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SynopsisOn today's date in 1953, Pageant, a new work for symphonic winds premiered with the University of Miami Band. It was written by American composer Vincent Persichetti, who conducted the performance, as he did the work's New York City debut later that same year with the Goldman Band, then America's premiere professional wind ensemble, who had commissioned the work. It might seem odd that an amateur, student ensemble should premiere a work commissioned for professionals, but in the 1950s, when the U.S. college system was rapidly expanding, the savvy Mr. Persichetti was ready and willing to supply both students and professionals with more than a dozen new wind band scores to perform.He put it this way: “I find wonderful performances in the universities around the country. They may be students, but … they'll find something there that you maybe didn't quite even dream of, and make something of it, whereas sometimes the professional orchestras don't always get it as quickly. [The student musicians] have to work harder, but they do this all through high school and college, and by the time they get to the end of college they know what music is about and can phrase and shape it with some conviction.”Music Played in Today's ProgramVincent Persichetti (1915-1987): Pageant; Winds of the London Symphony Orchestra; David Amos, conductor; Naxos 8.570123
Have you wondered about graph theory and how to start exploring it in Python? What resources and Python libraries can you use to experiment and learn more? This week on the show, former co-host David Amos returns to talk about what he's been up to and share his knowledge about graph theory in Python.
In this episode of Wicked Energy with JG, host Justin Gauthier is joined by special guest David Amos, who led the development of the growth deal for Orkney, Shetland, and the Western Isles in Scotland. These island areas have incredible renewable energy potential, with about 30% to 40% of Europe's accessible renewable energy potential. The focus of the growth deal was to capitalize on this potential to support job creation, economic growth, and decarbonization. The conversation delves into the ongoing work in Scotland to repurpose natural gas pipelines for the transportation of hydrogen and the UK's exploration of blending hydrogen into the gas network. It also explores the viability of using existing infrastructure for the transport of hydrogen, such as converting it into ammonia or methanol. The episode highlights the importance of low-cost hydrogen production, with a focus on green hydrogen produced through electrolysis using renewable energy sources. Exciting developments related to converting biowaste to energy, hydrogen, and graphene are also discussed. This includes a company testing a technology to split hydrogen from natural gas and create graphene through microwave plasma. The episode emphasizes the need to appreciate and leverage alternative energy sources and molecules. Additionally, the episode explores the potential for utilizing abundant renewable energy on islands instead of exporting it, particularly focusing on the Western Isles and the transformative opportunities it presents for the community. Don't miss this engaging conversation that delves into the world of renewable energy, hydrogen production, and the future of sustainable power solutions. Linked: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dgamos/ Website: https://www.linkedin.com/company/pluszero-ltd/ Show Sponsors TenEx Technologies TenEx Technologies is a leading provider of nanotechnology-based products for the oil & gas industry. Their products are designed to improve the production of oil and gas wells, and they have been shown to be effective in a variety of field applications. Some of their key products include: NanoCLEAR: Tailored nanofluids to improve production of new completions and existing wells MicroHOLD: Cost-Effective Microparticle Slurry designed to improve frac efficiency and well production NoHIT: Innovative frac hit mitigation technology via in situ pressurization reaction SandBOND: Sand consolidation chemical solution CeraFLO: Greener, cost-effective proprietary blends to eliminate paraffin issues Website: https://www.tenextechnologies.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/tenextechnologies/ InflowControl InflowControl is a technology company that helps oil companies improve the efficiency of oil production while reducing the industry's environmental impact with their Autonomous Inflow Control Valve (AICV®). This breakthrough technology improves oil production by reducing unwanted gas and water which enables mature oil fields to be more profitable by supporting oil production from zones that would have typically been bypassed. This provides oil companies and its stakeholders with Lower Carbon Oil and higher profitability. To learn more, visit the links below: Website: www.inflowcontrol.no LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/inflowcontrol-as/ YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqdgIooQhYtUBo-auUlYw-Q Wicked Energy For more info on Wicked Energy, please visit www.wickedenergy.io. For the video version, please visit the Wicked Energy YouTube channel at https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCL5PSzLBnSb7u1HD1xmLOJg If you or your company are interested in starting a podcast, visit https://www.wickedenergy.io/free-guide for a free guide on creating a successful podcast. Lastly, if you have any topics or guests you'd like to hear on the show, please email me at justin@wickedenergy.io or send me a message on LinkedIn.
