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BYK macht Chemie digital und kundenorientiert – und du solltest wissen, wie!
In dieser Episode von „Digital Product Talks“ sprechen Felix und Daniel mit Maik Dudda, Head of Digital Channels und Strategy bei BYK, einem Unternehmen der ALTANA AG.
In this week's episode, Michael is joined by longtime Citipoint member, nearly-professional golfer, and co-owner of BYK construction, Paul Woodmansee!
Åsa Warnqvist, litteratursociolog och chef på Barnboksinstitutet, presenterar två män omgivna av en dammig air av bildning, språkintresse och tweed: radiotjänstemannen och akademikern Nils-Olof Franzén och redaktören för Byköpings-posten, herr Agaton Sax - två veritabla renässansmänniskor. Quentin Blake nämns. Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play.
CoDrive.pl - Aldona Marciniak, Cezary Gutowski i Jasiek Olejniczak o F1, ELMS i motorsporcie
Partnerem programu jest Continental - producent opon SportContact7.Red Bull w tarapatach! Czy sprint położy Verstappena w domowym wyścigu Byków?Lando Norris najbliżej strącenia króla z tronu? Jest już prawie kierowcą kompletnym.Mercedes wyhodował te żmije na własnej piersi. Szokujące maile sugerują niszczenie zdrowia psychicznego Hamiltona. Toto Wolff poszedł na policję!Grand Prix Austrii - Najlepszy wyścig Formuły 1? Dlaczego możemy liczyć na niespodzianki na Red Bull Ring.ORLEN 80. Rajd Polski - mazurskie szutry gotowe na przyjazd Cezarego i Aldony! Do tego o tym jak wszystko zostało już powiedziane, piosenka “Gdzie te Perezy” i samochód za plecami Aldony.To wszystko w najnowszym odcinku podcastu #CoDrive - specjalnie dla Was, wszystko o F1!
Kolejna, jubileuszowa wygrana Verstappena i Red Bulla! Nikt i nic nie może pokonać w tym sezonie Byków. Mimo tego mieliśmy całkiem ciekawy wyścig - rozmawiamy o poprawkach Astona, potencjalnej przyszłości Lance'a Strolla. Uwaga - chwalimy Ferrari za strategię! Dyskutujemy też o przyszłości McLarena, zmianach na 2026 i potencjalnych nowych zespołach. Zapraszamy do słuchania!
On this episode of The Red Bucket, we are joined by Ron Brashear of BYK – a global supplier of specialty chemicals and additives. Together we discuss the chemistry behind additives and their use in the paint formulation process. We also cover how additives can be designed to help the coating perform to the end user's specifications. All of that and more coming up next on The Red Bucket. 0:00 - Intro 1:36 - Introduction to Ron Brashear and BYK 5:22 - The Role Additives Play in Coating Formulations 9:14 - Wetting and Dispersing Additives 13:52 - The Relationship Between Coating Manufacturers and Additives Suppliers [Part 1] 16:39 - Surface Additives 20:59 - Flow Additives 24:30 - Defoamers 27:34 - Anti-Corrosive Pigments 30:04 - The Relationship Between Coating Manufacturers and Additives Suppliers [Part 2] 33:50 - The Misnomer That It's All the Same Thing in the Bucket 35:30 - "The Four Questions" [Non-Technical] 36:54 - "Tech Tips" 37:54 - Closing Remarks
Indianie i ci prawdziwi, tacy jak Siedzący Byk, Cochise, Geronimo, czy wykreowani przez literaturę i kino, z których najbardziej znany jest oczywiście Winnetou od lat rozbudzają naszą wyobraźnię. Często ich historie były wytworem amerykańskiej prasy, budowaniem mitów, nie tylko tych w których okrutni Indianie bezwzględnie mordują i skalpują osadników, ale także kreacją wodzów i ich plemion nie mających nic wspólnego z rzeczywistością. Dość powiedzieć, że największy kreator wizerunku Apaczów – w pewnym momencie wręcz będących synonimem określenia Indianin, niemiecki pisarz Karol May nigdy nie odwiedził miejsc gdzie działy opisywane przez niego historie Indian, a za Ocean dotarł długo po wydaniu słynnych książek. Do dziś nie tylko samo określenie tego plemienia, będące nazwą adaptowaną przez Amerykanów od innych Indian, oznaczającą „wroga”, ale także całe spektrum akcesoriów takich jak nie używany nigdy na tym terenie tomahawk, czy rytuał skalpowania wymaga wyjaśnienia. Historia Indian z terenów pogranicza USA i Meksyku, tak zwanej Apaczerii rozciągającej się na terenie kilku stanów o powierzchni bliskiej powierzchni dzisiejszej Polski, to także opowieść o najdłużej trwającym marzeniu o wolności.
On today's show, we're ready, it's time, and here comes the NFL, but wait, is that the NBA coming in with one more offseason bombshell for us? Yep, Donovan Mitchell going to the Cavaliers has definitely shaken up the Eastern Conference, and trust me, we'll get to that in a bit, but we have to keep our priorities straight cuz football season is upon us! Big picture, we covered our tiers last episode, dividing the teams into the Contenders, the Hopefuls, the Sleepers and the Season's Already Over but today, we're gonna look a bit deeper at the most interesting teams coming into the season before making our final preseason predictions. There's the Chiefs, minus Tyreek Hill and with a suspect D last year, but with a revamped offensive line, it doesn't matter who he's throwing to, there's no way Mahomes doesn't throw for 4500+ yards. And Tyreek has made his new team interesting as well, mostly by hyping up his QB, but everyone is now waiting to see if Tua and the Dolphins can deliver. Don't sleep on the Saints, the team that owns TB12 and the Bucs. With a top tier defensive unit, playmakers like Kamara, they're a Jameis Winston career year away from contention, but unfortunately, that's worse than a 50/50 proposition. And Gaber thinks SF might have the best roster in football, but Trey Lance still has a lot to prove, and I'm saying Jimmy G is the one who leads them to the Super Bowl again. Are the new look Eagles for real? Are the Bucs in trouble? Can the Raiders make the leap? Can the Rams repeat? All this, plus, the Donovan Mitchell trade & some assorted NBA offseason chatter, as we close out the KD trade saga that never led anywhere & look at another year of the Theoretical Nets of BYK, laugh about Pat Bev to the Lakers, decide on next year's contenders way too early and sulk over Chet's injury. So sit back, the NFL is just days away while we're still talking hoops and celebrating a Warriors' title and we're breaking down how it's all unfolding, next on the Roundup Podcast so let's get rolling . . . Time Stamps: 9:30 - Giannis, Jokic & Luka in FIBA EuroBasket 13:46 - All Around the NFL: Most Interesting Teams - Dolphins 19:35 - Chiefs 27:02 - Eagles 33:21 - Raiders 37:25 - Saints 39:28 - Rams 43:55 - 49ers 49:33 - Jaguars 52:55 - MVP, Playoff Teams and Super Bowl Picks & Predictions 1:16:10 - Fantasy Football Talk: Advantages of the Super-Flex Format 1:20:40 - All Around the NBAOffseason: Donovan Mitchell to Cavs 1:41:20 - Wrap-up to KD Trade/No-Trade Saga & East Overview 1:44:20 - West Overview 1:46:57 - Chet Injury & Thunder Conundrum 1:50:35 - Laker Schadenfreude 1:56:56 - Our Ongoing Warriors Championship Celebration Continues: Wiseman's Upside
Znak zodiaku BYK, to drugi znak zodiaku pełny zmysłowości, cierpliwości i stabilności. Posłuchaj, by dowiedzieć się więcej! Tym samym zapraszam Cię na wyjątkowy kurs praktycznej astrologii, jeśli chcesz wykorzystać astrologię do budowania wymarzonego życia, w zgodzie ze sobą i swoim potencjałem:
Dziś dyskutujemy o tym, czy gwiazdy mogą przewidzieć naszą przyszłość, czy wszystko jest zapisane w kartach i czy warto wierzyć w horoskopy. Sprawdzamy, czy testy osobowości dają wiarygodne wyniki i czy numerologia ma sens. Dwa różne stanowiska po dwóch stronach mikrofonu :)
Nowy Tygodnik Kulturalny - nowe miejsce, znani goście, lubiani prowadzący, nowa energia i emocje!
