Podcasts about conzett

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Best podcasts about conzett

Latest podcast episodes about conzett

Kultur kompakt
Visions du réel – Start des 53. internationalen Dokfilmfestivals

Kultur kompakt

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2022 26:24


(00:00:23) In Nyon haben die Gäste seit gestern Abend wieder Visionen. Dabei bleiben sie auf dem Boden der Tatsachen: Es ist das internationale Dokumentarfilmfestival «Visions du réel», das in seine 53. Ausgabe gestartet ist. Mit grossem Programm vor Ort, aber auch einem Online-Angebot. Weitere Themen: (00:04:46) Fremde Räume mit der Virtual Reality Brille entdecken – am Festival «Umprogrammiert» im Kleintheater Luzern. (00:08:59) Der Prix Meret Oppenheim - geht auch an die Ingenieure Gianfranco Bronzini und Jürg Conzett. (00:13:04) Das Who ist Who der Spinnen – der Spinnenkatalog des Naturhistorischen Museums Bern. (00:16:31) Wie lassen sich Kunst und Leben verbinden? Das fragt die Schweizer Autorin Julia Weber in ihrem neuen Roman «Die Vermengung». (00:20:16) Seismograph der US-amerikanischen Kunstwelt – die Biennale im Whitney Museum in New York. (00:26:18) «Das letzte Wort»: Die grösste Nicht-Kartoffel der Welt.

Regionaljournal Graubünden
Ausgezeichnete Ingenieurskunst

Regionaljournal Graubünden

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 14:01


Die Bündner Ingenieure Jürg Conzett und Gianfranco Bronzini erhalten den Meret-Oppenheim-Preis vom Bundesamt für Kultur. Bekannt sind sie vor allem für ihre Brücken, wie jene in Vals. Weitere Themen: * Kantonsgelder für diverse Projekte. * Selina Gasparin blickt zurück auf ihre Karriere.

Regionaljournal Ostschweiz
St. Galler Quartierbahnhof Bruggen wird verschoben

Regionaljournal Ostschweiz

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2022 6:41


Die Stadt und der Kanton St. Gallen planen gemeinsam mit der SBB, den Bahnhof Bruggen nach Osten zu verschieben und mit dem SOB-Bahnhof Haggen zu verbinden. Die Kosten für das Projekt werden auf 39 Millionen Franken geschätzt. Weitere Themen: * AR: Regierung hat neuen Richtplan in Kraft gesetzt * AR: Kantonsratskommission möchte bei der Totalrevision des Volksschulgesetzes weitergehen als die Regierung * GR: Di beiden Ingenieure Jürg Conzett und Gianfranco Bronzini erhalten den Prix Meret Oppenheim vom Bundesamt für Kultur * SG: Plus in der Rechnung der katholischen Kirche des Kantons St. Gallen

Elevate Support Podcast
Lance Conzett's Dream Job at Uber

Elevate Support Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 38:41


Sarah sits down to talk with Lance Conzett from Uber. The two discuss customer support as a great resource to learn how the customers interact with a company's product and services and how that translates to working in all departments. Lance shares excellent stories from going through a massive merger that Uber went through in 2020.

