michael L. Alfaro, Marcio Martins, Mericien Venzon, and Hussam Zaher. 2016. “Diversification in Vipers: Phylogenetic Relationships, Time of Divergence and Shifts in Speciation Rates.” Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 105: 50–62. Böhm, Monika, Ben Collen, Jonathan E M Baillie, Philip Bowles, Janice Chanson, Neil Cox, Geoffrey Hammerson, et al. 2013. “The Conservation Status of the World’s Reptiles.” Biological Conservation 157: 372–85. Breidenbach, Carla Harvey. 1990. “Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles Thermal Cues Influence Strikes in Pitless Vipers.” Journal of Herpetology 24 (4): 448–50. Gracheva, E.O., Ingolia, N.T., Kelly, Y.M., Cordero-Morales, J.F., Hollopeter, G., Chesler, A.T., Sánchez, E.E., Perez, J.C., Weissman, J.S. and Julius, D., 2010. “Molecular basis of infrared detection by snakes.” Nature, 464 (7291): 1006. Krochmal, A.R. and Bakken, G.S., 2003. “Thermoregulation is the pits: use of thermal radiation for retreat site selection by rattlesnakes.” Journal of Experimental Biology, 206(15): 2539-2545. OPEN ACCESS Lourdais, O., Shine, R., Bonnet, X., Guillon, M. and Naulleau, G., 2004. “Climate affects embryonic development in a viviparous snake, Vipera aspis.” Oikos, 104 (3): 551-560. Madsen, Thomas, Bo Stille, and Richard Shine. 1996. “Inbreeding Depression in an Isolated Population of Adders Vipera Berus.” Biological Conservation 75: 113–18. Madsen, Thomas, Beata Ujvari, and Mats Olsson. 2004. “Novel Genes Continue to Enhance Population Growth in Adders (Vipera Berus).” Biological Conservation 120 (1): 145–47. Madsen, Thomas, and Beata Ujvari. 2011. “The Potential Demise of a Population of Adders (Vipera Berus) in Smygehuk, Sweden.” Herpetological Conservation and Biology 6 (1): 72–74. OPEN ACCESS Paulo, O. S., J. Pinheiro, A. Miraldo, M. W. Bruford, W. C. Jordan, and R. A. Nichols. 2008. “The Role of Vicariance vs. Dispersal in Shaping Genetic Patterns in Ocellated Lizard Species in the Western Mediterranean.” Molecular Ecology 17 (6): 1535–51. Van Dyke, J.U. and Grace, M.S., 2010. “The role of thermal contrast in infrared-based defensive targeting by the copperhead, Agkistrodon contortrix.” Animal Behaviour, 79 (5): 993-999. Williams, David, Wolfgang Wüster, and Bryan Grieg Fry. 2006. “The Good, the Bad and the Ugly: Australian Snake Taxonomists and a History of the Taxonomy of Australia’s Venomous Snakes.” Toxicon 48 (7): 919–30. Music – Treehouse by Ed Nelson
Seth Buechley experienced towering success in building a cellular network. He saw the upside, then the downside, of ambition. His Golden Touch became a reverse Midas Touch for a while. He tells how gratitude and humility turned him around. His perspective, which began in a commune in the woods and led him to financial success, shines through his insights into the advantages and disadvantages of ambition. He illustrates the essential value of gratitude in leadership with lasting impact.
Designing electronics is generally cumbersome and expensive -- or was, until Leah Buechley and her team at MIT developed tools to treat electronics just like paper and pen. In this talk from TEDYouth 2011, Buechley shows some of her charming designs, like a paper piano you can sketch and then play.
Concevoir des circuits électroniques est souvent compliqué et cher -- ou l'était, jusqu'à ce que Leah Buechley et son équipe du M.I.T. développent des outils pour manipuler les circuits électroniques comme nous le ferions avec une feuille et un stylo. Dans cette intervention à TEDYouth 2011, Buechley montre certaines de ses étonnantes créations, comme ce piano papier que nous pouvons dessiner puis utiliser.
Diseñar electrónica generalmente es agotador y caro --o por lo menos lo era, hasta que Leah Buechley y su equipo de MIT crearon herramientas para manipular electrónica como si fuese papel y lápiz. En esta charla de TEDYouth 2011, Buechley muestra algunos de sus diseños innovadores, como un piano de papel que se puede dibujar y luego tocar.
Elektronik zu designen ist generell schwerfällig und teuer – oder war es zumindest – bis Leah Buechley und ihr Team des Massachusetts Institut für Technologie Werkzeuge entwickelten, die den Umgang mit Elektronik so einfach wie den mit Papier und Stift machten. In dieser Rede von TEDYouth2011 zeigt Buechley einige ihrer charmanten Designs, wie z.b. ein Papier-Klavier, das man zeichnen und spielen kann.
Desenhando eletrônicos é normalmente complicado e caro -- ou era, até Leah Buechley e sua equipe no MIT ( Instituto de Tecnologia de Massachusetts) desenvolveram ferramentas para usar eletrônicos como se fossem papel e caneta. Nessa palestra da TEDYouth 2011, Buechley mostra como alguns de seus desenhos encantadores, como um piano em papel que você pode desenhar e tocar.
Episode Summary: Today’s episode of the podcast is a continuation of this month’s theme of vulture conservation across the globe. Our guest is PhD candidate at the University of Utah,... Read more » The post EOC 016: Studying the Egyptian Vulture in Ethiopia and the Middle East with Evan Buechley appeared first on Wild Lens.