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In this episode of the CEDIA Podcast, host Walt Zerbe, Senior Director of Technology and Standards, leads a discussion on the latest trends from the ISC show. Michael Heiss, an industry consultant, shares insights on the integration of commercial and residential technology. Pete Trauth from Nirvana Home Entertainment introduces "Seco," a product featuring molded plastic squares that display low-resolution video while mimicking wood or stone finishes. Sam Woodward, now with Tait, discusses the importance of collaboration between AV and IT departments and the critical role of network infrastructure in live events. Here are the mentions with timestamps arranged by topic: Tools and Products "SECO": "00:03:17" "SmartThings Pro": "00:09:30" "E-Paper Display": "00:11:08" "Micro LED on Silicon": "00:13:17" "Leaky Coax": "21:30" "Unreal Engine": "30:40" "Tate Navigator": "30:40" Companies and Brands "Samsung": "00:09:30" "Barco": "00:08:32" Events and Sessions "ISC Show": "00:00:07" Standards "EN 17206": "24:07" Videos and Talks "CEDIA YouTube Channel": "23:06" Miscellaneous "Super Bowl Halftime Show": "26:22" "Cydia": "00:36:42"
One from the Archives... Recorded live on May 19th, 2022 Two people making music on the fly… Bugs In The Basement creates improvised musical journeys from an array of vintage and handmade instruments to modern technologies. Recorded live from our basement studio in the Pacific Northwest, each week we experiment in the process of making exploratory music and soundscapes. Unmixed, unedited and unapologetic. Subscribe to the Podcast, stream the albums or go to www.bugsinthebasement.com
NSB (North Star Boys) invited Rob Herrera to their tour rehearsal for an interview on the creative process behind their new album ‘CYDIA.' Thank you for listening! If you enjoyed and learned something from this podcast please be sure to follow and rate it in order to help us grow in the podcast space. You are also welcome to help support this podcast with a small monthly donation to help sustain future episodes. If you'd like to watch my video interviews, I invite you to Subscribe to my channel at www.YouTube.com/FrontRowLiveEnt Follow Us: @FrontRowLiveEnt | @Robertherrera3 #NSB #NorthStarBoys #FrontRowLiveEnt --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontrowliveent/support
NSB (North Star Boys) invited Rob Herrera to their tour rehearsal for an interview on the creative process behind their new album ‘CYDIA.' Thank you for listening! If you enjoyed and learned something from this podcast please be sure to follow and rate it in order to help us grow in the podcast space. You are also welcome to help support this podcast with a small monthly donation to help sustain future episodes. If you'd like to watch my video interviews, I invite you to Subscribe to my channel at www.YouTube.com/FrontRowLiveEnt Follow Us: @FrontRowLiveEnt | @Robertherrera3 #NSB #NorthStarBoys #FrontRowLiveEnt --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/frontrowliveent/support
Spring: everything wakes up. All sorts of creepy crawlies are gunning for your crops and sometimes we need to be ahead of the game. Apples have stopped flowering and the smallest beginnings of the fruit are on your trees. Those tiny fruitlets are known in English as “Codlings” Hence the name for the moth who's caterpillars love to invade these codlings: Codling moth Parents (moths) are now laying eggs on these codlings, so let's avoid the caterpillars tunnelling into your tiny, developing fruit! MADEX is the spray to use from now on; every two weeks or so until February. Madex is a codling moth granulosis virus that will affect the small brutes before they enter the apple. Only works on Codling moth species (Cydia pomonella); and the virus will not harm us either. Noticed the black sooty mould on your lemon tree leaves? That stuff grows on all sorts of citrus! That's a fungus that grows on the excrement of sap-sucking insects, especially scale insects, mealybugs and citrus whitefly. Those tiny whitefly have really become the bigger pest on citrus, especially north of Christchurch. Trying to remove the black, sooty mould is literally useless, as the sap-suckers will continue to drop their sweet poos; So: we need to control those whitefly etc., right now by giving them a weekly dose of Neem Oil. Aim for the top-side of the leaves and the bottom-side of the leaves. The regularity of spraying halts the egg-laying part of the life cycle, simply by killing the susceptible juveniles before they become adults. Lemon tree borer is another troublesome critter on citrus; this one grows its babies (rather large beetle grubs) in tunnels in branches, twigs and trunks of citrus trees. The female beetle lays her eggs on freshly-made pruning cuts, so the very first thing we must not do is prune our citrus in spring and summer. To remove the grub from its tunnel is tricky, but can be achieved with a “hypodermic needle” filled with insecticide. You can literally squirt that stuff into the grub's tunnel by access in the “toilet hole” from the outside. That way you won't cause any extra damage to the branch but still halt the destruction inside the branch Clever, eh? LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Viel Spass mit dere Folg! Timecodes: 00:00 Intro 00:21 Haare Ahplanze lah? 12:28 Sich selber vergliche über Social Media 18:28 Handys früener 21:47 Cydia und Jailbreaks 26:23 dEltere bshlüssed Spielkonsole ih wills usartet? 39:33 Fousy 40:42 En Teppich wo all kenned 43:03 Hort und Mittagsclub 47:10 Butter und Sache wo eus zum kotze bringet 55:45 Hunde-/Katzefleisch esse 01:00:00 Eine Vegane Diskussion 01:17:06 Frau kopiert mit KI dStimm vom Fründ (Fremdgange) 01:18:25 Super Conductor und Krebsheilmittel 01:21:13 Würsh für 3 Millione... 01:25:28 Yaf gaht zrug id USA 01:30:03 Outro
As security is primarily about stopping bad things from happening, victories are often silent. At the same time, failures are often very public, so how can organizations tell when their security is paying off? In this episode, we are joined by guest speaker Laura Koetzle, Vice President and Group Director at Forrester and Robin Oldham, CEO of consulting firm Cydia, to discuss assessing the value of a result that produces nothing. Recorded on-site at SPHERE23.
Maior produtor nacional de maçã, Santa Catarina solicitou ao Ministério da Agricultura e Pecuária a retirada da fruta da pauta de negociações com a China. A abertura do mercado brasileiro para a maçã chinesa representa um altíssimo risco socioeconômico aos produtores, além de riscos fitossanitários à cultura da macieira. Santa Catarina responde por 48% da área plantada no Brasil, com uma produção que, na safra 2021/2022, superou a marca de 15 mil hectares de área colhida. O estado foi responsável pela produção de 572 mil toneladas e contou com cerca de três mil pomicultores. Conforme a Associação Brasileira de Produtores de Maçã (ABPM), os investimentos necessários para a implantação de um pomar de alta tecnologia no Brasil chegam aos R$ 150 mil por hectare, sem a terra. Além disso, anualmente é preciso implantar pelo menos 2 mil hectares de renovação de áreas apenas para manter a atividade anual. A abertura para o mercado chinês poderia comprometer a renda de milhares de famílias ligadas a este setor produtivo, tanto de maneira direta quanto indireta. Santa Catarina é referência internacional em sanidade vegetal e faz parte da única região do mundo a erradicar a Cydia pomonella. A praga, também conhecida como traça da maçã, pode causar grandes prejuízos aos produtores rurais e está longe do território catarinense há dez anos. Conforme a Associação Brasileira dos Produtores de Maçã, o risco fitossanitário de introdução da praga a partir da importação de maçãs da China é considerado altíssimo. A Cydia pomonella é considerada o pior inseto praga da fruticultura no mundo. “A exportação no caso por parte do chineses, de maçãs, aqui pro Brasil, isso é uma ameaça extremamente relevante, muito importante que pode incluir livre significar aí uma redução drástica do tamanho do setor no Brasil, e até mesmo seu desaparecimento por uma série de motivos”, alertou o diretor executivo da Associação Brasileira de Produtores de Maçã (ANPM), Moisés Lopes de Albuquerque, durante o Cruz de Malta Notícias desta sexta-feira (17).
On this episode of Unstoppable Mindset, we get to speak with Nick Bayard the executive Director of BirdNote. This organization is a nonprofit that provides sound-rich programs on over 200 radio stations that discuss the challenges faced by birds. The program includes the sounds of birds. It can be heard daily. You will get to learn more about BirdNote during our episode. Nick holds a Master's degree in Public Administration and International Development from the Harvard Kennedy School and a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies from Brown University. He served three years in the Peace Corps Paraguay and has held several social service policy decisions in the Northwest U.S. Nick gives us much to think about, not only about birds and BirdNote, but also he helps us think more deeply about how we live our lives and how we can help make our whole planet a more friendly and good place to live. About the Guest: Nick Bayard is the Executive Director of BirdNote. BirdNote is a public media nonprofit organization that tells vivid, sound-rich stories about birds and the challenges they face in order to inspire listeners to care about the natural world and take steps to protect it. BirdNote Daily is their beloved flagship show that has been in production since 2005. It is a one minute, 45 second daily radio show that broadcasts on over 250 radio stations across the US. You can listen to BirdNote Daily and other longform podcasts produced by BirdNote anytime, wherever you listen to podcasts. You can also learn what BirdNote is doing to contribute to more diverse and inclusive birding and environmental communities at www.birdnote.org. Nick holds a master's degree in Public Administration and International Development from the Harvard Kennedy School and a bachelor's degree in Environmental Studies from Brown University. He served for three years in the environmental sector of Peace Corps Paraguay and has served in leadership roles in social services and racial equity in government policy in the Pacific Northwest. Nick is an Eagle Scout and also a musician, having released an award-winning children's album, Wishing Well, with his oldest son in 2014. Nick and his wife Sedia live in Washington State with their three kids. Ways to connect with Nick: BirdNote website: www.birdnote.org BirdNote daily podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/birdnote-daily/id79155128 BirdNote's Bring Birds Back podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/bring-birds-back/id1566042634 BirdNote's Threatened podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/threatened/id1538065542 BirdNote en Español podcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/birdnote-en-espa%C3%B1ol/id1643711928 Nick Bayard's LinkedIn page: www.linkedin.com/in/nickbayard Nick Bayard's Twitter page: https://twitter.com/NickBayard Wishing Well children's album: https://www.amazon.com/Wishing-Well-Nick-Bayard/dp/B00IHIEUYE/ref=tmm_acd_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= About the Host: Michael Hingson is a New York Times best-selling author, international lecturer, and Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe. Michael, blind since birth, survived the 9/11 attacks with the help of his guide dog Roselle. This story is the subject of his best-selling book, Thunder Dog. Michael gives over 100 presentations around the world each year speaking to influential groups such as Exxon Mobile, AT&T, Federal Express, Scripps College, Rutgers University, Children's Hospital, and the American Red Cross just to name a few. He is Ambassador for the National Braille Literacy Campaign for the National Federation of the Blind and also serves as Ambassador for the American Humane Association's 2012 Hero Dog Awards. https://michaelhingson.com https://www.facebook.com/michael.hingson.author.speaker/ https://twitter.com/mhingson https://www.youtube.com/user/mhingson https://www.linkedin.com/in/michaelhingson/ accessiBe Links https://accessibe.com/ https://www.youtube.com/c/accessiBe https://www.linkedin.com/company/accessibe/mycompany/ https://www.facebook.com/accessibe/ Thanks for listening! Thanks so much for listening to our podcast! If you enjoyed this episode and think that others could benefit from listening, please share it using the social media buttons on this page. Do you have some feedback or questions about this episode? Leave a comment in the section below! Subscribe to the podcast If you would like to get automatic updates of new podcast episodes, you can subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts or Stitcher. You can also subscribe in your favorite podcast app. Leave us an Apple Podcasts review Ratings and reviews from our listeners are extremely valuable to us and greatly appreciated. They help our podcast rank higher on Apple Podcasts, which exposes our show to more awesome listeners like you. If you have a minute, please leave an honest review on Apple Podcasts. Transcription Notes Michael Hingson 00:00 Access Cast and accessiBe Initiative presents Unstoppable Mindset. The podcast where inclusion, diversity and the unexpected meet. Hi, I'm Michael Hingson, Chief Vision Officer for accessiBe and the author of the number one New York Times bestselling book, Thunder dog, the story of a blind man, his guide dog and the triumph of trust. Thanks for joining me on my podcast as we explore our own blinding fears of inclusion unacceptance and our resistance to change. We will discover the idea that no matter the situation, or the people we encounter, our own fears, and prejudices often are our strongest barriers to moving forward. The unstoppable mindset podcast is sponsored by accessiBe, that's a c c e s s i capital B e. Visit www.accessibe.com to learn how you can make your website accessible for persons with disabilities. And to help make the internet fully inclusive by the year 2025. Glad you dropped by we're happy to meet you and to have you here with us. Michael Hingson 01:21 Welcome once again to unstoppable mindset. Hi, everyone. It's a nice fall day here in Southern California, supposed to get up to 96 degrees today. It is late September. So for those who remember, it is also the time of hurricane Ian in Florida. And our thoughts are with all the people and creatures down there. But today, we get to interview someone and talk about some of those creatures. Nick Bayard is a person who has been involved in dealing with natural resources and so on. He's the Executive Director of bird note. And we're going to get to that. And all things, Nick, as we go along. So Nick, welcome to unstoppable mindset. Nick Bayard 02:05 Thank you so much. It's an honor to be here. Michael Hingson 02:07 Well, it's our pleasure, and we really appreciate you taking the time to be here with us. Let's start just kind of learning a little bit about you, can you kind of tell us where you came from and how you got where you Nick