Podcast appearances and mentions of Daniel Green

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Best podcasts about Daniel Green

Latest podcast episodes about Daniel Green

What On Earth
It's not easy being Green in this election

What On Earth

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 16, 2025 25:43


The Green Party aims to be the environmental conscience of parliament. But its popularity has waned as people consider strategic voting in the face of other concerns – and as climate change slips as a priority for voters. We speak to Green Party advisor Daniel Green about how the party is balancing its climate policy with other issues in this election and whether co-leaders Jonathan Pedneault and Elizabeth May can overcome their low poll numbers. We also hear from voters on whether climate is a ballot box priority.

La Commission Normandeau-Ferrandez
Pourquoi Stablex ? «Parce qu'on est stupides» - Daniel Green

La Commission Normandeau-Ferrandez

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 14, 2025 43:17


Voici l’essentiel de l’épisode du 14 avril 2025 pour l’émission La commission: Le Québec, vidange de l’Amérique? C’est la question qu’on se pose à la lecture de l’enquête publiée par les journalistes Anne Caroline Desplanques et Charles Mathieu du Journal de Montréal. On y apprend qu’entre 2018 et 2022, le Québec a reçu la plus grande quantité de déchets dangereux par habitant au monde. LA nouvelle du jour: on enlève le prix plancher sur l’essence! Quel sera l’impact sur le prix à la pompe? Qu’en sera-t-il des fournisseurs indépendants? Le député de Beauce-Sud et porte-parole gouvernemental sur la question, Samuel Poulin, nous en parle. Depuis 25 ans, la réserve stratégique de sirop d’érable du Québec protège l’industrie contre les caprices de Dame nature et les soubresauts du marché mondial. Derrière ses 60 millions de kilos entreposés, ce Fort Knox du sirop assure la stabilité des prix et la constance des exportations. La sextorsion est un fléau à un point tel que la GRC et les experts parlent d’une crise de sécurité publique! Le Journal de Montréal s’est intéressé au phénomène et nous apprend que 83% des victimes de sextorsion au pays sont des garçons. Voir https://www.cogecomedia.com/vie-privee pour notre politique de vie privée

Tandy Time: NBA Top Shot & NFTs

Today's episode is sponsored by TopShotBeta $BETA! "NBA Top Shots Rookie Debut Meme Coin" Join the Discord: https://t.co/UfdbfBF1L4 Follow on X: https://x.com/TopShotBETA View more: https://t.co/B4PmYeOvTQ Talking NBA Top Shot, NBA, Vegas, and much more with “The Judge” DGCourtoom *Not financial advice*

Drivetime with DeRusha
Why are private brand names more popular than brand names?

Drivetime with DeRusha

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 17:14


In this weeks DeRusha Eats he talks with UNFI Director of Brand Marketing and Chef Daniel Green about shoppers preferring private brand products over brand names, why the quality gap is closing, having energy from partnerships, and more.

Drivetime with DeRusha
How do you feel about surveys, the hardest parenting decision, lazy days, and DeRusha Eats

Drivetime with DeRusha

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 30:35


This hour Jason DeRusha wonders about the incessant surveys and do you fill them out, when do you let your kids start using electronics, he wonders if "lazy days" are necessary, when/how do you take them, and it's DeRusha Eats talking private vs. brand names with UNFI Director of Brand Marketing and Chef Daniel Green.

Delitto Al Punto
Il Caso James Jordan (Parte 1)

Delitto Al Punto

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 22, 2024 70:11


Oggi affrontiamo con estremo dettaglio il caso di James Jordan, l'omicidio del padre della leggenda del basket Michael Jordan. In questa prima parte, ci immergiamo nel misterioso e tragico destino di James Jordan. La scoperta del suo corpo in una palude della Carolina del Sud apre un vortice di domande e teorie. Conduce a un intrecciarsi di storie e personaggi, tra cui Larry Demery e Daniel Green, i due giovani accusati dell'omicidio. Esploreremo i dettagli dell'indagine, le teorie che circondano questo caso e il profondo impatto che la morte di James ha avuto su suo figlio Michael, provocandone l'inatteso ritiro dalla NBA. Questo racconto è un viaggio attraverso un caso che ha lasciato dietro di sé domande senza risposta per decenni, un caso avvolto in una nebbia di contraddizioni e colpi di scena. Vi porteremo dalle paludi della Carolina del Sud ai grattacieli di Chicago, dalle fredde stanze di interrogatorio alle aule di tribunale, dove tutto ha avuto inizio, ma non ha ancora trovato fine. Rimanete con noi fino alla fine di questa prima parte e non perdete la seconda, dove le rivelazioni saranno ancora più sorprendenti. Iscrivetevi al nostro canale e attivate le notifiche per non perdervi la continuazione di questo appassionante caso. La verità è lì, da qualche parte, tra le ombre del dubbio e la luce della giustizia.Questo Caso è disponibile anche in versione video sul canale YouTube "Diritto al punto podcast"SoundTrack: Suspense Piano You Tube Channel - No CopyRight Stuff Video Link - https://bit.ly/31BAnx0Fonti: -Follow the truth Podcast -Air di David Halberstam -Moment Of Truth Documentario -The Jordan Rules di Sam Smith -The Last Dance Documentario

Capital Vineyard Church
Chinese Church Support Ministries | Daniel | 16-6-24

Capital Vineyard Church

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 28:01


In this message, Daniel Green from CCSM talked about how God has moved and is moving in China, and how we can support our brothers and sisters there.

Církev bratrská Zlín
Láska a strach

Církev bratrská Zlín

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 28:18


Daniel Green. 1. Janův 4:18-19 --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/crkev-bratrsk-zln/message

In My Heart with Heather Thomson
Chef Daniel Green

In My Heart with Heather Thomson

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 33:48


Chef Daniel is a Healthy Eating Expert and Television Celebrity Cook in England, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai and the USA. Daniel will sit on the Culinary Investor panel for the 1st season of Food Fortunes on Food Network to decide if he will invest in a new product being presented. Daniel is also a judge on Food Network's Kitchen Inferno. Making appearances on talk shows around the world, planning meals for 2 major international airlines and developing in-room dining for a 5-star hotel chain in Asia has cultivated an international fan base. Currently, Daniel is based in the US and is a full time presenter for EVINE, one of the top luxury home shopping channels in the US. Daniel has authored 12 books sold worldwide – Including Paleo Monday to Friday, Modern Dining for Life, Healthy Dining for Life ), Healthy Eating for Lower Cholesterol, Green's Greens. Two of his latest healthy cookbooks won the prestigious Gourmand World Cookbook Award 2010 and 2011 for “The Best TV Celebrity Chef Cookbook” and one book has been printed in seven languages to date. For the last 5 years, Daniel has created the in-room dining menus for the 18 properties that make up the 5 star Dusit Thani hotel chain in Asia. He has also designed menus for the Shangri-La, Mandarin Oriental, Hilton, Conrad, Sheraton, Westin, Marriott, over the last 10 years. For the past 3 years, Daniel has been planning all of KLM's on-board meals totaling 2 million meals per year. Daniel created his own range of healthy gourmet foods, ingredients and smart cooking tools. His products which include gluten free jams, spices and olive oil have launched in premium lifestyle stores in Asia, Australia and the U.S. under Daniel's personal brand, The Model Cook. SPONSOR:  OUAI: Frizz-free up your schedule with OUAI. GO to www.theouai.com  and enter promo code INMYHEART for 15% off any product.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Travel Tech Insider
Season 1 Finale

Travel Tech Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 12, 2024 79:37


The season finale is here! Episode 10 wraps up with some special guests to help us check in on the latest goings-on among all the hot topics we covered in Season 1. Cliffhangers abound...What's next with NDC, loyalty program changes, regulatory trends, and all things AI? Luxury and Zillennials, venture capital funding (or lack thereof?) and the future of destination marketing are all looking a little different from when we covered them just months ago.Thanks to Friends of the Pod Janette Roush, Daniel Green, Tiffany Funk, Bobby Demri, Michael Levinson, Zach Demuth and Paul Tilstone for sharing your thoughts with us!And a special thanks to our fabulous producerZach Vanasse for serving as maestro for this little endeavor.Catch the latest episode below and stay tuned for season 2 this summer!Follows:Gilad Berenstein – host Cara Whitehill – host Bobby Demri – guest Zach Demuth – guest Tiffany Funk – guest Daniel Green – guest Michael Levinson – guest Janette Roush – guest Paul Tilstone - guest

The Jiggy Jaguar Show
Ep. 2/19/2024 - The Jiggy Jaguar Show 219 2024 daniel green field sandra lee

The Jiggy Jaguar Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2024


219 2024 daniel green field sandra lee

Cars Yeah with Mark Greene
2468: Daniel Green

Cars Yeah with Mark Greene

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 31, 2024 34:29


Daniel Green is a racer who four years ago sold everything he owned so that he can travel the country. His mission was simple: Inspire others to be more than ordinary and to be the best version of themselves. Since taking his leap he's encouraged others to break out of their comfort zones and pursue their dreams. Danny travels the country living a ‘Drag & Drive' lifestyle and in his second year of racing made over two hundred passes down the drag strip, earning “Rookie of the Year at the Rocky Mountain Race Week 2.0. He has been featured in and on a multitude of automotive media outlets and touches thousands of lives on his adventures.

Mountain Murders Podcast
James Jordan

Mountain Murders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 29, 2024 103:03


James Jordan, the father of superstar basketballer Michael Jordan, was found murdered in August 1993. His new red Lexus SC400 was found stripped a few counties away. Larry Demery, a member of the Lumbee tribe, and Daniel Green, an African American, are charged with the murder. This week, Mountain Murders examines the case. There's more than meets the eye story filled with corruption, racism, and shoddy police work; leaves us asking if justice was actually served. You don't want to miss this strange tale of backwoods Southern justice. Intro Music by Joe Buck YourselfHosts Heather and Dylan Packerwww.patreon.com/mountainmurderspodcastWe're proud to be part of the Darkcast Network!

Deliverance on SermonAudio
Response to God's Deliverance

Deliverance on SermonAudio

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2023 33:00


A new MP3 sermon from Living Hope Bible Church is now available on SermonAudio with the following details: Title: Response to God's Deliverance Speaker: Dr. Daniel Green Broadcaster: Living Hope Bible Church Event: Sunday - AM Date: 11/19/2023 Bible: Psalm 34 Length: 33 min.

