Podcasts about cat m

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Best podcasts about cat m

Latest podcast episodes about cat m

The SnoWest Show
Arctic Cat M 858 early release! Dave McClure, Todd Tupper talk about riding the new M 858

The SnoWest Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 11, 2024 45:28


Arctic Cat released its 2025 M Alpha One 858 mountain sleds this week and this is our initial reaction pod. We get Todd Tupper of Cat's R&D department and David McClure on to talk about riding the '25 M 858 Alpha Ones. SnoWest test riders Justin Stevens, Broc Genta and Bruce Kerbs join host Ryan Harris in studio.

Most Interesting Person You've Never Heard of Podcast
Charlie Schmidt (Keyboard Cat) M.I.P Episode 30

Most Interesting Person You've Never Heard of Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2023 107:36


Full Episodes out now!

Techie and the Blonde
I 'sense' a questions about LPWAN

Techie and the Blonde

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2022 36:02


A new form of IoT network technology emerged in recent years, to help support the explosive growth in the number of connected IoT sensors. The growth fueled mainly by our need to control everything from our smart homes, to smart watches, to commercial sensors. In this episode we compare the different types of Low Power Wide Area Network technologies (LPWAN), including Nb-IoT and CAT-M.

Irish Tech News Audio Articles
Ericsson Mobility Report: 5G to top one billion subscriptions in 2022 and 4.4 billion in 2027

Irish Tech News Audio Articles

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 25, 2022 4:20


North America is forecast to lead the world in 5G subscription penetration in the next five years with nine-of-every-ten subscriptions in the region expected to be 5G in 2027. The forecast is contained in the latest edition of the Ericsson (NASDAQ: ERIC) Mobility Report, which also predicts that current global 5G subscriptions will pass the one billion milestones by the end of 2022. The 2027 timeline also includes projections that 5G will account for: 82 percent of subscriptions in Western Europe; 80 percent in the Gulf Cooperation Council region; and 74 percent in North-East Asia. In India, where 5G deployments have yet to begin, 5G is expected to account for nearly 40 percent of all subscriptions by 2027. In global terms, 5G is forecast to account for almost half of all subscriptions by 2027, topping 4.4 billion subscriptions. The latest Ericsson Mobility Report – the twenty-second edition of Ericsson's network traffic insights and forecasts – also reveals that global mobile network data traffic doubled in the past two years. This traffic growth was driven by increased smartphone and mobile broadband usage, as well as the digitalization of society and industries. The recent statistics and forecasts highlight the strong demand for data connectivity and digital services have and are expected to have, despite the global Covid-19 pandemic and geopolitical uncertainties. Several hundred million people are becoming new mobile broadband subscribers every year. The June 2022 Ericsson Mobility Report also verifies that 5G is scaling faster than all previous mobile technology generations. About a quarter of the world's population currently has access to 5G coverage. Some 70 million 5G subscriptions were added during the first quarter of 2022 alone. By 2027, about three-quarters of the world's population will be able to access 5G, according to the report. Fredrik Jejdling, Executive Vice President and Head of Networks, Ericsson, says: “The latest Ericsson Mobility Report confirms 5G as the fastest growing mobile technology generation ever, and Ericsson is playing a key role in making it happen. We work every day with our customers and ecosystem partners around the world to ensure that millions more people, enterprises, industries, and societies enjoy the benefits of 5G connectivity as soon as possible.” Peter Jonsson, Executive Editor, Ericsson Mobility Report, Ericsson, says: “The deployment of 5G standalone (SA) networks is increasing in many regions as communications service providers (CSPs) gear up for innovation to address business opportunities beyond enhanced mobile broadband. A solid digital network infrastructure underpins enterprises' digital transformation plans, and their new capabilities can be turned into new customer services.” The report also highlights the increasingly important role that Fixed Wireless Access (FWA) is playing in the delivery of broadband services. Ericsson predicts that the number of FWA connections will exceed 100 million in 2022, a figure that is forecast to more than double by 2027, reaching almost 230 million. On the Internet of Things (IoT), the report notes that in 2021, broadband IoT (4G/5G) overtook 2G and 3G as the technology that connects the largest share of all cellular IoT connected devices, accounting for 44 per cent of all connections. Massive IoT technologies (NB-IoT, Cat-M) increased by almost 80 percent during 2021, reaching close to 330 million connections. The number of IoT devices connected by these technologies is expected to overtake 2G/3G in 2023.

Instant Trivia
Episode 279 - Honky "Cat" - "M"Enagerie - Nevada - Austin - File Under "S"