Bayard 02:18 are a little bit? Sure, well, I grew up in Delaware, in kind of a little bubble, to be honest, and, you know, my educational career kind of took a winding path, because I didn't really see a career out there that looks like something I wanted to do forever. I just feel like there's there's too much to try to pack into one life to commit to sort of, you know, doctor, lawyer, you know, etc. And so, I think that was both a blessing and a curse, because it led me to follow a lot of different paths. And it led to a lot of frustration too, because our, I think our society is set up to reward sort of monotony and continue building, you know, of a career over a period of time. But I wouldn't trade it for anything, because it's it's given me a lot of unique experiences, serving in the Peace Corps in South America, getting to do racial equity work and in government. And now being executive director of a wonderful organization that I've loved for a long time, came a bit out of left field, because I had done so many things that kind of added up to what the burden of board members wanted in this role that all of a sudden, things kind of fell into place for something that I never could have predicted. So it's it's been a winding road, but I'm really thrilled to be where I am and happy to get the chance to talk about it with you. Michael Hingson 03:56 Winding roads are always kind of fun, you know, you never know where you're gonna go next. Or maybe you do but at the same time, it's always the adventure of getting there. That's at least half the fun. Nick Bayard 04:07 And you've had that experience too, right? Yes, quite a number of lifetimes packed into one right. Michael Hingson 04:14 It has been a fun adventure. And it continues to be and I can't complain about that a single bit. It's, you know, it's all about choices. And but it is all about embracing the adventure of life to exactly. Nick Bayard 04:28 So what you went to college, I went to Brown University in Rhode Island and studied environmental studies and really had a wonderful experience there. And then Michael Hingson 04:41 what got you from there to the Peace Corps? Nick Bayard 04:43 You know, I thought I was gonna go down the path of biologist scientists, ecologist, spent a year doing a residency in environmental education in the Grand Tetons, and we're realized after that year that actually maybe halfway into that year that I would be, I would feel kind of limited myself, I guess if I were to just sort of pick that path and run with it, although lots of people do that and love it, it just wasn't for me. What I recognized is that I just didn't have enough experience out in the world to be able to even say what I wanted to commit to for, you know, even for at least the next few years, so I thought that the Peace Corps was this opportunity to, to really throw myself into the unknown and experience something completely different. And hopefully learn about people learn more about people learn more about institutions learn more about how different cultures and communities operate. And it was like, throw myself in the deep end, I got even more than I bargained for, I'd say, How so, you know, the Peace Corps was hard in ways that I didn't expect, I, I think I was conditioned to think of it as a just really an opportunity to help make the world a better place. But there's a danger of that Savior mindset. If you go to a place thinking that you have the skills or the resources to be able to help or save in a way that you've maybe seen it on TV, and you realize you're, you're with people, and you're, you know, you're not any better or worse than the folks that you're going to live with. And as a Peace Corps volunteer, you are very much reliant on your community to take care of you and teach you and that was jarring. I think it's jarring for a lot of folks who go abroad for service work. They've, there's this idea that, you know, we go and we save, or we help. But really, going with a mindset of humility, and learning and growth, I think is much more important. And so I had to sort of adjust my worldview in a lot of ways and recognize that, you know, I had never really thought about, oh, gosh, you know, I'm gonna go help a community. In every community, there are people who are unkind, who lie, who, who cheat, who steal, etc. And I don't know why I think part of my my upbringing was thinking, well, if people are underprivileged, they're all nice all the time. And it's just a community like any other. So I thought that was really interesting to go and experience, you know, humanity in a different context. And recognize that a lot of the preconceptions I had about about other parts of the world were completely wrong. And so it was perfect learning and growth. For me, that's exactly what I needed. Michael Hingson 07:52 Interesting kind of way to put it when you talk about underprivileged and so on. Do you think today that there is underprivileged other parts of the world as you thought they were, when you were first starting out in the Peace Corps, Nick Bayard 08:06 I think the biggest blind spot I had was really on, it wasn't even so much about global issues, it was about American history. And as I've, as I've grown, you know, and, and gotten older, the extent of the, the blind spots I had around race and racism in America, have really driven sort of this last 10 years of my my life and my career, really, from a place of just, you know, feeling like I was robbed of an understanding of how formative racism was at the at the heart of how the country was born, and how it's evolved, and how it's progressed, and why certain communities experienced the conditions that they do. And so that's something that I've really worked hard at to understand, because it's not history that I got in school, it's not history that I heard about in my community, you know, as I came to find out, that's very much by design. And so I, I don't blame myself for it. But I recognize the responsibility I have to keep to always keep learning and growing. Yeah. Michael Hingson 09:19 Well, I think that we do oftentimes find that there. Are there any number of people who think well, we're so much better off than than they are. And I think it depends on what you mean, by better off if you think about the world being more technologically advanced, we have access to more technologies and more creature comforts, in some ways. Anyway, there's probably some truth to that. But when you get down into community, you get down into family and you get to dealing with those concepts, and the closeness and the loyalty that that people have. That's a whole different animal and it's not necessarily at all clear that we're really any better off as, as well as some people, at least from what I've heard and learned? Nick Bayard 10:05 Yeah, I think back to, you know, I developed some really important friendships in Paraguay and really got close to folks in a way that can't really compare it to some of the friendships I've had in America even just because the cross cultural cross language divide, bridging, that is a powerful thing. And I've, I think I laughed more in Paraguay than I, I ever have in a similar stretch of time and in America, because there's, there's a sense of humor and a lightness in the Paraguayan culture that I experienced that it's just delightful. And, you know, there's, I hosted a weekly radio show. And every week, folks would, would give me jokes to tell in the, in the native language, Guarani. And it was, you know, on the radio show, we talked about things like, you know, the environment and agriculture and green manures and things like that. But the thing that really stood out to people are the jokes, because they, there were things that people connected with, and sense of humor is just a really important part of the culture. So it was, it was just interesting to to experience that the joy of being there with folks who really, really did not have infrastructure around them. Shiny water, paved roads, things like that. Just just having a great time in life. That that was a good, a good lesson for me. Michael Hingson 11:47 Yeah. And oftentimes, I think, here in this country, we don't slow down and stop and think about life. And that's something that I've been thinking about a lot. And we're actually going to talk about it in the new book that I'm writing, which tentatively is titled The Guide Dogs Guide to Being brave, but it's about taking time each day to stop and really think about what you did that day, what worked, what didn't and just thinking about life, we don't meditate nearly enough, do we? Nick Bayard 12:17 And you can say that, again, I don't know if you have any, go two ways to remind yourself, that's something I struggle with is just actually committing to a pause until I feel like I really need it. I don't know if you if you have any insight, Michael Hingson 12:36 you know, what we're what we're talking about in the book are several different techniques that can help. One thing that I find a lot of people use our vision boards and treasure mapping and visioning, where you put something up on a refrigerator, or somewhere to remind you of something like if you're going to take a vacation. And you want to really keep in the mindset of getting prepared for that you put a picture of like if you're going to go to Hawaii, you put a picture of Hawaii up well, you can do the same thing with with what we're talking about here, you can put up something around the house that says Don't forget to meditate at the end of the day, or when you when you get into bed before you turn off the light. If there's someplace that you normally look, put there a note, don't forget to take five minutes or 10 minutes to meditate. And you can put reminders up to do that. And what eventually happens, if you do it, and are consistent about it, you'll create a mindset that will cause you to automatically do it. And you'll be able to go more into a mode of of meditating. I took a course in transcendental meditation in college. And what they suggested was this make it a habit to get up 20 minutes early and meditate in the morning or and take and set up a time to do it at night. Nowadays, we have other ways to help with visioning. I, for example, put a lot of reminders in my little Amazon Echo device, I got to be careful of what I say or she's going to talk to me, but But I I put reminders in of things that I want to do not just about meetings on the calendar, but other things. And that's another way to vision it doesn't have to be from an eyesight standpoint. So you if you have an echo, you can tell it to remind you at 11 o'clock every night hey, go meditate for 10 minutes. I mean, there are a lot of ways to use technology and techniques to create a visioning environment to get you into the habit of doing something. Nick Bayard 14:46 That's great. Yeah, I My My issue is I think I have to keep coming up with new ways to get my attention but get my own attention. Sort of like exactly how sometimes the sign word Some other times, I feel like I need up a sign that all kind of slapped me in the face. Because I'm not, I'm not willing to listen to what my my past self had reminded me to do. Well, that's Michael Hingson 15:11 why I like the idea of the echo device. And I can tell it to we have several echo devices around the house. So I can have the reminder play on every echo device as well, so that it will remind me wherever I am in the house that you can't escape it. For me, I'm pretty much in the habit of doing it all the time. But still, having the reminder doesn't hurt. Right, right, right. So there are a lot of ways to give yourself a reminder to do something that will force you to at least for the second set, it's on to listen, and hopefully that will help you move forward and doing what it is you want to do. And taking time really to stop and or at least slow down and think a little bit is always an important thing to do. Nick Bayard 16:03 Hmm. Yeah, I think one of the challenges of work from home is there's, there's folks that do that is less, less travel, less transition. And so it's easy for things to kind of pile up and go just back to back to back. And it's like, oh, let me actually go into the other room here and sit down for a minute and or take a walk outside. That's Those are good reminders. Michael Hingson 16:29 Yeah. And those can be verbal with an echo device, you can send yourself a calendar invite that just remind you, every day, it's such and such a time, take the time to go off and do something and you know, you may not be able to do it right at that moment. But the reminder is still there. And by having something that forces you to at least think about it that is reminders in various formats and forms. That helps. All right, right. So we can take the time to do it. The problem that I think we mostly have is, oh, I just don't have time to do that. I've got to get this done or that done. Yeah, we do have time. Mental health is one of the most important thing, if not the most important thing that we can be doing for ourselves that we normally don't pay attention to. But in reality, we can make work for us. Nick Bayard 17:22 For sure, for sure. I think that's that's originally actually what drew me in to burn out which is, which is the organization where I am. And it's a the flagship show that we run on radio stations, and our podcast is it's called burnout daily, that people probably know it as burnout. It's a minute, 45 seconds, and it's got a catchy theme song that invites you in and invites you to pay attention to the lives of burns for just Just a minute, 45 seconds. And that seems to be enough time that you can go deeply into something but not so much time that you you can't justify just sitting there and listening. Which is originally why you know why I came to love the program so much. Well, Michael Hingson 18:15 how long were you in the Peace Corps? Nick Bayard 18:17 I was there for I did a a two year volunteer service term. And then I stayed on for an additional year to be the coordinator of the environment sector. Michael Hingson 18:28 Where the volunteers were was that. I'm sorry, where was that? Where did you do that? Nick Bayard 18:34 In Paraguay? Okay, one of two landlocked countries in South America and the other? Michael Hingson 18:40 Yeah. Right. Yeah, there's a lot of water around South America. Nick Bayard 18:46 Yeah. You know, and, unfortunately, if Paraguay has not been, as that benefited from a lot of the natural resources on the continent, partly due to the, you know, the history of war, there was a major war that Paraguay found itself in against Brazil, Argentina, and Uruguay, and it just turned into an actual massacre of genocide. It was, I think it was just after the US Civil War ended, or it was right around that time, and something like 80% of all boys and men are killed. And then the country shrunk. And then it was President Rutherford B. Hayes who brokered an agreement to give Paraguay back some of its land and so there's actually a county in Paraguay called President Hays County or it's been caught, but as they didn't they i Yes. And so I saw more busts and sort of recognitions of President Hayes in Paraguay than I ever expected