CoinGeek Conversations
Jurg Conzett: Money is always changing

CoinGeek Conversations

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 14, 2021 28:48


The founder of Zurich's MoneyMuseum, Dr. Jurg Conzett discusses the history and evolution of money on this episode of CoinGeek Conversations. As Dr. Conzett tells Charles Miller, money creation today is unlike the coins of the Middle Ages in the sense that its value remains the same after a historical event has taken place. “If there was a pandemic, you close shop, put the coins on the shelf, waited six months then opened again, the coins still have the same value.” he said. “Not so with our money, a pandemic hits and the next minute the money begins to disappear.”  Dr. Conzett believes that money creation is changing right in front of our eyes with the digitization of central bank money to make CBDCs – central bank digital currencies. According to him, the digitization of central bank money was governments' response to fear and uncertainty triggered by the rise of Bitcoin. “Governments around the world were frightened because when Bitcoin has risen substantially, they say, ‘what do we do if people go to an exchange and transact with Bitcoin? What happens to taxes?' They must be in horror and say ‘we have to do something', so what they decided is to tokenize.”  Dr. Conzett describes a future where most of the banking money will be replaced by digitized central bank money under the control of governments, giving politicians power over the money supply. “They [politicians] have a tremendous responsibility and we will see how they go about fiscal responsibility.”  For his part, Dr. Conzett sees no direct or necessary relation between the digitization of money and Bitcoin and blockchain, citing China as an example. “China has digitized their currency, but not with Bitcoin, not on blockchain.” He notes that Bitcoin and blockchain will only surface if and when politicians decide to incorporate blockchain technology into the digitized money system. “There will be pressure to bring all the money onto the blockchain, because once it's on blockchain, at least in BSV, it will be public knowledge.” But in order to get there, he believes people must increase the token economy.  As for the future of blockchain, Dr. Conzett believes only one Bitcoin ecosystem will prevail. “In my opinion, there will be one blockchain which attracts most because it will be the most efficient, and the most efficient, I think will win.”  

We Own This Town: Music
256: Content over Style with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 65:57


Special guest LANCE CONZETT brings Reaux Marquez, Yours Truly Jai, Jordan Xx, Aaron Cartier, f_Forever, Bantug, Seint Monet, Candace in Wonderland, $avvy, Houston Kendrick

We Own This Town: Music
256: Content over Style with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 22, 2021 65:57


Special guest LANCE CONZETT brings Reaux Marquez, Yours Truly Jai, Jordan Xx, Aaron Cartier, f_Forever, Bantug, Seint Monet, Candace in Wonderland, $avvy, Houston Kendrick

Cuntrasts HD
Senza sturnizi – Richard Coray, constructur da punts persas

Cuntrasts HD

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2020 26:25


Richard Coray era in um da paucs pleds. Sia spezialitad era la lavur cun laina e la construcziun da punts persas. Quai èn las puntanadas che vegnan duvradas per construir las punts. Cun sias puntanadas temporaras ha Coray creà construcziuns spectacularas ch’èn mo pli visiblas sin fotografias veglias. Richard Coray è vegnì admirà a ses temp dad inschigners e laics sco persunalitad legendara. La reschissura da films Susanna Fanzun ha accumpagnà l’autur Johann Clopath che retschertga dapi onns davart la vita ed ovra da Coray. Prest cumpara il cudesch sur da ses convischin da Trin. Cun Jürg Conzett, inschigner da renum internaziunal, ha discurrì l’autura davart dumondas da construcziun e davart sia fascinaziun ed admiraziun per il constructur. Cun ils purtrets contemporans e bleras fotografias istoricas taissa l’autura dal film in viadi visual tras il temp e l’ovra da Richard Coray.

Cuntrasts
Senza sturnizi – Richard Coray, constructur da punts persas

Cuntrasts

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2020 26:25


Richard Coray era in um da paucs pleds. Sia spezialitad era la lavur cun laina e la construcziun da punts persas. Quai èn las puntanadas che vegnan duvradas per construir las punts. Cun sias puntanadas temporaras ha Coray creà construcziuns spectacularas ch’èn mo pli visiblas sin fotografias veglias. Richard Coray è vegnì admirà a ses temp dad inschigners e laics sco persunalitad legendara. La reschissura da films Susanna Fanzun ha accumpagnà l’autur Johann Clopath che retschertga dapi onns davart la vita ed ovra da Coray. Prest cumpara il cudesch sur da ses convischin da Trin. Cun Jürg Conzett, inschigner da renum internaziunal, ha discurrì l’autura davart dumondas da construcziun e davart sia fascinaziun ed admiraziun per il constructur. Cun ils purtrets contemporans e bleras fotografias istoricas taissa l’autura dal film in viadi visual tras il temp e l’ovra da Richard Coray.