Screaming in the Cloud
Learnings From A Lifelong Career in Open-Source with Amir Szekely

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2023 38:47


Amir Szekely, Owner at CloudSnorkel, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss how he got his start in the early days of cloud and his solo project, CloudSnorkel. Throughout this conversation, Corey and Amir discuss the importance of being pragmatic when moving to the cloud, and the different approaches they see in developers from the early days of cloud to now. Amir shares what motivates him to develop open-source projects, and why he finds fulfillment in fixing bugs and operating CloudSnorkel as a one-man show. About AmirAmir Szekely is a cloud consultant specializing in deployment automation, AWS CDK, CloudFormation, and CI/CD. His background includes security, virtualization, and Windows development. Amir enjoys creating open-source projects like cdk-github-runners, cdk-turbo-layers, and NSIS.Links Referenced: CloudSnorkel: https://cloudsnorkel.com/ lasttootinaws.com: https://lasttootinaws.com camelcamelcamel.com: https://camelcamelcamel.com github.com/cloudsnorkel: https://github.com/cloudsnorkel Personal website: https://kichik.com TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn, and this is an episode that I have been angling for for longer than you might imagine. My guest today is Amir Szekely, who's the owner at CloudSnorkel. Amir, thank you for joining me.Amir: Thanks for having me, Corey. I love being here.Corey: So, I've been using one of your open-source projects for an embarrassingly long amount of time, and for the longest time, I make the critical mistake of referring to the project itself as CloudSnorkel because that's the word that shows up in the GitHub project that I can actually see that jumps out at me. The actual name of the project within your org is cdk-github-runners if I'm not mistaken.Amir: That's real original, right?Corey: Exactly. It's like, “Oh, good, I'll just mention that, and suddenly everyone will know what I'm talking about.” But ignoring the problems of naming things well, which is a pain that everyone at AWS or who uses it knows far too well, the product is basically magic. Before I wind up basically embarrassing myself by doing a poor job of explaining what it is, how do you think about it?Amir: Well, I mean, it's a pretty simple project, which I think what makes it great as well. It creates GitHub runners with CDK. That's about it. It's in the name, and it just does that. And I really tried to make it as simple as possible and kind of learn from other projects that I've seen that are similar, and basically learn from my pain points in them.I think the reason I started is because I actually deployed CDK runners—sorry, GitHub runners—for one company, and I ended up using the Kubernetes one, right? So, GitHub in themselves, they have two projects they recommend—and not to nudge GitHub, please recommend my project one day as well—they have the Kubernetes controller and they have the Terraform deployer. And the specific client that I worked for, they wanted to use Kubernetes. And I tried to deploy it, and, Corey, I swear, I worked three days; three days to deploy the thing, which was crazy to me. And every single step of the way, I had to go and read some documentation, figure out what I did wrong, and apparently the order the documentation was was incorrect.And I had to—I even opened tickets, and they—you know, they were rightfully like, “It's open-source project. Please contribute and fix the documentation for us.” At that point, I said, “Nah.” [laugh]. Let me create something better with CDK and I decided just to have the simplest setup possible.So usually, right, what you end up doing in these projects, you have to set up either secrets or SSM parameters, and you have to prepare the ground and you have to get your GitHub token and all those things. And that's just annoying. So, I decided to create a—Corey: So much busy work.Amir: Yes, yeah, so much busy work and so much boilerplate and so much figuring out the right way and the right order, and just annoying. So, I decided to create a setup page. I thought, “What if you can actually install it just like you install any app on GitHub,” which is the way it's supposed to be right? So, when you install cdk-github-runners—CloudSnorkel—you get an HTML page and you just click a few buttons and you tell it where to install it and it just installs it for you. And it sets the secrets and everything. And if you want to change the secret, you don't have to redeploy. You can just change the secret, right? You have to roll the token over or whatever. So, it's much, much easier to install.Corey: And I feel like I discovered this project through one of the more surreal approaches—and I had cause to revisit it a few weeks ago when I was redoing my talk for the CDK Community Day, which has since happened and people liked the talk—and I mentioned what CloudSnorkel had been doing and how I was using the runners accordingly. So, that was what I accidentally caused me to pop back up with, “Hey, I've got some issues here.” But we'll get to that. Because once upon a time, I built a Twitter client for creating threads because shitposting is my love language, I would sit and create Twitter threads in the middle of live keynote talks. Threading in the native client was always terrible, and I wanted to build something that would help me do that. So, I did.And it was up for a while. It's not anymore because I'm not paying $42,000 a month in API costs to some jackass, but it still exists in the form of lasttootinaws.com if you want to create threads on Mastodon. But after I put this out, some people complained that it was slow.To which my response was, “What do you mean? It's super fast for me in San Francisco talking to it hosted in Oregon.” But on every round trip from halfway around the world, it became a problem. So, I got it into my head that since this thing was fully stateless, other than a Lambda function being fronted via an API Gateway, that I should deploy it to every region. It didn't quite fit into a Cloudflare Worker or into one of the Edge Lambda functions that AWS has given up on, but okay, how do I deploy something to every region?And the answer is, with great difficulty because it's clear that no one was ever imagining with all those regions that anyone would use all of them. It's imagined that most customers use two or three, but customers are different, so which two or three is going to be widely varied. So, anything halfway sensible about doing deployments like this didn't work out. Again, because this thing was also a Lambda function and an API Gateway, it was dirt cheap, so I didn't really want to start spending stupid amounts of money doing deployment infrastructure and the rest.So okay, how do I do this? Well, GitHub Actions is awesome. It is basically what all of AWS's code offerings wish that they were. CodeBuild is sad and this was kind of great. The problem is, once you're out of the free tier, and if you're a bad developer where you do a deploy on every iteration, suddenly it starts costing for what I was doing in every region, something like a quarter of per deploy, which adds up when you're really, really bad at programming.Amir: [laugh].Corey: So, their matrix jobs are awesome, but I wanted to do some self-hosted runners. How do I do that? And I want to keep it cheap, so how do I do a self-hosted runner inside of a Lambda function? Which led me directly to you. And it was nothing short of astonishing. This was a few years ago. I seem to recall that it used to be a bit less well-architected in terms of its elegance. Did it always use step functions, for example, to wind up orchestrating these things?Amir: Yeah, so I do remember that day. We met pretty much… basically as a joke because the Lambda Runner was a joke that I did, and I posted on Twitter, and I was half-proud of my joke that starts in ten seconds, right? But yeah, no, the—I think it always used functions. I've been kind of in love with the functions for the past two years. They just—they're nice.Corey: Oh, they're magic, and AWS is so bad at telling their story. Both of those things are true.Amir: Yeah. And the API is not amazing. But like, when you get it working—and you know, you have to spend some time to get it working—it's really nice because then you have nothing to manage, ever. And they can call APIs directly now, so you don't have to even create Lambdas. It's pretty cool.Corey: And what I loved is you wind up deploying this thing to whatever account you want it to live within. What is it, the OIDC? I always get those letters in the wrong direction. OIDC, I think, is correct.Amir: I think it's OIDC, yeah.Corey: Yeah, and it winds up doing this through a secure method as opposed to just okay, now anyone with access to the project can deploy into your account, which is not ideal. And it just works. It spins up a whole bunch of these Lambda functions that are using a Docker image as the deployment environment. And yeah, all right, if effectively my CDK deploy—which is what it's doing inside of this thing—doesn't complete within 15 minutes, then it's not going to and the thing is going to break out. We've solved the halting problem. After 15 minutes, the loop will terminate. The end.But that's never been a problem, even with getting ACM certificates spun up. It completes well within that time limit. And its cost to me is effectively nothing. With one key exception: that you made the choice to use Secrets Manager to wind up storing a lot of the things it cares about instead of Parameter Store, so I think you wind up costing me—I think there's two of those different secrets, so that's 80 cents a month. Which I will be demanding in blood one of these days if I ever catch you at re:Invent.Amir: I'll buy you beer [laugh].Corey: There we go. That'll count. That'll buy, like, several months of that. That works—at re:Invent, no. The beers there are, like, $18, so that'll cover me for years. We're set.Amir: We'll split it [laugh].Corey: Exactly. Problem solved. But I like the elegance of it, I like how clever it is, and I want to be very clear, though, it's not just for shitposting. Because it's very configurable where, yes, you can use Lambda functions, you can use Spot Instances, you can use CodeBuild containers, you can use Fargate containers, you can use EC2 instances, and it just automatically orchestrates and adds these self-hosted runners to your account, and every build gets a pristine environment as a result. That is no small thing.Amir: Oh, and I love making things configurable. People really appreciate it I feel, you know, and gives people kind of a sense of power. But as long as you make that configuration simple enough, right, or at least the defaults good defaults, right, then, even with that power, people still don't shoot themselves in the foot and it still works really well. By the way, we just added ECS recently, which people really were asking for because it gives you the, kind of, easy option to have the runner—well, not the runner but at least the runner infrastructure staying up, right? So, you can have auto-scaling group backing ECS and then the runner can start up a lot faster. It was actually very important to other people because Lambda, as fast that it is, it's limited, and Fargate, for whatever reason, still to this day, takes a minute to start up.Corey: Yeah. What's wild to me about this is, start to finish, I hit a deploy to the main branch and it sparks the thing up, runs the deploy. Deploy itself takes a little over two minutes. And every time I do this, within three minutes of me pushing to commit, the deploy is done globally. It is lightning fast.And I know it's easy to lose yourself in the idea of this being a giant shitpost, where, oh, who's going to do deployment jobs in Lambda functions? Well, kind of a lot of us for a variety of reasons, some of which might be better than others. In my case, it was just because I was cheap, but the massive parallelization ability to do 20 simultaneous deploys in a matrix configuration that doesn't wind up smacking into rate limits everywhere, that was kind of great.Amir: Yeah, we have seen people use Lambda a lot. It's mostly for, yeah, like you said, small jobs. And the environment that they give you, it's kind of limited, so you can't actually install packages, right? There is no sudo, and you can't actually install anything unless it's in your temp directory. But still, like, just being able to run a lot of little jobs, it's really great. Yeah.Corey: And you can also make sure that there's a Docker image ready to go with the stuff that you need, just by configuring how the build works in the CDK. I will admit, I did have a couple of bug reports for you. One was kind of useful, where it was not at all clear how to do this on top of a Graviton-based Lambda function—because yeah, that was back when not everything really supported ARM architectures super well—and a couple of other times when the documentation was fairly ambiguous from my perspective, where it wasn't at all clear, what was I doing? I spent four hours trying to beat my way through it, I give up, filed an issue, went to get a cup of coffee, came back, and the answer was sitting there waiting for me because I'm not convinced you sleep.Amir: Well, I am a vampire. My last name is from the Transylvania area [laugh]. So—Corey: Excellent. Excellent.Amir: By the way, not the first time people tell me that. But anyway [laugh].Corey: There's something to be said for getting immediate responsiveness because one of the reasons I'm always so loath to go and do a support ticket anywhere is this is going to take weeks. And then someone's going to come back with a, “I don't get it.” And try and, like, read the support portfolio to you. No, you went right into yeah, it's this. Fix it and your problem goes away. And sure enough, it did.Amir: The