Podcasts about d mark

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Best podcasts about d mark

Latest podcast episodes about d mark

Le D-to-Day
D-to-Day #34 | Mélanger l'entrepreneuriat & l'humour avec Anthony Vendrame

Le D-to-Day

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 68:07


Cette semaine sur le pod, on reçoit Anthony Vendrame aka FDB. On a eu la chance d'en apprendre d'avantage sur la création de Poches & Fils et l'arrivée de son fameux personnes, François Daigle-Bérubé. Dans l'épisode, Anthony explique sa vision sur la croissance de son entreprise et comment marier l'humour à l'entrepreneuriat de manière profitable !Lien vers Anthony Vendrame : https://www.instagram.com/antho_vendrame/Lien vers le D-to-Day Podcast : https://linktr.ee/dtodaypodcast?utm_source=linktree_profile_share

Auswandern in die Schweiz
Die Schweiz profitiert von einer starken Währung – Deutschland zahlt den Preis für den Euro

Auswandern in die Schweiz

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 11:28


Warum profitiert die Schweiz von einer starken Währung, während Deutschland mit dem Euro zu kämpfen hat? In dieser Folge schauen wir uns an, welche Auswirkungen eine harte Währung auf Wirtschaft, Inflation und Wohlstand hat – und ob Deutschland mit der D-Mark vielleicht besser dran wäre.

Steuerrechtskanzlei LedererLaw
Milliardenschatz D-Mark! Neue Bundesbank Zahlen zum Bargeld!

Steuerrechtskanzlei LedererLaw

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 18, 2025 4:51


Die Deutsche Mark ist längst Geschichte – oder doch nicht? Die Bundesbank hat brandneue Zahlen veröffentlicht – die haben es in sich! Noch immer sind unglaubliche 12,2 Milliarden D-Mark nicht in Euro umgetauscht. Viele Menschen bewahren ihre alten Scheine und Münzen auf. Aber warum? Und wie kannst du dein altes Geld jetzt noch umtauschen? Alle Antworten verrät RA Lederer heute. Sei dein eigener Anwalt mit PepperPapers.de

Thores Tea Time
#215: Kurt Kleinschmidt, Afd-Landesvorsitzender: D-Mark, Russland, Remigration & Björn Höcke

Thores Tea Time

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 9, 2025 120:53


In dieser brisanten Wahlspecial-Folge von Thores Tea Time erwartet euch ein zweistündiges, kontroverses Gespräch mit Kurt Kleinschmidt, dem Landesvorsitzenden der AfD, der mit hoher Wahrscheinlichkeit in den Bundestag einziehen wird. Wir nehmen kein Blatt vor den Mund und sprechen über die großen Streitfragen unserer Zeit: Putin – Kriegsverbrecher oder nicht? Wie kann der Ukraine-Krieg enden? Zurück zur D-Mark – realistisch oder populistisch? Sollen Windkraftanlagen abgerissen werden? Reform der Bundeswehr & Rückkehr zur Wehrpflicht Kernkraft als Zukunft oder Irrweg? Alice Weidel, Björn Höcke und Adolf Hitler Migrationspolitik – radikaler Kurswechsel oder notwendige Reform? Ein Gespräch voller harter Thesen und kritischer Nachfragen. Hört rein und bildet euch eure eigene Meinung!

Wohlstand für Alle
Ep. 284: Die ökonomische Blödheit der AfD

Wohlstand für Alle

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2025 63:35


Die „Alternative für Deutschland“ kombiniert in ihrem Programm zur Bundestagswahl 2025 das Libertäre mit einem exklusiven Nationalismus. Der Staat soll schlanker werden, weshalb die rechtsradikale Partei eine Einhaltung der Schuldenbremse und weitere austeritätspolitische Maßnahmen ebenso einfordert wie die Senkung von Steuern – nicht zuletzt der Unternehmenssteuer. Außerdem spricht sich die AfD dezidiert gegen Erbschaft- und Vermögensteuer aus. Auch der Soli soll für alle abgeschafft werden. Zugleich aber soll Geld in die Familien, um die Geburtenraten zu steigern und letztendlich das Ziel zu erreichen, dass ein Elternteil allein die Familie ernähren kann: was übersetzt bedeutet, dass Frauen zuhause bleiben sollen. Nicht nur aus feministischen Gründen, sondern auch volkswirtschaftlich ist dies ein Desaster, das durch Forderungen nach Remigration noch vergrößert wird. Der Wunsch nach einer autochthonen deutschen „Volksgemeinschaft“ ist auch ökonomischer Irrsinn, der noch dadurch wächst, dass die AfD sogar eine Rückkehr zur D-Mark proklamiert und weiterhin auf Golddeckung und Bitcoin setzt. Mehr dazu von Ole Nymoen und Wolfgang M. Schmitt in der neuen Folge von „Wohlstand für Alle“! Wer Oles Buch bis zum 15. Februar bei Autorenwelt vorbestellt, erhält es signiert zum Erscheinungstermin: https://shop.autorenwelt.de/products/warum-ich-niemals-fur-mein-land-kampfen-wurde-von-ole-nymoen?variant=50295968891205 Unsere Zusatzinhalte könnt ihr bei Apple Podcasts, Steady und Patreon hören. Vielen Dank! Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/de/podcast/wohlstand-f%C3%BCr-alle/id1476402723 Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/oleundwolfgang Steady: https://steadyhq.com/de/oleundwolfgang/about

Studio 9 - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Wo kommen denn immer noch die alten D-Mark her?

Studio 9 - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2025 2:43


Hildebrandt, Kerstin www.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Studio 9

American Conservative University
Vivek G Ramaswamy- A Hundred Heads on Stakes, Peter St Onge, Ph.D., Mark Dice- It's All Part of Their Plan and Alex Jones.

American Conservative University

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 24:14


Vivek G Ramaswamy- A Hundred Heads on Stakes, Peter St Onge, Ph.D., Mark Dice- It's All Part of Their Plan and Alex Jones.   Vivek G Ramaswamy- A Hundred Heads on Stakes Peter St Onge, Ph.D. Study: Each Government Regulator Destroys 158 Jobs Mark Dice- It's All Part of Their Plan Alex Jones Biden White House considering preemptive pardons   Vivek G Ramaswamy Hashem @HashemAllMighty Do you agree with @VivekGRamaswamy ? "If Israel wants to… abandon the myth of a 2-state solution, Israel should go ahead and abandon [it]. The Arab world can absorb Palestinians, just as the Jews absorbed their people from the 22 countries they were kicked out of since 1948.”   Post Peter St Onge, Ph.D. @profstonge Study: Each Government Regulator Destroys 158 Jobs Fire him and you're 157 jobs ahead Beyond the money DOGE saves, it's the many millions of jobs you create by firing government workers.   It's All Part of Their Plan Watch this video at- Mark Dice 1.91M subscribers 214,412 views Dec 6, 2024

TEAM Talk on ESPN Radio 101.7 The TEAM
11/11/24 NM United out of USL Playoffs & Utah A.D. Mark Harlan fined 40K for criticism of refs

TEAM Talk on ESPN Radio 101.7 The TEAM

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2024 10:40


11/11/24 NM United out of USL Playoffs & Utah A.D. Mark Harlan fined 40K for criticism of refs

Matussek!
Matussek!: Deutsche Einheit (Teil 2)

Matussek!

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 53:23


„Birth of a Nation“. Matussek setzt seine Erinnerungen an den Mauerfall fort und plädiert für jenen 9. November 1989 als Tag der Deutschen Einheit. Rückkehr aus dem erdbebengeschädigten San Francisco ins neblige November-Berlin. Das Palasthotel, das runde Bett und die Stasiüberwachung. Schwarzmarkthändler und das Anstehen als Ritual. Blut, Schweiß und Tränen in der Silvesternacht 1989/1990. ZK-Mitglied und Schauspieler Hans-Peter Minetti versucht den Gang in die Neue Zeit. Staatsbürgerkunde und der historische Materialismus. Ein Provinztheater und ein ganzes Land warten auf Godot. Die Ankunft der D-Mark als archaisches Ritual. Wolf Biermanns Comeback. Neusprech und IM Ibrahim Böhme. Mahnwache für Lenin als Wahnmache. Begleitende Lektüre: Matussek, „Palasthotel“, Exil-Verlag.

Filmgeschichten
FG094 - Split (2016)

Filmgeschichten

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2024 49:08


1 Film – 2 Generationen Laura (*1994) und Jürgen (*1971) sprechen in dieser Folge über einen Film aus dem Jahre 2016. Es handelt sich diesmal um einen US-amerikanischen Psychothriller von M. Night Shyamalan, in dem wir einen Entführer sehen, der eine dissoziative Identitätsstörung hat und aus über 20 verschiedenen Persönlichkeiten besteht. Natürlich kann es sich dabei nur um den als Nachfolger von Unbreakable geltenden Film mit dem Titel SPLIT handeln... In Folge 95 schauen wir endlich mal einen deutschen Film an, in dem wir 100.000 D-Mark nachlaufen... Feedback wie immer an filmgeschichten@hysterika.de Folge direkt herunterladen

SWR2 Archivradio - Geschichte in Originaltönen
Anschnallpflicht wird eingeführt – Gurtmuffel zahlen 40 Mark | 1.8.1984

SWR2 Archivradio - Geschichte in Originaltönen

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 7:27


Seit sich Autofahrer und -fahrerinnen anschnallen, ist die Zahl der Verkehrstoten deutlich zurückgegangen. Dieser Trend hat schon in den 1970er Jahren begonnen, als viele die Gurte freiwillig anlegten. Aber mit der Einführung der Anschnallpflicht am 1. August 1984 gingen die Opferzahlen noch einmal zurück. Wer von diesem Tag an unangeschnallt erwischt wurde, musste mit einem Bußgeld von 40 D-Mark rechnen. Trotzdem gab es am ersten Tag noch etliche Gurtmuffel. Drei Wochen nach der Einführung zog das Stuttgarter Innenministerium eine erste Bilanz. Fazit: Im Großen und Ganzen ist das Anschnallen akzeptiert, aber vor allem im innerstädtischen Verkehr hapert es noch hier und dort.

SchönerDenken
Folge 1302: ZWEI ZU EINS - Volkseigenes Vermögen

SchönerDenken

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2024 17:58


Eine deutsche Komödie? Eine deutsch-deutsche Komödie? Das rief schon eine Menge Vorurteile auf den Plan. Aber erstens: Sandra Hüller! Und zweitens: Unser Lieblingskino CAPITOL hat mit diesem Film wieder neu eröffnet! Und es hat sich gelohnt: Es ist eine Heist-Komödie, die auf wahren Ereignissen beruht. In einer Zwischenzeit der deutschen Geschichte, kurz nachdem die D-Mark als Zahlungsmittel ausgegeben wurde – im Wechselkurs 2:1 (daher der Filmtitel), entdecken einige DDR-Bürger in Halberstadt, dass in einer riesigen Bunkeranlage das komplette Scheingeld der DDR eingelagert wurde. Und noch drei Tage bleiben, um das Geld zu tauschen ...Regisseurin Natja Brunckhorst, die auch das Drehbuch geschrieben hat, erzählt ganz leichtfüßig eine Geschichte, in der es aber dann doch nicht nur um plötzlichen Reichtum geht, um Gier und Neid. Es geht auch um die Illusion des Sozialismus und die Illusion des Kapitalismus, um Familie und darum, wie man seine Würde und sich selbst nicht verliert, wenn die Geschichte einem den Boden unter den Füßen wegzieht. Wir haben erst viel gelacht, dann nachgedacht. Im Podcast diskutieren wir über großartige Schauspieler, starke Songs, Verfolgungsjagden, über den niedlichen Kapitalismus von 1990, über unseren Westblick und offene Baustellen. Und wir zählen DDR-Geld, denn Regisseurin Natja Brunckhorst verteilte nach dem Film das Requisitengeld an die Zuschauer, rückwirkendes Begrüßungsgeld

Kinocast | Der Podcast über Kinofilme, Sneak Preview, Filme, Serien, Heimkino, Streaming, Games, Trailer, News und mehr