Instant Trivia

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2021 7:38


Welcome to the Instant Trivia podcast episode 279, where we ask the best trivia on the Internet. Round 1. Category: Honky "Cat" 1: Tiffany published its first one of these in 1845 (online shopping came a little later). catalog. 2: This tough, thin cord is used to string musical instruments and tennis rackets. catgut. 3: It's a 2-hulled sailing boat. catamaran. 4: The name of this ancient war device is partly from the Greek for "hurl". catapult. 5: A book giving the basic principles of Christianity in Q- and -A form. catechism. Round 2. Category: "M"Enagerie 1: Though its voice is shrill, this small monkey's name is derived from Old French "marmouser", to murmur. a marmoset. 2: It's said ancient Romans not only ate these eels but fed their disobedient slaves to them. a moray eel. 3: Of the musk ox, musk deer or musk turtle, the 1 that secretes the musk used in purfume. the musk deer. 4: The tiny eyes of this insectivore are hidden in its fur. a mole. 5: This ferretlike carnivore that has a bird in its name subsists on snakes and rodents. a mongoose. Round 3. Category: Nevada 1: Built by the federal government, Boulder City is the only community in Nevada where this isn't legal. Gambling. 2: From 1870 to 1893, after a gold and silver boom, this state capital was home to a U.S. Mint. Carson City. 3: In 1973 this variety of sheep was designated Nevada's state animal. a bighorn sheep. 4: In 1973 this variety of sheep was designated Nevada's state animal. a bighorn sheep. 5: Just southeast of Las Vegas, it began as a WWII magnesium-supplying town and is now Nevada's 2nd-largest city. Henderson. Round 4. Category: Austin 1: The Confederate Soldiers Monument on the State Capitol grounds has 5 bronze statues headed by this president. Jefferson Davis. 2: At dusk, April through October, millions of these mammals fly out from under the Congress Ave. Bridge to feed. bats. 3: At 30 years, this PBS series from the Austin music scene is the longest-running music showcase now on TV. Austin City Limits. 4: Austin's African-American history is chronicled in a museum named for this agricultural scientist. George Washington Carver. 5: This Old West cattle trail that ran from Texas to Kansas crossed the eastern part of Austin. the Chisholm Trail. Round 5. Category: File Under "S" 1: Head and Shoulders, Agree, and Pert Plus are leading types of these. Shampoos. 2: It's a heavy, single-edged cavalry sword with a blade less curved than a scimitar. Saber. 3: This disease caused by the lack of ascorbic acid is called Barlow's Disease in infants. Scurvy. 4: This Middle Eastern dog is also called a gazelle hound because it was once trained to hunt gazelles. Saluki. 5: Known as "Old Fuss N' Feathers", he wrote the Army's first complete manual of drill regulations. Winfield Scott. Thanks for listening! Come back tomorrow for more exciting trivia!

New Books in American Studies
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team’s ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US’ desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation’s sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/american-studies

New Books in Gender Studies
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books in Gender Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team's ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US' desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation's sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/gender-studies

New Books in African American Studies
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books in African American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team's ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US' desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation's sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/african-american-studies

New Books in Sports
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books in Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team’s ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US’ desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation’s sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/sports

New Books in History
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books in History

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team’s ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US’ desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation’s sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history

New Books Network
Cat M. Ariail, "Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity" (U Illinois Press, 2020)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 2, 2021 48:03


At almost any international sporting event in which the US competes, it is now common (and appropriate) to remark on the composition of the American team’s ethnic and racial diversity. It is now accepted that a competitor with “USA” on their jersey/uniform does not have to “look” a certain way in order to represent the country . They can be African American, Latino/a, Asian American, Native American, or any other racial or ethnic background. For many decades of Olympic/international competition, this was not the case. It is the challenge to these limitations that Cat Ariail discusses in her work, Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (University of Illinois Press, 2020). Here, by examining the careers and importance of women such as Alice Coachman, Mae Faggs, and Wilma Rudolph, the author demonstrates the tensions and opportunities created by the US’ desire to triumph against Eastern-bloc foes (both on the field of athletic competition, as well as in international diplomacy). Ultimately, it was the talent of these competitors that overcame many discriminatory assumptions and forced the nation’s sports cultures (both white and African American) to broaden the notion of who could don the USA moniker in Olympic venues such as Melbourne and Rome. While eventually coming to accept, grudgingly, the notion that African American women should compete on behalf of the USA, not all barriers fell, as Ariail argues in her chapters on Wilma Rudolph. Here, she focuses on the fact that Rudolph “looked” the way a US female athlete should. Further, her “performance” closely mirrored what was expected of white female athletes (this, in turned, required the covering up of Rudolph being an unwed mother). Still, she looked the part, and this made it possible for more African American women, and eventually white females, to gain acceptance so as to be able to compete for the US in track and field. This work provides an excellent overview of the talent and determination it took for female athletes from schools such as Tennessee State University to challenge, and surmount, many, though not all, of the limitations that the sporting culture of post-World War II US society placed on them. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network

All the Books!
E288: Great Books for Giving: December 1, 2020

All the Books!

