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We look ahead to Super Saturday and a frantic final round of the Top 14 regular season, analyse the permutations and chat to Castres' Australian back rower Nick Champion de Crespigny about his French roots, Wallaby ambitions, contract situation, gratitude to Pierre-Henry Broncan, dream debut season, lack of Super Rugby recognition and much more. Plus, we round up the latest PRO D2 play-off action and discuss some wild transfer rumours... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this episode of Morning Shot, we take a closer look into the unsettling world of in-flight turbulence, exploring the realities and myths surrounding severe turbulence. Hear from an aviation expert and a former pilot as they reveal how prepared you really are and what you can do to stay safe. Keith Tonkin, Managing Director, Aviation Projects & Richard de Crespigny, Former Qantas pilot share their insights on one of air travel's most feared phenomena. Presented by Emaad Akhtar This podcast is produced and edited by Anthea Ng (nganthea@sph.com.sg) She produces Mind Your Business, Biz-How-To and Breakfast Special segments on the Breakfast Show. Do contact her for topics: C-Suite, SME, Startups, Healthtech, Sustainability, Property, Intergenerational Family Business, Industry Outlook, Fintech and trending businesses in town. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This is a recording of session 2 of the Foley's February Criminal Law CPD Series of 2024. In this episode, Sharon Lacy S.C. and Hetty de Crespigny touch on the law, the science and the philosophy behind doli incapax, then discusses the preparation and forensic decision making in doli incapax cases.
Sarah Smith has been successfully writing for popular TV shows such as “McLeod's Daughters”, “All Saints” and “Love Child” for years. Now, she's turned her hand to fiction creating a clever and quirky murder mystery set in the Los Angeles fast lane and narrated by a young, vibrant (albeit dead) woman, hellbent on finding her killer. + Mireille Vignol is a renowned literary translator who has taken the work of Australian greats such as Kate Grenville and Kenneth Cook to French speaking audiences around the world. Cath was intrigued by a very singular event Mireille organised in Melbourne called a “Translation Slam”, where two jousting translators interpreted the same piece of text to very different effect and then defended their choices. GuestsSarah Smith, author of “12 Steps to a Long and Fulfilling Death” Mireille Vignol, literary translator. She also mentions the authors Proust, Kenneth Cook and Kate Grenville and poet Peter Bakowski. Dan, our everyday reader, loves war stories such as “The Bombing of Darwin; The Diary of Tom Taylor, Darwin, 1942” by Alan R. Tucker and aircrash investigations such as “QF32” by Richard de Crespigny. Cath and Annie also mention the Booker prize winner, “Prophet Song”by Paul Lynch and a chilling tale by Louise Doughty called “Platform Seven”. INSTAGRAM @Ultimo Press@sarah_saysSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Sarah Smith has been successfully writing for popular TV shows such as “McLeod's Daughters”, “All Saints” and “Love Child” for years. Now, she's turned her hand to fiction creating a clever and quirky murder mystery set in the Los Angeles fast lane and narrated by a young, vibrant (albeit dead) woman, hellbent on finding her killer. + Mireille Vignol is a renowned literary translator who has taken the work of Australian greats such as Kate Grenville and Kenneth Cook to French speaking audiences around the world. Cath was intrigued by a very singular event Mireille organised in Melbourne called a “Translation Slam”, where two jousting translators interpreted the same piece of text to very different effect and then defended their choices. GuestsSarah Smith, author of “12 Steps to a Long and Fulfilling Death” Mireille Vignol, literary translator. She also mentions the authors Proust, Kenneth Cook and Kate Grenville and poet Peter Bakowski. Dan, our everyday reader, loves war stories such as “The Bombing of Darwin; The Diary of Tom Taylor, Darwin, 1942” by Alan R. Tucker and aircrash investigations such as “QF32” by Richard de Crespigny. Cath and Annie also mention the Booker prize winner, “Prophet Song”by Paul Lynch and a chilling tale by Louise Doughty called “Platform Seven”. INSTAGRAM @Ultimo Press@sarah_saysSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
From pilot pay and conditions, through to turbulence, hairy landings and the Bermuda Triangle, the former Qantas pilot Richard de Crespigny joined Nightlife to answer your questions.