escalation process that some companies put you through is very frustrating. I mean, lucky for you, CloudSnorkel is a one-man show and this man loves solving bugs. So [laugh].Corey: Yeah. Do you know of anyone using it for anything that isn't ridiculous and trivial like what I'm using it for?Amir: Yeah, I have to think whether or not I can… I mean, so—okay. We have a bunch of dedicated users, right, the GitHub repo, that keep posting bugs and keep posting even patches, right, so you can tell that they're using it. I even have one sponsor, one recurring sponsor on GitHub that uses it.Corey: It's always nice when people thank you via money.Amir: Yeah. Yeah, it is very validating. I think [BLEEP] is using it, but I also don't think I can actually say it because I got it from the GitHub.Corey: It's always fun. That's the beautiful part about open-source. You don't know who's using this. You see what other things people are working on, and you never know, is one of their—is this someone's side project, is it a skunkworks thing, or God forbid, is this inside of every car going forward and no one bothered to tell me about that. That is the magic and mystery of open-source. And you've been doing open-source for longer than I have and I thought I was old. You were originally named in some of the WinAMP credits, for God's sake, that media player that really whipped the llama's ass.Amir: Oh, yeah, I started real early. I started about when I was 15, I think. I started off with Pascal or something or even Perl, and then I decided I have to learn C and I have to learn Windows API. I don't know what possessed me to do that. Win32 API is… unique [laugh].But once I created those applications for myself, right, I think there was—oh my God, do you know the—what is it called, Sherlock in macOS, right? And these days, for PowerToys, there is the equivalent of it called, I don't know, whatever that—PowerBar? That's exactly—that was that. That's a project I created as a kid. I wanted something where I can go to the Run menu of Windows when you hit Winkey R, and you can just type something and it will start it up, right?I didn't want to go to the Start menu and browse and click things. I wanted to do everything with the keyboard. So, I created something called Blazerun [laugh], which [laugh] helped you really easily create shortcuts that went into your path, right, the Windows path, so you can really easily start them from Winkey R. I don't think that anyone besides me used it, but anyway, that thing needed an installer, right? Because Windows, you got to install things. So, I ended up—Corey: Yeah, these days on Mac OS, I use Alfred for that which is kind of long in the tooth, but there's a launch bar and a bunch of other stuff for it. What I love is that if I—I can double-tap the command key and that just pops up whatever I need it to and tell the computer what to do. It feels like there's an AI play in there somewhere if people can figure out how to spend ten minutes on building AI that does something other than lets them fire their customer service staff.Amir: Oh, my God. Please don't fire customer service staff. AI is so bad.Corey: Yeah, when I reach out to talk to a human, I really needed a human.Amir: Yes. Like, I'm not calling you because I want to talk to a robot. I know there's a website. Leave me alone, just give me a person.Corey: Yeah. Like, you already failed to solve my problem on your website. It's person time.Amir: Exactly. Oh, my God. Anyway [laugh]. So, I had to create an installer, right, and I found it was called NSIS. So, it was a Nullsoft “SuperPiMP” installation system. Or in the future, when Justin, the guy who created Winamp and NSIS, tried to tone down a little bit, Nullsoft Scriptable Installation System. And SuperPiMP is—this is such useless history for you, right, but SuperPiMP is the next generation of PiMP which is Plug-in Mini Packager [laugh].Corey: I remember so many of the—like, these days, no one would ever name any project like that, just because it's so off-putting to people with sensibilities, but back then that was half the stuff that came out. “Oh, you don't like how this thing I built for free in the wee hours when I wasn't working at my fast food job wound up—you know, like, how I chose to name it, well, that's okay. Don't use it. Go build your own. Oh, what you're using it anyway. That's what I thought.”Amir: Yeah. The source code was filled with profanity, too. And like, I didn't care, I really did not care, but some people would complain and open bug reports and patches. And my policy was kind of like, okay if you're complaining, I'm just going to ignore you. If you're opening a patch, fine, I'm going to accept that you're—you guys want to create something that's sensible for everybody, sure.I mean, it's just source code, you know? Whatever. So yeah, I started working on that NSIS. I used it for myself and I joined the forums—and this kind of answers to your question of why I respond to things so fast, just because of the fun—I did the same when I was 15, right? I started going on the forums, you remember forums? You remember that [laugh]?Corey: Oh, yeah, back before they all became terrible and monetized.Amir: Oh, yeah. So, you know, people were using NSIS, too, and they had requests, right? They wanted. Back in the day—what was it—there was only support for 16-bit colors for the icon, so they want 32-bit colors and big colors—32—big icon, sorry, 32 pixels by 32 pixels. Remember, 32 pixels?Corey: Oh, yes. Not well, and not happily, but I remember it.Amir: Yeah. So, I started just, you know, giving people—working on that open-source and creating up a fork. It wasn't even called ‘fork' back then, but yeah, I created, like, a little fork of myself and I started adding all these features. And people were really happy, and kind of created, like, this happy cycle for myself: when people were happy, I was happy coding. And then people were happy by what I was coding. And then they were asking for more and they were getting happier, the more I responded.So, it was kind of like a serotonin cycle that made me happy and made everybody happy. So, it's like a win, win, win, win, win. And that's how I started with open-source. And eventually… NSIS—again, that installation system—got so big, like, my fork got so big, and Justin, the guy who works on WinAMP and NSIS, he had other things to deal with. You know, there's a whole history there with AOL. I'm sure you've heard all the funny stories.Corey: Oh, yes. In fact, one thing that—you want to talk about weird collisions of things crossing, one of the things I picked up from your bio when you finally got tired of telling me no and agreed to be on the show was that you're also one of the team who works on camelcamelcamel.com. And I keep forgetting that's one of those things that most people have no idea exists. But it's very simple: all it does is it tracks Amazon products that you tell it to and alerts you when there's a price drop on the thing that you're looking at.It's something that is useful. I try and use it for things of substance or hobbies because I feel really pathetic when I'm like, get excited emails about a price drop in toilet paper. But you know, it's very handy just to keep an idea for price history, where okay, am I actually being ripped off? Oh, they claim it's their big Amazon Deals day and this is 40% off. Let's see what camelcamelcamel has to say.Oh, surprise. They just jacked the price right beforehand and now knocked 40% off. Genius. I love that. It always felt like something that was going to be blown off the radar by Amazon being displeased, but I discovered you folks in 2010 and here you are now, 13 years later, still here. I will say the website looks a lot better now.Amir: [laugh]. That's a recent change. I actually joined camel, maybe two or three years ago. I wasn't there from the beginning. But I knew the guy who created it—again, as you were saying—from the Winamp days, right? So, we were both working in the free—well, it wasn't freenode. It was not freenode. It was a separate IRC server that, again, Justin created for himself. It was called landoleet.Corey: Mmm. I never encountered that one.Amir: Yeah, no, it was pretty private. The only people that cared about WinAMP and NSIS ended up joining there. But it was a lot of fun. I met a lot of friends there. And yeah, I met Daniel Green there as well, and he's the guy that created, along with some other people in there that I think want to remain anonymous so I'm not going to mention, but they also were on the camel project.And yeah, I was kind of doing my poor version of shitposting on Twitter about AWS, kind of starting to get some traction and maybe some clients and talk about AWS so people can approach me, and Daniel approached me out of the blue and he was like, “Do you just post about AWS on Twitter or do you also do some AWS work?” I was like, “I do some AWS work.”Corey: Yes, as do all of us. It's one of those, well crap, we're getting called out now. “Do you actually know how any of this stuff works?” Like, “Much to my everlasting shame, yes. Why are you asking?”Amir: Oh, my God, no, I cannot fix your printer. Leave me alone.Corey: Mm-hm.Amir: I don't want to fix your Lambdas. No, but I do actually want to fix your Lambdas. And so, [laugh] he approached me and he asked if I can help them move camelcamelcamel from their data center to AWS. So, that was a nice big project. So, we moved, actually, all of camelcamelcamel into AWS. And this is how I found myself not only in the Winamp credits, but also in the camelcamelcamel credits page, which has a great picture of me riding a camel.Corey: Excellent. But one of the things I've always found has been that when you take an application that has been pre-existing for a while in a data center and then move it into the cloud, you suddenly have to care about things that no one sensible pays any attention to in the land of the data center. Because it's like, “What do I care about how much data passes between my application server and the database? Wait, what do you mean that in this configuration, that's a chargeable data transfer? Oh, dear Lord.” And things that you've never had to think about optimizing are suddenly things are very much optimizing.Because let's face it, when it comes to putting things in racks and then running servers, you aren't auto-scaling those things, so everything tends to be running over-provisioned, for very good reasons. It's an interesting education. Anything you picked out from that process that you think it'd be useful for folks to bear in mind if they're staring down the barrel of the same thing?Amir: Yeah, for sure. I think… in general, right, not just here. But in general, you always want to be pragmatic, right? You don't want to take steps are huge, right? So, the thing we did was not necessarily rewrite everything and change everything to AWS and move everything to Lambda and move everything to Docker.Basically, we did a mini lift-and-shift, but not exactly lift-and-shift, right? We didn't take it as is. We moved to RDS, we moved to ElastiCache, right, we obviously made use of security groups and session connect and we dropped SSH Sage and we improved the security a lot and we locked everything down, all the permissions and all that kind of stuff, right? But like you said, there's stuff that you start having to pay attention to. In our case, it was less the data transfer because we have a pretty good CDN. There was more of IOPS. So—and IOPS, specifically for a database.We had a huge database with about one terabyte of data and a lot of it is that price history that you see, right? So, all those nice little graphs that we create in—what do you call them, charts—that we create in camelcamelcamel off the price history. There's a lot of data behind that. And what we always want to do is actually remove that from MySQL, which has been kind of struggling with it even before the move to AWS, but after the move to AWS, where everything was no longer over-provisioned and we couldn't just buy a few more NVMes on Amazon for 100 bucks when they were on sale—back when we had to pay Amazon—Corey: And you know, when they're on sale. That's the best part.Amir: And we know [laugh]. We get good prices on NVMe. But yeah, on Amazon—on AWS, sorry—you have to pay for io1 or something, and that adds up real quick, as you were saying. So, part of that move was also to move to something that was a little better for that data structure. And we actually removed just that data, the price history, the price points from MySQL to DynamoDB, which was a pretty nice little project.Actually, I wrote about it in my blog. There is, kind of, lessons learned from moving one terabyte from MySQL to DynamoDB, and I think the biggest lesson was about hidden price of storage in DynamoDB. But before that, I want to talk about what you asked, which was the way that other people should make that move, right? So again, be pragmatic, right? If you Google, “How do I move stuff from DynamoDB to MySQL,” everybody's always talking about their cool project using Lambda and how you throttle Lambda and how you get throttled from DynamoDB and how you set it up with an SQS, and this and that. You don't need all that.Just fire up an EC2 instance, write some quick code to do it. I used, I think it was Go with some limiter code from Uber, and that was it. And you don't need all those Lambdas and SQS and the complication. That thing was a one-time thing anyway, so it doesn't need to be super… super-duper serverless, you know?Corey: That is almost always the way that it tends to play out. You encounter these weird little things along the way. And you see so many things that are tied to this is how architecture absolutely must be done. And oh you're not a real serverless person if you don't have everything running in Lambda and the rest. There are times where yeah, spin up an EC2 box, write some relatively inefficient code in ten minutes