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 1, 2020 36:02


This week, Liberty and Danika discuss great books that make great gifts, including The Art of Ramona Quimby, The Savage Beard of She Dwarf, and Eat a Peach. Pick up an All the Books! 200th episode commemorative item here. Subscribe to All the Books! using RSS, iTunes, or Spotify and never miss a book. Sign up for the weekly New Books! newsletter for even more new book news. BOOKS DISCUSSED ON THE SHOW: The Art of Ramona Quimby: Sixty-Five Years of Illustrations from Beverly Cleary’s Beloved Books by Anna Katz  (Author), Annie Barrows (Contributor), Jacqueline Rogers (Contributor) Nothing Much Happens: Cozy and Calming Stories to Soothe Your Mind and Help You Sleep by Kathryn Nicolai Eat a Peach: A Memoir by David Chang  Homecoming Tales: 15 Inspiring Stories from Old Friends Senior Dog Sanctuary Rainbow Revolution by Magnus Hastings  Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge and the Teachings of Plants by Robin Wall Kimmerer [New hardcover edition] Chinatown Pretty: Fashion and Wisdom from Chinatown’s Most Stylish Seniors by Andria Lo and Valerie Luu  Living Lively: 80 Plant-Based Recipes to Activate Your Power and Feed Your Potential by Haile Thomas Flower: Exploring the World in Bloom by Phaidon Editors The Savage Beard of She Dwarf by Kyle Latino Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents by Isabel Wilkerson The Splendid and the Vile: A Saga of Churchill, Family, and Defiance During the Blitz by Erik Larson We Are Water Protectors written by Carole Lindstrom and illustrated by Michaela Goade Black Futures by Kimberly Drew and Jenna Wortham  I Am Every Good Thing by Derrick Barnes and Gordon C. James The New Sotheby’s Wine Encyclopedia by Tom Stevenson  All Boys Aren’t Blue by George M. Johnson Reclaimed Rust: The Four-Wheeled Creations of James Hetfield by James Hetfield  Beyond the Gender Binary (Pocket Change Collective) written by Alok Vad-Menen and illustrated Ashley Lukashevsky  WHAT WE’RE READING: This is How We Fly by Anna Meriano Francis Bacon: Revelations by Mark Stevens and Annalyn Swan BOOKS OUT THIS WEEK: Fishing for Dinosaurs and Other Stories by Joe R. Lansdale  Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower by Tamsyn Muir Comes a Pale Rider by Caitlín R. Kiernan Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (Sport and Society) by Cat M. Ariail Bone Chase by Weston Ochse Under a Gilded Moon: A Novel by Joy Jordan-Lake  Love Poems for the Office by John Kenney This Time Next Year by Sophie Cousens  Ruth Bader Ginsburg: The Last Interview: and Other Conversations by Melville House We Hear Voices by Evie Green The Good Girls by Claire Eliza Bartlett The Bitterwine Oath by Hannah West     Ordesa: A Novel by Manuel Vilas, Andrea Rosenberg (translator) Heiress Apparently (Daughters of the Dynasty) by Diana Ma Never After: The Thirteenth Fairy (The Chronicles of Never After) by Melissa de la Cruz Belgrade Noir edited by Milorad Ivanovic  The Age of Wood: Our Most Useful Material and the Construction of Civilization by Roland Ennos The Love Curse of Melody McIntyre by Robin Talley  The Game: A Digital Turning Point by Alessandro Baricco, Clarissa Botsford (translator) Black Futures by Kimberly Drew and Jenna Wortham A Wolf for a Spell by Karah Sutton The Wicked Hour by Alice Blachard Call of Vultures by Kate Kessler How to Fail at Flirting by Denise Williams Barack Before Obama: Life Before the Presidency by David Katz  Shed No Tears: A Novel (Cat Kinsella) by Caz Frear  The Arctic Fury: A Novel by Greer Macallister  Happiness Becomes You: A Guide to Changing Your Life for Good by Tina Turner  Accra Noir (Akashic Noir) by Nana-Ama Danquah The Lies You Told by Harriet Tyce An Outsider’s Guide to Humans: What Science Taught Me About What We Do and Who We Are by Camilla Pang PhD Big Girl, Small Town by Michelle Gallen All The Young Men by Ruth Coker Burks and Kevin Carr O’Leary Finding My Voice by Marie Myung-Ok Lee Wild Minds: The Artists and Rivalries That Inspired the Golden Age of Animation by Reid Mitenbuler The Black Friend: On Being a Better White Person by Frederick Joseph A Curse of Roses by Diana Pinguicha  King of the Rising (Islands of Blood and Storm Book 2) by Kacen Callender  Admission by Julie Buxbaum The Blade Between: A Novel by Sam J. Miller The Ballad of Ami Miles by Kristy Dallas Alley How to Catch a Queen by Alyssa Cole The Chicken Sisters by KJ Dell’Antonia Perestroika in Paris: A novel by Jane Smiley Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America by Ijeoma Oluo A Sky Beyond the Storm (An Ember in the Ashes Book 4) by Sabaa Tahir Rest and Be Thankful by Emma Glass Dark, Salt, Clear: The Life of a Fishing Town by Lamorna Ash The Opium Prince by Jasmine Aimaq Ambergris: City of Saints and Madmen; Shriek: An Afterword; Finch by Jeff VanderMeer  Girl Giant and the Monkey King by Van Hoang See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

All the Books!
E287: New Releases and More for November 24, 2020

All the Books!