Prowadzenie: Jacek Wakar Goście: Szymon Kloska, Łukasz Maciejewski, Jacek Marczyński, Ola Salwa, Agnieszka Szydłowska Gość specjalny: Marcel Andino Velez
Zapraszamy na kolejny Podcast PROBASKET Live, czyli dwugodzinną audycję o NBA. Zapraszają: Michał Pacuda i Krzysztof Sendecki. Kolejne nagranie w czwartek 24 marca o godz. 21.00. Zapisz się do autorskiego newslettera PROBASKET - https://www.subscribepage.com/probasket SPIS TREŚCI: 00:00 - Rozpoczynamy 61. Podcast PROBASKET LIVE! 00:30 - Jak na wojnę na Ukrainie zareagowała NBA i jej kluby? 04:14 - Zapowiedź dzisiejszych tematów! W planie spotkania z ostatnich dni i wstępna zapowiedź play-offów. 05:51 - Rozpoczynamy od wtorkowych spotkań. Brooklyn Nets wygrali z Charlotte Hornets, a show skradł Kyrie Irving, który zdobył 50 punktów. Do końca sezonu zagra jednak tylko w kilku meczach! 20:44 - W meczu Cavaliers z Pacers rekord kariery ustanowił Darius Garland. Czy Evan Mobley to pewniak do nagrody debiutanta roku? 22:25 - Parę słów o New Orleans Pelicans. CJ McCollum gra świetnie, ale potrzebuje wsparcia. 25:45 - Golden State Warriors udało się wygrać, jednak ich problemy są wyraźnie widoczne. Bez Draymonda Greena gra Wojowników się nie klei, a Klay Thompson nie może wrócić do formy sprzed kontuzji. 37:30 - W środę było aż 12 spotkań. Wrócił Devin Booker, a Phoenix Suns pokonali Miami Heat. Słońca nie mają słabych punktów! 50:31 - Na wschodzie świetnie radzą sobie ostatnio również Boston Celtics. Jayson Tatum gra najlepszą koszykówkę w swoim życiu. 59:04 - Co z Chicago Bulls? Byki nie wygrały w tym sezonie żadnego meczu z trzema najlepszymi drużynami ze wschodu i zachodu. To coś mówi o sile Byków. 1:04:08 - Czy Atlanta Hawks jeszcze się obudzą? 1:07:55 - Po Meczu Gwiazd Los Angeles Lakers odnotowali bilans 1-6, a w środę przegrali z jedną z najgorszych ekip w tym sezonie. Czy to jeszcze można uratować? 1:13:18 - Rzut oka na tabelę NBA. Czy awans Lakers do turnieju play-in może być zagrożony? 1:20:50 - Nikola Jokić zapisze się na kartach historii! Tego nie dokonał jeszcze nikt. 1:25:28 - Minnesota Timberwolves w dalszym ciągu imponują i zasługują na garść pochwał. 1:26:43 - Philadelphia wciąż dominuje, a duet Joel Embiid - James Harden działa fenomenalnie! Na transferze Bena Simmonsa najwięcej zyskał prawdopodobnie Tyrese Maxey. 1:33:40 - W nocy ze środy na czwartek Sixers podejmą Nets, ale uwaga skupiła się na zawodniku, który nie zagra, czyli na Benie Simmonsie. 1:37:47 - Russell Westbrook nie gra w tym sezonie najlepiej, ale kibice zaatakowali nawet jego rodzinę. Jego przygoda w Lakers prawdopodobnie dobiega powoli końca. 1:47:47 - Za nami pierwszy odcinek serialu o Los Angeles Lakers! Co można powiedzieć po pierwszej części? 1:58:28 - Malcolm Brogdon w reprezentacji Polski?! Zawodnik Indiana Pacers trenował w zeszłym roku w Słupsku, a teraz może dołączyć do kadry. 2:02:22 - Nowy przepis w Polskiej Lidze Koszykówki?! Co stoi za ciągłymi zmianami? 2:07:55 - Jeremy Sochan otrzymał nagrodę dla najlepszego rezerwowego w swojej konferencji uniwersyteckiej ligi NCAA. Mamy ogromne szanse na kolejnego Polaka w NBA! 2:08:47 - Kończymy! Dziękujemy za waszą obecność na 61. Podkaście PROBASKET Live. Zapraszamy ponownie za dwa tygodnie - 24 marca o godz. 21. Michał Pacuda - http://twitter.com/Pacuda Krzysztof Sendecki - https://twitter.com/sendecki81 PROBASKET - https://twitter.com/probasketpl Grupa dyskusyjna PROBASKET - https://www.facebook.com/groups/probasketpl/ PROBASKET na Facebooku - https://www.facebook.com/probasketpl/ SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/probasketpl/tracks Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4DCmBkGAIDqNKc2gvJhnrx Archiwum Podcastów - https://probasket.pl/category/podcast-probasket/
Zamknięcie okienka transferowego NBA w czwartek 10 lutego o godz. 21.00 i wtedy właśnie rozpoczął się 59. Podcast PROBASKET LIVE, w którym Michał Pacuda i Krzysztof Sendecki przez dwie godziny rozmawiali o tym, co wydarzyło się w NBA w ostatnich dniach, a raczej godzinach. Zapraszamy na podsumowanie transferów NBA - analizy, oceny i wnioski! Następny Podcast PROBASKET Live w czwartek 24 lutego o godz. 21.00. Zapisz się do autorskiego newslettera PROBASKET - https://www.subscribepage.com/probasket SPIS TREŚCI: 00:00 - Rozpoczynamy 59. Podcast PROBASKET LIVE! Tematem przewodnim będzie zamknięcie okienka transferowego w NBA. 04:25 - Stało się! James Harden trafił do Philadelphia 76ers, a Ben Simmons przenosi się do Brooklyn Nets. Czego możemy spodziewać się po obu zespołach? 37:02 - Chwila oddechu. Na PROBASKET mamy dla was świetną promocję od Timberland. Kurtki i buty zimowe ze świetnym rabatem! 39:22 - CJ McCollum przenosi się do New Orleans Pelicans, a Norman Powell i Robert Covington do Los Angeles Clippers. Co planują Portland Trail Blazers i co zrobi Damian Lillard? 54:04 - Milwaukee Bucks byli mniej aktywni na rynku, ale zyskali Serge'a Ibakę kosztem Donte DiVincenzo. Tempa w ostatnim czasie nie zwalnia Giannis Antetokounmpo. 58:56 - Michał Pacuda przy Waszej pomocy zebrał kultowe kawałki kojarzące się z NBA! Ile z nich pamiętacie? Link: https://probasket.pl/nba-muzyka-ktora-kojarzy-sie-z-nba-kultowe-kawalki-i-najlepsze-dzingle/ 1:00:51 - Wymiana na linii Sacramento Kings - Indiana Pacers wstrząsnęła NBA. Domantas Sabonis przeniósł się do Kalifornii, ale Pacers udało się wyciągnąć Tyrese'a Haliburtona. Czy to pozwoli Kings na walkę o play-offy? 1:13:35 - Cleveland Cavaliers kontynuują świetną grę i wszystko wskazuje na to, że mogą w play-offach poważnie namieszać. 1:17:30 - Kristaps Porzingis przenosi się do Washington Wizards! Dallas Mavericks otrzymują w zamian Spencera Dinwiddiego i Davisa Bertansa. 1:22:06 - Zbroją się również Boston Celtics. Pozbyli się Dennisa Schrodera, a pozyskały m.in. Derricka White'a. 1:24:35 - Konkurs! Do wygrania kontrowersyjna autobiografia Scottiego Pippena! 1:29:13 - Los Angeles Lakers i New York Knicks nie poczynili żadnych ruchów na rynku, choć nie radzą sobie dobrze. 1:32:54 - Phoenix Suns grają rewelacyjnie. Słońca mają najlepszy bilans w NBA i są obecnie jednym z głównych kandydatów do mistrzowskiego tytułu. Skąd wynika ich znakomita gra? 1:41:15 - Problemy mają natomiast Chicago Bulls. Skład Byków zdziesiątkowały kontuzje, ale DeMar DeRozan robi co może, żeby jego zespół utrzymywał się w czołówce. 1:44:40 - Poza grą wciąż znajduje się Draymond Green. Warriors przegrali ostatnio z Utah Jazz, którzy po kilku fatalnych tygodniach wracają na zwycięskie tory. W fantastycznej formie są też Memphis Grizzlies, wysoko trzymają się również Denver Nuggets. 1:49:05 - Kolejny rzut oka na sytuację Los Angeles Lakers. Russell Westbrook nie został wymieniony, ale błąd Jeziorowcy mogli popełnić już dużo wcześniej! Czy to można jeszcze uratować? 1:55:57 - Na PROBASKET szykuje się coś dużego z okazji walentynek! Przy okazji wracamy do Meczu Gwiazd i zawodników, którzy wystąpią we wszystkich konkursach. 2:00:08 - NBA opublikowała listę 15 najwybitniejszych trenerów w historii ligi. Nominacje wywołały jednak spore kontrowersje. 2:02:04 - Pora na pudelkowy kąciki! Gary Payton II z Golden State Warriors ma przyrodniego brata o imieniu... Gary Payton Junior! 2:04:30 - Kończymy! Kolejny Podcast PROBASKET LIVE już w czwartek 24 lutego. Michał Pacuda - http://twitter.com/Pacuda Krzysztof Sendecki - https://twitter.com/sendecki81 PROBASKET - https://twitter.com/probasketpl Grupa dyskusyjna PROBASKET - https://www.facebook.com/groups/probasketpl/ PROBASKET na Facebooku - https://www.facebook.com/probasketpl/ SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/probasketpl/tracks Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4DCmBkGAIDqNKc2gvJhnrx Archiwum Podcastów - https://probasket.pl/category/podcast-probasket/
In der frischesten Folge dieses kleinen feinen Eishockey-Podcasts schauen wir mal über den Tellerrand des Eishockeys in unserer Republik und zwar gleich ein Stückchen weiter. Elias Fischbacher und Artem Klein spielten im vergangenen Sommer in der Israel Elite Hockey League (IEHL). Beide erzählen, wie sie dort hinkamen und was sie dort erlebten. Und weil es nicht Bend your knees wäre darf der eigentliche Weg ins Eishockey und was unsere beiden Protagonisten gerade in ihren Clubs in Barcelona und Peiting erleben auch nicht fehlen. Hört rein! P.S.: Byk gibt's jetzt auch bei Amazon Podcasts und Audible.