We Own This Town: Music
177: 2019 Highlights with Lance Conzett, Part 2

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2019 60:33


Lance Conzett returns to help run down a few more notable releases from 2019.

conzett
We Own This Town: Music
177: 2019 Highlights with Lance Conzett, Part 2

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2019 60:33


Lance Conzett returns to help run down a few more notable releases from 2019.

conzett
We Own This Town: Music
176: 2019 Highlights with Lance Conzett, Part 1

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2019 57:58


Lance Conzett co-hosts to help run down a few of the notable releases from 2019.

conzett
We Own This Town: Music
176: 2019 Highlights with Lance Conzett, Part 1

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 13, 2019 57:58


Lance Conzett co-hosts to help run down a few of the notable releases from 2019.

conzett
Ruby Rogues
RR 435: Alternatives to Adding React with Graham Conzett

Ruby Rogues

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2019 59:28


Graham Conzett has been a developer for 12 years. He has worked with Ruby and Rails for half of that, and currently works for a company that does large format touchscreens. Graham gave a talk at RailsConf 2018 called “Old School JavaScript and Rails” where he talks about the experience of JavaScript fatigue. The world of JavaScript changes very quickly, and sometimes it feels like there’s a new framework every week. Because there is no clear winner among these frameworks, many Rails developers feel compelled to reach for something like React. However, there are many strategies for doing JavaScript in Ruby and in Rails that existed before these frameworks, so you can accomplish what you want to get done without bringing one in. Remember that all of them can coexist side by side, so you don’t have to pick one strategy. The panel discusses the effect that adopting a new technology can have on the team, such as the learning curve and hiring people that specialize in it.  To illustrate this, Graham talks about the company he works for. Their app is a 90% is a Rails app, and one component has a lot of React. He talks about how they came up with that strategy and how they have kept React isolated to that page. It’s crept into some other little places, but there is a document in the team charter that defines where and why they use certain things, and that has kept it limited. Graham talks about the tradeoffs between choosing to stay in Rails or introduce React. If you bring in React, you have to bring in a different testing framework. React also has a bigger learning curve than standard HTML or CSS. There are far less conventions around React than Rails, so you have to spend time coming to a consensus as a team. Webpacker helps with this to a degree, but it also pulls in a bunch of third party plugins, so Rails is no longer writing the rules and you may have to debug random plugins. If you want to avoid adding a framework like React, consider using ujs, or Unobtrusive JavaScript. These are JavaScript ‘helpers’ included in the Rails bundle that you can add to various buttons that help you decorate and enhance. You don’t have to change much of your HTML frontend code but it makes it more interactive. Graham talks about he uses them and why he likes them. The panel compares using ujs to other strategies like using Stimulus or ‘sprinkles’ of JavaScript. For small JS sprinkles, Graham advises to keep that focused on a single HTML element and bound to a single event handler. Ujs works best when you piggyback off of that Rails/Rest related stuff, and Stimulus is more about manipulating parts on the page that don’t have a need for asynchronous request. You can really use ujs everywhere, so the three techniques are not mutually exclusive. Graham gives advice to developers considering pulling in a frontend framework. He says to start with minimal JS and then talk to your team about when it feels right to do it, because that’s a tricky conversation to know what your expectations are and problems you’re trying to solve. Sometimes things will force the issue and make you want to explore using frontend frameworks. When it’s a time saver, it makes your team scale better, or when you have something you just can’t do without it, then that might be the right time to use React. The show concludes with the panel discussing their experiences with different compiling languages like TypeScript. They talk about what influences the tools people choose. They agree that the most important thing is getting working code out there, it doesn’t really matter how it’s written, but to only pull things in when you know you need it. Panelists Charles Max Wood Andrew Mason David Kimura Nate Hopkins With special guest: Graham Conzett Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Adventures in Angular Links Old School JavaScript and Rails at RailsConf 2018 React React Native React Native Web Jest Capybara Webpacker Rails-ujs Turbolinks Stimulus Stimulus Reflex Babel TypeScript Actionview components Angular Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon OBS David Kimura: WeDo 2.0 by Lego Workflow Automation Self Hosted Andrew Mason: Publish to Github action JustDunning.com Nate Hopkins: Company of One by Paul Jarvis IndieHackers Graham Conzett: Basecamp’s Shape Up Pigeonforteachers.com  IKE Smart City Follow Graham @gconzett on Twitter and Github