SynopsisOn today's date in 1829, German composer Felix Mendelssohn was in London, participating in a gala concert to raise funds for the victims of a flood in Silesia. “Everyone who has attracted the slightest attention during the season will take part,” wrote Mendelssohn. “Many offers of good performers have had to be declined, as otherwise the concert will last till the next day!”Mendelssohn performed his Double Concerto in E Major for two pianos and orchestra, joined by his friend and fellow-composer/pianist Ignaz Moscheles. Mendessohn and Moscheles jointly prepared a special cadenza, and jokingly bet each other how long the audience would applaud it—Mendessohn predicting 10 minutes, and Mosceheles, more modestly, suggesting 5.In the Baroque age, Double Concertos were very popular, but by Mendelssohn's day they had become less common. In our time, Concertos for Two Pianos are even rarer. One of the most successful American Double Concertos was written between 1952 and 1953 by the American composer Quincy Porter. Also known as the “Concerto Concertante,” commissioned by the Louisville Orchestra. It proved to be one of the most popular of Porter's works, and even won the Pulitzer Prize for Music in 1954.Music Played in Today's ProgramFelix Mendelssohn (1809 - 1847) Double Concerto Güher and Süher Pekinel, pianos; Philharmonia Orchestra; Sir Neville Marriner, conductor. Chandos 9711Quincy Porter (1897 - 1966) Concerto for Two Pianos Joshua Pierce and Dorothy Jonas, duo pianists; Moravian Philharmonic; David Amos, conductor. Helcion 1044
Episode 87 [TAPPING INTO THE POWER OF PENTECOST] with special guest Bishop David Amos Bishop Chad MacDonald recently sat down with City Harvest Network Bishop David Amos. Listen in as they discuss how you can access the power of God in every area of your life. Get ready because revival isn't coming…It's here! https://www.revivalfirewm.com FB & IG @revivalfirewm https://www.youtube.com/VoiceofRevival About The Host: Chad MacDonald is the founder of Revival Fire World Ministries, an international prophetic voice, revivalist and published author. Carrying an apostolic anointing, Chad travels extensively through the United States and Internationally. His meetings are marked with the tangible presence of God and accompanied by powerful signs and wonders. His heart burns to see a return to true Pentecostal power and the body of Christ equipped to carry the glory of God. Chad currently resides in Chattanooga with his wife and three children. Website: http://www.revivalfirewm.com To Give & Partner: http://www.revivalfirewm.com/give-now Paypal: paypal.me/revivalfirewm Social Media: FB: https://www.facebook.com/revivalfirewm IG: @revivalfirewm YOUTUBE: https://www.youtube.com/VoiceofRevival Books: Casting Out Devils: A Handbook For Moving in The Supernatural Power of Deliverance https://www.amazon.com/Casting-Out-Devils-Supernatural-Deliverance/dp/B0857B5179 Greater World: Mandate For The Supernatural https://www.amazon.com/Greater-Works-Supernatural-Chad-MacDonald/dp/1725106647 Prayer That Makes Hell Tremble https://www.amazon.com/Prayer-That-Makes-Hell-Tremble/dp/1983554847 Defeating Delilah: Overcoming The Demon That Wants Your Anointing https://www.amazon.com/Defeating-Delilah-Overcoming-Demon-Anointing/dp/1091843201 Rise and Be Healed https://www.amazon.com/Rise-Be-Healed-Receiving-Deliverance/dp/1537246267
In this episode, Chad MacDonald welcomes his good friend Bishop David Amos from City Harvest Network in Columbus Ohio onto the ‘Voice of Revival'. Check it out as they discuss true pentecostal legacy, impartation, the anointing and how to walk in the mantle for miracles. Get ready….Let's go… https://www.revivalfirewm.com FB & IG @revivalfirewm https://www.youtube.com/VoiceofRevival
Valentin Churavy joins us to talk about the challenges facing organizers of virtual conferences and what he and the JuliaCon 2022 organizers did to meet those challenges and pull off a successful virtual conference. We also chat about some of our favorite talks from JuliaCon 2022, and dig into Valentin's background in cognitive science and distributed computing. Support Talk Julia on Ko-Fi We're excited to announce that we have opened up podcast memberships! Become a member for as little as $5/mo to get early access to episodes, social media shoutouts, and, starting at $10/mo and up, access to a members-only "office hours" call. Your support helps us continue to bring you interviews and educational Julia content each week. It also helps us grow sustainably and improve the quality of the podcast. Become a member today
Viral Shah, one of the co-creators of the Julia language, join hosts David and Randy to talk about how he got into programming, what led him and his fellow co-creators to create Julia, and his thoughts on the present state and future of the language. Special Guest: Viral Shah.
David and Randy respond to an article that makes the case for JAX over Julia for machine learning, particularly when applied to solving differential equations. David also shares a series of workshops hosted by the Julia Gender Inclusive community, as well as a new package by Elias Carvalho for creating truth tables from Julia expressions, and Randy explores a YouTube series and set of Pluto notebooks all about partially observable Markov processes. Support Talk Julia on Ko-Fi We're excited to announce that we have opened up podcast memberships! Become a member for as little as $5/mo to get early access to episodes, social media shoutouts, and, starting at $10/mo and up, access to a members-only "office hours" call. Your support helps us continue to bring you interviews and educational Julia content each week. It also helps us grow sustainably and improve the quality of the podcast. Become a member today
David and Randy explore Julia's plotting ecosystem and discuss plotting in Julia using Plots.jl, GadFly.jl, VegaLite.jl, Makie.jl, and more. Support Talk Julia on Ko-Fi We're excited to announce that we have opened up podcast memberships! Become a member for as little as $5/mo to get early access to episodes, social media shoutouts, and, starting at $10/mo and up, access to a members-only "office hours" call. Your support helps us continue to bring you interviews and educational Julia content each week. It also helps us grow sustainably and improve the quality of the podcast. Become a member today
Bogumił Kamiński discusses his new book Julia For Data Analysis (Manning) and his work on the DataFrames.jl package.
JuMP.jl is a an optimization library written entirely in the Julia language. And it's FAST! JuMP co-creator Miles Lubin join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila to discuss the inspiration behind JuMP, how JuMP become a NumFOCUS sponsored project, the journey to JuMP's version 1.0 release, and the future of the project. Special Guest: Miles Lubin.
Once you experience the Julia REPL, it's hard to go back to anything else. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore the Julia REPL with Julia's official REPL stan Miguel Raz. Miguel shares his Julia story, how Julia is being used in undergraduate courses at Mexico's UNAM, reflects on the willingness of the Julia community to collaborate with other language communities, and teaches us some nifty Julia REPL tips and tricks. Enjoying Talk Julia? We're excited to announce that we have opened up podcast memberships! Become a member for as little as $5/mo to get early access to episodes, social media shoutouts, and, starting at $10/mo and up, access to a members-only "office hours" call. Your support helps us continue to bring you interviews and educational Julia content each week. It also helps us grow sustainably and improve the quality of the podcast. Become a member today
Talk Julia co-host Randy Davila talks about his automated conjecturing program Christy.jl and how he uses it to generate new research problems in graph theory and mathematics using artificial intelligence. Learn how automated conjecturing works, how Randy got into it, and how Christy.jl can be used to generate problems and potential relations in other domains, too.
Logan Kilpatrick discusses his role at the Julia Project, his journey to becoming a Julia developer, and his thoughts on how we can better serve the Julia community and help boost adoption.