Coraz bliżej święta, Last Christmas leci w rozgłośniach radiowych, a wiele osób już na serio rozgląda się za prezentami. W związku z tym czas na odcinek świąteczny, który pomoże wybrać coś pod choinkę miłośnikom inwestowania, przedsiębiorczości lub po prostu tym, którzy zasługują na fajny prezent od Was. Tym razem nie będę wymieniał X książek, ale będę przekonywał, że trzeba pewne prezenty dopasować od odbiorcy. No i nie będzie tylko o książkach, bo zaczniemy przekornie od... kryptowalut. W tym odcinku:- kilka pomysłów na prezent dla inwestorów i cos dla przedsiębiorców;- drobne rady czego nie kupować, bo jak coś jest popularne to wcale nie znaczy, że przydatne;- i kilka praktycznych wskazówek od kogoś, kto sporo czytał, sporo prezentów giełdowych dostał i sam podarował.
52. Podcast PROBASKET LIVE. Michał Pacuda i Krzysztof Sendecki znów rozmawiali o NBA. Podsumowali wydarzenia z ostatnich 2 tygodni. Kolejny Podcast PROBASKET Live: czwartek 25 listopada o godz. 21:00 na YouTube. Oglądaj NBA w CANAL+ online już od 10zł w pierwszym miesiącu! Specjalna okazja! - https://probasket.pl/ogladaj-nba-w-canal-przez-internet-za-10zl-specjalna-okazja/ Ciekawy artykuł o faulach w NBA - https://probasket.pl/nba-mniej-fauli-i-wszyscy-zachwyceni-ale-faul-to-faul-trzeba-gwizdac/ Zapisz się do autorskiego newslettera PROBASKET - https://www.subscribepage.com/probasket SPIS TREŚCI: 00:00 - Sprawy organizacyjne, zapowiedź konkursu i wstęp. 03:51 - Rzut oka na wyniki poniedziałkowych spotkań NBA. 05:39 - Cavaliers wyglądali dobrze, ale mają teraz poważne problemy z kontuzjami. Dobrze radzi sobie ich młody trzon, ale również Ricky Rubio. 14:26 - Celtics mieli swoje przebłyski, ale przez większość czasu ich gra się nie klei. 22:24 - Wizards są na ten moment liderem Wschodu! 27:26 - Hawks jak dotąd zawodzą po całości. Co się dzieje z Trae Youngiem i ekipą? 30:24 - Mavericks mają poważny problem! Luka Doncić doznał urazu kostki i jakiś czas będzie poza grą. 34:19 - Paul George może nie być faworytem do nagrody MVP. Jak dotąd ciągnie grę Clippers. Ma jednak odpowiednie wsparcie! 36:49 - Po świetnym początku Miami Heat zaliczyli kilka wpadek. Ich również nie ominęły jednak problemy z kontuzjami. 38:49 - Blazers w poniedziałek wygrali, ale ich gra nie wygląda dobrze. Jaka przyszłość czeka Damiana Lillarda? Czy może trafić do Sixers w zamian za Bena Simmonsa? 46:40 - Co się dzieje z Benem Simmonsem? O co chodzi jemu i Sixers. Wyjaśniamy o co jest to całe zamieszanie i dlaczego Sixers go jeszcze nie wytransferowali. 59:25 - Dlaczego o Nikoli Jokiciu nie mówi się jako kandydacie do MVP? 1:01:27 - Pora na pierwszy konkurs tego wieczoru! Do wygrania Space Jam 2 na DVD i Blu-Ray. Pytanie o "Przybić Sprite'a!". Pamiętacie o co chodzi? 1:03:50 - Kilka słów o Chicago Bulls. Grę "Byków" ogląda się z uśmiechem na twarzy. 1:15:34 - Porozmawiajmy o Los Angeles Lakers. Nie ma LeBrona Jamesa i nie ma wyników. Russell Westbrook i Anthony Davis grają znacznie poniżej oczekiwań. Problemem Lakers jest też ławka rezerwowych, nowy skład, brak zgrania i pomysłu na atak, ale też brak zaangażowania w obronę! 1:28:36 - Przechodzimy do wtorkowych wyników i od razu rzut oka na Golden State Warriors. "Stephen Curry to kosmita!", ale dobrze radzą sobie również Jordan Poole czy Andre Iguodala. Wkrótce wrócą jeszcze Klay Thompson i James Wiseman. 1:40:36 - Brooklyn Nets wciąż krają w kratkę. James Harden dalej nie może odnaleźć swojego rytmu, czego nie ułatwiają też sędziowie. 1:44:50 - Jak po miesiącu od rozpoczęcia rozgrywek wygląda tabela NBA? 1:46:47 - Wyjaśniamy, dlaczego PROBASKET LIVE odbył się w środę, a nie czwartek! Michał Pacuda z PROBASKET oraz Łukasz Szwonder z kanału "Keepthebeat" gościć będą w "Basket Office" w czwartek o godz. 22.00 na antenie Canal+ (zobacz wyżej link i informację o możliwości zamówienia Canal+ online za jedyne 10zł za pierwszy miesiąc!). 1:50:19 - Druga część konkursu o Space Jam 2 na DVD i Blu Ray! 1:52:03 - Chwila wspomnień! Wracamy do lat 90. i legendarnego logo Charlotte Hornets. 1:57:35 - Na rynku pojawiły się nowe książki o koszykówce wydawnictwa SQN! Album na 75-lecie istnienia ligi NBA, "Ostatni Sezon" Phila Jacksona, "Pruszków Mistrz!" i biografia Włodzimierza Szaranowicza! 2:05:55 - Widzimy się już w kolejny czwartek, następny Podcast PROBASKET LIVE już 25 listopada o godzinie 21:00. Michał Pacuda - http://twitter.com/Pacuda Krzysztof Sendecki - https://twitter.com/sendecki81 PROBASKET - https://twitter.com/probasketpl Grupa dyskusyjna PROBASKET - https://www.facebook.com/groups/probasketpl/ PROBASKET na Facebooku - https://www.facebook.com/probasketpl/ SoundCloud - https://soundcloud.com/probasketpl/tracks Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/show/4DCmBkGAIDqNKc2gvJhnrx
Unter leicht veränderten Vorzeichen schauen Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein, jetzt mehr oder weniger in Interviewform, auf den Saisonstart der PENNY DEL. Hört rein, wie der Sportdirektor der Nürnberg Ice Tigers die Vorbereitung seines Teams bewertet, wen er als Gewinner der vergangenen Wochen sieht, wie die Verpflichtung seines Sohnes Jake zustande kam, welchen Neuzugang aus der Liga er gerne in seinem Team gehabt hätte und worauf er sich ganz besonders freut. Und ja, noch viel mehr. BYK, nur echt mit Ustis Meckerecke!
Gerade als Ihr dachtet, wir hätten uns bereits ganz heimlich, still und leise in die Sommerpause verabschiedet, da kommen wir mit zwei Ausgaben fürs Ende der ersten Staffel von Bend your knees zurück, die sich gewaschen haben...! Für #35 hatten Kathrin Fring und Daniel Goldstein den Sportmanager der Adler Mannheim, Jan-Axel Alavaara zu Gast. Er erzählt uns, wie die Mannheimer ihr Team für die kommende Saison zusammenstellen, was sie sich von dem einen oder anderen Neuzugang versprechen und wie es mit einem Saisonziel aussieht. Außerdem plaudern wir mit ihm über seine Spielerkarriere, seine Erfahrungen in Göteborg zusammen mit Leuten wie Daniel Alfredsson oder Henrik Lundqvist gespielt zu haben und über das einmalige Erlebnis mit Frölunda nach fast 40 Jahren ohne Titel, Anfang der 2000er zurück an die schwedische Spitze gelangt zu sein. Fahrradcontent inklusive! Am Ende der Folge gibt uns Kathrin noch einen kleinen Einblick in die Sommervorbereitung des DFEL-Teams der Eisbären Juniors und was bei ihr in den kommenden Wochen so ansteht. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV.
Pełna fantazji szarża Maxa Verstappena pozwoliła mu wyprzedzić na przedostatnim okrążeniu wyprzedzić Lewisa Hamiltona. Red Bull w GP Francji po raz kolejny okazał się lepszy od Mercedesa. Czy szala mistrzostw przechyla się na korzyść Byków? O tym i oczywiście nie tylko o tym rozmawiamy w najnowszym odcinku naszego podcastu. Zapraszamy do słuchania!
