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Raleigh Police says it's network of 1,200 cameras throughout the city now includes those in and around Crabtree Valley Mall. The mall says will make the response to possible emergency situations faster. WRAL's Brett Kneese explains how it works.
Reese, Kmac, Pam and Alex discuss the current state of the Washington Commanders and the moves they have made. How does Kmac feel about the state of the Washington Commanders? Did Kliff Kingsbury did deserve to be hired as the Commanders offensive coordinator? Is Kmac happy with the moves the Commanders made? What stellar advice did Reese give a young man in Crabtree Valley Mall? Provided the North Carolina Tar Heels hold on to the #1 spot in the ACC, who are you picking to finish #2?
Jon Farmer gave a miraculous testimony of how his daughter received a NEW EYE from God. Jon told his story to our atheist friend, Jordan Stewart, at our live public podcast event in Raleigh, NC! If you haven't listened to Part 1 yet, then you missed Jon's story. So before you listen to Part 2, make sure you go back and check out the first part of this fascinating conversation! Part 2 dives deeper into the realm of why God created us and the world and why He did it the way He did it. We'll attempt to answer questions about Hell, and why Hell even exists, and we'll talk to a young man from Bangladesh about various religions, evil spirits and the supernatural. If there is a God, do you believe He could create a new eye? If your child was born without a fully functional eye, an eye of abnormal size and shape, would you pray? Would you expect your prayers to make a difference? But what if they did? What if your child's eye was recreated? Also joining us will be another awesome guest, atheist/skeptic Jordan Stewart, who we welcome to ask the tough questions. What an exciting time to have important conversations! We'll be broadcasting from the Sanctuary Girl retail store at the Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, NC. Even MORE…our Director for The Miracles & Atheists Film will be taking footage for our upcoming movie!!! Don't know about the movie? Click here to learn more. At the event we're planning to have free snacks, good people and fascinating dialogs - will you come out and join us? If you're not local, we'll also be streaming to Rumble, Facebook and YouTube. —----------------------------------------------------------------- Partner with the Miracles & Atheists Movie! patreon.com/miraclesandatheists —----------------------------------------------------------------- Connect with Miracles & Atheists: M&A Podcast! https://miraclesandatheists.com/podcast Catalog of Livestreams: https://miraclesandatheists.com/livestream Rate & Review Us! https://apple.co/3rTV5DN Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-1384806 Chat with M&A on Telegram: https://t.me/miraclesandatheists Censorship-free comms w/ M&A on Truth Social: https://truthsocial.com/@miraclesandatheists Twitter: @miraclesatheist Instagram: @miraclesandatheists Facebook: facebook.com/miraclesatheists MACC Call-in Show (every other Tuesday @8PM EST): https://miraclesandatheists.com/MACC Email the show: nick@miraclesandatheists.com Apply to be our Guest: https://bit.ly/ma_intake
If there is a God, do you believe He could create a new eye? If your child was born without a fully functional eye, an eye of abnormal size and shape, would you pray? Would you expect your prayers to make a difference? But what if they did? What if your child's eye was recreated? That's our guest Jon Farmer's testimony, and what we'll be diving into on this presentation of The Miracles & Atheists Podcast! Also joining us was another interesting guest, atheist/skeptic Jordan Stewart, who we welcome dto ask the tough questions. This particular episode is Part 1 of a 2-part series. What an exciting time to have important conversations! We broadcasted this conversation live and in public from the Sanctuary Girl retail store at the Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, NC. Even MORE…our Director for The Miracles & Atheists Film will be taking footage for our upcoming movie!!! Don't know about the movie? Click here to learn more. Now You Can Partner with Us! Go to: patreon.com/miraclesandatheists M&A Podcast! Catalog of Livestreams Click here to Rate & Review Us! M&A on Rumble (Rumble is YouTube without censorship) But…if you insist, you can Subscribe on YouTube Chat with M&A on Telegram: Censorship-free comms w/ M&A on Truth Social Twitter: @miraclesatheist Instagram: @miraclesandatheists M&A Facebook Page Call-in Show: Miracles & Atheists Community Call-In (MACC) Email the show: nick@miraclesandatheists.com Apply to be our Guest