to see anywhere. It's really interesting. Michael Hingson 19:57 There's a historic fact I didn't know Cool. And that's, that's a good thing. And and we do have a Paraguay today. And so you spent time in the Peace Corps there, which is always a good thing. Nick Bayard 20:10 Yeah. And it was, it was interesting to go and realize that Spanish wouldn't help me very much. I spoke a little bit of Spanish. I got there. But the Peace Corps trainer is quickly put me into a class to learn the language, quad knee, which is the language that most Paraguayan speak most of the time, and the class itself was taught in Spanish. And so I was just really having a hard time with that one, because I sort of it sort of felt like, you know, trying to use tweezers with oven mitts on it's like, I barely know what you're saying, I'm supposed to understand it enough to, to learn a whole new language, it ended up working out really well. But I ended up learning it very well, very, very, very fluently, Michael Hingson 21:02 but but those first few months were pretty rough. Well, there's nothing like immersion to force you to learn something, which is going back to what we talked about, as far as giving yourself reminders to take time to think about life. You know, it's all about immersion. Nick Bayard 21:18 Yeah, that the other really surprising thing that happened when I was first arriving in Paraguay was I was I was just starting to go bald. And I was dealing with all the emotions around that. And having a hard time with that, and, and some of the folks in my community where I was training, would ask me about it, and prod me about it, and even make fun of me about it. And so I, I realized, okay, if I'm gonna be able to have a snappy comeback or something, I've got a, I got to figure this out, because I just, I'm having a hard enough time with this already. And just to have people kind of prodding me in on something that I'm sensitive about, you know, I, I need to learn to communicate here. Michael Hingson 22:03 Also a good way to maybe pick up some more jokes for a future radio program. Nick Bayard 22:09 Yeah, exactly, exactly. Michael Hingson 22:12 So what did you do after the Peace Corps? Nick Bayard 22:15 Well, I came back to the US and wanted to be in DC, because that's where a lot of international development work was, was based, but actually ended up working for a nonprofit that develops high quality preschools in low income neighborhoods, called appletree. Institute, and help help them raise money and develop new schools. In areas where there hadn't traditionally been been very effective schools. And, you know, it was there that I really learned how to how to pitch an organization to funders. It was a, it was a fundraising role. And so that was really valuable for me, because I got to really understand how, you know what, what's compelling to people who might want to give and what is fundraising other than really giving somebody the opportunity to support something maybe they didn't know that they wanted to support. So I came to really enjoy fundraising and realize that if it's for something that I care about, it's it's a great opportunity for me and for the people that I connect with to to make the world a better place. Michael Hingson 23:30 Yeah. How long did you do that? Nick Bayard 23:33 I was there for two years. After about a year and a half, I felt like, Okay, I've kind of plateaued in this role, I'm going to apply to grad school, I got a very good score on my GRE and a friend of mine and her dad told her the score, and she said, you could go to Harvard. And I had not thought of that before she said it. And it sort of got the wheels turning, like maybe see what see what Harvard has gone on. And they had a master's program and Public Administration and International Development, which was really appealing because it was quantitative, heavy. It focused on economics, which everybody in international development just kept saying, you know, you got to have that foundation. And it ended up you know, being a program that the math was so advanced that it was sort of like being hit with a ton of bricks for the first year. You know, and then after the after that first year, I get into take more courses on, you know, things like public speaking and leadership and negotiation and writing, you know, the stuff that now feels a little bit more practical to my day to day, but it was actually that was where I met my wife and so I'm especially glad that that was worked out the way that it did because it completely. It completely, you know, formed every every moment since, you know, since I met Cydia, my wife. So that's probably the most valuable thing I got from Harvard. Michael Hingson 25:18 Well that makes makes a lot of sense. So you got your master's degree was she in the same program, Nick Bayard 25:23 she was in the School of Education getting she was getting her second master's degree. She had gotten a master's degree from the school for international training. And this master's degree was in learning and teaching at Harvard Graduate School of Education. And everybody at Harvard was just kind of blown away by her and what she knew about learning and teaching. Because she'd done it for so long understood it so well. And I think a lot of her classmates more and more from her than they did from some of the professors, to be honest. So she's she, she really understands how people learn better than anyone I've, I've met. And she's she's really helped me whenever I've given a training or had I sort of convey a concept to a group. Well just Michael Hingson 26:16 give her permission to remind you every day to take some time to meditate and think about life. And I bet you'll have the habit in no time. I bet you're right. Wives, wives do that. And that's a blessing. So sure. So they're, and all that math. Well, everything needs math in one way or another. But I can appreciate the fact that once you survive the math, and sometimes I wonder when, when colleges and universities do those things that you don't expect, like in a program, like you're thinking of giving you so much math, or when I was at UC Irvine, the people who went into the bioscience program, before they got to the point of being able to take all of the regular bioscience courses other than introductory courses, they had to take a year of organic chemistry. And a lot of the people in the biocide program, we're gonna go into med so they were kind of pre med and all that. And what what happened is that people who enrolled in the biocide program at UC Irvine, I know the first year I was there, 1600 people enrolled. And there were 200 left by the end of their sophomore year, because organic chemistry and other courses like that weeded them out. And the bioscience department was very deliberate about insisting that you have to do all that before you can go on, even though and the reality is, of course, you would use that organic chemistry. But still, before you can get to the real practical stuff, you've got to be able to deal with the theory. So kind of wonder if they were doing that at Harvard, if that was part of the logic. Nick Bayard 27:54 I wonder, you know, there's, you know, you wonder how sadistic some of these design these programs. One of the things that, you know, I feel like our program at Harvard does, you know, as it is it signals to folks who know about that degree, that you can do something very intense and difficult. Even if you don't end up using a lot of the hard skills, you know, that you you worked on there. So that's, that's been valuable for when folks know about that degree program. Anybody who's been through the Harvard Kennedy School will, I think set up a little straighter when you tell them that you have an NPA ID is that's that's the one that it's really the you know, the gut punch, especially in that first year. Michael Hingson 28:45 Yeah, well, you survived it and you moved on, what did you do after you got that Nick Bayard 28:50 degree? I actually spent a year working on music and recognize that like, there probably wouldn't be a time in a transition period when I'd have the opportunity to, to pursue music was something I've always loved and always done for, for, you know, just a full time thing for a while. And so when I when I met Cydia, she had been with our oldest son at the time, she'd come over as a single mom with her son, Wally, to Harvard, they kind of upgraded everything and came to Cambridge. And when I met Cydia, qualia was 10. And so we kind of became a family unit pretty quickly. And obviously when you know when to do it, and I got married, and so one of the things that came of that time we were living in DC was city I said, Why don't you write a children's album? And all of a sudden, all this music just started coming out of me, inspired by my conversation was with a query. And so it was really quite a fun time to, to be able to talk to him and understand his worldview and then write some music based on what I learned. And we, we ended up recording and producing this album together called wishing well. And it became pretty popular on the children's radio stations. And Wally and I were invited to be showcased performers at the world's only at the time Children's Music Conference. kindy calm, and at the time, we were the only act that had an actual kit, and you know, in the group, so that was quite a special time. And you know, we moved back out to cometa to put a trailer back in his his school he had been in, but we stayed on the East Coast for a year and did music and, you know, made some memories. Michael Hingson 30:54 What good memories Wow, that's pretty amazing. I'm going to have to go look for the album. Nick Bayard 31:00 Yeah, it was it was a surprise. To me, I had never thought of writing or recording children's music till Cydia suggested it. And I've, you know, I loved music as a kid Rafi has always been a hero of mine. And things kind of came full circle when I had a chance to take. Now our two youngest kids, we have four and a six year old to see Rafi alive. Just before the pandemic hit, we had a chance to meet him and give him a hug. And it just the you know, the the waterworks were turned on I it was more emotional than I expected it to be he so what did you do after music. That was we came out to Tacoma. And I was basically, you know, trying to figure out my place in this community and had a lot of meetings with folks and learned about an opening for the director of a social service organization that was working to support youth and young adults who were struggling with education and employment or housing, mental health, substance use disorders. And getting that job and really trying to build this thing into something that was, you know, trusted by young people and offered as many services as we can offer in one place. Because the young folks that have been burned by institutions are a lot less likely to trust institutions. And so we, as an institution could could help start to rebuild that trust a little bit by creating a space where people were, were welcomed and felt accepted, felt represented, and really could could be put on a path towards success, then we can make a big difference. And so it was a it was about as there for about five years, and we were able to increase mental health services on site, we were able to expand the the housing options for young people experiencing homelessness for our county. And we're able to really start the conversation around how institutional racism in the nonprofit sector is, is making our nonprofits not only in some cases, not effective, but in other cases, actually, the perpetuators of harm and so that's, that's something that I'm really pleased came out of that experience was was an opportunity to lead some of those conversations and be part of some of those efforts to to make it tough to make a change in the sector in terms of racial equity. Michael Hingson 33:56 What made you go out to Tacoma in general, Nick Bayard 34:00 well Cydia and equate my my wife and oldest son before I met them, they had been here my wife was born in eastern Washington and grew up in Tacoma. And so they had had they had a wife here before they went east to, to for city to get her second master's. And so we, you know, quaintly had his friends back here and I liked what I knew of Washington and so we decided to come out here and start a life together as a family. Less snow than the East Coast. Yes, sadly for me, but happily for much others in my family, who aren't as as big snow fans as I am, Michael Hingson 34:47 but still get to snow. Nick Bayard 34:49 We can. That's true. That's true. But it's a wonderful place to raise a family just because it's it is like you said you can get to almost anything Whether it's you know, the city, whether it is performing arts, venues, nature hikes, mountains, rivers, lakes, the ocean, you know, it's just, it's just great. And it's sort of like the home that I never knew I wanted. Michael Hingson 35:20 And I'll bet being in Washington, you even know where Gonzaga University is where everyone else only knows once a year during basketball season. Nick Bayard 35:28 That's right, we have some fierce, fiercely loyal folks, you know, in those, you know, in those in those fights, and I try to stay out of it. Yeah, the sports. The sports debates, Michael Hingson 35:45 I had the honor of being invited to speak at Gonzaga several years ago, it was a lot of fun, and very much enjoyed being up there. So that's great. I've spent a lot of time around various places in Washington, which is always a good thing. We love Washington. Although we we love Victorville where we are we love it, especially because our house is very accessible, we built the house so that it's accessible for my wife. And so we can't complain. And then as you said, working at home, you know, you have all the things that you got to do. But we can create schedules and set it up to work, right. So it works out very well for us. So we're, we're pretty, we're pleased. Nick Bayard 36:25 That's great. I'm curious if you, if you have any reflections on, you know, the people in Washington versus the folks where you are, one of the things I learned when I came out was that, that there's just sort of this, this norm of, it's okay to just start talking to somebody without even sort of an intro, sort of like you'd be at the supermarket and you can just, you can enter the middle of a conversation with somebody you've never met. I don't know if that was your experience when he came out here. Michael Hingson 36:55 It was, and there are parts of California where you can do some of that. But I think the whole world is changing, we're getting to be such a polarized world, because of things that are happening in politics, that shouldn't happen, that people aren't talking to each other nearly as much as they used to, I don't know whether you're finding that out there. But we are seeing a lot more of it down here than we used to, Nick Bayard 37:19 I find myself a lot more closed off. For a couple of reasons. One being, I still mask most places I go. And I also wear hearing aids. And so the combination of the mask and hearing loss, and, you know, just the mechanics of that, and then if somebody else