Die #EishockeyWM läuft und Bend your knees ist fast im Fieber. Da bietet es sich natürlich an, mit einem Protagonisten zu sprechen, der selbst vor Ort ist und bereits für einen Sensation gesorgt hat. Sebastian Dahm spielt seine neunte WM für sein Heimatland Dänemark. Er erzählt uns und Euch wie es in Riga auf dem Eis und daneben läuft, wie seine Saison in Klagenfurt vonstatten ging und was er in der Zukunft vorhat und, ja, von einem seiner verrücktesten Mitspieler. Co-Gastgeberin ist diesmal Kathrin Fring, mit die trotz Boykott-Gedanken die WM-Spiele schaut, beim BYK-Tippspiel am Start ist und uns mit ein paar Analysen aus der Teamwelt des Eishockey aufklärt. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV sowie ROBIN.
Episode 11 On this episode, we speak to Allison Greene (Research and Development Manager) and Jeff Flynn (Site Manager) from the global specialty chemical company BYK. www.manufacturect.org www.byk.com
Ihr hattet gedacht die Meista-Ausgabe mit Frank Hördler wäre Eure Lieblingsfolge und könnte nicht getoppt werden? Entscheidet das lieber nach den nächsten 70 Minuten! Hannes Elster und Daniel Goldstein haben die Olympiahelden Leo Pföderl (Stürmer) und André Kreidler (Physio) in der Quarantäne im Hotel im lettischen Riga kurz vor Beginn der Eishockey-WM ins Kreuzverhör genommen. Sehr spannend dabei: Bekommt Leo im Laufe der Sendung sein Mittagessen? Andere zu klärende Fragen: Wie hat er so gut das Bullyspielen gelernt und was war los bei der Meistafeier? Was sind die Aufgaben eines Eishockey-Physios? Wer sind die härtesten Spieler und wie sieht der Kontakt zu anderen Physiotherapeuten aus? BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV sowie ROBIN.
Für Nummer 31 Eures Lieblingseishockeypodcasts kamen Stefan Ustorf, André Rankel und Daniel Goldstein zusammen, um dem erfolgreichsten Spieler der DEL-Geschichte, Frank Hördler zu seinem achten (!) Titel zu gratulieren. Und weil Ustorf gerade in Michigan war, guckte auch noch ein guter alter Bekannter der vier vorbei. Es wurden wichtige und unwichtige Fragen besprochen: Wie lange hielt Frank Hördlers Dauergrinsen an? Wie lief das mit der Kapitänsrolle? Wer waren die wichtigsten und lustigsten Mitspieler in der Saison 2020/21 in der Eisbären-Kabine? Wie lange will Franky noch spielen? Wie viele Kilometer schaffte André Rankel im Mai bisher auf dem Rad? Was macht eigentlich Mark Beaufait jetzt? Nur eine Frage blieb unbeantwortet: Ist Stefan Ustorfs belegte Stimme wirklich auf seine Allergie zurückzuführen? BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV und ROBIN.
Bukber gagal, uang hilang, yaa sdh lah.. Byk drama hari ini
In Bend your knees Nummer 30 waren der Wolfsburger Maximilian Adam und der Nürnberger Julius Karrer bei Daniel Goldstein zu Besuch. Die beiden DEL-Verteidiger erzählen über ihren Werdegang, über die aktuelle Saison, berichten von ihrem Umgang mit ihren Coaches und wie sie es geschafft, sich in der DEL (zumindest vorübergehend) zu etablieren. Adam berichtet von den Stärken der Grizzlys und Karrer, wie die Nürnberger es schafften, gegen den DEL-Finalisten vier von sechs Punkten zu holen. Außerdem am Start: eine neue Ausgabe des BYK-Punchline-Quizzes. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV und ROBIN.
Gerade noch rechtzeitig vor dem Beginn der U18-Junioren-WM am Montag widmen wir uns bei Bend your knees eben jener mit dem leider verletzten Kapitän des Teams Haakon Hänelt. Und natürlich sprechen Kathrin Fring und Daniel Goldstein auch mit einer Frauen-Nationalspielerin, nämlich der Berlinerin Laura Kluge, über die Absage der WM der Frauen. Das und noch ein ganzes Stück mehr gibt's in 70 Minuten Eishockeypodcast. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV und ROBIN.
Das hattet Ihr Euch so gedacht. Playoff-Start ohne Bend your knees-Playoff-Vorschau. Nein, nein, nein! Goldi hat sich die geballte Kompetenz eingeladen und schaut mit dem Geschäftsführer der der Lausitzer Füchse, Dirk Rohrbach, sowie dem Sportdirektor der Nürnberg Ice Tigers auf die schönste Eishockey-Jahreszeit in der DEL2 und der PENNY DEL voraus. Moment mal, Ustorf? Genau! Usti ist zurück bei Bend your knees und neben einer tollen Geschichte über einen seiner Schützlinge in Nürnberg gibt's auch spontan und gratis eine frische Meckerecke, die eher in Diskussionsecke umgetauft werden sollte. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von Robin sowie SpradeTV.
Diese Woche bei Bend your knees: Duanne Moeser, der Sportmanager der Augsburger Panther. Und er hatte viel zu erzählen! Außerdem gibt's ein weiteres Debüt. Kathrin Fring ist erstmals Co-Gastgeberin bei BYK und lässt den Namen desjenigen, mit dem Daniel Goldstein diesen Podcast startete endgültig vergessen. Wie hieß der nochmal?! Duanne Moeser, seines Zeichens der ewige AEV-Panther, erzählt über die Schwierigkeiten der Corona-Saison 2020/21, über das, was ihm fehlte und das, was den Panthern fehlte. Außerdem berichtet er aus seiner Spielerkarriere, von einem, der nie Schwitzwäsche trug, von seinem letzten aktiven Spiel und schwärmt von der Augsburger CHL-Saison. Einen oder besser gleich mehrere Wünsche ans Eishockey hat er auch für die Zukunft. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von Robin sowie SpradeTV.
Seid dabei und erlebt André Rankels Podcast-Debüt als Co-Gastgeber bei Bend your knees. Und er wünschte sich seinen ehemaligen Mitspieler, den Straubinger Tiger Sven Ziegler als Gast. Bekam er natürlich prompt! Wir sprachen mit "Ziggy" darüber, warum die Niederbayern erst jetzt in Schwung kommen, wie und wann er seine Torflaute beendet, wie das damals mit dem Wechsel nach Straubing war, die Unterschiede von Straubing zu Berlin und umgedreht, sowie seine Karriereentwicklung im Großen und Ganzen. Als Bonus gibt's sehr interessante Ansichten von André zum Thema Checks und Körperkontakt im Eishockey. Mit der Tonqualität sind wir diesmal nicht so zufrieden, aber das wird demnächst wieder besser. BYK wird wie immer präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV.
Im ersten Podcast ohne Stefan Ustorf hat sich der Quatschkopf zwei ausgesprochene Eishockey-Fachfrauen eingeladen. Mit Kathrin Fring von den Eisbären Juniors und Kathrin KA Lehmann vom ESC Planegg geht's einmal rasant durch alle Eishockeythemen und zurück. Über den ganz kurzen Rückblick aufs #dfelFinal4 und sie Corona-Saison 2020/21 geht's zu den Hürden fürs Fraueneishockey, über die Karrieren der beiden außerhalb des gefrorenen Nass kommen wir ins Schwyzerdütsch und zu einer sehr interessanten Zusage. Apropos: Ihr solltet heute wirklich bis zum Ende hören... BYK wird wie immer präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV und ROBIN.
Droga Społeczności, Dzisiaj:
Endlich einmal Hintergrundräusche bei einer Bend your knees-Aufnahme... Und wofür steht das Allgäu? Richtig: Vogelzwitschern und Kirchenglocken! Ihr wollt wissen, wie es mit Bend your knees und Stefan Ustorf weitergeht? Dann hört in unsere Spezialfolge rein. Aufgezeichnet am Samstagabend in Füssen. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV!
Die große Vorschau aufs DFEL-Finalturnier bei Bend your knees präsentiert Euch mit Jenny Harß, Caro Walz, Franziska Albl und Dominique Quint die vier Torhüterinnen der teilnehmenden Teams. Wir haben mit ihnen auf ihre Saison zurück und das Finalturnier voraus geschaut. Wir haben etwas über ihre Karrieren erfahren, über ihre Vorlieben und wir haben auch ein bisschen gequizzed. Die vielleicht kurzweiligste Folge bis hierhin! BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von SpradeTV und Robin.
Heute wird gequatscht! Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein diskutieren in der neuen Bend your knees-Folge ausführlichst über die Möglichkeiten der Nachwuchsförderung in der DEL und das Für und Wider von Geduld. Außerdem dabei: ein Update zur Frauen-Bundesliga, unsere Lieblingsspieler der zweiten Saisonhälfte, eine Lederjacke und keine Harley Davidson. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFan.FM und unterstützt von ROBIN und Sprade.TV!