Catalyst Metals Ltd (ASX:CYL) CEO James Champion de Crespigny tells Proactive that since taking control of the Plutonic Gold Mine in Western Australia at the end of June the company has delivered significantly improved operating results. The ASX-lister produced 6,694 ounces of gold in September under new management and reported increases across all key operating metrics compared to 18 months earlier, including a 17% increase in gold produced, 37% increase in ore processed, 24% increase in material movement and 23% increase in underground development metres. #invest #investing #investment #investor #stockmarket #stocks #stock #stockmarketnews
There has never been a case in which someone with no flying experience has successfully landed a large jet airplane
Interview with James Champion de Crespigny, MD & CEO of Catalyst Metals (ASX: CYL) and Chris Jordaan, President & CEO of Superior Gold Inc. (TSX-V:SGI).Catalyst Metals Limited is a gold mining and development company listed on the Australian Securities Exchange (ASX code: CYL). Catalyst holds significant landholdings in three mineral belts with large gold endowment – Henty (Tasmania), Marymia (WA) and Four Eagles (Victoria).
When a Qantas plane suffered a severe engine failure four minutes after leaving Singapore, there were fears of a significant airline disaster. Captain Richard de Crespigny joins the show to share his experience.
Dieser Flug hätte als zweitschwerstes Flugzeugunglück der Luftfahrtgeschichte mit nur einer Maschine enden können: Kurz nach dem Start in Singapur kommt es bei einem Airbus A380 der Qantas zu einer Triebwerksexplosion. Teile einer Turbinenscheibe durchschlagen Tragfläche und Rumpf, hunderte Leitungen werden durchtrennt, wichtige Hydrauliksysteme werden funktionsunfähig. Für die 469 Insassen des Megaliners beginnen bange Stunden. Im Cockpit geben gleich fünf Piloten ihr Bestes, die Maschine zu retten. Der Kopf dieser historischen Rettungsmission ist Kapitän Richard de Crespigny. Ein Vollblutpilot, ein mutiger Mann, ein besonnener Crew-Manager. In dieser Episode des Flugforensik-Podcasts erzählt de Crespigny, wie er und seine Kollegen die A380 und ihre Passagiere gerettet haben. Eine ganz besondere Folge, denn diesmal geht es um eine Heldentat und ihre Geschichte. Benjamin Denes und Andreas Spaeth sprechen nicht nur mit dem Kapitän des Fluges QF32 sondern auch mit Passagierin Johanna Friis. Die Schwedin war auf dem Weg zum Work & Travel-Jahr in Schweden. Dieser Flug sollte ihr Leben verändern. Warum, das berichtet Johanna am Ende der Episode. Für die aktuelle Folge haben die Flugforensiker auch mit dem A380-Kapitän Claus Cordes gesprochen und mit dem Ingenieur und Triebwerks-Experten Prof. Dr. Jens Friedrichs von der Technischen Universität Braunschweig. Das ganze Interview mit Richard de Crespigny als Video sowie weitere multimediale Angebote gibt es für unsere Patrons in der Business- und First Class. Wir bedanken uns bei unseren First Class Patrons: Christina Schaffner, Kai-Michael Poppe, Ira Adam, Adrian Spiegel, Manu S., Sven Kristian, Felix Keller, Daniel Freiesleben, Nina, Michael Harms. Und auch herzlichen Dank an unsere Patrons aus der Business- und aus der Economy Class: Romana Lindinger, Peter, Timo Schröder, Raya Katz, Susanne Möhrke, Philipp, Henning Jensen, Andreas Agazzi, Annike, Felix Eckelt, Hendrik Schröder, J.S.A. vor dem Reimersbache, Hannes Werning, Christian, Lars Klück, Kerstin Ludwig, Roman Frauenberger, Lauwrence I King. Möchtest du Flugforensik auch unterstützen? Dann werde auch du Spender bei Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/user?u=84692298 Du kannst uns auch durch den Erwerb u Merchandising deine Liebe erweisen: https://flugforensik.myspreadshop.de/ Die beiden Bücher von Richard de Crespigny gibt es hier: QF32: https://qf32.aero/ Bei Amazon bestellen: https://www.amazon.de/QF32-author-Lessons-Cockpit-English-ebook/dp/B007KTLQ5W/ref=tmm_kin_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=1677016207&sr=8-4 FLY!: Fly-TheBook.Com Online bestellen: https://www.bookdepository.com/Fly!-Richard-de-Crespigny/9780670078738?redirected=true&selectCurrency=EUR&w=AFFCAU9SRD2DZYA8YC53 Am 4. November 2010 startet ein Airbus A380 der australischen Fluggesellschaft Qantas, ursprünglich aus London kommend, vom Flughafen Singapur in Richtung Sydney. Der Flug verläuft zunächst planmäßig, doch etwa fünf Minuten nach dem Start explodiert plötzlich der Triebwerk Nummer 2 unter der linken Tragfläche. Die Triebwerksteile durchschlugen die Tragfläche und beschädigten zahlreiche Systeme, darunter die Hydraulik, die Elektrik und das Fahrwerk. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/flugforensik/message
Richard de Crespigny says the idea is a cost-cutting measure which could have dire consequences.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Where the Path Breaks by Captain Charles de Crespigny audiobook. The soldier awakened from the brink of death eight months after his injury on the battlefield. As he slowly regained his senses and his memory, the face of a girl creeps into his mind, and he soon recalls that this girl had married him out of pity on the day he went into battle. The wedding had been a true "war wedding". Inspired by the face and the vague recollections which were taking shape, and after learning that his day-bride had since remarried (believing her day-husband killed in action), the battle-scarred soldier decides to re-invent himself, take on a new name, and seek a new life. To what extent his former life would have upon his adopted life unfolds in unforgettable detail with each chapter of Where the Path Breaks. Captain Charles de Créspigny was a pseudonym used by Charles Norris (C.N.) Williamson
On today's episode of the RecruitingDaily Podcast, William Tincup and Lachlan de Crespigny from Revelo about solving the tech skills gap with remote staffing technology.