and just do the thing, and then turn it off when you're done. Problem solved. But there's such an aversion to that. It's nice to encounter people who are pragmatists more than they are zealots.Amir: I mostly learned that lesson. And both Daniel Green and me learned that lesson from the Winamp days. Because we both have written plugins for Winamp and we've been around that area and you can… if you took one of those non-pragmatist people, right, and you had them review the Winamp code right now—or even before—they would have a million things to say. That code was—and NSIS, too, by the way—and it was so optimized. It was so not necessarily readable, right? But it worked and it worked amazing. And Justin would—if you think I respond quickly, right, Justin Frankel, the guy who wrote Winamp, he would release versions of NSIS and of Winamp, like, four versions a day, right? That was before [laugh] you had CI/CD systems and GitHub and stuff. That was just CVS. You remember CVS [laugh]?Corey: Oh, I've done multiple CVS migrations. One to Git and a couple to Subversion.Amir: Oh yeah, Subversion. Yep. Done ‘em all. CVS to Subversion to Git. Yep. Yep. That was fun.Corey: And these days, everyone's using Git because it—we're beginning to have a monoculture.Amir: Yeah, yeah. I mean, but Git is nicer than Subversion, for me, at least. I've had more fun with it.Corey: Talk about damning with faint praise.Amir: Faint?Corey: Yeah, anything's better than Subversion, let's be honest here.Amir: Oh [laugh].Corey: I mean, realistically, copying a bunch of files and directories to a.bak folder is better than Subversion.Amir: Well—Corey: At least these days. But back then it was great.Amir: Yeah, I mean, the only thing you had, right [laugh]?Corey: [laugh].Amir: Anyway, achieving great things with not necessarily the right tools, but just sheer power of will, that's what I took from the Winamp days. Just the entire world used Winamp. And by the way, the NSIS project that I was working on, right, I always used to joke that every computer in the world ran my code, every Windows computer in the world when my code, just because—Corey: Yes.Amir: So, many different companies use NSIS. And none of them cared that the code was not very readable, to put it mildly.Corey: So, many companies founder on those shores where they lose sight of the fact that I can point to basically no companies that died because their code was terrible, yeah, had an awful lot that died with great-looking code, but they didn't nail the business problem.Amir: Yeah. I would be lying if I said that I nailed exactly the business problem at NSIS because the most of the time I would spend there and actually shrinking the stub, right, there was appended to your installer data, right? So, there's a little stub that came—the executable, basically, that came before your data that was extracted. I spent, I want to say, years of my life [laugh] just shrinking it down by bytes—by literal bytes—just so it stays under 34, 35 kilobytes. It was kind of a—it was a challenge and something that people appreciated, but not necessarily the thing that people appreciate the most. I think the features—Corey: Well, no I have to do the same thing to make sure something fits into a Lambda deployment package. The scale changes, the problem changes, but somehow everything sort of rhymes with history.Amir: Oh, yeah. I hope you don't have to disassemble code to do that, though because that's uh… I mean, it was fun. It was just a lot.Corey: I have to ask, how much work went into building your cdk-github-runners as far as getting it to a point of just working out the door? Because I look at that and it feels like there's—like, the early versions, yeah, there wasn't a whole bunch of code tied to it, but geez, the iterative, “How exactly does this ridiculous step functions API work or whatnot,” feels like I'm looking at weeks of frustration. At least it would have been for me.Amir: Yeah, yeah. I mean, it wasn't, like, a day or two. It was definitely not—but it was not years, either. I've been working on it I think about a year now. Don't quote me on that. But I've put a lot of time into it. So, you know, like you said, the skeleton code is pretty simple: it's a step function, which as we said, takes a long time to get right. The functions, they are really nice, but their definition language is not very straightforward. But beyond that, right, once that part worked, it worked. Then came all the bug reports and all the little corner cases, right? We—Corey: Hell is other people's use cases. Always is. But that's honestly better than a lot of folks wind up experiencing where they'll put an open-source project up and no one ever knows. So, getting users is often one of the biggest barriers to a lot of this stuff. I've found countless hidden gems lurking around on GitHub with a very particular search for something that no one had ever looked at before, as best I can tell.Amir: Yeah.Corey: Open-source is a tricky thing. There needs to be marketing brought into it, there needs to be storytelling around it, and has to actually—dare I say—solve a problem someone has.Amir: I mean, I have many open-source projects like that, that I find super useful, I created for myself, but no one knows. I think cdk-github-runners, I'm pretty sure people know about it only because you talked about it on Screaming in the Cloud or your newsletter. And by the way, thank you for telling me that you talked about it last week in the conference because now we know why there was a spike [laugh] all of a sudden. People Googled it.Corey: Yeah. I put links to it as well, but it's the, yeah, I use this a lot and it's great. I gave a crappy explanation on how it works, but that's the trick I've found between conference talks and, dare I say, podcast episodes, you gives people a glimpse and a hook and tell them where to go to learn more. Otherwise, you're trying to explain every nuance and every intricacy in 45 minutes. And you can't do that effectively in almost every case. All you're going to do is drive people away. Make it sound exciting, get them to see the value in it, and then let them go.Amir: You have to explain the market for it, right? That's it.Corey: Precisely.Amir: And I got to say, I somewhat disagree with your—or I have a different view when you say that, you know, open-source projects needs marketing and all those things. It depends on what open-source is for you, right? I don't create open-source projects so they are successful, right? It's obviously always nicer when they're successful, but—and I do get that cycle of happiness that, like I was saying, people create bugs and I have to fix them and stuff, right? But not every open-source project needs to be a success. Sometimes it's just fun.Corey: No. When I talk about marketing, I'm talking about exactly what we're doing here. I'm not talking take out an AdWords campaign or something horrifying like that. It's you build something that solved the problem for someone. The big problem that worries me about these things is how do you not lose sleep at night about the fact that solve someone's problem and they don't know that it exists?Because that drives me nuts. I've lost count of the number of times I've been beating my head against a wall and asked someone like, “How would you handle this?” Like, “Oh, well, what's wrong with this project?” “What do you mean?” “Well, this project seems to do exactly what you want it to do.” And no one has it all stuffed in their head. But yeah, then it seems like open-source becomes a little more corporatized and it becomes a lead gen tool for people to wind up selling their SaaS services or managed offerings or the rest.Amir: Yeah.Corey: And that feels like the increasing corporatization of open-source that I'm not a huge fan of.Amir: Yeah. I mean, I'm not going to lie, right? Like, part of why I created this—or I don't know if it was part of it, but like, I had a dream that, you know, I'm going to get, oh, tons of GitHub sponsors, and everybody's going to use it and I can retire on an island and just make money out of this, right? Like, that's always a dream, right? But it's a dream, you know?And I think bottom line open-source is… just a tool, and some people use it for, like you were saying, driving sales into their SaaS, some people, like, may use it just for fun, and some people use it for other things. Or some people use it for politics, even, right? There's a lot of politics around open-source.I got to tell you a story. Back in the NSIS days, right—talking about politics—so this is not even about politics of open-source. People made NSIS a battleground for their politics. We would have translations, right? People could upload their translations. And I, you know, or other people that worked on NSIS, right, we don't speak every language of the world, so there's only so much we can do about figuring out if it's a real translation, if it's good or not.Back in the day, Google Translate didn't exist. Like, these days, we check Google Translate, we kind of ask a few questions to make sure they make sense. But back in the day, we did the best that we could. At some point, we got a patch for Catalan language, I'm probably mispronouncing it—but the separatist people in Spain, I think, and I didn't know anything about that. I was a young kid and… I just didn't know.And I just included it, you know? Someone submitted a patch, they worked hard, they wanted to be part of the open-source project. Why not? Sure I included it. And then a few weeks later, someone from Spain wanted to change Catalan into Spanish to make sure that doesn't exist for whatever reason.And then they just started fighting with each other and started making demands of me. Like, you have to do this, you have to do that, you have to delete that, you have to change the name. And I was just so baffled by why would someone fight so much over a translation of an open-source project. Like, these days, I kind of get what they were getting at, right?Corey: But they were so bad at telling that story that it was just like, so basically, screw, “You for helping,” is how it comes across.Amir: Yeah, screw you for helping. You're a pawn now. Just—you're a pawn unwittingly. Just do what I say and help me in my political cause. I ended up just telling both of them if you guys can agree on anything, I'm just going to remove both translations. And that's what I ended up doing. I just removed both translations. And then a few months later—because we had a release every month basically, I just added both of them back and I've never heard from them again. So sort of problem solved. Peace the Middle East? I don't know.Corey: It's kind of wild just to see how often that sort of thing tends to happen. It's a, I don't necessarily understand why folks are so opposed to other people trying to help. I think they feel like there's this loss of control as things are slipping through their fingers, but it's a really unwelcoming approach. One of the things that got me deep into the open-source ecosystem surprisingly late in my development was when I started pitching in on the SaltStack project right after it was founded, where suddenly everything I threw their way was merged, and then Tom Hatch, the guy who founded the project, would immediately fix all the bugs and stuff I put in and then push something else immediately thereafter. But it was such a welcoming thing.Instead of nitpicking me to death in the pull request, it just got merged in and then silently fixed. And I thought that was a classy way to do it. Of course, it doesn't scale and of course, it causes other problems, but I envy the simplicity of those days and just the ethos behind that.Amir: That's something I've learned the last few years, I would say. Back in the NSIS day, I was not like that. I nitpicked. I nitpicked a lot. And I can guess why, but it just—you create a patch—in my mind, right, like you create a patch, you fix it, right?But these days I get, I've been on the other side as well, right? Like I created patches for open-source projects and I've seen them just wither away and die, and then five years later, someone's like, “Oh, can you fix this line to have one instead of two, and then I'll merge it.” I'm like, “I don't care anymore. It was five years ago. I don't work there anymore. I don't need it. If you want it, do it.”So, I get it these days. And these days, if someone creates a patch—just yesterday, someone created a patch to format cdk-github-runners in VS Code. And they did it just, like, a little bit wrong. So, I just fixed it for them and I approved it and pushed it. You know, it's much better. You don't need to bug people for most of it.Corey: You didn't yell at them for having the temerity to contribute?Amir: My voice is so raw because I've been yelling for five days at them, yeah.Corey: Exactly, exactly. I really want to thank you for taking the time to chat with me about how all this stuff came to be and your own path. If people want to learn more, where's the best place for them to find you?Amir: So, I really appreciate you having me and driving all this traffic to my projects. If people want to learn more, they can always go to cloudsnorkel.com; it has all the projects. github.com/cloudsnorkel has a few more. And then my private blog is kichik.com. So, K-I-C-H-I-K dot com. I don't post there as much as I should, but it has some interesting AWS projects from the past few years that I've done.Corey: And we will, of course, put links to all of that in the show notes. Thank you so much for taking the time. I really appreciate it.Amir: Thank you, Corey. It was really nice meeting you.Corey: Amir Szekely, owner of CloudSnorkel. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, along with an insulting comment. Heck, put it on all of the podcast platforms with a step function state machine that you somehow can't quite figure out how the API works.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.