To trochę nietypowy odcinek, ale usłyszysz tu oddech smutnego byka na łańcuchu, szczekanie psa, chodzenie po niekoszonej trawie, mnóstwo ptaków, psa cieszącego się na mój widok, chrupanie przez króliki siana, kocią mamę schodzącą z drabiny i uderzającą głową w mikrofon, oraz wiatr.Support the show (https://patronite.pl/hodowlaslow)
Lange gefordert (sogar vom Bremerhavener Chefcoach), endlich ist er da. Bend your knees wird in dieser Woche vom Rekordspieler der Dresdner Eislöwen aus der DEL2, Steven Rupprich, besucht und der gebürtige Berliner und ausgebildete Eisbär hat direkt einen anderen Ex-Berliner, nämlich Thomas Supis, mitgebracht. Wir redeten über den neuen und den alten Dresdner Cheftrainer, über den Prinzen oder auch König von Dresden, über den Karrierestart, über das Sauerland, über starke Goalies und verrückte Mitspieler. Und im dritten Drittel gibt's einen wilden Ritt durch die DEL über die DFEL bis hin zur NHL. BYK wird auch in der #20 präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV!
In Bend your knees #19 können sich Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein vor Gästen und Ehrengästen kaum retten. Zuallererst gibt's ein großes Dankeschön an alle Spenderinnen und Spender von Pink your knees direkt von Simone Lehman vom Begleiter mit Herz e.V. (www.begleiter-mit-herz.de). Außerdem bilanzieren wir mit André Rankel und Hannes Elster den ersten DEL-Saisonabschnitt, gucken auf den Unterschied zur vor der Spielzeit von Usti getippten Tabelle, schauen auf die Schwäche von München, fragen uns, weshalb die Aggressivität fehlt und warum es Unterschiede zwischen Heim- und Auswärtsspielen gibt. Ebenfalls endlich wieder mit dabei: Ustis Meckerecke! BYK wird auch in dieser Woche präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN sowie SpradeTV, dem Home of Hockey!
Erstmals stattete ein Cheftrainer aus der DEL Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein für die aktuelle Bend your knees-Episode einen Besuch ab: Thomas Popiesch von den Fischtown Pinguins Bremerhaven plauderte über aktuelle Entwicklungen und seine Eishockeykarriere. Diesmal ging es, gastbedingt, natürlich viel um Trainingsmethodik, es ging um die Vorbereitung, ums Scouting, ums Powerplay und Penalty Killing, Thomas berichtete, von seinem ersten Coach im Profi-Eishockey (Spielertrainer Ralph Krueger) und stellte sein persönliches All-Star-Team auf. Nur eine Frage beantwortete er nicht so richtig. Welche? Das müsst Ihr schon selbst herausfinden... BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV!
Wenn Alex und Daniel Weiß nach zehn Jahren endlich wieder gemeinsam in einem Team spielen, dann ist es für ihre ehemaligen Kollegen Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein Pflicht, sie zu Bend your knees einzuladen. Und sie kamen vorbei und es wurde viel gelacht. Hört Alex über seine neue Rolle als Kapitän und Vater bei den Schwenninger Wild Wings sprechen, hört Dany dabei zu, wie er aus Crimmitschau erzählt und in welcher Reihe er eingeplant ist. Belauscht die Vier vor allem aber dabei, wie sie über alte Zeiten reden. Und weil die Jungs sehr gerne Deutschrap hören, gibt's sogar ein entsprechendes Quiz mit Eishockey-Punchlines. Und noch viel mehr. BYK wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von ROBIN und SpradeTV!
In der neuen Ausgabe von Bend your knees lassen sich Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein vom besten deutschsprachigen Spieler der DEL2, Marco Pfleger, die Stärken und Schwächen der Liga und seiner Tölzer Löwen erklären, hören, dass er erst spät zum Eishockey kam, warum er in der zweiten und nicht der ersten Liga spielt, lassen ihn seine Zeit in Nürnberg und mit Leo Pföderl lobpreisen und danken seinem ehemaligen Arbeitgeber für die Ausbildung und die Chance, ins Profieishockey zu gelangen. Außerdem lassen sie wieder deutsche Talente hochleben, gucken kurz übern Teich zum NHL-Start und sprechen sich deutlich, wie jeder andere normal denkende Mensch inzwischen auch, gegen eine WM in Belarus und für eine WM in Großbritannien aus. BYK in der 14. Ausgabe wird präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von Robin und SpradeTV!
Hier ist sie nun. Die neue Bend your knees-Ausgabe mit dem Schwerpunkt U20-Weltmeisterschaft. Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein sprechen mit dem Co-Trainer des deutschen Junioren-Nationalteams Steffen Ziesche, aber ehren zuvor noch den heute vom aktiven Leistungssport zurückgetretenen Ex-Eisbären-Stürmer Florian Busch. Ziesche, der mit Ustorf selbst an einer Junioren-WM teilnahm, erzählt über die Vorbereitung in Füssen, den Flug nach Kanada, die Bubble in Edmonton in der Arena und im Hotel, die Spiele, die Taktik, die U18-WM und mehr. BYK wird wie immer präsentiert von TheFanPunktFM und unterstützt von Robin und SpradeTV!
Rechtzeitig zum Weihnachtsfest legen Euch Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein eine neue Eishockeypodcast-Ausgabe unter den Baum. Diesmal haben sie Besuch von einer der wahrscheinlich derzeit besten Eishockeyspielerinnen der Republik, Nicola Eisenschmid. Mit der 24-jährigen Topscorerin plaudern die zwei über ihre bisherige Laufbahn und das Leben abseits davon, das Frauen-Nationalteam, die Frauen-Bundesliga und ihren Club, den ERC Ingolstadt. Darüberhinaus gibt es viele Geschichten und Informationen rund um den schönsten Sport der Welt und natürlich die Eishockey-Talentschmiede Kaufbeuren. Hört rein, in die anderthalb Stunden Eishockeyunterhaltung! BYK wird auch zu Weihnachten präsentiert von TheFanPunktFm und unterstützt von Robin und SpradeTV.
Stefan Ustorf und Daniel Goldstein haben für die Aufnahme zur neuen Folge von Bend your knees lange gewartet und dann gnadenlos zugeschlagen. Der erste Held des rheinischen Derbys in der Saison 2020/21, Charlie Jahnke, kam auf ein Pläuschchen vorbei. Es geht um Verletzungen, Quarantäne, Selbstvertrauen, Musik, Serien und das was passierte, als Charlie Jahnke mal in der Wohnung von Stefan Ustorf war, als der wiederum gar nicht zu Hause weilte. Außerdem diskutieren der Fachmann und der Quatschkopf über die DEL2, die U20-WM (noch vor Bekanntwerden der positiven COVID-19-Test beim deutschen Team) und die neue Ausländerregelung in der Schweiz und schweifen dann auch leicht ab. Zu gewinnen gibts auch etwas, wenn Ihr bis zum Ende hört. BYK wird natürlich auch diesmal präsentiert von TheFanPunktFm und unterstützt von Robin und SpradeTV!
Horoskop na listopad dla Byków :)
This shiur is sponsored anonymously in honor of and in the zechus of the Byk family, a model of chesed and good middos, may they grow up in shalom, each in their own way. Please consider sponsoring my videos by contacting me directly or through Patreon, https://www.patreon.com/rygb
W 102. lekcji Kwadransu na angielski nagraliśmy bajkę o sowie, byku i lesie. Sowa jest przemądrzałą, a byk mało rozgarnięty :) Jest to wyjątkowy odcinek z okazji Dnia Dziecka. Jako że bajka jest dość długa, to po wyjaśnienie kluczowych słów odsyłam Cię na stronę z notatkami i do materiałów dodatkowych dostępnych po zapisie na nasz newsletter.Happy Children's Day!----------------------Jeżeli doceniasz moją pracę nad podcastem, to zostań Patronem KNA dzięki stronie www.patronite.pl/kwadrans. Nie wiesz czym jest Patronite? Posłuchaj specjalnego odcinka: https://szymon.edu.pl/kwadrans-na-angielski-zostan-patronem/Dołącz do naszej społeczności na stronie www.KwadransNaAngielski.plLekcji możesz słuchać na Spotify albo oglądać na YouTube.Wszystkie nowe wyrażenia z tej lekcji w formie pisemnej są dostępne na stronie www.szymon.edu.pl/kwadrans-na-angielski-lekcja-102#polskipodcast-------Efekty dźwiękowe pochodzą z serwisu YouTube AudioLibrary oraz Zapsplat.Utwór na początku historii to Magcial Forest by Sir Cubworth z YouTube Audio Library.Thank you D.M Larson for allowing us the record your script. Script for "The Owl, the Bull and the Forest" is copyrighted by DM Larson.
Internetowa platforma Netflix wypuściła niedawno serial dokumentalny „The Last Dance” o mistrzowskiej drużynie Byków. Jednakże zastanówmy się nie o czym jest ta produkcja, ale dlaczego została zrealizowana. Wg mnie jest to kolejna pozycja na pewnym rachunku kultury, o którym opowiadam w podcaście.
We catch up on the news of the day from around the racing world and then welcome in Rick Hammerle from Oaklawn Park to talk about the upcoming Rebel Stakes, his first season at Oaklawn, purse increases, and more!
W pierwszym noworocznym odcinku Radia Canal Pod Koszem Artur Kwiatkowski gościł Wojtka Michałowicza i Marcina Więckowskiego, szefa fanclubu Chicago Bulls w Polsce. Panowie powspominali lata 90', porozmawiali o aktualnych problemach Byków i podyskutowali o zbliżającym się weekendzie gwiazd. Zapraszamy!