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv
RR 435: Alternatives to Adding React with Graham Conzett

All Ruby Podcasts by Devchat.tv

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2019 59:28


Graham Conzett has been a developer for 12 years. He has worked with Ruby and Rails for half of that, and currently works for a company that does large format touchscreens. Graham gave a talk at RailsConf 2018 called “Old School JavaScript and Rails” where he talks about the experience of JavaScript fatigue. The world of JavaScript changes very quickly, and sometimes it feels like there’s a new framework every week. Because there is no clear winner among these frameworks, many Rails developers feel compelled to reach for something like React. However, there are many strategies for doing JavaScript in Ruby and in Rails that existed before these frameworks, so you can accomplish what you want to get done without bringing one in. Remember that all of them can coexist side by side, so you don’t have to pick one strategy. The panel discusses the effect that adopting a new technology can have on the team, such as the learning curve and hiring people that specialize in it.  To illustrate this, Graham talks about the company he works for. Their app is a 90% is a Rails app, and one component has a lot of React. He talks about how they came up with that strategy and how they have kept React isolated to that page. It’s crept into some other little places, but there is a document in the team charter that defines where and why they use certain things, and that has kept it limited. Graham talks about the tradeoffs between choosing to stay in Rails or introduce React. If you bring in React, you have to bring in a different testing framework. React also has a bigger learning curve than standard HTML or CSS. There are far less conventions around React than Rails, so you have to spend time coming to a consensus as a team. Webpacker helps with this to a degree, but it also pulls in a bunch of third party plugins, so Rails is no longer writing the rules and you may have to debug random plugins. If you want to avoid adding a framework like React, consider using ujs, or Unobtrusive JavaScript. These are JavaScript ‘helpers’ included in the Rails bundle that you can add to various buttons that help you decorate and enhance. You don’t have to change much of your HTML frontend code but it makes it more interactive. Graham talks about he uses them and why he likes them. The panel compares using ujs to other strategies like using Stimulus or ‘sprinkles’ of JavaScript. For small JS sprinkles, Graham advises to keep that focused on a single HTML element and bound to a single event handler. Ujs works best when you piggyback off of that Rails/Rest related stuff, and Stimulus is more about manipulating parts on the page that don’t have a need for asynchronous request. You can really use ujs everywhere, so the three techniques are not mutually exclusive. Graham gives advice to developers considering pulling in a frontend framework. He says to start with minimal JS and then talk to your team about when it feels right to do it, because that’s a tricky conversation to know what your expectations are and problems you’re trying to solve. Sometimes things will force the issue and make you want to explore using frontend frameworks. When it’s a time saver, it makes your team scale better, or when you have something you just can’t do without it, then that might be the right time to use React. The show concludes with the panel discussing their experiences with different compiling languages like TypeScript. They talk about what influences the tools people choose. They agree that the most important thing is getting working code out there, it doesn’t really matter how it’s written, but to only pull things in when you know you need it. Panelists Charles Max Wood Andrew Mason David Kimura Nate Hopkins With special guest: Graham Conzett Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Adventures in Angular Links Old School JavaScript and Rails at RailsConf 2018 React React Native React Native Web Jest Capybara Webpacker Rails-ujs Turbolinks Stimulus Stimulus Reflex Babel TypeScript Actionview components Angular Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon OBS David Kimura: WeDo 2.0 by Lego Workflow Automation Self Hosted Andrew Mason: Publish to Github action JustDunning.com Nate Hopkins: Company of One by Paul Jarvis IndieHackers Graham Conzett: Basecamp’s Shape Up Pigeonforteachers.com  IKE Smart City Follow Graham @gconzett on Twitter and Github

Devchat.tv Master Feed
RR 435: Alternatives to Adding React with Graham Conzett

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2019 59:28


Graham Conzett has been a developer for 12 years. He has worked with Ruby and Rails for half of that, and currently works for a company that does large format touchscreens. Graham gave a talk at RailsConf 2018 called “Old School JavaScript and Rails” where he talks about the experience of JavaScript fatigue. The world of JavaScript changes very quickly, and sometimes it feels like there’s a new framework every week. Because there is no clear winner among these frameworks, many Rails developers feel compelled to reach for something like React. However, there are many strategies for doing JavaScript in Ruby and in Rails that existed before these frameworks, so you can accomplish what you want to get done without bringing one in. Remember that all of them can coexist side by side, so you don’t have to pick one strategy. The panel discusses the effect that adopting a new technology can have on the team, such as the learning curve and hiring people that specialize in it.  To illustrate this, Graham talks about the company he works for. Their app is a 90% is a Rails app, and one component has a lot of React. He talks about how they came up with that strategy and how they have kept React isolated to that page. It’s crept into some other little places, but there is a document in the team charter that defines where and why they use certain things, and that has kept it limited. Graham talks about the tradeoffs between choosing to stay in Rails or introduce React. If you bring in React, you have to bring in a different testing framework. React also has a bigger learning curve than standard HTML or CSS. There are far less conventions around React than Rails, so you have to spend time coming to a consensus as a team. Webpacker helps with this to a degree, but it also pulls in a bunch of third party plugins, so Rails is no longer writing the rules and you may have to debug random plugins. If you want to avoid adding a framework like React, consider using ujs, or Unobtrusive JavaScript. These are JavaScript ‘helpers’ included in the Rails bundle that you can add to various buttons that help you decorate and enhance. You don’t have to change much of your HTML frontend code but it makes it more interactive. Graham talks about he uses them and why he likes them. The panel compares using ujs to other strategies like using Stimulus or ‘sprinkles’ of JavaScript. For small JS sprinkles, Graham advises to keep that focused on a single HTML element and bound to a single event handler. Ujs works best when you piggyback off of that Rails/Rest related stuff, and Stimulus is more about manipulating parts on the page that don’t have a need for asynchronous request. You can really use ujs everywhere, so the three techniques are not mutually exclusive. Graham gives advice to developers considering pulling in a frontend framework. He says to start with minimal JS and then talk to your team about when it feels right to do it, because that’s a tricky conversation to know what your expectations are and problems you’re trying to solve. Sometimes things will force the issue and make you want to explore using frontend frameworks. When it’s a time saver, it makes your team scale better, or when you have something you just can’t do without it, then that might be the right time to use React. The show concludes with the panel discussing their experiences with different compiling languages like TypeScript. They talk about what influences the tools people choose. They agree that the most important thing is getting working code out there, it doesn’t really matter how it’s written, but to only pull things in when you know you need it. Panelists Charles Max Wood Andrew Mason David Kimura Nate Hopkins With special guest: Graham Conzett Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry’s small plan Cloud 66 - Pain Free Rails Deployments Try Cloud 66 Rails for FREE & get $66 free credits with promo code RubyRogues Adventures in Angular Links Old School JavaScript and Rails at RailsConf 2018 React React Native React Native Web Jest Capybara Webpacker Rails-ujs Turbolinks Stimulus Stimulus Reflex Babel TypeScript Actionview components Angular Follow DevChatTV on Facebook and Twitter Picks Charles Max Wood: St. George Marathon OBS David Kimura: WeDo 2.0 by Lego Workflow Automation Self Hosted Andrew Mason: Publish to Github action JustDunning.com Nate Hopkins: Company of One by Paul Jarvis IndieHackers Graham Conzett: Basecamp’s Shape Up Pigeonforteachers.com  IKE Smart City Follow Graham @gconzett on Twitter and Github

We Own This Town: Music
145: Nashville Hip-Hop with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2019 77:06


Lance Conzett guest co-hosts and educates on a handful of worthwhile hip-hop acts.