"Zwei zu Eins" hieß es in der Sneak Preview der Innenstadtkinos Stuttgart in der vergangenen Woche. Das ist kein Fußballergebnis, sondern eine deutsche Komodie über die Wirren der Nachwendezeit, Freundschaften, unerwarteten Reichtung, Überfallplanungen, Investitionen und vieles mehr. Die deutsche Komödie "Spieleabend" mit vielen namhaften deutschen Schauspielern feierte auf Netlix seine Premiere - Hört unsere Sendung wie uns beide Filme gefallen haben. Die Neustarts der Woche und die offiziellen Stuttgarter Kinocharts haben wir auch für euch. Viel Spaß! Inhalt des Hauptfilms: Maren (Sandra Hüller), Robert (Max Riemelt) und Volker (Ronald Zehrfeld) kennen sich seit ihrer Kindheit und sind gemeinsam im ostdeutschen Halberstadt aufgewachsen. Im Jahr 1990 wird aus der BRD und der DDR allerdings auch auf der Geld-Ebene ein Land und so sind sie wie alle Ost-Bürger im Juli dazu angehalten, ihre alte Währung in neue D-Mark einzutauschen. Wie es der Zufall will, machen die drei in einem verlassenen Schacht unweit ihres Zuhauses allerdings eine unglaubliche Entdeckung: Hier wurden Millionen Ostmark abgeladen, die bald ihre Gültigkeit verlieren. Doch sie erkennen: Noch lässt der Geldberg sich umtauschen. Also klauen sie den Papiergeld-Schatz und entwickeln mit ihren Nachbarn und Bekannten ein System, um vor Ablauf der Umtausch-Frist mit dem Fund so viel Kohle wie möglich zu machen. Rucksackweise beginnen sie, die Scheine davonzutragen. Deutscher Titel: Zwei zu Eins Internationaler Titel: Two to One Regie: Natja Brunckhorst Drehbuch: Natja Brunckhorst DarstellerInnen: Sandra Hüller, Max Riemelt, Ronald Zehrfeld, Ursula Werner, Peter Kurth, Martin Brambach, Kathrin Wehlisch, Olli Dittrich, Lotte Shirin Keiling, Tom Keune, David Bredin, Uwe Preuss Deutscher Kinostart: 25.07.2024 Produktion/Verleih: XVerleih Webseite: www.x-

rundfunk 17
Bin ich jetzt Swiftie? – #rundfunk17 Folge 324

rundfunk 17

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 75:39


Taylor Swift ist in Deutschland und selbst Internetstar anredo wird zum Swiftie. BastiMasti versteht den Hype nicht und will nachvollziehen, wieso die Tour des Mega-Stars das ganze Land in den Ausnahmezustand treibt. Sie hat's schon drauf. Taylor Swift hilft anredo wieder zum Internetstar-Titel. Ein virales Video seines engelsgleichen Gesangs macht den Ex-X-Star endlich wieder zum TikTok-Millionär. Jetzt ist er endgültig Swiftie. Und das, obwohl er vorher gar nicht so großer Fan war. In dieser Folge #rundfunk17 berichtet er BastiMasti von seinem Konzerterlebnis in Reihe 28. Wie so oft ist er mal wieder derbe unseriös in den Ticketverkauf gerutscht und hat irgendeinem großen Swiftie aus Klasse 7c die Eintrittskarte weggekauft. Was man nicht alles tut für "The Eras" - was auch immer das genau ist. Neu-Swiftie @anredo hat sich vorab weder über die Musik, noch über das korrekte Outfit informiert und blamierte sich bereits auf dem Parkplatz in Gelsenkirchen mit seinem nicht vorhandenen Taylor-Wissen. Wie gut, dass die Podcast-Community ihm ein umfangreiches Onboarding bereitgestellt hat. Was dann folgt, ist ein wunderbarer Podcast-Erlebnisbericht zum Konzert in der sogenannten N2, der den Hype um Taylor Swift bis ins kleinste Detail beleuchtet. Schließlich wusste Basti nicht einmal, dass Taylor und Lana Del Rey nicht dieselbe Person sind. In feinstem Feedback-Sandwich erörtert anredo, was ihm gut gefiel und wo noch Luft nach oben ist: Wie bewertet Deutschlands ehrlichster Konzert-Kritiker die Stimmung in Swiftkirchen, die Soundqualität, Essen & Trinken und Taylors Style? Besonders angetan sind BastiMasti und anredo von den vielen unterstützenden Eltern und Boyfriends der meist jungen Frauen auf Schalke. Einzig der Bauer im pinken Shirt fällt aus dem Raster. Das war jedoch (neben der veganen Currywurst) fast der einzige Fauxpas in der Arena. Basti nutzte N3, um abends durch die leeren Gassen von Darmstadt zu flanieren. Er berichtet von einer unangenehmen Situation an der Tür des berühmt-berüchtigten "Schlosskellers". Hier fand die langweilige Party der Bundesrepublik statt, für die "Marc, das Wunderkind" beinah 40 D-Mark hingeblättert hätte. Die beiden Star-Moderatoren des Erfolgs-Podcasts rundfunk 17 sind sich einig, dass frühere Feierei inkl. Daydrinking unbedingt wieder salonfähig gemacht werden müssen. anredo geht mit gutem Beispiel voran und erzählt nächste Woche vom CSD in Köln. Werbung: Das Erfolgs-Kartenspiel "Trash TV - Promis, Pannen, Peinlichkeiten" könnt ihr hier kaufen.* *) Dieser Link ist ein sogenannter Ref-ID-Links. Wenn man über diesen Link etwas kauft, verdienen wir daran eine kleine Provision, ohne dass für euch Mehrkosten entstehen.

Akte Rheinland
Getötet für 1937 D-Mark: Raubmord in einer Eitorfer Spielhalle

Akte Rheinland

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2024 28:51


Als die Mitarbeiterin einer Spielhalle in Eitorf am späten Nachmittag des 7. August 2001 zu ihrem Arbeitsplatz kommt, um ihre Kollegin abzulösen, wundert sie sich über die abgesperrte Tür. Sie schließt auf, tritt ein - und bekommt es mit der Angst zu tun: Der Boden ist voller Blut. Die Frau folgt der Blutspur bis zur Toilette. Was sie dort sieht, wird sie nie mehr vergessen: Die Kollegin kniet blutüberströmt vor der Toilette - sie ist tot. Getötet wurde sie, wie sich herausstellt, für eine Beute von nicht einmal 2000 Euro. Feedback, Themenvorschläge und Fragen an podcast@ga.de oder via Instagram-DM an @akterheinland.

Schachgeflüster
Freitagabends in der Krone | Schachgedichte von & mit Martin Hahn #34

Schachgeflüster

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2024 1:58


In der neuesten Episode des Schachgeflüster Podcast nimmt uns Schachdichter Martin Hahn mit auf eine nostalgische Reise zurück in die frühen 1990er Jahre eines Schachclubs. Sein Gedicht 'Freitagabends in der Krone' ist nicht nur eine Hommage an die Schachgemeinschaft, sondern auch ein liebevoller Rückblick auf eine Zeit, die vielen von uns in Erinnerung geblieben ist. Man stelle sich vor, wie es war, in einem Schachclub zu sitzen, ohne die Ablenkungen von Smartphones. Keine ständige Erreichbarkeit, kein Geräusch - nur das Murmeln der Spieler, die in ihre Partien vertieft sind. Besonders eindrucksvoll sind die Charaktere, die Martin in seinem Gedicht lebendig werden lässt. Da ist Bruno, der 17 Runden Blitzschach spielt, während sein Gegner Nico an einem Tee nippt. Oder Eberhard, dessen Zigarrenstummel nie ganz ausgeraucht zu sein scheinen und der beständig seinen Rauch in den Raum bläst. Auch die kleinen Details, die Martin einfließen lässt, tragen zur Authentizität bei. Wer erinnert sich nicht an die Bluna, die früher Jahren ein beliebtes Getränk war? Oder an die D-Mark, die damals noch in unseren Geldbörsen klimperte? Diese Elemente machen das Gedicht zu einer kleinen Zeitreise. Martin Hahn spricht mit seinem Gedicht nicht nur Schachliebhaber an, sondern auch all jene, die sich gerne an vergangene Zeiten erinnern. Sein Gedicht ist eine Einladung, innezuhalten und die kleinen, kostbaren Momente des Lebens zu genießen. Folge direkt herunterladen ℹ Die beten Schachmaterialien im Chess Tigers Online Shop: Chess Tigers Shop

DSCHINNS
Kapitel 1: Hüseyin

DSCHINNS

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 24, 2024 19:04


Kapitel 1 – Hüseyin: Es ist 1999: Das Millennium steht vor der Tür. Fast dreißig Jahre hat Hüseyin Yılmaz in Deutschland schwer geschuftet. Nie war er sich zu schade für die Arbeit, die kein Deutscher machen wollte. Jetzt will sich Hüseyin seinen Traum erfüllen: eine Eigentumswohnung, hier in Istanbul. Deutschland, dieses kalte, herzlose Land endlich verlassen. Da wird seine Brust eng. Ein Schmerz. Eine Stimme aus dem Off, sein Dschinn, umkreist ihn, spricht zu ihm und gemeinsam rekapitulieren sie sein Leben. Diese Stimme erzählt uns in den folgenden Kapiteln das komplexe Porträt einer Familie, die von Geheimnissen und Schweigen zerrissen wird. Basierend auf einer Theaterfassung von Selen Kara. Mit Vedat Erincin (Hüseyin), Şiir Eloğlu (Dschinn), Aysima Ergün (Sevda) und Bettina Stucky (Halime). Komposition: Schneider TM. Technische Realisation: Christian Alpen, Sebastian Ohm und Dominik Wegmann. Regieassistenz: Leo Schenkel. Hörspieleinrichtung und Regie: Florian Fischer. Dramaturgie: Michael Becker. Produktion: NDR 2024. Unser Tipp aus der ARD Mediathek: Songs of Gastarbeiter: Liebe, D-Mark und Tod. https://1.ard.de/Songs_of_Gastarbeiter

Verurteilt! Der Gerichtspodcast
Verurteilt! (111): Millionen-Coup bei der Bundesbank

Verurteilt! Der Gerichtspodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 63:19


Als es noch die D-Mark gab und die Bundesbank noch in Geldöfen kaputtes und unbrauchbares Geld verbrannte, witterten einige Geldbearbeiter ihre Chance zum schnellen Reichtum. Sie stecken Scheine ein, statt sie zu verbrennen. Bei einer Kontrollzählung fielen die Betrügereien nach Jahren auf. Die Bundesbank suchte die Gelddiebe in den eigenen Reihen, Polizei und Staatsanwaltschaft ermittelten. Ende 1979 mussten sich schließlich drei mutmaßliche Täter vorm Landgericht Frankfurt verantworten. Die Anklage lautete auf gemeinschaftlichen Diebstahl von mehreren Millionen D-Mark.

Bohniger Wachmacher
#36 Solo-Abenteuer im Wald

Bohniger Wachmacher

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2024 31:58


Gumo mit Dax und Moritz! Heute mit Neuigkeiten von Dax' bestem Freund Thom Yorke. Bei Moritz geht es ruhiger zu, nur die Kaffeemaschine macht mit einem Blinklicht Stress. Die BoWa-Community wächst derweil über sich hinaus: Ein fantastischer Urlaubstipp in Bottrop von Maike und neues vom Mapmakers Forrest Männer-Retreat dank Hörer Ulrich. Songs of Gastarbeiter: Liebe, D-Mark und Tod glaciære - Take some time (to show some love) --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/bohnigerwachmacher/message

Le D-to-Day
D-to-Day #27 | L'univers entrepreneurial et marketing de Béatrice Vallière

Le D-to-Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2024 52:54


Liens vers les invités : https://www.instagram.com/vitaminebmarketing/https://www.vitaminebmarketing.com Lien vers le DéMark :https://linktr.ee/ledemark

Le D-to-Day
D-to-Day #26 | Une nouvelle identité pour Ashton en collaboration avec lg2

Le D-to-Day

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2024 67:00


Liens vers les invités : https://ashtonrestaurants.ca/https://lg2.com/ Lien vers le DéMark :https://linktr.ee/ledemark

Verurteilt! Der Gerichtspodcast
Verurteilt! (108): Klaus will in den Knast

Verurteilt! Der Gerichtspodcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 1, 2024 58:32


1998 beschließt Klaus N. eine Bank zu überfallen. Am 20. November betritt er in Bad Homburg bei Frankfurt die Schalterhalle einer Filiale und erbeutet 12 000 D-Mark. Den Angestellten gelingt es auf dem Weg in den Tresor, den Alarm auszulösen. Doch noch bevor die Polizei in der Bank angekommen ist, stellt sich Klaus N. Im Frühsommer 1999 steht er in Frankfurt vor dem Landgericht. Am Ende erkennt das Gericht auf Nötigung. Und findet auch eine kuriose Antwort darauf, warum Klaus N. eine Bank überfallen und sich anschließend sofort gestellt hat.

Le D-to-Day
D-to-Day #25 | L'univers entrepreneurial de Cécile Dufour de Viva

Le D-to-Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 50:11


Lien vers l'invité : https://cliniqueviva.com/?gad_source=1&gclid=Cj0KCQjw8pKxBhD_ARIsAPrG45nGeIcMIchxk7qqPwKZM-k0DDIyKMswRrU5MJGhRq0ttQlYvPBFo7gaAsNcEALw_wcBLien vers le DéMark : https://linktr.ee/ledemark

Le D-to-Day
D-TO-DAY #24 | Le marketing d'influence et plus encore avec Pizza Salvatoré

Le D-to-Day

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 5, 2024 62:00


Lien vers Pizza Salvatore : https://salvatore.com/fr/Instagram de Pizza Salvatoré : https://www.instagram.com/pizza_salvatore/Lien vers le DéMark : https://linktr.ee/ledemark?utm_source=linktree_profile_share<sid=bac47e28-b809-4307-885a-e55a5a3050c4

Stories of History
Damals genau heute Teil 1 - #1 Die DDR bekommt die D-Mark

Stories of History

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2024 9:46


Die Einführung der D-Mark war für die Bürger der ehemaligen DDR ein einschneidendes Erlebnis. Nun konnten sie sich Dinge im Westen kaufen, die für sie bis dahin unerreichbar waren. Doch in welchem Verhältnis Ostmark in Westmark getauscht werden sollten, darüber gab es Streit, wie eine Erklärung der Staatsbank der DDR vom 2. April 1990 belegt. Damals genau heute ist ein FYEO Original der dpa Gehostet von Katharina Meyer Redaktion: Annette Meinke & Ronny Thorau Produziert von Isabel Lübbert-Rein Gesamtleitung FYEO: Benjamin Risom, Luca Hirschfeld und Tristan Lehmann

So techt Deutschland
Ismet Koyun - vom Einwanderer zum "anatolischen Elon Musk"

So techt Deutschland

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 27, 2024 29:09


In den Achtzigern reist Ismet Koyun mit 20 D-Mark in der Tasche als türkischer Einwanderer nach Deutschland. Heute leitet er mit Kobil einen Weltmarktführer für Sicherheitslösungen und nennt sich selbst "anatolischer Elon Musk". Deutschland brauche mutige Leute, die bereit sind, Risiken einzugehen und neue Wege zu beschreiten, erzählt er in der neuen Folge von "So techt Deutschland". Koyun kritisiert die Zögerlichkeit im deutschen Innovationsökosystem und plädiert für eine Kultur, die Unternehmertum und kreative Lösungsansätze fördert.Ein Schlüsselprojekt, die All-In-One-App, illustriert seine Vision einer Plattform, die nicht nur den direkten Kontakt zwischen Herstellern und Kunden stärkt, sondern auch sichere und einfache Handhabung für tägliche Bedürfnisse von Finanztransaktionen bis zu Stadtbürokratie bietet. In Istanbul hat die App bereits mit fünf Millionen Nutzer. In Deutschland soll sie demnächst in Worms starten und kommunale Verwaltungsdienstleistungen, das gesellschaftliche Leben und unternehmerische Angebote digital zusammenbringen.Koyun ist überzeugt, dass Deutschland das Potenzial hat, an der Spitze der technologischen Entwicklung zu stehen, fordert jedoch ein entschlossenes Umdenken bei Digitalisierung und dem Einsatz neuer Technologien. "Wir müssen von den alten Technologien loslassen und mutig in die Zukunft blicken", macht er seine Kritik deutlich. Seinen Optimismus habe er aber nicht verloren: "Ich liebe dieses Land und glaube an das deutsche Ingenieurwesen", bekräftigt Koyun. Für ihn steht fest: Mit dem richtigen Mindset und einer offenen Einstellung gegenüber Innovationen kann Deutschland seine Position im globalen Technologiewettbewerb entscheidend verbessern.Wie das funktionieren kann und wie Isemt Koyun die Zukunft der digitalen Verwaltung sieht, erzählt er in der neuen Folge von "So techt Deutschland."Alle Rabattcodes und Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier: https://linktr.ee/sotechtdeutschlandSie haben Fragen für Frauke Holzmeier und Andreas Laukat? Dann schreiben Sie eine E-Mail an sotechtdeutschland@ntv.de.Unsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://datenschutz.ad-alliance.de/podcast.htmlUnsere allgemeinen Datenschutzrichtlinien finden Sie unter https://art19.com/privacy. Die Datenschutzrichtlinien für Kalifornien sind unter https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info abrufbar.