Afsnit 4 handler om, hvordan de vigtige processer omkring budget- og risikostyring er opbygget og udspiller sig i et strategisk partnerskab. Tre erfarne byggefolk fra ByK med TRUST giver deres bud på, hvordan risici minimeres og budgetoverskridelser undgås.
Dette afsnit handler om, hvordan en kompleks organisatorisk størrelse som et strategisk partnerskab udvikles, organiseres og ledes. To erfarne ledere med plads i den daglige ledelse i ByK med TRUST, kontorchef Anne Wewer, fra KANT og projektdirektør Kim Thinggaard fra Enemærke & Petersen, giver et indblik i de ledelsesudfordringer og erfaringer som de sidste tre års lederhverdag i TRUST har givet dem.
Podcasten handler om, hvordan bygherren indgår i struktur, projekter og hverdag i et strategisk partnerskab. Kontorchef Christina Schulin-Zeuthen og projektleder Simon Schødt Jensen fra Københavns bygherre organisation BYK videregiver vigtige erfaringer opnået gennem de sidste tre år og et utal af projekter.
On this weeks show Chris talks to Nat Bromhead from Bicycling Australia Magazine about sentencing for Jason Lowndes death in 2017, including distracted driving, what's needed to improve road user behaviour, mobile phone use, Gitta Scheenhouwers death in South Yarra, Australian states not having standardised legal responses to minimum passing laws, improving infrastructure and an apparent disconnection between sentencing and community expectations.We also chat about Commuter Cycling: will Australia embrace salary sacrifice ride to work schemes, who's possibly next in line to run the Tour Down Under, upcoming Bicycling Australia events and the next January/ February 2020 edition with three major features by women writers.Local news includes The A-Z of cycling in Melbourne that lists everything from ByK, Jetnikoff shop rides (highly recommended!), previous guests Melburn Durt and Rally for the Future of Melbourne's Transport.
Młode Pelikany łyknęły Clippers z Paulem Georgem w składzie, Siatki nie mogły znaleźć siatki w Denver choć Jokic nie bronił, Kozły z trudem odparły szarżę Byków, a James Dolan pewnie pije szampana!
Jack Walker and Paul Atzemis are joined by Ronald Brashear. Ron is the End Use Manager for Protective Coatings Additives in North America for BYK. The guys discuss the role of dispersing agents in coating formulation.Find out more at https://carboline-tech-service-podcast.pinecast.co
The Audio Only Lets Play, SaGa (Legend) continues! Bill and the gang are on the 10th floor searching for the resistance in an attempt to stop Byk-ake (or something like that) form getting the white orb! Can none of these worlds look after themselves! Tracks are "Gift of the MAGI" by "Argle" and "Heroes" by "Ziwtra". Check them out and lots of other amazing game music remixes at OCRemix.org --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Jack Walker and Paul Atzemis are joined by Ronald Brashear. Ron is the End Use Manager for Protective Coatings Additives in North America for BYK. The 3 discuss the important role BYK plays in coating formulation and how BYK can help.
Kaylie Kwon: kaylieEB | kayliekwon@gmail.com Show Notes: 02:14 - Kaylie's Journey Into Software Development 09:25 - Implementing a Design System and Attacking Higher-level Workflows 15:43 - EDS Collaboration and Public Availability 19:07 - Getting Involved with The Yarn Project 20:57 - Selective Resolution 23:37 - The Warmth of the Yarn Community 27:11 - Handling Issue Communication and Tracking Resources: Eventbrite britecharts Eventbrite Spectrum Transcript: CHARLES: Hello everybody and welcome to The Frontside Podcast. My name is Charles Lowell, I'm a software developer here at the Frontside and your podcast host-in-training. With me today is Elrick Ryan. Hello Elrick. ELRICK: Hey, what's up Charles? CHARLES: Not much. Are you enjoying your morning so far? ELRICK: Yeah, my morning is going well. Everything is good. CHARLES: Lots of cups of coffee? ELRICK: No cups of coffee yet. I've been drinking a lot of green tea. CHARLES: I've actually heard that's really good for you. ELRICK: That's what I heard too. That's why I started drinking it. CHARLES: Did you continue because it tastes good or do you just live on the idea of how good it is for you? ELRICK: A little bit of both. It doesn't taste that great but it's not horrible. It's almost like an acquired taste and then when you add in, "This is good for me," then it tastes great. CHARLES: Okay. We got a nice [inaudible] there. ELRICK: Yes. CHARLES: Anyway, I guess we should, at some point get on to the main content of our podcast. We have a very interesting guest with us today who has her fingers in all kinds of pies that we were talking about just at the pre-show, just before we were recording so we're really, really happy to have Kaylie Kwon. Thank you for coming on the show and welcome. KAYLIE: Hi. Thank you for having me. CHARLES: It's going to be great. Now, you are a software engineer at Eventbrite, that's correct? KAYLIE: Yep. CHARLES: What kind of things do you do over there? KAYLIE: I used to work on part of the feature team that worked on their reserved seating product but not too long ago, I moved to our frontend platform team, which is a team that helps other frontend engineers move faster through things like working on infrastructure or Eventbrite design system and dev tools. CHARLES: So like getting into the tools that unlock the exponential productivity of the developer team? KAYLIE: Uhm-mm. CHARLES: We're going to dig into all of that because you just listed a bunch of really interesting stuff. I'm really excited to talk about the design systems, in particular but lots of different stuff. But before we do, I understand that you have a fairly unique way of entering in to the position that you're in now. Your journey didn't follow the traditional arc. Would you be willing to elaborate on that or tell us that story? KAYLIE: Yeah, totally. I graduated with a degree in art history, not related to computer science at all. Then right after, I moved to New York and worked for a small startup. It was marketing/business development role and I wasn't really happy with it. I was working on some design-y stuff on the side with HTML and CSS but I just felt like my brain just needed to be stimulated a little more. I applied to this all women's bootcamp program called Hackbright in San Francisco. It was a three-month intensive program and luckily coming out of that, I had at least some initial knowledge to get my foot in the door and Eventbrite was one of the hiring partners. They brought me in for interview. I actually had no idea that it was going to be a frontend engineering role because my bootcamp was totally in Python and it just had more with a backend focus. Ben, who spoke at React Boston Conference with me, was actually one of the interviewers and he gave me this Clojure problem and I solved it but in Python just using recursion. He was like, "You got it. Just convert it to JavaScript," and I was like, "No, it just can't be done. No JavaScript." But there's the reason he would chose to hire me and they onboarded me as an internal bootcamp within Eventbrite. The first three months I was there, I learned about React, Redux, JavaScript, ES6, all of that good stuff. Then they moved me to a feature team, where I continued, I guess working on the product and then I became involved more with open source projects. I really expressed interest in when you're a new engineer and coming onboard, there's all these assumed knowledge that isn't documented anywhere or something will be really obscure and hard to use but people will just assume that that's the status quo. This idea around developer experience and helping other developers move faster, it just kind of become a natural interest of mine. I was talking to the platform team, Ben in particular, expressed my interest in working in these areas. Just about like a month ago, we did a big re-org and I landed on the platform team. Currently, we have a lot of projects in flight. One of them being moving our dependency system from our old codebase, which first was written in RequireJS to webpack. We're building out our Eventbrite design system, which is basically a shared UI component library that other teams could leverage. Our platform team will just come in and make sure that the API is usable across different teams and maintain a consistent brand in terms of look and feel. We're also working on other tooling stuff like making sure we use Docker for our dev environment and making sure that the frontend containers don't break, making sure that everyone is on the same version of ESLint, Node and things like that. CHARLES: How do you make sure that the frontend containers don't break? KAYLIE: It's actually hard. I think one thing that we're trying to test right now is using Yarn Offline Mirror and having better caching. When you build a container, it'll look into the cache directory, which is just bunch of committed tarballs. That way, they don't have to fetch to the network each time because once the lockfile or package.JSON changes at our current state, it'll rebuild the entire container and it could take a very long time. We just have a lot of packages that we've added over time. Other things, we're experimenting along with our platform team on the backend side about having remote images. Instead of devs building their containers locally on their computer, having them remotely built by a CI system and then just pulling the container and the images down. CHARLES: Really, really you're like all over the place. That sounds so much fun. KAYLIE: Yeah, it's a lot of context switching. Sorry, if I was jumping too many topics at once. CHARLES: No, absolutely not. I think it's actually fascinating and it's actually capture the kind of scope because when you are doing development, if you yourself are not running up and down the stack, the tools that you use are. The better the tools, the better you're able to focus on the one little sliver of the stack that you're working on. If I don't have to worry about where are my Docker images are coming from or if there's a temporary network flip that I can't install my dependencies, if I don't have to worry about those things, then that makes me more effective so it's important to just kind of lay out all of the stuff that goes into making a quality developer experience. KAYLIE: Yeah, the dream is like frontend people wouldn't have to worry about any of the backend stuff and they just have this isolated environment, where they could just work on what they do best, which is JavaScript and writing features in React. Everything else just works and they could see that replicated through their dev environment as well as QA and Prod and hopefully, make every tooling that they use, like testing and linting all easily, intuitive and accessible. CHARLES: How is it that you're working up and down the stack, making sure that your CI systems, your Docker images but then also at the same time, working on a design system, which you've got collaboration, I assume with some pretty hard core devops teams but also then you're interfacing with designers. You kind of flesh out your design system. Are those the same people on the platform team? Or there are different groups within it? KAYLIE: We have designers and researchers actually, as part of our engineering unit. We work pretty closely with them to define guidelines on what the design system should look like because coming into making this designs system, one thing we really wanted to make sure that is that both sides of engineering and design have input, rather than the previous old version called Style Guide, which was more engineering-driven