Sports Daily
Wildcat Daniel Green out for the season

Sports Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2023 45:38


Hour 1 - It is bad news, Green is out.  Jacob and Tommy kick off a Wednesday with Wildcat talk.

Purple Project Podcast
PPPD: Daniel Green Update & Will NcNair Jr. Added (KSU) 9.19.23

Purple Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 20, 2023 13:57


K-State football on the defense side take a huge blow, while HC Jerome Tang gets his final roster spot filled for the 2023-24 basketball season! Plus, men's golf.

In My Heart with Heather Thomson
Chef Daniel Green

In My Heart with Heather Thomson

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2023 33:23


Chef Daniel is a Healthy Eating Expert and Television Celebrity Cook in England, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai and the USA. Daniel will sit on the Culinary Investor panel for the 1st season of Food Fortunes on Food Network to decide if he will invest in a new product being presented. Daniel is also a judge on Food Network's Kitchen Inferno. Making appearances on talk shows around the world, planning meals for 2 major international airlines and developing in-room dining for a 5-star hotel chain in Asia has cultivated an international fan base. Currently, Daniel is based in the US and is a full time presenter for EVINE, one of the top luxury home shopping channels in the US. Daniel has authored 12 books sold worldwide – Including Paleo Monday to Friday, Modern Dining for Life, Healthy Dining for Life ), Healthy Eating for Lower Cholesterol, Green's Greens. Two of his latest healthy cookbooks won the prestigious Gourmand World Cookbook Award 2010 and 2011 for “The Best TV Celebrity Chef Cookbook” and one book has been printed in seven languages to date. For the last 5 years, Daniel has created the in-room dining menus for the 18 properties that make up the 5 star Dusit Thani hotel chain in Asia. He has also designed menus for the Shangri-La, Mandarin Oriental, Hilton, Conrad, Sheraton, Westin, Marriott, over the last 10 years. For the past 3 years, Daniel has been planning all of KLM's on-board meals totaling 2 million meals per year. Daniel created his own range of healthy gourmet foods, ingredients and smart cooking tools. His products which include gluten free jams, spices and olive oil have launched in premium lifestyle stores in Asia, Australia and the U.S. under Daniel's personal brand, The Model Cook. SPONSOR: Go to www.THEOUAI.com and put in code IN MY HEART for 15% off any purchase. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Down Trails of Victory
S3 E3--Stephen F Austin High School--1986 State Football Semifinalists

Down Trails of Victory

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 16, 2023 114:14


"I want to fly like an Eagle, let my spirit carry me..."The Stephen F. Austin High School Eagles of Port Acres, Texas, did just that in 1986, as they soared through a season of triumph, culminating in a historic State Semifinal matchup with Cuero and its sophomore phenom Robert Strait.Hear SFA seniors Kenny Ford, Allen Griggie, Kevin Henry, Damon Martin, and Derek Moore talk with Buck (who was an assistant coach for the Eagles) about that 1986 season, including remembrances about:attending Stephen F Austin High School in the mid-1980s;the 1985 Regional Finalist team, and its impact on the 1986 team;pre-district and district games;the 1986 playoff run;thoughts on SFA educators, coaches, players, and opponents;and other topics!The podcast brings up a wide range of names from Southeast Texas, including Richard Marler, Boyd Edwards, Danny Knowles, Greg Green, Jo Ellen Green, Loyce Comeaux, Ned Cole, Joe Washington Sr, Dr. Chester Levy Jr, Mike Owens, Sylvester Smith, Robert Lawson, Jimmy Wyble, George Thompson, Joe Smith, Larry Reece, Jim Yarberry, Larry Southard, John Evans, Leroy Ross, Graylin Johnson, Devin Woods, Kenneth Everfield, Roderick Batiste, Keith Randle, Burk Whittington, Jack Foster, Richard Washington, Curtis Barbay, Ernest Bo Gipson, Fred Kennebrew, Scott Conner, Randy Tomlinson, Scott Gooch, Shane Dronett, Otis Sowell, Chuck Langston, Ed Peveto, Julian Bush, Fredena Ballou, Ronnie Fisher, Robert Conner, Daniel Green, Derrick LeBlanc, Frederick Rhine, Kip Texada, Terry Parker, Brett Wilson, Murphy Ford, Jimbo Guy, Eric Garcia, Zandar Hebert, Glen Simien, Ed Reynolds, Jeff Sly, Terry Jones, Chris Lalonde, Arthur Thibodeaux, Derrick LeBlanc, Fred Robbins, Bobby Durham, Jason Chenault, Troy Bertrand, Brice Alpough, Eric Malveaux, Terest Pete, David Lalonde, Travis Sanders, Gerard Green, Amante Martin, ...and more! Other well-known names included in the podcast are Spike Dykes, Mike Gundy, Curtis Looper, Ezekiel Elliott, Tony Pollard, Brian Bosworth, Ray Lewis, Harry Hickey, Paul Johnson, Robert Strait, Wayne Mathis, Adam Arroyo, Rodney Pedrazza, Irvin Thomas, Brian Parks, Bill Shimek, Patrick Mahomes, Joe Burrow...and more!!"Time keeps on slippin', slippin', slippin', into the future..."Harken back to that time in 1986 when young men flew like Eagles...Right here on Down Trails of Victory podcast!

The Leadership in Insurance Podcast (The LIIP)
The Emerging Tech Series with Daniel Green, Co-Founder & CTO, Faye

The Leadership in Insurance Podcast (The LIIP)

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 31:12


This episode dive's into all things #Tech, #ESG & Engineering #Culture. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

KCSN: K-State Athletics
Daniel Green Discusses Decision to Return to Kansas State and Defense in 2023 | 3MAW 7/15

KCSN: K-State Athletics

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 15, 2023 25:23


John Kurtz and Cole Manbeck sit down with Kansas State linebacker Daniel Green at Big 12 Media Days in Arlington to talk about his decision to come back to Manhattan and preview the Wildcats defense in 2023. — Find the best Kansas State looks for this season at Homefield Apparel. Check out their entire K-State collection here: https://www.homefieldapparel.com/collections/kansas-state-wildcats-vintage-apparel-shop — Join us on July 29 for our “Tacos and Bourbon” golf tournament presented by Mission Taco Joint and Holladay Distillery! Sign up here: http://GiveButter.com/kcsngolf — The best Kansas City sports coverage in one place. Download our app now! Apple: https://apps.apple.com/us/app/kcsn/id6443568374 Google Play: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.kcsn&hl=en — Download the DraftKings Sportsbook App NOW and sign up with promo code KCSN! https://apps.apple.com/us/app/draftkings-sportsbook-casino/id1375031369 — Subscribe to the KCSN Daily substack for film reviews, exclusive podcasts, KC Draft guide, discounts and access, giveaways, merch drops and more at https://kcsn.substack.com/subscribe FOLLOW US ON: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/KCSportsNetwork Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kcsports.network/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/KCSportsNetwork Substack - https://kcsn.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Shane Dennis Podcast
The Pulse 7-13-23 HR 2

Shane Dennis Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2023 58:29


Pat holds special interviews with Cooper Beebe, Daniel Green of K-State and Terry Franz from Cars 4 Heroes. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Aletheia Gainesville - Sermon Audio
A Light to Those In Darkness | John 9:1-23

Aletheia Gainesville - Sermon Audio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 9, 2023 43:32


Daniel Green speaks from John 9 on Jesus as a Light in the darkness.