Watch the live stream: Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by FusionAuth: pythonbytes.fm/fusionauth Special guest: Ian Hellen Brian #1: gensim.parsing.preprocessing Problem I'm working on Turn a blog title into a possible url example: “Twisted and Testing Event Driven / Asynchronous Applications - Glyph” would like, perhaps: “twisted-testing-event-driven-asynchrounous-applications” Sub-problem: remove stop words ← this is the hard part I started with an article called Removing Stop Words from Strings in Python It covered how to do this with NLTK, Gensim, and SpaCy I was most successful with remove_stopwords() from Gensim from gensim.parsing.preprocessing import remove_stopwords It's part of a gensim.parsing.preprocessing package I wonder what's all in there? a treasure trove gensim.parsing.preprocessing.preprocess_string is one this function applies filters to a string, with the defaults almost being just what I want: strip_tags() strip_punctuation() strip_multiple_whitespaces() strip_numeric() remove_stopwords() strip_short() stem_text() ← I think I want everything except this this one turns “Twisted” into “Twist”, not good. There's lots of other text processing goodies in there also. Oh, yeah, and Gensim is also cool. topic modeling for training semantic NLP models So, I think I found a really big hammer for my little problem. But I'm good with that Michael #2: DevDocs via Loic Thomson Gather and search a bunch of technology docs together at once For example: Python + Flask + JavaScript + Vue + CSS Has an offline mode for laptops / tablets Installs as a PWA (sadly not on Firefox) Ian #3: MSTICPy MSTICPy is toolset for CyberSecurity investigations and hunting in Jupyter notebooks. What is CyberSec hunting/investigating? - responding to security alerts and threat intelligence reports, trawling through security logs from cloud services and hosts to determine if it's a real threat or not. Why Jupyter notebooks? SOC (Security Ops Center) tools can be excellent but all have limitations You can get data from anywhere Use custom analysis and visualizations Control the workflow…. workflow is repeatable Open source pkg - created originally to support MS Sentinel Notebooks but now supports lots of providers. When I start this 3+ yrs ago I thought a lot this would be in PyPI - but no
This week on Talk Julia, David and Randy share and explore resources from around the Julia community all about file input and output and beautiful terminal output. You'll learn how to read and write files in Julia, work the the filesystem, and see how packages like FIGlet.jl and Term.jl can take command line applications to the next level.
Visual Studio Code (VS Code) is a popular code editor from Microsoft, and the Julia VS Code extension makes working with Julia in VS Code a real treat. Learn how to install Julia, VS Code, the Julia VS Code extension, and how to use the Julia VS Code extension features to create a robust and fluid Julia development environment.
David and Randy explore deep neural networks in Julia using Flux.jl by recreating Grant Sanderson's model for predicting handwritten digits in the MNIST data set. We also show how to visualize model results and training performance in TensorBoard using the TensorBoardLogging.jl package.
Flux.jl is Julia's elegant machine learning library, but its API is a little different than Tensorflow or PyTorch. This week on Talk Julia, David and Randy dive into Flux.jl, explore some of the big differences between Flux and Python's machine learning libraries, and offer up some tips and tricks for learning Flux if you're coming to it from another ecosystem.
David and Randy take a look at reinforcement learning in Julia by diving into the ReinforcementLearning.jl package. We talk a little bit about what reinforcement learning is, as well as our thoughts on ReinforcementLearning.jl's design, which taps into Julia's multiple dispatch system. About The Show Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned.
This week we asked Julia Twitter what their favorite Julia packages are, and the responses don't disappoint! We picked two packages to investigate this week: Randy dives into DataFrames.jl and David explores the amazing Revise.jl package. Randy also shares an example of building a single neuron machine learning model from scratch in Julia, and David talks about some animations he made this week using Javis.jl.
David and Randy explore graph theory with Juli. We learn how to use the Graphs.jl Julia package to create graph data structures, and the JuMP.jl package to calculate NP-hard and NP-complete properties of the graphs. This week we also share a bunch of amazing things that our listeners are building in Julia. Thanks to everyone that shared your projects with us! Check out the Twitter thread (https://twitter.com/talkjuliapod/status/1489255938737410051) to see what everyone is working on. Episode links are available in the show notes on our website ➡ https://www.talkjulia.com/6 (https://www.talkjulia/6) ABOUT THE SHOW Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned.
David and Randy share some of their thoughts on functions, methods, and multiple dispatch in Julia from the perspective as new users coming to Julia from Python. Learn how Julia's type declarations and multiple dispatch system allow you to redefine functions with different behavior depending on the types of their arguments and explore some of the differences between functions in Julia and functions in Python.
David and Randy explore Julia packages for reading, writing, and manipulating music and MIDI files, discuss whether or not Julia should be taught as the primary language in a machine learning course, an amazing Julia resource for Pythonistas, and a whole lot more. ABOUT THE SHOW Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned. Subscribe to our YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCqyyHX2p543yKxUNWCPCMbw) to watch video versions of the podcast, and follow us on Twitter (https://twitter.com/talkjuliapod) for updates on the show and to connect with David and Randy.
Watch the live stream: Watch on YouTube About the show Sponsored by us: Check out the courses over at Talk Python And Brian's book too! Michael #1: Box: Python dictionaries with advanced dot notation access Want to treat dictionaries like classes? Box. small_box = Box({'data': 2, 'count': 5}) small_box.data == small_box['data'] == getattr(small_box, 'data') == small_box.get('data') There are over a half dozen ways to customize your Box and make it work for you: Check out the new Box github wiki for more details and examples! Superset of dict See Types of Boxes as well Brian #2: Reading tracebacks in Python Trey Hunner “When Python encounters an error in your code, it will print out a traceback. Let's talk about how to use tracebacks to fix our code.” Brian's commentary Tracebacks can feel like brick wall of error telling you “you suck”. But they are really meant to help you, and do, once you know how to read them. Probably should be one of the earliest things we teach people new to coding. Like maybe: hello world tracebacks testing Anyway, back to Trey Start at the bottom. Read the last line first That will have the type of exception and an error message The two lines above that are The exact filename and line number where the exception occurs a copy of the line Those two lines are a stack frame. Keep going up and it's other stack frames for the callstack of how you got here. Trey walks through this with an example and shows how to solve an error at a high level stack frame using the traceback. Michael #3: Raspberry Pi: These two new devices just went live on the International Space Station The International Space Station has connected new Raspberry 4 Model B units to run experiments from 500 student programmer teams in Europe. From the education-focused European Astro Pi Challenge These are new space-hardened Raspberry Pi units, dubbed Astro Pi The AstroPi units are part of a project run by the European Space Agency (ESA) for the Earth-focused Mission Zero and Mission Space Lab. The former allows young Python programmers to take humidity readings on board ISS while the latter lets students run various scientific experiments on the space station using its sensors. Brian #4: Make Simple Mocks With SimpleNamespace Adam Johnson Who's crushing it recently, BTW, lots of recent blog posts SimpleNamespace is in the types standard library package. Works great as a test double, especially as a stub or fake object. “It's as simple as possible, with no faff around being callable, tracking usage, etc.” Example: >from types import SimpleNamespace >obj = SimpleNamespace(x=12, y=17, verbose=True) >obj namespace(x=12, y=17, verbose=True) >obj.x 12 >obj.verbose True unittest.mock.Mock also works, but has the annoying feature that, unless you pass in a spec, any attribute will be allowed. The SimpleNamespace solution doesn't allow any typos or other attributes. Example: >obj.vrebose Traceback (most recent call last): File "[HTML_REMOVED]", line 1, in [HTML_REMOVED] AttributeError: 'types.SimpleNamespace' object has no attribute 'vrebose'. Did you mean: 'verbose'? Michael #5: Extra, extra, exta Marak Squires, supply chain issues (NPM), and terrorism? [npm issues] css outlines! python 3.10.2 Python Shorts YouTube series #1 Parsing data with Pydantic #2 Counting the number of times items appear with collections.Counter Stream Deck + PyCharm video, github repo Brian #6: 3 Things You Might Not Know About Numbers in Python David Amos Most understated phrase I've read in a long time: “… there's a good chance that you've used a number in one of your programs” There's more to numbers than many people realize The 3 things numbers have methods integers have to_bytes(length=1, byteorder="big") int.from_bytes(b'x06xc1', byteorder="big") class method bit_length() and a bunch of others floats have is_integer(), as_integer_ratio() and a bunch more use variables or parentheses, though. 5.bit_length() doesn't work n=5; n.bit_length() and (5).bit_length() works numbers have hierarchy Every number in Python is an instance of the Number class. so isinstance(value, Number) should work for any number type Then there's 4 abstract types encompassing other types Complex: has type complex Real: has float Rational: has Fraction Integral: has int and bool Where's Decimal? It's not part of those abstract types, it directly inherits from Number Also, floats are weird Numbers are extensible You can derive from numeric classes, both abstract and concrete, and create your own However, to do this effectively, you gotta implement A LOT of dunder methods. Joke:
This week on Talk Julia, David and Randy discuss the a cuter alternative to the Iris dataset for teaching machine learning: PalmerPenguin.jl. We also dive into some awesome features of Julia's package manager — namely stacked environments — an awesome You Tube channel for learning Julia, and what the difference between using and import is when importing a package into your project. ABOUT THE SHOW Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned.
Are you you thinking about learning the Julia programming language and you're already fluent in another language, such as R, Python, or MATLAB? In this week's episode, we explore tips, ticks, and resources to help you get up to speed with the Julia language as quickly as possible. ABOUT THE SHOW Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned.
Talk Julia is a weekly podcast devoted to the Julia programming language. Join hosts David Amos and Randy Davila as we explore Julia news and resources, learn Julia for ourselves, and share our experience and everything that we've learned. This is the first episode of Talk Julia. Learn why we're excited about Julia and what we'll be talking about in future episodes. New episodes will be available every Friday here on YouTube as well as your favorite podcast app.
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The Fire of Yehuweh Impact Church Pastor David Amos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Happy in the lord david amos impact church --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
To understand aright the power of Amos 6, it is helpful to reflect a little on two themes: complacency and the power elite.(1) I shall begin by reminding you of a story I told in the meditation for January 15. One of my high school history teachers related how, toward the end of World War II, he had been furloughed home because of an injury. He had seen many of his buddies killed; others were still in action. He was riding a bus in a Canadian city, and he heard an obviously wealthy and ostentatious woman in the seat in front of him talking to her companion. Her husband was making a lot of money in arms production. She confided to her seatmate: “I hope this war doesn't end soon. We've never had it so good.”That is the ugly face of complacency. The picture of those “who are complacent in Zion” (Amos 6:1) is no less repugnant. There they are, strumming away on their guitars, fancying themselves to be gifted musicians like David (Amos 6:5), slurping their Chardonnay, the atmosphere charged with their perfumes and aftershaves (Amos 6:6)—but they do not grieve over all that is wrong and corrupt.(2) Virtually every society develops an elite. An absolute monarchy or a dictatorship demonstrates this in obvious ways. Communism, theoretically classless, develops its own elite, its own rulers; the privilege of birth gives way to the privilege of party membership and political power. In a democracy, there may be relative equality of opportunity, but that is not the same as classlessness. Rather, at its best equal opportunity ensures some mobility within a more or less stratified society: outsiders can become insiders, and the elite can be penetrated by hoi polloi. Aristocracy and dictatorship are then replaced by meritocracy; the rule of the rich and the noble is replaced by the rule of the successful and the clever and the vicious. Of course, this is almost inevitable, as many sociologists have explained: for practical reasons, direct rule by the people is impossible. There have to be representatives, appointees, someone to make decisions and effect things—and a new power bloc is born. Perhaps the greatest benefit of democracy is that it provides a peaceful way of turning blighters out every few years, and selecting others.But from God's perspective, leadership goes hand in hand with responsibility. Amos 6 is directed against the capitals of Judah and Israel (Zion and Samaria) and against the “notable men” (Amos 6:1). The ugly complacency of this chapter is the complacency of rulers and leaders presiding over decadence, compromise, injustice, theological perversity, and their own creature comforts. And where, in the church and in the broader culture, do leadership and complacency join hands today? At how many levels? And what does God think of it? This podcast is designed to be used alongside TGC's Read The Bible initiative (TGC.org/readthebible). The podcast features devotional commentaries from D.A. Carson's book For the Love of God (vol. 2) that follow the M'Cheyne Bible reading plan.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
The fire and the prophet gifting and walking the walk Pastor David Amos Impact Church --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Faith, Testimonies, Trust Impach Church Pastor David Amos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Fire of Yehuweh Impact Curch Pastor David Amos --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
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David Amos Preaching on The Sword of Annointing and Rice Blace Preaching on Sheep Dog on Thursday 9, 2021 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
How well do you know Python's math module? Maybe you've used a few of the constants or arithmetic functions. You may be surprised by the amount of functionality hiding within this built-in library, and perhaps you don't need to reach for an additional outside library. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
David Amos Sermon on Preachers and Leadership At Impact Church August 29, 2021 --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
David Amos Sermon on the Leaders of the Church and Leaders of The Nation and What They can Learn from The Bible --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Have you started to use Python's assignment expression in your code? Maybe you have heard them called the walrus operator. Now that the controversy over the introduction in Python 3.8 has settled down, how can you use assignment expressions effectively in your code? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Have you heard of FastAPI? An application programming interface is vital to make your software accessible to users across the internet. FastAPI is an excellent option for quickly creating a web API that implements best practices. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Happy in the Lord David Amos Impact Church --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
How is Python being used today, and what can you do with the language? Do you want to develop software, dive into data science and math, automate parts of your job and digital life, or work with electronics? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Are you ready to expand your Python knowledge into the intermediate to advanced territory? What tools are awaiting your discovery inside Python's functools module? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Are you ready to practice your Python skills some more? There is a new set of practice problems prepared for you to tackle, and this time they're based on working with CSV files. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Sam Ritter is a Research Scientist on the neuroscience team at DeepMind.Featured ReferencesUnsupervised Predictive Memory in a Goal-Directed Agent (MERLIN)Greg Wayne, Chia-Chun Hung, David Amos, Mehdi Mirza, Arun Ahuja, Agnieszka Grabska-Barwinska, Jack Rae, Piotr Mirowski, Joel Z. Leibo, Adam Santoro, Mevlana Gemici, Malcolm Reynolds, Tim Harley, Josh Abramson, Shakir Mohamed, Danilo Rezende, David Saxton, Adam Cain, Chloe Hillier, David Silver, Koray Kavukcuoglu, Matt Botvinick, Demis Hassabis, Timothy LillicrapMeta-RL without forgetting: Been There, Done That: Meta-Learning with Episodic RecallSamuel Ritter, Jane X. Wang, Zeb Kurth-Nelson, Siddhant M. Jayakumar, Charles Blundell, Razvan Pascanu, Matthew BotvinickMeta-Reinforcement Learning with Episodic Recall: An Integrative Theory of Reward-Driven Learning, Samuel Ritter 2019Meta-RL exploration and planning: Rapid Task-Solving in Novel EnvironmentsSam Ritter, Ryan Faulkner, Laurent Sartran, Adam Santoro, Matt Botvinick, David RaposoSynthetic Returns for Long-Term Credit AssignmentDavid Raposo, Sam Ritter, Adam Santoro, Greg Wayne, Theophane Weber, Matt Botvinick, Hado van Hasselt, Francis Song Additional References Sam Ritter: Meta-Learning to Make Smart Inferences from Small Data , North Star AI 2019 The Bitter Lesson, Rich Sutton 2019
Are you looking for an in-depth data science project to practice your skills on? Perhaps you would like to add new tools to your Python web development projects instead? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
How do you know you're using the correct data structure for your Python project? There are so many built into Python and even more that are importable from the collections module. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects. We discuss a recent three-part video course on selecting the ideal data structure.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Sermon of The gifts of the Ruach Hakodesh David Amos --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Did you know the Python Software Foundation is hiring! With the recent support of three Visionary Sponsors, the PSF has been able to open positions for a developer-in-residence and a Python packaging project manager. Real Python now has a monthly Python news article. Frequent guest of the show, David Amos compiles and summarizes the biggest Python news from the past month.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
The Ministry of the Holy Spirit --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Sundays Impact Church Service David Amos --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Are you looking for a bit of order when working with dictionaries in Python? Are you aware that the Python dict has changed over the last several versions and now keeps items in order? Could you learn more about object-oriented programming in Python by comparing it to another language? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Do you know how a neural network functions? What goes into building one from scratch using Python? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Sacred Elohim’s Diamond Light and Pearl Ministries Revolution Dove One Radio
Pesach and Palm Sunday Service at Impact Church in Ironton Ohio David Amos and Pastor Kim G. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/kimberly-anapol/support
Have you heard about NoSQL databases, or wondered how to use one with Python? How does MongoDB store information and what packages can you use to connect this type of database to your Python project? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Have you wanted to get your Python code to consume data from web-based APIs? Maybe you've dabbled with the requests package, but you don't know what steps to take next. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Do you know the initial steps to get your Python script hosted on the web? You may have built something with Flask, but how would you stand it up so that you can share it with others? This week on the show, we have the previous guest Martin Breuss back on the show. Martin shares his recent article titled, "Python Web Applications: Deploy Your Script as a Flask App". David Amos also returns, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Are you interested in building interactive dashboards with Python? How about a project that takes a flat data file all the way to a web-hosted interactive dashboard? This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Are you familiar with the role data engineers play in the modern landscape of data science and Python? Data engineering is a sub-discipline that focuses on the transportation, transformation, and storage of data. This week on the show, David Amos is back, and he's brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
In this episode, we explore the promise of the Father to restore the Tent of David (Amos 9:11). Jesus came as the son of David and held the responsibility to let the wind of the Spirit blow in His Father's house.
It's been quite the year! The Real Python team has written, edited, curated, illustrated, and produced a mountain of Python articles this year. We also upgraded the site and membership with office hours, transcripts, this podcast, and much more. We are joined by two members of the Real Python team, David Amos and Joanna Jablonski. We wanted to share a year-end wrap-up with a collection of articles that showcase a diversity of Python topics and the quality of what our team created this year.
Have you wondered how Python manages memory? How are your variables stored in memory, and when do they get deleted? This week on the show, David Amos is here, and he has brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects. Along with the Real Python article on Python memory management, we also talk about another article about creating even and non-even spaced arrays in Python with np.linspace.
If you're coming to Python from a different language, you may not know about a useful tool for working with loops, Python's built-in enumerate function. This week on the show, David Amos is here, and he has brought another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects. Along with the Real Python article covering the details of the enumerate function, we also talk about another article about constructing Python graphical user interface elements in PyQt.
Are you interested in learning more about Natural Language Processing? Have you heard of sentiment analysis? This week on the show, Kyle Stratis returns to talk about his new article titled, Use Sentiment Analysis With Python to Classify Movie Reviews. David Amos is also here, and all of us cover another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects.
Are you ready to move beyond flat files for your data in Python? Maybe you're not sure where to start with databases and SQL. This week on the show, David Amos returns with another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects. We cover a Real Python article about managing data with SQLite and SQLAlchemy.
On Sunday, October 25, 2020, Rev. Robert Mossotti continued his series on Dispensationalism with a lesson on "The Tents of David" from Amos 9:11-12 and Acts 15.
Do you have gaps in your Python learning path? If you're like me, you may have followed a completely random route to learn Python. This week on the show, David Amos is here to talk about the release of the Real Python book, "Python Basics: A Practical Introduction to Python 3". The book is designed not only to get beginners up to speed but also to help fill in the gaps many intermediate learners may still have.
The Python return statement is such a fundamental part of writing functions. Is it possible you missed some best practices when writing your own return statements? This week on the show, David Amos returns with another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects. We also talk functional programming again with an article on the Python map function and processing iterables without a loop.
Wouldn't it be nice to a use a form of version control for data? Something that would allow you to track and version your datasets and models. Well, that's what the tool called DVC is designed to do. This week on the show, David Amos is here and he's brought another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects.
Have you wondered what are Python wheels? How are they used to package Python code? Does Python use pass by value or pass by reference? This week on the show, David Amos is here to help answer these questions, and he has brought another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects.
Do you want to learn the how and when of implementing K-means clustering in Python? Would you like to practice your pandas skills with a real-world project? This week on the show, David Amos is back with another batch of PyCoder’s Weekly articles and projects.
Would you like to clearly understand what's happening when you use the Python import keyword? Do you want to use modules more effectively to structure your code? Or maybe you're ready to move to the next level with your Django project by adding user management. This week on the show, David Amos is back with another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
Are you familiar with linear programming, and how it can be used to solve resource optimization problems? Would you like to free your Python code from a clunky command line and start making convenient graphical interfaces for your users? This week on the show, David Amos is back with another batch of PyCoder's Weekly articles and projects.
David is the director of Amos Lighting + Home a lighting retailer and lighting design consultancy based in Exeter. https://www.amoslighting.co.uk/ They specialize in transforming space with the creative use of light and provide lighting design and advice to both retail and trade customers. I spoke to David with my co-host Kay Hanson during the COVID 19 lockdown. In this episode, we learn about light temperatures and colour rendering, The importance of having intuitive switching How to avoid ‘death by downlight’ and ‘ceiling acne’. And why everyone should have a pee light. How to be a kick-ass Interior Designer. Come and join us on the Interior Design BA(Hons) course at the University of Plymouth.https://www.plymouth.ac.uk/courses/undergraduate/ba-interior-design Thanks to Dave Clarke from @iamthehow (http://www.iamthehow.com) for production support and advice invaluable in the setting up of this Podcast. Kay Hanson (insta @kay_v_hanson) for her planning support and co-hosting for these and our educational podcasts for the University of Plymouth Mark Frith (insta @fritzthekat Twitter @markfrith) for composing the music and all your support and advice along the way. I’d really like to hear your feedback on the podcast. Leave a comment or get in touch via twitter @multi_story. Thanks for listening. Bye for now.
Have you wanted to learn Regular Expressions in Python, but don't know where to start? Have you stumbled into the dreaded pink SettingWithCopyWarning in Pandas? This week on the show, we have David Amos from the Real Python team to discuss a recent two-part series on Regex in Python. We also talk about another recent article on the site about views vs copies in Pandas. David also brings a few other articles and projects from the wider Python community for us to discuss.
Have you wanted to work with PDF files in Python? Maybe you want to extract text, merge and concatenate files, or even create PDFs from scratch. Are you interested in building hardware projects using a Raspberry Pi? This week on the show we have David Amos from the Real Python team to discuss his recent article on working with PDFs. David also brings a few other articles from the wider Python community for us to discuss.
As teachers around the world move into online teaching and learning, we must consider ways to modify our way of teaching. Writing and communicating in an online learning environment, while making connections with your students, is a very important first step. This is the first episode in a two-part series. How will teachers adapt their online writing in order to communicate and engage learners? What materials will teachers develop to ignite motivation with students? How will connections and community be built via online courses? In this episode, Sean and Kelly talk with David Amos, a writer for Real Python about how he makes connections with his Real Python tutorials and we will share tips and techniques for developing quality online writing for learners. David Amos Real Python https://realpython.com/team/damos/ https://realpython.com/python-gui-tkinter/ https://realpython.com/python-rounding/ Special Guest: David Amos.