that not. One team would need a model so they would build a model and a different team would build a slightly different model and we would end up with five different models. They want to be maintained over time and there wasn't really a focus on accessibility or consistency of brand so the design system project was to eliminate all of those pain points. CHARLES: For people who may not be familiar with design system but it's something that certainly is cramping up more and more, what's the general strategy you take? Clearly, you talked about the kind of the pains that it solves, like I'm experiencing this pain where I've got five dialogues, I've got three ways of laying out forms, I've got these problems. What's the strategy that I go about as my organization for trying to implement this? Like now, I want to do a design system, where do I start? KAYLIE: One big thing, I think that helped us was developing Eventbrite design system as just the standalone product. You could run Eventbrite design system as a standalone with all of the documentation and components with each of their different props that could be configured and it has its own set of tests. All of the components are API-driven so there's nothing specific about business logic that it assumes. For example, our button component just assumes that I'll be receiving a type of submission and some [inaudible] body. It doesn't make any assumptions that it's going to be anything Eventbrite specific. It's high-level configurable that the end user wants it to be. Another thing that helped is we have a planned approach session right before we start working on a new component. A developer who would be building the component would meet with one of the frontend platform members and will be discussing the API of the component, the CSS that would go in it and the designer would do the final QA. The development takes longer than if you were to write just a component for your app but we're trying to build it out for a long term use. We have versioning for Eventbrite design system as a library so whenever you make updates, we added to the changelog and then it gets released and we bumped in Core, which is where all of our apps live and people have to get the new version. Basically, it's an orchestrated effort and we have a process built around scheduled releases and bumping it in Core. CHARLES: I get the wanting to have a uniform buttons, uniform labels, dialogs and things like that. How do you attack the problem of higher-level workflows like a form submission and validation process that might have a lot of different pathways? How do you guide that using a design system? KAYLIE: Those are actually really good questions because we went through issues like that. Validation form field or components that have logic around more complex inputs and validation is really hard because different teams use it in a slightly different way so we ended up having two versions of complex inputs. Now, we're in the process of deprecating the V1 and then having people move over to V2. We also use the Atomic Design Principles for Eventbrite design system. It means, things like atoms would be composed of buttons and we have molecules, which are slightly more complex. Then one level above that would be organisms, which are things like forms. Obviously, as you move up to like the higher level, it becomes more difficult for us to decide does this belong in EDS or does it belong with the app. There's lots of refactoring that sometimes ends up happening as a result of something built one way and us realizing later down the road that it wasn't actually very extensible and we just built it for this particular use case. Sometimes, it's the opposite where this was too generic. We can make it a little bit more specific and add more logic to it. It really depends on the component but that's been our strategy, just taking the components as needed. We're still in the earlier stages. We've released EDS a year ago and now, we're almost close to finishing it. We're just missing a handful of components. They'll be more [inaudible] that's available as opposed to adding a brand new component. CHARLES: Did you find guidance in existing design systems? One thing is why not just use one of the existing ones that's out there. Is it a matter of branding? Is it a matter of, "There are certain interactions which are unique to our product that we need to design system to capture them?" I guess my question is, if this is something I want to take on myself, what tools would I be able to reach for and what other design systems would I be able to look to versus what I have to contribute myself? What am I going to be looking for to share with the community and what am I going to look for that's develop that's uniquely mine? KAYLIE: I think consistency was a big issue. Sort of the genesis of idea came actually even before I joined the company but I think what they were going for was that we already had an existing component library called Style Guide and it wasn't really working out for us. To build like a common UI library was a natural assumption but making it better, making it more reusable. We looked at companies like Airbnb and Microsoft and I learned a lot from what they were doing. You definitely wanted some components that are specific to Eventbrite such as a ticket card or a media card that we use for our browse pages which would be needed for Eventbrite specific pages. I think mostly, the designers wanted more control because relying on third library means we don't always get what we want. We're actually thinking about making EDS open source at some point in the future, where it could take themes so other companies or individuals can leverage it but use their own theming scheme. If Spotify came and wanted to use EDS but using their colors and brand logo, then they could do so, just by layering a different configuration style to it. CHARLES: That's such an interesting idea. Is this something that you all have explored, maybe collaborating with another company? I'm trying to think what would be the benefit of making it publicly available, unless you would be getting lots of contributions back to improve EDS itself. Is that the idea? KAYLIE: Yeah. We're definitely set on making it public at some point in the future but making it open source is a different conversation because like you said, there's pros and cons that comes with open sourcing a package. We recently open source britecharts, which is a D3 library. It's been getting a lot of contributions. It's a good recruiting tool but it's also a lot of maintenance work outside of developers normal work hours. Also, we have to start worrying about like when we make a breaking change to a component, we're not just breaking it for our own product but for other developers. We currently have external developers. We have Eventbrite plugin system called Spectrum so developers are already building on top of that and they've been asking for something like this, where they could leverage and match the look and feel with the rest of the product. The downside is lots of maintenance hours and worrying about all the people that would be breaking the component for by just solving your use case. I feel like I didn't fully answer one of your questions, which was you have a different dynamic of people working on both really backend ops things, as well as a really frontend design system work. We definitely got very smart people on the team. Some people definitely have expertise in one area versus on others. Currently, we have five developers and some of us lean more towards the backend of the frontend work and I am one of those people working on things like Yarn and Docker and build system work but it's funny because I was thinking if I had a portfolio then, there wouldn't be any visual components to it, even though I'm a frontend developer. It would just be like terminal screens. We try to divide the work but everyone tries to, I guess develop, at least some shared knowledge around why we make the decisions that we do. CHARLES: It's interesting how they all intersect. I feel like the trend of the last 10 years has been to dev of all the things. I think the first thing was this artificial divide between developers and testing and that came together with the test driven development and test obsessed. Then there was this divide between developer and an ops and that divide went away now with the advent of the devops movement. Now, there's this divide between developers and design and I feel like that kind of wall is collapsing right now. You have developers participating a lot more in design and designers spending a lot more in development. We're seeing that but it's just funny how the devs starts integrating with all the things. KAYLIE: Yeah, that's a really good insight. CHARLES: You said you kind of naturally gravitate towards more of the backend doing the working with Docker, working with Yarn. How did you get actually involved with the Yarn Project? KAYLIE: Eventbrite converted over from NPM to Yarn maybe a year ago and the benefits that we got from converting over was awesome because we were manually editing NPM shrinkwrap, which is a nightmare and the installation speed of the container was really slow just because we were on NPM and it didn't really have any advance caching mechanisms at that point. Yarn just sped up a lot of things for us. I really like the user interface outside of just installing. You actually get a lot of freebie commands like 'yarn why,' that tells you why you have a particular dependency or you could do 'yarn check.' It was just a lot more helpful. I've been wanting to contribute to open source for a while so I did a little bit of work before then but the community was really encouraging when I first try to solve and pick up some first contribution bugs off of their backlog. At the time, they were pushing for 1.0 release so there's a lot of excitement about what Yarn will be and all the new features will be adding. I kept trying to pick places where I felt like I could be of help and then, Christoph, the manager of the Yarn Team and I believe [inaudible] team as well, reached out and asked if I wanted to build the selective resolution feature for them. I was like, "Yeah. I'll give it a go." Then I did it. CHARLES: What is selective resolution? KAYLIE: Good question -- CHARLES: Because I use Yarn every day and I've never heard this term. KAYLIE: It's something that became available with 1.0 release, much like workspaces and most of the time, you're not going to need it but sometimes, you're using a library. That library will have a nested dependency that for some reason, has a bug or you can't work with that package or maybe you just want to dedupe the package so that all of your dependencies end up using one version of that particular nested package. Selective resolution is like a way for you to override other libraries dependencies -- CHARLES: Oh, that's really cool. I like that because I've had that happens to me where I want some version of a library that has got a bug fix and yet, some other library that's depending is requiring this library and they're getting the old version and I'm like, "Nah!" ELRICK: That was happening to me last night. I wish I knew about this. CHARLES: Yes, seriously. KAYLIE: Yeah. Before this -- CHARLES: I'm glad we had you on justifying about this. KAYLIE: Awesome. Before this, you would have to file an issue with the original maintainer and maybe, it'll get fix. Maybe it won't or maybe you're stuck on the old version and you can't do anything about it. We had a really similar issue with the PhantomJS package, where we wanted to use a