Inside Wirtschaft - Der Podcast mit Manuel Koch | Börse und Wirtschaft im Blick
#1044 Inside Wirtschaft - Robert Halver (Baader Bank): "Der digitale Euro ist die Zukunft und wird kommen"

Inside Wirtschaft - Der Podcast mit Manuel Koch | Börse und Wirtschaft im Blick

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2024 7:43


Der Euro feiert ein Jubiläum: 25 Jahre! Jetzt werden Sie vielleicht denken, wieso das denn!? Der kam doch erst am 1.1.2002. Das stimmt - denn da kam das Bargeld. 1999 wurde der Euro allerdings schon als Buchgeld eingeführt. Hat sich die Gemeinschaftswährung bewährt oder alles nur teurer gemacht? „Ich bin ein Kind der D-Mark. Habe die auch geschätzt, aber man hat sich auch schnell an den Euro gewöhnt. Eine europäische Einigung ist wichtig, um gegen China und Amerika mitzuhalten. Das hat man über die Währung zuerst gemacht”, sagt Robert Halver. "Natürlich ist man mit viel Euphorie gestartet, aber die deutschen Stabilitätskriterien konnte man nicht auf den Euro-Raum übertragen. Das wurde massiv aufgeweicht. Aber wenn Deutschland alleine dastünde, wäre es schwierig. Jetzt ist der digitale Euro die Zukunft und wird kommen", so der Experte der Baader Bank. Alle Details im Interview von Inside Wirtschaft-Chefredakteur Manuel Koch an der Frankfurter Börse auf https://inside-wirtschaft.de

German Podcast
News in Slow German - #393 - German Grammar, News and Expressions

German Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 8:29


Wir beginnen den ersten Teil unseres Programms mit einer Diskussion über einige aktuelle Ereignisse. Als Erstes sprechen wir über die Vorwahlen in den USA, die in dieser Woche begonnen haben. Die ersten Ergebnisse sind nicht überraschend. Danach sprechen wir über die Präsidentschaftswahlen in Taiwan, die am vergangenen Samstag stattfanden. Wir werden das Ergebnis dieser Wahl und die damit verbundenen möglichen Veränderungen diskutieren. Unsere heutige Diskussion zum Thema Wissenschaft und Technologie ist einer Studie gewidmet, die Nagetiere als Modell für menschliche Liebesbeziehungen verwendet. Und zum Schluss sprechen wir über ein interessantes Phänomen – die zunehmende Beliebtheit nicht-englischsprachiger Songs in den USA. Weiter geht es mit dem zweiten Teil unseres Programms, „Trending in Germany“. Wir werden über den Tod von Franz Beckenbauer sprechen, der am 7. Januar im Alter von 78 Jahren gestorben ist. „Der Kaiser“ war einer der größten Fußballer aller Zeiten. Außerdem sprechen wir darüber, dass der Euro vor mehr als 20 Jahren die D-Mark als Währung in Deutschland abgelöst hat. Aber obwohl die D-Mark ungültig ist, wurden Milliarden D-Mark bis heute noch immer nicht umgetauscht. Wir sprechen darüber, warum viele Deutsche an alten und ungültigen Geldscheinen und Münzen festhalten. Donald Trump gewinnt die Vorwahlen der Republikaner in Iowa Taiwan wählt China-Kritiker zum Präsidenten Wissenschaftler nutzen Nagetiere als Modell für Partnerbeziehungen unter Menschen Wachsende Popularität nicht-englischsprachiger Songs in den USA im Jahr 2023 Der Kaiser ist tot 12 Milliarden D-Mark immer noch nicht umgetauscht

News in Slow German
News in Slow German - #393 - German Grammar, News and Expressions

News in Slow German

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 18, 2024 8:29


Wir beginnen den ersten Teil unseres Programms mit einer Diskussion über einige aktuelle Ereignisse. Als Erstes sprechen wir über die Vorwahlen in den USA, die in dieser Woche begonnen haben. Die ersten Ergebnisse sind nicht überraschend. Danach sprechen wir über die Präsidentschaftswahlen in Taiwan, die am vergangenen Samstag stattfanden. Wir werden das Ergebnis dieser Wahl und die damit verbundenen möglichen Veränderungen diskutieren. Unsere heutige Diskussion zum Thema Wissenschaft und Technologie ist einer Studie gewidmet, die Nagetiere als Modell für menschliche Liebesbeziehungen verwendet. Und zum Schluss sprechen wir über ein interessantes Phänomen – die zunehmende Beliebtheit nicht-englischsprachiger Songs in den USA. Weiter geht es mit dem zweiten Teil unseres Programms, „Trending in Germany“. Wir werden über den Tod von Franz Beckenbauer sprechen, der am 7. Januar im Alter von 78 Jahren gestorben ist. „Der Kaiser“ war einer der größten Fußballer aller Zeiten. Außerdem sprechen wir darüber, dass der Euro vor mehr als 20 Jahren die D-Mark als Währung in Deutschland abgelöst hat. Aber obwohl die D-Mark ungültig ist, wurden Milliarden D-Mark bis heute noch immer nicht umgetauscht. Wir sprechen darüber, warum viele Deutsche an alten und ungültigen Geldscheinen und Münzen festhalten. Donald Trump gewinnt die Vorwahlen der Republikaner in Iowa Taiwan wählt China-Kritiker zum Präsidenten Wissenschaftler nutzen Nagetiere als Modell für Partnerbeziehungen unter Menschen Wachsende Popularität nicht-englischsprachiger Songs in den USA im Jahr 2023 Der Kaiser ist tot 12 Milliarden D-Mark immer noch nicht umgetauscht

FohlenPodcast
Histörchen #26 - Schuhe,Töppen und andere Schlappen mit Opa und Hennes

FohlenPodcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 19, 2023 24:55


Die neue Folge des „Histörchen“ ist ein Podcast der vielen kleinen Geschichten. Geschichten, die alle eine Gemeinsamkeit haben: Sie drehen sich um Fußballschuhe. Um Töppen. Oder auch: Schlappen. Da wäre zum Beispiel die Geschichte von Tomáš Čvančara. Dem tschechischen Nationalspieler war beim jüngsten 4:0 im Heimspiel gegen den VfL Wolfsburg sein Schuh kaputt gegangen. Der 23-Jährige wollte daher sein „Arbeitswerkzeug“ wechseln, fand jedoch keinen geeigneten Zeitpunkt. So spielte er zunächst mit dem lädierten Schuh weiter – und erzielte prompt damit das 1:0. Unvergessen ist natürlich auch die Geschichte von Arie van Lents versteigerten Glücksschuhen. Borussias damaliger Stürmer kämpfte in der Saison 2001/02 mit einer langen Torflaute, 103 Tage lang hatte er am Bökelberg nicht mehr getroffen. Im Februar traf der Niederländer dann im Derby gegen Köln gleich dreifach. Dabei trug er Schuhe, die er eigentlich einige Monate zuvor bei einer Auktion versteigert hatte - 855 D-Mark waren dabei für den guten Zweck zusammengekommen. Der Käufer sendete die Schuhe jedoch vor dem Derby zurück an den Niederländer und verhalf – wenn auch indirekt – van Lent damit zu einem Hattrick und den Fohlen zu einem klaren Derbysieg (4:0). „Und natürlich hat er die Schuhe dann nicht wieder zurückgeschickt, sondern hat sie bis Saisonende gespielt und hat dann auch nochmal drei Tore darin gemacht“, erzählt Matthias Rech, FohlenEcho-Redakteur und Bereichsleiter FohlenWelt. Welche besonderen Schuhe von (ehemaligen) Borussia-Spielern aktuell in Borussias interaktivem Vereinsmuseum, der FohlenWelt, ausgestellt sind – kleiner Spoiler: Die Schuhe von Günter Netzer, mit denen er im DFB-Pokalfinale 1973 nach seiner legendären Selbsteinwechslung den Siegtreffer erzielte (Foto), sind ebenso dabei wie die Schuhe Igor de Camargos, mit denen er im Relegationshinspiel 2011 gegen den VfL Bochum das 1:0 erzielte. Welche weiteren Schuh-Geschichten legendär sind und wieso Trainer Hennes Weisweiler, wie Knippi mit einem Augenzwinkern sagt, „gut auch als Schuhhandelsvertreter hätte weiterarbeiten können“, erfahrt ihr in der neuen Ausgabe des „FohlenPodcast – Histörchen“. Hört jetzt rein!

Keine Angst vor Hits
Derya Yildirim & Grup Şimşek – BAL

Keine Angst vor Hits

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 10:58


Mit der Bağlama kann der gemeine Indie-Rock Fan vor einigen Jahren noch nicht besonders viel anfangen. Bands wie Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek oder die niederländische Band Altin Gün haben die traditionelle Langhalslaute und türkischsprachige Musik mittlerweile aber wieder populär gemacht. Hier entlang geht's zu den Links unserer Werbepartner. Film-Empfehlung: Aşk, Mark ve Ölüm – Liebe, D-Mark und Tod >> Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/musik/popfilter-derya-yildirim-grup-simsek-bal

Podcasts – detektor.fm
Popfilter – Der Song des Tages | Derya Yildirim & Grup Şimşek – BAL

Podcasts – detektor.fm

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2023 10:58


Mit der Bağlama kann der gemeine Indie-Rock Fan vor einigen Jahren noch nicht besonders viel anfangen. Bands wie Derya Yıldırım & Grup Şimşek oder die niederländische Band Altin Gün haben die traditionelle Langhalslaute und türkischsprachige Musik mittlerweile aber wieder populär gemacht. Hier entlang geht's zu den Links unserer Werbepartner. Film-Empfehlung: Aşk, Mark ve Ölüm – Liebe, D-Mark und Tod >> Artikel zum Nachlesen: https://detektor.fm/musik/popfilter-derya-yildirim-grup-simsek-bal

Sunset Club
#16 – Der Fernseher saugt nicht richtig!

Sunset Club

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 53:02


Manchmal muss man sich seinem eigenen Alman stellen. Joko neigt etwa dazu, bei Produktbeschwerden ganz oben ins Organigramm einzusteigen: Kundenservice? Pfff. Ich möchte bitte den CEO sprechen! Mein Fernseher saugt nicht richtig! Zum Glück hat diese Piefigkeit auch ein Ventil: Die Faszination für die Entgleisung. Gehen wir zurück zu einem Abend im Jahr 1985, als Freddy Mercury in München Vollgas gegeben hat. Der Preis? Ein Kater, sicher, aber auch: 82.500 D-Mark – exlusive der Austern, einer privat gecharterten Boing und einem legendären Videodreh. Joko Cornelius Winterscheidt möchte jedenfalls genau diese Rechnung ersteigern. Richtig, für eine Rechnung bezahlen! Is this the real life? Is this just fantasy? Oder ist das nicht schon wieder sehr deutsch? Beruhigend zu wissen: Die Rechnung war so korrekt, der Manager hat hinterher persönlich die leeren Flaschen gezählt: 218 x Roederer Cristal à 0,75 außerdem 88 Magnum-Flaschen sowie eine Dom Perignon. Und alle Almans, denen das zu exzessiv ist, können Freddy Mercury immer noch bei Madame Tussauds treffen. Sophie ist dann eventuell auch da. Du möchtest mehr über unsere Werbepartner erfahren? Hier findest du alle Infos & Rabatte: https://linktr.ee/sunset_club

Alan Dorve presents Reflections Radio
Reflections Radio 023 | From Ibiza, Guest Mix by Sal Benanti & D-Mark aka LOTC

Alan Dorve presents Reflections Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 31, 2023 119:30


Like every month, for 2 hours the best worldwide sounds of the electronic scene will impact your soul. Compiled and Mixed by Alan Dorve. - I hope you all had a fantastic month of august, for those who could! I was lucky to spend some days of holidays at Ibiza, well-deserved, with my family and friends. I salute you from here! From Port des Torrent I bring you this month's show, along with my guests of this month my dear friends and artists settled down in the island, Sal Benanti and D-Mark with his a.k.a. Lord Of The Club for the show. Both together will take the controls here at Reflections Radio on the 2nd. hour. I hope you enjoy it all as much as we enjoyed it here making the show! Big hugs from Ibiza to everyone! - More info: www.alandorve.com - 00. Intro Reflections Radio 01. Sensetive5 – Heartbeat (Extended Mix) 02. Nicolas Soria – Puchaki 03. Keyano – Una Hora (Holter & Mogyoro Extended Remix) 04. Viktop – Requiem For Tudor 05. Lucas Perdomo – The Endless Journey (Original Mix) 06. Paul (AR) & EANP – Insane 07. Anthony Arco, Alan Dorve – Kauko (Original Mix) 08. Rafael Cerato – Glory (feat Far & High) 09. Fatum – U2C 10. Eelke Kleijn – Time Machine (Extended Mix) 11. Quivver & Dave Seaman – Liquid Nights 12. Eddy Tango – Enchanted Forest 13. ANUQRAM – Don’t Stop (Extended Mix) 14. Depeche Mode – Wagging Tongue (Edu Imbernon & Clemente ‘Imbermind’ Vision) Guest Mix by Sal Benanti & D-Mark pres. LOTC 15. Brotech - Safari 16. Emanuele Esposito & Gianni Romano feat. Helen Tesfazghi - It's Not Right 17. Arodes & Martim Rola - Luci 18. Band & Dos - La Montaña 19. Sal Benanti - ID 20. LevyM feat. Emmanuel Jal, Nyaruach & Benjy - Guaja (N-You-Up Freaky Dub) 21. Norty Cotto - La Critica 22. Mr Smith & Dr Packer - La Serenissima (Dr Packer’s Retro 90’s Extended Mix) 23. Jason Rivas & Elsa Del Mar - Amanecer De Ibiza 2K23 24. Anahit Vardanyan - Be a Human 25. Nora En Pure - Sycamore 26. Thage - Angel Dust 27. Ginchy - In My Heart 28. Nora En Pure - Prophets Of Hope 29. Just Luke feat. KARRA - DIPLO 30. Rui Da Silva feat. Cassandra - Touch Me (LOTC Live Remake) 31. Freejak & Capella - U Got 2 Know