Sarah and guest Peter Konieczny of medievalists.net delve into the layers of pre-modern history, late medieval historical fiction, and modern film in John Woo's 2009 film Red Cliff. Join us as we get into interpretations of pre-modern history in China and the medieval novel Romance of the Three Kingdoms. For more of Peter on Romance of the Three Kingdoms: https://www.medievalists.net/2018/10/which-translation-romance-three-kingdoms/ The works of Rafe de Crespigny, the leading English-language scholar on the period: https://openresearch-repository.anu.edu.au/browse?type=author&authority=907b8620-2109-49aa-93b6-6e3f3a72b2c2 Video on the battle from Kings and Generals: https://youtu.be/a1n0yNDODJI
The emerging trend in AV and across all technology over the past few years is the shift to cloud and web-based workflows. But with the trends come the challenges, as AV and tech companies find themselves ill-equipped to accommodate these shifts. Companies are outsourcing labor to handle these challenges at a previously unseen rate. Ben Thomas reached out for an expert's perspective on the situation. Lach de Crespigny, Co-Founder of Revelo, joined him to discuss outsourcing engineers in the AV industry. Revelo is a leader in the global engineering talent staffing space.Additional shifts occurring in the space are a rapid move to remote workers. And with the talent crunch of software engineers in the United States during COVID and beyond, companies need to get creative in finding the resources they need. The move to remote unlocks the old paradigm of hiring and extends the resource pool to a global footprint.The stigmatism towards hiring these engineering positions through international sourcing is gone, and companies feel free to build their teams with the best people, no matter where they live.“As long as you speak good English, are technically strong, and work in my time zone, I don't really care if you're living in San Francisco, Austin, Texas, Mexico City, or San Paolo, Brazil,” de Crespigny said. “So, we had a flood of American companies, who for the first time started hiring remotely. They were looking for the same thing they used to look for in a new in-person employee; they just said, okay, why don't I expand my talent pool to the 600 million people in Latin America, get better engineers, often for a competitive price. I'll be able to accelerate the progress of my company.”
Lachlan de Crespigny é o co-fundador e co-CEO da Revelo. Num ambiente tão concorrido e dinâmico, que é o de contratação de pessoas de tecnologia, a Revelo é um dos principais nomes do mercado, capitaneando esse tema, como um parceiro estratégico das empresas e dos profissionais de diferentes skills. A Revelo foi co-fundada pelo “Lach”, […] O post Lachlan de Crespigny, co-CEO da Revelo. Pessoas antes da tecnologia. apareceu primeiro em Like a Boss.
Qantas Pilot, Richard de Crespigny was the pilot in command of QF32 when things went terribly wrong, midair. On November 4, 2010, just four minutes after leaving the runway in Singapore, the A380 aircraft carrying 469 people suffered significant damage, leaving Captain Richard de Crespigny with no choice but to remain calm and act quickly. Whilst the pilots worked through their checklists and scrambled to find the origin of the fault, the passengers were assured that they were safe. Clare Ryan, of seat 73A was sitting right by the wing, she saw fuel spilling from the aircraft and knew that something was not right. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Qantas Pilot, Richard de Crespigny was the pilot in command of QF32 when things went terribly wrong, midair. On November 4, 2010, just four minutes after leaving the runway in Singapore, the A380 aircraft carrying 469 people suffered significant damage, leaving Captain Richard de Crespigny with no choice but to remain calm and act quickly. Whilst the pilots worked through their checklists and scrambled to find the origin of the fault, the passengers were assured that they were safe. Clare Ryan, of seat 73A was sitting right by the wing, she saw fuel spilling from the aircraft and knew that something was not right.