next patch version with a bug fix but then, something that was requiring it wasn't letting us use it. It works. I verified it. It seems like Facebook started using it as well so it was a pretty rewarding to work on that. CHARLES: That's exciting. I also plan on using it the next time I encounter this. ELRICK: To get this feature, is this a flag that you have to pass? How does it do the selective resolution? KAYLIE: As long as you're using Yarn 1.0 or above, you define resolutions field inside of your package.json, like how you would define that dependencies, you also have extra [inaudible] resolutions. On the left hand side, you put in a glob pattern that you want to match and if you want to match all packages, you just enter the name of the package. Then on the right side, you enter whatever version or path that you wanted to match. It could be a file or a GitHub link or it could be a version or a range or whatever you want. ELRICK: Nice. CHARLES: That's fantastic. Now, you mentioned that as you were coming to work on this, you were looking for features to work on but the community actually did a very good job of drawing you in and getting that contribution from you, which is actually pretty amazing when you think about it. I think a lot of open source projects, either flourished or failed by their ability to attract contributors. What was it that was particularly inviting? KAYLIE: It was a combination of things. I think one thing is they tried to point you to the actual code like if you want to submit a PR, then this is where you would get started. I actually started doing that myself on some of the issues. Everyone loves PRs more than issues so I think giving people filing the issues, some, I guess empowerment to try to fix it on their own, I think is great. They also have a Discord Channel for devs to talk about any questions that they might have, how to set up their initial dev environment, to test things on Yarn. Also, they were really nice. They were really thankful when I posted a PR or commented on the fix. They also use a lot of emojis, which helps. I think I personally found it really rewarding because it made me a better developer. Before contributing to Yarn, I didn't know that much about Node. For me, it was just fun to learn more about like, "This is how something else works," and also, the codebase uses a lot of different linting configurations, which I hadn't really used before so that was a nice learning curve there as well. ELRICK: For your initial time going to Yarn when you didn't know much about it, was the champion from the project that worked with you to get you over the hump or places that you were stuck or did you just have to kind of figured it out on your own or did you ask questions on the Discord Channel or in Slack Channel or anything? How did that process go initially? KAYLIE: I definitely pace myself. I just picked up easier bugs on a repos if possible and BYK and Mel who maintain the project would give guidance, especially through PR comments and they also answer any questions on issues. If I ask questions like what's the right approach here, because sometimes you get a bug and it's not just a bug. It actually has to do with philosophy of like, what should Yarn do in this case. There be like really minor edge cases like maybe NPM does that in a particular way, should Yarn respect that or should it try to be better? Those discussions are, I think really helpful and interesting and understanding what's going on. CHARLES: It's fantastic when the conversation just builds and you're learning stuff and then you actually feel like you came out with the best solution that was available to you at the end of the process. ELRICK: You gain a lot of context about the project during those conversations. CHARLES: Right. KAYLIE: Yeah, what was good about those selective resolution feature was it was completely community-driven, even from the RFC standpoint which submitted by someone in the community and then it was implemented by me, who doesn't work in Facebook. I think that's awesome. CHARLES: There's been a lot of thought that was put into the feature even before the implementation. That's always so critical to getting people's and giving them some specifications, some blueprint of what they're actually going to build. One of the things also that I wanted to touch on too is you mentioned before the show that they have a very unique take on the way they handle communication with the community, not just in terms of pull request but also in terms of issues. KAYLIE: Yarn issue count is around 800 -- CHARLES: Boy, that's a lot. I can feel daunting when you look at that, right? KAYLIE: Yeah, but it's actively [inaudible] project, a lot of people are passionate about it and there are bots that other projects use to just automatically close issues when they're not active. But something that BYK told me was when issues are closed, people take it somewhat personally and we just want to make sure that there's like a human touch to it and we, at least get to the issues without just automatically closing them. I really respect that. I think even when people are really frustrated, the maintainers never really lose their shit. They're always very graceful and when someone is acting outside of the standards of Code of Conduct, there's a gentle reminder. So far, all of the interactions that I've seen to the issues have been really constructive, rather than being like, "Sorry, we're not going to work on this." It feels like it is a community project and people care about how it's being used. It's actually not easy given all the different operating systems that Yarn has to accommodate. It's like a pretty low level tool so I give the guys a lot of kudos for handling that. CHARLES: Eight hundred issues means that with a human touch, that means 800 people have to actually respond to those issues and usually those 800 people are not actually 800 people. They're like 10 people or some number significantly below 800. How do you attack them to try and make sure that they're responded to in a timely fashion? KAYLIE: I think issue tracking is the hardest part of open source. I think it's in the order of issue tracking and then reviewing PRs and then submitting PRs because writing code is writing code but understanding other people's code is more difficult and understanding other people's issues and what the bug is, actually is even more difficult. You don't, obviously have their exact dev environment so sometimes, it's hard to repro. I think we do a lot of things that a lot of other projects leverage, which is we label the issues, we define priority if it's actually impacting a lot of people or if it's a critical bug like you can install a package versus maybe a warning message that could be tweet. Then we kept a board, like a GitHub board to track issues when we were heading for the 1.0 release. I'm not sure if we're still doing that but that helped to a degree. Other people from the community, not just the maintainers, jump in to try and help out an issue, which is probably one of the best things. Then when we merge pull requests, we close the issues that have been referenced. CHARLES: Yeah, it's really wonderful when that thing happens. I'm so curious like how to [inaudible] because I know that it's so disheartening when you're working on a project and you file an issue and maybe, it doesn't even go answered for one day, two days or two weeks or you submit a pull request and no one's even commenting on it. It can be really disheartening and kind of make you question the viability of the product itself, especially if you see a lot of activity elsewhere. On the one hand, I also understand that the maintainers are human and they probably have a lot of obligations. I know that I've got a lot of projects where I let the issues languish and I even have one that I'm using where I can't get any response and it's just so frustrating. KAYLIE: Yeah, even Yarn is definitely not perfect. There are definitely issues that sort of go buried. You could add us at YarnPackage/Core. That pings all of us and the core team. You could call out specific people but that's a tough one. CHARLES: This isn't with Yarn, by the way. It's a totally separate project. It's fantastic when there's that basic acknowledgement. It makes such a difference in people's perception of the entire enterprise. Looks like we're actually approaching time. If we want to give a special shout out to any talks you're going to be giving, any events that you'll be at or -- KAYLIE: Actually, Ben on my frontend platform team is speaking at Nodevember about Next React. I think that's where the shout out. And then Christoph will be speaking at AgentConf in Austria, I think in January about the future of dev tools. I think both things are [inaudible]. CHARLES: All right. Fantastic. ELRICK: Any slick future features coming out in Yarn that we should know about? KAYLIE: I'll keep you updated. CHARLES: She's sworn to secrecy. KAYLIE: Yeah. I'm not sure what I'm supposed to [inaudible] yet. CHARLES: I could hear the pause of conspiracy in your voice. Thank you so much, Kaylie for coming on the show. This has been a really wonderful conversation that's just gone all over the map and those are my favorite kind. Thank you very much. KAYLIE: Thank you so much for having me. This has been a lot of fun, guys. CHARLES: Well, if people want to get in touch with you, how would they go about doing that? KAYLIE: I'm a rarity, where I don't have Twitter. You can email me, I guess. CHARLES: File an issue on Yarn. KAYLIE: Yeah. I'm KaylieEB on GitHub and KaylieKwon@Gmail. CHARLES: As always, you can get in touch with us. We're at @TheFrontside on Twitter or just drop us a line on the email. You use that on occasion too at Contact@Frontside.io. Thank you, Kaylie. Thank you, Elrick and thank you for listening.
The Guilty Feminist Presented by Deborah Frances-White and Felicity Ward Episode 69: Fabulous! with special guest Angela Clarke Recorded 8 June 2017 at Warwick Arts Centre. Released 16 October. Music by Mark Hodge and produced by Euan Maco McAleece. More about Deborah Frances-White http://deborahfrances-white.com https://twitter.com/DeborahFW Global Pillage http://www.crowdfunder.co.uk/timepeaceapp More about Felicity Ward https://www.felicityward.com https://twitter.com/felicityward https://www.instagram.com/p/BVFlmKxl9W5/?hl=en https://www.instagram.com/p/BVF05BVl_xv/?hl=en More about Angela Clarke http://angelaclarke.co.uk https://twitter.com/theangelaclarke https://www.amazon.co.uk/Angela-Clarke/e/B00B2P62OA The Sexy Getting Ready Song https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ky-BYK-f154 For more information about this and other episodes… visit guiltyfeminist.com tweet us twitter.com/guiltfempod like our Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/guiltyfeminist check out our Instagram instagram.com/theguiltyfeminist or join our mailing list eepurl.com/bRfSPT Buy our merch http://guiltyfeminist.instantcart.com/ The Negotiations special episode of the podcast is now available to purchase http://guiltyfeminist.com/product/include-yourself-podcast/ Come to a live recording! 18, 19, 21 October at Giant Dwarf, Sydney. Tickets on sale now. 20 October, State Library of Queensland. Tickets on sale now. 28 October, Auckland Town Hall. Tickets on sale now. 6 November at Kings Place. Tickets on sale now. 21 November at The Round House. Tickets on sale now. 1 December at The Y Theatre, Leicester. Tickets on sale now. 4 December at Kings Place. Tickets on sale now. Leave us a review and rate us on Apple Podcasts
Susan O'Connell, Dharma Talk, Saturday 9 July 2016, Austin Zen Center