Little Evil - Der True-Crime Podcast mit Schuss
#74 der Manager & Soko Dagobert

Little Evil - Der True-Crime Podcast mit Schuss

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 16, 2023 66:55


Triggerwarnung: in unserem zweiten Fall geht es heute um Depressionen und Suizidgedanken. Fall 1: Als der Bankleiter Dan Short verschwindet und die Bankfiliale überfallen wird, stellt sich schnell die Frage: Hat Short etwas damit zu tun oder ist er Opfer von Verbrechern geworden? Die Klärung des Falles sollte sich als absolutes Glück und forensisches Wunder herausstellen. Fall 2: Arno Funke ist verschuldet und schwerst depressiv. Da er keinen Lebenssinn mehr sieht, nimmt er sich einen Bombenanschlag auf das Kaufhaus KaDeWe vor und erbeutet, für ihn überraschend, eine Summe in Höhe von 500.000 D-Mark. Als das Geld aufgebraucht ist, will er ein weiteres Kaufhaus erpressen. Es beginnt die größte Hetzjagd der deutschen Kriminalgeschichte.

Wohlstand für Alle
Ep. 199: Wieso Lohn für Hausarbeit eine schlechte Idee ist

Wohlstand für Alle

Play Episode Listen Later May 31, 2023 25:04


Sollte Hausarbeit entlohnt werden? Und wenn ja, wie hoch sollte der Lohn sein? In den 1970er-Jahren wollten Aktivistinnen circa 2000 D-Mark für die Reproduktionsarbeit erhalten, was annähernd so viel wie der Durchschnittslohn war. Tatsächlich handelte es sich um eine aus der Luft gegriffene Zahl. Das hinderte diverse Bewegungen in Deutschland, aber auch in anderen Ländern wie England oder Amerika, nicht daran, diese Forderungen lautstark zu vertreten. Allerdings mit keinem nennenswerten Erfolg. Hinzu kam, dass viele Pamphlete maximal unlogisch argumentierten: So glaubten einige, dass sie mit dem Lohn für Hausarbeit von eben dieser unabhängig werden und statt zu kochen lieber ins Restaurant gehen könnten. Sie wollten also am Ende nicht Lohn für getane Arbeit erhalten, sondern ein Gehalt, das sie von der Arbeit entbindet. In der neuen Folge von „Wohlstand für Alle“ zeichnen Ole Nymoen und Wolfgang M. Schmitt die Irrungen und Wirrungen der Debatte nach und machen konstruktive Gegenvorschläge. Literatur: Pieke Biermann, Gisela Bock: "Lohn für Hausarbeit vom Staat für alle Frauen", in: Courage. Berliner Frauenzeitung (3/1977), online verfügbar unter: http://library.fes.de/cgi-bin/courage.pl?id=07.00120&dok=197703&f=197703_016&l=197703_021&c=197703_016. Silvia Federici: Das Lohnpatriarchat. Texte zu Marxismus & Gender; übersetzt von Leo Kühberger, Mandelbaum Verlag. Ihr könnt uns unterstützen - herzlichen Dank! Paypal: https://www.paypal.me/oleundwolfgang Konto: Wolfgang M. Schmitt, Ole Nymoen Betreff: Wohlstand fuer Alle IBAN: DE67 5745 0120 0130 7996 12 BIC: MALADE51NWD Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/oleundwolfgang Steady: https://steadyhq.com/de/oleundwolfgang/about Social Media: Instagram: Unser gemeinsamer Kanal: https://www.instagram.com/oleundwolfgang/ Ole: https://www.instagram.com/ole.nymoen/ Wolfgang: https://www.instagram.com/wolfgangmschmitt/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@oleundwolfgang Twitter: Unser gemeinsamer Kanal: https://twitter.com/OleUndWolfgang Ole: twitter.com/nymoen_ole Wolfgang: twitter.com/SchmittJunior Die gesamte WfA-Literaturliste: https://wohlstand-fuer-alle.netlify.app

Ab 21 - Deutschlandfunk Nova
Comeback - So feiern wir die 90er

Ab 21 - Deutschlandfunk Nova

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2023 17:47


Eine Zeitreise in die Nineties: Diddl-Maus, Buffalos, Nokia-Handys: Trend-Artikel, die damals noch in D-Mark bezahlt wurden. Wichtige Dokumente wurden mal eben gefaxt, denn Messengerdienste gab es nicht. Dafür aber die gleichnamigen Taschen. (Eine Wiederholung vom 15.04.2022).**********Ihr hört in der Ab 21:00:01:01 - Gesa und Moana vom Podcast "Die Nostalgischen" über ihre 90er-Leidenschaft**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: Tiktok und Instagram.**********Meldet euch!Ihr könnt das Team von Ab 21 über WhatsApp erreichen.Uns interessiert: Was beschäftigt euch? Habt ihr ein Thema, über das wir unbedingt in der Sendung und im Podcast sprechen sollen?Schickt uns eine Sprachnachricht oder schreibt uns per 0160-91360852 oder an ab21.dlfnova@deutschlandradio.de.Wichtig: Wenn ihr diese Nummer speichert und uns eine Nachricht schickt, akzeptiert ihr unsere Regeln zum Datenschutz und bei WhatsApp die Datenschutzrichtlinien von WhatsApp.

SPIEGEL Update – Die Nachrichten
Deutschland, ein Krimi-Land?; Schock in Moskau; Wenn man das in D-Mark umrechnen würde...

SPIEGEL Update – Die Nachrichten

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 6:20


Die Zahl der registrierten Straftaten in Deutschland steigt sprunghaft. Putins Schergen inhaftieren US-Journalisten – und: Sind Lebensmittelkonzerne für die anhaltend hohe Inflation verantwortlich? Das ist die Lage am Donnerstagabend. Die Artikel zum Nachlesen: Der rätselhafte Anstieg der Jugendkriminalität Haftbefehl gegen US-Journalist in Russland – Anwalt hat keinen Zugang Der Podcast Podcast »Putins Krieg im Netz« Inflationsrate sinkt auf 7,4 Prozent Mehr Hintergründe zum Thema erhalten Sie bei SPIEGEL+. Jetzt für nur € 1,– im ersten Monat testen unter spiegel.de/abonnieren.  +++ Alle Rabattcodes und Infos zu unseren Werbepartnern finden Sie hier: https://linktr.ee/spiegellage +++ Die SPIEGEL-Gruppe ist nicht für den Inhalt dieser Webseite verantwortlich.Informationen zu unserer Datenschutzerklärung

Kurz informiert – die IT-News des Tages von heise online
Kurz informiert vom 19.12.2022 by heise online

Kurz informiert – die IT-News des Tages von heise online

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2022


Heute mit: E-Krankschreibung, Twitter, HP-Schadcode, D-Mark

Studio 9 - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Milliardenschwerer Schatz - Die Deutschen horten D-Mark-Bestände

Studio 9 - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2022 2:21


Obermann, Katiwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, Studio 9Direkter Link zur Audiodatei

Billy Newman Photo Podcast
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 243 Sleeping Bag System