Sponsored by Datadog: pythonbytes.fm/datadog Special guest: David Amos David #1: PEP 614 – Relaxing Grammar Restrictions on Decorators Python currently requires that all decorators consist of a dotted name, optionally followed by a single call. E.g., can’t use subscripts or chained calls PEP proposes allowing any valid expression. Motivation for limitation is not a technical requirement: “I have a gut feeling about this one. I'm not sure where it comes from, but I have it... So while it would be quite easy to change the syntax in the future, I'd like to stick to the more restricted form unless a real use case is presented where [changing the syntax] would increase readability.” (Guido van Rossom, Source) Use case highlighted by PEP: List of Qt buttons: buttons = [button0, button1, …] Decorator is a method on a class attribute: button.clicked.connect Under current restrictions you can’t do @button[0].clicked.connect Workarounds involve assigning list element to a variable first: button0 = buttons[0] @button0.clicked.connect Author points out grammar is already loose enough to hack around: Define function def _(x): return x Then use _ as your decorator: @_(buttons[0].clicked.connect) That’s less readable than just using the subscript PEP proposes relaxing grammar to “any valid expression” (sort of), i.e. anything that you can use as a test in if, elif, or while blocks (as opposed to valid string input to eval) Some things wouldn’t be allowed, though E.g., tuples require parentheses, @f, g doesn’t make sense Does a tuple as a decorator make sense in the first place, though? CPython implementation on GitHub: https://github.com/brandtbucher/cpython/tree/decorators Michael #2: Create a macOS Menu Bar App with Python (Pomodoro Timer) by Camillo Visini Nice article: Learn how to create your very own macOS Menu Bar App using Python, rumps and py2app The mac menu bar is super useful. I leverage the heck out of this thing. Why not write Python for it? Tools: Python 3 and PyCharm as an IDE Rumps → Ridiculously Uncomplicated macOS Python Statusbar apps py2app → For creating standalone macOS apps from Python code (how cool is that?) Get started with the code: app = rumps.App("Pomodoro", "
https://youtu.be/_QXx9kPkRDc The Highway of Holiness Acts 15:1-21 Certain Jewish believers have come in and are requiring the Gentile converts to be circumcised. This was the covenant seal of the Jewish people that they belonged to God. Paul's rebuke of Peter was due to these Jewish believers requiring circumcision for salvation. Galatians 2:11-16 New King James Version (NKJV) 11 Now when [a]Peter had come to Antioch, I [b]withstood him to his face, because he was to be blamed; 12 for before certain men came from James, he would eat with the Gentiles; but when they came, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing [c]those who were of the circumcision. 13 And the rest of the Jews also played the hypocrite with him, so that even Barnabas was carried away with their hypocrisy. 14 But when I saw that they were not straightforward about the truth of the gospel, I said to Peter before them all, “If you, being a Jew, live in the manner of Gentiles and not as the Jews, [d]why do you compel Gentiles to live as [e]Jews? 15 We who are Jews by nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles, 16 knowing that a man is not [f]justified by the works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of the law; for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified. And so the Jewish council, with the Apostle James as its leader comes up with satisfactory requirements: 19 Therefore I judge that we should not trouble those from among the Gentiles who are turning to God, 20 but that we write to them to abstain from things polluted by idols, from [f]sexual immorality, from things strangled, and from blood. Abstain from these things: things offered to idols, eating of animals that have been strangled, tasting or eating blood— three ceremonial laws and one moral law- sexual immorality. Although the not eating of blood goes all the way back to Genesis- the life is in the blood. Paul had told the Corinthian church they could eat meat offered to idols, but that demons were associated with those festivals were they sacrificed the meat. “Observe Israel after the flesh: Are not those who eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar? What am I saying then? That an idol is anything, or what is offered to idols is anything? Rather, that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and not to God, and I do not want you to have fellowship with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot partake of the Lord's table and of the table of demons.” I Corinthians 10:18-21 NKJV These new converts in Christ were to look and act different then their surrounding society. Ceremonial laws- the Jews saw these things as extremely nasty and unholy. The apostles wanted the Gentile converts and Jewish converts to be a new religion- Christianity. Not a modified Jewish religion, a new called out and consecrated church, of which Jews and Gentiles would become brethren and love one another. The Tabernacle of David (Amos 9:11-15, just a reference) The Jewish remnant that survives God's judgment would become one Body along with born again Gentiles to make up ONE church. Why the moral law?? Sexual immorality was so a part of the Gentiles culture, they would need help in separating from it. Why not murder? Because even in the most deprived societies, murder was still seen as wrong. Sexual immorality was so embedded in their culture, so much a part of them as a people, from idol prostitution to pedastry, sexually immorality was upheld as a moral and standard of the Roman Empire life. Born again of the Spirit- but the mind needs to be renewed daily. “Flee sexual immorality. Every sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in ...
https://youtu.be/_QXx9kPkRDc The Highway of Holiness Acts 15:1-21 Certain Jewish believers have come in and are requiring the Gentile converts to be circumcised. This was the covenant seal of the Jewish people that they belonged to God. Paul’s rebuke of Peter was due to these Jewish believers requiring circumcision for salvation. Galatians 2:11-16 New King James Version (NKJV) 11 Now when [a]Peter had come to Antioch, I [b]withstood him to his face, because he was to be blamed; 12 for before certain men came from James, he would eat with the Gentiles; but when they came, he withdrew and separated himself, fearing [c]those who were of the circumcision. 13 And the rest of the Jews also played the hypocrite with him, so that even Barnabas was carried away with their hypocrisy. 14 But when I saw that they were not straightforward about the truth of the gospel, I said to Peter before them all, “If you, being a Jew, live in the manner of Gentiles and not as the Jews, [d]why do you compel Gentiles to live as [e]Jews? 15 We who are Jews by nature, and not sinners of the Gentiles, 16 knowing that a man is not [f]justified by the works of the law but by faith in Jesus Christ, even we have believed in Christ Jesus, that we might be justified by faith in Christ and not by the works of the law; for by the works of the law no flesh shall be justified. And so the Jewish council, with the Apostle James as its leader comes up with satisfactory requirements: 19 Therefore I judge that we should not trouble those from among the Gentiles who are turning to God, 20 but that we write to them to abstain from things polluted by idols, from [f]sexual immorality, from things strangled, and from blood. Abstain from these things: things offered to idols, eating of animals that have been strangled, tasting or eating blood— three ceremonial laws and one moral law- sexual immorality. Although the not eating of blood goes all the way back to Genesis- the life is in the blood. Paul had told the Corinthian church they could eat meat offered to idols, but that demons were associated with those festivals were they sacrificed the meat. “Observe Israel after the flesh: Are not those who eat of the sacrifices partakers of the altar? What am I saying then? That an idol is anything, or what is offered to idols is anything? Rather, that the things which the Gentiles sacrifice they sacrifice to demons and not to God, and I do not want you to have fellowship with demons. You cannot drink the cup of the Lord and the cup of demons; you cannot partake of the Lord’s table and of the table of demons.” I Corinthians 10:18-21 NKJV These new converts in Christ were to look and act different then their surrounding society. Ceremonial laws- the Jews saw these things as extremely nasty and unholy. The apostles wanted the Gentile converts and Jewish converts to be a new religion- Christianity. Not a modified Jewish religion, a new called out and consecrated church, of which Jews and Gentiles would become brethren and love one another. The Tabernacle of David (Amos 9:11-15, just a reference) The Jewish remnant that survives God’s judgment would become one Body along with born again Gentiles to make up ONE church. Why the moral law?? Sexual immorality was so a part of the Gentiles culture, they would need help in separating from it. Why not murder? Because even in the most deprived societies, murder was still seen as wrong. Sexual immorality was so embedded in their culture, so much a part of them as a people, from idol prostitution to pedastry, sexually immorality was upheld as a moral and standard of the Roman Empire life. Born again of the Spirit- but the mind needs to be renewed daily. “Flee sexual immorality. Every sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits sexual immorality sins against his own body. Or do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in ...
In this episode, Dr. Timothy David Amos discusses the impacts of the Meiji Restoration on Japan's Burakumin outcaste communities, detailing continuities in discrimination alongside the positive and negative effects of emancipation. We discuss the lineage of Buraku communities, their racialization and discrimination, commoners' resistance to emancipation, and challenges facing Buraku communities today.
Eric and Connie got together with Dave for a rare discussion after "The Awakening" Talkcast. Dave was out for a walk part of the time so the sound quality is not the best. After Connie left to sleep Dave talked deep into the night about the Messianic Prince and prophecy. Towards the end he mentioned the "immortal" Avengers that people are getting prophetic words about that are also being portrayed in the controlled media on an ongoing basis. Micah 5:7 actually teaches that there is a small group of these individuals that will appear before the world. I refer to them as the Earthly Seven because I believe they are the earthly counterparts of the Seven Eholim that stand before the throne of God (Rev 4:5 cf. 8:2). I believe the eighth prophetic figure in Micah 5:7 is the New Elijah/New Moses figure in Hosea 1:11 who is also the messianic king-priest in Ezekiel 45:22 that makes sacrifices for his own sins. Isaiah 30:20 and Jer 3:15 also speak of other enlightened teachers that are coming and Isaiah 1:29 appears to refer to the restoration of the ancient Sanhedrin, the earthly Seventy that are a type of the seventy Elohim in the Divine Council (Psalms 82:1). After the twelve tribes are restored (Ezekiel 48) there will be twelve chieftains set over them as there was in the ancient past. The Levitical Priesthood will also be restored as well as the House of David (Amos 9:11-12) among whom there will be many Davidic princes appointed to rule over the people. (Isa 32:1; Jer 33:17-18, 20-21, 24-26; Psalms 45:16; Eze 46:16ff) So we can see that there will be a whole array of prophetic figures in the future as well as a number of important prophetesses, princesses and the future Queen of Israel." LINK: Here's the audio in Room 2A which is not available on iTunes yet: http://www.talkshoe.com/talkshoe/web/talkCast.jsp?masterId=137354&cmd=tc
Solomon builds the Temple of Jerusalem. God gave the design of the alter, the ark of the covenant, the pattern of the tabernacle, it's furnishings, and so much more to Moses, told Noah how to build the ark for the animals, but he never gave a layout for a temple. So where did Solomon come up with one? The answer may tell you why God speaks of rebuilding the tabernacle of David (Amos 9:11 & Acts 15:16) but not the temple of Solomon.
Solomon builds the Temple of Jerusalem. God gave the design of the alter, the ark of the covenant, the pattern of the tabernacle, it's furnishings, and so much more to Moses, told Noah how to build the ark for the animals, but he never gave a layout for a temple. So where did Solomon come up with one? The answer may tell you why God speaks of rebuilding the tabernacle of David (Amos 9:11 & Acts 15:16) but not the temple of Solomon.
"The Christian View--Messages, Worship, Bible Study and Praise"
"The Tabernacle of David" Amos 9:11-13 Pastor Shelia Louis of Tabernacle of David International Worship Center in Midwest City, OK Website: EarthlyMinistry.Org Broadcast link: TheChristianViewOnline.com Email: claudette@earthlyministry.org For a "Free Prayer Guide" go to our website location to download a copy.
1º JML - Into The Wild (Original Mix)2º Minitech Project - Acid Tech (Original Mix) 3º David Amos & Julio Navas - Happy End (Original Mix) 4º Minitech Project - The Bounce (Original Mix) 5º Minitech Project - Squab (Original Mix) 6º Mladen Tomic - Before Sunset (Original Mix) 7º Matteo DiMarr - Tronno(Original Mix) 8º Da Fresh - Once Again (Original Mix) 9º Popof - Wash It (Original Mix) 10º Jalebee Cartel - Were Was I (Khainz Remix) 11º Wehbba and Propulse - Wrong Side Business (Khainz Remix) 12º Egbert - Die Acid Plaat (Khainz Remix) This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration
1º JML - Into The Wild (Original Mix)2º Minitech Project - Acid Tech (Original Mix) 3º David Amos & Julio Navas - Happy End (Original Mix) 4º Minitech Project - The Bounce (Original Mix) 5º Minitech Project - Squab (Original Mix) 6º Mladen Tomic - Before Sunset (Original Mix) 7º Matteo DiMarr - Tronno(Original Mix) 8º Da Fresh - Once Again (Original Mix) 9º Popof - Wash It (Original Mix) 10º Jalebee Cartel - Were Was I (Khainz Remix) 11º Wehbba and Propulse - Wrong Side Business (Khainz Remix) 12º Egbert - Die Acid Plaat (Khainz Remix) This show is syndicated & distributed exclusively by Syndicast. If you are a radio station interested in airing the show or would like to distribute your podcast / radio show please register here: https://syndicast.co.uk/distribution/registration