Scriptnotes Podcast
601 - Side Quests

Scriptnotes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 47:45


John and Craig take a detour to discuss side quests: those smaller tasks that can serve as the building blocks of a character's journey. How do side quests differ from your hero's primary goal? What's the best way to use them? And how can writers make them meaningful? We then discuss the importance of failure to the artistic process. We also follow up on graphic design for writers, spacing out TV episodes, and a Scriptnotes love story. In our bonus segment for premium members, John and Craig put on their headsets to to talk about VR. Links: Do Your Worst, Or You Might Never Do Your Best by Bridget Webber Why You Need to Fail TED Talk by Derek Sivers Artists must be allowed to make bad work by Austin Kleon The Museum of Failure For Profit: A History of Corporations by William Magnuson Kobo Libra 2 Nine Days on IMDb Get a Scriptnotes T-shirt! Check out the Inneresting Newsletter Gift a Scriptnotes Subscription or treat yourself to a premium subscription! Craig Mazin on Instagram John August on Twitter John on Instagram John on Mastodon Outro by Daniel Green (send us yours!) Scriptnotes is produced by Drew Marquardt with help from Chris Csont and edited by Matthew Chilelli. Our intern is Halley Lamberson. Email us at ask@johnaugust.com You can download the episode here.

Military Matters
Fast Take — 'Front Toward Enemy: War, Veterans, and the Homefront' with Dr. Dan Green

Military Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 6, 2023 27:33


Rod Rodriguez and Jack Murphy talk about Jack's interview with Dr. Daniel Green and his book "Front Toward Enemy: War, Veterans, and the Homefront."   ___________ This episode is brought to you by Homes For Our Troops, a nonprofit helping build and donate homes to injured post 9/11 veterans. Visit HFOTUSA.org for more information.

Military Matters
'Front Toward Enemy: War, Veterans, and the Homefront' with Dr. Dan Green

Military Matters

Play Episode Listen Later May 30, 2023 54:10


With over 2 million post 9/11 veterans in America, the voice of this generation of vets is getting louder and more pronounced in television, film, theater, and in literature. What does this all mean for those vets transitioning back to a society they don't feel understands them? How do they make peace with wars that never really ended? Jack Murphy talks with Dr. Daniel Green about his book "Front Toward Enemy: War, Veterans, and the Homefront".    This episode is brought to you by Homes For Our Troops, a nonprofit helping build and donate homes to injured post 9/11 veterans. Visit HFOTUSA.org for more information.  

Art Supply Insiders Podcast
ASI 65 "Artist Spotlight" - Interview with Internationally known artist Alexander Cruz

Art Supply Insiders Podcast

Play Episode Play 60 sec Highlight Listen Later May 21, 2023 30:11 Transcription Available


Join Alexander Cruz as he takes you through his inspirational story and humble beginnings. Alexander shares his experiences with Bob Ross, portrait artist Daniel Green and many others.  Alexander transmits his sensitivity and realism through mother nature. The peace reflected in his landscapes, the brilliant colors that flowers transmit to us and the nobility of his animals are some of the themes that this artist can capture. The hyper realism so palpable that Cruz presents us makes us attest to the pictorial mastery he has with his art.Click here to go to the Alexander Cruz web page.Art Supply InsidersClick here to subscribe & follow (and be notified of every new podcast): Subscribe & FollowPlease leave a comment (we love feedback!): CommentsSupport the show

101 Stage Adaptations
8 - THE THREE SISTERS OF WEEHAWKEN by Deborah Zoe Laufer (Ep. 20)

101 Stage Adaptations

Play Episode Play 59 sec Highlight Listen Later Mar 9, 2023 54:32


Melissa reconnects with playwright Deborah Zoe Laufer. They first met when Melissa interviewed her about her play, Be Here Now. Now we be here again to talk about one of Deb's (apparently many) stage adaptations, The Three Sisters of Weehawken, based of course on Chekhov's Three Sisters. In this episode, we discuss:Why Deborah set her adaptation in New JerseyWhich of Chekhov's 3 sisters we areWhat message Chekhov's plays have for us today How writers groups influence her writing processAnd more!Resources MentionedThe Three Sisters of Weehawken by Deborah Zoe LauferMelissa's first interviews with Deborah : The Be Here Now Interview, On Playwriting Pt. 1 & Pt. 2About Our GuestDeborah Zoe Laufer's plays have been produced at Steppenwolf Theatre Company, Cincinnati Playhouse in the Park, Cleveland Playhouse, Geva, The Humana Festival, Everyman, Primary Stages, Ensemble Studio Theatre, and hundreds of other theaters around the world. Plays include Be Here Now, End Days, Rooted, Informed Consent which was a NYTimes critic's pick, Leveling Up, Out of Sterno, The Last Schwartz, Sirens, Meta, The Three Sisters of Weehawken, Fortune, dozens of short plays, and the musicals, Window Treatment, and By Any Other Name, written with composer, Daniel Green. Deb is a recipient of the Helen Merrill Playwriting Award, the Lilly Award, The ATCA Steinberg citation, and grants and commissions from the National Endowment for the Arts, The Alfred P. Sloan Foundation, The Edgerton Foundation, The National New Play Network, and the Lincoln Center Foundation. Her work has been developed by The Eugene O'Neill Playwrights Conference, Theatre Lab, PlayPenn, The Cherry Lane Alternative, The Missoula Colony, LOCAL Theatre, Asolo Rep, The Baltic Playwrights Conference, and more. Her plays are published or recorded by Concord/Samuel French, Smith and Kraus, Playscripts, LA Theatreworks, and Premieres. She is a graduate of Juilliard, an alumna of the BMI Lehman Engel Advanced Musical TConnect with host Melissa Schmitz***Sign up for the 101 Stage Adaptations Newsletter***101 Stage AdaptationsFollow the Podcast on Facebook & InstagramRead Melissa's plays on New Play ExchangeConnect with Melissa on LinkedInWays to support the show:- Buy Me a Coffee- Tell us your thoughts in our Listener Survey!- Give a 5-Star rating- Write a glowing review on Apple Podcasts - Send this episode to a friend- Share on social media (Tag us so we can thank you!)Creators: Host your podcast through Buzzsprout using my affiliate link & get a $20 credit on your paid account. Let your fans directly support you via Buy Me a Coffee (affiliate link).

Latitud Podcast
#132 - Crucial legal and financial information for startups: Daniel Green, Gunderson

Latitud Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2023 37:55


It's 2023, and all startups are trying to find answers to profound questions that may affect their present and future existence.  We invited back Dan Green from Gunderson Dettmer for a series of special episodes where we will focus on vital legal and financial information.Dan works with all corporate and securities law areas, including company formation and financing, debt transactions, and investor-side financings. He got an exceptional eye for the Latam Startup universe. In this episode, we have a chance to overview what is happening with so many companies right now and discuss fundraising, down and extension rounds, dilutions, debt, vesting, and other crucial financial and legal topics.Hey, apply to be a fellow, open your startup, sign up for our newsletter, or request early access to Meridian. Follow us on Linkedin / Twitter / Instagram / Podcast.

KCSN: K-State Athletics
Kansas State Football Continues to Get Good News in Offseason | 3MAW 1/20

KCSN: K-State Athletics

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2023 34:44


John Kurtz, Cole Manbeck, and Derek Young react to the recent news about Kansas State football including the return of Daniel Green and a couple of transfers heading to Manhattan. — Compete against KCSN hosts and other KCSN supporters in our exclusive DraftKings Daily Fantasy league for just $5. Only 50 players are allowed per week, so act now! https://dkn.gs/r/gj0tcTskQEqlep-O0Zhh6Q — Download the DraftKings Sportsbook App NOW and sign up with promo code KCSN! https://apps.apple.com/us/app/draftkings-sportsbook-casino/id1375031369 — Subscribe to the KCSN Daily substack for film reviews, exclusive podcasts, KC Draft guide, discounts and access, giveaways, merch drops and more at https://kcsn.substack.com/subscribe — You can look good while supporting the network by copping some NEW KCSN merch in collaboration with our friends at Charlie Hustle. https://www.charliehustle.com/collections/kc-sports-network  FOLLOW US ON: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/KCSportsNetwork Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kcsports.network/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/KCSportsNetwork Substack - https://kcsn.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Purple Project Podcast
PPPD: Jevon Banks & The Return of Daniel Green (KStateFB) 1/16/23

Purple Project Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2023 9:18


Kansas State football received some very good news over the weekend! Eddie has more details.

LatamlistEspresso
Interview with Antonio Soares on LatAm's fintech landscape for 2023. Syncfy closes $10M seed round, Ep 125

LatamlistEspresso

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 20, 2022 6:26


This week's Espresso covers updates from Welbe, Syncfy, and more!Outline of this episode:[00:28] - Syncfy closes $10M seed round[00:45] - tea secures $8.9M in seed round[01:03] - Welbe closes $4.1M seed round[01:21] - WeKall completes a $1.5M pre-seed round[01:50] - Interview with Antonio Soares on LatAm fintech trends in 2023[05:19] - How to be the Difference's Holiday Special[05:29] - New Crossing Borders episodeResources & people mentioned:Companies & Startups: Syncfy, tea, Welbe, WeKall, Dock, Gunderson Dettmer.VCs, Accelerators, Institutions: Point72 Ventures, Acuitas Group Holdings, Volpe Capital, Nazca, Carao Ventures, Imagine Ventures. People: Antonio Soares, Johanna Molina, Paul Lynskey, Daniel Green, Nathan Lustig.

48 Hours
The Ambush: Who Killed Officer Daniel Green? | My Life of Crime

48 Hours

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2022 28:58


On the morning of February 5th, 2015, Tulare County police officer Daniel Green took his son to school and then returned home. While on the toilet, he is shot dead. Police have no gun, eyewitnesses, or DNA evidence. During routine questioning the following day, Daniel's ex-wife, Erika Sandoval, tells police she hasn't visited Daniel's house in weeks, but her story appears to contradict a neighbor's surveillance footage. 48 Hours correspondent Erin Moriarty presents her investigation into the killing of officer Daniel Green on her podcast, My Life of Crime. Based on the 48 Hours episode "The Killing of Daniel Green”.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

SportsBeat KC
A full bowl lineup: How postseason matchups came about for Kansas State, Mizzou, KU

SportsBeat KC

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 6, 2022 25:41


Kansas State won a conference championship, then joined Missouri and Kansas in learning its bowl destination. SportsBeat KC tells the huge weekend in college football in podcast form. You'll hear comments from K-State coach Chris Klieman and players Daniel Green, Deuce Vaughn, Will Howard and Felix Anudike-Uzomah after their stirring 31-28 victory over TCU for the Wildcats' first Big 12 championship in a decade. The Wildcats are headed to the Sugar Bowl to face Alabama. Also with their suitcases packed are the Tigers and Jayhawks. Mizzou is headed to the Gazparilla Bowl to meet Wake Forest and Kansas to the Liberty Bowl to play Arkansas. You may have heard about a poential Mizzou-KU matchup in a bowl game last week. Missouri Coach Eli Drinkwitz addresses that topic, and Kansas coach Lance Leipold talks about the unexpected success of Kansas in his second season. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

My Life of Crime with Erin Moriarty
The Ambush: Who Killed Officer Daniel Green?

