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This week, Nigel and Tazziii don their capes, cowls, and hit the bricks for a deep dive into The LEGO Batman Movie (starting at 27:17), with Content Creator Chochy.We tackle this high-octane, laugh-a-minute exploration of the Batman mythos told through the LEGO IP, as we question whether this animated view of Batman's trauma and his relationship with The Joker has given us the best story about the Dark Knight to date. It's a fun ride, but does it succeed as a narrative that can entertain audiences on multiple levels?We examine its themes of family, trust, and vulnerability, debating which moments work and whether the redemption arc ends on a satisfying note. This week's storytelling tip is about creating meaningful setbacks on the path to redemption for your protagonist.Other stories we're enjoying include: Mickey 17 (Cinema), Your Friendly Neighborhood Spider-Man (Disney+), Superman & Lois (The CW), School Spirits (Paramount+), Supacell (Netflix), Superstore (Netflix), Sakamoto Days (Netflix), My Next Life as a Villainess: All Routes Lead to Doom (Crunchyroll), Captain America: Brave New World (Cinema), Gangs of London (Netflix), Klara and the Sun (Book), Daredevil: Born Again (Disney+)Guest LinksFind Chochy online:Website: https://linktr.ee/chochyplaysBluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/chochy.co.ukTwitter: https://twitter.com/chochyplays Instagram: https://instagram.com/chochy1000TikTok: https://tiktok.com/@chochy1000Twitch: https://twitch.tv/chochyplays
SportsDay Insiders Kevin Sherrington and Evan Grant discuss [1:50] the Rangers' pitching situation early in camp as Jacob deGrom wows observers. Kevin says he's never seen any pitcher throw harder or with better command with such little ramp-up from inactivity. Basically, if he's healthy, he's great. Evan breaks down the reunion of Rangers relievers and what it means. The guys also analyze Alex Bregman's deal with the Red Sox and how the Astros are hastening the end of their dynasty because Jim Crane doesn't want to pay taxes on it. [33:00] Kevin notes that LA has already embraced its newest celebrity with a mural of Luka Doncic shaking hands with Kobe Bryant. What were the Mavs thinking? Kevin tries to explain. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
SportsDay Insiders Kevin Sherrington and Evan Grant discuss [1:50] the Rangers' pitching situation early in camp as Jacob deGrom wows observers. Kevin says he's never seen any pitcher throw harder or with better command with such little ramp-up from inactivity. Basically, if he's healthy, he's great. Evan breaks down the reunion of Rangers relievers and what it means. The guys also analyze Alex Bregman's deal with the Red Sox and how the Astros are hastening the end of their dynasty because Jim Crane doesn't want to pay taxes on it. [33:00] Kevin notes that LA has already embraced its newest celebrity with a mural of Luka Doncic shaking hands with Kobe Bryant. What were the Mavs thinking? Kevin tries to explain. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Trump's fills out his team strongly with some controversial choices. Will the Senate confirm them and how will they perform? Trump's threatened tariffs already working magic plus what we know about his negotiating style. Were the Bobs from “Office Space” prototypes for Elon Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy and their Department of Government Efficiency (DOGE)? Will DOGE succeed? Plus: how the media makes up sources and whether they have learned anything from Trump's election. Co-hosts Christian Whiton and Mark Simon interview Jeff Berkowitz, CEO of Delve and veteran of multiple successful presidential campaigns. Timestamps 00:00 Trump transition strong 05:40 Trump's new team 10:00 Will the Senate confirm? 15:11 Trump tariffs as negotiating strategy 20:00 Will Elon and Vivek succeed? 26:00 Media's fake news sources 38:10 Left scheming to thwart Trump 40:53 Rubio and running national security 47:20 Disassembling bureaucracies 52:32 Milton (“Office Space”) in the basement
Sourabh Luthra is an arms dealer from Batala, Amritsar, and the Director of Luthra Gun House. He's a second-generation arms dealer and gun enthusiast. Many Bollywood stars and Punjabi singers get their guns from him. He also has a Youtube Channel https://www.youtube.com/@BANDOOKWALE. In this episode Vinamre and Sourabh talk about: - Different types of shotguns, rifles, and pistols, Firearm Training in India - Why Punjabi singers get threatened, Gun culture in Pakistan - The process of getting a gun license in India - How Adani and Ambani are getting into the arms industry - How to load a gun and the technicalities of guns If you're interested in getting to know more about the world of guns, watch this episode. Timestamps: 0:00 - Introduction 1:10 - Different Types of Shotguns 17:20 - Different Types of Customers 20:10 - How to Load a Gun 26:45 - Weapon Culture in Pakistan 27:50 - How His Guns Saved Lives 30:55 - Security Threats to Gun Owners 36:00 - Which Guns Can You Buy on an Indian Civilian License? 39:20 - Unboxing a Browning Maral Rifle 45:00 - Firearm Training in India 48:40 - Why Silencers Are Illegal 49:40 - Where to Aim for Self-defense 51:25 - Why Are Singers in Punjab Threatened? 54:15 - How They Judge Customers 56:30 - The Indian Army Has the Strongest Weapons 59:25 - Unboxing a Gun Made by Jindal 1:06:40 - Stories of Misfires 1:12:15 - Adani is Making Rocket Launchers 1:15:10 - Disassembling a Gun 1:18:00 - How to Get a Gun License in India 1:42:50 - Why Indian Firearms Are Costly 1:45:20 - Components of a Gun 1:50:10 - Can Indian Guns Compete Globally? 1:51:35 - Conclusion ==================================================================== This is the official channel for Dostcast, a podcast by Vinamre Kasanaa. Connect with me LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vinamre-kasanaa-b8524496/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/vinamrekasanaa/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/VinamreKasanaa Dostcast on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dostcast/ Dostcast on Twitter: https://twitter.com/dostcast Dostcast on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61557567524054 ==================================================================== Contact Us For business inquiries: dostcast@egiplay.com
Have you ever found yourself saying, "There's a part of me that feels this or that behaves like this, and I don't know why?" Or perhaps you've reacted in ways that even surprise you, leaving you wondering where those feelings or behaviors come from. If you do, you are not alone. In this episode, I dive deep into unmasking these patterns of behaviors that up until now may have been viewed as an integral part of your success. I'm sharing more of the common coping mechanisms that many of us use to protect ourselves when we feel unsafe, examine how these mechanisms form, why they persist, and, most importantly, give you a way to begin to address and transform them. Our mission is to help you become unstoppable so you can do the best work of your career while you enjoy more inner peace and freedom. Head to ritahyland.com and sign up to receive podcast announcements and exclusive tips to unleash more of your creativity, productivity, and ingenuity in your work and at home. If this episode was helpful for you… Share it with someone who will benefit from hearing it too! That way we all improve. Also, be sure to leave a review on Apple Podcasts letting me know what you enjoy about Playing Full Out and any questions you have. Your topic may be used as the subject for a future episode! Show Notes: https://www.ritahyland.com/disassembling-old-patterns Connect with Rita on LinkedIn: ★Rita (Wetterstroem) Hyland★
(Cloud Mountain Retreat Center) Taking out the parts of the body and putting them back in again - body parts contemplation.
Dharma Seed - dharmaseed.org: dharma talks and meditation instruction
(Cloud Mountain Retreat Center) Taking out the parts of the body and putting them back in again - body parts contemplation.
From Engineering to FashionImagine a world where your clothes are as easy to recycle as paper and plastic. That's the vision Cedric Vanhoeck, founder and CEO of Resortecs, is turning into reality, and in this latest episode, host Peter Jeun Ho Tsang and Cédric discuss how Cedric's original career path of engineering led him to sorting out one of the fashion industry's biggest problems: products designed and destined for the landfill. Dismantling Products Stitch by StitchResortecs' proprietary technologies, Smart Stitch and Smart Disassembly, are the linchpins in making garment recycling a frictionless part of the fashion supply chain with threads that dissolve in machines what can be described as giant ovens. Cédric takes listeners through how the tech works and how brands such as Bershka and Decathlon have launched collections using the Reortecs system. But will this be enough? We dissect the implications of EU regulations and how many brands will likely find legislative loopholes to avoid going full scale with circular solutions.Cédric and Resortecs are featured in chapter 3 of the book Fashion Tech Applied. Check it out.Find out about Resortecs here.Connect with Cédric on LinkedIn.*EXCLUSIVE OFFER* -20% discount for podcast listeners on the printed or ebook of Fashion Tech Applied. Purchase your copy at Springer here using the discount code*: 08cWPRlx1J7prE*Offer ends end June 2024Support the Show.--------The show is recorded from Beyond Form, a venture studio building & investing in fashion tech startups with ambitious founders. We'd love to hear your feedback, so let us know if you'd like to hear a certain topic. Email us at hello@beyondform.io. If you're an entrepreneur or fashion tech startup looking for studio support, check out our website: beyondform.io
IBM was late to the 386 PC party, but when they finally arrived they made a statement about what they thought the future of computing would be. With a 32-bit Micro Channel bus and room for six drives IBM aimed this tower directly at the likes of Compaq. But what's inside this monstrous machine and how can it be upgraded? And what can you do with an old boat anchor like this? Join me as I pull this PC apart to see what you got when you bought a $6,845 workstation in 1990. -=- Chapters -=- 00:00 - Intro 00:35 - Adopting a Micro Channel PC 04:38 - The Case 07:35 - Drive Bays and Power Supply 09:30 - Disassembling the Model 80 13:35 - Micro Channel Slots and Cards 15:53 - Auxiliary Video Extension 18:38 - Token Ring Network Card 19:05 - IBM PS/2 SCSI Adapter 19:51 - IBM Enhanced 80386 Memory Adapter w/ ROM 23:12 - Programmable Option Select 25:31 - Auto Configuration In Action 27:51 - Period Appropriate Productivity 29:15 - XGA-2 Graphics Adapter 34:21 - Conclusion & Outro -=- Links -= * Ardent Tool of Capitalism - https://www.ardent-tool.com * Model 8580-081 Resources - https://www.ardent-tool.com/8580/Planar_T2.html * Tube Time's MCA Tutorial: https://github.com/schlae/mca-tutorial * The Micro Channel Architecture Handbook by Chet Heath and Winn Rosch: https://archive.org/details/microchannelarch00heat * IBM Museum - https://www.youtube.com/@IBM_Museum/ * BOPT 16 MB Barrier Walkthrough: https://groups.google.com/g/comp.sys.ibm.ps2.hardware/c/SIRXr3RBBLM/m/4fDpZeg-YtkJ -=- Contact -=- Follow on Mastodon: https://bitbang.social/@kefkafloyd Follow on Bluesky: https://bsky.app/profile/kefkafloyd.bsky.social Visit The Website: https://www.userlandia.com Join The Userlandia Discord: https://discord.com/invite/z2jmF93 Theme Song by Space Vixen: https://spacevixenmusic.bandcamp.com Follow them on Twitter @SpaceVixenMusic: https://twitter.com/spacevixenmusic
Contact information for Ke'oni: / pohala_hawaiian_botanicals Ke'oni's websites: https://www.alohama.pohala.net/, https://www.pohala.net/ Ke'oni Hanalei is a wisdom-keeper who shares the knowledge from his ancient Mu lineage (dating back over 18,000 years). He is also an alchemist and founder of Pohala Esoteric Hawaiian Botanical Medicine. In this interview, he shares his understanding of "disassembling and re-assembling" that relates to the transformation we are all in during this transition into the Age of Aquarius. The English translation of the ancient 20,000 year old Mu prayer: Lay me down Within the All of Awe Before the uncreation of this ground It is within the most intense prayer Find you here LIke I know I can. Ke'oni's websites: https://www.alohama.pohala.net/, https://www.pohala.net/ Full bio: Ke'oni Hanalei is the Founder of Pohala: Esoteric Hawaiian Botanical Medicine and of AlohaMa: a community mentorship program. He learned the ancient ways of making plant medicines from his grandmother, a well known healer on the island of Maui. He is a descendant of the Mu people and his lineage dates back 1017 generations (over 20,000 years). He is one of a small number of practitioners who have access and the willingness to share this ancient wisdom. One aspect of this ancient wisdom is Fern Medicine which works with emotional intelligence and how we come into balance with the energies of our emotions. Ke'oni is also a teacher, mentor and leader of spiritual retreats in his work with the AlohaMa community mentorship program. AlohaMa means "self-reflective love." As we learn to love ourselves, we are able to enter into compassionate and collaborative relationships with others in which we bring out the best qualities in each other. Heather's website: https://www.risingmoonhealingcenter.com' To become a patron: / heatherensworth
Richard talks with Matt Godbolt, author of the godbolt.org Compiler Explorer, about how certain aspects of the Compiler Explorer work, as well as "disassembling" language designs themselves - talking about reference counting optimizations, destructors and unwinding, and even defending the infamous design decision of NaN != NaN.
By Kel Coleman, from Issue #385 of Beneath Ceaseless Skies Online MagazineNarrated by Maxine L. Moore.He pointed out more mistakes; some amateur, others he still made on occasion.More info »
Spend some time, focusing on the people who do their jobs very well today, and think about what makes them so successful. Be curious. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rebecca-shea6/message
The guys start off with Mack discussing his experience at the Matchbox 20 concert the previous night and how it almost didn't happen several times. Then they talk about different Star Trek documentaries starting with Trekkies to Trek Nation to The Center Chair. They then realize there are others to talk about so this will turn into a two parter. And Matchbox 20 was awesome.
This week on aBlogtoWatch Weekly, Rick, Ariel, and David are back for another episode filled with horological wonder. First up is David's recent featured article, as our hosts trace the history of ETA and connect it to the recent in-house movement craze. After parsing the movement market to near death, it's on to a bit of industry news, and another shedload of new watches from Bremont, Parmigiani, Hublot, Chopard, Zenith, and Bulgari. Listen below or on the player of your choice. Highlights • 1:05 Grinding Gears: Why The In-House Watch Movement Craze Was (Is) Stupid & The Cool Way Out • 24:03 Richemont Boss Johann Rupert Quashes Talk of Deals with LVMH or Kering | Bloomberg • 30:43 Hands-On: Parmigiani Tonda PF Rattrapante Watch • 36:00 Bremont Brings A Prototype To Life With The MB Viper Limited-Edition Watch • 44:37 Hublot Big Bang Unico Nespresso Origin: A Watch Made From Recycled Coffee Pods • 48:20 New Bulgari Aluminium Watches Announced For Summer 2023 • 54:54 Hands-On: Chopard Alpine Eagle Cadence 8HF Watch In Titanium • 54:54 Hands-On: Zenith Chronomaster Sport Gold Watches We'd love to hear from you with feedback or suggestions for future show topics or guests. Comment below or contact podcasts@ablogtowatch.com. Advertising opportunities are also available. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ablogtowatchweekly/message
Welcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: But why would the AI kill us?, published by So8res on April 17, 2023 on LessWrong. Status: Partially in response to We Don't Trade With Ants, partly in response to watching others try to make versions of this point that I didn't like. None of this is particularly new; it feels to me like repeating obvious claims that have regularly been made in comments elsewhere, and are probably found in multiple parts of the LessWrong sequences. But I've been repeating them aloud a bunch recently, and so might as well collect the points into a single post. Might the AGI let us live, not because it cares but because it has no particular reason to go out of its way to kill us? As Eliezer Yudkowsky once said: The AI does not hate you, nor does it love you, but you are made of atoms which it can use for something else. There's lots of energy in the biosphere! (That's why animals eat plants and animals for fuel.) By consuming it, you can do whatever else you were going to do better or faster. (Last I checked, you can get about 10x as much energy from burning a square meter of biosphere as you can get by collecting a square meter of sunlight for a day. But I haven't done the calculation for years and years and am pulling that straight out of a cold cache. That energy boost could yield a speedup (in your thinking, or in your technological design, or in your intergalactic probes themselves), which translates into extra galaxies you manage to catch before they cross the cosmic event horizon!) But there's so little energy here, compared to the rest of the universe. Why wouldn't it just leave us be, and go mine asteroids or something? Well, for starters, there's quite a lot of energy in the sun, and if the biosphere isn't burned for fuel then it will freeze over when the AI wraps the sun in a dyson sphere or otherwise rips it apart. It doesn't need to consume your personal biomass to kill you; consuming the sun works just fine. And separately, note that if the AI is actually completely indifferent to humanity, the question is not "is there more energy in the biosphere or in the sun?", but rather "is there more energy available in the biosphere than it takes to access that energy?". The AI doesn't have to choose between harvesting the sun and harvesting the biosphere, it can just harvest both, and there's a lot of calories in the biosphere. I still just think that it might decide to leave us be for some reason. That answers above are sufficient to argue that the AI kills us (if the AI's goals are orthogonal to ours, and can be better achieved with more resources). But the answer is in fact overdetermined, because there's also the following reason. A humanity that just finished coughing up a superintelligence has the potential to cough up another superintelligence, if left unchecked. Humanity alone might not stand a chance against a superintelligence, but the next superintelligence humanity builds could in principle be a problem. Disassembling us for parts seems likely to be easier than building all your infrastructure in a manner that's robust to whatever superintelligence humanity coughs up next. Better to nip that problem in the bud.[1] But we don't kill all the cows. Sure, but the horse population fell dramatically with the invention of the automobile. One of the big reasons that humans haven't disassembled cows for spare parts is that we aren't yet skilled enough to reassemble those spare parts into something that is more useful to us than cows. We are trying to culture meat in labs, and when we do, the cow population might also fall off a cliff. A sufficiently capable AI takes you apart instead of trading with you at the point that it can rearrange your atoms into an even better trading partner.[2] And humans are probably not the optimal trading partners. But there's still a bunch of hor...
Link to original articleWelcome to The Nonlinear Library, where we use Text-to-Speech software to convert the best writing from the Rationalist and EA communities into audio. This is: But why would the AI kill us?, published by So8res on April 17, 2023 on LessWrong. Status: Partially in response to We Don't Trade With Ants, partly in response to watching others try to make versions of this point that I didn't like. None of this is particularly new; it feels to me like repeating obvious claims that have regularly been made in comments elsewhere, and are probably found in multiple parts of the LessWrong sequences. But I've been repeating them aloud a bunch recently, and so might as well collect the points into a single post. Might the AGI let us live, not because it cares but because it has no particular reason to go out of its way to kill us? As Eliezer Yudkowsky once said: The AI does not hate you, nor does it love you, but you are made of atoms which it can use for something else. There's lots of energy in the biosphere! (That's why animals eat plants and animals for fuel.) By consuming it, you can do whatever else you were going to do better or faster. (Last I checked, you can get about 10x as much energy from burning a square meter of biosphere as you can get by collecting a square meter of sunlight for a day. But I haven't done the calculation for years and years and am pulling that straight out of a cold cache. That energy boost could yield a speedup (in your thinking, or in your technological design, or in your intergalactic probes themselves), which translates into extra galaxies you manage to catch before they cross the cosmic event horizon!) But there's so little energy here, compared to the rest of the universe. Why wouldn't it just leave us be, and go mine asteroids or something? Well, for starters, there's quite a lot of energy in the sun, and if the biosphere isn't burned for fuel then it will freeze over when the AI wraps the sun in a dyson sphere or otherwise rips it apart. It doesn't need to consume your personal biomass to kill you; consuming the sun works just fine. And separately, note that if the AI is actually completely indifferent to humanity, the question is not "is there more energy in the biosphere or in the sun?", but rather "is there more energy available in the biosphere than it takes to access that energy?". The AI doesn't have to choose between harvesting the sun and harvesting the biosphere, it can just harvest both, and there's a lot of calories in the biosphere. I still just think that it might decide to leave us be for some reason. That answers above are sufficient to argue that the AI kills us (if the AI's goals are orthogonal to ours, and can be better achieved with more resources). But the answer is in fact overdetermined, because there's also the following reason. A humanity that just finished coughing up a superintelligence has the potential to cough up another superintelligence, if left unchecked. Humanity alone might not stand a chance against a superintelligence, but the next superintelligence humanity builds could in principle be a problem. Disassembling us for parts seems likely to be easier than building all your infrastructure in a manner that's robust to whatever superintelligence humanity coughs up next. Better to nip that problem in the bud.[1] But we don't kill all the cows. Sure, but the horse population fell dramatically with the invention of the automobile. One of the big reasons that humans haven't disassembled cows for spare parts is that we aren't yet skilled enough to reassemble those spare parts into something that is more useful to us than cows. We are trying to culture meat in labs, and when we do, the cow population might also fall off a cliff. A sufficiently capable AI takes you apart instead of trading with you at the point that it can rearrange your atoms into an even better trading partner.[2] And humans are probably not the optimal trading partners. But there's still a bunch of hor...
In today's episode of Backpacker Radio presented by The Trek, we are joined by Lt Cookoo Bird. Cookoo's a name you've heard on this podcast before, he's been a hiking partner of Jabba's for many years and he was the third member of our Wind River High route trek in 2019. Today's episode is a certified marathon, as Cookoo delights us with tales from trails all over the country, including the time he got a hitch from a prostitute, tindering his way along the West Coast, cycling from Oregon to Maine with his mom, befriending countless strangers, and much more. This one is an instant Backpacker Radio classic. We wrap the show with a triple crown of non-traditional burger toppings, confirmation that boxers are in fact the dumbest dog breed, and some tips for hiking in the rain on the Appalachian Trail. Enlightened Equipment: Use code “TREKPOD10” for 10% off Enlightened Equipment's Stock Revelation Quilt or Torrid Jacket at enlightenedequipment.com. Gossamer Gear: Use code “BACKPACKERRADIO” for 15% off at gossamergear.com. RTIC Outdoors: Shop at rticoutdoors.com. [divider] Interview with Lt. Cookoo Bird Bruce's Instagram Time stamps & Questions 00:05:35 - QOTD: What is the appropriate amount of time to wait to ask to eat someone's pickle? 00:08:20 - Reminders: Vote for BPR in the Sports Podcast Awards! 00:09:25 - Introducing Bruce 00:10:08 - Tell us your trail name origin story. 00:13:40 - Why did you start with the Long Trail? 00:15:45 - Would you say the Appalachian Trail was your most formative hike? 00:16:30 - Tell us about your vow of silence on the AT. 00:21:39 - What was Jabba like in 2013? 00:23:10 - Any other standout stories from the AT? 00:25:02 - Give us the background on hiker gangs. 00:28:15 - Discussion about Riff Raff 00:36:39 - What are the different groups like? 00:38:48 - What is the interaction like between groups? 00:40:40 - Tell us about the Adirondack 46ers. 00:45:00 - How did the Adirondacks compare to trails you'd done before? 00:46:02 - Was the Sierra High Route next? 00:47:00 - Getting to the Lost Coast Trail 01:01:50 - Tell us about the Lost Coast Trail 01:05:50 - Getting to the Sierra High Route 01:12:20 - Tell us about the Sierra High Route. 01:16:54 - What is camping like on the Sierra High Route? 01:18:15 - How much is on trail versus off? 01:19:44 - Tell us the story of almost getting kicked off a bus. 01:26:55 - Tell us about the bike tour with your mom. 01:30:45 - What did you learn about your mom while biking from coast to coast? 01:32:02 - How would you describe your relationship to your mom prior to the trip? 01:34:22 - Did your relationship change over the course of the trip? 01:38:17 - How did the bike trip compare to your thru-hikes? 01:41:24 - Anything else to share from the ride? 01:42:30 - Tell us about your adventures in 2017. 01:52:00 - Discussion about Mt. Washington 01:53:58 - Biking around Lake Superior 02:00:50 - Disassembling a barn in Iowa 02:02:00 - Trying MCT oil 02:04:30 - Discussion about Bruce's love life 02:06:30 - Tell us about the first attempt of the Hayduke in 2019 02:14:30 - Story about burning his foot on the Hayduke 02:27:10 - Switching to hike with Jabba in Escalante 02:29:40 - Interview pause: twin update 02:32:49 - Tell us about the Wind River High Route 02:43:00 - Story about bailing off the Wind River High Route 02:50:00 - Tell us about redeeming yourself with a class 5 climb in the Tetons SEGMENTS Trek Propaganda 12 Helpful Tips for Dealing With Rain While Hiking the Appalachian Trail by Kelly Floro Patent Pending Triple Crown of non-traditional burger toppings Mail Bag 5 Star Review [divider] Check out our sound guy @paulyboyshallcross. Subscribe to this podcast on iTunes (and please leave us a review)! Find us on Spotify, Stitcher, and Google Play. Support us on Patreon to get bonus content. Advertise on Backpacker Radio Follow The Trek, Chaunce, Badger, and Trail Correspondents on Instagram. Follow Backpacker Radio, The Trek and Chaunce on YouTube. Follow Backpacker Radio on Tik Tok. A super big thank you to our Chuck Norris Award winner(s) from Patreon: Andrew, Austen McDaniel, Austin Ford, Brad & Blair (Thirteen Adventures), Brent Stenberg, Christopher Marshburn, Dayne, DoGoodPantry, Greg McDaniel, Kristina Diaz, Matt Soukup, Mike Poisel, Morgan Luke, Patrick Cianciolo, Sawyer Products, and Tracy “Trigger” Fawns. A big thank you to our Cinnamon Connection Champions from Patreon: Dcnerdlet, Jacob Northrup, Jeff LaFranier, Keith Dobie Jr, Liz Seger, and Peter.
Disassembling the lens nucleus is a crucial step during cataract surgery. Different techniques may be better suited to different cataract types, require more skill and ultimately make a difference in visual recovery and corneal health. Your Ophthalmology Against The Rule hosts take a detailed look at the MiLoop technique and discuss the pros and cons of various phaco options including femto laser assisted, divide and conquer, and chop. As you'll hear, just like with nuclear fission, with great power comes great responsibility when choosing an option to split the nucleus.
It is my great pleasure to present Dr. Nicole LePera, this week's incomparable guest on The Life Stylist Podcast. Nicole, known as The Holistic Psychologist, leads the SelfHealers Movement, an international community of people joining together to take healing into their own hands – which, after all, is what this show is all about, right? She's inspired millions through her social media presence, bringing ancient knowledge to a digital world. She's also the author of the New York Times bestseller, How to Do the Work, and a thoughtful new workbook to help people apply her tools in their lives. It's called How to Meet Yourself: A Workbook for Self-Discovery, and it drops today! Now, this is one hell of an interview – I'm going to warn you – in the best way possible. We cover so much ground in the realm of psychology, mental and emotional wellbeing, that you'll be scribbling notes in no time. DISCLAIMER: This podcast is presented for educational and exploratory purposes only. Published content is not intended to be used for diagnosing or treating any illness. Those responsible for this show disclaim responsibility for any possible adverse effects from the use of information presented by Luke or his guests. Please consult with your healthcare provider before using any products referenced. This podcast may contain paid endorsements for products or services. 00:04:19 — Who Is The The Holistic Psychologist? Reckoning with the numbers (5.5M followers) Luke tells a story of difficult change Disassembling the tools of distraction Shame in the human condition A hint at her next book release How to Meet Yourself: A Workbook for Self-Discovery Prioritizing our breathing and body 00:41:55 — Dysfunctional Family Dynamics How early relationships shape us Sigmund Freud's compulsion to repeat Being a conscious observer of roles you play for yourself Neil Strauss: When Love Is A Drug #68 Silence, introversion, and growing into yourself Learning to not apologize for what we want Tolerating moments of misunderstanding 01:15:30 — Connection, Conflict & Awareness The energetic dance between minds and emotions Finding security in space Dr. LePera on living and loving in a thruple Podcast: SelfHealers Soundboard 01:39:34 — Learning From Relationships Past & Present Does anyone come through childhood unscathed? Signs of dysfunctional relationships Safety is home, home is safety Neurochemistry of trauma addiction Dr. LePera on codependency Mirroring energies around us The 5 New Love Languages 02:15:46 — The Role of Plant Medicines in Modern Healing What happens next? It's all about integration Luke's experience doing the hard work Dr. LePera shares a bad mushroom trip experience Safety of a controlled environment Appreciating the work of Bruce Lipton, Joe Dispenza, and Wim Hoff Benefits of cold plunging How to Meet Yourself: A Workbook for Self-Discovery More about this episode. Watch on YouTube. THIS SHOW IS BROUGHT TO YOU BY: HIGHER DOSE. You've heard all about HigherDOSE's portable Infrared Sauna Blanket, and now they've just launched a new line of Magnesium-based products. Detox Drops, High-Dration Powder, and Chill Chews are all brand new from HigherDOSE, designed to complement their high-tech devices and make for a powerful new addition to your daily health routine! Get your Magnesium line-up today at higherdose.com with the code: LUKE15 at check out to save 15% off. AND... JUST THRIVE. For exceptional gut and immune health in the new year and beyond, there's nothing like Just Thrive. Get 15% off on everything Just Thrive carries when you go to justthrivehealth.com and use code LUKE15 at checkout. AND… ORGANIFI. Start your day with essential superfoods that help reduce stress and reset your morning. Contains a clinical dose of Ashwagandha. It supports healthy cortisol levels which aid in weight management. Go to organifi.com/lifestylist and use code lifestylist for 20% off any item in the store. AND… JOOVV. A new generation of Joovv devices are here and I am stoked. They're sleeker, lighter, easier to set up, and allow you to stand 3x further away from the device while still getting the recommended dosage. There's also a new ambient mode to help you wind down at the end of the day and a recovery mode that will help you rejuvenate after a tough workout. If you are ready to get a new Joovv device, you can get a discount for a limited time over at Joovv.com/luke. Resources: Workbook: howtomeetyourself.com Website: theholisticpsychologist.com Instagram: @the.holistic.psychologist YouTube: The Holistic Psychologist SelfHealers.Circle: @selfhealers.circle Find some huge savings on all my favorite wellness products from 2022: lukestorey.com/holidaygiftguide Are you ready to block harmful blue light, and look great at the same time? Check out Gilded By Luke Storey. Where fashion meets function: gildedbylukestorey.com Join me on Telegram for the uncensored content big tech won't allow me to post. It's free speech and free content: www.lukestorey.com/telegram Related: Dr. Gabor Maté: Breaking the Epidemic Cycle of Trauma & Addiction To Find True Healing & Liberation #432 Transcending Limiting Beliefs & Negative Patterns to Achieve Your Highest Potential w/ Peter Crone #413 Emotional Intelligence: How To Make Your Heart Smart w/ Josh Trent #223
We're officially back from our extended leave, and it's Brad's turn to run down his mixtape of songs he listened to pre-high school. Whereas Sean's "mixtape" was predicibly pretty cool all things considered, Brad's mixtape is... not. Enjoy? Topics Discussed: The inevitably lengthy discussion of the Sick New World tour Disassembling computer towers to burn an American Hi-Fi song The profundity of “Understanding in a Car Crash” Is it pronounced “Alex is on Fire” or “Alexis on Fire”? Did any musician age worse than The Streets? The Zach Slow, Jelly Donut, and Lady Sovereign saga The Toadies vs. Oasis battle at Brad's high school The time Brad got in trouble because of Fatboy Slim The time Brad and his friend got in trouble because of Ludacris The highs and lows of the turntablism genre Rahzel making the music with his mouth A terrifying electronic music video And, of course, Methods of Mayhem Website: www.queenvenerator.com Twitter: @queenvenerator Instagram: @queenvenerator
Episode 20: Triggers, Habits and Emotional Eating We all have triggers, habits and emotional connections with food. When we are hungry, but not really physically hungry we know it as head hunger, heart hunger, or, which covers both, emotional hunger. This episode explores triggers, habits and connections, and will show you how to disassemble them. Episode 20 looks at the mistakes we make and why and what the cost is of not putting in a pause. Your actionable COACHING ADVICE this week will show you how to get the most out of this week's booklet, The Brilliance of Chocolate Cake. 1:11. Personal Story1:37. Disassembling a trigger2:47. Disassembling a habit4:01. Triggers5:06. Habits6:19. Changing a habit but still responding to the trigger6:59. Simple emotional connection to a specific food7:19. Deeper emotional connection to food7:52. The connection might even be deeper9:25. Self-Sabotage10:03. Disassembling a trigger11:13. Disassembling a habit12:28. Disassembling a connection14:13. Autobiography in Five Chapters by Portia Nelson15:49. What mistakes do we make and why?17:33. The cost of not putting in a pause18:20. Calling out a new way to handle triggers, habits, urges, cravings and emotional connections20:40. This week's actionable COACHING ADVICE21:50. This week's VFO (Valuable Free Offer)23:29. Episode 21, coming up.LINKS:Breaking Free From Diet Prison BookBreaking Free From Diet Prison CourseTHIS WEEK'S VFO: The Brilliance of Chocolate CakeBreaking Free From Diet Prison Facebook pageRoadmap To Diet Success InstagramBLOG: Emotional EatingACCESS Transcript Here
Support Topic Lords on Patreon and get episodes a week early! (https://www.patreon.com/topiclords) Lords: * Tyriq * https://twitter.com/FourbitFriday * https://frror.bandcamp.com/ * Stevie * codroid@gmail.com Topics: * Striped humans * Alternative keyboard layouts: teaching yourself to type in new horrible ways * Where did I get these floppy disks? * The floppy disk poems * How do I give a tech talk? * https://vimeo.com/91436410 * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=59hwI9Ae1qU * http://paperdino.com/save-the-date/ Microtopics: * The extent of Jim's patience vis-a-vis delayed plugging. * Wishing you didn't make things so you could talk about the things you didn't make. * Plugging the small random things in life, like bugs. * Sitting in a chair right now. * Trying desperately for forty years to never use Bluetooth. * George Michael's "Faith" * George Michael rehearsing a Queen song. * A Faith listening party. * The etymology of "Lobster." * Plugging bugs and unplugging crustaceans. * Invisible stripes along one's epidermis. * Mosaicism (as distinct from Chimerism.) * Blaschko Lines. * A secret invisible power to be striped. * The show where nobody knows anything. * Spiraling outward from a central point. * A thing that is a fact if you believe Wikipedia. * Describing an egg as ovoid because it is similar to an ovum, i.e. an egg. * Whether a factoid is bullshit. * Whether humans are humanoid. * The distinction between a fact and a factoid and how it has changed over time. * Being slightly hungry and eating a single macaronus. * Batman training his successor in the sci-fi future. * Joining the villain faction because they get the cool hooves and horns. * Turning 90 and getting your internal organs tattooed. * Check it out, here's my solar plexus. Enjoy. * An injection that makes your bones glow in the dark. * Cold-Turkey Colemak Switchin'. * Holding your left pinky on the tab key to keep your place. * Iterating until you find the episode title. * Typing without twerking. * Being able to get your hands to do what you want without hurting. * Getting a split keyboard so your hands keep working. * The ease and laziness of the Wiimote and nunchuk allowing you to put your hands anywhere you want. * Twitchy aim dominating the PC FPS design space regardless of what the game designer wants. * Making poem floppy disks and using them as drinking coasters. * Cleaning out your mouse. * Disassembling a floppy disk and folding it into the shape of the Starship Enterprise. * Remembering where the USB floppy drive might stuff. * Whether cursed demoscene executables still curse you if you run them in DosBox. * Whether the Ring video still cursed you after it's digitized to DVD. * Maybe'm or maybe'm not. * A pretty cool knick knack. * A human head like pancake batter. * Bread that you put in a blender. * The old good lord, bad lord routine. * Picking a god and channeling its power into your tech talk. * A community of people that you want to like and respect you. * Various ways to prepare to give a talk, and why Tyriq always does it the wrong way. * Going to a talk and thereby consenting to be lectured by the person giving the talk. * Blaming the audience for picking the wrong talk if they don't like your talk. * How to run an ARG for no money. * Deconstructing the idea that canon and headcanon are in any way different. * Re-telling the same story over and over again. * Same bullshit, different number of dimensions. * A movie that was cooler when it was just a throwaway line in another movie. * Depicting the same overarching event but with details changed. * Games that require you to make a choice that you can't take back.
Why you SHOULD date your clients (theoretically) with best selling author Mark Young About Mark Young- If ever a person existed who can point out everything that is wrong with anything, you've just found him. It's a terrible trait when trying to make friends, but one that always seems to make for successful implementation. Seriously, this guy can find the flaw in any plan –and manages to do it before anything goes wrong. It's really annoying, at first, but if you keep an open mind to the criticism, it's just gold. And having been an entrepreneur and marketer for nearly 30 years, we would be remiss not to listen. At the root of everything, however, Mark is an educator and teacher. Disassembling projects, campaigns, or even financial statements, Mark manages to reverse engineer a solution, then takes the time to teach anyone who will stop and listen. And it is no wonder, given the fact that he holds university degrees in nearly every discipline you can imagine. And if you ask him why, he'll simply reply, “Why not?” Ask about the time he decided to join American MENSA on a dare –and succeeded. All of that said, Mark's most admirable quality is the genuine concern and ownership he takes of his clients' businesses. If there were a way to give more than 100%,this is the guy who would find a way to do it. He works the numbers, then works them again, reducing everything to a metric and finding ways to improve. “Do the right thing for the client, regardless of the cost. It'll come back to you. I promise.” – Mark Young Date Your Clients is a step-by-step juxtaposition between the relational skills required in dating and those required to be successful in business. With chapter titles such as, The First Date, Meeting the Family, and The First Fight, the author seamlessly weaves his way through the complicated landscape of relationships and provides humourous illustrations of life's worst moments.
Some years ago, Iowa City singer Betsy Hickok was looking for a guitarist to collaborate with. Some friends connected her with Central Iowa musician Ron Roberts (an acoustical researcher at ISU by day). To say the two hit it off is a bit of an understatement, since soon thereafter they were married! The two lived … Continue reading The post Culture Crawl 746 “Instead of Disassembling The Engine” appeared first on Jazz 88.3 KCCK.
In today's episode we continue our investigative series into the actual science behind the Earth's ever changing climate, and continue to provide clear evidence to counter the bogus mainstream alarmist narrative. Today we will be taking a close look at the proverbial poster child of the climate alarmists, the Polar Bear. Joining us today is Dr. Susan Crockford a professional zoologist with a Ph.D. and more than 40 years of experience in her field. Dr Crockford earned her undergraduate degree in zoology at the University of British Columbia, and was an adjunct professor at the University of Victoria, for 15 years from 2004 to 2019. Late in the spring of 2019, after the publication of her scientific paper which contradicted the mainstream propaganda of declining polar bear abundance, her university department suddenly and without stating a cause refused to renew her unpaid adjunct professorship status. Polar bear evolution is one of Dr. Crockford's professional interests. Dr. Crockford's work includes studies on the Holocene history and evolution of Arctic animals. She is a specialist with the practical ability to identify the broken and or digested bones of a wide variety of animals including fish, reptiles and amphibians, birds, terrestrial mammals and marine mammals. Dr. Crockford has an extensive list of publications, both scientific journal articles and books. She also regularly writes at her own science blog at PolarBearScience.com. To learn more about Dr. Crockford, please visit: www.polarbearscience.com
Conflict is an inevitable and unavoidable aspect of the human experience and conflicts manifest themselves in a multitude of ways. Certain conflicts can be easily resolved while others have destructive and chaotic potential. In this episode of the Think Peace Podcast, host Colette Rausch is joined by social psychologist Dr. Robin Lynch to discuss the different types of conflict she has encountered, her experiences working in family court, and the crucial role of empathy in resolving some of these conflicts.
National Geographic Explorer Tara Roberts heads to Africa, her ancestral homeland. She visits Doors of No Return, walks the slave trail in Benin, and learns about the long legacy of African free divers who excavated ships all over the world as far back as the 16th century. After an initial burst of Afro-joy, Tara soon realizes she's viewed largely as American rather than Black on the continent. Her understanding of self, Blackness, and Africa are turned upside down. But later, while dancing to South African house music under the stars, she finds a connection once again. Want more? Check out our Into the Depths hub to learn more about Tara's journey following Black scuba divers, find previous Nat Geo coverage on the search for slave shipwrecks, and read the March cover story. And download a tool kit for hosting an Into the Depths listening party to spark conversation and journey deeper into the material. Also explore: If you're interested in the history of Black aquatic culture, historian Kevin Dawson lays out the connections between African people and the water in his book Undercurrents of Power: Aquatic Cultures in the African Diaspora. Read the powerful account of Kossola, also known by the name Cudjo Lewis, in author and anthropologist Zora Neale Hurston's book, Barracoon: The Story of the Last ‘Black Cargo.' Find out more about the many “doors of no return” that dot Africa's west coast, including the sites at Ouidah and Elmina Castle, which has been designated a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
Why is a systems engineering mindset essential for a scaling startup? In this episode of the Sourcegraph Podcast, Nelson Elhage, creator of the open source code search engine Livegrep, co-creator of the Ruby type checker Sorbet, and Member of Technical Staff at Anthropic, joins Beyang Liu, co-founder and CTO of Sourcegraph, to discuss how Rust is changing the security landscape, explain why Patrick McKenzie, better known as patio11, called his live code search tool “miraculous,” and dive deep into the weeds on the differences between trigram- and suffix-array-based search systems. Along the way, Elhage explains why developer productivity is nonlinear and why investing in developer experience should be axiomatic.Show notes & transcript: https://about.sourcegraph.com/podcast/nelson-elhage/Sourcegraph: about.sourcegraph.com
Holly Devine, the Founder of DisassemblingDisability and a teacher's aide/educational assistant in a classroom for disabled students, discusses her life journey with cp (cerebral palsy) and anxiety and how she is overcoming her disabilities daily.Holly shares how, growing up in Canada, her mom attended school with her during her kindergarten years.Holly shares the adaptive sports she participated in, including wheelchair basketball and paracycling.Holly and Chris share how they benefited by advocating for themselves and adapting to the word with their respective disabilities.You can connect with Holly at her web site, http://DisassemblingDisability.com or vis email at Holly@DisassemblingDisability.comIf you are ready to start overcoming your COALS and start achieving your GOALS get the FREE eBook, The 10 Steps to #DefineYourself at http://10stepstodefineyourself.comJoin the conversation with your fellow #DefineYourselfers in the #DefineYourself Community on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/groups/dfyscommunitySupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/dfys )
This week we come armed with a stat corner, AM offlane and a disassembled Dragon Lance! Adam's winning, Stan won a Tinker game, Marco won a Nemistice in 7 minutes, patch is confirmed! It's all looking good in the Dotaverse!
#543 Lazy Saturday vibes.You can find me, Werner Puchert, on LinkedIn and Twitter.
We're back! Free-form chat where we talk about new societies, tower moments, time perception, and healing, all from a new space! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tabbyluna/support
This episode is an example of how organizations can use additive manufacturing to its fullest benefit, such as customized parts, complex structures, and small batch sizes. We discuss the opportunity of understanding the limits of current manufacturing methods to create a high-performing product, offers a better user experience, is swiftly created, and is potentially more affordable than existing products. Chief Product Officer, Katie Brandeau describes how Fitz Frames has revolutionized the eyewear market using AM. Fitz created a face-scanning app that automatically creates the perfect fit for their 3D-printed glasses. It is a unique approach to product design that combines full customization with style in very little time.[1:49] Katie describes her journey from R&D at Disney to Chief Product Officer of Fitz Frames. [4:26] Fitz Founder, Heidi Hertel recognized a need in the children's eye care market and created a solution that included additive manufacturing. [11:13] Guidance for engineers who want to know if an additive manufacturing solution is right for their application. [17:28] Disassembling the historical product design process was the key to reinventing the design process and integrating additive manufacturing. [21:29] Katie describes an example where Fitz integrates the scan to print features to create truly customizable products in very little time. [27:58] Creating a non-breakable hinge for kid's glasses is an ingenious way Fitz Frames is disrupting the market and revolutionizing the eyewear industry. [31:32] Considerations and mistakes companies make when incorporating additive manufacturing into the design process and product creation. The Additive Snack Podcast is brought to you by EOS.
Nando, Ian and DVR discuss a few players that the projections disagree about, how they prefer to mix and match players across multiple rosters, 2021 pitcher management, expectations for Joc Pederson in Chicago, and more. Rundown 2:35 Disassembling the Cushbot to Understand Christian Walker 8:40 Players that Projection Systems Disagree About 16:39 Andrew Vaughn vs. Walker; Ceiling vs. Floor 22:03 Do You Diversify or Pick the Same Players, Generally? 33:13 2021 Pitching Workload Questions 39:38 Re-Examining Joc Pederson in Chicago 42:29 Players Returning From Suspension 45:56 Nando Gets Ty France in the Tout Wars Draft-and-Hold League Follow Nando on Twitter: @nandodifino Follow Ian on Twitter: @IanKahn4 Follow DVR on Twitter: @DerekVanRiper e-mail: fantasypods@theathletic.com, use subject line 'Under the Radar' Please fill out our listener survey: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/athleticaudiosurvey Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Full show notes, including links, can be found at http://www.thelocksportscast.com In this week’s episode: -1st public pick of Codkey Locksys L52 -More smart locks -Artichoke2000 teaches gin spools -Pocket Women’s Lighted follower tips -Fish Picks teaches how to make Chris Capune’s tension wrench -Master Lock invading Bunnings -Disassembling a Fichet Monobloc -The Locky Award Winners -Lockpicking assassins -Sales -Giveaways Contact Information: Email: podcast@thelocksportscast.com Twitter https://twitter.com/charlescurrent Reddit: currentc57 on r/locksport Discord: Lockpickers United as Current, Extraordinary League of Pickers as Current, CBC as Current Join the Discord at http://discord.thelocksportscast.com Donate: http://paypal.thelocksportscast.com https://patreon.com/thelocksportscast The Lock Sportscast merch CBC merch Executive Producers: -m3ddl3r -Panda-Frog -Michael Gilchrist -Starrylock -WilliamsBrain -Dave 2BDCy4D -Liibans Locksports Journey -Pat from Uncensored Tactical -BillN -PHpicker Chief Content Producer: -Pocket Women Content Producers: -LockLoony -Joshua Gonzalez -Artichoke2000 -RoonPicker -HVLogic -Chirael -Michael Gilchrist -WENDT -Panda-Frog -PHpicker -Starrylock Special Thanks: Announcements: http://lockyawards.com/ https://www.thelocksportscast.com/ Corrections and Additions: Germany: Low Crime, Clean Prisons, Lessons for America | Jeff Rosen | TEDxMountainViewHighSchool Recent stories related to locksport: The SECURAM Touch Smart Lock: Pricey but Packed With Premium Features Ann Arbor tech startup reimagines keyless home entry and smart access Shepherd Lock: Shepherd Smart Lock & Home Security System | Simple Touch Access Community News: Codkey Locksys L52 (24 pin) picked and gutted. First open (21) The Theory of Picking Gin Spool Drivers - Gin Series Part 1 (209) Light Follower build - tips, mistakes, modifications, changes for an American Lock follower (217) Master Lock invasion at Bunnings. What is happening to Lockwood. 1880 Prison Door Lock Key 023 How to make the best tension wrench for lock picking using wiper blade inserts #1319 Tension wrench bending #147 How to make a Universal Tension wrenche How To Disassemble a Fichet Monobloc Cylinder SpeedLocks Records: Speedlocks.org New Products: Resources: Main Topic: Locky Awards 2020 winners: The Locky Awards for 2020 Criminals: Daphne hitmen used car supplied by Robert Agius to practice lock-picking, court hears Sales: -https://hooligankeys.com/ NEWSTUFF21 for 15% off -https://www.3dlocksport.com 10% off with code PACLOCK10 -https://makolocks.com/ 15% off with code BUYMAKO Unknown exp -MAKO Locks Black Friday Specials Also the code above works on these deals! -https://uklockpickers.co.uk/ 10% off with code GIFT Giveaways and Contests: -Michael Gilchrist [L108] #Norlin400 Giveaway! Also American 1100 and Brady 71/40 picked -Starrylock How to Join Starry’s Posse #OperationStarburst -Tallanpick 50.000 SUSCRIPTORES GIVEAWAY! eng sub -RoonPicker Channel Update and Giveaway Announcement! -PHpicker (26) 100 sub giveaway #PH100 (24) Announcing my New Picker giveaway #PHNewPicker -Panda-Frog (ENG-152) Lockpicking - Giveaway result 21Feb and the new Giveaway #PandaFrog21Mar -Starrylock - #shoutoutMonday -Starrylock -Pocket Women -CLK Supplies Introducing #Lockboss Free Giveaway! Do you work with Locks & Keys or do Locksmithing? -Charles Builds Crap on YouTube - To encourage you to send me information for this show, I’m changing the rules for my PAM Giveaway (see rules below) or https://www.thelocksportscast.com/p/paclock-a-month-giveaway/ https://www.youtube.com/user/MrCharlesCurrent “PacLock a Month” Rules: I’m giving away one of my custom PacLock 100A padlocks every month. To be entered, you must: 1.Provide me with locksport or locksport community news that I can use on my weekly podcast. -Submit your news via one of the following: +Email: podcast@thelocksportscast.com +Reddit: currentc57 on r/locksport +Discord: You can find me on the following servers as “Current” ~Lockpickers United ~Extraordinary League of Pickers ~CBC -You will receive 1 entry for each news item I use in the podcast that month. 2.Share the podcast on social media -Make sure I know about it by tagging me and/or emailing me a screenshot or other proof. The winner will be drawn and announced the following month. The winner will have 1 week to contact me via email to claim the prize. I will pay for shipping within the U.S. If you live outside the U.S., you can still enter, but must pay to ship if you win. I reserve the right to change these rules as I need to during the course of the year. I reserve the right to disqualify anyone for any reason. My decisions are final. This giveaway is a thank you to the subscribers that watch my videos, listen to my podcast, and help me produce it. YouTube, Podbean, Fireside.fm, PacLock and other entities are in no way partners to this contest, and all applicants agree to release them from any and all liability related to this contest. Personal data collected as a part of this contest will be used only for the purposes of this contest and will not be released to third parties. Any entries that violate YouTube's community guidelines will be disqualified: http://www.youtube.com/t/community_guidelines
The day has arrived! In case you’re just tuning in, this is technically minute zero of Iron Man 2. We figured many of you might be joining us for the first time so we’ve created this episode to begin as we embark on the minute by minute dissection of Tony Stark’s second outing in the Marvel Cinematic Universe. Obsessive movie trivia? Check. Weird comparisons? Check. Unbelievably strange pop culture references? Check! Let’s begin!
Gearhead News #2: you ought'a know this. - The gov't wants to waste more of your money on the barely solvent USPS with electric mail vans (because windmills worked out so well). - Ford's new Broncos are falling apart because of a shortage of bolts (did management forget how to?). - Archeologists dug a chariot out of Pompeii's pyroclastic cement (would your Camaro last that long?). - The F-35 keeps getting its ass handed to it by 30-year old planes. - Ford is worried that the NRA's bankrupsty will cost them 150-so cars. - The Chinese bat plague just killed Fry's. On top of stories about cars, trucks, beers and guns, we've got Thomas Edison, bikes and cars on Palomar, Lemmy & Limbaugh, and Trinity Brewing Company's DDH-45 on sip.
Gearhead News #2: you ought'a know this. - The gov't wants to waste more of your money on the barely solvent USPS with electric mail vans (because windmills worked out so well). - Ford's new Broncos are falling apart because of a shortage of bolts (did management forget how to?). - Archeologists dug a chariot out of Pompeii's pyroclastic cement (would your Camaro last that long?). - The F-35 keeps getting its ass handed to it by 30-year old planes. - Ford is worried that the NRA's bankrupsty will cost them 150-so cars. - The Chinese bat plague just killed Fry's. On top of stories about cars, trucks, beers and guns, we've got Thomas Edison, bikes and cars on Palomar, Lemmy & Limbaugh, and Trinity Brewing Company's DDH-45 on sip.
Intro: I am thrilled to introduce Gary Mahler to you in this episode. I came across Gary on social media, by some intuitive pull. He's lived in Paris, Japan, Hawaii, owned and sold a business and created his ideal life and now coaches others to do the same. He lives each day in such a centered and purpose driven way. He has some amazing things for you to consider. I would highly suggest having a notepad and taking some notes on this one. In this episode you'll learn: Lessons from Parisians on living a slow, full life How our relationship with our identity impacts the rest of our life Disassembling parts of your life no longer serving your purpose Learning to recognize the judgements of yourself that are running the show The end result of ego-driven goals Why the WAY you go about getting something matters How to leave the “grind” behind and still reach your goals How to use whatever the Universe gives you and and with with rather than against it How to look at surrender with fortitude and dignity What a coach should REALLY help you do Understanding center and balance from a martial arts perspective Resources: Book- “The Surrender Experiment” by Michael Singer https://untetheredsoul.com/surrender-experiment Book- “Letting Go” by David Hawkins https://www.amazon.com/Letting-David-Hawkins-M-D-Ph-D/dp/1401945015 Website- https://www.garymahler.com/ Facebook- https://www.facebook.com/garyl.mahler
Whilst realising reality's repetitiveness and inauthenticity - our modern world seems to have become mundanely grey. In this episode we reveal how the design concept at DODI was rather unconsciously and creatively inspired. ━━━━━━━━━━ References + Credits ¹ Theatre of Tragedy. Senseless - song lyrics, 2006. ² Thomasin Lockwood. Voice over. Researched, written + created by © dodi kazma, 2020.
On this episode retro 80s: Intellivision Amico, Atari VCS and Disassembling Tempest on an Apple II, plus a new game by Antonio Savola and listeners reflect on the first arcade cabinet they played plus Atari mega at and Amiga 4000
Link to bioRxiv paper: http://biorxiv.org/cgi/content/short/2020.10.21.348904v1?rss=1 Authors: Vala, M., Bujak, L., Marin, A. G., Holanova, K., Henrichs, V., Braun, M., Lansky, Z., Piliarik, M. Abstract: Microtubules are cytoskeletal polymers of tubulin dimers assembled into protofilaments that constitute nanotubes undergoing periods of assembly and disassembly. Static electron micrographs suggest a structural transition of straight protofilaments into curved ones occurring at the tips of disassembling microtubules. However, these structural transitions have never been observed and the process of microtubule disassembly thus remains unclear. Here, label-free optical microscopy capable of selective imaging of the transient structural changes of protofilaments at the tip of a disassembling microtubule is introduced. Upon induced disassembly, the transition of ordered protofilaments into a disordered conformation is resolved at the tip of the microtubule. Imaging the unbinding of individual tubulin oligomers from the microtubule tip reveals transient pauses and relapses in the disassembly, concurrent with enrichment of ordered protofilament segments at the microtubule tip. These findings show that microtubule disassembly is a discrete process and suggest a mechanism of switching from the disassembly to the assembly phase. Copy rights belong to original authors. Visit the link for more info
The Army wants to know exactly what role advanced manufacturing might play in its future logistics chain. To help find out, experts are disassembling an entire Blackhawk helicopter and taking 3D images of every single nut and bolt. Officials think the exercise will tell them exactly which parts can be 3D printed, but building a digital model of an existing helicopter will have a wide array of other implications too. Federal News Network’s Jared Serbu has more.
When selling, are you going into so much detail about how your service works that you are actually losing deals? So many reps over-explain – essentially disassembling the entire car in order to prove that it has value. This habit can be the result of several things. In this episode, I unpack the reasons why […]
Continuing our series in -A Closer Walk with God.- The importance of joining a Bible-believing Church and ASSEMBLING with them.
Episode 3: What is Locksport http://thelocksportscast.com In this week's episode: More news of criminals with picks. What is locksport and activities does it encompass? A couple interesting projects by the lockpicking subreddit members. Please help me make this podcast a resource for the community by sending me any news or information you would like to share. Contact Information Email: charles@charlesbuildscrap.com Reddit: currentc57 on r/locksport Discord: Lockpickers United as Current, Extraordinary League of Pickers as Current, CBC as Current The locksport rules: Rule 1: never pick a lock that you don't own or do not have permission to pick. Rule 2: do not pick locks that you rely on or that are in use State of the podcast Thank you to everyone that contributed to this episode. And to everyone that has shared this podcast with others. It really helps. However , contributions were a bit thin this week. Please send me anything you have that is locksport related, even if you don't think it's important. It might just be the bit of info I needed. If not, no harm done. Remember this podcast needs your support. If you support the show in some way, like providing information that I use in the podcast, I will give you a shoutout. So when you send in your information, if you have a YouTube channel, blog or anything like that, be sure to let me know. I'm changing the day the podcast is released to Monday, to better fit my schedule. That will give me the weekend to plan, record, edit and upload the show. I want to say a special thank you to HelpfulLockPicker on YouTube for sharing this podcast, and my YouTube channel. https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCloseNEb6epWL36Ap_zZmow News: Women facing breaking and entering, theft charges https://www.kait8.com/2020/06/10/women-facing-breaking-entering-theft-charges/ What is “locksport”? Picking locks just for the fun of it Lock picking competitions Disassembling and repinning locks Challenge lock making and picking Making cutaway locks Decoding combination locks Safe cracking Tool making Non destructive bypass methods Destructive bypass methods Designing and making new types of locks Key impressioning Researching lock history Collecting locks For decoding combination locks, check out Potti314 on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCSCUS_rVVks_NKookFW9m4A For beautiful cutaway locks, check out Supallama on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCmBrQYJLqkxLGhYSX0LRyUQ Interesting projects from the lockpicking Reddit: LethalogicaX - made a 3D printed lock Reddit Post https://www.reddit.com/r/lockpicking/comments/h9ayrb/i_designed_a_new_3d_printed_lock/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf YouTube channel https://youtu.be/npht68N1uzs Grain ORice - Safe lock manipulation and picking YouTube channel https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCEVjx1wx19nFC9_VmvahtGw Reddit Post https://www.reddit.com/r/lockpicking/comments/h9l0y1/sg_8560_nondestructive_entry_idea/?utm_source=share&utm_medium=ios_app&utm_name=iossmf Giveaways: RoonPicker on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/channel/UC0uDsWpm4sISpzKlB0XVFDw Starrylock on YouTube https://www.youtube.com/user/DrSteveSick Charles Builds Crap https://www.youtube.com/user/MrCharlesCurrent Content for this episode provided by: Starrylock on YouTube LethalogicaX on YouTube Flashingflamez on Reddit Logos_Lock on Reddit Special Thanks to: HelpfulLockPicker Remember this podcast can't exist without your support Please keep sending in your news, links and giveaways.
Podcasters often fail to understand the fundamental difference between using media for distribution or promotional purposes versus using media for content creation purposes. How strategic are you with non-podcast-related content you produce on a regular basis? I’m far from perfect when it comes to my approach to my media stack. But it might help you better understand yours if I give you a rundown of what I’m doing, warts and all. This that you’re consuming didn’t start out this way. Nor did it start with me typing words on a keyboard. Nor did it start as a transcription of an audio file. It started life as a live video on LinkedIn. (https://www.linkedin.com/video/live/activity-6646042366056763392-UxlE) From there, I stripped out the good bits from my extemporaneous talk and wrote an article that was published on my website, on my Medium profile, and as an article on LinkedIn. And by “wrote”, I mean it. Those pieces are not accurate transcripts of what I said, though I do include one of those on the page of my website where this article will live. Those articles are 100% re-written so that 100% of the value can be received just by reading. Let me state that again: It’s OK with me that people who find this article never listen to my podcast. That’s because I get other tangible value from the effort it takes to make those posts. I also spend time (and money) editing the live video down to a stand-alone video that’s loaded to the a playlist on my YouTube channel (https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLIiiiguUmMmDC-WaQcgnSYzmNddfUg0ey) . I get effectively zero views on these videos because they aren’t designed to be good video to watch. Each video is nothing more than my head mostly blocked behind a big fat microphone with a boom arm in the way. So of course it’s not good video! It doesn’t matter that I have a great lighting kit and a quality video camera. I'm not creating good video content. I’m merely using (abusing?) these media properties for distribution. Nothing more. Don’t be like me! I’m better at social media. If you follow me on social media channels, you'll see I'm actively creating lots of content about podcasting in general in my own format and style. Not every forward-thinking, big question about podcasting is worthy of an episode of Podcast Pontifications. But they are great to share on social, mostly on my Twitter account (https://twitter.com/evoterra) . I could be better at sharing content on LinkedIn and through my company Facebook Page. But I’m not. And I’ve become OK with that. Other than my occasional guest appearance on someone else's podcast or getting up on a stage in front of a crowd (not that I can do that for a while, obviously), my media stack is small. Yours may not be. Regardless, I hope this helps you understand the difference between using your media stack for content creation versus using your media stack for promotion and distribution of your podcast episodes. There’s a difference. What media stacks are you using? Where are you creating not your podcast content? And do you think it's effective? I want to know (mailto:evo@podcastlaunch.pro) , and I also want you to ask your podcasting friends what they're doing with their own media stacks. ----- Share this with a friend: https://podcastpontifications.com/episode/disassembling-your-podcast-media-stack (https://podcastpontifications.com/episode/disassembling-your-podcast-media-stack) Podcast Pontifications (https://podcastpontifications.com/) is published by Evo Terra four times a week and is aimed at the working podcaster. The purpose of this show is to make podcasting better, not just easier. Follow Evo on Twitter (https://twitter.com/evoterra) for more podcasting insights as they come. And if you need a professional in your podcasting corner, please visit SimplerMedia.pro (https://podcastlaunch.pro/) to see how Simpler Media Productions... Support this podcast
In this episode of Do Explain, Christofer speaks with Sam Kuypers about why the world isn't best described as a mechanical clockwork of atoms . They discuss determinism and causality, myths in quantum physics, evolutionary psychology, and other related topics. Sam Kuypers, known as Crit Rat on Twitter, is a DPhil student in physics at the University of Oxford. He researches foundational issues in quantum theory and, besides physics, is mainly interested in the philosophy of science, as his twitter-handle suggests (@Crit_Rat). Support the podcast at: patreon.com/doexplain (monthly) ko-fi.com/doexplain (one-time)
This week: we just completed our first week with iPhone 11 Pro, and it's even better than we hoped. We'll dive into all the features we love most. Plus: details are emerging about iPhone 12, and we like what we're seeing! And is Apple Watch series 5 worth the upgrade? We discuss... This episode supported by Easily create a beautiful website all by yourself, at Squarespace.com/cultcast. Use offer code CultCast at checkout to get 10% off your first purchase of a website or domain. Cult of Mac's watch store is full of beautiful straps that cost way less than Apple's. See the full curated collection at Store.Cultofmac.com Enter for a chance to win a free Series 5 Apple Watch. CultCloth will keep your iPhone XS, Apple Watch, Mac and iPad sparkling clean, and for a limited time use code CULTCAST at checkout to score a free CleanCloth with any order at CultCloth.co. On the show this week @erfon / @lkahney / @lewiswallace This week's story links The iPhone 11 Pro unboxing you MUST SEE before buying (Space Grey First Impressions) Here’s why the iPhone 11 Pro camera is UNBEATABLE iPhone 11 Pro Max review: the best gets better This thing is a beauty. The first thing you notice is the glass back. The frosted matte finish makes it semi-translucent, giving it a weirdly illusory depth. It looks great. Not even the controversial, compound-eye camera bump can spoil its good looks. The iPhone 11 Pro Max is the best-looking iPhone to date, and I love it. 2020 iPhone design could take notes from the classic iPhone 4 look Apple could go back to one of its most beloved iPhone designs with next year’s iPhone refresh. According to a new report from seasoned Apple analyst Ming-Chi Kuo, Apple’s 2020 iPhone redesign will resemble the iPhone 4. Apple Watch Series 5 teardown confirms it’s a tweaked Series 4 Disassembling the latest Apple Watch doesn’t find very much that’s different from last year’s model. That doesn’t mean there aren’t improvements in the new Series 5; they’re just not visible in a teardown, even one done by the experts at iFixit.
Which conceptions of the political are inscribed in blockchain technologies? What is cryptoeconomics? And what does it look like if we disassemble the blockchain truth machine?Shownotes:Jaya's research homepage:http://distributingchains.info/Download Jaya's Dissertation here:Brekke, Jaya Klara. 2019. Disassembling the Trust Machine. Geography Department, Durham University:http://distributingchains.info/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/DisassemblingTrustMachine_Brekke2019.pdfJaya's general homepage:http://www.jayapapaya.net/Jaya on Twitter:https://twitter.com/jayapapayaWiki of Bitcoin:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitcoinWiki of Bitcoin Cash:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin_CashHomepage of Ethereum:https://www.ethereum.org/Reddit page of Etherum's fork Ethereum Classic:https://www.reddit.com/r/EthereumClassic/Wiki of “The DAO” (first Decentralized Autonomous Organization on Ethereum):https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_DAO_(organization)Paper on The DAO by Quinn DuPont:DuPont, Quinn. 2017. “Experiments in Algorithmic Governance: A history and ethnography of ‘The DAO', a failed Decentralized Autonomous Organization”. In Bitcoin and Beyond: Cryptocurrencies, Blockchains and Global Governance herausgegeben von Campbell-Verduyn, Malcolm. London: Routledge:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/319529311_Experiments_in_Algorithmic_Governance_A_history_and_ethnography_of_The_DAO_a_failed_Decentralized_Autonomous_OrganizationHaraway, Donna. 2016. Staying with the Trouble. Durham: Duke University Press:https://www.dukeupress.edu/staying-with-the-troubleWeyl, Glen und Eric A. Posner. 2018. Radical Markets. Princeton: Princeton University Press:https://press.princeton.edu/titles/11222.htmlHomepage of the book "Radical Markets":http://radicalmarkets.com/Vitalik Buterin Talk at the RadicalXChange Conference:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIs8zjLDZrQ If you like Future Histories please consider supporting the show on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/join/FutureHistories?Get in touch: office@futurehistories.today or via Twitter (#FutureHistories):https://twitter.com/FutureHpodcasthttps://www.youtube.com/c/FutureHistoriesPodcasthttps://www.reddit.com/r/FutureHistories/ Episode Keywords:#JayaKlaraBrekke, #JanGroos, #Blockchain, #PolitischeÖkonomie, #Zukunft, #Cryptoeconomics, #Netzwerk, #Netzwerke, #DezentralisierteNetzwerke, #Etherum, #Algorithmen, #AlgorithmischesRegieren, #DasRegierenDerAlgorithmen, #FutureHistoriesInternational
Which conceptions of the political are inscribed in blockchain technologies? What is cryptoeconomics? And what does it look like if we disassemble the blockchain truth machine?Shownotes:Jaya's research homepage:http://distributingchains.info/Download Jaya's Dissertation here:Brekke, Jaya Klara. 2019. Disassembling the Trust Machine. Geography Department, Durham University:http://distributingchains.info/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/DisassemblingTrustMachine_Brekke2019.pdfJaya's general homepage:http://www.jayapapaya.net/Jaya on Twitter:https://twitter.com/jayapapayaWiki of Bitcoin:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BitcoinWiki of Bitcoin Cash:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bitcoin_CashHomepage of Ethereum:https://www.ethereum.org/Reddit page of Etherum's fork Ethereum Classic:https://www.reddit.com/r/EthereumClassic/Wiki of “The DAO” (first Decentralized Autonomous Organization on Ethereum):https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_DAO_(organization)Paper on The DAO by Quinn DuPont:DuPont, Quinn. 2017. “Experiments in Algorithmic Governance: A history and ethnography of ‘The DAO', a failed Decentralized Autonomous Organization”. In Bitcoin and Beyond: Cryptocurrencies, Blockchains and Global Governance herausgegeben von Campbell-Verduyn, Malcolm. London: Routledge:https://www.researchgate.net/publication/319529311_Experiments_in_Algorithmic_Governance_A_history_and_ethnography_of_The_DAO_a_failed_Decentralized_Autonomous_OrganizationHaraway, Donna. 2016. Staying with the Trouble. Durham: Duke University Press:https://www.dukeupress.edu/staying-with-the-troubleWeyl, Glen und Eric A. Posner. 2018. Radical Markets. Princeton: Princeton University Press:https://press.princeton.edu/titles/11222.htmlHomepage of the book "Radical Markets":http://radicalmarkets.com/Vitalik Buterin Talk at the RadicalXChange Conference:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WIs8zjLDZrQ If you like Future Histories please consider supporting the show on Patreon:https://www.patreon.com/join/FutureHistories?Get in touch: office@futurehistories.today or via Twitter (#FutureHistories):https://twitter.com/FutureHpodcasthttps://www.youtube.com/c/FutureHistoriesPodcasthttps://www.reddit.com/r/FutureHistories/ Episode Keywords:#JayaKlaraBrekke, #JanGroos, #Blockchain, #PolitischeÖkonomie, #Zukunft, #Cryptoeconomics, #Netzwerk, #Netzwerke, #DezentralisierteNetzwerke, #Etherum, #Algorithmen, #AlgorithmischesRegieren, #DasRegierenDerAlgorithmen, #FutureHistoriesInternational
'Summer is Night at Hand' - We should learn to identify trends and patterns - Disassembling the Creation Story represents chaos and a spiritual breakdown www.cwicmedia.com www.facebook.com/cwicmedia 'The Son of Man Cometh' Come Follow Me for Individuals and Families
There's a new Marvel movie out. It's called AVENGERS: INFINITY WAR. About 900 million dollars at the box office in less than a week suggests that perhaps you might have seen it by now. If, by some chance you haven't yet, then perhaps consider coming back to this episode after you have because we dive into SPOILERS face first and from the word GO. Fair warning, nearest and dearest.
Journey Church International is a difference making church in Lees Summit, MO with an exciting kids program, bible-based teaching and an inviting atmosphere.
In the podcast this week, we will continue conversations around our series entitled My Dysfunctional Family: Learning to love difficult people. We will learn that the majority of the dysfunction we experience in our family is due to a misunderstanding of our current roles. If we can understand, communicate, and manage our family roles in a way that shows our heart, we can begin to disassemble the dysfunction.
In the podcast this week, we will continue conversations around our series entitled My Dysfunctional Family: Learning to love difficult people. We will learn that the majority of the dysfunction we experience in our family is due to a misunderstanding of our current roles. If we can understand, communicate, and manage our family roles in a way that shows our heart, we can begin to disassemble the dysfunction.
Journey Church International is a difference making church in Lees Summit, MO with an exciting kids program, bible-based teaching and an inviting atmosphere.
Recorded at Øredev 2017, Fredrik talks to Marco Ceccione about the ZX Spectrum, positive hacking (the only kind there is!), the benefits of getting closer to the metal and finally balancing coding and management. Marco is an engineering manager at Toptal. Before that, he worked at Stack overflow, where, among other things, he wrote object-oriented assembly to solve real-wold problems on a huge scale. Yes, that’s a real thing, discussion and links explains it all. Thank you Cloudnet for sponsoring our VPS! Comments, questions or tips? We are @kodsnack, @tobiashieta, @oferlund and @bjoreman on Twitter, have a page on Facebook and can be emailed at info@kodsnack.se if you want to write longer. We read everything we receive. If you enjoy Kodsnack we would love a review in iTunes! Links Marco Ceccioni Marco’s Øredev presentation about the ZX Spectrum ZX Spectrum BIOS EFI Right to repair Arduino MSIL Russell’s barber Toptal - where Marco works Grafana Doctor Dobb’s articles on writing Quake Titles I was presenting this very very old computer Take the train and go to Milan Disassembling code by hand A very hands-on period Supremely hackable First repair it, then write some software for it Object-oriented assembly Ultimately, you have to code for the machine Hacking is always positive If they break, we don’t fix them
Made it to episode 20, and it's still a lot of fun - I hope the feeling is mutual. :-) Topics of interest: a bit of background about this podcast itself, playing around with a vintage Luctor N.V. Multiset AC power-supply, last weeks' effort for the RetroChallenge 2018/04, disassembling a coffee-machine and the upcoming Vintage Computer Festival Europe (VCFe). Relevant links: upcoming Hackalot hackerspace in Eindhoven (NL) RetroChallenge 2018, April (RC2018/04)... ...and my project for that Vintage Computer Festival Europe (VCFe), Muenchen --- RC2018/04 project status, showing C64, Bait-a-Cart cartridge-adapter and existing ROM-cartridge in action, along with the small 2nd hand TV: --- The Luctor N.V. Multiset AC power-supply: --- Pics of the coffee-machine's thermostat before and after destruction:
(First of all, apologies for the many "uhhh"s and "ummm"s you can hear - no idea what was going on there. Edited out a lot, and next time it should be better.) Topics this time are my effort so far for the RetroChallenge 2018/04 (25% in), a short and biased discussion of some available handheld oscilloscopes, disassembling consumer-scales to see what was going on inside, hacking together a small digital probe to distinguish high/low/floating pins, and blowing a fuse while poking at electronics. --- Links/show-notes, in that order: my effort this week for the RetroChallenge 2018/04 (April) some portable scopes: the ones I used: Velleman HPS140i (1-channel) Velleman WFS210 (WiFi, 2-channel) Seeedstudio DSO Nano v1 (1-channel) nice but starting from approx EUR 400: Owon HDS series Micsig tBook series Siglent SHS series PC-based: Owon VDS series LabNation SmartScope (software any good..?) Awesome Space retro-place (Utrecht, NL) Makersbase fablab (Breda, NL) Hackalot hackspace (Eindhoven, NL) W.r.t the blown fuse: I made the rookie mistake of connecting probe-ground to something main-referenced (but not earth)... #makeagoodfirstimpression --- Some pics of scales-disassembly: (load-sensor mounted in one of the scales' 4 feet) (strain-gauge element (?) embedded in metal spring-thing) Note that when the metal thing is flexed, both "halves" of the element would decrease in resistance - a few hundred Ohms when flexing them by hand. That's why I don't understand why there were 3 wires bonded to this thing. Why not use 2? (From what I read and discussed with a friend, one "half" would ideally have to have a constant or at least less-decreasing-when-flexed resistance, to be used in a Wheatstone bridge.) --- Schematic and pics of the digital probe: (probe in a blob of hot-glue)
We read a trip report about FreeBSD in China, look at how Unix deals with Signals, a stats collector in DragonFlyBSD & much more! This episode was brought to you by Headlines Trip Report: FreeBSD in China at COPU and LinuxCon (https://www.freebsdfoundation.org/blog/trip-report-freebsd-in-china-at-copu-and-linuxcon/) This trip report is from Deb Goodkin, the Executive Director of the FreeBSD Foundation. She travelled to China in May 2017 to promote FreeBSD, meet with companies, and participate in discussions around Open Source. > In May of 2017, we were invited to give a talk about FreeBSD at COPU's (China Open Source Promotional Unit) Open Source China, Open Source World Summit, which took place June 21-22, in Beijing. This was a tremendous opportunity to talk about the advantages of FreeBSD to the open source leaders and organizations interested in open source. I was honored to represent the Project and Foundation and give the presentation “FreeBSD Advantages and Applications”. > Since I was already going to be in Beijing, and LinuxCon China was being held right before the COPU event, Microsoft invited me to be part of a women-in-tech panel they were sponsoring. There were six of us on the panel including two from Microsoft, one from the Linux Foundation, one from Accenture of China, and one from Women Who Code. Two of us spoke in English, with everyone else speaking Chinese. It was disappointing that we didn't have translators, because I would have loved hearing everyone's answers. We had excellent questions from the audience at the end. I also had a chance to talk with a journalist from Beijing, where I emphasized how contributing to an open source project, like FreeBSD, is a wonderful way to get experience to boost your resume for a job. > The first day of LinuxCon also happened to be FreeBSD Day. I had my posters with me and was thrilled to have the Honorary Chairman of COPU (also known as the “Father of Open Source in China”) hold one up for a photo op. Unfortunately, I haven't been able to get a copy of that photo for proof (I'm still working on it!). We spent a long time discussing the strengths of FreeBSD. He believes there are many applications in China that could benefit from FreeBSD, especially for embedded devices, university research, and open source education. We had more time throughout the week to discuss FreeBSD in more detail. > Since I was at LinuxCon, I had a chance to meet with people from the Linux Foundation, other open source projects, and some of our donors. With LinuxCon changing its name to Open Source Summit, I discussed how important it is to include minority voices like ours to contribute to improving the open source ecosystem. The people I talked to within the Linux Foundation agreed and suggested that we get someone from the Project to give a talk at the Open Source Summit in Prague this October. Jim Zemlin, the Linux Foundation Executive Director, suggested having a BSD track at the summits. We did miss the call for proposals for that conference, but we need to get people to consider submitting proposals for the Open Source Summits in 2018. > I talked to a CTO from a company that donates to us and he brought up his belief that FreeBSD is much easier to get started on as a contributor. He talked about the steep path in Linux to getting contributions accepted due to having over 10,000 developers and the hierarchy of decision makers, from Linus to his main lieutenants to the layers beneath him. It can take 6 months to get your changes in! > On Tuesday, Kylie and I met with a representative from Huawei, who we've been meeting over the phone with over the past few months. Huawei has a FreeBSD contributor and is looking to add more. We were thrilled to hear they decided to donate this year. We look forward to helping them get up to speed with FreeBSD and collaborate with the Project. > Wednesday marked the beginning of COPU and the reason I flew all the way to Beijing! We started the summit with having a group photo of all the speakers:The honorary chairman, Professor Lu in the front middle. > My presentation was called “FreeBSD Advantages and Applications”. A lot of the material came from Foundation Board President, George-Neville-Neil's presentation, “FreeBSD is not a Linux Distribution”, which is a wonderful introduction to FreeBSD and includes the history of FreeBSD, who uses it and why, and which features stand out. My presentation went well, with Professor Lu and others engaged through the translators. Afterwards, I was invited to a VIP dinner, which I was thrilled about. > The only hitch was that Kylie and I were running a FreeBSD meetup that evening, and both were important! Beijing during rush hour is crazy, even trying to go only a couple of miles is challenging. We made plans that I would go to the meetup and give the same presentation, and then head back to the dinner. Amazingly, it worked out. Check out the rest of her trip report and stay tuned for more news from the region as this is one of the focus areas of the Foundation. *** Unix: Dealing with signals (http://www.networkworld.com/article/3211296/linux/unix-dealing-with-signals.html) Signals on Unix systems are critical to the way processes live and die. This article looks at how they're generated, how they work, and how processes receive or block them On Unix systems, there are several ways to send signals to processes—with a kill command, with a keyboard sequence (like control-C), or through a program Signals are also generated by hardware exceptions such as segmentation faults and illegal instructions, timers and child process termination. But how do you know what signals a process will react to? After all, what a process is programmed to do and able to ignore is another issue. Fortunately, the /proc file system makes information about how processes handle signals (and which they block or ignore) accessible with commands like the one shown below. In this command, we're looking at information related to the login shell for the current user, the "$$" representing the current process. On FreeBSD, you can use procstat -i PID to get that and even more information, and easier to digest form P if signal is pending in the global process queue I if signal delivery disposition is SIGIGN C if signal delivery is to catch it Catching a signal requires that a signal handling function exists in the process to handle a given signal. The SIGKILL (9) and SIGSTOP (#) signals cannot be ignored or caught. For example, if you wanted to tell the kernel that ctrl-C's are to be ignored, you would include something like this in your source code: signal(SIGINT, SIGIGN); To ensure that the default action for a signal is taken, you would do something like this instead: signal(SIGSEGV, SIGDFL); + The article then shows some ways to send signals from the command line, for example to send SIGHUP to a process with pid 1234: kill -HUP 1234 + You can get a list of the different signals by running kill -l On Unix systems, signals are used to send all kinds of information to running processes, and they come from user commands, other processes, and the kernel itself. Through /proc, information about how processes are handling signals is now easily accessible and, with just a little manipulation of the data, easy to understand. links owned by NGZ erroneously marked as on loan (https://smartos.org/bugview/OS-6274) NGZ (Non-Global Zone), is IllumOS speak for their equivalent to a jail > As reported by user brianewell in smartos-live#737, NGZ ip tunnels stopped persisting across zone reboot. This behavior appeared in the 20170202 PI and was not present in previous releases. After much spelunking I determined that this was caused by a regression introduced in commit 33df115 (part of the OS-5363 work). The regression was a one-line change to link_activate() which marks NGZ links as on loan when they are in fact not loaned because the NGZ created and owns the link. “On loan” means the interface belongs to the host (GZ, Global Zone), and has been loaned to the NGZ (Jail) This regression was easy to introduce because of the subtle nature of this code and lack of comments. I'm going to remove the regressive line, add clarifying comments, and also add some asserts. The following is a detailed analysis of the issue, how I debugged it, and why my one-line change caused the regression: To start I verified that PI 20170119 work as expected: booted 20170119 created iptun (named v4sys76) inside of a native NGZ (names sos-zone) performed a reboot of sos-zone zlogin to sos-zone and verify iptun still exists after reboot Then I booted the GZ into PI 20170202 and verified the iptun did not show up booted 20170202 started sos-zone zlogin and verified the iptun was missing At this point I thought I would recreate the iptun and see if I could monitor the zone halt/boot process for the culprit, but instead I received an error from dladm: "object already exists". I didn't expect this. So I used mdb to inspect the dlmgmtd state. Sure enough the iptun exists in dlmgmtd. Okay, so if the link already exists, why doesn't it show up (in either the GZ or the NGZ)? If a link is not marked as active then it won't show up when you query dladm. When booting the zone on 20170119 the llflags for the iptun contained the value 0x3. So the problem is the link is not marked as active on the 20170202 PI. The linkactivate() function is responsible for marking a link as active. I used dtrace to verify this function was called on the 20170202 PI and that the dlmgmtlinkt had the correct llflags value. So the iptun link structure has the correct llflags when linkactivate() returns but when I inspect the same structure with mdb afterwards the value has changed. Sometime after linkactivate() completes some other process changed the llflags value. My next question was: where is linkactivate() called and what comes after it that might affect the llflags? I did another trace and got this stack. The dlmgmtupid() function calls dlmgmtwritedbentry() after linkactivate() and that can change the flags. But dtrace proved the llflags value was still 0x3 after returning from this function. With no obvious questions left I then asked cscope to show me all places where llflags is modified. As I walked through the list I used dtrace to eliminate candidates one at a time -- until I reached dlmgmtdestroycommon(). I would not have expected this function to show up during zone boot but sure enough it was being called somehow, and by someone. Who? Since there is no easy way to track door calls it was at this point I decided to go nuclear and use the dtrace stop action to stop dlmgmtd when it hits dlmgmtdestroycommon(). Then I used mdb -k to inspect the door info for the dlmgmtd threads and look for my culprit. The culprit is doupiptun() caused by the dladm up-iptun call. Using ptree I then realized this was happening as part of the zone boot under the network/iptun svc startup. At this point it was a matter of doing a zlogin to sos-zone and running truss on dladm up-iptun to find the real reason why dladmdestroydatalinkid() is called. So the link is marked as inactive because dladmgetsnapconf() fails with DLADMSTATUSDENIED which is mapped to EACCESS. Looking at the dladmgetsnapconf() code I see the following “The caller is in a non-global zone and the persistent configuration belongs to the global zone.” What this is saying is that if a link is marked "on loan" (meaning it's technically owned/created by the GZ but assigned/loaned to the NGZ) and the zone calling dladmgetsnapconf() is an NGZ then return EACCESS because the configuration of the link is up to the GZ, not the NGZ. This code is correct and should be enforced, but why is it tripping in PI 20170202 and not 20170119? It comes back to my earlier observation that in the 20170202 PI we marked the iptun as "on loan" but not in the older one. Why? Well as it turns out while fixing OS-5363 I fixed what I thought was a bug in linkactivate() When I first read this code it was my understanding that anytime we added a link to a zone's datalink list, by calling zoneadddatalink(), that link was then considered "on loan". My understanding was incorrect. The linkactivate() code has a subtleness that eluded me. There are two cases in linkactivate(): 1. The link is under an NGZ's datalink list but it's lllinkid doesn't reflect that (e.g., the link is found under zoneid 3 but lllinkid is 0). In this case the link is owned by the GZ but is being loaned to an NGZ and the link state should be updated accordingly. We get in this situation when dlmgmtd is restated for some reason (it must resync it's in-memory state with the state of the system). 2. The link is NOT under any NGZ's (zonecheckdatalink() is only concerned with NGZs) datalink list but its llzoneid holds the value of an NGZ. This indicates that the link is owned by an NGZ but for whatever reason is not currently under the NGZ's datalink list (e.g., because we are booting the zone and we now need to assign the link to its list). So the fix is to revert that one line change as well as add some clarifying comments and also some asserts to prevent further confusion in the future. + A nice breakdown by Ryan Zezeski of how he accidently introduced a regression, and how he tracked it down using dtrace and mdb New experimental statistics collector in master (http://dpaste.com/2YP0X9C) Master now has an in-kernel statistics collector which is enabled by default, and a (still primitive) user land program to access it. This recorder samples the state of the machine once every 10 seconds and records it in a large FIFO, all in-kernel. The FIFO typically contains 8192 entries, or around the last 23 hours worth of data. Statistics recorded include current load, user/sys/idle cpu use, swap use, VM fault rate, VM memory statistics, and counters for syscalls, path lookups, and various interrupt types. A few more useful counters will probably be added... I'd like to tie cpu temperature, fork rate, and exec rate in at some point, as well as network and disk traffic. The statistics gathering takes essentially no real overhead and is always on, so any user at the spur of the moment with no prior intent can query the last 23 hours worth of data. There is a user frontend to the data called 'kcollect' (its tied into the buildworld now). Currently still primitive. Ultimately my intention is to integrate it with a dbm database for long-term statistical data retention (if desired) using an occasional (like once-an-hour) cron-job to soak up anything new, with plenty of wiggle room due to the amount of time the kernel keeps itself. This is better and less invasive than having a userland statistics gathering script running every few minutes from cron and has the advantage of giving you a lot of data on the spur of the moment without having to ask for it before-hand. If you have gnuplot installed (pkg install gnuplot), kcollect can generate some useful graphs based on the in-kernel data. Well, it will be boring if the machine isn't doing anything :-). There are options to use gnuplot to generate a plot window in X or a .jpg or .png file, and other options to set the width and height and such. At the moment the gnuplot output uses a subset of statically defined fields to plot but ultimately the field list it uses will be specifiable. Sample image generated during a synth run (http://apollo.backplane.com/DFlyMisc/kcollect03.jpg) News Roundup openbsd changes of note 626 (https://www.tedunangst.com/flak/post/openbsd-changes-of-note-626) Hackerthon is imminent. There are two signals one can receive after accessing invalid memory, SIGBUS and SIGSEGV. Nobody seems to know what the difference is or should be, although some theories have been unearthed. Make some attempt to be slightly more consistent and predictable in OpenBSD. Introduces jiffies in an effort to appease our penguin oppressors. Clarify that IP.OF.UPSTREAM.RESOLVER is not actually the hostname of a server you can use. Switch acpibat to use _BIX before _BIF, which means you might see discharge cycle counts, too. Assorted clang compatibility. clang uses -Oz to mean optimize for size and -Os for something else, so make gcc accept -Oz so all makefiles can be the same. Adjust some hardlinks. Make sure we build gcc with gcc. The SSLcheckprivate_key function is a lie. Switch the amd64 and i386 compiler to clang and see what happens. We are moving towards using wscons (wstpad) as the driver for touchpads. Dancing with the stars, er, NET_LOCK(). clang emits lots of warnings. Fix some of them. Turn off a bunch of clang builtins because we have a strong preference that code use our libc versions. Some other changes because clang is not gcc. Among other curiosities, static variables in the special .openbsd.randomdata are sometimes assumed to be all zero, leading the clang optimizer to eliminate reads of such variables. Some more pledge rules for sed. If the script doesn't require opening new files, don't let it. Backport a bajillion fixes to stable. Release errata. RFC 1885 was obsoleted nearly 20 years ago by RFC 2463 which was obsoleted over 10 years ago by RFC 4443. We are probably not going back. Update libexpat to 2.2.3. vmm: support more than 3855MB guest memory. Merge libdrm 2.4.82. Disable SSE optimizations on i386/amd64 for SlowBcopy. It is supposed to be slow. Prevents crashes when talking to memory mapped video memory in a hypervisor. The $25 “FREEDOM Laptop!” (https://functionallyparanoid.com/2017/08/08/the-25-freedom-laptop/) Time to get back to the original intent of this blog – talking about my paranoid obsession with information security! So break out your tinfoil hats my friends because this will be a fun ride. I'm looking for the most open source / freedom respecting portable computing experience I can possibly find and I'm going to document my work in real-time so you will get to experience the ups (and possibly the downs) of that path through the universe. With that said, let's get rolling. When I built my OpenBSD router using the APU2 board, I discovered that there are some amd64 systems that use open source BIOS. This one used Coreboot and after some investigation I discovered that there was an even more paranoid open source BIOS called Libreboot out there. That started to feel like it might scratch my itch. Well, after playing around with some lower-powered systems like my APU2 board, my Thinkpad x230 and my SPARC64 boxes, I thought, if it runs amd64 code and I can run an open source operating system on it, the thing should be powerful enough for me to do most (if not all) of what I need it to do. At this point, I started looking for a viable machine. From a performance perspective, it looked like the Thinkpad x200, T400, T500 and W500 were all viable candidates. After paying attention on eBay for a while, I saw something that was either going to be a sweet deal, or a throwaway piece of garbage! I found a listing for a Thinkpad T500 that said it didn't come with a power adapter and was 100% untested. From looking at the photos, it seemed like there was nothing that had been molested about it. Obviously, nobody was jumping on something this risky so I thought, “what the heck” and dropped a bit at the opening price of $24.99. Well, guess what. I won the auction. Now to see what I got. When the laptop showed up, I discovered it was minus its hard drive (but the outside plastic cover was still in place). I plugged in my x230's power adapter and hit the button. I got lights and was dropped to the BIOS screen. To my eternal joy, I discovered that the machine I had purchased for $25 was 100% functional and included the T9400 2.54 GHz Core 2 Duo CPU and the 1680×1050 display panel. W00t! First things first, I need to get this machine a hard drive and get the RAM upgraded from the 2GB that it showed up with to 8GB. Good news is that these two purchases only totaled $50 for the pair. An aftermarket 9-cell replacement battery was another $20. Throw in a supported WiFi card that doesn't require a non-free blob from Libreboot at $5.99 off of eBay and $5 for a hard drive caddy and I'm looking at about $65 in additional parts bringing the total cost of the laptop, fully loaded up at just over $100. Not bad at all… Once all of the parts arrived and were installed, now for the fun part. Disassembling the entire thing down to the motherboard so we can re-flash the BIOS with Libreboot. The guide looks particularly challenging for this but hey, I have a nice set of screwdrivers from iFixit and a remarkable lack of fear when it comes to disassembling things. Should be fun! Well, fun didn't even come close. I wish I had shot some pictures along the way because at one point I had a heap of parts in one corner of my “workbench” (the dining room table) and just the bare motherboard, minus the CPU sitting in front of me. With the help of a clip and a bunch of whoops wires (patch cables), I connected my Beaglebone Black to the BIOS chip on the bare motherboard and attempted to read the chip. #fail I figured out after doing some more digging that you need to use the connector on the left side of the BBB if you hold it with the power connector facing away from you. In addition, you should probably read the entire process through instead of stopping at the exciting pinout connector diagram because I missed the bit about the 3.3v power supply need to have ground connected to pin 2 of the BIOS chip. Speaking of that infamous 3.3v power supply, I managed to bend a paperclip into a U shape and jam it into the connector of an old ATX power supply I had in a closet and source power from that. I felt like MacGyver for that one! I was able to successfully read the original Thinkpad BIOS and then flash the Libreboot + Grub2 VESA framebuffer image onto the laptop! I gulped loudly and started the reassembly process. Other than having some cable routing difficulties because the replacement WiFi card didn't have a 5Ghz antenna, it all went back together. Now for the moment of truth! I hit the power button and everything worked!!! At this point I happily scurried to download the latest snapshot of OpenBSD – current and install it. Well, things got a little weird here. Looks like I have to use GRUB to boot this machine now and GRUB won't boot an OpenBSD machine with Full Disk Encryption. That was a bit of a bummer for me. I tilted against that windmill for several days and then finally admitted defeat. So now what to do? Install Arch? Well, here's where I think the crazy caught up to me. I decided to be an utter sell out and install Ubuntu Gnome Edition 17.04 (since that will be the default DE going forward) with full disk encryption. I figured I could have fun playing around in a foreign land and try to harden the heck out of that operating system. I called Ubuntu “grandma's Linux” because a friend of mine installed it on his mom's laptop for her but I figured what the heck – let's see how the other half live! At this point, while I didn't have what I originally set out to do – build a laptop with Libreboot and OpenBSD, I did have a nice compromise that is as well hardened as I can possibly make it and very functional in terms of being able to do what I need to do on a day to day basis. Do I wish it was more portable? Of course. This thing is like a six or seven pounder. However, I feel much more secure in knowing that the vast majority of the code running on this machine is open source and has all the eyes of the community on it, versus something that comes from a vendor that we cannot inspect. My hope is that someone with the talent (unfortunately I lack those skills) takes an interest in getting FDE working with Libreboot on OpenBSD and I will most happily nuke and repave this “ancient of days” machine to run that! FreeBSD Programmers Report Ryzen SMT Bug That Hangs Or Resets Machines (https://hothardware.com/news/freebsd-programmers-report-ryzen-smt-bug-that-hangs-or-resets-machines) It's starting to look like there's an inherent bug with AMD's Zen-based chips that is causing issues on Unix-based operating systems, with both Linux and FreeBSD confirmed. The bug doesn't just affect Ryzen desktop chips, but also AMD's enterprise EPYC chips. It seems safe to assume that Threadripper will bundle it in, as well. It's not entirely clear what is causing the issue, but it's related to the CPU being maxed out in operations, thus causing data to get shifted around in memory, ultimately resulting in unstable software. If the bug is exercised a certain way, it can even cause machines to reset. The revelation about the issue on FreeBSD was posted to the official repository, where the issue is said to happen when threads can lock up, and then cause the system to become unstable. Getting rid of the issue seems as simple as disabling SMT, but that would then negate the benefits provided by having so many threads at-the-ready. On the Linux side of the Unix fence, Phoronix reports on similar issues, where stressing Zen chips with intensive benchmarks can cause one segmentation fault after another. The issue is so profound, that Phoronix Test Suite developer Michael Larabel introduced a special test that can be run to act as a bit of a proof-of-concept. To test another way, PTS can be run with this command: PTS_CONCURRENT_TEST_RUNS=4 TOTAL_LOOP_TIME=60 phoronix-test-suite stress-run build-linux-kernel build-php build-apache build-imagemagick Running this command will compile four different software projects at once, over and over, for an hour. Before long, segfaults should begin to appear (as seen in the shot above). It's not entirely clear if both sets of issues here are related, but seeing as both involve stressing the CPU to its limit, it seems likely. Whether or not this could be patched on a kernel or EFI level is something yet to be seen. TrueOS - UNSTABLE update: 8/7/17 (https://www.trueos.org/blog/unstable-update-8717/) A new UNSTABLE update for TrueOS is available! Released regularly, UNSTABLE updates are the full “rolling release” of TrueOS. UNSTABLE includes experimental features, bugfixes, and other CURRENT FreeBSD work. It is meant to be used by those users interested in using the latest TrueOS and FreeBSD developments to help test and improve these projects. WARNING: UNSTABLE updates are released primarily for TrueOS and FreeBSD testing/experimentation purposes. Update and run UNSTABLE “at your own risk”. Note: There was a CDN issue over the weekend that caused issues for early updaters. Everything appears to be resolved and the update is fully available again. If you encountered instability or package issues from updating on 8/6 or 8/5, roll back to a previous boot environment and run the update again. Changes: UNSTABLE .iso and .img files beginning with TrueOS-2017-08-3-x64 will be available to download from http://download.trueos.org/unstable/amd64/. Due to CDN issues, these are not quite available, look for them later today or tomorrow (8/8/17). This update resyncs all ports with FreeBSD as of 8.1.2017. This includes: New/updated FreeBSD Kernel and World & New DRM (Direct Rendering Manager) next. Experimental patch for libhyve-remote: (From htps://github.com/trueos/freebsd/commit/a67a73e49538448629ea27, thanks araujobsd) The libhyve-remote aims to abstract functionalities from other third party libraries like libvncserver, freerdp, and spice to be used in hypervisor implementation. With a basic data structure it is easy to implement any remote desktop protocol without digging into the protocol specification or third part libraries – check some of our examples.We don't statically link any third party library, instead we use a dynamic linker and load only the functionality necessary to launch the service.Our target is to abstract functionalities from libvncserver, freerdp and spice. Right now, libhyve-remote only supports libvncserver. It is possible to launch a VNC server with different screen resolution as well as with authentication.With this patch we implement support for bhyve to use libhyve-remote that basically abstract some functionalities from libvncserver. We can: Enable wait state, Enable authentication, Enable different resolutions< Have a better compression. Also, we add a new -s flag for vncserver, if the libhyve-remote library is not present in the system, we fallback to bhyve RFB implementation. For example: -s 2,fbuf,tcp=0.0.0.0:5937,w=800,h=600,password=1234567,vncserver,wait New SysAdm Client pages under the System Management category: System Control: This is an interface to browse all the sysctl's on the system. Devices: This lists all known information about devices on the designated system. Lumina Theming: Lumina is testing new theming functionality! By default (in UNSTABLE), a heavily customized version of the Qt5ct engine is included and enabled. This is intended to allow users to quickly adjust themes/icon packs without needing to log out and back in. This also fixes a bug in Insight with different icons loading for the side and primary windows. Look for more information about this new functionality to be discussed on the Lumina Website. Update to Iridium Web Browser: Iridium is a Chromium based browser built with user privacy and security as the primary concern, but still maintaining the speed and usability of Chromium. It is now up to date – give it a try and let us know what you think (search for iridium-browser in AppCafe). Beastie Bits GhostBSD 11.1 Alpha1 is ready (http://www.ghostbsd.org/11.1-ALPHA1) A Special CharmBUG announcement (https://www.meetup.com/CharmBUG/events/242563414/) Byhve Obfuscation Part 1 of Many (https://github.com/HardenedBSD/hardenedBSD/commit/59eabffdca53275086493836f732f24195f3a91d) New BSDMag is out (https://bsdmag.org/download/bsd-magazine-overriding-libc-functions/) git: kernel - Lower VMMAXUSER_ADDRESS to finalize work-around for Ryzen bug (http://lists.dragonflybsd.org/pipermail/commits/2017-August/626190.html) Ken Thompson corrects one of his biggest regrets (https://twitter.com/_rsc/status/897555509141794817) *** Feedback/Questions Hans - zxfer (http://dpaste.com/2SQYQV2) Harza - Google Summer of Code (http://dpaste.com/2175GEB) tadslot - Microphones, Proprietary software, and feedback (http://dpaste.com/154MY1H) Florian - ZFS/Jail (http://dpaste.com/2V9VFAC) Modifying a ZFS root system to a beadm layout (http://dan.langille.org/2015/03/11/modifying-a-zfs-root-system-to-a-beadm-layout/) ***
TheVape Week Episode 5 - Disassembling Vaping GroupThink
Today's conversation with Rosetta brings insight and revelation from Reverend Jenenne Macklin. She is a licensed clinical therapist with a master's degree in social work, now working as the Spirit and Riches coach. During her time in the field, Reverend Jenenne helped countless people change their lives, but found a serious lack of self value in women. The Reverend had every reason to not value herself, either. She journeyed through debt, being fired, and desperately attempting to regain control of her life. Jenenne speaks with authority because she worked her way up from the bottom. She began her life's work of instilling in women that who you are brings the value to every role you are in. Listen in as Jenenne propels you into making peace with your money by changing your mindset. [Tweet "How to Transform Your Relationship with Money with @JenenneM"] How you think about yourself impacts how you handle your money. Reverend Jenenne's mission is, “To empower women to know their value, to impact and transform their relationship with money.” She started out with a mixed up relationship with money. Jenenne, not understanding the implications, started accruing credit card debt early on in college. Much to her surprise, the debt and irresponsible choices stayed with her and her credit score. She spent time evading creditors and wondering how to regain control over her finances and her life. Jenenne began to see patterns of thinking and believing but could not seem to change herself or her clients. Untangling self worth from what you do to who you are connected Jenenne's spirituality to her business of coaching. Can you relate? Listen in and let Jenenne's journey motivate you! Moving from fear to faith. Do you think you're the only entrepreneur with debt? Or the only one with habits of spending money on shoes? Do you think no one else is struggling with historical residue or an ingrained idea of how things are “supposed” to be? Jenenne recommends similar action steps that she took to reboot her thinking. Hear how she involved her spirituality in pursuing business ownership. She moved herself away from a victim mentality to confidently controlling her money. Jenenne offers proven prosperity principles to help you make peace with money. She picked up the phone and called her creditors instead of running from them. Even though it was scary, she made a budget. She asked herself, and will ask you, “Do I want a different kind of life? Or these shoes?” Learn how Reverend Jenenne put this plan into action on this episode. [Tweet "Reframing the stories in your head about money and self-worth, on this episode"] Strategies to stay in alignment with your values and move forward. Whether you are a first generation entrepreneur or not, you will be met with resistance as you move forward. Reverend Jenenne rediscovered her value, but not without obstacles to overcome. She examined what voices she was surrounded by and if she needed to leave some circles of people behind. Are you in a conversation of support? Do you only hear discouragement? Jenenne knows first-hand that you cannot survive this journey alone. She advises simple but powerful strategies to keep you in line with the changes you'll need to make. On this episode, Reverend Jenenne walks us through the strategies she implements daily, from waking in the morning until she falls asleep at night. She offers a fancy way of saying, “No” when discouraging voices leak in. Listen in for ways you can implement lasting habits to daily set yourself up for success. Bringing the missing pieces to your business. How did Jenenne find that missing piece and connect her spirituality to her business? Rosetta ends this conversation with Jenenne's best advice and an anthem to know yourself and your value. The shift to understanding her own value changed Jenenne's path. She is ready for you to change your path, too. She shares resources, authors, books, websites and endless help for your journey. Jenenne divulges what inspires her and how she stands her ground in continued prosperity. You'll find wisdom and inspiration from Reverend Jenenne's journey on this episode of Happy Black Woman. [Tweet "Release yourself from historical residue that impacts your money choices, with @JenenneM"] Outline of this great episode: [0:30] Rosetta's welcome and introduction to this episode with Reverend Jenenne Macklin. [1:50] The mission and work of Spirit and Riches coach, Reverend Jenenne. [3:10] Jenenne's journey from licensed clinical therapist to making the empowering women her business and life's work. [7:30] Disassembling the way we're “supposed” to approach debt, money, and starting a business. [8:13] Practical action steps for entrepreneurs, who are caught up in debt, to regain control. [12:46] How Jenenne advises her clients to overcome obstacles that arise in entrepreneurship. [16:06] Breaking free from the historical residue that influences your choices and decisions. [17:34] Quieting the voices of disagreement and finding support for your path. [20:05] Standing your ground in prosperity. [21:01] Strategies Jenenne uses to stay in alignment with her values. [25:08] The books and resources that inspire Reverend Jenenne. [27:01] Connecting your spirituality to your business. [29:26] Jenenne's best advice for women incorporating who they are into their business. [32:50] Jenenne's website and resources. Resources mentioned in this episode: BOOKS: “Think and Grow Rich” by Napoleon Hill Lisa Nichols http://motivatingthemasses.com Joseph Campbell http://www.goodreads.com/author/show/20105.Joseph_Campbell Edgar Cayce http://www.edgarcayce.org Abraham Hicks',http://www.abraham-hicks.com/lawofattractionsource/index.php Reverend Jenenne's website: http://spiritandriches.com Tweets you can use to share this episode: [Tweet "“My mission is to empower women to know their value, to impact and transform their relationship with money” - @JenenneM"] [Tweet "“Know. Your. Value.” - @JenenneM"] Thanks for listening! Please subscribe, rate and review… Thanks so much for joining us on the podcast this week! Be sure to leave me a note in the comments below with your #1 takeaway from the show. Don't forget to subscribe to the show to get FREE automatic notifications when each new episode goes live! Subscribe via iTunes (for iPhone) Subscribe via Stitcher (for Android) Finally, please consider leaving an honest rating and review for The Happy Black Woman Podcast on iTunes or Stitcher to help spread the word about the show and help more black women find our tribe! Join the Happy Black Woman Facebook Tribe: Join our Happy Black Woman Facebook Tribe to connect and network with like-minded women from around the world! Click here to request access to our private Facebook group.
Dr. Carol Francis invites Tom Paladino who invented a Scalar instrument based on Tesla Technology. Scalar treatments claim to promotes health and wellbeing with phenomenal results. Paladino claims to have successfully used his scalar instrument to remotely disassemble pathogens in the body (including HIV, Herpes, Candida and the Ebola virus.) He also uses the instrument to reassemble nutrients and balance the chakras. The Scientific community has known about Scalar energy for a long time and Governments are using it for their own purposes; however, Tom is a pioneer in Scalar Energy because he is using it to promote health and wellbeing. Tom has also created a Hormone Therapy treatment for both men and women, as well as a Fat Metabolizing treatment which facilitates weight loss without dieting. Here is a sample of the results people have experienced from using Scalar Energy treatments: *Disassembling of harmful pathogens in the human body, results indicated by blood tests *Feelings of being stronger and younger with greater vigor and vitality *Fading of wrinkles and dark spots *Softer, clearer skin *Weight loss without trying *Elimination of Celiac disease related symptoms (I have experienced this myself) *Elimination of Psoriasis *Negative test results for HIV, Hepatitis C, Herpes, Lyme disease and other previously perceived incurable ailments *Deeper, more restful sleep *Feelings of being happier and more positive *Other results, too numerous to mention Join Dr. Carol Francis, Psychologist, Counselor and Hypnotherapist in Los Angeles Beach Cities area for this intriguing alternative treatment exploration.
Learn more at www.PureSoulAlchemy.com This show is a healing session on Disassembling our Illusory Relationship Fantasies. Tune in whether you are single or in a relationship wishing for more from your partner. We will vibrationally share our “...and they lived happily ever after” stories and allow them to be released so that the reality of a grounded, warm, loving relationship can take it’s place. Join in for this 30 minute soul re-alignment process! A transmission of channeled healing technologies which restructure your creative source grid. Put your healing request into chat anytime during the show. Have in mind, any relationship fantasy that you'd like transformational assistance with. This is optional and not necessary to receive the full benefit of the session. Pure Soul Alchemy is a channeled energetic field where transformative operations and procedures are enacted for you while you comfortably relax. Through Gabriella's perception and vocalization of the inner energetic landscape, we are opened in ways which allow for these processes to come into our physical reality and enact change on our behalf. Plan to be laying down for the duration of the session. www.PureSoulAlchemy.com
Maurice and Richard are back for another discussion episode. This time they turn their attention to Marvel's The Avengers.