is wearing a mask, it makes it really hard for me to, to hear what they're saying. Because I can't read their lips. And at the same time also, like, being a little bit wary of, you know, being around folks for too long and close environments. We've been lucky with COVID we haven't, haven't had it, but just, you know, I'm looking forward to, you know, science, figuring out more about how to how to prevent it, how to treat it, how to deal with long COVID, that kind of stuff. So yes, I've I've not been as gregarious as I think I always used to be. But I hope to get back to that at some point. Michael Hingson 38:21 We have stayed pretty close to home, I've traveled a few times to speak, done a lot of virtual things, but we stay pretty close to home, just because it is safer. And you know, we can cope with that we we are pretty good at being flexible about things changing. And when people talk about getting back to normal. That just is never going to happen. And I first thought about that after September 11. Because people kept saying after September 11 With all the things that were going on and government being closed for a week and airports being closed and all that and just all the discussions and people started saying we got to get back to normal. And it was very frustrating to me. And I finally realized that it was frustrating, because normal will never be the same again. Nick Bayard 39:09 Right. Right. And and what opportunities do we have to identify what what was bad about the old normal that we can we can change. One of the I think real blessings over the last few years has been people have been forced or and invited, I think to to examine how they're spending their time, what they give their time and effort to. And I see people being bolder about pursuing what they love and spending more time with their families. And I think that's a wonderful byproduct of what's been a really difficult couple of years. Michael Hingson 39:53 Yeah. And I hope that that trend will continue in that path. People will recognize that, and that companies and bosses and leaders will recognize that there's value in letting people do that, because it'll be much better for their mental health. Absolutely. Well, you ended up going at least for a while into city government in Tacoma, right? Nick Bayard 40:17 I did, I was the assistant chief equity officer in the Office of Equity and Human Rights, which is charged with supporting equitable representation in the workforce. Making sure that our community outreach is is, is really robust, making sure that policies and procedures are equitable, and, and that they recognize the harm that's been done over over decades, you know, against certain groups, and so it's, it's an office that I have a ton of respect for, and I was really happy to be able to serve for for a couple of years. And it was really, I think, it's really valuable to, to go back and forth between different sectors to, to be able to keep fresh eyes on things, one of the things I really appreciate being able to do was being able to come into the government role with lots of grassroots community development experience, and having relationships with a lot of folks that a lot of the city employees didn't have. And so I was able to kind of be a trusted liaison for a lot of those groups and for city staff, and, you know, everybody's got their own path. But for me, being able to, you know, take that experience, somewhere where it can be of good use is, is important. And that's that's also, you know, translated to coming back to the nonprofit sector and going into public media now, is that I've got, you know, that perspective of what it's like to be in government and, you know, as as an entity that reports to, to voters and to community members in a, you know, in the way that in the way that our elections are set up, and the way that our community engagement set up. So it was, it was a, it was quite a valuable experience, Michael Hingson 42:19 did you in dealing with all of the various issues and aspects around equity? Of course, everybody talks about diversity and so on. But generally, when they do disabilities get left out of that, did you find that you were involved at all or very much in dealing with equity from the standpoint of dealing with persons with disabilities and making sure that they get into the, to the workforce, and that were treated fairly, and so on? Nick Bayard 42:48 Yes, there actually, prior to my arrival, there had been a long standing Tacoma area commission on disabilities. And most of the members of that commission, if not all, experience, pretty significant disabilities, you know, carry those in their lives. And so our office was charged with being the liaison for that commission. And so whenever there was, the commission would bring a concern or a policy proposal to the city come through our office. One of the projects that was underway that we helped move forward while I was there, was around accessible taxis. And it, it's a good, it was a good window into just how complex is policy challenges can be. Because, you know, the the elected officials that would have to get put put this into place, you know, had to figure out, we had to figure out how much it costs, we had to figure out where folks would need to go, we had to figure out what it would mean to retrofit a taxi company's vehicles. And then how Uber and Lyft and others will be involved with that. And it was it's a multi year process that's still underway. But what we did was we commissioned a feasibility study, so that we could get a clearer and clearer sense of what the cost and scope would need to be so that the elected officials could make a good decision based on that. Something else that commission accomplished was I'm really proud of, but I didn't have any personal part of this is that they had the council pass an ordinance to require closed captioning in all places of business, restaurants and so on. So somebody that's hearing impaired or deaf, would be able to watch TV watch a sports game and know what's going on in a way that they hadn't before. So I think the the bigger issues to tackle had to do with accessible housing and accessible streets And, and that kind of thing. And those are those that's ongoing work. Of course, Michael Hingson 45:03 other aspects of all that that still don't get addressed very well are things that deal with with eyesight and things like Braille menus in restaurants. So we're, now you've got many companies that we in one way or another are putting kiosks in their facilities and McDonald's and McDonald's is now starting to make those kiosks talk or even accessible voting machines, so that a person who happens to be blind or low vision can go in and use an accessible machine to be able to vote independently. And there are just a lot of challenges like that, that continue to get left out of a lot of the discussions, which is unfortunate. Nick Bayard 45:47 Very unfortunate. So a question for me is always how do how do we elevate voices like yours and and others? Who? Who oftentimes, I think the, the discussion is it the, the the attention is ends up going on, you know, the, the group or the person that can shout the loudest? Yeah. And so that's not that shouldn't be the case, it should be, you know, we should take a look at intersecting issues of privilege and access and figure out, you know, if, if we can redesign our system so that those of us who you know, have the most barriers, or have have an easy time of it, I think we'll all have an easier time of it, boy struck by the universal design concepts that make things accessible for folks with disabilities, but also make them easier to access for folks without disabilities. It's hard to argue against a lot of investment and that kind of change, I think. Michael Hingson 46:54 And therein lies one of the real keys that is that, in reality, a lot of the things that might make life more inclusive for us really would help other people as well. But so many people emphasize just one thing that it makes it more of a challenge, like eyesight, you know, so even and one of my favorite topics I've discussed a couple of times on this podcast are the Tesla vehicles were everything is really driven by a touchscreen. And to use not only voice input, what voice output is limited or non existent, there is some voice input to be able to do things. But I as a passenger in a Tesla can't even work the radio, because it's all touchscreen driven. That's really lovely. Except that whoever does it, and the case of a driver, a driver has to look at the screen. And yes, you do have some other capabilities of the Tesla helping with driving. But the reality is that with the state of technology today, people should be watching the road. And we've got the technologies to allow us to use other senses. And we don't do it nearly as much as we should. We have not and we have not embraced in inclusive mindset yet. And when we do, then a lot of the questions that people may have and the concerns that people may have will go away, because they'll realize that what affects some will really help everyone, Nick Bayard 48:28 for sure. I think part of the part of the reason we get stuck on some of these things is that we tend to think about things in either or terms like either either you support blind people, or you support immigrants, or you support people of color or you support the LGBTQ community. And there's these like saying these soI completely separate projects is a recipe for complete failure to make anything change. And I think what we we need to recognize is that every group contains elements of every other group. Correct. And so helping helping one group fully is going to help other groups in different ways and thinking of ways that we can invest in those, you know, in the middle of those Venn diagrams, so that so that everybody benefits. Right. Michael Hingson 49:30 Well, so you worked in government, and then how did you get to bird note from that? Nick Bayard 49:35 Well, I've always loved birds and been fascinated by their behavior, their anatomy, their resilience, and had had taken some ornithology masters levels classes. I when I was out in Wyoming, and, you know, it hadn't been at the front of my mind. You know, since I started family hadn't been out bird watching too much. But then I saw that, you know, the executive director job at burnout had opened up. And it was interesting to me because I didn't realize that bird note itself was independent of radio stations. As a listener, I always thought the burden out was just part of our either part of our local radio station or part of NPR. But in fact, it's an independent nonprofit. And so it, it took me seeing the job opening to understand how the organization was set up. And all of a sudden, it I was just very excited about that opportunity. Because, you know, I'd had nonprofit leadership experience, I love birds, I love the burnt out daily show, and the long form podcasts that burned out, produces. And it it seemed to me that it was just a great next step, in terms of in terms of getting to know a new field of public media, in terms of being able to take some skills I've learned elsewhere and apply them. And it was, you know, it was it was a job where I didn't know anyone going into it. And so, you know, a lot of people and myself included, you know, get jobs through, you know, a personal connection, introduce you to somebody, and then you go through an application or interview process. With burnout, it was it was first time recently where I just applied and was invited to interview. And so in that way, it was, it was gratifying, just not that I, you know, not that there's anything wrong with, you know, having those connections, but, you know, it's It felt good to just apply and just on the nature of what they saw, have them give me a call and, Michael Hingson 51:58 and asked me to, to interview. And the rest is sort of history. Nick Bayard 52:05 That's right. That's right, as coming up on one year and November. Michael Hingson 52:08 So tell us a little about bird note, I'd appreciate knowing more about what exactly the organization is, what it does, and so on. Nick Bayard 52:17 Sure, we're an independent public media nonprofit organization that's been around since 2005. And it it started really, as a as a radio program under the auspices of Seattle Audubon. And eventually, after a few years it, it became its own nonprofit. And it started really with this vision that the founders vision was to produce a short, sound rich audio experience for radio listeners about birds. And it's just become a really beloved institution in the areas where it's broadcast. And it it's now we've got the flagship show is the minute 45 second show, copper note daily that broadcasts in about 250 public radio stations across the US. We've got long form podcasts, those are called threatened and bring birds back. And we do virtual events and things that most listeners know us for burning out daily. Because that's our biggest audience. We've got, we think around 5 million daily listeners to that show. And so what's really powerful about that, is that we're able to, I believe, create a mindset shift for all of those folks, in terms of inviting them to slow down, pay attention to nature, learn something amazing about birds, and hopefully get inspired to spend more time with nature, with birds, and to the point where we hope we inspire action. For conservation, whether that's something simple, like the way that you live your life, the way that you set up your bird feeders, the way that you turn off your lights during migration season, those kinds of things, all the way up to advocating for more federal legislation for conservation. You know, we hear from listeners that we we have changed their lives, which is really amazing to hear that we've inspired people to to pursue careers in ornithology bird science, that we have helped people with mental health. People say that the show calms them down. It's something that they look forward to every day. And I think the really, really big opportunity we have is to continue showcasing and diversifying people from every background on the show and stories that reflects different kinds of knowledge. folks that aren't, you know, this the the typical profile of somebody who's been centered a conservation over the last 100 years. white male, able bodied person recognize that every group is connected to burns and has a love of, of burning in the outdoors. And we have an opportunity to elevate those stories that haven't been elevated, you know, over over our country's history, which is, I think, very powerful. Michael Hingson 55:20 So what is the typical one minute 45 second show, like what happens? Nick Bayard 55:27 Well, sometimes we we start with our theme song, which I'm not going to attempt to recreate with my voice here on burnout.org. And hear that it's a it's a very short, little, just very catchy, you know, couple of seconds thing and then you'll hear the narrator say, this is bird note. And then you'll hear the sound of birds usually, and the narrator will talk you through what you're hearing. And well explained something about the birds behavior, something that we you know, we're learning