My Life of Crime with Erin Moriarty

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 30, 2022 28:21


On the morning of February 5th, 2015, Tulare County police officer Daniel Green took his son to school and then returned home. While on the toilet, he is shot dead. Police have no gun, eyewitnesses, or DNA evidence. During routine questioning the following day, Daniel's ex-wife, Erika Sandoval, tells police she hasn't visited Daniel's house in weeks, but her story appears to contradict a neighbor's surveillance footage. Based on the 48 Hours episode "The Killing of Daniel Green.”See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Movie Oubliette
Elvira: Mistress of the Dark

Movie Oubliette

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 65:46


Conrad and Dan are exposed to Elvira for the very first time in this Patreon's Choice episode, and watch with delight as the busty horror movie host scandalises the small, conservative town she visits in search of her past... and the money she needs to fund her Vegas debut. Elvira: Mistress of the Dark (1988) stars Cassandra Peterson as the irrepressible Elvira, E. Morgan Sheppard as her scheming great uncle Vinnie, Daniel Green as the naive town hunk, Bob, and Edie McClurg as the hilariously shrewish Chastity Pariah. It's the kind of comedy they don't make any more, but it that a sad or a good thing? Does Elvira work for a dumbfounded international audience? Find out! Follow us on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram Support us on Patreon to nominate future films and access exclusive bonus content

From the Dark Side: Podcast
The Murder of Daniel Green

From the Dark Side: Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 11, 2022 19:40


A 31-year old man is fatally shot in his home by his ex-wife after he posted a photo to Instagram of him and his new girlfriend. A shocking allegation in the courtroom has a jury conflicted on the motive.

Truth, Lies & Alibis
One in Three - Daniel Green

Truth, Lies & Alibis

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2022 39:48


This week, in continuation of Domestic Violence Awareness Month, we bring attention to the often forgotten statistic that 1 in 3 males are victims of violence from an intimate partner. We talk about Daniel Green and Isaiah Carvalho, both of which we victims of domestic violence. Case episodes will be released every Monday. They are available anywhere you get your podcasts, including Youtube."Atlantean Twilight" Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com)Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 4.0 Licensehttp://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/References:“links”Facebook - Truth, Lies, and AlibisInstagram - @truthliesandalibisTwitter - @TLandApodcastYoutube - Truth, Lies & Alibis PodcastEmails can be sent to - TLApodcast@yahoo.comPodcast website - Truthliesandalibis.buzzsprout.com 

Follow the Truth
E13 Update - 30 Minutes to Plead for Freedom

Follow the Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 5, 2022 26:07


After nearly 3 decades in prison for the murder of Michael Jordan's father, Daniel Green finally has the chance to get a hearing that could lead to a new trial and even his freedom. But instead of letting his attorney of more than 6 years argue on his behalf, in the eleventh hour, he fires her and makes his own off-the-cuff argument in front of the judge. Spectators in court are stunned, fearing Green may have thrown away his last chance of coming home. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

20 Minute Leaders
Ep916: Daniel Green | Co-Founder and CTO, Faye

20 Minute Leaders

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2022 22:03


Daniel Green is Co-Founder & CTO of Faye, the #1 disruptor setting a new standard in travel insurance coverage and care. This is the second startup he has founded with Faye Co-Founder & CEO, Elad Schaffer. Both previously co-founded Wikistrat, the world's first crowdsourced consultancy platform. There Daniel developed the company's core technologies including a real-time collaboration platform, gamification incentification systems and its flagship data model for predicting disruptions to countries and economies. As a developer with 20 years of experience and a deep passion for travel, Daniel enjoys applying his specialization in real-time applications to Faye's core mission of forever elevating the way consumers travel

Writing in the Tiny House
Reality Check

Writing in the Tiny House

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 15:26


A dose of reality for today. “Brigitte,” Installment One of Tales from Vlaydor, is available on ebook and audiobook. Follow the link to find them on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/s?k=brigitte+devin+davis&ref=nb_sb_noss_1 Become a patron today! Visit patreon.com/writinginthetinyhouse Get ahold of Krissy Barton with Little Syllables editing services. She does free sample edits to see if you and she would be the right fit. www.littlesyllables.com Instagram: @authordevindavis Twitter: @authordevind The following is an imperfect transcript of this episode. A complete transcript can be found on the show's webpage. [00:00:00] Hello, and welcome to the show Writing in the Tiny House. The entire point of this podcast is to help the tormented artist by sharing what I know about writing, publishing, and stress management, so that you can have the tools to produce the content that you have been eager to write. If you have the steps in place, you can produce a short story in as few as three months or a novel in as few as 18. And hopefully through the ideas in this podcast, you will have the wisdom to adjust that timeline if you need to. I am Devin Davis, the guy who lives and writes in a tiny house in Northern Utah. Thank you for tuning in, and please enjoy today's episode of Writing in the Tiny House.  Hello and good morning. It is another [00:01:00] Wednesday. And here we are in the tiny house doing another episode of this awesome show guys. It has been rough. Things have been rough, and I will compile another clip episode on my experience with beta readers later, just because that whole process isn't finished yet. I have a few beta readers who have not given feedback. I'm going to be meeting one of them tonight for drinks. I'm excited to hear what she has to say, but there has been a reality check in my life, and I have decided to share that reality check with you all today. at the same time, I don't want this to sound bitter or whatever, just because sometimes when we have moments like this, it's really easy to just get mad and it's okay to get mad. It is also a very healthy way to realize your life and to realize what you're doing, to realize the next [00:02:00] steps to realize. Your reality, hence the reality check. here's the fundamental question with all of this that I don't know that I've addressed in a previous episode of writing in the tiny house, what does it take to be a writer? What does it take for a person to say that they are a writer and like with so many art based things? I mean, in reality, you don't, you don't have to have painted anything in order to say that you're a painter, you certainly don't have to have sold any of your paintings to say that you're a painter and you don't have to have any of your artwork in your house. It is something where you can say it. And it is true I mean, with painting, perhaps you, you need to have held a brush at some time in your life, and that could have been at any time. And at that moment in time, you were a painter and you could still claim to be a painter because, because, because of opinions, because of, [00:03:00] you know, time isn't real, anyway, stuff like that. Writing is the same. If you have written an essay ever in your life, you are a writer and today you could still claim to be a writer. If you have not written a single word since that essay in junior high school at the same time, though, if you do claim to be a writer, people will want to see. the fruits of your labor. They will want to see what you have done. And so if you say that you are a writer, especially if it is your profession instead of your hobby, and that's another tricky part with this friends, if you want it to be your profession, there's a lot of stuff that you're going to have to do. and the fact of the matter is most writers in this world do not support themselves through their writing. If you want to support yourself through your writing, there is a [00:04:00] lot you are going to have to do, and it will take a long time. I mean, there are always exceptions to all of the things that I'm going to be saying, but by and large, most writers don't support themselves with writing and. Those who do it has taken a long time to get there, or a lot of the writers that we see today are able to write full time because a loved one is actually supporting them Or whatever they write full time because they don't need to worry about income. Income is being provided somewhere else, either through a loved one or inheritance or whatever, whatever. and like I said, there's always exceptions to that. , but here we are here. We here I am. I finished another pass with TIS and we're doing the beta readers and I received feedback that ti needs to be longer ti needs to be a full on novel instead of just a Nove The beta reader who said that [00:05:00] had all of the reasons to back it up, had all of it for this reason and that reason and whatever the thing is, I originally wrote his. thinking that it would just be a short story. And so I worked it out in the method that we see short stories. There aren't many characters. There aren't many characters who speak, everything feels pretty condensed. and that's how I wanted it, but was it the best way to do it? This beta reader has shown me that probably it wasn't. So while there were definitely strong parts in Ts, and I appreciate that and I love knowing that those things were there. thus far, I've gotten a lot of good feedback from ti. Another trick, like another kind of interesting thing with beta readers is if somebody says that they don't like the main character and another person says that they do like the main character, the thing is both of those beta readers are right. I mean, there's always a chance that the first person missed [00:06:00] something or there's a chance that I didn't do it. Right. Or there's probably. A greater chance of a little bit of both of those possibilities, but I've received very good feedback from ti thus far, but one beta reader wanted to understand the scope of it all. the thing is TIS is supposed to be the first book of a world of books. I. Hesitate to say that it's a, well, it would be a series, but the thing is, each of the books is not necessarily a continuation of the previous book. Most of these books will have different characters with different plots and different things, but they all take place in the same world. And so this collection of books, this tales from LAER stuff. That we've been doing for the past while is actually a world of books. It is [00:07:00] a world of lives. It's a world of people and not necessarily all of the books are continuations of a previous plot. and that's where we are. So we have stories that take place in this city. We have stories that take place in another city and the stories are unrelated except for a single element that ties in later. And of course, all of this builds for the final thing at the end, just because that's how it gets to be. Right. You build for 10 books and then you have the final trilogy at the end with a big battle. it? It's something that we've seen a lot in fantasy. going back to this idea of being a writer and what it all kind of looks like this beta reader wanted to understand the scope of where we were headed with this of where T was going of the [00:08:00] future projects. that are on the horizon, so to speak. And she said that the story is too big and the world is too complicated. And the intricacies of the magic system are such that it cannot all be properly developed in a Nove. And the thing with releasing a collection of short stories and a collection of Noves over time is the entire world is not fully developed in each Nove. And unless the Noves are all released at the same time, the reader is only going to get a half baked world in each Nove over the next. Many years until I'm finished with them. And so I can either release a collection of Noves all at once, or I can kind of flex my muscles and do all of the world building and make [00:09:00] TIS a big beefy novel, which will then set off this entire collection of this entire world of books with a splash. There's a lot of. heat writing on the first book of any collection of stories and any series. The first book is super important and I am convinced right now that a Nove is not the best way to do a first book. It was a year ago. That I was seeing a trend of people releasing a Nove as a way to test a theory or to test the market, to see if releasing something larger or something, you know, along those lines of the Nove later would land well. And so the novella was a way to test the market and the thing. Now that we are [00:10:00] 18 months beyond that, beyond me hearing about that first trend, I have not seen the fruit of any of the people following those trends yet. I know of one person who released a Nove. His name is Daniel Green. and it was his first, anything that he ever wrote, he has a very large following on YouTube, a very respectable, big following. And so he's self-published because he already has a big audience that he directly addresses, I think two times a week on his channel on YouTube. And he released a novella and I don't know what has come of. I don't know if he has continued with that or not, or if it was just a good project that he did. And now it's done. Who knows? I mean, I could, I could figure it out and I probably shouldn't include that on a podcast episode, but here we are just standing here thinking so. [00:11:00] considering the length of time that comes in between these projects is a Nove the best way to go. Like I said, I'm convinced that it's not, that also means that ti gets to be largely rewritten. And so to be a writer, here's the thing, friends here is the hard thing to be a writer you write to be a writer does not mean that other people will have to read what you have written. You do not need to land yourself a big following in order to be considered a writer. I have thus far written, literally hundreds of thousands of words. Literally hundreds of thousands of words that all belong within this world of lado. And this dates back to my first novels that I released when I was 24. I mean, this was forever ago. And I mean, it's what happens when you're 24 and you're eager to have a book out in [00:12:00] the world. And so you release a book that has not had a final proofread. So those books are not available now, but they take place in lado and so, here we are. I have written hundreds of thousands of words. I am going to write hundreds of thousands of more words until a readership gets a hold of any of it. And so the question of the day is, and I ask this very seriously because I already know my own answer, but I'm going to pose it to you. The listeners of writing in the tiny house. I'm, I'm assuming that most of you are writers are hoping to be whether professionally or as a hobby or whatever writing fulfills in your life. If you end up writing hundreds of thousands of words and a handful of people only ever get to read some of it, is it all worth it?[00:13:00]  So go ahead and think about that because hundreds of thousands of words represents hours and hours, hundreds of hours. if not more and as a writer, is it worth it? If only a handful of people ever read a fraction of the stuff you have written. So for me, the answer is yes, that's something that I've been toiling with for a long time. And I have this big ass series. That I have been struggling with for a long time to begin to start. And now, because life is different than it was 10 years ago, I can start it, but this is something that will likely carry me into my sixties. There's enough books and enough, there there's enough content to carry me into my sixties. we get to just wonder if something that takes up so much [00:14:00] of my life, doesn't get read by somebody else or only a handful of other people and whatever else is it going to be worth it, something to think about. So thank you for joining me. And I leave you with that sobering thought.  And that is it for today. Before we go, I need to say that my current work in progress Tiz the next installment of Tales from Vlaydor is ready for beta readers, people to read the novella and share with me their experience. It's a big, important step before publishing. So if you wish to be a part of this project, reach out to me on my social media handles; on Instagram I'm @authordevindavis, and on Twitter I'm @authordevind. And remember that my short story Brigitte is available on Amazon as an ebook and on Audible as an audio book. Check those out today. [00:15:00] 