Before it was torn down and transformed into yet another Starbucks, an Alcatel-Lucent lab in midtown Raleigh, North Carolina, was where Nokia's David Eckard and his team worked on the initial iterations of broadband, PON and fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) technologies. Eckard's team was relegated to the loading dock while peers in the main building focused on DSL. But as is the case in the telecom and tech industries, quite a few great ideas have grown out of garages.Eckard, Nokia's VP of strategy and technology for North America, sat down with Light Reading after he and his colleagues – Leopold Diouf, VP and general manager of broadband device unit, and Suresh Chandrasekaran, fixed NW customer engineer – provided a tour of the equipment maker's "new" broadband lab in Raleigh (located near Crabtree Valley Mall for those familiar with the Raleigh area). Eckard joined Nokia after more than a decade with Alcatel-Lucent, which was acquired by Nokia in 2016.In the podcast Eckard discusses Nokia's approach to 25G PON, beacon devices for mesh Wi-Fi home networks, fixed wireless access (FWA) technologies and more. Nokia has over 150 FWA customer trials with more than two dozen operators deploying 5G FWA platform around the world, he says.Here are highlights covered in this podcast episode:Short history on Alcatel-Lucent lab and FTTH developments (1:54)Overview of software and product development of Nokia's lab (04:23)Nokia's transition to deploying virtualization and software-defined access networks (06:16)Customer demos at the lab to test PON and access networks (07:40)Challenge in working with customers on both legacy and new equipment (09:47)The future of PON technology (11:07)Use cases for FWA (13:54)Nokia's plans for use of the US infrastructure fund (18:35) See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode of the #RDUblkPodcast, DeVashi & Aisha welcome Gerrikka & Terrance Bunche owners of The Lounge Inc & The Stadium Inc. in Crabtree Valley Mall. These two business support other black owned business in a one stop shop. I mean shirts, shoes, jewelry for men and women. They support a total of 47 black owned business in the area, which is phenomenal. Listen to them from being fired and laid off to full time business owners. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rdublkpodcast/message
Russ Jones' family has a history of building things in Raleigh, including Crabtree Valley Mall. Now a partner at Loden Properties, Jones has his own portfolio of projects, including the redeveloped Gateway Plaza and the upcoming Longleaf hotel on the north side of downtown. In part two of our interview, we talked about Raleigh's hotel scene and the new Longleaf Hotel that Russ is currently working on.Ashton and Hayes also discuss a favorite Raleigh lunch spot whose owners are closing shop and headed to the beach, a potential conversion of a church to affordable senior housing, and NO the State Farmer's Market isn't going anywhere.Special thanks to our sponsor, Steele Residential--check them out for buying, selling or renting!Subscribe/rate Podcast Raleigh on your favorite podcast sites:Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-raleigh/id1458907220Google: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Inzk5woxrsjwf3zhd5vv3av4yei Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/podcast-raleighSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6b3dVvLJfO0EqvDGQaFTAP?si=QrcfEq8WSE2h3aEZSGV0pQ
Russ Jones' family has a history of building things in Raleigh, including Crabtree Valley Mall. Now a partner at Loden Properties, Jones has his own portfolio of projects, including the redeveloped Gateway Plaza and the upcoming Longleaf hotel on the north side of downtown. We broke up our interview with Russ into two parts--in this first one we talk about some of that family history, how a few key developers helped shape Raleigh, and the past and current development of the aforementioned Gateway project. In part two, we'll focus on the Longleaf, and Raleigh's independent hotel scene in general.Before the interview, we discuss the Enloe Charity Ball, Dreamville Festival tickets going on sale, a new planned development near downtown, and WHY ARE PEOPLE RUNNING AROUND WITH NO CLOTHES ON?!Special thanks to our sponsor, Steele Residential--check them out for buying, selling or renting!Subscribe/rate Podcast Raleigh on your favorite podcast sites:Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/podcast-raleigh/id1458907220Google: https://play.google.com/music/listen?u=0#/ps/Inzk5woxrsjwf3zhd5vv3av4yei Stitcher: https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/podcast-raleighSpotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/6b3dVvLJfO0EqvDGQaFTAP?si=QrcfEq8WSE2h3aEZSGV0pQ