We Own This Town: Music
145: Nashville Hip-Hop with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later May 18, 2019 77:06


Lance Conzett guest co-hosts and educates on a handful of worthwhile hip-hop acts.

We Own This Town: Music
131: A Nice Jangle with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2019 66:28


Photojournalist extraordinaire Lance Conzett returns to the WOTT Studio to have six new songs played for him in exchange for his honest first impressions. He delivers.

We Own This Town: Music
131: A Nice Jangle with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 8, 2019 66:28


Photojournalist extraordinaire Lance Conzett returns to the WOTT Studio to have six new songs played for him in exchange for his honest first impressions. He delivers.

We Own This Town: Music
Volume 121 with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 73:49


Very special guest Lance Conzett joins us for a look at some Nashville Pop Music discoveries (as well as some of his non-pop local favorites) and delivers in spades.

conzett
We Own This Town: Music
Volume 121 with Lance Conzett

We Own This Town: Music

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2018 73:49


Very special guest Lance Conzett joins us for a look at some Nashville Pop Music discoveries (as well as some of his non-pop local favorites) and delivers in spades.

conzett
On crises and failures
Crises and Money (Video)

On crises and failures

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2017 3:14


Video: Introductory thoughts on the series “On Crises and Failures” from Jürg Conzett, founder of the MoneyMuseum.

money failures crises conzett moneymuseum
On crises and failures

Introductory thoughts on the series “On Crises and Failures” from Jürg Conzett, founder of the MoneyMuseum.

money failures crises conzett moneymuseum
Von Krisen und Scheitern
Krisen und Geld (Video)

Von Krisen und Scheitern

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2017


Video: Einführende Gedanken zur Serie “Von Krisen und Scheitern" von Jürg Conzett, Gründer des MoneyMuseum.

Von Krisen und Scheitern

Einführende Gedanken zur Serie “Von Krisen und Scheitern" von Jürg Conzett, Gründer des MoneyMuseum

Geld gestern & heute
Geld und Nachhaltigkeit

Geld gestern & heute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2016


Geld gehört zu den vier Tabuthemen in unserer Gesellschaft – wie Tod, Macht und Sexualität. Wenn etwas zum Tabu wird, wirkt es als unbewusstes Mysterium. Im Gespräch mit Stefan Brunnhuber forscht Jürg Conzett diesem Mysterium nach.

Geldtypen und -geheimnisse

Die Frage, was Geld ist, hat Jürg Conzett schon als Teenager interessiert. Der Gründer des MoneyMuseums beschäftigt sich noch immer mit dieser Frage und fasst in diesem Video seine persönlichen Gedanken dazu zusammen.

Geldtypen und -geheimnisse

Sind Sie im Umgang mit Geld eher wie Dagobert Duck oder Hans im Glück? Dr. Jürg Conzett stellt Ihnen den beliebten, von ihm entwickelten Test vor, mit dem Sie mehr über Ihr Verhältnis zu Geld herausfinden.

Geldtypen und -geheimnisse
Serendipity – das Geldgeheimnis

Geldtypen und -geheimnisse

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2015


Serendipity heisst: Finden ohne zu suchen. Dr. Jürg Conzett erklärt den einzigartigen Moment von Serendipity mit dem Golfsport, bei dem das Harmonisieren des äusseren und des inneren Spiels matchentscheidend ist. Eine kleine Einführung.

Money Yesterday & Today
The Meaning of Life and its Relation to Money

Money Yesterday & Today

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2014


The founder of the Sunflower Foundation, Jürg Conzett, met with pastor Adelheid Jewanski to discuss the meaning of life and the role of money. Their conversation is as relevant today as it was then.

Geld gestern & heute
Der Lebenssinn und sein Bezug zum Geld

Geld gestern & heute

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 10, 2014


Der Gründer der Sunflower Foundation, Jürg Conzett, hat sich mit der Pfarrerin Adelheid Jewanski zu einem Gespräch über Sinn und Geld getroffen. Das Gespräch ist heute so aktuell wie damals.