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2020 38:50


This week, Liberty and Patricia discuss Barely Functional Adult, Ruinsong, Escape Pod, and more great books. This episode is sponsored by TBR, Book Riot’s subscription service offering reading recommendations personalized to your reading life; Sips By; and Spellbreaker by Charlie N. Holmberg. Pick up an All the Books! 200th episode commemorative item here. Subscribe to All the Books! using RSS, iTunes, or Spotify and never miss a beat book. Sign up for the weekly New Books! newsletter for even more new book news. BOOKS DISCUSSED ON THE SHOW: Princess Floralinda and the Forty-Flight Tower by Tamsyn Muir Barely Functional Adult: It’ll All Make Sense Eventually by Meichi Ng What Cats Want: An illustrated guide for truly understanding your cat by Dr. Yuki Hattori  Escape Pod: The Science Fiction Anthology edited by Mur Lafferty & S.B. Divya Ruinsong by Julia Ember Once Upon a Time I Lived on Mars: Space, Exploration, and Life on Earth by Kate Greene Seance Tea Party by Reimena Yee Beetle & the Hollowbones by Aliza Layne What We Don’t Talk About When We Talk About Fat by Aubrey Gordon, creator of Your Fat Friend WHAT WE’RE READING: Mediocre: The Dangerous Legacy of White Male America by Ijeoma Oluo Meet Me in Another Life by Catriona Silvey MORE BOOKS OUT THIS WEEK: There’s Only One Danny Garvey by David F. Ross Ready Player Two by Ernest Cline The Thirty Names of Night by Zeyn Joukhadar Stuff You Should Know: An Incomplete Compendium of Mostly Interesting Things by Josh Clark and Chuck Bryant All Lara’s Wars by Wojciech Jagielski, Antonia Lloyd-Jones (translator) I Remember Everything: Life Lessons from Dawson’s Creek by Erin Hensley, Julia Callahan, Jillian Barthold War Lord: A Novel (Saxon Tales) by Bernard Cornwell Water, Wasted by Alex Branson In Search of a Name: A Novel by Marjolijn van Heemstra The Diplomat’s Wife: A Novel by Pam Jenoff  Dark Tides: A Novel by Philippa Gregory  Not Necessarily Rocket Science: A Beginner’s Guide to Life in the Space Age by Kellie Gerardi  Memory Rose into Threshold Speech: The Collected Earlier Poetry: A Bilingual Edition by Paul Celan, Pierre Joris (translator) Feline Philosophy: Cats and the Meaning of Life by John Gray  How the King of Elfhame Learned to Hate Stories by Holly Black   Carving Out a Humanity : Race, Rights, and Redemption by Janet Dewart Bell, Vincent Southerland Tomorrow Will Be Better: A Novel by Betty Smith   Fishing for Dinosaurs and Other Stories by Joe R. Lansdale  Comes a Pale Rider by Caitlín R. Kiernan Passing the Baton: Black Women Track Stars and American Identity (Sport and Society) by Cat M. Ariail See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Farklı Kaydet.
Felsefe | Sakıncalı Mevzular #13 - Matematik Keşif midir Yoksa İcat mı

Farklı Kaydet.

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2020 35:39


Matematik keşif midir yoksa icat mı tartışmasının keşif kanadında kalmıştık. "Endüstri mühendisliği nedir?" çıkış sorusu ışığında, matematiğin temelde nasıl bir çerçeve olduğu sezgisini dinleyiciye kazandırmaya çalışarak başladığımız kaydımızda, matematiğin gelişimini ve tarihsel birikimini bir kenara bırakıp bunları konuşamayacağımızı, tartışmanın geldiği noktayı, evrenin dilini, farklı matematikler olup olamayacağını, Pisagor'u, Öklid'i, Leibniz'i, Bullshit'lerden altın oranı, pi sayısının akıllara zarar kutsallığını (!) ve önümüzdeki haftalarda yapacağımız haylazlıkları konuştuk. Ayrıca şunu da belirtmeliyim ki, doğru söylemişim, NYC - LA petrol boru hattı sapmaları analojisini müjdeleyen zat-ı şahanemiz şüphesiz ki Feynman, arz ederim.

Tirada Larga
Tirada Larga x12 | Maldita Entrevista

Tirada Larga

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2020 116:43


Programa número 12 del Podcast Tirada Larga presentado por Angel (@Contadordekm) y Victor (@Premarathon). Programa especial en el que hemos podido secuestrar al Kipchoge de los análisis de carreras, David (@blogmaldito) de Blogmaldito.com se ha prestado a ser entrevistado por dos payasos de circo. Nuestra entrevista a "Piqué". Hablamos de casi todo y todo interesante, de sus entrenamientos, de maratones en territorio nacional, de Boston, de sus ruinas como corredor y de solidaridad. Un Bomboncito de programa. La promosió del invitado (desinteresada): - Para los que vivís cerca de Barcelona, el 1 de Febrero tenéis una oportunidad inmejorable de asistir a un entrenamiento solidario con Carles Castillejo en favor de la lucha contra la enfermedad del ELA en la zona de Parc Nou/Parc del llobregat y organizado por Xavi Crespo de CoRReDoRS.CaT Más info: https://twitter.com/xyecrespo/status/1216834206493564940 - No tires basura en el monte y, sí quieres, ayuda a recogerla cuando salgas a correr por ella. La iniciativa de "Petjada Verda" va en ese sentido y puedes saber más sobre esta organización sin animo de lucro en http://petjadaverda.org/ Recuerda que puedes enviar tus dudas en twitter con el hashtag #ConsultorioTL y que también puedes seguirnos en en nuestra cuenta de twitter @tirada_larga y tus audios con historias de correr sin tener ni idea al mail tiradalargalarga@gmail.com Nos puedes escuchar todos los viernes (si no rompemos algo) en tu plataforma de podcasts favorita: - Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/7GdlTagMd64mKMcqZmBrlV - Ivoox: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-tirada-larga_sq_f1790238_1.html - Apple Podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/es/podcast/tirada-larga/id1484784679 - Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c/TiradaLargaPodcast - Google Podcast: https://podcasts.google.com/?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9mOTA4OGEwL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz Síguenos en: Angel (@Contadordekm): - https://contadordekm.com/ - https://twitter.com/contadordekm Victor (@Premarathon): - https://www.Premarathon.com - https://twitter.com/PreMarathon Intro musical: Living Nightmare by Snowflake (c) copyright 2016 Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (3.0) license. http://dig.ccmixter.org/files/snowflake/54422 Ft: Blue Wave Theory

First Things First - Stories from IoT Implementers
Why is LPWA Cellular the Next Big Thing For Enterprise IoT?

First Things First - Stories from IoT Implementers

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 26, 2019 10:20


Since its inception, cellular IoT deployments have had to adapt to life on cellular-phone specialized 2G, 3G, and early-generation 4G networks. All that has changed with the deployment of the 4G low-power wide-area (LPWA) networks of Cat-M and Cat-NB.   Longer battery life, efficient and safe IoT communication, and more; Telit IoT expert Ken Bednasz explores what exciting new aspects enterprises can expect with cellular IoT on LPWA networks.