Most common thing I heard from people who are somewhat interested in the idea of competitive shooting is that they aren't good enough. - If you can draw the gun, and walk around without pointing it at yourself or anyone else, and can do basic malfunction clearance, you have the skills needed to get started. That's not to say that you're "good enough" though. When you start, you're going to suck at it. It's that way with ANYTHING you do in life, so accept it. - When I started cycling way back when, I was awful. When I picked it up again last fall, I was awful again. I'm still not great, but the more time I spend on the bike the more I'm learning and honing my skills. - It was the same when I really took up shooting as a hobby. When I started I didn't have a clue what my sights looked like when the shot broke, and if I shot 10 rounds, and 5 of them were in the center of the target, and 5 were low and left, I couldn't tell you what was different on those shots. Now? I'll still pull a shot low/left now and then, but I know the very instant that the gun goes off that something went wrong. Because I've put in the time and practice to learn these things. - There's a Swedish Psychologist named K Anders Ericcson who's literally wrote the book on this stuff. I haven't read the book yet (literally ordered it while working on these shownotes) but I've listened to him interviewed on the Freakonomics podcast a while back, as well as heard him referenced in many different audiobooks about mastery and things like that, and basically, the way I understand what I've heard about his research is that some people are born with somewhat of an advantage in their given field, but for the most part, if you want to master something, you've got to put in the work. Not just "work" but deliberate practice. So, if you know you're going to suck at competitive shooting when you start, why should you start? I've found it to be incredibly rewarding for several reasons: 1. Not to sound cocky, but I've become one of the better shooters out there. If you put me and 10 random gun owners on the range, and have us shoot for accuracy with a handgun, I'll finish near the top, because I've practiced a LOT more than the average person. 2. I've built a level of confidence in myself, my gear, and my abilities that I didn't have before I became a competitor. Certainly before I was a competitor I would pretend I had confidence when talking to my buddies about shooting, but now that I shoot a lot, practice a lot, and know what I'm capable of (with the numbers to prove it) I'm very confident should I ever need to use my gun for self defense. 3. I've got to meet some of the best in the world at my craft. If I were a runner, I probably wouldn't meet Usain Bolt at a random 5K in North Carolina. If I were a competitive cyclist, the chances of rolling up to the line with Chris Froome just wouldn't happen. BUT, there's something about competitive shooting that's different. When we invited Chris Tilley to come over to Ben's house, and record a podcast around his kitchen table, he was happy to do it. When you roll up to the starting position and Todd Jarrett has the timer, chances are he's going to drop some knowledge on you at some point if he thinks you need it. When we had Ben Stoeger on the podcast, he invited us into his hotel room to record it. These are world class shooters, all of them, and they're available and approachable. When we interviewed Tilley one of the things he said was that he loves teaching brand new shooters how to shoot. Not the A class guys who should practice more, and make excuses for not doing it, but the people who have never shot before. I think that's freaking cool. All this to day: if you've EVER wanted to try competitive shooting, do it. If you've ever wanted to gain more confidence in your shooting, try competition. If you've ever heard that competitive shooting will get you killed on the streets, come try it, and if you're just looking for something to waste your Saturday's on, we'll see you on the range. Gear that Doesn't Suck: If you're looking to become a better shooter, you need a shot timer. If you're shooting drills on the range and you're not timing them, I think you're wasting ammo. Just get a Pocket Pro 2 timer, and be done with it. The News Mike Vanderboegh passed away this week. He was a fervent 2A supporter, and he did a lot of good work. I'll miss him. There were reports of an Active Shooter at Crabtree Valley Mall here in Raleigh in Saturday. At this point on Sunday there are a lot of conflicting reports from witnesses, some saying they heard a shot, some saying they heard 4 shots, others saying they heard 12-14 shots. The police still say they don't have any evidence of any shooting taking place. While it was all going down, apparently some dude approached the mall dressed in camo, carrying a rifle, and said that he was there to help the police. Contact There's a new way to contact the podcast. If you want to send in a voicemail through your phone, just dial 7817-BULLET and you'll be connected to the Triangle Tactical voicemail line. Boom.
A sermon for the Second Sunday of Easter at Oxford Baptist Church
Join PCF as we wrap up our 2014 LIVE coverage season and visit with Randy Ramsey and Steve Goione at the Jarrett Bay Offshore Grand Opening at Crabtree Valley Mall in Raleigh, NC.