Team Hold!
Fantasy Basketball and Web 3 with Daniel Green

Team Hold!

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 25, 2022 72:28


The Judge stops by the show to talk about what Super Draft is doing with your Top Shot Moments. Then we talk a bit about the news of the WNBA MGLE drop and the NFL All Day OBJ drop.

The Short Side Option
EP89--2022 Kansas State Preview-- K-State Defense

The Short Side Option

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 19, 2022 71:09


This episode of The Short Side Option podcast is brought to you by our friends at Manhattan Brewing Company. Manhattan Brewing Company is entering their second year as the title sponsor of The Short Side Option and we couldn't be more excited to have them partner with us! Be sure to check out their list of upcoming events-- you can follow them on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/manhattanbrewing or on their website www.mhkbeer.com for all of the latest happenings at the brewery! In this episode of The Short Side Option, The ICON and Dlew take a look at the Kansas State defense. The defense is shaping up to be one of the best in the Big 12 and has plenty of star power to go around, as this unit is led by studs like Felix Anudike-Uzomah, Daniel Green, Julius Brents, and Ekow Boye-Doe. We break it all down on this episode of The Short Side Option!

WGN - The After Hours with Rick Kogan Podcast
Embracing Chicago culture at the Newberry Library Book Fair this weekend

WGN - The After Hours with Rick Kogan Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2022


Daniel Green, President and Librarian of the Newberry Library, joins Rick Kogan to talk about the Newberry Library Book Fair happening this weekend. He discussed with Rick how the library managed to stay afloat during the quarantine, the impact that technology has had on the consumption of literature, “promoting reading in Chicago about Chicago,” and […]

KCSN: K-State Athletics
Daniel Green and Eli Huggins Return To Loaded K-State Defense | 3MAW 7/20

KCSN: K-State Athletics

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2022 27:05


Cole Manbeck and Derek Young sit down with both Daniel Green and Eli Huggins in Arlington, Texas from Big 12 media days to talk about their preparation for the season and get their thoughts on this year's squad. — Subscribe to the KCSN Daily substack for film reviews, exclusive podcasts, KC Draft guide, discounts and access, giveaways, merch drops and more at https://kcsn.substack.com/subscribe — You can look good while supporting the network by copping some first-edition KCSN merch. https://happinameskc.com/team-store/kc-sport-network FOLLOW US ON: Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/KCSportsNetwork Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/kcsports.network/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/KCSportsNetwork Substack - https://kcsn.substack.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

In My Heart with Heather Thomson
Chef Daniel Green

In My Heart with Heather Thomson

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2022 33:44


Chef Daniel is a Healthy Eating Expert and Television Celebrity Cook in England, Thailand, Malaysia, Singapore, Hong Kong, Dubai and the USA. Daniel will sit on the Culinary Investor panel for the 1st season of Food Fortunes on Food Network to decide if he will invest in a new product being presented. Daniel is also a judge on Food Network's Kitchen Inferno. Making appearances on talk shows around the world, planning meals for 2 major international airlines and developing in-room dining for a 5-star hotel chain in Asia has cultivated an international fan base. Currently, Daniel is based in the US and is a full time presenter for EVINE, one of the top luxury home shopping channels in the US. Daniel has authored 12 books sold worldwide – Including Paleo Monday to Friday, Modern Dining for Life, Healthy Dining for Life ), Healthy Eating for Lower Cholesterol, Green's Greens. Two of his latest healthy cookbooks won the prestigious Gourmand World Cookbook Award 2010 and 2011 for “The Best TV Celebrity Chef Cookbook” and one book has been printed in seven languages to date. For the last 5 years, Daniel has created the in-room dining menus for the 18 properties that make up the 5 star Dusit Thani hotel chain in Asia. He has also designed menus for the Shangri-La, Mandarin Oriental, Hilton, Conrad, Sheraton, Westin, Marriott, over the last 10 years. For the past 3 years, Daniel has been planning all of KLM's on-board meals totaling 2 million meals per year. Daniel created his own range of healthy gourmet foods, ingredients and smart cooking tools. His products which include gluten free jams, spices and olive oil have launched in premium lifestyle stores in Asia, Australia and the U.S. under Daniel's personal brand, The Model Cook. Fabric: Protect your family's financial future with Fabric. Apply today in just 10 minutes at www.meetfabric.com/INMYHEART Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

The College Football Experience
Kansas State Wildcats College Football Preview 2022 (Ep. 998)

The College Football Experience

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 36:39


The College Football Experience (@TCEonSGPN) on the Sports Gambling Podcast Network previews the upcoming 2022 college football season for the Kansas State Wildcats. Pick Dundee aka (@TheColbyD) & Patty C (@PattyC831) break down the Kansas State Wildcats current roster and key in on each and every game the Wildcats play in 2022. Could Chris Klieman have Kansas State playing for the Big 12 Championship this year? Did Kansas State win the transfer portal when they landed Adrian Martinez from Nebraska? How will Collin Klein do as OC in his first year and could he get creative with how to use Martinez? Will Kansas State have the most dynamic backfield in the country with Martinez and Deuce Vaughn? Will the return of Phillip Brooks, Malik Knowles and Kade Warner have the K State wideouts looking strong? Is defensive end Felix Anudike-Uzomah a name the whole Big 12 should look out for? Are linebackers Daniel Green and Will Honas some to watch out for? Can Joe Klanderman get this Kansas State Wildcats defense to be even better in 2022? We talk it all and more on this Kansas State Wildcats edition of The College Football Experience. Kansas State Wildcats 2022 ScheduleWin Total O/U: 6.5vs South Dakotavs Missourivs Tulane@ Oklahomavs Texas Tech@ Iowa StateBYE@ TCUvs Oklahoma Statevs Texas@ Baylor@ West Virginiavs Kansas=====================================================Download the SGPN APP today https://sgpn.app and leave us a rating & review.SGPN Merch Store - https://sg.pn/storeDownload The Free SGPN App - https://sgpn.appWynnBET - Bet $50 Get $200 In Free Bets - https://sg.pn/WynnBETJoin Sleeper and get a 100% deposit bonus up to $100 - http://sleeper.com/sgpSupport for this episode - IPVanish.com/sgp | DrinkTrade.com/sgp Follow The College Experience & SGPN On Social MediaTwitter - https://twitter.com/TCEonSGPNTwitter - http://www.twitter.com/gamblingpodcastInstagram - http://www.instagram.com/sportsgamblingpodcastTikTok - https://www.tiktok.com/@gamblingpodcastFacebook - http://www.facebook.com/sportsgamblingpodcast Follow The Hosts On Social MediaColby Dant - http://www.twitter.com/thecolbydPatty C - https://twitter.com/PattyC831NC Nick - https://twitter.com/NC__NicK Watch the Sports Gambling PodcastYouTube - https://www.sg.pn/YouTubeTwitch - https://www.sg.pn/Twitch Read & Discuss - Join the conversationWebsite - https://www.sportsgamblingpodcast.comSlack - https://sg.pn/slackReddit - https://www.sg.pn/reddit===================================================== Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Follow the Truth
E12 Update - Surprise Court Ruling Impacts Daniel Green's Bid for New Trial

Follow the Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 26, 2022 32:40


After Daniel Green's last appeal and his first chance at parole were denied, his hope that he would get a chance at freedom was slipping away. Then a surprise decision from the NC Court of Appeals changes everything. It's the first legal decision in his favor in 28 years. In this episode we talk about what a huge break this could be in the case, and what happens next. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices