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In this episode of The Dept. Omar sits down with David Simons to break down the strategy behind high-converting web classes that actually work in 2025. With over $5 million in client results, David shares the exact method that helped Omar generate six figures from one simple presentation.If you're serious about building a high-trust, high-conversion online business around your expertise, you can't afford to miss this one.Checkout Davids Challenge
The ABMP Podcast | Speaking With the Massage & Bodywork Profession
Two names that are well known within the bodywork community—Dr. David Simons, author of Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual, and Moshe Feldenkrais, engineer, physicist, and found of the Feldenkrais Method—join Doug Nelson on this episode of The ABMP Podcast. Who were these pioneers in the bodywork profession and what can we learn from their origins? Resources: Myofascial Pain and Dysfunction: The Trigger Point Manual: https://www.amazon.com/Myofascial-Pain-Dysfunction-Trigger-Manual/dp/0683083635 Feldenkrais Method: https://feldenkrais.com/ Host: Douglas Nelson is Board Certified in Massage Therapy and Therapeutic Bodywork, beginning his career in massage therapy in 1977. Seeing over 1,200 client visits annually for decades, he is also the owner of BodyWork Associates, a massage therapy clinic in Champaign, IL. with 21 therapists that was established in 1982. He is the founder of NMT MidWest, Inc., providing training in Precision Neuromuscular Therapy™ across the USA. He has personally taught more than 13,000 hours of continuing education and is the author of three books. Doug is a past president of the Massage Therapy Foundation. Sponsors: Anatomy Trains: www.anatomytrains.com Elements Massage: www.elementsmassage.com/abmp Earthlite: www.earthlite.com
Readings: Isaiah 40:3-31, Matthew 3, Apocalypse Explained 1088:4,5. By Rev. David Simons. Recorded at Bryn Athyn Cathedral on February 7, 1960. See www.newchurchaudio.org for more recordings.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Get ready for an eye-opening episode as we chat with a former IRS agent who took a path less traveled. Hailing from Detroit, she knew early on that justice was her calling, leading her to become an accountant and later join the IRS. From investigating quirky cases to questioning income tax, her journey unfolds with a dose of courage. Discover her story of stepping away from the IRS, finding her own path, and shedding light on income tax's mysteries. Tune in as we explore her insights, challenge conventions, and navigate the blurred lines between taxation and fairness. It's a conversation that'll have you thinking long after the episode ends.
Episode 89 The Theremin Part 2: Recordings After 1970 Playlist Ultimate Spinach, “(Ballad of The) Hip Death Goddess” from Ultimate Spinach (1968 MGM Records). This American psychedelic rock band was from Boston, Massachusetts, although they had a sound that had more an affinity with the free spirit of San Francisco. The Theremin has a prominent part in this song, following the vocalist and filling in some interesting instrumental parts. Bass and Feedback, Richard Nese; Vocals, Drums, Tabla, Bass Drum, Bells, Chimes, Keith Lahteinen; Vocals, Electric Guitar, Guitar, Kazoo, Barbara Hudson; Vocals, Electric Piano, Electric Harpsichord, Organ, Harpsichord, Twelve-String Guitar, Sitar, Harmonica, Wood Flute, Theremin, Celesta, Ian Bruce-Douglas; Vocals, Lead Guitar, Guitar Feedback, Sitar Drone, Electric Sitar, Geoffrey Winthrop. 8:11 Hawkwind, “Paranoia Part 2” from Hawkwind (1970 Liberty). Hawkwind was a pioneering space-rock and psychedelic group from the UK. They were known to use a theremin during their early years—1969 to 1973 and revived its use on stage in later performances using a Moog Etherwave model in the 2000s. This first album features a theremin added to much of the sonic textures, sometimes overtly but often run through effects to provide a looming background, as in this song. It is sometimes difficult to distinguish, but I think there is a theremin providing some of the droning background and then sporadic bursts of tones beginning around 4:25. 14:54 McKendree Spring, “God Bless the Conspiracy” from 3 (1972 Decca). Electric Violin, Viola, Theremin, Michael Dreyfuss; Electronics (Ring Modulator), Tom Oberheim; Vocals, Acoustic Guitar, Dulcimer, Fran McKendree; Electric Bass, Larry Tucker; Electric Guitar, Martin Slutsky. This progressive band with experimental leanings was a quartet without a drummer. Dreyfus later said, “In God Bless the Conspiracy and No Regrets I was able to play viola and Theremin at the same time by bringing my body closer to the Theremin (to change pitch) while playing a harmony part on the viola,”(2006). He played a Theremin beginning 1969. He may have used a Moog theremin, such as the Troubadour. 6:53 Linda Cohen, “Horizon Jane” from Lake Of Light (1973 Poppy). Folky album from Philadelphia featuring several electronic musicians. Acoustic Guitar, Bass, Piano, Polytonic Modulator, Jefferson Cain; Classical Guitar, Composer, Linda Cohen; Flute, Stan Slotter; Producer, Electric Guitar, Matrix Electronic Drums, Modulator, Sitar, Synthesizer, Craig Anderton; Minimoog, Theremin, Charles Cohen. 3:36 Ronnie Montrose, “Space Station #5” from Montrose (1973 Warner Brothers). Ronnie Montrose added a custom-built Theremin to his equipment with the pitch antenna mounted on his aluminum (silver) Velano guitar so that he could play both at the same time. Volume for the theremin was controlled by a black box mounted on a mike stand, to which he stood nearby. He was recording with it throughout the 1970s. Here is a great live clip you where you can see how he played it. Note the end of the clip where he put the theremin guitar up against the speaker and wails on the volume control of the theremin control box. Bass, Bill Church; Drums, Denny Carmassi; Guitar, Theremin-Guitar, Ronnie Montrose; Vocals, Sam Hagar. 5:36 Arthur Brown's Kingdom Come, “Time Captives” from Journey (1974 Passport). Fender Bass, Percussion, Vocals, Phil Shutt; Bentley Rhythm Ace, Vocals, Arthur Brown; Electric Guitar, Vocals, Andy Dalby; Mellotron, ARP 2600, EMS VCS 3, Piano, Theremin, Percussion, Vocals, Victor Peraino. 8:37 Michael Quatro, “Get Away” from In Collaboration with The Gods (1975 United Artists Records). Brother of Detroit rockers Suzi and Patti Quatro, he had a flare for progressive rock and electronic keyboards in the 1970s. The Theremin makes frequent appearances on this album, this track in particular. Arranger, Piano Baldwin, Electric Piano Gretsch Electro, Piano Tack Piano, Sonic Six Synthesizer, Effects Univox Phaser, Univox Stringman, EC-80 Echo, Elka Electric Piano, Hammond Organ, Minimoog Synthesizer, Univox Mini-Korg, Electroharmonix Boxes, Mellotron Violin, Cello, Flute, Effects Wah-Wah Pedals, Effects Syntha-Pedal, Bass Nova Bass, Horns, Organ Pipe Organ, Sounds Ring Modulation, Maestro Theremin, Electronic Effects, Percussion , Michael Quatro;Bass, Lead Vocals, Arranged By Arranging Assistance, Dave Kiswiney; Drums, Kirk (Arthur) Trachsel; Guitar, Teddy Hale. 4:04 Melodic Energy Commission, “Revise The Scene” from Stranger In Mystery (1979 Energy Discs). This is the first album from this Canadian space-rock, psychedelic and folk troupe from British Columbia. The Theremin was a key instrument in their ensemble and was custom-built by group member George McDonald. His Theremin would eventually be known as the Galactic Stream Theremin and would take some 25 years to build and evolve into a six antennae instrument for “tuning into the performers body motions.” During this recording, a simpler, more traditional version was used. Gas & Steam Bass, Bells, Tambourine, Mark Franklin; Dulcimer, Bowed Dulcimer, Khaen, Gongs, Flute, Randy Raine-Reusch; Hydro-electric Guitar, Custom-made Theremin, Aura, Wall Of Oscillation, George McDonald; Percussion, Tablas, Brass Tank, Glockenspiel, Roland SH5 Synthesizer, Organ, Paul Franklin; EMS Synthi AKS, Delatronics, Electric Guitar, Del Dettmar; Wordy Voice, Guitar, Piano, Organ, Roland SH 1000 Synthesizer, Gongs, Vibraphone, Kalimba, Stone Drum, Egyptian Shepherd's Pipe, Xaliman. 6:13 The Nihilist Spasm Band, “Elsinore” from Vol. 2 (1979 Music gallery Editions). Canadian group that used all hand-made instruments, including the kit-made Theremin by Bill Exley. Bass, Hugh McIntyre; Drums, Greg Curnoe; Guitar, John Clement, Murray Favro; Kazoo, John Boyle; Pratt-a-various, Art Pratten; Vocals, Theremin, Bill Exley. Recorded live at the Toronto Music Gallery, February 4th 1978. 5:14 Yuseff Yancy, Garret List, “Sweetness” Garrett List / A-1 Band, “Sweetness” from Fire & Ice (1982 Lovely Music). Alto Saxophone, Byard Lancaster; Maestro Theremin, Electronics, Youseff Yancy; Vocals, Genie Sherman. 4:11. Todd Clark, “Into the Vision” from Into The Vision (1984 T.M.I. Productions). Guitar, Cheetah Chrome; Theremin, Bat-wing Guitar with ARP Avatar, Todd Clark; Found Vocals, William Burroughs. 8:38 Danielle Dax, “Yummer Yummer Man” from Yummer Yummer Man (1985 Awesome). UK artist Danielle Dax. Wah Guitar, Steve Reeves; Guitar, Slide Guitar, Organ, David Knight; Producer, arranger, lyrics, Vocals, Theremin, Tapes, Danielle Dax; Drums, Martyn Watts; Music by Danielle Dax, David Knight. Dax is an experimental English musician, artist, and producer, born as Danielle Gardner. 3:16 Mars Everywhere, “Attack of the Giant Squid” from Visitor Parking (1989 Audiofile Tapes). Cassette release from this space-rock band from the 1980s. Electric Guitar, Electronics, Tape, Ernie Falcone; Synthesizer, Theremin, Keyboards, Tom Fenwick. 5:03 Jon Spencer Blues Explosion, “Vacuum of Loneliness” from The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion (1992 Caroline). This NY band uses an original Moog Vanguard (circa 1960). This rock and blues band was active from 1991 until 2016. Baritone Saxophone, John Linnell; Drums, Russell Simins; Guitar, Vocals, Judah Bauer; Tenor Saxophone, Kurt Hoffman; Trumpet, Frank London; Vocals, Guitar, Moog Vanguard Theremin, Jon Spencer. Here is a video of a live performance of The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion with a Moog Vanguard Theremin (just after the 39-minute mark). 3:02 Calvin Owens and His Blues Orchestra, “Vincent Van Gogh” from That's Your Booty (1996 Sawdust Alley). Trumpet solo and vocals, Calvin Owens; Maestro Theremin, Youseff Yancy; Alto Saxophone, Tenor Saxophone, Eddy De Vos, Kurt van Herck, Peter Vandendriessche; Backing Vocals, B. J. Scott, Frank Deruytter, Mieke Belange, Yan De Bryun; Baritone Saxophone, Bo Vander Werf, Johan Vandendriessche; Bass, Ban Buls, Roman Korohek; Cello, B. Piatkowski, X. Gao; Drums, Cesar Janssens, Laurent Mercier; Guitar, Marty Townsend, Yan De Bryun; Keyboards, Rafael Van Goubergen; Organ, Peter Van Bogart; Saxophone, Jimmy Heath; Tenor Saxophone, David "Fathead" Newman, Shelly Caroll Paul; Trombone, Marc Godfroid, Yan De Breker; Trumpet, Andy Haderer, Rüdiger Baldauf; Violin, D. Ivanov, E. Kouyoumdjian; Vocals, Archie Bell, Otis Clay, Ruby Wilson. 6:23. David Simons, “Music For Theremin And Gamelan (1998-1999), parts I and II” from Fung Sha Noon (2009 Tzadik). Theremin, Rob Schwimmer; Gamelan, Theremin, Sampler, MIDI Controller, Percussion, Marimba, Zoomoozophone, 43 Pitch Zither, Harmonic Canon, Slide Guitar, Chromelodeon harmonium, David Simons; Gamelan, Barbara Benary, Denman Maroney, John Morton, Laura Liben. 6:09 (part I) and 6:29 (part II) Lydia Kavina, “Voice of the Theremin,” composed by Vladimir Komarov from Music from The Ether, Original Works For Theremin (1999 Mode). TVox Tour model theremin, Lydia Kavina. Arranged, mixed, performed by Lydia Kavina. 8:11 Lydia Kavina, “Free Music #1,” composed by Percy Grainger from Music from The Ether, Original Works For Theremin (1999 Mode). TVox Tour model theremin, Lydia Kavina; mixed and spatialized, Steve Puntolillo. This work was originally written for theremin although Grainger had many ideas around how this type of “free music” should be played. This native Australian was fascinated by the sounds of the real world and invented a mechanical machine for making such sounds. In 1938, Grainger said, "...Out in nature we hear all kinds of lovely and touching 'free' (non-harmonic) combinations of tones, yet we are unable to take up these beauties and expressiveness into the art of music because of our archaic notions of harmony.” His adaptation of free music for theremin was an attempt to create sounds that were new to music. This version was multitracked by Kavina and an old acquaintance of mine, sound engineer Steve Puntolillo, to recreate the parts for four theremins. 1:19 The Kurstins, “Sunshine” from Gymnopedie (2000 Rouge Records). Composed by Roy Ayers; Minimoog, ARP String Ensemble, Organ, Guitar, Sampler, Drums, Rhodes Electric Piano, Greg Kurstin; Moog Theremin, Theremin Vocoder, Moogerfoogers, Pamelia Kurstin. 3:47 The Kurstins, “Outside” from Gymnopedie (2000 Rouge Records). Composed by Greg Kurstin; Minimoog, ARP String Ensemble, Organ, Guitar, Sampler, Drums, Rhodes Electric Piano, Greg Kurstin; Moog Theremin, Theremin Vocoder, Moogerfoogers, Pamelia Kurstin. 3:55 Hecate's Angels, “Shrink-Wrapped Soul” from Saints And Scoundrels (2004 redFLY Records). Los Angeles-based Pietra Wexstun is a composer, singer, keyboard and theremin player. Vocals, Farfisa organ, piano, theremin, sound effects, Pietra Wexstun; bass, Bill Blatt; guitar, Stan Ridgway; drums, Elmo Smith. 3:52 Pamelia Kurstin, “Barrow In Furness” from Thinking Out Loud (2007 Tzadik). From Kurstin first solo record. Composed, Produced, Theremin With L6 Looping Pedals and Microsynth Pedal, Guitar, Piano, Pamelia Kurstin. She played the Etherwave Pro Theremin by Moog fo this recording. Pamelia Kurstin, video with she and Bob Moogdiscussing the Etherwave Pro when it was introduced. Kurstin uses the Etherwave Pro Theremin by Moog Music. 5:12 Barbara Bucholtz, “SixEight” from Moonstruck (2008 Intuition Records). Bucholtz was a German theremin player and composer. She played a TVox Tour model theremin. Drums, Sebastian Merk; Music By, Contrabass Flute, Sampler, programmed, engineered, produced, and recorded by Tilmann Dehnhard; Trumpet, Arve Henriksen. 4:01 Herb Deutsch, “Longing” from Theremin One Hundred Years (2020 Electronic Sound). Composer, Herb Deutsch; Piano, Nancy Deutsch; Moog Melodia Theremin, Daryl Kubian. Recording from 2012. The beloved Herb Deutsch, who died recently at age 90, was an early collaborator with Bob Moog on the creation of the synthesizer. Herb became acquainted with Bob by purchasing a Theremin kit—a Moog Melodia model, in the early 1960s. He was primarily responsible for convincing Moog to add a keyboard to his modular unit. Also, this is taken from a terrific compilation of modern Theremin artists to benefit the New York Theremin Society. Check it out. 3:38 M83, “Sitting” from M83 (2016 Lowlands Festival). This is a live recording from Holland. “Sitting” was a song on M83's first album in 2001. But it didn't have a theremin part until they decided to spice-up the live interpretation of the song in 2016. Jordan Lawlor uses a Moog Theremini when M83 performs this in concert. He puts down his guitar, grabs some drum sticks, beats a rhythm on some electronic drums while dancing in place and moving his hands around a theremin. You can hear the theremin in this track but don't mistake it for the keyboard tones that Gonzalez is playing on his modular system. A longer sequence of theremin begins at 1:38 in the audio. You can view the video here, beginning at 26:54 into the show. M83 is a French electronica band founded in 1999 by Anthony Gonzalez, who remains the only sole member from the original outfit. Performing members on this live tour included: Anthony Gonzalez, lead vocals, modular synthesizers, keyboards, guitars, piano, bass, drums, percussion, programming, arrangement, mixer, production; Loïc Maurin, drums, percussion, guitar, bass, keyboards; Jordan Lawlor, guitars, vocals, multi-instrumentalist; Kaela Sinclair, Dave Smith and M-Audio keyboards, vocals; Joe Berry, piano, synthesizers, electronic wind instrument, saxophone. 4:03 Radio Science Orchestra, “Theme from Doctor Who” (2019). This UK-based band unites theremin, ondes martenot, Moog and modular electronics, for its performances. They've played such events as the TEDSummit, the British Library, and Glastonbury Festival. They made a concert recording with Lydia Kavina in 2009 of the Theme from Doctor Who. This version was made more recently and appears to also include Kavina. She plays the TVox Tour model theremin made by her husband G. Pavlov. 2:18 Thorwald Jørgensen, Kamilla Bystrova, “Moderato” from Air électrique: Original Music For Theremin And Piano (2020 Zefir). Jørgensen is an accomplished Dutch classical theremin player. Piano, Kamilla Bystrova; Liner Notes, Design, Moog Etherwave Pro Theremin, Thorwald Jørgensen. 2:10 Dorit Chrysler, “A Happy Place” from Theremin One Hundred Years (2020 Electronic Sound). Issued with the magazine's 7” vinyl and magazine bundle Electronic Sound Magazine, issue 70. Written, produced, and performed by Dorit Chrysler. 2:06 Dorit Chrysler, “Calder Plays Theremin Side A” from Calder Plays Theremin (2023 NY Theremin Society/Fridman Gallery) Written for Theremin Orchestra in 5 Movements, Chrysler's work is based on a commissioned sound piece by The Museum of Modern Art in conjunction with the exhibition Alexander Calder: Modern from the Start. Chrysler identified two of Alexander Calder's sculptures, Snow Flurry, I (1948) and Man-Eater with Pennants (1945), to interact and “play” multiple Theremins on site. I believe the Theremin are various Moog models. Calder Plays Theremin is a co-release of the NY Theremin Society and Fridman Gallery. 8:48 Opening background tracks: Ronnie Montrose, “Open Fire” (excerpt) from Open Fire (1978 Warner Brothers). Bass, Alan Fitzgerald; Drums, Rick Shlosser; Guitar, Custom-built Theremin mpounted to his electric guitar, Ronnie Montrose; composed by Edgar Winter, Ronnie Montrose. 2:09 Hooverphonic, “L'Odeur Animale” from The Magnificent Tree (2000 Columbia). Guitar, Raymond Geerts; Keyboards, Bass, Programmed by Alex Callier; Vocals, Geike Arnaert; Maestro Theremin, trumpet, Youseff Yancy; Fairlight, Effects, Dan Lacksman. 3:46. Opening and closing sequences voiced by Anne Benkovitz. Additional opening, closing, and other incidental music by Thom Holmes. See my companion blog that I write for the Bob Moog Foundation: For additional notes, please see my blog, Noise and Notations.
A conversation with David Simons and Jarred Shewey Find Return to Duty (and contribute!) at https://www.returntoduty.us/
In this episode, Ryan chats with David Simons of Kingdom Social Media. David's story is one of God's faithfulness and perseverance to follow your dreams. If you need some encouragement today, you'll love this episode. Links: Kingdom Social Media - https://kingdomsocialmedia.com/ Caught Between a Dream and a Job by Delatorro McNeal II https://www.amazon.com/dp/1599793334/
In episode 81 of the Wealth in Christ Show, We sat with David Simons. Mr.David is the founder and CEO of Kingdom Social media. In this episode, we discuss Mr. David's entrepreneurial journey and how he teaches business owners and ministry leaders how to leverage their social media for growthLink to join Pray and Invest Group:https://www.facebook.com/groups/216144613257783/Link to investing guide:https://wealthinchristbrand.com/products/investing-guideWealth in christ Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/Wealthinchrist/Dami on IG:https://www.instagram.com/damitheceo/Wealth in christ store: wealthinchristbrand.comUSE promo code: WEALTH for 10% off any products
================================================== ==SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1================================================== == DEVOCIÓN MATUTINA PARA ADOLESCENTES 2022“UN SALTO EN EL TIEMPO”Narrado por: DORIANY SÁNCHEZDesde: PERÚUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist Church 19 DE AGOSTOUN GLOBO A 30 KM DE ALTURA«Haces de las nubes tus carros de guerra. ¡Tú cabalgas en las alas del viento!» (Salmo 104:3, NVI).¿Te has subido alguna vez a una montaña? ¿A qué altura? ¿Ha subido alguna vez za un rascacielos? ¿A qué altura? ¿Ha volado en un avión a 12,000 metros 1 [40,000 pies]? Pues bien, todas estas son experiencias estupendas, pero ascender una montaña, caminar o volar a esas alturas no es nada comparado con lo que hizo un médico oficial del ejército estadounidense llamado David Simons, de Minnesota.El 19 de agosto de 1957, Simons batió todos los récords de altitud al elevarse en un globo aerostático a más de 30.500 metros de altura en la estratosfera. Permaneció toda la noche sobrevolando Dakota del Sur, y dijo que había sido una de las experiencias más emocionantes de su vida.Los globos aerostáticos se remontan a tiempos pasados. Pilatre De Rozier es considerado el primer globo del mundo. Envió una oveja, un pato y un gallo a dar el primer paseo en 1783. El viaje apareció 15 minutos antes de estrellarse contra el suelo. Dos años más tarde, Rozier lo intento de nuevo, eta vez con él adentro. Por desgracia, su globo explotó media hora después del despegue y él murió. El diseño del globo y el hidrógeno inflamable fueron una mala combinación. Dos años más tarde, en 1785, Jean Pierre Blanchard y John Jefferies se desarrollaron en las primeras personas en cruzar con éxito el Canal de la Mancha en un globo.Los vuelos experimentales con globos de aire caliente continuaron durante los siguientes cien años, y luego, en 1932, un científico suizo estableció un récord de altitud: 16,000 metros (52,498 pies). Desde ese día se ha producido una carrera para ver quién puede llegar más lejos y volar más alto. En 1935, un modelo propulsado por gas helio alcanzó una altitud de 22,065 metros (72,395 pies), más de 21 kilómetros (13 millas de altura. Tan alto, de hecho, que los pilotos tuvieron que estar en una cámara presurizada. Fue uno de los primeros pasos reales hacia los futuros viajes espaciales. Y luego David Simons batió ese récord por poco más de 9,000 metros [30,000 pies), subiendo al aire casi 30 kilómetros. Pero en 1960 Joe Kittinger estableció el estándar al saltar desde un globo a 31,000 metros de altura. Y lo que es más sorprendente, mientras caía del cielo, ¡rompió la barrera del sonido con su cuerpo!¿Quieres volar de verdad? Entonces no te pierdas la mayor atracción que se avecina. Cuando Jesús venga de nuevo, te invitará a subir a un glorioso carro con él en las alas del viento. Volaremos hacia mundos desconocidos. Ese sí que es un viaje que no podemos perdernos.
Hvis du ikke har set The Wire, så gør det. Har du dog tygget dig igennem de 342 episoder af Baltimore-krimi/dramaet, så kan du heldigvis kaste dig over serieskaberen David Simons nye miniserie We Own this City, der lige nu kan ses på HBO. For den er fremragende, siger Lone Nikolajsen. Som i The Wire foregår den i Baltimores politi, men denne gang har David Simon et dokumentarisk forlæg. We own this city handler om en virkelig korruptionsskandale i byens politikorps, som endte med, at samtlige ni medlemmer af den civilklædte eliteenhed Gun Trace Task Force i 2017 blev dømt. Lone Nikolajsen anmelder. Og vi skal naturligvis også tale om den seneste uges optrapning af konflikten mellem Vesten og Rusland. For mens NATO-lande sætter turbo på våbenhjælpen til Ukraine, er Rusland i stigende grad begyndt at tale om en regulær stedfortræderkrig og truer med/advarer mod, at det kan ende i en atomar konfrontation. Mathias Irminger Sonne er igennem fra Berlin. Og så får jeg besøg af chefredaktøren, der faktisk har en optur over, at Rusland lukker for gassen. For det må nødvendigvis få EU til at indse, at olien og gassen skal blive i jorden. Lyt med!
Det er noget nær juleaften i studiet i denne uge, hvor navnlig filmredaktør Jacob Ludvigsen har glædet sig til 'The Wire'-skaberen David Simons nye, store politiserie, 'We Own This City'. Ligesom i 'The Wire' er handlingen hensat Baltimore, hvor Simon opruller en utrolig – og utrolig barsk – virkelig sag om politikorruption og vold. Jon Bernthal ('King Richard', 'The Walking Dead') giver den hele armen i hovedrollen, men kan 'We Own This City' leve op til de tårnhøje forventninger? Jacob og filmskribent Lise Ulrich diskuterer, men først skal det handle om månedens måske mest binge-værdige serie, 'The Dropout' på Disney+. Serien fortæller den virkelige historie om iværksætteren Elizabeth Holmes, der som bare 19-årig grundlagde virksomheden Theranos. Et banebrydende foretagende, der påstod at kunne udføre avancerede blodtests med blot én enkelt dråbe blod. Men det hele var fup og svindel, og Holmes endte som en af det 21. århundredes største amerikanske svindlere. Amanda Seyfried er forrygende i hovedrollen, og både Jacob og Lise er stærkt underholdt. For navnlig på ét vigtigt punkt lykkes 'The Dropout', hvor svindlerserien 'Inventing Anna' fejlede stort. Lyt med!
Im Digital Insurance Podcast besprechen wir relevante Themen der digitalen Transformation. Um noch mehr Insights zu erhalten, haben wir kürzlich unser Studio auf dem InnoVario in Siegburg aufgebaut und interessante Interviews geführt, die wir hier aufbereitet haben. In unserem neuen Format Insurance Insights bieten wir spannenden Akteuren der Versicherungswirtschaft eine Bühne und die Möglichkeit, sich euch, unseren Hörern, vorzustellen. In dieser Episode sprechen David Simons, Founder & CEO bei Flixcheck und Dieter Kiwus, Geschäftsführender Gesellschafter bei Kiwus Consulting GmbH. Flixcheck wurde 2015 gegründet und bietet eine standardisierte Software as a Service-Lösung, die Unternehmen dabei unterstützt, den eigenen Customer Service effektiver, moderner und kundenfreundlicher zu machen. Kiwus Consulting ist ein digitales Inhabergeführtes Beratungsunternehmen. Sie helfen selbstständigen Finanzdienstleistern dabei, Online präsenter zu werden, ihre Kundenzufriedenheit zu steigern und gleichzeitig mit innovativem Empfehlungsmarketing konstant neue Kunden zu gewinnen. Links in dieser Ausgabe Zur Homepage von Jonas Piela Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Jonas Piela Zum LinkedIn-Profil von David Simons Zum LinkedIn-Profil von Dieter Kiwus Über diesen Podcast Folgt uns auf LinkedIn für mehr Podcast-Updates Zur Podcast-Website Wir suchen immer nach neuen und spannenden Gesprächspartnern. Meldet euch bei Susan.
This episode is brought to you by National Office Systems Afghanistan veteran and political consultant David Simons joins the Tuesday Commute to discuss the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan and why he says it was a failure by our political leaders, what he makes of Herschel Walker's chances in the U.S. Senate race against Raphael Warnock and what to expect in the 2022 Georgia gubernatorial race. Subscribe to the show on Apple Podcasts
David D. Simons is a Mediapreneur who utilizes his off line and online skillsto promote brands, increase businesses, support causes, and buildrelationships. His passion and excitement for media has attracted the likesof Fortune 500 companies, non-profits, churches, and entrepreneurs. Davidobtained a degree in Digital Media from Sacramento State University, anda Masters degree in Entertainment Business from Full Sail University.David is the CEO of Kingdom Social Media, which is an organizationdesigned to help influential leaders and leading organizations dominatetheir market online through social media marketing. David has beenrecognized by Entrepreneur.com, Dell Computers, Yahoo, XeroxCorporation, Huffington Post, and Hootsuite for his strategies in socialmedia.. David truly enjoys teaching and in his spare time he is an AdjunctProfessor for Temple University, the Community College of Philadelphia,and Esperanza College.David lives in Philadelphia, PA with his loving wife,Abigail Simons. David lives by this rule: “The biggest risk you will take in life is not taking risks."Website: https://kingdomsocialmedia.com/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KingdomSocialMedia/Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kingdomsocialmedia/Twitter: https://twitter.com/kingdomofsocial
Annemieke Bosman spreekt Neerlandica Mieke Tillema over haar boek Ida Simons. Pianiste, schrijfster, overlevende. Wie is Ida Simons, geboren als Ida Rosenheimer in 1911 in Antwerpen? Hoe kan een vrouw, die de verschrikkingen van de Tweede Wereldoorlog aan den lijve heeft ondervonden zo'n sprankelend boek schrijven? Ze groeide op in een kleurrijk Joods gezin, net als Gittel in Een dwaze maagd, en maakt als negentienjarige haar debuut als concertpianiste. Haar ster rijst snel en ze speelt voor uitverkochte zalen. In 1933 trouwt ze in Den Haag met de jurist David Simons, die hen nog lange tijd voor deportatie weet te behoeden. Het gedwongen verblijf in Westerbork en Theresienstadt en de bijzondere redding van het gezin Simons in februari 1945 blijven niet zonder gevolgen. Ida Simons treedt niet meer op. Ze gaat schrijven en publiceert een dichtbundel, twee novellen en de roman Een dwaze maagd. Het vervolg hierop, Als water in de woestijn, heeft ze door haar vroege, zelfgekozen dood niet kunnen voltooien.
Het vervalsen van persoonsbewijzen, voedselbonnen en het regelen van onderduikplekken. Dingen waar je meteen aan moet denken bij het woord verzet. Historicus Hinke Piersma is te gast bij Focus. Ze werkt al meer dan twintig jaar voor het NIOD Instituut voor Oorlogs-, Holocaust - en Genocidestudies. Vanuit haar favoriete plek, het archief, onderzocht ze onder andere het beleid van de gemeente Amsterdam jegens teruggekeerde Joden. Momenteel werkt ze aan een biografie over de Joodse jurist David Simons.
If you are good at or love doing something, there's nothing better than to start making money out of it. Chasing your passions and integrating them with the most effective marketing strategies is a straight path towards success. Mediapreneur David Simons shares what it really takes to discover your gift, get out of a position that you don't enjoy, and find what can be considered your "dream job." He talks about his inspiring journey on sticking with his deep love for digital marketing that allowed him to get out of Corporate America and start his own business venture. David also dissects what must be done to achieve such a fantastic result, from the right way of building a successful entrepreneurial mindset, discovering the why behind your career, and learning how to elevate yourself using affirmative thoughts.
Curtis and David discuss how you can use social media to expand your business and get your message heard. David Simons is an entrepreneur and media enthusiast who utilizes his offline and online skills to promote brands, increase businesses, support causes, and build relationships. He's passionate and excited about social media, and his success and energy have attracted Fortune 500 companies, non-profits, churches, and entrepreneurs, all coming to seek his help and assistance in building their own strength and power through social media. Curtis's motto is that what you learn today and how you position yourself will determine your future financial well-being 5, 10, 20 years from today. To learn more about how to manage your wealth in a practical way, visit www.practicalwealthadvisors.com Links and Resources from this Episode www.practicalwealthadvisors.com Email Curtis for a free report - curtmay@gmail.com Call his office - 610-622-3121 Connect with David Simons David@kingdomsocialmedia.com http://www.kingdombusinesssolutions.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/daviddsimons/ Special Listener Gift Schedule a 15-Minute Call with Curtis Free Ebook Financial Planning Has Failed Show Notes Always interested in business and media - 4:38 Be great at what you do - 6:47 There are principles, strategies, and tactics - 14:12 Building credibility to work with people - 17:51 The first level of trust - 21:41 How to grow a message - 26:27 What to learn from the pandemic - 29:51 Educate people on target marketing - 31:03 You have to understand and respect the process - 32:01 About advertising - 32:57 Opportunities for business owners - 34:35 Get in touch with David - 45:55 Review, Subscribe and ShareIf you like what you hear please leave a review by clicking here Make sure you're subscribed to the podcast so you get the latest episodes. Click here to subscribe with Apple Podcasts Click here to subscribe with Spotify Click here to subscribe with Stitcher Click here to subscribe with RSS
Instagram : Iamchrismcbride Instagram: Daviddsimons David Simon's Websites: Shor.by/davidDSimons Chris McBride's Websites: linktr.ee/christophermcbride Rising Tide Podcast: Youtube Channel https://youtu.be/kV3DcamsDyQ --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tmi-risingtide/support
This is Episode Three of our series on the Enneagram! Today we are diving into the Head Triad. These Enneagram types think first, and then feel or do. They also all three deal with fear in different ways. Our three guests give us insight into how they see the world. David Simons is our Type 5. He is analytic, skeptical, and intelligent. Enneagram Fives are our observers and/or investigators. They are typically introverted and analytical, motivated by a drive to understand and gather knowledge. Tamara Thompson is our resident Type 6. She is also Jill's sister! Enneagram Sixes are our Loyalists. They are the “ride or die” friends They look out for the whole, and what is best for everyone. They tend to fight with anxiety and “worst case scenario” more than others. They are motivated by a need for security and consistency. Jill McCormick is repping our Enneagram Sevens! Sevens just want to have fun! They are known as the enthusiasts and are very "big picture," rather than "detail" people. They tend to fight with just wanting more of the fun thing. Sevens love adventure and keeping things light. They are motivated by avoiding pain. This is a great behind the curtains of Fives, Sixes, and Sevens. Enjoy! #enneagram #9types #afrayedknotpodcast
When the pandemic started, we were told not to bother with masks. But now it looks like experts have done a 180 here, and a lot of us are being told to cover our mugs when we leave the house. So which is it? Should we mask up or not? To find out, we talk to epidemiologist Dr. Benjamin Cowling, microbiologist Dr. Anna Davies, and clinical psychologist Dr. Olga Perski. Also: RED DEVIL SQUID!! Here’s a link to our transcript: https://bit.ly/2LxuxTW And here’s a link to the squid video: https://youtu.be/iANgyT95bmA This episode was produced by Wendy Zukerman with help from Michelle Dang, Rose Rimler, Meryl Horn, Laura Morris and Sinduja Srinivasan. We’re edited by Blythe Terrell with help from Caitlin Kenney. Fact checking by Diane Kelly. Mix and sound design by Peter Leonard. Music written by Peter Leonard, Marcus Bagala, Emma Munger, and Bobby Lord. A huge thanks to all the researchers we got in touch with for this episode, including Dr. David Simons and Benjamin Burford. And special thanks to the Zukerman family and Joseph Lavelle Wilson.
Nuevo episodio de Ficciones Podcasts. Y volvió el momento en que hablamos de series: en esta ocasión hablamos de una serie que cerró su tercera temporada, y una miniserie de 6 capítulos, ambas de la pantalla de HBO. Westworld, de Jonathan Nolan y Lisa Joy, y The Plot Against America, de David Simons y Ed Burns. ¿Veremos la 4ta temporada de Westworld en el 2021? ¿Haremos eventualmente un re-watching de The Plot Against America? Esas preguntas y muchas más, están respondidas si pones play en este episodio. Visitá nuestra web acá para leer las reseñas. Ficciones en las redes: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Letterboxd. Fabri en las redes: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Letterboxd. Sebas en las redes: Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Letterboxd.
We’ve returned after a month long break to reconnect and share ideas and information to help entrepreneurs start and sustain their businesses. The covid-19 pandemic has taken a toll on our economy with an aftershock that’s bound to last several months after quarantine ends. If you’re thinking of starting a new business or pivoting your existing business, you might be wondering how you can build a brand during an economic meltdown? David Simons joins us to share some important information about the entrepreneur economy, abundance thinking and tips to make your brand stand out. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
Exploring how a country becomes diseased by fascism from within in David Simon's alternate history drama, The Plot Against America.A Muckraker Media ProductionLinks:MindTheaterPod on Twitter and InstagramMusic: Blue Dot Sessions- Two Dollar Token- The Big Ten- As Dust Gathers- Curio- The Coil WindsLicensed under Creative Commons
Når Donald Trump farer til Twitter-tasterne for at fordømme en film for at være kaos-opildnende liberalsk propaganda – og selvsamme er skrevet af selveste Damon Lindelof – ja, så skal den film selvfølgelig ses. Derfor kaster podcastværterne Jacob og Lise sig i denne uge over den gakkede actionsatire ’The Hunt’, hvori nok så politisk korrekte liberale slagter »deplorables« for skægs skyld – indtil de selv får ørerne i maskinen af en sydstatsantiheltinde af den hårdkogte, Clint Eastwood’ske republikanermuld... En vaskeægte dobbelt Oscar-vinder titter frem i et af plottets mange twists, men er krænkelses-hypen om ’The Hunt’ bare en b-filmsstorm i et glas vand? Værterne diskuterer, og går derefter rask videre i det politisk-ladede program til en af årets helt store serier fra ingen ringere end ’The Wire’-skaberen David Simon. ’The Plot Against America’ er baseret på Philip Roths bestseller, og skildrer en alternativ amerikansk virkelighed i 1940’erne, hvor nazisympatisøren og flyhelten Charles Lindbergh vælges til præsident i stedet for Franklin D. Roosewelt. Det får antisemitismen til at blomstre, og serien drager ikke så få paralleller det mordene USA’s politiske højredrejninger. Men spørgsmålet er, om den også lever op til Simon-fanboy Jacobs tårnhøje forventninger...? Få svaret i Soundvenue Streamer, der hver uge dissekerer de mest interessante titler i streamingdybet lige nu. Du kan lytte og abonnere i Spotify, iTunes eller din foretrukne podcast-app. RETTELSE TIL UDSENDELSEN: 'The Plot Against America'-forfatteren Philip Roth døde i 2016, mens virkelighedens Charles Lindbergh døde i 1974 i en moden alder af 72 år. Vi beklager og bebrejder isolationskuller.
“A confused customer does not buy” Learn how to drive traffic to your site using leeds and PPC (pay per click). This episode features marketing experts, David Simons of Kingdom Social Media and Hasan Ali of Atlas Capital Enterprises. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app
2020 byder på et overflødighedshorn af nye streaming-film og serier, så i denne uge guider Soundvenues filmredaktør Jacob Ludvigsen og filmskribent Lise Ulrich dig til de mest interessante titler, du skal holde skarpt øje med. Værterne peger på de serier, vi kommer til at snakke mest om ved vandautomaten, de mest stjernespækkede (Kidman! Blanchett! Bier!), de bedste tilbagevendende serier (host, ’Fargo’, host!) og naturligvis årets absolut mest imødesete nye serie over dem alle. Det skal handle om ’The Wire’-skaberen David Simons nye HBO-projekt, Jacobs aversion mod kvinderettighedsfilm (...), ’Skam’-skuespillere på overnaturlige Netflix-eventyr og Lises forkærlighed for Adam Sandlers seriøse sider. Og meget, meget mere. Få streaming-overblikket over 2020 – på en skarp halv time. SOUNDVENUE STREAMER udkommer ugentligt. Du kan lytte og abonnere via Spotify, iTunes eller i din foretrukne podcast-app.
Case # 8671302Statement of Robert Smirke, taken from a letter to Jonah Magnus dated 13th February 1867.Content warnings for this episode are at the end of the show notes. Thanks to this week's Patrons: Zach Jenkins, Dunstan Thorn, David Simons, Kayla B., Roman Sevchenko, Meche Morier, Andrew Wadsworth, E Jalenak, Brie Hutcheon, Sara Homan, Lucy McCully, Kelly Lux Callahan, Jeffery Sumler, Melissa Verble, Greg Lange, Kelsey P, Mobius, Pettycoated Swashbuckler, Christopher Pajo, ASmith, Eric Zagar.Edited this week by Elizabeth Moffat, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J Newall. Performances:"Elias Bouchard" - Ben Meredith"Martin Blackwood" - Alexander J NewallSound effects this week by previously credited artists via freesound.org.Check out our merchandise at https://www.redbubble.com/people/rustyquill/collections/708982-the-magnus-archives-s1You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.oin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillDISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comContent warnings for:Body HorrorParanoia See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
My Biggest Challenge Has Been Built Battling Depression and I Am Happy That I Have Had Horses To Overcome This (Listeners' Choice) Contact Details for this Episode are available on www.HorseChats.com/DavidSimonsLC Music - BenSound.com Interviewed by Glenys Cox
David simons is a MEDIAPRENUER who utilizes his online and offline to promote brands and increase business awareness. Tun in with the Voice of Reason and David Simons today!
Join Alex, Lydia, Ben, Bryn and Helen as Alex continues his merciless campaign.This week, Grizzop and Bronc head to Damascus city, Azu rushes to get dressed, Sasha is in a seriously bad way and Hamid, well...Thanks to this week's Patrons; Zach Jenkins, Dunstan Thorn, David Simons, Kayla B., Roman Sevchenko, Meche Morier, Andrew Wadsworth, E Jalenak, Brie Hutcheon, Sara HomanIf you'd like to join them be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEditing this week by Lowri Ann Davies & Alexander J NewallSFX this week by Walter_Odington, InspectorJ, daveincamas, RutgerMuller, TobiasKosmos, Cyberkineticfilms, gpag1, bottles, CamoMano & previously credited artists.As always, today’s game system is available for free at www.d20pfsrd.comJoin our community:WEBSITE: www.rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/therustyquill/TWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: www.reddit.com/r/RustyQuill/DISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comRusty Quill Gaming is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
When he was a teen, David recognized that his parent's divorce was for the best. But it still didn't prevent him from feeling disappointed and sad. And like most young men, instead of talking about his feelings, he acted out. Discover how the threat of jail time motivated him to turn his life around.
On this week’s episode host Christina Jeurling Birro speaks with geneticist, and host of the BBC Radio show Inside Science, Dr. Adam Rutherford. He has been the science advisor on 'World War Z', 'Ex Machina', and 'Annihilation', one of the most talked about films this Spring. She is also joined by bestselling author Jonathan Abrams, who wrote “All the Pieces Matter: The Inside Story of the Wire”, the definitive oral history of David Simons groundbreaking show 'The Wire'.
My Biggest Challenge Has Been Built Battling Depression and I Am Happy That I Have Had Horses To Overcome This. Time Stamps and Contact Details for this Episode are available on www.HorseChats.com/DavidSimons Music - BenSound.com
Como a teoria, popularizada por David Simons e Janet Travell, explica, através da identificação e tratamento de pontos-gatilho, esse fenômeno? Há quem diga que as hipóteses geradas, partindo-se dessa teoria, falham em lógica e em ciência. E por conta disso, essa teoria já foi refutada cientificamente. Além disso, os tratamentos, baseados nesse modelo teórico, não possuem evidências de benefícios porque você está tratando algo que de fato não existe! Segura ai! Esse podcast é parte do canal Fisio na Pauta. Nesse canal, assuntos relevantes serão discutidos usando a ciência e o ceticismo como pedras fundamentais. Minha intenção é oferecer informação sobre saúde, ciência, reabilitação e claro… Fisioterapia! O Fisio na Pauta Podcast é uma produção independente, elaborado por um fisioterapeuta disposto a disseminar conhecimento em prol da evolução da ciência da Fisioterapia. O conteúdo desse programa é meramente informativo e não deve ser utilizado como conselho médico, uma vez que o conteúdo científico está constantemente evoluindo. Em caso de sintomas e/ou dúvidas, recomendo procurar um profissional da área da saúde. As informações e opiniões expressas nesse programa são de inteira responsabilidade de seus autores, não correspondendo necessariamente ao ponto de vista dos colaboradores do canal. Você pode acompanhar o Fisio na Pauta Podcast das seguintes maneiras: website: www.fisionapauta.com.br email: contato@fisionapauta.com.br Twitter: @fisionapauta Facebook: @canalfisionapauta Instagram: fisionapauta Deixe seu comentário no iTunes! Quer colaborar e apoiar o canal Fisio na Pauta? Acesse: http://www.fisionapauta.com.br/apoie/ Ouça, divulgue, compartilhe! Músicas: DJ Cam Quartet | Rebirth of Coll – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oU0ZmbBY9QI Bongos Bongos | Klément Julienne – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deaet_vKn3c Finger on the Trigger | Knightowl – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDBs63UZJnw Stoked | The Beach Boys - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gotv0EulMNo G4t1lh0 | Gatilho - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJQHdqPPzMQ Lá vem você | Criolo - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ-4ujn32eg Foto da vitrine: PainScience.com - https://www.painscience.com/articles/trigger-point-doubts.php Referência bibliográficas: Kerry, R., Maddocks, M., & Mumford, S. (2008). Philosophy of science and physiotherapy: An insight into practice. Physiotherapy theory and practice, 24(6), 397-407. Venere, K., & Ridgeway, K. (2016). Trigger point dry needling: the data do not support broad applicability or robust effect. Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy, 24(1), 2-4. Wilke, J., Krause, F., Vogt, L., & Banzer, W. (2016). What is evidence-based about myofascial chains: a systematic review. Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 97(3), 454-461. Dommerholt, J., & Gerwin, R. D. (2015). A critical evaluation of Quintner et al: Missing the point. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(2), 193-204. Dommerholt, J., Grieve, R., Hooks, T., & Layton, M. (2015). A critical overview of the current myofascial pain literature–October 2015. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(4), 736-746. Rathbone, A., Henry, J., & Kumbhare, D. (2015). Comment on: A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon. Rheumatology, 54(6), 1126-1127. Quintner, J., Bove, G., & Cohen, M. (2015). Comment on: A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon: reply. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 54(6), 1127-1128. Jafri, M. S. (2014). Mechanisms of myofascial pain. International scholarly research notices, 2014. Teyhen, D. S. (2013). Painful and Tender Muscles Dry Needling Can Reduce Myofascial Pain Related to Trigger Points. Money, S. (2017). Pathophysiology of Trigger Points in Myofascial Pain Syndrome. Journal of pain & palliative care pharmacotherapy, 31(2), 158-159. Quintner, J. L., Bove, G. M., & Cohen, M. L. (2014). A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon. Rheumatology, 54(3), 392-399. Quintner, J. L., & Cohen, M. L. (1994). Referred pain of peripheral nerve origin: an alternative to the" myofascial pain" construct. Clinical Journal of Pain, 10(3), 243-251. Quintner, J. L., Bove, G. M., & Cohen, M. L. (2015). Response to Dommerholt and Gerwin: Did we miss the point?. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(3), 394-395. Cohen, M., & Quintner, J. (2008). The horse is dead: let myofascial pain syndrome rest in peace. Pain Medicine, 9(4), 464-465. Shah, J. P., Thaker, N., Heimur, J., Aredo, J. V., Sikdar, S., & Gerber, L. (2015). Myofascial trigger points then and now: a historical and scientific perspective. PM&R, 7(7), 746-761. Quintner, J., Cohen, M., & Weisman, A. Behold the Mighty Trigger Point. Ingraham, P. (2017, November 11). Trigger Point Doubts Do muscle knots exist? Exploring controversies about the existence and nature of so-called “trigger points” and myofascial pain syndrome. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from https://www.painscience.com/articles/trigger-point-doubts.php. Wolfe, F. (2013, February 14). Travell, Simons and Cargo Cult Science. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from http://www.fmperplex.com/2013/02/14/travell-simons-and-cargo-cult-science/. Quintner, J. (2016, December 29). The trigger point strikes … out!. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from https://bodyinmind.org/evaluating-trigger-point/. Hilton, S., Blinckenstaff, C., & Cohen, M. L. (2017, June 01). Trigger Points, the “Third Space”, and the Merit of Pain Theories with Dr. Milton Cohen [Audio Podcast]. Retrieved from https://ptpodcast.com/pain-science-and-sensibility-episode-24-trigger-points-the-third-space-and-the-merit-of-pain-theories-with-dr-milton-cohen/.
Como a teoria, popularizada por David Simons e Janet Travell, explica, através da identificação e tratamento de pontos-gatilho, esse fenômeno? Há quem diga que as hipóteses geradas, partindo-se dessa teoria, falham em lógica e em ciência. E por conta disso, essa teoria já foi refutada cientificamente. Além disso, os tratamentos, baseados nesse modelo teórico, não possuem evidências de benefícios porque você está tratando algo que de fato não existe! Segura ai! Esse podcast é parte do canal Fisio na Pauta. Nesse canal, assuntos relevantes serão discutidos usando a ciência e o ceticismo como pedras fundamentais. Minha intenção é oferecer informação sobre saúde, ciência, reabilitação e claro… Fisioterapia! O Fisio na Pauta Podcast é uma produção independente, elaborado por um fisioterapeuta disposto a disseminar conhecimento em prol da evolução da ciência da Fisioterapia. O conteúdo desse programa é meramente informativo e não deve ser utilizado como conselho médico, uma vez que o conteúdo científico está constantemente evoluindo. Em caso de sintomas e/ou dúvidas, recomendo procurar um profissional da área da saúde. As informações e opiniões expressas nesse programa são de inteira responsabilidade de seus autores, não correspondendo necessariamente ao ponto de vista dos colaboradores do canal. Você pode acompanhar o Fisio na Pauta Podcast das seguintes maneiras: website: www.fisionapauta.com.br email: contato@fisionapauta.com.br Twitter: @fisionapauta Facebook: @canalfisionapauta Instagram: fisionapauta Deixe seu comentário no iTunes! Quer colaborar e apoiar o canal Fisio na Pauta? Acesse: https://fisionapauta.com.br/apoie/ Ouça, divulgue, compartilhe! Músicas: DJ Cam Quartet | Rebirth of Coll – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oU0ZmbBY9QI Bongos Bongos | Klément Julienne – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deaet_vKn3c Finger on the Trigger | Knightowl – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDBs63UZJnw Stoked | The Beach Boys – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gotv0EulMNo
Como a teoria, popularizada por David Simons e Janet Travell, explica, através da identificação e tratamento de pontos-gatilho, esse fenômeno? Há quem diga que as hipóteses geradas, partindo-se dessa teoria, falham em lógica e em ciência. E por conta disso, essa teoria já foi refutada cientificamente. Além disso, os tratamentos, baseados nesse modelo teórico, não possuem evidências de benefícios porque você está tratando algo que de fato não existe! Segura ai! Esse podcast é parte do canal Fisio na Pauta. Nesse canal, assuntos relevantes serão discutidos usando a ciência e o ceticismo como pedras fundamentais. Minha intenção é oferecer informação sobre saúde, ciência, reabilitação e claro… Fisioterapia! O Fisio na Pauta Podcast é uma produção independente, elaborado por um fisioterapeuta disposto a disseminar conhecimento em prol da evolução da ciência da Fisioterapia. O conteúdo desse programa é meramente informativo e não deve ser utilizado como conselho médico, uma vez que o conteúdo científico está constantemente evoluindo. Em caso de sintomas e/ou dúvidas, recomendo procurar um profissional da área da saúde. As informações e opiniões expressas nesse programa são de inteira responsabilidade de seus autores, não correspondendo necessariamente ao ponto de vista dos colaboradores do canal. Você pode acompanhar o Fisio na Pauta Podcast das seguintes maneiras: website: www.fisionapauta.com.br email: contato@fisionapauta.com.br Twitter: @fisionapauta Facebook: @canalfisionapauta Instagram: fisionapauta Deixe seu comentário no iTunes! Quer colaborar e apoiar o canal Fisio na Pauta? Acesse: http://www.fisionapauta.com.br/apoie/ Ouça, divulgue, compartilhe! Músicas: DJ Cam Quartet | Rebirth of Coll – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oU0ZmbBY9QI Bongos Bongos | Klément Julienne – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=deaet_vKn3c Finger on the Trigger | Knightowl – https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JDBs63UZJnw Stoked | The Beach Boys - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gotv0EulMNo G4t1lh0 | Gatilho - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tJQHdqPPzMQ Lá vem você | Criolo - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MZ-4ujn32eg Foto da vitrine: PainScience.com - https://www.painscience.com/articles/trigger-point-doubts.php Referência bibliográficas: Kerry, R., Maddocks, M., & Mumford, S. (2008). Philosophy of science and physiotherapy: An insight into practice. Physiotherapy theory and practice, 24(6), 397-407. Venere, K., & Ridgeway, K. (2016). Trigger point dry needling: the data do not support broad applicability or robust effect. Journal of Manual & Manipulative Therapy, 24(1), 2-4. Wilke, J., Krause, F., Vogt, L., & Banzer, W. (2016). What is evidence-based about myofascial chains: a systematic review. Archives of physical medicine and rehabilitation, 97(3), 454-461. Dommerholt, J., & Gerwin, R. D. (2015). A critical evaluation of Quintner et al: Missing the point. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(2), 193-204. Dommerholt, J., Grieve, R., Hooks, T., & Layton, M. (2015). A critical overview of the current myofascial pain literature–October 2015. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(4), 736-746. Rathbone, A., Henry, J., & Kumbhare, D. (2015). Comment on: A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon. Rheumatology, 54(6), 1126-1127. Quintner, J., Bove, G., & Cohen, M. (2015). Comment on: A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon: reply. Rheumatology (Oxford, England), 54(6), 1127-1128. Jafri, M. S. (2014). Mechanisms of myofascial pain. International scholarly research notices, 2014. Teyhen, D. S. (2013). Painful and Tender Muscles Dry Needling Can Reduce Myofascial Pain Related to Trigger Points. Money, S. (2017). Pathophysiology of Trigger Points in Myofascial Pain Syndrome. Journal of pain & palliative care pharmacotherapy, 31(2), 158-159. Quintner, J. L., Bove, G. M., & Cohen, M. L. (2014). A critical evaluation of the trigger point phenomenon. Rheumatology, 54(3), 392-399. Quintner, J. L., & Cohen, M. L. (1994). Referred pain of peripheral nerve origin: an alternative to the" myofascial pain" construct. Clinical Journal of Pain, 10(3), 243-251. Quintner, J. L., Bove, G. M., & Cohen, M. L. (2015). Response to Dommerholt and Gerwin: Did we miss the point?. Journal of bodywork and movement therapies, 19(3), 394-395. Cohen, M., & Quintner, J. (2008). The horse is dead: let myofascial pain syndrome rest in peace. Pain Medicine, 9(4), 464-465. Shah, J. P., Thaker, N., Heimur, J., Aredo, J. V., Sikdar, S., & Gerber, L. (2015). Myofascial trigger points then and now: a historical and scientific perspective. PM&R, 7(7), 746-761. Quintner, J., Cohen, M., & Weisman, A. Behold the Mighty Trigger Point. Ingraham, P. (2017, November 11). Trigger Point Doubts Do muscle knots exist? Exploring controversies about the existence and nature of so-called “trigger points” and myofascial pain syndrome. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from https://www.painscience.com/articles/trigger-point-doubts.php. Wolfe, F. (2013, February 14). Travell, Simons and Cargo Cult Science. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from http://www.fmperplex.com/2013/02/14/travell-simons-and-cargo-cult-science/. Quintner, J. (2016, December 29). The trigger point strikes … out!. Retrieved May 12, 2018, from https://bodyinmind.org/evaluating-trigger-point/. Hilton, S., Blinckenstaff, C., & Cohen, M. L. (2017, June 01). Trigger Points, the “Third Space”, and the Merit of Pain Theories with Dr. Milton Cohen [Audio Podcast]. Retrieved from https://ptpodcast.com/pain-science-and-sensibility-episode-24-trigger-points-the-third-space-and-the-merit-of-pain-theories-with-dr-milton-cohen/.
Adobe After Effects is a staple in the visual effects post-production world. It is used in large-scale Hollywood productions, network television, and even by the Office of Communication here at Andover. The software’s co-founder, David Simons, is a member of Andover’s class of 1986. On this episode of Every Quarter, Simons sits down with Neil Evans to discuss his career path to Adobe, the struggles of having one of the first personal computers at Andover, and his advice for aspiring coders. Simons’ new project, Character Animator, combines elements of After Effects with live action puppetry technology and has been featured recently on the Stephen Colbert Show [embedded below] and a live episode of The Simpsons.
Drive spoke to David Simons, who came on the show to talk about his upcoming work with the ABC show CATALYST – exploring new and exciting subjects from gut heath to artificial intelligence and everything in between.
Vi taler om seriegeniet David Simons nye serie om sexarbejde i 1970'erne, The Deuce. Vi taler også om dokumentarer om prinsesse Diana og Fargo sæson 3. Værter: Frederik Dirks Gottlieb og Kasper Lundberg. Produceret af Munck Studios København.
Die „Game of Thrones“-Festspiele pausieren bis 2019, also höchste Zeit uns wieder anderen Serien zu widmen. Zum Glück schiebt HBO gleich die neue Serie von David Simon („The Wire“, „Treme“, „Show me a Hero“) nach. Das können wir uns nicht entgehen lassen und so diskutieren Jens Prausnitz, Marcus Kirzynowski, Olaf Schmidt und Hari List in... Continue reading
In the latest podcast Ali talks to writer J. David Simons, initially about his latest novel 'A Woman Of Integrity' but also his 'Glasgow To Galilee' trilogy and one of Ali's favourite novels, 'An Exquisite Sense Of What Is Beautiful'. Talk also turns to life as a writer in the present day, the problems with publishing and promotion, and there are questions from a very special reader/listener. All this and much more on what is podcast #82.
How many different ways can you store data? David Simons knows at least ten! Carl and Richard talk to David about a wide variety of data storage approaches. Some are SQL, some are NoSQL, but David digs into each one talking about strengths and weaknesses. The conversation digs into the idea that using one data store for all purposes is archaic - while it always depends on your application's needs, have two, three, or four different data stores isn't crazy! David talks about various classes of data stores including graph, object, time series, relational, and more... there are lots of ways to store your data, and with the right store, coding and maintaining get easier! The trick is to deal with the essentials of every data store: reliability, backup, and recovery. Here's a great list of choices for your app!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
How many different ways can you store data? David Simons knows at least ten! Carl and Richard talk to David about a wide variety of data storage approaches. Some are SQL, some are NoSQL, but David digs into each one talking about strengths and weaknesses. The conversation digs into the idea that using one data store for all purposes is archaic - while it always depends on your application's needs, have two, three, or four different data stores isn't crazy! David talks about various classes of data stores including graph, object, time series, relational, and more... there are lots of ways to store your data, and with the right store, coding and maintaining get easier! The trick is to deal with the essentials of every data store: reliability, backup, and recovery. Here's a great list of choices for your app!Support this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/net-rocks/donations
Tech Talkfest is your weekly podcast about the UK technology scene. This week Zoe speaks to Maria Ingold. Maria is a technology consultant with a passion for The Connected Home Zoe takes a tour around the technology inside Maria’s house, which includes iPhone controlled lighting systems, surveillance cameras that send photo’s in real-time to you phone and an innovative way of turning your existing power-plugs into an Ethernet system throughout your house. David Simons is looking at how the internet has changed his love-life, Judith Lewis and the Search News has a raft of essential tips for small businesses, bloggers and website copywriters. And our comedy geniuses Dave Chawner and John Davis have some hilarious sketches to keep you entertained! Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- http://www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and http://www.twitter.com/z1radio http://www.ZoneOneRadio.com http://www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio #seo #technology #tech #techcity #london #siliconeroundabout #connected #home #interview
Tech Talkfest is your weekly podcast about the UK technology scene. This week Zoe speaks to Maria Ingold. Maria is a technology consultant with a passion for The Connected Home Zoe takes a tour around the technology inside Maria’s house, which includes iPhone controlled lighting systems, surveillance cameras that send photo’s in real-time to you phone and an innovative way of turning your existing power-plugs into an Ethernet system throughout your house. David Simons is looking at how the internet has changed his love-life Judith Lewis and the Search News has a raft of essential tips for small businesses, bloggers and website copywriters. And our comedy geniuses Dave Chawner and John Davis have some hilarious sketches to keep you entertained! Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- http://www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and http://www.twitter.com/z1radio http://www.ZoneOneRadio.com http://www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio #technology #tech #techcity #interview #podcast #connected #seo #search
Zoe Cunningham presents #TechTalkfest - your weekly podcast about the UK technology scene. This week we talk to Professor and inventor Adrian Cheok about bringing technology from behind the screen and into our senses. He also give us an insight into why Japan wants another Apple and not another Sony... David Simons is of the myspace generation and works in computing...but he's bored of Social Networking. Is the bubble bursting for the one billion worldwide users? Sofie Sandell has prepared a guide for people running events to get the most out of the Eventbrite service. Judith Lewis and the Search News has a raft of essential tips for small businesses, bloggers and website copywriters. If you're not using Google webmaster tools, she explains why you should be! And our comedy geniuses Dave Chawner and John Davis are back from Edinburgh Festival with more tech-based sketches, including Sky's revolutionary cricket technology... Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Zoe Cunningham presents #TechTalkfest - your weekly podcast about the UK technology scene. This week we talk to Professor and inventor Adrian Cheok about bringing technology from behind the screen and into our senses. He also give us an insight into why Japan wants another Apple and not another Sony... David Simons is of the myspace generation and works in computing...but he's bored of Social Networking. Is the bubble bursting for the one billion worldwide users? Sofie Sandell has prepared a guide for people running events to get the most out of the Eventbrite service. Judith Lewis and the Search News has a raft of essential tips for small businesses, bloggers and website copywriters. If you're not using Google webmaster tools, she explains why you should be! And our comedy geniuses Dave Chawner and John Davis are back from Edinburgh Festival with more tech-based sketches, including Sky's revolutionary cricket technology... Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Tech Talkfest talks to the movers and shakers of Tech City, keeping up to date with their projects and charting the progress, pitfalls and plans of working in the world’s most exciting industry. This week we have an exclusive interview with TankTopTV’s Liz Rice and she has some exciting news about their latest step in their development cycle… Christoph Burgdorfer delves into how the life cycle of a product launch has changed forever in technology, and assesses what this means for both developers and consumers Also this week, coder David Simons investigates the pro’s and con’s of our ever more computer-literate children. Sofie Sandell has a guide to Pinterest and as ever Judith Lewis and the Search News has the very latest updates for anyone working in SEO Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Tech Talkfest talks to the movers and shakers of Tech City, keeping up to date with their projects and charting the progress, pitfalls and plans of working in the world’s most exciting industry. This week we have an exclusive interview with TankTopTV’s Liz Rice and she has some exciting news about their latest step in their development cycle… Christoph Burgdorfer delves into how the life cycle of a product launch has changed forever in technology, and assesses what this means for both developers and consumers Also this week, coder David Simons investigates the pro’s and con’s of our ever more computer-literate children. Sofie Sandell has a guide to Pinterest and as ever Judith Lewis and the Search News has the very latest updates for anyone working in SEO Tech: (n) All things Gadgets and Gizmos Talkfest: (n) An enjoyable discussion and conversation -- www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio #Technology #Podcast #SiliconeRoundabout #TechCity #Developer #Development #Pinterest #SEO #Search
Tech Talkfest is your weekly download of the UK technology scene. This week we’re looking at Crowdfunding – how you can get cash for your ideas and 'kick start' your projects. David Simons has a history of the Kickstarter website including the highs and lows of it's major projects. We talk to Lee Denny, the organiser of Leefest, which succesfully raised £50,000 this year to help it grow to a 5,000 person festival. Sofie Sandell has a guide to how you can utilise the various websites out there to raise funding for your projects. Also this week, Judith Lewis has the latest algorithm updates from Google in the SEO news, comedians Dave Chawner and John Davis provide some light relief with a surreal tour around the airwaves and Richard Lee has the latest technology news for Apple's iWatch, Ubisoft and LoveFilm #Leefest #Kickstarter #Crowdfunding #Apple #iWatch #Ubisoft #Technology #London -- www.twitter.com/TechTalkfest and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Tech Talkfest is your weekly download of the UK technology scene. This week we’re looking at Crowdfunding – how you can get cash for your ideas and 'kick start' your projects. David Simons has a history of the Kickstarter website including the highs and lows of it's major projects. We talk to Lee Denny, the organiser of Leefest, which succesfully raised £50,000 this year to help it grow to a 5,000 person festival. Sofie Sandell has a guide to how you can utilise the various websites out there to raise funding for your projects. Also this week, Judith Lewis has the latest algorithm updates from Google in the SEO news, comedians Dave Chawner and John Davis provide some light relief with a surreal tour around the airwaves and Richard Lee has the latest technology news for Apple's iWatch, Ubisoft and LoveFilm #Leefest #Kickstarter #Crowdfunding #Apple #iWatch #Ubisoft #Technology #London -- www.twitter.com/ZoeFCunningham and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Tech Talkfest is your weekly download of the UK technology scene. This week we’re looking at Crowdfunding – how you can get cash for your ideas and 'kick start' your projects. David Simons has a history of the Kickstarter website including the highs and lows of it's major projects. We talk to Lee Denny, the organiser of Leefest, which succesfully raised £50,000 this year to help it grow to a 5,000 person festival. Sofie Sandell has a guide to how you can utilise the various websites out there to raise funding for your projects. Also this week, Judith Lewis has the latest algorithm updates from Google in the SEO news, comedians Dave Chawner and John Davis provide some light relief with a surreal tour around the airwaves and Richard Lee has the latest technology news for Apple's iWatch, Ubisoft and LoveFilm #Leefest #Kickstarter #Crowdfunding #Apple #iWatch #Ubisoft #Technology #London -- www.twitter.com/ZoeFCunningham and www.twitter.com/z1radio www.ZoneOneRadio.com www.facebook.com/ZoneOneRadio
Wer bei THE WIRE vorallendingen an Kanye West beim Kieferchirugen denkt, dem dürften die wohlmeinenden Besprechungen in sämtlichen deutschsprachigen Feuilletons entgangen sein oder sie/er wartet immer noch auf den Telekom Techniker für den Internetanschluß. THE WIRE ist ein Phänomen, ein Erdbeben mit Epizentrum Baltimore, dessen Ausläufer mediale Seismographen weltweit haben ausschlagen lassen, lange bevor Bilder des eigentlichen Bebens in den heimischen Wohnzimmern angelangt waren. Für manche die schlichtweg beste Serie aller Zeiten, für alle herausragende Unterhaltung. Um es in den Worten von Ex- Bundespräsident Hotte Köhler und Sido zu sagen, "Du kannst zwar die Flimmerfreunde aus dem Ohrensessel nehmen, aber Du kannst den Ohrensessel nicht aus den Flimmerfreunden nehmen." Von der Ecke, Bernd, Ben und Kay über David Simons endlich regulär im deutschen Sprachraum erhältliche Großtat. So Strasse, so Establishment, so Flimmerfreunde.
Audio File: Download MP3Transcript: An Interview with Sarah Allen CTO, Mightyverse Date: January 14, 2011 Interview with Sarah Allen [intro music] Lucy Sanders: Hi, this is Lucy Sanders. I'm the CEO of NCWIT, the National Center for Women in Information Technology. This is the next in a series of just great interviews with entrepreneurs who have started some really interesting companies and our interviewee today is no exception. With me is Larry Nelson from W3W3. Hi Larry. Larry Nelson: Hi, I'm happy to be here. This is an exciting series. Lucy: What's going on with W3W3? Larry: Well, we're interviewing all kinds of interesting people. Now, we don't interview only women, just so you know. Lucy: Oh, OK. Larry: Our interview not too long ago with Leonard Nimoy was fantastic. Lee Kennedy: You're such a bragger. [laughs] Larry: Yes. I couldn't help it. Lucy: Also with me is Lee Kennedy, who is a director of NCWIT and also a serial entrepreneur. Her latest company is Boulder Search. Welcome Lee. Lee: Thanks Lucy, always great to be here. Lucy: Today we're interesting a really busy, interesting person, Sarah Allen. She's currently the CTO and co-founder of Mightyverse. I went and played around at Mightyverse and you just must go. All the listeners must go to Mightyverse and play with it. I don't know, Sarah, if that's the right thing to say, play with it, or not, but I had great fun looking for languages and thinking about phrases. Basically what you've created at Mightyverse what you're calling a language marketplace. And you just don't see a pronunciation or hear a pronunciation, but you see people's faces actually saying it. It looks good on your mobile device. You can be anywhere and go figure out how the heck to say something. Sarah is primarily self-funding this company through some independent consulting work. And one other thing before we get to the interview, I wanted to say especially to our listeners who follow NCWIT and what we do, Sarah has started RailsBridge which is providing free workshops teaching Ruby on Rails aimed at women. Thank you for doing that Sarah and welcome. Sarah Allen: I'm very happy to be here. Lucy: Before we start, why don't you tell us a little bit about Mightyverse, over and above what I said, as a way of introduction? Sarah: Well, I think that it's fine to say that you played with it. I feel like playing is the best way to learn. We definitely want to create an engaging way to learn how to speak languages. And I'm really excited that we just released a collection of Hebrew phrases on the iPhone. So if you have an iPhone or an iPad you can go to the store and for 99 cents get a collection of Hebrew phrases. And we're really in a phase where we're market testing the mobile angle of Mightyverse. So you can see the full collection on the web but we're releasing a series of collections to get feedback from people about the mobile experience. Lucy: Well, people in the Bay area, I think you can show up and record your phrases and maybe even get a free lunch from Sarah? [laughter] Sarah: Absolutely. If anybody wants to come and record a phrase in their native language we'd be delighted to have you as our guest. Lucy: Sarah, you are quite a technologist, obviously you're a chief technology officer. But prior to your work at Mightyverse, you've worked in Shockwave and Flash and you were named one of the top 25 women on the web in 1998. So a very amazing technology career. How did you first get into technology? Sarah: Well, I started programming in Basic on an Apple II, back in the day when your computer would arrive with a manual that taught you Basic. I really taught myself from a book that shipped with the Apple at that day. And I got into it because my mom went into selling computers after being laid off from teaching in the public schools in the Boston area. And so, she brought an Apple II home and I taught myself. Larry: Wow. Lucy: Basic, I learned Basic in my high school math class. Lee: That's amazing. Had you done other kind of techie things before you jumped into that? Sarah: I think that that was the first really technical thing that I had done. I didn't see a big division between technical things and non- technical things. My dad had a philosophy where he would always teach both my brother and me everything that he did. He did handy stuff around the house and fixed cars. He taught us both math and different things. So I didn't really see that the computer was a really technical thing. I thought that building physical circuits was really technical and I thought that fixing cars was really technical. But I thought that it was just a toy. Lee: Yeah. Sarah: I knew it was a serious thing for my mom and for other people. I approached it as like this adventure, like "Oh, let's play with this thing." Lucy: Certainly from your position as a CTO, you're always assessing technologies and listeners are always curious to know which ones you see as being the most exciting. Sarah: Well, I think right now mobile is super exciting. But what's most exciting about mobile is the fact that we now have these huge data storage that we can access. We have cloud computing so that it's really easy to deploy services and to access data stores. We're starting to see a lot of easily interconnected web services. I think we're finally approaching what Tim Berners-Lee meant by the semantic web, this notion of having these services on the web that you can connect to and machines can connect to and make sense of. So, we're starting to be able to assemble fairly complex systems without building every piece ourselves. I think that's really exciting. Lucy: So it's clear how you got into technology. How did you get into being an entrepreneur? Sarah: Well I feel like I kind of stumbled into entrepreneurship because all through college I was a teaching assistant at this one class. And these two guys who TA'd with me and then we were head TAs. And we did a number of projects together, coding together. And they both hooked up with another friend of theirs and they decided to start a company. So this happened about six months before I graduated because I graduated in the middle of the year. So I did as like "Well, my friends are starting this company. I'll work there for the summer." And kind of fell into it because I got wrapped up in what we were doing and ended up really being a co-founder of that company. And that was CoSA, which was a company that created After Effects, which is now sold by Adobe. That really gave me the feel for what it meant to be involved in a startup company which otherwise I don't think I really would have understood how exciting that is and why I would have wanted to do it. Lucy: Tell us what it is about being an entrepreneur that you love so much. Sarah: Well, I really love creating things that don't exist and solving problems that either people don't see or they don't realize can be solved by today's technology. I think that's really exciting. The thing that convinced me to actually be a software developer, because I graduated from college... I graduated with a CS degree. But I didn't think I was going to be a software developer because I thought it was straightforward. I thought it was like doing crossword puzzles or Rubik's cubes. It's entertaining. But I didn't really take it seriously. I didn't see when I was in college the power of computing and how it can be applied to real world problems because everything seemed really obvious to me. So I figured anybody could do it. And then when I was working at CoSA, CoSA actually was a very small company. We also kept up tech support. And I remember somebody who was calling to ask me about a question who had bought our software said "I didn't think computers could do this." And I realized that I had a unique perspective that I never recognized before. Because of my experience, because of my skills, because of my unique world view, I can see things that I'm not the only person who sees. But the majority of the world doesn't and that's a real opportunity for me. That's kind of exciting. Larry: Boy, I'll say. Well you mentioned your parents. It was really neat how they had a way of helping steer you somewhat. But I want to talk about your career. Who are some of the people along the way that have supported your career, whether they be mentors or role models or whatever? Sarah: Early in my career I really struggled with not seeing women role models. That was really important to me. I felt a little isolated. I was often the only woman on my team. I did find men who were great role models. Harry Chesley, who created the Shockwave team and hired me at Macromedia, was the person I learned about the Internet from. He was the first person who I ever heard say that he wanted to work on open source. I asked him what he would want to do if he made it rich and could retire early and he said he would want to write software for free. And I thought that was really bizarre and now I understand what that means. Lucy: Yeah. Sarah: And my friend David Simons who I started CoSA with who still works on After Effects at Adobe. He's really always inspired me because he stays true to himself. He always respected me. And he always saw, I think even before I saw things in myself he saw them in me, in terms of what I could do. Our collaboration showed me how we could work together. And those kinds of relationships were really inspiring. It may sound clich�, but my husband has been incredibly supportive, I think another person who will see in me things before I recognize them myself. Having his support in picking through these career choices is super, super important. But after a while I started to get frustrated that I didn't have women ahead of me. I started to feel that maybe I didn't belong. Maybe this wasn't the career for me. Were some of the things happening that I didn't like because of my gender? I didn't know and I felt uncertain about that. I actually read this book about the 50 Nobel prize winners in math and science who are women. And I read an essay about Emmy Noether, who is a German mathematician who was actually the first woman to be paid to be a professor in Germany. But before that she did math because she loved doing math and she lectured under somebody else's name because she was so thrilled with the opportunity to talk to people about her ideas about math. She helped Einstein lay the mathematical foundation for his theories of relativity. Lucy: Wow. Sarah: She was just very excited to work with people who had respect for her so it didn't matter that she didn't get paid for it, that the rest of the world didn't acknowledge it because in her small circle, they all knew that Emmy was the person to go to when you had a math question. Then I looked around me and I saw that, OK, I have this group of guys who all respect me and we build great software. I was working on Flash video at the time, working with an amazing team. And I just felt like "Well, this is what I love to do. Forget all of that nonsense. I'm just going to follow what I love and the rest will take care of itself." Lucy: Well, that's a great story. I think, too, some of the work you're doing with Ruby on Rails giving women the confidence and skill set to get out there and to start contributing in a space is really going to also add role models. Sarah: It is my hope. Lucy: And thank you for doing that. So, we are going to turn now, away from technology and mentoring into sort of the dark side of the career. [laughs] And asking about the toughest thing you ever had to do so far in your career. Sarah: This is actually the hardest question. I am thinking about this interview. There isn't one thing. The hardest thing is really making decisions like the hardest thing for me, it may sound a little tried, is just making priorities, making decisions. I used to feel that they were right answers, and that if there were some negative consequence to a decision I made that then I have made the wrong answer. And what I come to realize is that every decision comes with risks and if am deciding am I going to do A or B or C, each thing has potentially negative consequences. And to make a decision with your eyes open and to say "OK I am going to do this and there might be some fallout and I might do it anyhow." I feel like I make those decisions 20 times a day running a company. I make new significant technical decisions for my neighbors who make strategic decisions, who make those life decisions. Should I be spending this much time on my career instead of my family? It's not really that kind of either/or but all the little decisions add up and they have consequences both good and bad. So, I think that's the hardest thing. Lucy : Well and sometimes, too, I think. You think if you don't do anything. There is no risk with doing nothing and not making decision, whereas in fact, right? Larry: Yeah. Sarah: That's the biggest risk. Lucy: That's the biggest risk of all. Sarah: I mean I think that, I probably instead of the most wide spread computer software that I've ever developed was Shockwaves where I wrote... Even though there were only four engineers in the project. I wrote a significant amount of code. I was involved with many, many releases of it. I don't think I got any real risk in developing that. I never did anything that I wasn't sure what's going to work. I really like the civilization in the late 90s. I have never really taken real risks in my career, and so later I started to try to take risks. I was able to do much more impressive things because they didn't know it worked the first time. But if you make a decision, you try to do something knowing that it might not work and litigate that. You can lay a path. You can set expectations that you are experimenting and then you are able to do things that are much more clear. Lucy: And that brings us to the next question when you think back about all the things you have done in your career, whether it's working with technologies, making decisions or what to do. If you are kind of sum it all that and give advice to somebody that's looking to get in to being an entrepreneur, what advice would you give them? Sarah: I have couple of pieces of advices. The number one piece of advice is to pick the people you work with first, it's more important than the project, the technology anything else. It's that you are working with great people that you respect for, that you can learn from, that they have respect for you and that you are going to have a great working environment. When I went to college, I would say pick your college class by the professor not by the subject. I feel that's completely true for your working environment. So if you think it's an amazing job but you are not sure about the people or an "OK" job with amazing people, take the OK job with amazing people because the amazing people will turn it into an amazing job. It's more likely your project is going to change than the people change. So, that's the first thing which I think is really important Lucy: And that's great advice. Larry: Yeah, you got it. Lucy: Very true. Sarah: The second thing is to really find your passion. Find the things that makes you tick, find the things that you love. What is the thing that you can do just forever and never get bored of? And that's what you should be doing. It can be very, as a young person, I didn't know what that was. But when I found it and I didn't recognize that when I found it that I kept following it. What's this thing that I am into? I would pick things. It felt like I was making career choices on a lark. But I would just follow my gut instinct about this. This feel is exciting to me and then in retrospect, I could see a pattern, but it was seven or eight years before I saw a pattern. But I was following what is it that drives me? What is that excites me and that lead me to where I am today. Larry: Very good, great advice. What are your personal characteristics that have given you the advantage of being the entrepreneur? Sarah: It's kind of a hard question because I feel like I'm such a different person than I was when I started being an entrepreneur and I feel that the things that made me successful now, they feel like there are very different things that made me successful then. But I think the common thread that runs through it is that it's creative work. At least this is my angle at it. In college, I got two degrees. One in computer science and the other in visual arts. I am at studio art. There are two things that I learned. One was in being creative, sometimes that blank canvass if you want enemy. You need edit the paper. You need to pour your creativity into and creativity is work, like creating that structure for yourself. Creating the path, getting yourself into the creative mindset is working at a discipline. The other thing is being able to receive and give in an affective critique. One of the things that you learned in Art 101 or whatever they called it is we did lots of drawings. Everybody would put their art in the wall and you were supposed to critique it. I would come and I would look at a drawing. It would be like Oh, my God. I can't believe that person just turn that in. [laughter] Sarah: And if you would say, the composition of the little jumbo but this quality of line really speaks to me. I like the gracefulness of that line and I learned to pick out the parts of a drawing that were really wonderful and disregard the thing that didn't turn out OK. And that made me not only be able to communicate more effectively but more importantly, see things that I otherwise wouldn't see. I think those skills lead me to be able to interact with people and hone my own skills in a way that to give me an advantage of an entrepreneur. Lucy: I think that's great. Was that your picture that she said about Larry? Larry: Maybe. Lucy: Maybe just a little? Sarah: I would never say. Lucy: No, never say. Larry: Thank you. Thank you. Lucy: No, never say but I just thought that was wonderful. Just to say it. Now, Sarah, you mentioned in your earlier question around decision making about is it the right time for me to be spending this time away from my family and working so much in my career? And so, get us to our next question about bringing balance to your personal and professional lives. Any advice you would like to give the listeners about that? Sarah: First off, I'm probably the worst person to give advice about work right now. Lucy: Go ahead. Yeah? Sarah: I do have a family. I love my family. I wish I could spend more time with them which is ironic because it obviously not a big enough wish to overcome my drive to do other things in my life. And so, in that way you have to have some kind of balance. You have to figure out how you are going to make peace with all of these things that you want in your life. I was very influenced by a woman. I don't know her name who gave a talk at Grace Hopper Celebration of Women Computing. I think it is 1997. Right around that time, I was either pregnant or about to be and it was that talk about having children and having a technical career in. For the first time I heard somebody who actually said that she thought that having a career in technology was an advantage for being a mother. I was expecting to hear all about compromise. But she said it was an advantage and she went through a lot of ways that it really helped her relation with her son. And, what she said was, "You can have it all, just not all at once." Lucy: That's a good way to put it. Sarah: That's what I try to do at my best. That when I am home with my family, I am there with them. Like I'm most successful when I can make time to do what I am doing and really do it fully and then decide that "OK, this is time I am not going to spend with my family. I'm going to spend it on other thing and really spend it at that. If you can do that successfully then I think you can have really great balance. But it is really challenging. But it is incredibly rewarding when it does work. Lucy: Sarah, we've really enjoyed talking to you. Just feels like you've got this Zen about you. So, tell us what's next for you? Sarah: Well, a lot of things. I am really excited about RailsBridge becoming self sustaining. I read a great book "The Starfish and The Spider." Its subtitle is the "Unstoppable Power of Leaderless Organizations" I'm taking a bunch of lesson on that book in trying to create, help create or empower this group of volunteers and create structure around it so that it can just... The workshops can be self sustaining and don't need me as a leader. Or don't need any leader and they can just work by themselves. It's really exciting that's starting to happen. Also, I'm working to have my consulting company with this grown up around me. It started with just a way to fund my product development ideas but that also started to become a self sustaining company. And then, that will really liberate me to focus on my neighbors. I am really excited to spend more time writing code, spend time figuring out the hard problems around language or even better yet, figuring out the easy problems that are going to be most rewarding first. It's such a vast problem space but there are also so many things that don't require a lot of technology. I am excited about a problem which is as much a human problem as it is a problem for technology. Larry: Excellent. Lucy: Well, we are going to stay tuned, that's for sure. Larry: Yeah. Lucy: Well, thanks very much Sarah. It was great talking to you. I want to remind listeners where they can find these interviews at w3w3w3.com and ncwit.org. Larry: We are really looking forward to it. We are going to follow you, Sarah. Sarah: Great, you can follow me on Twitter at my hacker identity. It's all sorts.com. Like the dinosaur. Lee: OK. Cool. We will be there. Lucy: Thank you so much. Sarah: All right. Series: Entrepreneurial HeroesInterviewee: Sarah AllenInterview Summary: Sarah Allen is a serial innovator with a history of developing leading-edge products, such as After Effects, Shockwave, Flash video, and OpenLaszlo. She has a habit of recognizing great and timely ideas, finding talented teams, and creating compelling software. Release Date: January 14, 2011Interview Subject: Sarah AllenInterviewer(s): Lucy Sanders, Larry Nelson, Lee KennedyDuration: 23:55