Billy Newman Photo Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 45:11


If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. 0:23 Today I wanted to talk to you about Adobe Premiere. I just yesterday talked about Adobe Final Cut 10.4 and some of the cool 360 editing things you can do with it. I guess Adobe's getting into it pretty, pretty good. And really, with a lot of attrition that's been happening on the apple side. And I think a couple of days ago, I talked about the new MacBook Pros that have come out, that's sort of the only Pro, does it? I don't think a lot of pros are liking some of the stuff that Apple's doing. So to cut to the chase of it, they're moving over to PC stuff. And a lot of that hardware is quite excellent. A lot of those video editing rigs are very capable, outside of like, the macro, what are you gonna do with that? Now? It's, it's not, it's not state of the art at least. And so you know, as fast as the world is moving? It's, I don't know, it's apple's fault to lose it like this. So with a lot of the, with a lot of the, I guess, diminishing effects that came about in Final Cut 10.4 or Final Cut 10.0 when they switched over to I guess what was it? Like the Final Cut Studio system? Do you remember that? And like in 2010, I kind of switched up the final cut x or Final Cut 10. Now we're at 10.4. But when they did that, I think a lot of people were thinking, Oh, well, this is like they made it like iMovie. I don't know if that was true. I used it for a lot of stuff. And I don't know, it's still hard for me to use, I guess. But there's a lot of editors that yes, at that point time decided that for a lot of their professional editing needs, they really couldn't have some tool that was sort of rolling over features like that in a way that wasn't consistent for their needs. So I think at that time, a lot of editing studios tried to switch over to people that were cross-trained in Adobe Premiere. And that's been the editing software that's been in, in professional news, probably pretty directly for like the last decade for a lot of video production needs. So it's kind of interesting, and they've been keeping up with a lot of the changes, I think Adobe has been doing and maybe even a little faster than Final Cut, or some of the other companies like they had 360 editings earlier on, I think they've had, you know better motion graphics and After Effects for a longer amount of time than well, or they're just working at a higher level. And I think it's it's a higher level of proficiency with some of the stuff that they're able to get done. So I've been interested in it. But no, it's interesting to talk about to kind of separate some of the differences. I'm invested in the final cut system. So I'll probably be staying there for just a little rinky-dink YouTube cuts that they make. Who needs Final Cut for that or Adobe Premiere for that matter? But 2:58 you can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. And then you can look at that Bitly Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism, camping, and cool stuff over there. 3:21 finished up that camping trip I was doing up there. The mountain Creek was there in the Cascades a couple of days ago. What was that like Wednesday, I think it was like maybe Tuesday, Tuesday night, or Wednesday morning, I think that was the supermoon that was coming up that night. If I remember right. And that was pretty cool. It was cool to see the full moon up there. And they always talk about the Super Moon, which is kind of an I don't know, it's a little bit of a misnomer. But it's cool to see the thing to talk about happening every six months or so. It's just kind of the oscillation of a bit of the eccentricity in the orbit of the moon that makes it I think about 25,000 miles closer than its maximum, and then maybe about 25,000 miles further away. And it's distant maximum. But I think it's only like a little bit of a sliver larger than it normally would be. If you notice though, it's a thing I learned way back and I think that they show it in a scene in Apollo 13. But if you put your hand out and you put your thumb up at all times, you're able to cover the entire Full Moon, just with your thumbnail. It's pretty wild, man. You gotta kinda always like visualize the moon has been this really big thing in the sky. And a lot of the time it's, it's just as big as your thumbnail at arm's reach, which is kind of a trip, but it's kind of it was cool to see the super moon that night. It was bright. It was cool to kind of watch around and kind of look I was illuminating the forest in the trees in the mountains and stuff around me, that was kind of nice to see. The cold that night though, man, I tell you so have a 15-degree sleeping bag. And that's great. 15 degrees is fine. But envisioning degrees is more than adequate for most circumstances that I ended up being in during the summertime. When it was done, I was just not too big of concern about how cold it gets. But when it says 15 degrees, it means you're going to be comfortable down to somewhere around 35 degrees, but anywhere under 30 degrees is a pretty uncomfortable experience, I think it means you're going to stay alive until it's about 15 degrees. So if it were me again, buying something for maybe I don't know, a more heavy three-season camping experience most of the time, probably a lot of the nights out that I do. Even though I like to go at all times a year, it seems like the majority of nights I go out are during the summer months or you know during like pretty fair weather seasons. But if I were going to buy again, which I'm going to try and get like a two or three sleeping bag system going, if I was going to buy again, I'd probably get a zero degree or maybe a negative 15 degree. And I could use the warm because man, what I noticed is even if it was just a little bit down to what it would have been probably maybe 10 or 29 or something like that it was you know, a bit below freezing. Who knows how cold it was, it was only like an elevation of 2500 feet and it was a canyon. I thought it was a clear night, but I thought it would be relatively sheltered. And yeah, it was a lot of ice on my window when I woke up. And it was a cold cold night to sit through too. So So yeah, that 15-degree bag was just holding up out there. But yeah, if I was gonna go again, I think they have like a zero-degree bag. And then down below that, they had like a negative 15. And like maybe like a negative 30-degree bag, negative 30 sounds like a real warm, like down back. So I think mine's a synthetic bag. They talk about this sometimes where there are differences in the thermal insulation qualities of the material that your sleeping bag is made out of. And I think that the for it was an improvement, you know, above what and whatever cotton we were using for a while they were using wool stuff, which was pretty smart that that works well to be an insulating material. And it doesn't. Alright, that works well with moisture and stuff and all the other things we know about. Merino wool is cool. Everybody knows about that kind of stuff but we had like, you know, those terrible big cotton sleeping bags way back. Those arrived and I don't know if they were even that insulating. Then they switched over to those synthetic materials, which are probably all oil-based Does that sound right? Like petroleum-based like plastic products that were made out of synthetics, I think that's how they spin up a lot of those. This 8:05 bladder ledges synthetic types of materials that they're making these nylons out of. So I think that was how a lot of this, this synthetic stuff had been made. But really, I think what they talk about being the superior insulator is down. And that's what I'd hoped to try and find as another zero-degree or negative 15-degree sleeping bag would be a negative 15-degree down bag, which is normally a bit more expensive. You know, when you're looking around at the price points for these different sleeping bags, if you're trying to get into some colder weather camping stuff, where you're gonna find is that those name brand or you know, don't even name brand necessarily, but just a bespoke manufacturer for quality, technical outdoors product is going to be very expensive. And so that's where you get to find out, you know, three 399 for a sleeping bag 299-490-9699 I've seen like a lot of pretty expensive prices out there. I think MIMO makes some bags that are looking pretty cool that I've seen recommended a few times. I've heard of big agness they made 10s most of the time though, right? Acting company, aren't they? Yeah, the stone glacier is one that I keep hearing kind of pop up here and there now for some sense Marmot I think has bags. Alright guys, is you know, a retailer of recreational equipment they're closed right now I don't even know if you get an order from anyone like that, but they have some bags. I think that's where my synthetic bag was from, that I've been using for the last I don't know seven years or so. So that's it's been fine. But I also tested out the sleeping mat I got I got a new Thermarest sleeping mat. No big news. It's pretty exciting. guys stay tuned. It's yeah It's a larger sleeping mat than I had before but it's a coated one with I think it's kind of like ballistic nylon but it's that nylon coating over it so it's not just the rubber mat at the base of it so you can throw it on the ground or the bathrooms semi abrasive materials that it would be outside and it's working great I think it's about one inch thick or so it's about 25 inches wide at the shoulder point and it's long enough to fit my whole body which is probably the one for me so yeah I got a solid camp man I think for the last like three years I've been sleeping on one that goes flat about four hours after you start sleeping so that's kind of nice to swap out I don't know why I put up with it for so long really should do that. Sleep is like one of the best things you can get you know if you can figure out just like a couple easy things to take care of when you're out camping or out in the woods and stuff it's probably sleep I mean that's like the thing that takes in and it's frustrating because when like even this last one I'm talking about didn't sleep very well way too cold part of it you know, no shelter enough stuff that was kind of comfortable but really as it is yeah, it's like I need to I need to figure out a couple other extra things to kind of throw in there but yeah, there's just a couple things you can figure out when you're going camping like how to stay warm or how to be comfortable when you do go or like when you're asleep and it's like one of the most important and most effective things you can do to kind of improve the way that a trip goes because like yeah it can be like it can be brutal the next day if you don't get any sleep the night before which is probably the first half dozen camping trips of the year like you know this first half dozen or so overnight to the year I'm just always kind of groggy and like oh what I have to get up right now which is sort out was Wednesday morning when I woke up I popped up and I think it was probably about 5am or so that I that I got up I think it was just about first light the sun had come up yeah but there's a little bit of light up in the sky and the stars were kind of washed out by the blue sky. So I have to up and the fire was out I think from the night before like I was mentioning how those the sticks had worn out and coals and started burning down even I think by the time I was near the end of the last podcast I hopped out and the back windows were clear there wasn't any frost on it but the front window the windshield was ice over pretty hard I mean it looked like it was you know like coated or water and then froze over solid so it wasn't even just kind of like a fluffy bitter white frost or something that had built up on it through the fog. It just looks like a hard coating of just an ice sheet over the windshield. Great. I don't have an ice scraper of the whiskey I was thinking tonight it's a man who needs an ice scraper I'm taking a sip of coffee 12:58 so yeah, I don't know I grabbed a box. I think it was a piece of cardboard out of the back that I could kind of flex around a bit through that over the windshield tried to run the truck for a bit try to warm it up and took a while to but yeah scraped off some ice scraped off a hole big enough to kind of get started on the drive and then prep to take off but yeah take some photos and stuff around the campsite for a bit first in the morning nice draw in the valley like I was talking about that goes up to that ridge point that you can kind of see off in the distance and I think I could see like the fire from the smoke or the smoke from the fire of the neighboring campers over there. I don't know if I'd mentioned it well Yeah, I did in the last one. They were their kind of doing Brody's out the on the road around sunset. I think I got a little clip of it on video but yeah, it's like four or five of them. And this kind of beater. In the late 90s, four-by-four trucks spin out on dirt roads. So looks fine. I don't know. But they were I think getting the fire going and stuff in the morning too or whatever they had gone from the night before. You can see a plume of it coming up from that area they would have been camping in over by the creek bed downhill. And yeah, it was cool. I took some photos and stuff that morning, walked around kind of cleaned up the camp a little bit but the fire stuff out and jumped in the truck, had that little hole in the ice to see through, and then yeah popped on a podcast and cruised down the road. And so what I was trying to do was take off down to a couple of other spots along the creek while it was still morning and then head down ultimately to the area where the lake started to build up and so it kind of how it works is like it kind of flows down the creek and then there's a dam a point ultimately and then back right behind the dam is a reservoir where that Greek has kind of built up and I guess now is yeah body of water out there. So drove down ways and took some photographs. of the Creek and the morning light and some of the water and stuff coming through a really like that kind of affected the sort of early spring kind of fresh snow melt mountain Creek stuff that just sort of looks really crisp and forested and natural and then it came down a ways further to a bridge that kind of cuts across the span of the creek as it starts to sort of widen out into the reservoir area and it looks like you know a big stretch of calm water out on the edge of the bridge where I think two different groups that were doing some fishing in the morning and yeah seems like people are still out it was a busy area up there is still still definitely pretty fully populated set of people you know even during this lockdown period there's a bunch of people out there hanging out and fishing I think it was two different different groups to maybe they were they were all kind of connected but yeah they were they're out there with a couple lines over the bridge and they were picking up a couple things that thing so I saw a lady that was pulling up and a little a little blue kayak to the ramp on the first day and on her What is that thing you know when you you run it through the gilling you got the fish and stuff anyway she pulled up with like gardens like four or five trout or something on her on her inner guy I know that's where it leave it I guess but she pulled up with four or five trout so I figured the guys these guys were doing a little bit of trout fishing out there. Which sounds fun. It's a nice clear crisp morning and stuff like I was saying so yeah, it sounds like it'd be nice to be out there for a couple of hours doing sufficient, and yeah look like they were up to where they were getting a couple of things. Let's go to a sauna osprey that took off I think over the lake area just at that time and would kind of like pull up at certain spots over the water kind of back flap to hold in the same spot and look underwater and see if there's something I didn't see enough or I didn't see a prime opportunity and then we're going to swoop off and then take off to a different section of the lake, then do it again. So watch that about three or four times and try to take a couple of pictures of the area which are nice I like the photographs that I got that morning it's good to get a nice look at it, you know, a lot of the time that the photographs look a lot better when you just select the right time of day to be somewhere which you know is obvious but just the types of colors and the types of saturation and dynamics that you get in the look of a pretty simple you know, set of trees and water, it just comes off a lot better when it's it's just the right type of light. It's amazing to kind of see what differences it makes when it's a cloudy day or a sunny day or a morning or an evening, or midday. 17:44 It seems like the dynamics of the light change so much that you could get like a different look in the photo, which is always kind of interesting to pay attention to and sort of seeing how that goes what changes about it, and sort of how that affects the photographs that you're making. I mean even now that you know some cool intimidate, it's kind of cool to figure out how it works for you or how it works or what I'm trying to do is how to figure out how it works for my photographs and what I've tried to do which is nice. It was cool going out there and climbing around the creeks and stuff in the morning and taking a cup of photos and water and osprey and going over to the Lake area that's trying to work on similar stuff to what I've done before but kind of that mirror look of that calm water as it spreads across the lake in the morning. And on the reflection of the bright blue, kind of pre-sunlit sky. How is it you know like before the sun is actually up over the horizon, there's not a lot of intensity so it's just kind of a softer blue glow and a lot of ways and then there's still enough illumination that you can see the greens and the trees and sort of the soft calm water in the morning before it gets kind of agitated through the rest of the day? So nice kind of peaceful looks to the photos and sort of the natural stuff that I like to go kind of capture you know ultimately though, there's some nice stuff up there and I was like happy to kind of photograph some of the some of what I was looking for. But I was also frustrated in the area too. I think there was a there's little more choked-off than what I normally like. Like there wasn't as many opportunities as I had hoped for I had to try and utilize the ones that I found there weren't as many opportunities as I had hoped for kind of an opened up wide scene that you could set up a landscape photo and there weren't a lot of elements to work with it was just sort of like some rolling hills off to a Green Hill. So sometimes I'm trying to find some stuff that's a little bit more dynamic and it looks more than that. But it was fun though, even as it is anyway. Though I'm trying to I think maybe like I was mentioning last when I got stuck and turned around but the snow and I didn't want to deal with any of that right now. But in the next weeks If I want to get up to Mount Jefferson or Mount Washington or a couple of these other wilderness areas that have a few kinds of visual landmarks that would be worth taking an observation of. You can check out more information at Billy Newman photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or if you're more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. 21:00 So I was looking around at different options. I liked a lot of the Nikon stuff, but I also noticed I liked the Nikon stuff, I'll leave it at that. I just noticed that sometimes some of the accessory equipment outside of the body that you might buy a bit of the lens are expensive, or they're a little more expensive than maybe some of the commensurate lenses that might be available over in canon. I remember back in college someone was mentioning to me that they were going to switch from Nikon over to canon because the canon was a bigger company. I don't know if this is a reason or not. It was interesting logic though, to kind of think through at the time but that canon was a larger company selling more lenses making more cameras making more equipment. And so they had more resources, more staff, more designers working on cameras, building cameras, and doing research and development to kind of bring that forward. And I think even maybe now that's still perhaps true if you look at some of the technologies in Nikon versus canon like we were just kind of to take a base idea of it though I love Nikon stuff a lot if you were to take like the D five I think that's a 20-megapixel sensor. Whereas if you were to look at the newer Nikon or Canon five D Mark four that's I think like 3136 I don't know if it's out there in the third maybe I think it's a 30-megapixel camera. And I think perhaps the five D Mark three is a 23-megapixel camera. So it was interesting just kind of noticing a couple of those things now I understand that there are benefits to the lower megapixel rating for some of the low light performance that you get a high ISS and I think that's maybe sometimes where Nikon performs well but then there's also Sony who's producing 42-megapixel cameras and they're doing incredible things in low light but also even better stuff with a seven s which I think is the version of the camera that's specifically around some of the higher end video features. And I think it's a 12-megapixel camera that does incredible stuff and low light like almost like you know 100,000 so you can get amazing low light images and low light video. So it's interesting how that kind of sensor technology works. But all that being said it's just interesting that for a long time even way back in history like to the beginning of the digital SLR I think canon was way ahead and what they are producing as far as their sensors go and what they're able to produce like megapixels or in fidelity have an image I think they had a what was the first one I think Nikon did not have a full-frame digital SLR and tell the Nikon d3 came out which was a fantastic camera and I had that one also as a used camera that about later loved the d3 but it was interesting that they yeah like they didn't have a full-frame DSLR camera option until 2007 I think when that came out, whereas, on the Canon side, I think that the EOS one D The one DS is that right? I think it was the DS was the first full frame camera produced by Canon and that was way back and I think that was still like around eight megapixels or maybe 10 megapixels for the mark two and then they had some technology that was just far more advanced for the time 2000 to 2003 2004 than what canon had gone or is before when Nikon it you know what I mean right? So anyway that fast forwards to me in the fall of 2018 I'm looking around for another camera purchased because I was going to be moving I was going to be taking a job where I was I was going to be working every day doing family portrait photography and a lot of like wedding photography stuff to where I needed it. And on the memory card system that would be in the camera was like on the Sony side as I had mentioned before. There were some limitations to it and one of the other limitations was that it only accepted SD cards which right now I'm kind of learning are fine you know you can use an SD card for just about anything but I also liked the opportunity or the option to have a compact flash card or maybe it's a USM USM USD. That's $1 I'm not sure but with the compact flash card system that goes in, I always felt that was like a little bit more professional when you put that in. And I just wanted more memory options so with I think the five D Mark three that I decided to pick up use that had the Compact Flash slot and also had the SD card slot and you could record to NADP video and you could take photographs you could do like high frame rate burst series for photographs and it's just seemed like it was a great workhorse camera that the five D series and I think that's what people have been talking about. Even since like the five D Mark two when they announced the HD video recording features on DSLRs so I think that when even before that, you know it was just it was one of the top-use cameras for wedding photographers and stuff so for me, I was trying to find something that would be like a good workhorse camera where I could always kind of count on it and the battery system and the memory card and the lens arrangement that would be available to me that I could really just be hammering away on frames and then be bringing those in editing them and then kind of delivering them to clients in a pretty fast manner. So I thought that would be something that would help me out and I think I was right I think was a good choice though there are fantastic options like the ACE seven Mark three, or the seven three and then a seven are three. I think both of those have kind of solved a lot of those issues that I've been talking about where they've adjusted the battery system and they've adjusted the just some of the blackout problems that I was talking about before but I was happy to switch over to the Canon side of it. I think also the reason I was talking about two words Yeah, no blackout, and I liked being able to use the through-the-lens viewfinder of the SLR as opposed to the digital SLR or just looking at it on the screen. So I don't know if all those reasons were kind of why I wanted to get back to the DSLR system instead of the interchangeable lens camera system. But it was great so so back I think in September I was looking around a lot I sold the seminar off and then I was trying to hunt around for options for me to get a well-priced canon five D Mark three and then I also bought one from Marina so she had a five D Mark three body and then we could kind of share lenses for two so I wanted to get up and running. And I wanted to talk about like some of the lens stuff that I was interested in too It's interesting kind of switching over to Ken and now just kind of seeing you know what's available and what's available in the US market which for me and you know someone that doesn't want to spend a ton of stuff, getting a pretty high-level professional level set of photography equipment, it's interesting to kind of comb around through the US market and figure out good pieces to use. I think almost every camera system I've ever had it's been something that I've made a purchase of off of the US marketplace in some manner you know, I haven't bought a new film camera that's for sure. And so it was interesting kind of trying to figure that out a little bit and I've always had really good luck with that I hear some bad stories out there but it seems like a lot of photographers take pretty good care of their camera equipment in a way that at least seems quite usable for me so what I ended up with it at some point and I save a ton of money doing it too and I don't have to deal with the heavy depreciation because like by the time I I end up wanting to sell it hasn't moved that much in the marketplace. A lot of the time you know it only ends up being like a few $100 to purchase that camera because when you sell it again you get a lot of that money back and as opposed to well I'll get into that story a second but like when I purchased it that camera was quite new. And it had appreciated a lot and value from the new price the new sticker price from the in the store in the camera store price to what it was when I bought it used so so it was a fantastic deal to kind of pick it up and find like a good one out there. So so yeah back in. Was it back in September I was hunting around in Oregon trying to find a good five D Mark three body so I was trying to debate a little bit I was looking around on eBay for five D Mark threes that would be available. And I was looking around on ke H and those are two locations that I kind of made purchases from before when I was making a purchase online. I like eBay and I sold a bunch of stuff on eBay. I sold myself a seminar on eBay. I sold my d3 when I had made a purchase the d3 I think from K h and I sold that d3 on eBay and I made my money back it was great it worked pretty well. But when I was looking around I didn't find the price point that I wanted for the five D Mark three line I think those are all running around 18 or 1900 bucks for the five D Mark three bodies that are being sold but I'm sure I don't I seem to like the market was a little lower than that at the time and then when I looked on kth it was sort of the same story where once we were in bargain condition you know where they'd been pretty beaten up or probably had been you know, someone's wedding photography camera where it really hammered out 100,000 or 200,000 frames already had a few seasons of weddings over the last couple of years and the person was trying to offload that gear and then you know an upgrade to their five-year mark for their one dx or something like that. So I kind of wanted to stay away from those in a way I'm sure they would have been functioning cameras and the way that they had been reported but there's really no way to like get an observation of the camera and its function in your hand while you have it to see that it's really like as clean or as in good condition as you'd want it to be for something that you're going to spend 18 $100 for when I was buying used cameras it was sub $1,000 purchases so it's like well you know, it's got a couple of scuffs on it or something like that, but they were always quite nice in their physical condition. So what I ended up deciding to do was instead of purchasing on eBay or kth what I decided to do was try and check out the local marketplaces so I went on Craigslist to look at the classified listings that were there in you know, photo and video equipment for sale listing in my area. And I kind of scoured across Oregon to find you know a couple of good pieces so I was trying to look in the Portland area. I was looking over in the bend area I was looking in the Eugene area and I was also looking up into like the Seattle and Tacoma area as well because I thought well you know if I need to then I'll drive up little ways that I might save hundreds of dollars trying to purchase a nice camera system so I thought that might be a good idea. And then in addition to Craigslist, I was also getting into the Facebook marketplace where I was selling a ton of mag my stuff from a house when I was trying to set up this move over here to Maui. So I was looking around at that I was saying well maybe I can check out and see if there's camera equipment that is also listed there too. And that worked out well I was pretty impressed with it. So for the camera bodies, I found two canon five mark three bodies one of them I found over I'm banned for $1,000 flat which is an incredible deal I think I think I got that brand on that one. It had been used I think for just like a single project that someone had I think they did to have a business or they're paid to do it so they made a purchase of a five-day Mark three and then they shot like a series of web instruction like instructional videos for YouTube for a company that had purchased it and then they hadn't used that equipment in a while since then. So they were going to sell that camera off and get some of their money back. So I got the camera for $1,000 even which was fantastic it barely even had like rub marks on it on the base of it you know like when you look at the camera body physically, the rubber was in fantastic shape. And the base plate like where the tripod would go I think was the only area where there's a little bit of a scuff but it was fantastic. It was cool that it worked out so well for me so I made a purchase of that camera for 1000. Then I was looking around and I found another one up in the Portland area that a real estate agent had bought to take photographs of their property and then I think they'd found out that they didn't want a five-day Mark three but they wanted a Sony camera and so they made a purchase of a Sony camera just a few months after that. And then to make up the cost of that purchase they wanted to sell off the Canon five D Mark three that they had and so I saw I got the box too which is interesting. I got the box for the five D Mark three and had the receipt from the camera store that they bought it for it was you know 20 $600 when they bought it maybe 12 months ago or 11 months ago and I looked at the shutter count of it. There are maybe 1900 pictures that have been taken on the camera body when I purchased it it was almost like a brand-new camera. I think it was put 1000 frames on a day at the job that I had so 34:22 yeah, it was I've already broken it in quite a bit more than it had been when I purchased it so it was cool getting such a new camera for such a low price. So saving $1,000 trying to put it put the these this package of equipment together was excellent and I was really happy to do that. And that was one thing I noticed about the Canon US market is there's just and this is sort of back to that thing. It's a bigger company and they're selling more cameras out there. So it was cool that there's just so much used gear out in the market where as opposed to you know if I was looking for a D 100 on the Nikon side or a D four or something like that, it would be pretty hard to find those bodies I guess in that condition or you know in that way and then for that price it seemed like and same goes for like a Canon one dx that I was trying to find that on the US market those were held by professionals or sports photographers and those bodies were really and still very expensive when I was looking around for them but it seemed like there were so many people that were interested in doing wedding photography or doing photography as a hobby that they would kind of lean into the higher price range and pick up a five D Mark three and then find out why maybe I don't want it or maybe I want to switch over to a five D Mark for now. And so they were ditching those and offloading this for way lower prices so it was excellent time to kind of come in pick those cameras up and and kind of start getting set up but the other thing I noticed is that Okay, so now we have the five D bodies now we're going to need lenses to work on these so what I was looking for was the the USM what was it the the 24 to 70 f two eight lenses that were for like the professional full frame cameras and I was fortunate to find those again on the Facebook marketplace I think I found one in the Eugene area and I got a USM 124 to 70 which was a great price and then I also found a USM to 24 to 70 that had been used more I definitely could tell that it had been used more this even though it was a newer version lens that it definitely had I think some more where I and that's that's probably the lens that though still works great still has great optical clarity but it's probably the one that seems the most tired when I'm using it sometimes so it's interesting sometimes but but I'm sure I probably put a ton of work on it to just kind of racking it back and forth trying to get all these different photographs I was trying to shoot so i don't know i lenses don't last forever and they're mechanical pieces but but these are really well built you know these these professional hourglass systems are really sturdy and well built and I was really impressed with how they were working so I had a great time using it and I didn't really seem to run into any problems while I was trying to produce produce photographs with it but I found yeah I found one of them one of the lenses in the Eugene area and then I found another one up in Portland and so I drove up to pick that lens up and then add you know add to five D Mark threes and 224 to 70 f two eight lenses to throw on there to do a bunch of the family portrait stuff and a bunch of the you know kind of lifestyle images that I was trying to do so it was a great starting setup for me to kind of get and then move out from and so I had been working with that for a couple months and I've been trying to kind of expand from that since then. So the stuff that I'm looking for now well so I started looking into like some things for like real estate photography and one of the things that are always required for that stuff is is like a really wide angle lens. So when I was looking around with the company that I was working with they were looking for images between 17 millimeters full frame and 20 millimeters on a full-frame camera and so I went ahead and I purchased the 17 to 40-millimeter f four lenses it was quite inexpensive I mean you know, again coming from like the Nikon so what I thought like wow, that's gonna be more than $1,000 to pick up a lens for it was a low price I think was about $520 to buy a new 17 to 40 millimeter 38:37 the lens that was like that Yeah, the f4 that I was talking about. So I picked that one up to do some of the real estate photography and that amortize pretty quickly to get into it to use that for real estate jobs. It kind of paid for itself just in a couple of jobs alone without the cameras themselves and the 24 to 70 sort of paid for themselves by hammering out a bunch of family portrait sessions with them. So both of those things kind of worked out pretty well but in addition to that what I'm looking for is like the 50-millimeter f one four lenses I was looking at that too and I'm looking at those new because and this is what I'm saying is it's just it seems like Canon lens prices are sort of dropping down a bit maybe there are newer lenses and I know there's you know the there are way higher end lenses but the 50-millimeter f one for kind of lower end lens perhaps is I think 299 which is super cheap I guess that's what I paid for 35-millimeter dx lens on my old camera system, you know on the Nikon stuff so so I was I think what was it like that? The 28-millimeter f two lenses I had for my Sony camera were like 450 bucks when I bought it used right? So it was awesome to find that 50-millimeter f one four for 299. And then in addition to that, for other portrait stuff, if I wanted to do it, I could pick up an eight 85 millimeter f one eight for 299 also, and I was like, wow, these are way more reasonable price ranges than what I thought so it really for not that much, you could probably put together a full range of prime lenses that I would want to use. And I could put together a full range of zoom lenses that I wanted to use that were all kind of higher-end glass, that that would be great for, you know, professional staff, or the lifestyle stuff or the, you know, whatever kind of photography stuff I wanted to expand into. And then on top of that, I was looking at the 40:34 dough, I would love an F to eight, I was looking at the zoom lenses, and one thing I've kind of learned from this job that I was working with is when you're working with compression, and like when you're working like with zoom, and you're using the compression of the lens pass, you know, 70 millimeters like into the 80 millimeters or 100 millimeters or out to 200 f two A is soft. And a lot of times especially if you're taking pictures of a couple of people together and you're not trying to just rack right into to focus in on an eye and even when you're taking a picture a portrait of someone, you have to kind of crank it up to f4 f5 to get a depth of field that's thick enough to get their, their nose, their eyes in their ear in focus in the way that you'd need to. And it seems like well, you know, like, love the super shallow depth of field, but it seems like you want to get the person in focus, so you got to get a few parts of them and focus. Remember taking self-portraits, you know, like I hold the camera out in front of me with the Canon 50 millimeter, one eight, and try and take a picture of Marina and me somewhere and I remember Marina would be just on the plane in front of me, you know because we're trying to stand right next to each other. And maybe I would be in focus. But then Marina, just one or two inches in front of my nose would be completely out of focus, it would look just like a super blurry kind of washed area because the depth of field was so shallow. That's where I was trying to, you know, kind of finally learning like, Oh, yeah, okay, so maybe f1 eight isn't absolutely what you have to have for every photograph that you take or f1 for whatever it might be. So I was kind of finding that part out where Okay, well I'm gonna have to rack this out to like f5 or f8. Anyway, to get a sharp photograph of the thing that I'm trying to get an image of. So I have kind of rounded out that I'm going to be fine for a lot of the landscape photography that I'm interested in doing, I'm going to be fine kind of jumping into lenses that are around that f4 line. So I was looking at the USM 70 to 200 f4 lens that they have. And so I think it's, I think that the two eight, the f2 eight lenses that's 70 to 200 is like around 1500 bucks. But then the f4 is about 600 bucks, I think it's like 599 to pick up a 70 to 200 USM lens. Now it doesn't have the image stabilization on Nikon, they call it vibration reduction is that right? But it doesn't have image stabilization. And I think it is probably lacking some other additional features because I know there are two versions after that, that escalate in price quite a bit. But if you're looking for that older one, it's still available on Amazon for 599, which is a great price. If you want to get a 70 to 200 I think that was cool. And there are a lot of things you could do with it. Again, like I was saying with the compression, if you're going out to 225 millimeters and you're shooting it at four, that's going to give you a nice bokeh in the background. And you're going to get the person in focus if you need to if you're shooting a portrait and if you're shooting some kind of landscape or wildlife scene, you're going to be able to do a lot with that too. You're just gonna have a lot of flexibility in what you're able to do I love fast lenses, I'd like to always push for you to wait or have 1.2 or something like that. But I'm loving the fact that there's an opportunity for me to get a whole range of focal lengths as I'm trying to transition over into new gear for a much much lower price than what I was expecting so I think that's pretty cool I've been pretty happy with this transition over into canon equipment so far. And it's been interesting you know the thing that I'm I'm 44:19 thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo 44:22 podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, some good links to other outbound sources, some links to books, and links to some podcasts like this blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy new minnesota.com. Thanks for listening to this episode and the back end