On 4 November 2010, a flight from Singapore to Sydney came within a knife edge of being one of the world's worst air disasters. Shortly after leaving Changi Airport, an explosion shattered Engine 2 of Qantas flight QF32 – an Airbus A380, the largest and most advanced passenger plane ever built. Hundreds of pieces of shrapnel ripped through the wing and fuselage, creating chaos as vital flight systems and back-ups were destroyed or degraded. In other hands, the plane might have been lost with all 469 people on board, but a supremely experienced flight crew, led by Captain Richard Champion de Crespigny, managed to land the crippled aircraft and safely disembark the passengers. Captain Richard Champion de Crespigny joined us on "Remember When." See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Novo episódio do Podcast GoEPIK discute Squads e Metodologias Ágeis em tempos de coronavírus. Wellington Moscon, CEO e fundador da GoEPIK, conversa com Lachlan de Crespigny, co-fundador da Revelo, uma HR tech que busca democratizar o acesso aos talentos por meio de inteligência artificial. Após ouvir o episódio, cadastre-se no nosso site www.goepik.com.br para receber o trial grátis da Plataforma de Indústria 4.0 e Transformação Digital.
"Mistakes happen. How you respond to them is key.” I'm joined by Captain Richard de Crespigny, most famous for piloting QF32, a Qantas A380 which experienced an explosion mid-air in 2010, to land safely for all passengers and crew on board. We previously spoke on the podcast several years ago, and since then Richard has released his second book, 'FLY!'. We talk about the QF32 incident and how he navigated through that disaster, and also how he applies neuroscience training to help build resilience. It's a fascinating conversation about training your brain to perform better under pressure, and something everyone - not just business owners - will benefit from listening to. Join the Facebook Group. Follow Mark Bouris on Instagram, LinkedIn & YouTube. Want to grow your business and stay ahead of the pack? Access Mark Bouris' Masterclasses. Got a question or comment for Mark? Send an email. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week Matt & Andy talk to Richard De Crespigny, the captain of Qantas flight QF32 in which his A380 suffered multiple major failures when one of it's engines exploded. He discusses the incident itself and how he felt afterwards and then gives us some great knowledge and advice about stress, failure management and safety culture. This one isn't just for A320 pilots, in fact, it's not even just for pilots - everyone can learn from this episode. If that wasn't enough, Richard has also donated two signed copies of his latest book, Fly! for them to give away. He has set a question for you to answer, get it correct and you'll be in with a chance of wining one of these two books.
For years, a common mantra among corporate executives has been that "the blockchain," the technology underlying Bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies, is where the real value lies in the future. But on this week's episode of Odd Lots, we speak to Angus Champion de Crespigny, who formerly advised companies on how to use blockchain technology. He now believes that ultimately it won't get them anywhere.
Regardless of your industry, there will be times you'll face crises and difficult decisions. Richard de Crespigny knows more than most about handling pressure. He was the captain on the ill-fated Qantas flight 32 that suffered a major engine failure in 2010. His new book, FLY, looks at the lessons from that day and what aviation generally can teach others about performing under pressure. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In 2010, thousands of feet in the air above Singapore, the 469 passengers aboard QF32 found themselves in a crisis that no one could have anticipated when the A380 in which they were flying suffered a catastrophic explosion.
In an on stage conversation at the Brisbane Powerhouse, Pilot, Captain Richard de Crespigny discusses the life lessons he learnt from QF32 with Rhianna Patrick.
In an on stage conversation at the Brisbane Powerhouse, Pilot, Captain Richard de Crespigny discusses the life lessons he learnt from QF32 with Rhianna Patrick.
Future Squared with Steve Glaveski - Helping You Navigate a Brave New World
Melbourne born and educated, Richard Champion de Crespigny got his first taste of a future flying career as a 14-year-old when his father took him on a tour of the Royal Australian Air Force (RAAF) Academy at Point Cook in Victoria. In 1975, aed 17, he joined the RAAF: One year later, he started flying. During his 11 years flying transport, jet and helicopter aircraft with the RAAF, he was seconded as AIde-de-Camp to two Australian Governors-General, Richard remained with the RAAF until 1986 when he joined Qantas, flying Boeing 747, Airbus A330 and A380 jet aircrafts. In 2010 he was the Captain on board Qantas Flight QF32 when it suffered a catastrophic explosion. His multi-award winning and bestselling book QF32 is a blow-by-blow story of what went right when things went wrong in the air. Richard still flies the AIrbus A380, delivers presentations on the elements of resilience to governments, agencies and fortune 500 companies. IN 2016, Richard was made a Member of the Order of Australia (AM) for his significant service to the aviation industry, both nationally and internationally, particularly to flight safety and to the community. This was a deeply insightful two hour long deep dive conversation with Richard on a number of topics that pertain to not only surviving a crisis situation in the air, which - fortunately - few of us will have to do, but how to apply the elements of resilience to better navigate crisis in our own lives, embrace adversity and thrive, whether in a business setting or even when it comes to our own interpersonal relationships. As you’ll discover, Richard thinks critically about a wide range of disciplines that each serve to aid his understanding of the world and his decision making, characteristics that were key to the safe landing of the aircraft. Amongst the plethora of topics we discussed, expect to learn: Why you need to first understand your mind if you want to master it What the eight elements of resilience are and how to use them to your advantage How to understand risk and make better decisions, particularly in crisis situations when our threat-detecting amygdala is often prone to hijacking the more rational part of our brain and wire us to react instead of respond Expect to learn this and a whole bunch more in my far reaching conversation with the one and only Richard De Crespigny. --- Topics Discussed: De Crespigny’s early inspirations How our brains work Understand your mind to understand yourself Negativity bias and mainstream media The eight elements of resilience Why we’re living in the best times ever Leaning into adversity and being prepared for anything Risk management Decision making Crisis management Making sense of the wealth of knowledge at our disposal Responding with intelligence instead of reacting with impulse Leadership, empowering your people and radical transparency Systems 1 and 2 thinking Effective teamwork Learning how to learn Balancing short-term and long-term incentives Brand management, transparency and personal guarantees What happened aboard QF32 Air France flight 447 Turning brand defectors into brand advocates NASA, SpaceX, Hyperloop and Autonomous Vehicles Robotics and emerging technologies Embracing ambiguity and thriving in uncertain conditions Show Notes: Fly the Book: https://flythebookcom.wordpress.com/ Richard’s blog: http://qf32.aero Twitter: @RichardDeCrep Get Fly! the book On Amazon: https://amzn.to/2p9Xavz Get QF32 the book on Amazon: https://amzn.to/2Oarcdg --- Listen on Apple Podcasts @ goo.gl/sMnEa0 Also available on: Spotify, Google Play, Stitcher and Soundcloud Twitter: www.twitter.com/steveglaveski Instagram: www.instagram.com/@thesteveglaveski Future Squared: www.futuresquared.xyz Steve Glaveski: www.steveglaveski.com Medium: www.medium.com/@steveglaveski Terminator clips sourced from www.terminatorfiles.com and remain the intellectual property of Tristar Pictures.
Bitmain’s IPO filing reveals that it’s doing well despite the bear market.-AND-If you bet that the SEC would delay its bitcoin ETF decision again, you’re a winner. -ALSO-In a biting op-ed on CoinDesk.com, former EY employee Angus Champion de Crespigny writes that permissioned blockchains may have no real business benefit.-DON’T MISS-CoinDesk editor Marc Hochstein investor Jalak Jobanputra on blockchain's progress in the developing world and advancing women's participation in the industry.Host Pete Rizzo has the rest. Recorded September 27, 2018 in New York, NY.Thanks to our sponsors!Said Business School, University of OxfordOxford Fintech ProgrammeOxford Blockchain Strategy ProgrammeLate Confirmation is a CoinDesk production made in collaboration with The Podglomerate.For more information, visit www.CoinDesk.com
Captain Richard de Crespigny AM saved 469 lives on flight QF32 with his quick-thinking and resilience. Since then he has become a spokesperson for crisis management and his new book Fly!, Life lessons from the cockpit of QF32, shares techniques for coping with stress under pressure and skills to build your resilience. No matter your walk of life, Fly! will enable everybody to perform at their best and to succeed in any situation. Books mentioned in this podcast: Fly! by Richard de Crespigny —> https://bit.ly/2MMHzjP Hosts: John Purcell and Robert O'Hearn Guest: Richard de Crespigny
Episode 2: Evolution through revolution In this second episode, EY’s Roger Park is joined by Angus Champion de Crespigny, Americas Financial Services Blockchain Leader, EY for a discussion exploring the evolution of blockchain, its applications and usage, as well as cryptocurrencies, within the financial services industry.
With so many great guests this year, we thought it was about time for another best of episode. An interesting collection for our 58th episode; a footballer (Adam MacDougall), a surfer (Tom Carroll), a pilot (Richard de Crespigny) and a chef (Guillaume Brahimi). Join the Facebook Group. Follow Mark Bouris on Instagram, LinkedIn & YouTube. Want to grow your business and stay ahead of the pack? Access Mark Bouris' Masterclasses. Got a question or comment for Mark? Send an email. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Executives from Deutsche Bank and Royal Bank of Canada share their early learnings about distributed ledger technology at American Banker's Blockchains + Digital Currencies conference in July.
The buzz: Show me the money? Our current financial world is rife with inefficiencies: cross-border payments take days and cost money, inter-bank funds are slow, accessing money is cumbersome, trading securities takes time. Hail, cryptocurrency! Bitcoin and blockchain were created to solve some of these challenges. How does it work? Should your business, your industry, and you personally adopt this new form of currency? What are the risks? The experts speak. Angus Champion de Crespigny, EY: “It's not worth doing something unless you were doing something that someone, somewhere, would much rather you weren't doing” (Terry Pratchett). Richard McCammon, Delego: “…Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted” (William B. Cameron). Gerlinde Zibulski, SAP: “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas, but in escaping from old ones” (John Maynard Keynes). Join us for Bitcoin/Blockchain: Hype or Hope for a New Secure Cryptocurrency?
The buzz: Show me the money? Our current financial world is rife with inefficiencies: cross-border payments take days and cost money, inter-bank funds are slow, accessing money is cumbersome, trading securities takes time. Hail, cryptocurrency! Bitcoin and blockchain were created to solve some of these challenges. How does it work? Should your business, your industry, and you personally adopt this new form of currency? What are the risks? The experts speak. Angus Champion de Crespigny, EY: “It's not worth doing something unless you were doing something that someone, somewhere, would much rather you weren't doing” (Terry Pratchett). Richard McCammon, Delego: “…Not everything that can be counted counts, and not everything that counts can be counted” (William B. Cameron). Gerlinde Zibulski, SAP: “The difficulty lies not so much in developing new ideas, but in escaping from old ones” (John Maynard Keynes). Join us for Bitcoin/Blockchain: Hype or Hope for a New Secure Cryptocurrency?
What's wrong with the youth of today? Recently we had some young employees doing a project for our civilian partners and when they had finished, and the contract had been signed, they all left the company even rejecting an increased salary offer to stay! They went and found work with another company having only worked for our partners for 18 months. Speed and agility are key in today’s fast moving workplace and this was what these young employees knew. They were not prepared to risk leaving their future employment chances to someone else and were aggressive in their planning. I had to admire them - they knew the project they had done would look good on their CVs and now they were off to get more experience from somewhere else.'There is no such thing as security. You have to be aware of your options and not be afraid of change or failure. In fact, change is vital.’ – Captain Richard Champion de Crespigny, QF32 It is exactly the same in air combat - at the merge, he who manoeuvres first dictates the fight. What this means is that when two aircraft meet head on, at speeds of up to Mach 1.5, the pilot that makes the first move will have the other pilot reacting to what they have done.http://www.fastjetperformance.com/podcasts/the-fighter-pilot-school-of-winning-how-you-can-use-aggression-to-succeed See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
On Marks latest podcast, he has an in depth interview with Pilot Captain Richard De Crespigny. Captain De Crespigny saved the lives of 469 people, safely landing a Qantas A380, after an engine exploded four minutes after take-off. The Captain shares his insights into crisis management, leadership, neuroscience and how robots will impact employment in the next 20 years. Join the Facebook Group. Follow Mark Bouris on Instagram, LinkedIn & YouTube. Want to grow your business and stay ahead of the pack? Access Mark Bouris' Masterclasses. Got a question or comment for Mark? Send an email. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Home births are slightly more risky than hospital births, so does this mean it's immoral for women to have one?Lachlan de Crespigny and obstetrician and gynechologist from the University of Melbourne, and Julian Savulescu, from the faculty of philosophy at the University of Oxford join the JME podcast to discuss.