about the birds something that scientists have just figured out, that kind of thing, then we'll take you back to the sounds of the birds, and then maybe one or two more pieces of information. And then from time to time, well, well let folks know what they can do to to learn more or to connect or to you know, to to make a difference for birds. This morning show was about the white Bennett storm petrel, which is a seabird lives off the coast of Chile and Peru. And it lives most of its life just over the water. And it took scientists eight years to figure out that this storm petrol actually nests about 50 miles inland and the desert and part of the continent that people describe as looking like the surface of bars. So anytime we can, we can drop in some surprising fun tidbits of information for our listeners, we love to do that too. So is bird node, a standard 501 C three nonprofit it is. And if you've got a burden on.org, you can learn more about how to get our email list, which gives you a sneak preview of all of our daily or weekly shows. You can support bird note, we, we we rely on the generosity of listeners to do what we do. And so, you know, unlike a radio station public radio station, which does a fun to drive every couple of years, or sorry, a couple times a year, we we are asking listeners over social media and have our email list to support us with gifts. And we're fortunate to have a lot of generous listeners who donate monthly and who give annually. And one of the services that we've created is something called Bird note plus, where you can subscribe at a different level of monthly giving to get ad free podcasts and get access to special events and get early access to shows and so if there any podcast fans or bird lovers out there that want to check out bird note plus, I would encourage them to do that. Michael Hingson 58:19 I would as well. It it sounds like a lot of fun. I have not I guess either been up at the right time or whatever have not heard bird no daily here so I'm going to have to go set up a reminder to go listen on the website, I guess every Nick Bayard 58:34 day. Please do. Yes, you can subscribe anywhere you can podcasts, you can subscribe to the sempurna daily, something that's really exciting as we just launched burnout en Espanol. So it's our first dual language production. So there's a new podcast feed for burnout and Espanyol where it's it's the same experience of the English burden on daily but in Spanish and speaking with folks in and in it throughout the Americas that are doing conservation work. In conversation in Spanish, it's, I think a really great opportunity for us to broaden our audience throughout the Americas. And then our our long form podcasts you can also find anywhere you get podcasts or bring birds back is is I think there's just a really special program that's hosted by a woman named Tanisha Hamilton who models her entry into birding and you just feel the enthusiasm and excitement as she gets into this and talks about things like what it's like to be a black woman birder what it's like to find your own community and birding. You know, how do people with disabilities? What are some of the technologies that they can use to get out and look at birds there and then there are different sort of species specific Two episodes, one of the really popular ones is about the purple Martin, which, which has an amazing history of interplay with with Native American communities and, and carried forward today where people will become what they call purple Martin landlords and create houses for them and just it's just a great story. Great, great program. And then our we have a field based long form podcast called threatened, which is hosted by already Daniel who's on NPR science desk now, and that's about going to the place they're doing in depth work to understand the conservation challenges birds are facing. And so that that podcast is coming out with new episodes in January, focused on Puerto Rico and island habitats. We just wrapped up the season on Hawaii, which was, which was really fascinating. Michael Hingson 1:00:57 Well, I, I'm gonna go listen, I It will be fun to go do that. Well, if people want to reach out and learn more about you and burden on I assume they can go to bird node.org. But how can they contact you and learn more? Nick Bayard 1:01:11 Sure they can. They can email me directly at Nick B. At bird note dot org. Always happy to chat. If it's a general bird note inquiry, you can email info at bird note.org We get a lot of people writing in with bird questions. You know, how do we get burned out on our local radio station, that kind of thing. We love to hear those kinds of questions because it helps us connect with new audiences and new radio stations. And, you know, I'm hopeful that we can grow the broadcasts range of Berto because right now we brought about 250 radio stations. But if if we were to, you know, get broadcasts on some of the bigger stations, we could double or triple our audience overnight, which would be, which would be amazing. And it's just a minute 45 seconds. So it's not exactly like a huge investment. I understand that, that time is a finite resource on radio, but I just I don't think there's any good reason why every radio station shouldn't play Burnin Up Michael Hingson 1:02:18 is short Is it is it makes perfect sense to do. Well, I, I find it fascinating and I hope everyone listening to us today will find it fascinating as well. And that they will reach out to you I think it will be beneficial. And as I said, I'm gonna go make it a habit, I think I can easily do that minute and 45 seconds is just not that long. It's not a big ask just and it's such a such a joyful Nick Bayard 1:02:47 show. You know, I came into this job as a huge fan, and just have become an even bigger fan, just, you know, getting under the hood and understanding everything that goes into developing creating and producing these shows. So I just feel really lucky to be doing what I do and lucky to have the chance to try to share it with as many people as I can and lucky to ask people to write us check some of sign up to God because that's that's what, that's what keeps us producing the stories and what what allows us to keep growing? Michael Hingson 1:03:27 Well, I'm gonna go check out bird note.org. And a little bit more detail. Do you know if the website designer paid any attention to or spend any time making sure that it's accessible and put an accessibility kinds of elements to the site? And or do you know if they've done that? Nick Bayard 1:03:42 We've done a, we our web developer ran an accessibility audit. I need to dig into the details around which aspects are good and which are bad. They told us we got a 91% score. Michael Hingson 1:03:58 That's pretty good. Nick Bayard 1:03:59 I think yeah, I think it's pretty good. That's you know, there's always, always room for improvement. One of the things that we were early early adopters of is the the transcripts of every episode on how to be really descriptive in those but I know that we've got got work to do and would welcome any, any feedback you have for sure when you when you go and check it out. Michael Hingson 1:04:26 We'll do it. And I will definitely communicate either way. Well, Nick, thanks again for being with us. This has been fun and fascinating. I hope you've enjoyed it and and we really appreciate you coming on and we hope you'll be back and update us as burnout progresses. Nick Bayard 1:04:44 Well, thanks so much, Michael. And I just want to say I'm really inspired by you and your story and I was just thrilled to hear from you and get the invitation to talk. So it's been just a really wonderful Expo. grandson a great honor to be able to chat with you today. Michael Hingson 1:05:03 Well, my pleasure as well. And for all of you out there listening, please reach out to Nick, please learn more about bird note. And we hope that you'll give us a five star rating wherever you're listening to the podcast. We really appreciate you doing that. I'd love to hear your comments, please feel free to email me at Michaelhi at accessibe.com A C C E S S I B E, or go to our podcast page, Michael hingson.com/podcast. But either way, I would appreciate your five star review would appreciate your comments. And Nick, for you and for everyone listening if you know of anyone else who you think ought to be a guest on unstoppable mindset. We'd love to hear from you about that as well. So thanks for listening. And Nick once more. Thank you very much for being a part of us today and our podcast. Thanks so much. Michael Hingson 1:05:55 You have been listening to the Unstoppable Mindset podcast. Thanks for dropping by. I hope that you'll join us again next week, and in future weeks for upcoming episodes. To subscribe to our podcast and to learn about upcoming episodes, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com slash podcast. Michael Hingson is spelled m i c h a e l h i n g s o n. While you're on the site., please use the form there to recommend people who we ought to interview in upcoming editions of the show. And also, we ask you and urge you to invite your friends to join us in the future. If you know of any one or any organization needing a speaker for an event, please email me at speaker at Michael hingson.com. I appreciate it very much. To learn more about the concept of blinded by fear, please visit www dot Michael hingson.com forward slash blinded by fear and while you're there, feel free to pick up a copy of my free eBook entitled blinded by fear. The unstoppable mindset podcast is provided by access cast an initiative of accessiBe and is sponsored by accessiBe. Please visit www.accessibe.com. accessiBe is spelled a c c e s s i b e. There you can learn all about how you can make your website inclusive for all persons with disabilities and how you can help make the internet fully inclusive by 2025. Thanks again for listening. Please come back and visit us again next week.
Episode 89: Mexican Jumping Beans: Where Does it Go? | A podcast about life cycles of all kinds of things, and where stuff goes | Sarah walks us through the life cycle of the moth (Cydia saltitans) that makes those Mexican beans jump! How does a little moth laying eggs in the flowers of a shrub (Sebastiana pavoniana) lead to the Mexican jumping beans we grew up so curious about? "Parisian" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ https://wheredoesitpodcast.com/listen https://www.patreon.com/wheredoesit Apple / Google / Spotify / Stitcher / Anchor / Soundcloud Instagram: www.instagram.com/wheredoesitpodcast/?hl=en email: wheredoesitpodcast@gmail.com
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 186 with Bad Actress, Key Flight Captains, Oltre L'Abisso, SARAH PERROTTA, The Low Down Dirty Heathens, Found, Impellitteri, Joy Basu, Luna Red, Nosferatu, Repo! The Genetic Opera, Shereen Teixeira, Against All Will, Cellophane, Hed PE, Otep, CYDIA, Jerusalem Blues Band, Michael Jay Cresswell, Gabriele Bellini, and Slug Chop. Magdalena Friese with an Interview with Mark Bistany of Puddle of Mudd, Otep, and Hed PE.
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 173 The Uneven, Lilli, Fabulae Dramatis, Dinnamarque, Cherry Troopers, Dominic Kirwan, Bobby Porter, CYDIA, URFERD, Seventh Dimension, Dethonator, and Fugatta.
In this episode we'll be discussing Cydia's antitrust case against Apple, Samsung cutting phone production and the Nothing 1. Remember to subscribe, follow, and leave a review! Social media: Twitter: @vein_tech Instagram: tech_vein Articles: Cydia antitrust case against Apple Samsung cutting phone production Nothing 1 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
What's old is new again, but we're not buying it this time. It's developer conference season, and we're hunting vaporware.
0:00:00 – HKPUG 會訊 + 每週 IT 新聞 0:52:35 – Main Topic 本集全長:1:44:57 Tag: 民航處SUA一站通, 無人機註冊, 小米電視自然落體事件, Pixel 7 工程機 eBay 有售, Apple 強制開發者提供刪除帳户功能, Cydia …
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
1 Billion Safari Users, SwiftUI in 2022, BTS WWDC 2022: What to expect, iOS 16, new operating systems, redesigned MacBook Air, more. WWDC 2022 full schedule. Apple's Safari browser now has more than 1 billion users. Michael Tsai - SwiftUI in 2022. Judge rules Cydia's antitrust case against Apple can move forward. Apple VP kindly reminds retail workers that they can say no to unions. We Tried Apple's Self Repair Program. You Shouldn't. (Probably). Foxconn raises outlook, saying supply chain situation improving. Kuo: TSMC roadmap indicates this year's iPhone 'A16' chip will stick to 5nm fab, same as A14 and A15. Apple has won a patent for a future Apple Watch with an integrated camera in its digital crown and more. Tesla is considering adopting Apple's AirPlay to improve audio quality. Apple Music 1 launching a new show hosted by K-pop sensation BTS. Formula One pilot Sebastian Vettel chases thieves using the iPhone's Find My app. Remembering Apple's Newton, 30 years on. Picks of the Week Alex's Pick: ChauvetDJ Andy's Pick: Buy Nothing App for iOS Rene's Pick: Rene's Nebula Class Hosts: Leo Laporte, Alex Lindsay, Rene Ritchie, and Andy Ihnatko Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/macbreak-weekly. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: ue.com/fits promo code MACBREAK kolide.com/macbreak wealthfront.com/macbreak
This week on Sociall.in's social media and digital marketing podcast, we're talking about Cydia's anti-trust suit against Apple, Instagram's ‘1-minute music tracks' launch, and WhatsApp's iPad version.
Necesitamos más instaladores solares / Luna 2.0 también se desploma / Google prohíbe los DeepFake en Colab / En Tonga sigue fallando Internet / Cydia demanda a Apple / Xiaomi se alía con Amazon
Recorded live on May 19th, 2022 Two people making music on the fly… Bugs In The Basement creates improvised musical journeys from an array of vintage and handmade instruments to modern technologies. Recorded live from our basement studio in the Pacific Northwest, each week we experiment in the process of making exploratory music and soundscapes. Unmixed, unedited and unapologetic. www.bugsinthebasement.com
Ultimo giorno di CES e ultime novità da scoprire, tra cui una BMW con la possibilità di cambiare colore. Facebook e Google multati in Francia per alcune pratiche legate ai cookies. Fitbit condivide alcune informazioni sulla salute dei suoi utenti a livello globale.Sono solo alcune delle storie di oggi!
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 138 with KillSET, Aittala, Dellacoma, Fiefdom, The Great Leslie, Transcendence, The Mummy Cats, MESSER, Modern Mimes, Black Pinoy, Celestines, Dead Reynolds, Diamonds and Guns, Factory, The Marty Rose Band, THE AUTOMATICS, Becoming, Corners of Sanctuary, Yesterday's Gone, CYDIA, Hellz Abyss, Kaiser and the Machines of Creation, Freakstorm, and Matt Long And The Revenant Ones. Max Ash from Max 1ON1 Online Radio on Facebook with interviews of Hellz Abyss and Freakstorm.
Midnight Madness Radio Episode 120 with 5 Star Hooker, DZ Deathrays, King Voodoo, Executive Order, Ghosts Of Men, Glass Heart, KRIS SEARLE, Cloverhill, Primal Creation, CYDIA, Vokonis, CHELSEA, Pentesilea Road, Liar Thief Bandit, and ALICE SWEET ALICE.
The largest global power during the rise of intellectual property was England, so the world adopted her philosophies. The US had the same impact on software law. Most case law that shaped the software industry is based on copyright law. Our first real software laws appeared in the 1970s and now have 50 years of jurisprudence to help guide us. This episode looks at the laws, supreme court cases, and some circuit appeals cases that shaped the software industry. -------- In our previous episode we went through a brief review of how the modern intellectual property laws came to be. Patent laws flowed from inventors in Venice in the 1400s, royals gave privileges to own a monopoly to inventors throughout the rest of Europe over the next couple of centuries, transferred to panels and academies during and after the Age of Revolutions, and slowly matured for each industry as technology progressed. Copyright laws formed similarly, although they were a little behind patent laws due to the fact that they weren't really necessary until we got the printing press. But when it came to data on a device, we had a case in 1908 we covered in the previous episode that led Congress to enact the 1909 Copyright Act. Mechanical music boxes evolved into mechanical forms of data storage and computing evolved from mechanical to digital. Following World War II there was an explosion in new technologies, with those in computing funded heavily by US government. Or at least, until we got ourselves tangled up in a very unpopular asymmetrical war in Vietnam. The Mansfield Amendment of 1969, was a small bill in the 1970 Military Authorization Act that ended the US military from funding research that didn't have a direct relationship to a specific military function. Money could still flow from ARPA into a program like the ARPAnet because we wanted to keep those missiles flying in case of nuclear war. But over time the impact was that a lot of those dollars the military had pumped into computing to help develop the underlying basic sciences behind things like radar and digital computing was about to dry up. This is a turning point: it was time to take the computing industry commercial. And that means lawyers. And so we got the first laws pertaining to software shortly after the software industry emerged from more and more custom requirements for these mainframes and then minicomputers and the growing collection of computer programmers. The Copyright Act of 1976 was the first major overhaul to the copyright laws since the 1909 Copyright Act. Since then, the US had become a true world power and much as the rest of the world followed the British laws from the Statute of Anne in 1709 as a template for copyright protections, the world looked on as the US developed their laws. Many nations had joined the Berne Convention for international copyright protections, but the publishing industry had exploded. We had magazines, so many newspapers, so many book publishers. And we had this whole weird new thing to deal with: software. Congress didn't explicitly protect software in the Copyright Act of 1976. But did add cards and tape as mediums and Congress knew this was an exploding new thing that would work itself out in the courts if they didn't step in. And of course executives from the new software industry were asking their representatives to get in front of things rather than have the unpredictable courts adjudicate a weird copyright mess in places where technology meets copy protection. So in section 117, Congress appointed the National Commission on New Technological Uses of Copyrighted Works, or CONTU) to provide a report about software and added a placeholder in the act that empaneled them. CONTU held hearings. They went beyond just software as there was another newish technology changing the world: photocopying. They presented their findings in 1978 and recommended we define a computer program as a set of statements or instructions to be used directly or indirectly in a computer in order to bring about a certain result. They also recommended that copies be allowed if required to use the program and that those be destroyed when the user no longer has rights to the software. This is important because this is an era where we could write software into memory or start installing compiled code onto a computer and then hand the media used to install it off to someone else. At the time the hobbyist industry was just about to evolve into the PC industry, but hard disks were years out for most of those machines. It was all about floppies. But up-market there was all kinds of storage and the righting was on the wall about what was about to come. Install software onto a computer, copy and sell the disk, move on. People would of course do that, but not legally. Companies could still sign away their copyright protections as part of a sales agreement but the right to copy was under the creator's control. But things like End User License Agreements were still far away. Imagine how ludicrous the idea that a piece of software if a piece of software went bad that it could put a company out of business in the 1970s. That would come as we needed to protect liability and not just restrict the right to copy to those who, well, had the right to do so. Further, we hadn't yet standardized on computer languages. And yet companies were building complicated logic to automate business and needed to be able to adapt works for other computers and so congress looked to provide that right at the direction of CONTU as well, if only to the company doing the customizations and not allowing the software to then be resold. These were all hashed out and put into law in 1980. And that's an important moment as suddenly the party who owned a copy was the rightful owner of a piece of software. Many of the provisions read as though we were dealing with book sellers selling a copy of a book, not dealing with the intricate details of the technology, but with technology those can change so quickly and those who make laws aren't exactly technologists, so that's to be expected. Source code versus compiled code also got tested. In 1982 Williams Electronics v Artic International explored a video game that was in a ROM (which is how games were distributed before disks and cassette tapes. Here, the Third Circuit weighed in on whether if the ROM was built into the machine, if it could be copied as it was utilitarian and therefore not covered under copyright. The source code was protected but what about what amounts to compiled code sitting on the ROM. They of course found that it was indeed protected. They again weighed in on Apple v Franklin in 1983. Here, Franklin Computer was cloning Apple computers and claimed it couldn't clone the computer without copying what was in the ROMs, which at the time was a remedial version of what we think of as an operating system today. Franklin claimed the OS was in fact a process or method of operation and Apple claimed it was novel. At the time the OS was converted to a binary language at runtime and that object code was a task called AppleSoft but it was still a program and thus still protected. One and two years later respectively, we got Mac OS 1 and Windows 1. 1986 saw Whelan Associates v Jaslow. Here, Elaine Whelan created a management system for a dental lab on the IBM Series One, in EDL. That was a minicomputer and when the personal computer came along she sued Jaslow because he took a BASIC version to market for the PC. He argued it was a different language and the set of commands was therefore different. But the programs looked structurally similar. She won, as while some literal elements were the same, “the copyrights of computer programs can be infringed even absent copying of the literal elements of the program.” This is where it's simple to identify literal copying of software code when it's done verbatim but difficult to identify non-literal copyright infringement. But this was all professional software. What about those silly video games all the kids wanted? Well, Atari applied for a copyright for one of their games, Breakout. Here, Register of Copyrights, Ralph Oman chose not to Register the copyright. And so Atari sued, winning in the appeal. There were certainly other dental management packages on the market at the time. But the court found that “copyrights do not protect ideas – only expressions of ideas.” Many found fault with the decision and the Second Circuit heard Computer Associates v Altai in 1992. Here, the court applied a three-step test of Abstraction-Filtration-Comparison to determine how similar products were and held that Altai's rewritten code did not meet the necessary requirements for copyright infringement. There were other types of litigation surrounding the emerging digital sphere at the time as well. The Computer Fraud and Abuse Act came along in 1986 and would be amended in 89, 94, 96, and 2001. Here, a number of criminal offenses were defined - not copyright but they have come up to criminalize activities that should have otherwise been copyright cases. And the Copyright Act of 1976 along with the CONTU findings were amended to cover the rental market came to be (much as happened with VHS tapes and Congress established provisions to cover that in 1990. Keep in mind that time sharing was just ending by then but we could rent video games over dial-up and of course VHS rentals were huge at the time. Here's a fun one, Atari infringed on Nintendo's copyright by claiming they were a defendant in a case and applying to the Copyright Office to get a copy of the 10NES program so they could actually infringe on their copyright. They tried to claim they couldn't infringe because they couldn't make games unless they reverse engineered the systems. Atari lost that one. But Sega won a similar one soon thereafter because playing more games on a Sega was fair use. Sony tried to sue Connectix in a similar case where you booted the PlayStation console using a BIOS provided by Connectix. And again, that was reverse engineering for the sake of fair use of a PlayStation people payed for. Kinda' like jailbreaking an iPhone, right? Yup, apps that help jailbreak, like Cydia, are legal on an iPhone. But Apple moves the cheese so much in terms of what's required to make it work so far that it's a bigger pain to jailbreak than it's worth. Much better than suing everyone. Laws are created and then refined in the courts. MAI Systems Corp. v. Peak Computer made it to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals in 1993. This involved Eric Francis leaving MAI and joining Peak. He then loaded MAI's diagnostics tools onto computers. MAI thought they should have a license per computer, but yet Peak used the same disk in multiple computers. The crucial change here was that the copy made, while ephemeral, was decided to be a copy of the software and so violated the copyright. We said we'd bring up that EULA though. In 1996, the Seventh Circuit found in ProCD v Zeidenberg, that the license preempted copyright thus allowing companies to use either copyright law or a license when seeking damages and giving lawyers yet another reason to answer any and all questions with “it depends.” One thing was certain, the digital world was coming fast in those Clinton years. I mean, the White House would have a Gopher page and Yahoo! would be on display at his second inauguration. So in 1998 we got the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Here, Congress added to Section 117 to allow for software copies if the software was required for maintenance of a computer. And yet software was still just a set of statements, like instructions in a book, that led the computer to a given result. The DMCA did have provisions to provide treatment to content providers and e-commerce providers. It also implemented two international treaties and provided remedies for anti-circumvention of copy-prevention systems since by then cracking was becoming a bigger thing. There was more packed in here. We got MAI Systems v Peak Computer reversed by law, refinement to how the Copyright Office works, modernizing audio and movie rights, and provisions to facilitate distance education. And of course the DMCA protected boat hull designs because, you know, might as well cram some stuff into a digital copyright act. In addition to the cases we covered earlier, we had Mazer v Stein, Dymow v Bolton, and even Computer Associates v Altai, which cemented the AFC method as the means most courts determine copyright protection as it extends to non-literal components such as dialogue and images. Time and time again, courts have weighed in on what fair use is because the boundaries are constantly shifting, in part due to technology, but also in part due to shifting business models. One of those shifting business models was ripping songs and movies. RealDVD got sued by the MPAA for allowing people to rip DVDs. YouTube would later get sued by Viacom but courts found no punitive damages could be awarded. Still, many online portals started to scan for and filter out works they could know were copy protected, especially given the rise of machine learning to aid in the process. But those were big, major companies at the time. IO Group, Inc sued Veoh for uploaded video content and the judge found Veoh was protected by safe harbor. Safe Harbor mostly refers to the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act, or OCILLA for short, which shields online portals and internet service providers from copyright infringement. This would be separate from Section 230, which protects those same organizations from being sued for 3rd party content uploaded on their sites. That's the law Trump wanted overturned during his final year in office but given that the EU has Directive 2000/31/EC, Australia has the Defamation Act of 2005, Italy has the Electronic Commerce Directive 2000, and lots of other countries like England and Germany have had courts find similarly, it is now part of being an Internet company. Although the future of “big tech” cases (and the damage many claim is being done to democracy) may find it refined or limited. In 2016, Cisco sued Arista for allegedly copying the command line interfaces to manage switches. Cisco lost but had claimed more than $300 million in damages. Here, the existing Cisco command structure allowed Arista to recruit seasoned Cisco administrators to the cause. Cisco had done the mental modeling to evolve those commands for decades and it seemed like those commands would have been their intellectual property. But, Arista hadn't copied the code. Then in 2017, in ZeniMax vs Oculus, ZeniMax wan a half billion dollar case against Oculus for copying their software architecture. And we continue to struggle with what copyright means as far as code goes. Just in 2021, the Supreme Court ruled in Google v Oracle America that using application programming interfaces (APIs) including representative source code can be transformative and fall within fair use, though did not rule if such APIs are copyrightable. I'm sure the CP/M team, who once practically owned the operating system market would have something to say about that after Microsoft swooped in with and recreated much of the work they had done. But that's for another episode. And traditional media cases continue. ABS Entertainment vs CBS looked at whether digitally remastering works extended copyright. BMG vs Cox Communications challenged peer-to-peer file-sharing in safe harbor cases (not to mention the whole Napster testifying before congress thing). You certainly can't resell mp3 files the way you could drop off a few dozen CDs at Tower Records, right? Capitol Records vs ReDigi said nope. Perfect 10 v Amazon, Goldman v Breitbart, and so many more cases continued to narrow down who and how audio, images, text, and other works could have the right to copy restricted by creators. But sometimes it's confusing. Dr. Seuss vs ComicMix found that merging Star Trek and “Oh, the Places You'll Go” was enough transformativeness to break the copyright of Dr Seuss, or was that the Fair Use Doctrine? Sometimes I find conflicting lines in opinions. Speaking of conflict… Is the government immune from copyright? Allen v Cooper, Governor of North Carolina made it to the Supreme Court, where they applied blanket copyright protections. Now, this was a shipwreck case but extended to digital works and the Supreme Court seemed to begrudgingly find for the state, and looked to a law as remedy rather than awarding damages. In other words, the “digital Blackbeards” of a state could pirate software at will. Guess I won't be writing any software for the state of North Carolina any time soon! But what about content created by a state? Well, the state of Georgia makes various works available behind a paywall. That paywall might be run by a third party in exchange for a cut of the proceeds. So Public.Resource goes after anything where the edict of a government isn't public domain. In other words, court decision, laws, and statutes should be free to all who wish to access them. The “government edicts doctrine” won in the end and so access to the laws of the nation continue to be free. What about algorithms? That's more patent territory when they are actually copyrightable, which is rare. Gottschalk v. Benson was denied a patent for a new way to convert binary-coded decimals to numerals while Diamond v Diehr saw an algorithm to run a rubber molding machine was patentable. And companies like Intel and Broadcom hold thousands of patents for microcode for chips. What about the emergence of open source software and the laws surrounding social coding? We'll get to the emergence of open source and the consequences in future episodes! One final note, most have never heard of the names in early cases. Most have heard of the organizations listed in later cases. Settling issues in the courts has gotten really, really expensive. And it doesn't always go the way we want. So these days, whether it's Apple v Samsung or other tech giants, the law seems to be reserved for those who can pay for it. Sure, there's the Erin Brockovich cases of the world. And lady justice is still blind. We can still represent ourselves, case and notes are free. But money can win cases by having attorneys with deep knowledge (which doesn't come cheap). And these cases drag on for years and given the startup assembly line often halts with pending legal actions, not many can withstand the latency incurred. This isn't a “big tech is evil” comment as much as “I see it and don't know a better rubric but it's still a thing” kinda' comment. Here's something better that we'd love to have a listener take away from this episode. Technology is always changing. Laws usually lag behind technology change as (like us) they're reactive to innovation. When those changes come, there is opportunity. Not only has the technological advancement gotten substantial enough to warrant lawmaker time, but the changes often create new gaps in markets that new entrants can leverage. Either leaders in markets adapt quickly or see those upstarts swoop in, having no technical debt and being able to pivot faster than those who previously might have enjoyed a first user advantage. What laws are out there being hashed out, just waiting to disrupt some part of the software market today?
多聊一聊「桌面美化」话题一直是 JJ 的私心,因为那个年代有着太多朴素但美好的历史,而这其中 The Skins Factory 这家设计工作室一直是个独特的存在,他们很早年间就以电影 CG 般质感的超细腻动态皮肤著称,而后又慢慢于移动时代退出我们的视线。当然,以两位主播的有限经历去评判他们难免会有偏颇,如有不敬,只能用乔老爷子那个广告里的话来送给这段传奇了「You can quote them, disagree with them, glorify or vilify them, but the only thing you can't do is ignore them.」P.S. 本台今天正式推出一款衍生产品,一盒浓缩了至今 125 期内容的 mix tape 卡带,A/B 两面总计 90 分钟。我们希望能用这种刻意的非主流行为艺术将我台一贯坚持的「湿货」输出物质化,在 21 世纪走过 21 年后的今天,用做作的行动宣告此间的少年依然心还是少年。# 内容提要00:02 · 开场道歉接反身周边售卖,难度系数 0.005:21 · 还是要解释一下为啥这次的选题又是「炒冷饭」09:16 · 这故事还要从 20 多年前佛罗里达某电脑城说起16:37 · 他们的崛起也许就来源于这次微软的外包合作25:38 · 创始人往往既是这家公司的下限又是这家公司的上限31:01 · 那要么顺便也聊聊另外一个「factory」36:26 · 也不知怎么又开始聊 Leon 辞职的事儿了39:14 · 也许从 Hyperdesk 开始慢慢退出我们的视线# 参考链接银河护卫队 0:26Anyway.MIX 合集磁带 @ Anyway.Store(仅电脑访问有效) 1:33我台最近更新了催更专区 2:51我台第二十期节目《Anyway Geographic》 5:48The Skins Factory 官网 6:07Iconfactory 官网 6:12Soft Facade 工作室后来演变成了 Clay 现在依然在 Dribbble 上活跃 6:15The Skins Factory 的创始人 Jeff Schader 6:27官方发布的 20 周年回顾文章 6:38《银河护卫队 Awesome Mix Vol. 2》中的《The Chain》 8:52非常早期的播放器 Sonique 11:18Winamp 皮肤博物馆 11:472000 年发布的 Windows Media Player 7 播放器 17:09当时给微软设计的皮肤 20:27对很多人来说再熟悉不过的 Windows XP 图标的概念设计来自于 Iconfactory 22:48BGM:《银河护卫队 Awesome Mix Vol. 1》中的《Spirit In The Sky》 25:11YouTube 上终结者皮肤的录屏演示 27:09给游戏《半条命 2》设计的皮肤 27:18Iconfactory 的网站上一直有成员列表,也有万圣节恶搞各自头像的传统 28:04Iconfactory 的移动端绘图应用 Linea 31:43Iconfactory 的经典 Twitter 客户端 Twitteriffic 31:58Iconfactory 的 Patreon 页面 34:12Mac 上替换图标用的软件 CandyBar 35:04CandyBar 的联合作者、著名的 Mac 软件开发商 Panic 35:07BGM:《银河护卫队 Awesome Mix Vol. 1》中的《Come And Get Your Love》 35:54Leon 的「离职倒计时专页」 36:56桌面美化软件 Hyperdesk 39:24WindowsBlinds 软件直到今天还依然可以在 Windows 10 上使用 42:32早期 Windows 自带的简单主题定制界面 43:36在 WindowBlinds 主题社区这个复古网站上,在 Top 作者一栏点 all time,还是可以看到 JJ 的名字~ 44:42游戏《水晶战争 C-Wars》非常成功的众筹页面 45:07曾经 iOS 上非常著名的「第三方」商店 Cydia 49:23混剪没有了,但是可以看看 The Skins Factory 的官方油管 53:00片尾曲:《银河护卫队 Awesome Mix Vol. 1》中的《I Want You Back》 55:16# 会员计划在本台官网(Anyway.FM) 注册会员即可 14 天试用 X 轴播放器和催更功能~ 开启独特的播客互动体验,Pro 会员更可加入听众群参与节目讨(hua)论(shui)~
NEW How to Jailbreak No Computer - install Cydia iOS 14.3 with Unc0ver Download Zeus App https://getzeus.app Configure Proxy: http://FFapple.com --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Recorded live on January 14th, 2021 Two people making music on the fly… Bugs In The Basement creates improvised musical journeys from an array of vintage and handmade instruments to modern technologies. Recorded live from our basement studio in the Pacific Northwest, each week we experiment in the process of making exploratory music and soundscapes. Unmixed, unedited and unapologetic. www.bugsinthebasement.com
Yanik and Luc-Olivier talk about their favorite games they played in 2020.Related LinksFU: App Store: StadiumFU: The Verge: Stadia comes to the iPhone and iPad with new iOS betaFU: saurik's tweet about Cydia suing AppleFU: Tim Sweeney's tweet announcing Spotify's availability on the Epic Games StoreFU: Cabel's tweet about Scott Forstall working on WordArtYear of PlayStationYouTube montage of the 77 most notable PS1 gamesYouTube montage of the top 30 most sold PS1 games in JapanYanik's honorable mentionsGran Turismo 1I.Q. FinalJumping Flash! 2Ace Combat 2Yu-Gi-Oh! Duel LinksBattlefield 1Game Boy Light hardwareYouTube/My Life in Gaming: Game Boy IPS Screen Mods for DMG, Pocket, GBC, GBA, and GBA SPLucco's honorable mentionsPapers, PleaseDanganronpa: Trigger Happy HavocAs discussed on episode 136: Ultimate Swinging ProShadow of the Tomb RaiderYanik's #4: Tales of PhantasiaYouTube: Tales of Phantasia SNES Opening showing off the Flexible Voice Drive technologyRecommended fan translation by Phantasian ProductionsYanik's #3: Crash 2: Cortex Strikes BackLucco's #3: Time HollowAs discussed on episode 135: I Bought Dr. Pepper Before It Was CoolYanik's #2: Dragon Quest IVLucco's #2: Animal Crossing: New HorizonsYouTube/LoadingReadyLive: Kathleen's Island ToursYanik's #1Lucco's #1This section of the show contains significant story spoilers. To avoid being spoiled, skip ahead to 2:44:53 once we acknowledge the awkwardness of having to mention spoilers.Heisei era gamingYouTube montage of the most notable games of the Heisei eraYouTube: みるみる's 平成のゲーム史を振り返ってみた series of Heisei game history videos (Japanese)If this episode somehow isn't enough, check out our other 2020 gaming episodes:129: Climate of Negativity about cloud gaming134: Pressing Buttons Feels Good about the 9 games that define our taste in video games135: I Bought Dr. Pepper Before It Was Cool where Yanik recommends handheld games to Luc-Olivier136: Ultimate Swinging Pro about the first Danganronpa game138: Gran Turismo 7 Prologue about revisiting Gran Turismo Sport149: Big Oof about next-generation consoles150: All My Friends Have HomePods about reviewing Google Stadia
Докладно про головне Російські хакери зламали FireEye та виклали в публічний доступ їх інструменти (більшість яких виявились програмами з відкритим вихідним кодом) Влада Казахстану перехоплює HTTPS трафік в столиці В онлайн форматі пройшли щорічна конференція OWASP Ukraine 2020 та BSides Security Week Коротко про важливе BGP нарешті може отримати велике оновлення безпеки Salesforce купив корпоративний месенджер Slack CISO компанії Johnson & Johnson стверджує, що організації охорони здоров’я піддаються кібератакам кожну хвилину Adobe випустили останнє оновлення до Flash Виробник гелікоптерів Kopter зазнав атаки вірусу-вимагача Cydia подала антимонопольний судовий позов проти Apple Вразливості тижня Дослідники знайшли 33 вразливості в open-source імплементаціях TCP/IP в різноманітних смарт-пристроях Відео zero-click експлойту під iPhone, який тирить фотки по Wi-Fi Tools & Writeups Depix – інструмент відновлення паролів з “пікселізованих” фотографій Пост Павла Жепи (доповідача на цьогорічному OWASP Ukraine) про те, як швидко Amazon реагує на витік API ключів до AWS у публічних репозитаріях GitHub. (Спойлер: дуже щвидко.) Рекомендації Порівняння методик побудови процесів безпечної розробки BSIMM та SAMM
In this episode, we'll be talking about Amazon's possibility of acquiring Wondery, Airpods Max, Cydia suing Apple, and much more! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/techvein/support
Der Weihnachts-Endspurt! In Folge 37 sprechen die ApfelNerds über die "Chrome is bad"-Diskussion. Außerdem geht um das potenziell aus der Packung verschwindende Anschlusskabel, einiges an frischer Software, die Apple Watch New Year Challenge, iOS 12.5, die Installationsraten von iOS 14, neue Betas, Microsoft Office jetzt mit nativem M1-Support, über die Klage von Cydia gegen Apple, das End-of-Life der Music Memos-App, animierte Album-Cover, M1 vs. Microsoft-ARM, das verlogene Facebook, und über die Suche nach einem neuen Ferrari-CEO, und bekannten Leuten auf der Short List.
A jailbreaker from way back, Today in iOS host Rob Walch joins Ken to talk about the recently launched lawsuit by Cydia against Apple - In a Few Minutes Sponsored this week by RemoteHQ - Go to remotehq.co/minutes and use code "minutes" for three-months free
This week, Cydia wants a piece of Apple's pie, the whole government wants Facebook in pieces, and Disney has a whole lot of new content on the horizon.
This week, Cydia wants a piece of Apple's pie, the whole government wants Facebook in pieces, and Disney has a whole lot of new content on the horizon.
Goldman Sachs analyst Rod Hall has been wrong about Apple for over two-years. So why do I keep talking about him? A look at that, plus Cydia - the App Store before the App Store - is suing Apple for antitrust violations. We'll pay a visit to that story.
La Azotea es un programa dirigido, producido, interpretado, subvencionado y caracterizado por Daniel Atik Sitio Web: http://la.azotea.co Síguenos en: https://twitter.com/LaAzoteaCo https://instagram.com/LaAzoteaCo https://facebook.com/LaAzoteaCo
Noticias tecnologícas del día, leídas por el gordo en el baño. Estados Unidos demanda a Facebook por prácticas anticompetitivas: pide que se desvincule de Instagram y WhatsApp La Fiscal General de Nueva York ha anunciado una demanda antimonopolio contra Facebook. En ella la FTC de Estados Unidos ha alegado que Facebook ha dañado a la competencia al comprar empresas como Instagram y WhatsApp para deshacerse de posibles amenazas. La demanda está especialmente enfocada en la adquisición de Instagram. Con la cual Facebook tenía el objetivo específico de deshacerse de un posible competidor futuro y ganar presencia en móvil. Es justamente lo que desvelaron correos internos de la compañía hace unos meses y que han salido a la luz precisamente a raíz de esta investigación. Entre las cosas que pide ahora la FTC es que el tribunal deshaga las adquisiciones de Instagram y WhatsApp. Es decir, pide que sean empresas independientes. Por otra parte, también se busca que se prohiba a Facebook imponer condiciones anticompetitivas a los desarrolladores de software de terceros. Facebook puede recurrir a esta demanda en las próximas semanas. ¿Cómo hará Estados Unidos esto? Habrá que esperar a ver cómo transpira esta situación. Cydia, la alternativa de la App Store para los iPhone con jailbreak, demanda a Apple por prácticas anticompetitivas Los últimos meses han estado agitados para Apple, enfrentándose a demandas por presunto monopolio en la distribución de apps en iOS así como a investigaciones por parte de reguladores. Una nueva demanda se ha presentado ante la compañí por estas prácticas anticompetitivas. Esta vez viene nada más y nada menos que de la mítica Cydia, la tienda de distribución de apps y repositorios para los iPhone con jailbreak. La demanda alega que si no fuera por el "monopolio ilegal" de Apple sobre la distribución de aplicaciones iOS, los usuarios tendrían otras opciones fuera de la App Store para instalar fácilmente aplicaciones iOS. Hay que tener en cuenta que Cydia se posicionó como una tienda de distribución de apps antes incluso de que Apple presentase la App Store. La demanda está siendo representada por el bufete de abogados que representaron a Samsung en su batalla contra Apple años atrás. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/elgordocircuito/message
Cydia, the 'original iPhone App Store' is suing Apple over antitrust claims; Apple AirPods Max are made in Vietnam, but still by Chinese firms; and attackers breach cybersecurity firm FireEye, steal hacking tools
Los temas fueron: 1. Apple deja de firmar iOS 10.2 http://bit.ly/Adios102 2. Guardar tus SHSH para cuando sea posible hacer upgrade/downgrade de iOS. bit.ly/GuardaSHSH2OnLine 3. Conocer la lista de tweaks compatibles en iOS 10.2. bit.ly/TweaksiOS102 4. Hacer funcionar los tweaks instalando Substrate Fix. bit.ly/Substrate102 5. Bloquear la actualización de iOS 10.2.1 con este perfil. bit.ly/Bloquear102y1021 6. Solucionando los 8 errores más comunes en Cydia Impactor. http://bit.ly/CydiaImpactorFIX 7. Saurik libera Cydia 1.1.28 Beta para Jailbreakers en iOS 10.1.x y 10.2 http://bit.ly/CydiaBeta 8. ¡Llegó, llegó, llegó! Tenemos disponible la herramienta para el Jailbreak en iOS 10.2 http://bit.ly/JB102iPhone6y5s
Vía Applesfera Hoy saltaba la noticia, unos cuantos miles de usuarios con jailbreak en su iPhone han visto como sus datos de acceso a su cuenta Apple han sido robados. Esto ha llevado a que se les hayan hecho cargos sin su consentimiento en sus tarjetas de crédito. Podríamos considerar este robo como uno de los más grandes sufridos por usuarios de iPhone hasta el momento.El Malware, de nombre KeyRaider, prometía ser una alternativa a la App Store oficial y es posible su descarga a través de Cydia. El problema parece estar localizado principalmente en China aunque otros 17 países como Francia, Inglaterra, Rusia o Japón también parecen tener usuarios afectados entre sus filas.
Outubro foi um mês bastante conturbado para o mundo do jailbreak pelo lançamento do Pangu 8: uma ferramenta inacabada, cheia de bugs e sem um Cydia funcional. No podcast de hoje conto um pouco da minha experiência e ouvimos também a opinião do convidado Cauê Fabiano.
Episodio 39 Martes 12 de Febrero de 2012 Leo y Seba de nuevo se juntan para hacer un nuevo episodio de La Manzana Rodeada, esta vez en las lejanas tierras de Luján de Cuyo donde se encuentra la humilde morada de Seba. Hablaron de Apple, android, windows y aviones. Comentando en laboratorio como revivir un iphone 3G del estancamiento de iOS 4.2.1, que tweaks de cydia son los que utilizan en sus equipos y mucho más.
Episodio 36 La manzana pregunta ¿Quién dijo las siguientes frases? Google no es una compañia real. Es un castillo de naipes DRM es el futuro Nuestro producto de mail, Hotmail, es el lider global del mercado No sabía que era un monopolio hasta que me lo dijeron Hemos tenido DRM en Wind ows por años. El formato músical en un iPod es “robado” No tenemos un monopolio. Tenemos cuota de mercado. Hay una diferencia. Mis hijos, en muchos aspectos han sido pobrementes educados como tantos otros niños, pero al menos en una dimensión les he lavado el cerebro: No uses Google, no uses un iPod No hay ninguna posibilidad de que el iPhone obtenga una cuota de mercado significativa. Ninguna. Linux es un cancer que se pega en un sentido de propiedad intelectual a todo lo que toca Voy a enterrar a ese sujeto, lo hice antes y lo haré otra vez. Voy a acabar con Google. Desarrolladores, desarrolladores, desarrolladores, desarrolladores, desarrolladores, desarrolladores, desarrolladores …. Trucos que nos cambiaron la vida 1- Abrir página de Safari iOS en Chrome directamente (vía Bitelia) Abrimos esta página desde Safari. Sí, ésta (de La Manzana Rodeada) que estás leyendo. Copiamos el siguiente código (si no se ve bien, recurrir a la versión web): javascript:location.href=“googlechrome”+location.href.substring(4); A continuación, añadimos esta misma página a favoritos. Ya que estamos, le cambiamos el nombre, que es lo único que os permite cambiar Ahora. Le ponemos “Abrir con Chrome” o lo que prefiramos. Una vez guardada, vamos a los favoritos, pulsamos “Editar” y abrimos el favorito que acabamos de guardar. Si no le hemos cambiado el nombre, lo cambiamos ahora. Borramos la URL del favorito y pegamos el código que hemos copiado antes. Ahora, cuando estemos en una pagina en Safari que queramos ver en Chrome para iOS, simplemente vamos a favoritos, seleccionamos el que hemos creado y, et voila! se abrirá en el navegador de Google. http://www.genbeta.com/movil/abre-en-chrome-para-ios-la-pagina-que-estes-viendo-en-safari 2- Limpieza: Cómo se limpia el smart cover: con una toallita de bebé. 3- Compartir desde el centro de notificaciones (gracias a Alvaro Fresquet @afresquet de Mendoza) En Agustes/Notidicaciones habilitar la opción “Widget compartir” Algo que según recuerdo estaba habilitado por defecto en iOS 6 y luego en 6.0.1 no!. 4- Print de pantalla (Cuántos utilizan esta excelente herramienta?) Botón home + power al mismo tiempo!. 5- No hace falta llegar con el dedo en el teclado para marcar las teclas pegadas al corte del teclado. Aunque están invisibles, te las marca igual. Consultorio Mail: Cristián David Restrepo Hola Genios... Tengo un problema, para mi grande. Resulta que una amiga me paso su iPhone 3GS por que no le quería arrancar, se quedaba en la manzanita, ya que lo dejo mucho tiempo sin cargar y por que se le daño el cargador, yo anterior mente le hice el favor de actualizarlo a la versión de iOS 5.1.1 y le hice el jailbreak para que reconociera la Sim Card ya que le iPhone fue comprado en EE.UU con la empresa AT&T, lo logre liberar y el equipo quedo funcionando bien con el Carrier de Claro (En Colombia), ahora con este problema de el arranque lo logre subiendo la versión del iOS a 6.0.1 y despues le hice el Downgrade con Sn0wbrezze ya que tenia guardado los SHSH de la versión anterior. Ahora después que hice el Jailbreak busque en varias paginas como liberar el iPhone para cualquier carrier y lo primero que encontré fue con SAM, seguí el tutorial pero no logro liberar el iPhone se queda en "Buscando", lo mas curioso es que estoy casi seguro que la vez anterior no utilice SAM, creo que fue otro. ¿Que puedo Hacer?, ¿Puedo revertir lo que ha hecho SAM?, ¿Algun Tweak de Cydia que me libere el iPhone para Cualquier Carrier? Muchas Gracias por su Atencion, espero su Pronta Respuesta.... Saludos desde Colombia Cristian David Restrepo Escuela de Ingeniería en Sistemas ...
Episodio #16 - 1 de Marzo de 2012 Juego: Quién es John Appleseed? Tema Libre: IPad 3 el 7 de Marzo. MacOS ML vs Windows 8 Consutorio: Mail: “Soy Matías Ramos, de Capital Federal, y les escribo para que me orienten al hacer una compra. Soy poseedor de un Ipod Touch 4 desde hace unos meses y ahora que ya lo uso por todos lados, a veces se me complica escuchar podcasts cuando estoy en algún lugar ruidoso (lease casi todos, colectivo, calle, etc...). Quería saber si me pueden recomendar algún tipo de auricular especial (del tipo ese un poco más grande que aisle sonidos) y si saben si se ajustan bien a los dispositivos Apple (o si de hecho hay marca Apple). También estaría bueno saber si se ve afectado el consumo de bateria del Ipod ya que serían auriculares más grandes.. Muchas gracias.” “Ezequiel Posse: Hola Seba y Leo, como andan? Les tengo una consulta respecto al jailbreak en un iPhone 3g que ya tiene hecho el jailbreak, pero hoy dia el teléfono está muuuy lento y no se de que manera lo han hecho al jail ya que el teléfono no es mio y yo no hice el jail. Además, de que no estoy muy en el tema de como volver a hacerlo. Me podrían encaminar un poco? Hasta que version puede hacerse el jail en un 3g, 4.2.1 es la última? Tampoco tengo idea del tema del base band y demas yerbas... Hay algún tutorial para seguir al pie de la letra? Digo como para no mandarme ningún moco.” “Luis Freites: Hola Muchachos ? Finalmente me arriesgue y me compre un Touch 4G pero de 32gb. Y la verdad que estoy muy contento. Por ahora no tengo ningun problema y esta en excelente estado. Sebas: esta comprado en Garbarino y tiene algo menos de 6meses de la compra Mi pregunta es, por en la Manzana no encuentro, la forma de hacerle el JailBreak ! .. estuve investigando algo, pero lo que intente no me funciono. Usando el redsn0w.exe (ver.: 0.9.10b4 ) pero no logro que termine el proceso. Resultado final. no me termina instalando Cydia. Ya hice varias pruebas, pero les pediria si tienen algun instrucctivo (a prueba de novatos) si pueden decirm donde obtenerlo. Desde ya, muchisimas gracias por el Podcast y creo que proximamente, y siguiendo los consejos de Sebas, quizas entre en el mundo Mac tambien .. obvio con alguna PowerPc de esas usadas que hablo hace un par de capitulos atras. Abrazo grande y Gracias por el Podcast. Este excelente. Luis (dde SanMiguel -BAires )” Twitter: “@blacktecno: @lrearte Si todos tus Followers donan U$1 te podrías comprar un iPhone 4s y presumiese lo a @sgaleazzi #UniPhoneParaLeo” “Entrevista a Leo y Sebastian del blog y podcast La Manzana Rodeada… http://www.louesfera.com/2012/02/19/entrevista-leo-sebastian-blog-podcast-la-manzana-rodeada/ gracias a @louesfera por la entrevista!” Página: “GoNz@LiChU: Problemas con appstore y jailbreak utilizó corona con último jailbreak. Consejo comenzar de nuevo!” “Maxi nos comenta las cosas que hace con su iBook.” Laboratorio: La vuelta al Torrent desde Mac, plex ¿Cómo logró la gente de Apple bloqueo su nuevo iPhone 3GS de 8 GB? Ellos sustituyeron a uno de los componentes internos! Pues resulta que los 3GS producidos después de la semana 28 del año 2011 (en algún momento de julio) se realiza con el chip Toshiba en lugar del chip Infineon de baseband. Los síntomas típicos de un chip de baseband dañada son los siguientes: No WiFi No ECID No IMEI No Bluetooth Por favor, toma nota del número de serie de hasta XXX109XXX pueden no ser compatibles con la baseband de IPAD. Consulte el siguiente ejemplo: XX109XX = 1 es el año de 2011 y 09 es la semana 9 de 1 año Si el número de serie es XX931XXX que significa que se produjo en 2009 en la semana 31. Por lo tanto, es seguro que funciona con el baseband del iPad. Aplicaciones free: Seba: MusicBox (cydia) Leo: Plex Resolución Juego: En muchas ocasiones, cuando Apple debe usar un nombre propio para demostrar alguna aplicación elige el nombre “John Appleseed”, se trata de...
Episodio #13 - 20 de enero Tema Libre: Jaiñbreak iOS 5.0 y 5.0.1 A5 Ley SOPA y bloqueos de los proncipales sitios de interner (Cuevana, Wikepedia, etc) Macbook Air, cuatro años adelantados a la competencia. Consultorio: Mauritob_13 nos consulta via twitter que hablemos de la lentitud del ipod touch 4g e iOS5 Laboratorio: Hablemos de Tweaks en Cydia: SBsettings, KillBackgrounds y tetherme. Aplicaciones Free: App iFixit
Episodio 12 - 15 enero 2012. Pregunta (Juego): ¿En qué tres cosas se tuvo que desdecir Steve Jobs a lo largo de su carrera? Tema libre: iKillers, una presentación con temas de la educación ¿Qué conviene comprar? iPhone 4 o 4s. iPad 1, 2 o esperar? Cómo comprarlos en Argentina? Consultorio: @elreykaled: Front Row, se puede recuperar? Apple TV y Air Play. Roman Wilfredo http://mac.softpedia.com/get/System-Utilities/Front-Row-Enabler-for-Lion.shtml; Plex Gonzalichu pide que hablemos de Tweaks de Cydia. Anyta Popycast de Murcia Laboratorio: iPhone 4s sin secretos. Probamos uno y te contamos todo. Aplicaciones free: Temple Run, Lector QR