Talkin' Tech
Jayhawks Get Shough'd + Mark Adams Goes to Maui

Talkin' Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2022 49:43


Hosts: Steven Rodriguez (@L_S_Rodriguez)Tristan McGonigal (@TristyMc)    Talkin' Tech Twitter: @TalkinTechPod The Nation Podcast Network:The Nation (@gunsupnation)The Nation Podcast (@gunsupvoice)Ramblin' Raiders (@RamblinRaiders)Tailgate Talks (@tailgate_talks)  Logo Art: Curtis McLaughlin (@cmclaughlin24)Coby Mote (@CobyMoteDesigns)    Intro Song: Victory Bells - Josh Abbott Band   Songs of the Week:Marathon - Drew KennedyWhen the Sun Goes Down - Kenny Chesney feat. Uncle Kracker 

Little Evil - Der True-Crime Podcast mit Schuss
#60 Scandinavian Star & das Axtschiff

Little Evil - Der True-Crime Podcast mit Schuss

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 14, 2022 47:51


Crime-Fans aufgepasst! Heute im Thema: Mord an Bord. Fall 1: Die Scandinavian Star soll um 19:30 Uhr zu ihrer Fährfahrt nach Dänemark aufbrechen. Doch schon vor dem Ablegen gibt es Probleme an Bord. Dennoch liegt das Schiff mit 2 Stunden und 15 Minuten Verspätung ab. Eine Seefahrt, die für viele die letzte sein sollte. Fall 2: Am 18. August 1993 finden dänische Fischer das Küstenmotorschiff "M.S. Bärbel" ohne Besatzung in der Nordsee treibend. Unweit des Schiffes finden sie einen Überlebenden auf einer Rettungsinsel. Der Geborgene hat 60.000 D-Mark bei sich und berichtet von einem tragischen Unglück. Doch ist das plausibel?