DijitalHayatTV
"İcat Mı? İnovasyon Mu?" | Bölüm192

DijitalHayatTV

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2019 27:23


12.10.2018 | Dijital Hayat Bölüm192 - TRT RADYO1 I "İcat mı? İnovasyon mu?" Bilal Eren'in hazırlayıp, sunduğu Dijital Hayat programında “İcat mı? İnovasyon mu?” sorusu üzerinden iki farklı kültürü Mimar ve Mühendisler Grubu Başkanı Osman Balta ile konuştuk. - Osman Balta Kimdir? - Mimar ve Mühendisler Grubu nedir? - İcat mı değerli inovasyon mu? Dijital Hayat, her cuma yeni bölümüyle 15:30 TRT Radyo1 mikrofonlarında canlı yayında.. Tüm geçmiş ve gelecek yayınlarımız için; www.youtube.com/dijitalhayattv

DMA
DJ DMA - RED SQUARE BAR MIX - 2018

DMA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2018 76:37


DJ DMA - RED SQUARE BAR MIX - 2018 (no jingles) 1. Timmy Trumpet & Lady Bee - Trumpets (Savin) 2. Монеточка - Каждый раз (Tarantino & Dyxanin) 3. Miyagi - Captain (Mikis) 4. Лобода - Superstar (Mikis) 5. Макс Барских - Берега (Ramirez & Rakurs) 6. DJ Vartan & Techcrasher - Down The Drain (Orig) 7. Bellini - Samba De Janeiro (Arefiev & Olmega) 8. Монатик & Надя Дорофеева - Глубоко (Vincent & Diaz) 9. Элджей - 360° (Kolya Funk & Temmy) (Censored) 10. Snow - Informer (Luca Debonaire Omerta) 11. Леша Свик - Малиновый свет (Mikis) 12. Rasa - Под фонарем (Wayne) 13. Leandro Da Silva - Bella Ciao 14. Егор Крид ft. Филипп Киркоров - Цвет настроения черный (Shnaps & Kolya Funk) 15. Елена Темникова - Не модные (Vincent & Diaz) 16. Макс Барских - Сделай громче (Mikis) 17. Газировка - Black (Eddie G) 18. Robin S - Show Me Love (Lebedeff & Fatkat) 19. Натан - Покажи мне любовь (Kolya Funk & Temmy) 20. Willy William - La La La (Eugene Star) 21. HammAli & Navai - Пустите меня на танцпол (Icegood) 22. Kazka - Плакала (Alex Shik & Dobrynin) 23. K-Maro - Let's Go (Shik & Burn ft. TPaul Sax) 24. Feduk - Моряк (Stylezz & Agamirov) 25. 2 Маши - Босая (Dobrynin) 26. J. Balvin & Jeon & Anitta - Machika (First & Reznikov) 27. House Of Pain - Jump Around (Balu) 28. Big Shaq vs Kolya Funk - Man's Not Hot (Vincent & Diaz Mash) 29. Мальбэк & Сюзанна - Гипнозы (Mexx & Cat-M) 30. Artik & Asti - Невероятно (Kolya Dark & Leo Burn) 31. Адлер Коцба & Timran - Запах моей женщины (Tarantino & Dyxanin)

DMA
DANCE PREMIER Vol.3 (Top Radio LIVE HQ)

DMA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2018 59:42


Welcome to DANCE PREMIER Radio Show, together with DMA & SMIRNOFF. Every Saturday 9:00 on the TOP Radio waves http:/www.topradio.lv Dance Premier - 3 1. Black Star - Pакета (Rem) 2. J. Balvin & Jeon & Anitta - Machika (First & Reznikov) 3. Gayazov$ Brother$ - Кредо (Lavrushkin) 4. Artik & Asti - Таких не бывает (Alex Shik) 5. Макс Барских - Вспоминать (Rakurs & Ramirez) 6. Robin S - Show Me Love (Lebedeff & Fatkat) 7. Jah Khalib - Если чё я баха (Shummi Massive) 8. Styline - You Know (Orig) 9. 2 Маши - Босая (Dobrynin) 10. Джиган - Молоды мы (Prezzplay & MDS) 11. Steve Aoki & Daddy Yankee - Azukita (Alexx Slam) 12. Элджей - Рваные джинсы (Mikis) 13. Егор Крид ft. Киркоров - Цвет настроения черный (Shnaps) 14. Мальбэк & Сюзанна - Гипнозы (Mexx & Cat-M) 15. Wlady & T.N.Y. vs Richard Grey - In The Club (Gary Caos) 16. Enur vs Deville - Calabria (Vincent & Diaz) (E17) 17. Леша Свик - Малиновый свет (Mikis) 18. Grivina - Я хочу (Mikis) 19. Daddy’s Groove & Mindshake ft. Kris Kiss - WOW! (Robby Mond) 20. Bob Sinclar - The Beat Goes On (Kirillich) 21. Missy Elliott - Work (Exwood) 22. Ka-Re - Половина (Kolya Funk & Shnaps) 23. Bang La Decks - Utopia

Macho Grande Podcast, rock, Metal Podcast
Macho Grande 192 with Underoath, Haggard Cat, MØL, Wrong & Between Oceans

Macho Grande Podcast, rock, Metal Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2018 87:41


Feat album in review 'Underoath - Erase Me'. New music from Haggard Cat, Wrong, MØL & Between Oceans. Plus the usual news & chat from the alternative world.  Audible - audibletrial.com/machogrande Big Cartel - https://machogrande.bigcartel.com Voicemail - 05603 689 842 contact us - info@machograndepodcast.co.uk Twitter - @machogranderock merch - http://www.machogrande.bigcartel.com/ 'This podcast is intended for promotional purposes only' Macho Grande Podcast' does not claim to own copyright etc, all copyright is respected to the artists and labels.  

WE ARE NOT FROM THE MOON
S0E02 - #MOSCOW MUSINGS Part 2/2

WE ARE NOT FROM THE MOON

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2016 44:51


Fellow journalist Cat M, speaks with us about living and working in Moscow as a journalist with Thabi from a black and white perspective. Part 1. INTRO TRACK Gavin @ PHONOMA for the intro Mix A Tribe Called Tip - Happy ( Remix Dub) Feat. Towa Tei / Remix - Q-tip (sample) NASA - July 20, 1969: One Giant Leap For Mankind | NASA

WE ARE NOT FROM THE MOON
S0E01 - #MOSCOW MUSINGS Part 1/2

WE ARE NOT FROM THE MOON

Play Episode Listen Later May 25, 2016 53:43


Fellow journalist Cat M, speaks about living and working in Moscow with Thabi as a journalist - from a black and white perspective. Part 1. INTRO TRACK Gavin @ PHONOMA for the intro Mix A Tribe Called Tip - Happy ( Remix Dub) Feat. Towa Tei / Remix - Q-tip (sample) NASA - July 20, 1969: One Giant Leap For Mankind | NASA

Radio Arlecchino: Italian Grammar and Culture Podcast
Episode 15: The Holiday Special Continued

Radio Arlecchino: Italian Grammar and Culture Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2007 10:35


asset title: Episode 15: The Holiday Special Continued filename: ra_15.mp3 track number: 15/22 time: 10:35 size: 8.68 MB bitrate: 112 kbps Holiday magic has allowed us to resume the remote broadcast we began in Episode 14. You may remember that, in the beginning of our Radio Arlecchino Holiday Special, Eric had been invited to join our commedia friends as they celebrated the season backstage before opening a new show. As they shared reminiscences of holidays past, we reviewed the grammar points we've encountered so far. So now we can continue to enjoy the warm fuzzy feelings, as we continue to review our grammar. Let's listen in before something else happens!Dialog: ItalianA First ThanksgivingArlecchino: A me, a me, a me il pandoro di Verona!Arlecchina: E mentre assaporate il pandoro ecco un altro ricordo di cibo ... Ricordate la professoressa Pease? Mi ha mandato questo biglietto ...Arlecchino: Indimenticabile! Cosa racconta?Arlecchina: Il suo primo Thanksgiving in America. Sentite, ragazzi: Antonella Pease: Per il Thanksgiving quell'anno ero a Austin dove studiavo all'Università del Texas ...Avendo affittato un piccolo appartamento, ho invitato alcuni amici per la festa e loro mi hanno portato un enorme tacchino.In Italia non abbiamo la festa del Ringraziamento e io non avevo mai visto un tacchino così grosso e non sapevo come cucinarlo. Alla fine ho tagliato il petto del bestione a fettine e le ho saltate in padella con burro olio e vino.Immaginate la sorpresa dei miei amici!Colombina: Nuova tradizione texana: tacchino al burro olio e vino!Dialog: EnglishArlecchino: I'm all about pandoro from Verona!Arlecchina: And while you're tasting the pandoro here's another food memory ... You remember professor Pease? She sent me this card ...Arlecchino: Unforgettable! What does she have to tell us?Arlecchina: About her first Thanksgving in America. Listen, guys: Antonella Pease: For Thanksgiving that year I was in Austin where I was studying at the University of Texas.Having rented a small apartment, I invited some friends for the holiday and they brought me an enormous turkey.In Italy we don't have the Day of Thanksgiving and I had never seen such a huge turkey and I didn't know how to cook it. In the end I cut up the breast of the beast into little slices and tossed it in a pan with butter, oil and wine.Imagine my friends' surprise!Colombina: A new Texas tradition! Turkey with butter oil and wine!Dialog: ItalianA Terrible Christmas SecretPantalone: Qui c'è un altro biglietto ... Colombina! Questo è indirizzato a te ...Colombina: È da Adria!Everybody: Adria!Colombina: Come ci divertivamo una volta a tramare complotti con sua sorella ... Ora scrive: 'Che Babbo Natale non esisteva me l'ha detto mia sorella una sera in bagno, dove andavamo spesso insieme a raccontarci segreti.'Adria: Che Babbo Natale non esisteva me l'ha detto mia sorella una sera in bagno, dove andavamo spesso insieme a raccontarci segreti. La storia di Babbo Natale per me era sempre stata piuttosto problematica perché dovevo difenderne l'esistenza con gli altri bambini, che mi prendevano in giro perché a loro i regali li portava Gesù Bambino. La delusione più grande è stata capire che Babbo Natale non si nascondeva sul balcone il giorno prima della vigilia di Natale--questo non me l'aveva raccontato nessuno, era una cosa che mi ero inventata io e di cui ero convintissima.Arlecchino: Ma chi gliel'ha detto alla sorella che Babbo Natale non esiste?!Arlecchina: Pensi che sia vero?Arlecchino: È assurdo!Dottore: Falsitas mentitur!Colombina: Dev'essere uno scherzo!Arlecchino: Babbo Natale esiste! È sempre esistito!Arlecchina: Ci credo anch'io!Pantalone: Calma, calma, ragazzi! In questa Compagnia, Babbo Natale esiste!Arlecchino: Evviva Babbo Natale!Everybody: Evviva! Evviva!Dialog: EnglishPantalone: Here's another card ... Colombina! This one is addressed to you ...Colombina: It's from Adria!Everybody: Adria!Colombina: What fun we used to have hatching plots with her sister ... Now she writes:'That Father Christmas didn't exist was something my sister told me one evening in the bathroom, where we often went to tell each other secrets ...' Adria: That Father Christmas didn't exist was something my sister told me one evening in the bathroom where we often went to tell each other secrets. The Father Christmas business had always been rather problematic for me because I had to defend his existence to the other children, who made fun of me because it was the Child Jesus who brought them their gifts. The greatest disappointment was to figure out that Father Christmas didn't hide on the balcony during the day before Christmas Eve -- nobody had ever told me this, it was something I had made up myself and of which I was thoroughly convinced.Arlecchino: Now who told her sister that Father Christmas doesn't exist?!Arlecchina: Do you think it's true?Arlecchino: It's absurd!Dottore: Falsitas mentitur!Colombina: It must be a joke!Arlecchino: Father Christmas exists! He has always existed!Arlecchina: I believe it too!Pantalone: Calm down, everybody! In this Company, Father Christmas exists!Arlecchino: Love Live Father Christmas!Everybody: Evviva! Evviva!Dialog: ItalianA Shocking EpiphanyPantalone: Coraggio, ragazzi! Avanti, sentiamo un altro biglietto! Dottore, ne ha un altro da leggerci?Dottore: Bigliettum habeo. Cinzia scripsit!Everybody: Cinzia!Pantalone: Avanti, che cosa Le racconta?Dottore: Allora. 'Tanti saluti a tutti ... et caetera, come mi mancate, et caetera ... Ecco! 'Avevo sette anni quando ...'Pantalone: Quando ....?Dottore: 'Avevo sette anni quando scoprii ...'Arlecchina: Quando scoprì ...?Cinzia: Avevo sette anni quando scoprii che la Befana non esiste. Era la notte del 5 gennaio e non riuscivo a dormire: cosa mi avrebbe portato la Befana? Dolci o carbone? Ero preoccupata perché ero stata un po' cattivella. Mi giravo e rigiravo nel letto quando sentii dei rumori. Mi alzai di scatto e in punta di piedi andai in sala da pranzo. La porta era accostata; mi feci coraggio e guardai dentro. C'era mia madre che riempiva di carbone di zucchero le calze che avevamo appeso la sera prima ...Arlecchino: Questo è il colmo! Altro che cattivella!Colombina: No! No! Non ci credo!Dottore: Pereat quivis anti Befanam!Arlecchina: Ma non è vero! Non può essere vero!Pantalone: Non piangere, Colombina! Certo che non è vero! Colleghi! Amici! Ragazzi! Calma! In questa Compagnia, la Befana esiste!Arlecchino: Evviva la Befana!Dialog: EnglishPantalone: Take heart, fellows! Now then, let's hear another card! Dottore, have you got another one to read to us?Dottore: Bigliettum habeo. Cinzia scripsit!Everybody: Cinzia!Pantalone: Go on, what does she have to say?Dottore: Well. 'Greetings to every one ... etc, how I miss you, etc ...' Here we are! 'I was seven years old when ...'Pantalone: When ....?Dottore: 'I was seven years old when I discovered ...'Arlecchina: When she discovered ...?Cinzia: I was seven when I found out that La Befana does not exist. It was the night of January 5 and I couldn't sleep: what would La Befana bring me? Sweets orcoal? I was worried because I had been a bit naughty. I was tossing andturning in my bed when I heard some noises. I sprang out of bed and tiptoed to the living room. The door was ajar; I gathered all my courage and looked inside. There was my mother stuffing sugar coal into the socks we had hung the night before ...Arlecchino: Now this beats everything! A bit naughty indeed!Colombina: No! No! I don't believe it!Dottore: Pereat quivis anti Befanam!Arlecchina: But it isn't true! It can't be true!Pantalone: Don't cry, Colombina! Of course it isn't true! Colleagues! Friends! Now, fellows, calm down! In this Company, the Befana exists!Arlecchino: Long live the Befana!Dialog: ItalianReally Ancient Holiday MemoriesArlecchino: Chi è che gratta? Chi è? È Babbo Natale?Ah, sei tu! E tu chi sei? La Befana?Davvero?! E perché non lo avete detto subito?Ragazzi! Guardate chi si è fatto vivo!Arlecchina: Giulio Cesare!Julius Caesar the Cat: Ave!Arlecchina: Sei venuto anche tu!Julius Caesar the Cat: Venni!Arlecchina: Hai visto che ci siamo tutti?Julius Caesar the Cat: Vidi!Arlecchina: E .... e ... e hai ...Julius Caesar the Cat: Sì, sì, perché no?: Vinsi!Colombina: Nerone!Nero the Cat: Presente -- ma non colpevole! Felici Saturnali a tutti! Cosa fate?Colombina: Stiamo leggendo i biglietti che ci hanno mandato gli amici! Tanti bei ricordi ...Arlecchino: Non tutti sono stati belli, però ...Dialog: EnglishArlecchino: Who's scratching? Who is it? Is it Father Christmas?Ah, it's you! And who are you? The Befana?Really?! Why didn't you say so right away?Hey everybody! Look who showed up!Arlecchina: Julius Caesar!Julius Caesar the Cat: Ave!Arlecchina: You came too!Julius Caesar the Cat: I came!Arlecchina: Did you see that we're all here?Julius Caesar the Cat: I saw!Arlecchina: And ... and ... did you ...?Julius Caesar the Cat: Yes, yes -- why not?: I conquered!Colombina: Nero!Nero the Cat: Present -- but not guilty! Happy Saturnalia to everyone! What are you doing?Colombina: We're reading cards that our friends have sent us! So many lovely memories ...Arlecchino: They haven't all been lovely though ...Dialog: ItalianA Boy's Best FriendPantalone: Nerone, vedi! Qui c'è uno anche per te!Nero the Cat: Per me? Ma chi lo sapeva che sarei stato qui? Mi faccia vedere ...Colombina: Da chi è?Nero the Cat: Oh! Mamma!Dottore: Optima amica pueris mater est!Colombina: Che cosa ti racconta Agrippina?Nero the Cat: 'Caro figlio ... So quanto ti sono sempre piaciute queste feste di fine anno ... Ricordi quei Saturnali quando ti elessero Princeps?' Il Princeps era il re dei Saturnali, poteva mandare tutti a fare qualsiasi cosa volesse, e quell'anno fui io! Mammina continua: Agrippina: 'Al banchetto quella sera chiamasti Britannico, il tuo rivale e nemico--quanti anni avevate? Quattordici? Quindici? Ah, cose da ragazzi ... Gli ordinasti di alzarsi, di venire al centro e di cantare. Tu sapevi quanto male cantava Britannico ... Ma la sua canzone suscitò la simpatia di tutti e tu lo uccidesti dopo ... Fu con il veleno, non è vero, come tentasti con me? Ah, quelli erano altri tempi ... Felici Saturnali, mio caro.'Nero the Cat: M-m-m-mamma!Colombina: Coraggio, Nerone! Tieni, bevi!Arlecchina: Cesare, non so se avremo un biglietto qui anche per te ...Julius Caesar the Cat: Fui console e dittatore ... principe dei Saturnali, mai ...Pantalone: Attenzione! Qui c'è proprio un papiro indirizzato a Cesare!Julius Caesar the Cat: Pro di immortales! Cleopatra!Everybody: Cosa dice?Julius Caesar the Cat: Ma lo sapete che i geroglifici di questa donna sono illegibili ... Proviamo ... 'Aggiù ... Buone feste! Cleopatra: Ho una nostalgia pazzesca di quella festa di Iside quando noi due ci nascondemmo nel palazzo durante le interminabili sfilate ... quando arrivarono al tempio della dea i sacerdoti ci cercarono invano e pensarono che fossimo saliti in cielo con Osiride. Magari fosse stato così. Invece tutto finì male per noi. E ti dico un'altra cosa ... non ti preoccupare più del fatto che non imparasti mai a camminare all'egiziana. Io sono greca. Tanti auguri, mio Cesare!Arlecchino: Evviva Cleopatra!Stage Manager: Tutti ai propri posti! Il sipario si alzerà tra cinque minuti! Tutti ai propri posti! Pantalone: Andiamo, ragazzi! Lo spettacolo!Amici, romani, concittadini ... alle poltrone e sul palcoscenico!Cesare, Nerone, entrate da questa parte ... così ci saranno più dei soliti quattro gatti ...Dialog: EnglishPantalone: Nero, look! There's one for you here as well!Nero the Cat: For me? But who knew that I was going to be here? Let me see ...Colombina: Who's it from?Nero the Cat: Oh! Mommy!Dottore: Optima amica pueris mater est!Colombina: What does Agrippina have to say?Nero the Cat: 'Dear son ... I know how much you have always loved these year-end holidays ... Do you remember those Saturnalia when they elected you Princeps?' The Princeps was the king of Saturnalia, he could command anyone to do whatever he wanted, and that year it was me! Mommy goes on ... Agrippina: At the banquet that evening you called on Britannicus, your rival and enemy--how old were you? Fourteen? Fifteen? Ah, the things little boys do ... You ordered him to come to the center and sing. You knew how poorly Britannicus sang .... But his song aroused everyone's sympathy and you killed him later on ... It was with poison, wasn't it, the way you tried with me? Ah, those were the days ... Happy Saturnalia, my dear.Nero the Cat: M-m-m-mamma!Colombina: Take heart, Nero! Here, have a drink!Arlecchina: Caesar, I don't know if we have a card here for you too ...Julius Caesar the Cat: I was consul and dictator ... Prince of Saturnalia, never ...Pantalone: Attention! Why there's a papyrus here addressed to Caesar!Julius Caesar the Cat: Pro di immortales! Cleopatra!Everybody: What does she say?Julius Caesar the Cat: Now you know that woman's hieroglyphics are illegible ... We'll give it a go ...'Aggiù ... Happy Holidays!'Cleopatra: I'm madly homesick for that Feast of Isis when the two of us hid in the palace during those endless processions ... When the arrived at the temple of the goddess the priest looked for us in vain and thought we had ascended to heaven with Osiris. If only it had been so ... Instead everything turned out wrong for us. And I'll tell you something else ... Don't worry anymore about the fact that you never learned to walk like an Egyption. I'm Greek! Best wishes, my Caesar!Arlecchino: Long live Cleopatra!Stage Manager: Places, everyone! Curtain going up in five minutes! Places!Pantalone: Let's go, fellows! It's showtime!Friends, Romans, countrymen ... to your seats and onto the stage!Caesar, Nero, go in this way ... now we'll have more than the usual 'four cats' ...