Billy Newman Photo Podcast
Billy Newman Photo Podcast | 235 Alvord Camping, Outfitting October Travel

Billy Newman Photo Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2022 27:29


If you're looking to discuss photography assignment work, or a podcast interview, please drop me an email. Drop Billy Newman an email here. If you want to book a wedding photography package, or a family portrait session, please visit GoldenHourWedding.com or you can email the Golden Hour Wedding booking manager here. If you want to look at my photography, my current portfolio is here. If you want to purchase stock images by Billy Newman, my current Stock photo library is here. If you want to learn more about the work Billy is doing as an Oregon outdoor travel guide, you can find resources on GoldenHourExperience.com. If you want to listen to the Archeoastronomy research podcast created by Billy Newman, you can listen to the Night Sky Podcast here. If you want to read a free PDF eBook written by Billy Newman about film photography: you can download Working With Film here. Yours free. Want to hear from me more often?Subscribe to the Billy Newman Photo Podcast on Apple Podcasts here. If you get value out of the photography content I produce, consider making a sustaining value for value financial contribution, Visit the Support Page here. You can find my latest photo books all on Amazon here. Website Billy Newman Photo https://billynewmanphoto.com/ YouTube https://www.youtube.com/billynewmanphoto Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/billynewmanphotos/ Twitter https://twitter.com/billynewman Instagram https://www.instagram.com/billynewman/ About   https://billynewmanphoto.com/about/ 0:14 Hello, and thank you very much for listening to this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. And today we're looking at a photograph that I wanted to introduce you to add to my portfolio from the Steen's looking up to the Steen's from the Alvord Desert It was I think for about a week or so that we camped in the Alvord on the old lake basin with the playa that's there now is a really beautiful spot and it's very cool. And it's one of my favorite spots in Oregon. And what I liked about this photograph is this is right before the sun rose, where we were camped I think there was so much in the shade as you can kind of tell by the ground there. But what was neat is as you look up the to the eastern wall there that that peak of the steam is rising 1000s of feet higher than where we are in the Alvord. And so the sun shines on that earlier, which was cool to see the dawn light hit the kind of intricate shape of the mountain to the scenes for a few minutes before it rose right where we were around our camp, I just thought was a cool moment. And it's a really beautiful spot to be this was photographed on film with a wide-angle lens and like a Nikon. And it was a great time and I love being up there in Alvord's cool spot I'll probably always talk well a bit, but amazing to see how the landscape has changed just in the way it used to be wet or used to be a lake. And that's just so dry out there. It's amazing how things could change. That's a really interesting way to see it. 1:52 You can see more of my work at Billy Newman photo comm you can check out some of my photo books on Amazon. I think if you look at Billy Newman under the author's section there and see some of the photo books on film on the desert, on surrealism, camping, and cool stuff over there. If like I say I like the October period, you know it's kind of a cool outdoor month for stuff and that's kind of what I'm going to talk about too is kind of layering up stuff for October I've been trying to kind of build up the layers of clothes and layers of like shelter stuff that I have for some of the outdoor travel stuff that I go out and do and I do it on a budget and I don't have much stuff and like other people have a lot more experience of like just getting to try all these different pieces and see like the benefits or the kind of way out the pluses and minuses are different pieces. And so I'm sure it's probably the case that like the best gear is always the best gear. It's kind of interesting to sort of go through those checklists or you know, like kind of in your mind like seeing like what like how's this work or what's better for me for this thing or not. So I've been pretty happy to always have or for the last couple years to have like a vortex range outlay and for a lot of outdoor stuff that I do in Oregon, later into the year that's been like a real lifesaver for having just like a hard waterproof shell that I can like the trust that has like a good hold on it that can keep me dry for most of the day. That along with I guess kinda working inward like the puffy jacket makes a huge difference. And so I use a puffy jacket all the time. There are a few different sizes though and you sort of have to like look at the down-fill layer to see what's going to be best for you and like the climate that you're going out to. That is kind of weird, it goes back and forth through me a little bit. So like out here in Oregon, where I am like west of the Cascades it's sort of a mild climate a lot of the year and so I'm able to I think you're kind of dealing with like above freezing temperatures. Most hours and on most days for the year I think like you know there's some sections of the year where you get some heavy freezes but outside of those storm times it's like pretty mild weather a lot of the time and if I'm going camping or doing something outdoors in the winter I well there are a couple of different types I definitely use it but really for a lot of like the three season work I do I use a light puffy jacket either because North Face thermal thermoball I think it's like a polyester based one. It's not a downfield, puffy jacket but I've used that for maybe six years now and I appreciate you having that. I think it's been great. That's probably one of my most used insulating layers when I'm going out and I mean works great, really all four seasons with the kind of compared and these mild weather circumstances like I am here in Oregon like that paired with that Shell has been enough for me to go out and in almost every kind of weather circumstances I've been in when I've gone out and been working or like when I was working outside a lot in the rain and trying to be si Like most days through the fall and winter, it was really fine to do that with a strong or like a good Gortex shell that keeps you dry all the way and puffy, thermo insulating layer that keeps you warm. So it was pretty cool but kind of comparing that and I have like this Patagonia jacket that I think has a heavier down fill rating and that has a lot of insulation to it, which is cool, warm jackets are great. And I take that out kind of deeper into the winter. But what I noticed though, is that for a lot of circumstances, like I say three season work and while you're working or kind of like physically kind of exerting yourself I've noticed like if it's not below freezing that is too warm of a jacket to wear. And so you kind of get to pick a little bit of like where your, your environmental thresholds are like what kind of environment you spend a lot of time and is it going to be above freezing temperatures or below freezing temperatures? Or is it gonna be hot weather temperatures, like where you're working, you know, your coldest temperatures might be 50, but you're going up toward like the 80s and 90s pretty regularly? And that's kind of a different environment to work into. So I've been kind of trying to keep an eye on that but as we're kind of dropping into October the outfitting stuff that I'm doing is sort of away from the heat gear stuff that I would have been using where I'm in like lighter synthetic shorts and trying to use like lighter layers and stuff like in the winter you kind of get to layer up and stuff we're just got some kind of fun sweater weather right 6:31 what I picked up last year and I'm kind of excited to put some more use into it was a wool baselayer so I got a great wool t-shirt and I kind of appreciate trying to cut out some of the cotton material that I'm using when I'm going out and doing some more outdoor stuff and I guess it's because back in the day cotton was a great revolution right you know, it was a more breathable fabric and it would dry faster than other fabrics that they had available to them I guess is part of what was cool about it. But as I sort of understand now it's one of the riskier types of fabric that you can wear as a base layer when you're out in the woods for a couple of days or when you're out camping or you know the talking TV shows about when you're in a survival situation. Not that but yeah, when you're out camping or if you were gonna go hunting or you're gonna go on a couple of day photo trip in the woods, you're just going to be living out of your truck and stuff, it kind of it ends up being a little difficult to use a lot of cotton pieces especially if you're going to get wet or if it's cold and you don't want to get wet but you do get wet and that's a bummer because the cotton stuff just kind of stays wet and it gets cold when it gets wet. And a couple of those things just sort of lead to it being a little bit frustrating and I guess that's where some of the survival complications of happy with people who are out in okay conditions they get hit with cold rain or wet snow and they're in like an outer let you know their insulating layers but they're like a cotton coating. Or like I guess tough warm-insulated Carhartt jackets on hunting in that they got into some wet snow on the second morning. The car hard wet pants got or the pants that were insulated got wet from the tall grass and brush that they walk through and then the person became hypothermic because of their exposure to the cold that soaked through their pants that got them very cold and I think they had to like ditch the band's get into their sleeping bag it was synthetic and then they try to like to warm them up with a hot water bottle in a sleeping bag or something like that out of the Jetboil but like it ended the trip I think they like they can't continue out of that sort of stuff so it's kind of interesting I like that kind of thing can go and people have probably heard anecdotes like that similarly in the past I'd hear like someone else talking about like a warm weather thing where I think they're going out on like a 42-day canoe trip Can you imagine that like going through some big river system and Labrador up in Canada? Wow, fun times popping out in Hudson Bay or something who knows? But they would go up there and they would talk about like all like the specific limitations on the type of fabrics that they would select to use because like if they got wet in the river, or I think it was like cold weather or who knows what kind of weather you're gonna get sort of circumstance where you go between hot and cold and Canada kayaking or canoeing down 1100 miles or something like that just big long trips like that. And they would kind of be really specific about how like they won't even have cotton boxers or cotton underwear because it'll be the thing that ends up being a problem for other people or another person. I think kind of there are a lot of great ways to sort of work through this next problem, but I think someone argued that they did have cotton on them so that they could use it as a fire starter. If they needed a fire starter. I said Just to just bring a Firestarter or some other material like that I think it would probably get you by a little better than your cotton underwear. The best Firestarter that I've used and heard about was 10:18 well, I mean yeah like a stove or whatever but if you're trying to light a fire in the winter having a plastic bag with Vaseline-dipped cotton swabs was like a pretty inert material. Just like having a backpack that doesn't smell like kerosene or something. And it has multiple uses you can use it cosmetically for everything's our best, if your lips chap, I hate when it gets dry and cold and you go oh man, my pores can't handle it. They were in a different environment. 5000 feet a difference in elevation a day ago, too much change and too much seasonal change. Now you get like, I don't know just rough spots or dry spots or something you use the Vaseline you get the cotton swabs for all sorts of different things, but they're fantastic. If you light that up. It's a great little flame ball and you can use that with a stack of your other dry materials to get a fire going. Even in pretty wet conditions especially if you're kind of keeping your Firestarter material protected. And some little party backpacks give it a try and stuff that works out pretty well. And I think it works better than your underwear on a rafting trip. So but yeah, I've heard of that. Yeah, people, people try to not use that people try to like drop their leather belts. Like they won't take a leather belt out into the woods either. Like I wouldn't like a sturdy belt. Like what you see people like big leather boots or whatever it's not because it gets washed, and waterlogged. But I guess because it's maybe a weight thing. I think that's what the idea was for. Maybe they're like going backpacking and using a piece of nylon webbing as a belt at that time. or other stuff we're like, I don't know just little tricks and things of like how you kind of hide certain materials and other materials and stuff. But it's weird how it goes. So I guess yeah, cotton stuff is sort of a go. They talk about using wool a lot as sort of like a preferred material to make it out of or down here like down stuff is kind of a preferred material. And then I also kind of hear similarly, sided, bad things about sort of the petroleum develop products that you get from polyesters or nylons, or I guess like the polyester insulating foams, you get like those thermo ball insulating foam bits that would be in the pouches of another polyester material that makes up like the puffy jacket that I wear. For the Patagonia one that's a downfield, puffy jacket. You have little goose feathers poking, poking out of it all the time, too. Yeah, I feel like you feel around the right way a little goose feather I'll punch out the side and pull it out a little feather right there a little down feather, which is kind of trippy. But those I guess are like a better insulating system. Then like the synthetic kind of oil-based stuff. I guess the same goes for like sleeping bags too. If you want to get into like a sleeping bag to keep you warm. There's something like the 15-degree bags that are well, I don't know, I think it has a couple of other features too. I guess it's like light and it stretches down well. And if you get it wet, you can get a drag and well I guess it depends on like certain qualities down sometimes that kind of get I think is a little tricky. But the wall I guess you can get, you can have to get wet, you'll stay warm, and you can get it dry faster. And I think that's sort of the benefit of the wall on the animal that gets wet too. You know, like if you think about sheep getting rained on all the time, I guess it's sort of part of the fibers that it doesn't attract a lot of odor because it has to be on an animal all the time. And I guess it does well to not have to, like make you cold when it gets wet. I guess that's a big part of it. So a lot of the merino wool fabrics that have come out, or the merino wool blends that are with some little bit of spandex or some other kind of natural fiber product that they try and put in helps to kind of be a little bit more durable when they have those little blends. But mostly you want a pretty strong merino wool fabric. And that's pretty cool if you're getting sort of like a base layer, or something like that it's a little bit more tuned for the outdoors like wool sweaters or something that you can find but that's not quite their cool old white shirts, you know, like an old old Pendleton shirt or an old Filson shirt that's like a loggers kind of wool button that would go under like a canvas jacket. I kind of think is cool but that's sort of a different look. And it used to be the technical gear layering and probably still you'd see if you get like, I don't know like a horse guide like a guided trip with a horse or a mule or something like that. That's the pack and a bunch of stuff. They probably still use gear that's sort of similar to that. Without the kind of like the technical synthetic gear that you try and find it like Rei hiking places or something or wherever whatever else similarly branded but yeah it's cool trying to do some wool Merino underlayers trying to work with those puffy jackets when they can 15:19 try to work with lavish a soft shell that gets a lot less useful than it used to be. I used to try new soft shells all the time but I just kind of go with the wool, the wool base layer, The North Face kind of wore you know like a warmer temperature-rated puffy jacket and then have the GoreTex layer over that picked up a hat this year. That's pretty cool that boots had a couple of different sets of boots for the October stuff before it gets really heavy in the season before it gets like real wet or rainy. Now while I'm kind of doing some of this lighter outdoor stuff I have like a pair of heavy leather boots that are super cool for some of that deeper hiking stuff that you get into especially after it's wet and rainy and stuff but really for a lot of the light season stuff and sort of summer spring stuff. I have these Nike s FB boots it's like that military dude I picked them up in brown like a desert tan color. And then I also picked up a similar pair that under armor makes and so they're kind of like a lighter, more athletic shoe from the base but they have like kind of tall neck that goes up to like your mid-upper ankle there. And so it's not like a real table or like it's not like galoshes they're not waterproof they're kind of vent on the sides and they dry out they're kind of like a synthetic material that dries out pretty quick when you do get it wet but it also has like a good bit of tread and you can get wet get them dry and wet. I think they're kind of made for an okay dry environment that's sort of where I use most of the time you know hiking around for any of this kind of lighter duty for us that was nice because they're light boots like with those other heavy leather ones like just the soles of the boots seem like they pound each you know you kind of like feel it the first couple of days you getting back into the use of them during the season where you're like man my feet are like four pounds heavier it seems like each just kind of like walking with a weight on it. So it's nice to have one of the newer sorts of higher tech boots that don't have the same kind of ankle support as a thicker leather boot does or they don't have the same kind of heel support. I like to talk about like those you know thick like a two-inch heel or something that like one of those whites boots has or if you get like Red Wings they have like a real deep thick heel on it that you can use to kind of stomp in and cut in on some hiking stuff and these Yeah, it's just kind of like a good sort of smooth walking boot and you get some ankle support from that that tall neck but it's sort of fabric so that it seems like it you're just it's a light boot and seems like you're ready to run and you can do like an athletic maneuver in these pretty well and it doesn't seem like the boots gonna be too heavy to slow you down not right for every circumstance like if I'm going in a deeper area it's cool it's nice to have like the kind of protection of a steel toed leather boot but like the normal s sfbs I think are not a steel toe I think I think these Under Armour ones though are there are steel toe versions that are out there. But that does seem to I've kind of run into a few circumstances where for some of the more woodsy stuff it seems like having the steel toe has helped a lot to keep my feet protected and stuff and if you hate gonna lie you gotta watch out for blisters and stuff too. One of the big things I've noticed to help that is like really breaking in your shoes with three weeks or more but three weeks of like pretty near full-time use to start getting them broken in or to get kind of the feel the break the crease the kind of the fabric kind of working together in the way that it's going to fit around your body and stuff but yeah, it seems like it takes about three weeks to sort of get those issues broken into a spot that that ends up being uncomfortable for longer trips and longer where I had like a pair of chocobos then this jacket was they were great you know that you don't wear socks you don't like buffer it with wool socks or something but I remember I think working with those for like three weeks or so at first your feet, man, they will rub raw 19:25 Yeah. Yeah, they'll you'll get some hot spots with the webbing on those chocolates. It's like this really kind of tough webbing but after like three weeks or so like after you kind of wear your foot into it so that it's kind of strong enough to deal with it. And you also start breaking in the rubber of the boot or the rubber of that foot for the shoe. You're your foot. But once you get that all kind of broken and I was able to hike for miles and miles and have no rub problems at all. I think I did. I think I did the whole hiking trip up to the summit. The paintbrush divide and the cascade Can you know like the Teton's chip I talked about some times But yeah, I did that whole hiking trip of the Tetons in early, mid-late September, probably right around now. But I did that trip in the Tetons, with just those, those black shakos that I had had like kind of that boot tread bottom and I did great through that whole chip I did like a 42-mile trip down the lower road that was like a hiking backpacking trip so you have a background backpack on you got these little river shoes on and you're hiking away on the trail and yeah, a lot of the times if you're not really in shape for it man, those will just rip your feet up pretty badly and I've seen it affect people's trips before you know like where their shoes just like really start to bite in on them. And it happens fast. As soon as you get like a hotspot or something it can be just a quarter mile or another mile and then like that, that problem has been exacerbated a lot. So as soon as like gets bad boom man gets bad fat or it starts to degrade fast and then once it's gone it's gone on for a while, you know so it's bad and it can cause some mobility problems when you're out there. So I think kind of to kind of deal with some of that stuff. We're kind of breaking them in earliest School, which is what I've been trying to do with some of my shoes but yeah, trying to get outfitted for this stuff in October it's been kind of fun trying to work out the layers and stuff. You can check out more information that Billy Newman's photo comm you can go to Billy Newman photo.com Ford slash support. If you want to help me out and participate in the value-for-value model that we're running this podcast with. If you receive some value out of some of the stuff that I was talking about, you're welcome to help me out and send some value my way through the portal at Billy Newman photo comm forward slash support, you can also find more information there about Patreon and the way that I use it if you're interested or feel more comfortable using Patreon that's patreon.com forward slash Billy Newman photo. 22:00 also interested in as I've spoken about before on this podcast I have an affinity for taking photographs on film. And I want to get back into that in a way because right now I don't have a film camera with me, I still have the Nikon en ad floating around. Though I'm short a lens or you know that's what I'm saying is like I've kind of made it an investment now into this whole range of focal lengths that have been quite nice pieces of glass over on the Canon side now. And so I'd like an opportunity to be able to take those photographs on film with that range of glass that I now have available to me. So what I'm looking at trying to do is, is trying to pick up one of these older now but one of these older but one of the last runs of film cameras that canon had put out and so I was looking around and trying to do some research for that. When I talked to you guys before about it. In the podcast, I was mentioning that I picked up a Nikon F for a camera that was the fully manual camera or you know like no I don't it wasn't for me anyway, I think it was autofocus and I had a whole color matrix It was one of the first cameras have that color matrix auto system in it where you could kind of like set it up. But nav has a lot of those same features what I'm trying to do to get to the point is I'm looking at the EOS line of film cameras that canon produced in the 1990s and the 2000s. And there's a lot of opportunities there where you can pick up a very nice camera body that you know shoot film, and that would kind of accompany the five D Mark three and all the Canon lenses that I have now. So I was looking at the EOS one n which I think is the camera that can come out in 1994 it looks quite a bit like a five-D body shape but it's not like that. It was it's not the oversize body but it looks you know just kinda like that camera SLR body style. And as a bunch of the features on the back, I think has that roller wheel that canon users have gotten accustomed to it probably was one of the first cameras to introduce that big roller wheel to control your F stop, and then the other roller on the front to control your aperture. So it was kind of it's interesting how it's laid out. But it feels like it looks almost the same way. So I'm looking around at those that came out in 1994. And then in the year 2000. They had come out with the EOS one DC one n before. What was it? I think I wrote it down over here. I can't remember what it was. There was the one and maybe the one h sunray. What would it have been? Let's look here is the one v that's I think the one I'm looking for. Yeah, the one V is that the film camera that canon produced in the year 2000, and probably up through like 2006 or 2007 or 2008 there's probably even new versions of that body that are still around if you notice those hardcore film users out there, so I'm looking around at some of those on the US market, I think they're like three, four, maybe 500 bucks if it's kind of on the higher end of expense but but I'm looking at some of those and it seems like it'd be kind of an interesting purchase to pick one of those up, then it could be shooting you know, film images like I have had an interest in doing with a professional body that kind of matched a lot of the same layout and workflow that that the five D Mark three that I'm using has, so I'm pretty interested in that and then I can use all this L class that I've been making a purchase of two so I have the super wide angle, or I don't know is it super wide, I think it's just a wide angle zoom for that 17 to 40 millimeter f4 I've got the 24 to 72 a i would have the 70 to 200 USM f4 and then I would have a couple prime lenses on top of that so it's like a pretty full collection of glass that I could use to make a whole bunch of different types of art or you know, like different different photographs different pieces that I'd be interested in trying to produce. And you know, like a lot of the film stuff I was I was building like all the stuff that was on that film book that I put together that was almost all done with a Nikon 50 millimeter f1 A and maybe like a couple of manual focus lenses that I should not have been using actually kind of knowing better now. The optics of those we're always kind of thanks a lot for checking out this episode of The Billy Newman photo podcast. Hope you guys check out some stuff on Billy Newman photo.com few new things up there some stuff on the homepage, some good links to other outbound sources, some links to books, and links to some podcasts like this blog posts are pretty cool. Yeah, check it out at Billy new minnesota.com. Thanks a lot for listening to this episode and the back end

Fazit - Kultur vom Tage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur
Filme der Woche: "Liebe, D-Mark und Tod", "Im Westen nichts Neues"

Fazit - Kultur vom Tage - Deutschlandfunk Kultur

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 6:56


Taszman, Jörgwww.deutschlandfunkkultur.de, FazitDirekter Link zur Audiodatei

Pirate Radio 92.7FM Greenville Audio Archive
PRL 6 - 3-22 Mike Mullis, Tony Dunn, Troy D, Mark Greenhalgh

Pirate Radio 92.7FM Greenville Audio Archive

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2022 143:50


PRL 6 - 3-22 Mike Mullis, Tony Dunn, Troy D, Mark Greenhalgh by Pirate Radio

DRINNIES
Freispruch wegen Wildlederjacke

DRINNIES

Play Episode Listen Later May 23, 2022 44:32


Die erste Folge DRINNIES vor Publikum! Ein ganzes Hummelvolk hört heute gespannt zu, wenn Giulia und Chris der Frage nachgehen, ob sie im Herbst lieber die Kelly Family Kreuzfahrt oder Metal-Wellness machen. Außerdem: Warum im Hafen Köln-Mühlheim Millionen von D-Mark auf dem Grund liegen, was wirklich in den Leitz-Ordnern steckt, die sich Angeklagte vor das Gesicht halten und warum Nektarinen der Max Giesinger unter den Pfirsichen sind. Leinen los!fraenk – der überraschend einfache Mobilfunktarif per App. Mit dem Code DRINNIES startest du bei 6GB Datenvolumen pro Monat statt 5GB: www.fraenk.deTu deinen Augen etwas Gutes mit HYLO CARE. Alle Infos und ein tolles Gewinnspiel auf www.hylo.de/drinnies See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

Alles auf Aktien
Hedgefonds-Legende Homm – ein Spekulant erklärt das Börsenchaos

Alles auf Aktien

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2022 95:31


In dieser Bonus-Episode erzählt Hedgefondslegende und Shortseller Florian Homm, wie er aus 4000 D-Mark eine Milliarde Euro gemacht hat, was sich gerade an den Börsen zusammenbraut, wo er Chancen sieht und mit welchen Life Hacks Ihr durch diese verrückten Zeiten kommt. Außerdem verrät er, warum er Cathie Wood und Frank Thelen nicht mag – und wie viele Millionen Dollar ein Frühstück mit ihm kostet. Wir freuen uns an Feedback über aaa@welt.de. Disclaimer: Die im Podcast besprochenen Aktien und Fonds stellen keine spezifischen Kauf- oder Anlage-Empfehlungen dar. Die Moderatoren und der Verlag haften nicht für etwaige Verluste, die aufgrund der Umsetzung der Gedanken oder Ideen entstehen. Hörtipps: Für alle, die noch mehr wissen wollen: Holger Zschäpitz können Sie jede Woche im Finanz- und Wirtschaftspodcast "Deffner&Zschäpitz" hören. Außerdem bei WELT: Im werktäglichen Podcast „Kick-off Politik - Das bringt der Tag“ geben wir Ihnen im Gespräch mit WELT-Experten die wichtigsten Hintergrundinformationen zu einem politischen Top-Thema des Tages. Mehr auf welt.de/kickoff und überall, wo es Podcasts gibt. +++Werbung+++ Hier geht's zur App: Scalable Capital ist der Broker mit Flatrate. Unbegrenzt Aktien traden und alle ETFs kostenlos besparen – für nur 2,99 € im Monat, ohne weitere Kosten. Und jetzt ab aufs Parkett, die Scalable App downloaden und loslegen. Hier geht's zur App: https://bit.ly/3abrHQm Impressum: https://www.welt.de/services/article7893735/Impressum.html Datenschutz: https://www.welt.de/services/article157550705/Datenschutzerklaerung-WELT-DIGITAL.html

On the Way to New Work - Der Podcast über neue Arbeit

Unser heutiger Gast ist gebürtiger Franzose und lebt mittlerweile seit 33 Jahren in seiner Wahlheimat Köln. Sein Unternehmen ist seit der Gründung 1999 (Eine Zeit in der noch mit D-Mark bezahlt wurde und weniger als 20% der in Deutschland lebenden Zugang zum Internet hatten) auf über 800 Mitarbeiter gewachsen und alleine in diesem Jahr sind mehrere hundert Neueinstellungen geplant. Mehr als 30.000 Online-Shops sind heute mit seinem Gütesiegel ausgezeichnet und über 30 Mio. Mitglieder vertrauen den Leistungen seiner Firma. Vertrauen ist ein wichtiger Bestandteil von New Work und Kern des Geschäftsmodells unseres heutigen Gastes. Seit fast 5 Jahren beschäftigen wir uns nun schon mit der Frage, wie Arbeit den Menschen stärkt - statt ihn zu schwächen. Wie kann ein Thema, das einen so wesentlichen Anteil in unserem Alltag einnimmt, wieder mehr Sinn in unserem Leben stiften? Wir suchen nach Methoden, Vorbildern, Erfahrungen, Tools und Ideen, die uns dem Kern von New Work näher bringen! Und darüber hinaus beschäftigt uns auch diese Woche wieder die Frage, ob wirklich alle Menschen das finden und leben können, was sie im Innersten wirklich, wirklich wollen. Ihr seid bei On the Way to New Work - heute mit Jean-Marc Noël von Trusted Shops. Episode 315 mit Jean-Marc Noel gibt es auf allen gängigen Podcast Plattformen, wie Spotify oder Apple Podcasts (oder direkt auf otwtnw.de). Einfach nach ‘On the Way to New Work' suchen und abonnieren, um keine Folge zu verpassen. Michael und Christoph veröffentlichen immer montags um 6:00 Uhr.

That SEC Football Podcast
Predicting the 10-game SEC on CBS schedule, Gus Malzhan on Auburn's advantage, Pete Golding on fixing Bama's D, Mark Stoops on his deep roster, Jimbo Fisher on Mond's confidence & more

That SEC Football Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 24, 2020 79:30


SEC Mike Bratton (@MichaelWBratton) and his cousin Shane (@BigOrangeVolz) discuss Jimbo Fisher's future as a weather man (2:30), Shane thinks LSU fans may have sold their soul for the 2019 season (3:30), predicting the new “SEC on CBS” schedule (5:00), Jeremy Pruitt updates the status of Austin Pope and Cade Mays as well as discusses freshman receiver Jalin Hyatt (20:00), Gus Malzahn on Auburn's recent scrimmage and why the Tigers could be at an advantage when it comes to the All-SEC schedule (30:00), Alabama DC Pete Golding discusses the issues that affected his defense in recent seasons and how the Tide plan on correcting the issues (37:45), Mark Stoops sounding confident about his depth and shares some good news on Terry Wilson's recovery (43:45), Brad White challenges Quinton Bohanna (49:30), Jimbo Fisher on the difference in camp this year vs. last year, Demond Demas, Kellen Mond's confidence growing, DeMarvin Leal and Baylor Cupp's return (53:30), Dan Lanning on improving Georgia's defense and on defending Georgia's new offense (1:03:00), Mike Leach explains why he wanted to come to Mississippi praises his receivers and freshman QB Will Rogers (1:08:00) Sign up for My Bookie: https://mybookie.ag/ Show music comes from Crimson Calamity: https://www.crimsoncalamitymusic.com/ Advertising inquiries: thatsecpodcast@gmail.com Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/that-sec-football-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brands Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices