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The beautiful Drush of the Chasam Soffer. Source Sheet: https://res.cloudinary.com/ouinternal/image/upload/outorah%20pdf/p6pqn7dpins0a5d1vzad.pdf --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/yechezkel-hartman/support
A few explanations based on Drush. Source Sheet: https://res.cloudinary.com/ouinternal/image/upload/outorah%20pdf/damomkugeu6s1jo8ifje.pdf --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/yechezkel-hartman/support
Can we truly learn from our past mistakes, or are we doomed to repeat them? Join us on this episode of the Parsha Review Podcast as we journey through Parshas Devarim, uncovering Moses' powerful words of guidance and reflection to the children of Israel. Together, we navigate the four layers of Torah understanding, PARDES—Pshat, Remez, Drush, and Sod—drawing inspiration from the Gaon of Vilna, who mastered these depths so profoundly that he no longer needed commentaries. We also provide essential insights into the cautious and structured approach required for studying Kabbalah, likening it to an ascent of Mount Everest.As we transition into the month of Av and the nine-day mourning period, we reflect on the enduring lessons from the destruction of the Jewish Temples, particularly the devastating impact of baseless hatred. Through compelling stories, such as the community support for a struggling father in Ashdod, we underscore the importance of compassion and unity. This episode challenges us to consciously transform and grow, even after witnessing miracles, emphasizing the significance of judging others favorably and fostering a positive outlook in our daily lives. Embark on this enriching exploration of Torah study and timeless wisdom, and uncover the transformative power of perspective and compassion._____________This episode (Ep 6.43) of the Parsha Review Podcast by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe on Parshas Devarim is dedicated in Honor of Gary Nathanson & in honor of our Holy Soldiers in the Battlefield and our Torah Scholars in the Study Halls who are fighting for the safety of our nation!Download & Print the Parsha Review Notes:https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ncaRyoH5iJmGGoMZs9y82Hz2ofViVouv?usp=sharingRecorded in the TORCH Centre - Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on August 6, 2024, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on August 8, 2024_____________DONATE to TORCH: Please consider supporting the podcasts by making a donation to help fund our Jewish outreach and educational efforts at https://www.torchweb.org/support.php. Thank you!_____________SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to other podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Prayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.transistor.fm/episodesParsha Review Podcast: https://parsha.tansistor.fm/episodesLiving Jewishly Podcast: https://jewishly.transistor.fm/episodesThinking Talmudist Podcast: https://talmud.transistor.fm/episodesUnboxing Judaism Podcast: https://unboxing.transistor.fm/episodesRabbi Aryeh Wolbe Podcast Collection: https://collection.transistor.fm/episodesFor a full listing of podcasts available by TORCH at https://www.TORCHpodcasts.com_____________EMAIL your questions, comments, and feedback: awolbe@torchweb.org_____________Please visit www.torchweb.org to see a full listing of our outreach and educational resources available in the Greater Houston area! ★ Support this podcast ★
Can we truly learn from our past mistakes, or are we doomed to repeat them? Join us on this episode of the Parsha Review Podcast as we journey through Parshas Devarim, uncovering Moses' powerful words of guidance and reflection to the children of Israel. Together, we navigate the four layers of Torah understanding, PARDES—Pshat, Remez, Drush, and Sod—drawing inspiration from the Gaon of Vilna, who mastered these depths so profoundly that he no longer needed commentaries. We also provide essential insights into the cautious and structured approach required for studying Kabbalah, likening it to an ascent of Mount Everest.As we transition into the month of Av and the nine-day mourning period, we reflect on the enduring lessons from the destruction of the Jewish Temples, particularly the devastating impact of baseless hatred. Through compelling stories, such as the community support for a struggling father in Ashdod, we underscore the importance of compassion and unity. This episode challenges us to consciously transform and grow, even after witnessing miracles, emphasizing the significance of judging others favorably and fostering a positive outlook in our daily lives. Embark on this enriching exploration of Torah study and timeless wisdom, and uncover the transformative power of perspective and compassion._____________This episode (Ep 6.43) of the Parsha Review Podcast by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe on Parshas Devarim is dedicated in Honor of Gary Nathanson & in honor of our Holy Soldiers in the Battlefield and our Torah Scholars in the Study Halls who are fighting for the safety of our nation!Download & Print the Parsha Review Notes:https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1ncaRyoH5iJmGGoMZs9y82Hz2ofViVouv?usp=sharingRecorded in the TORCH Centre - Levin Family Studios (B) to a live audience on August 6, 2024, in Houston, Texas.Released as Podcast on August 8, 2024_____________DONATE to TORCH: Please consider supporting the podcasts by making a donation to help fund our Jewish outreach and educational efforts at https://www.torchweb.org/support.php. Thank you!_____________SUBSCRIBE and LISTEN to other podcasts by Rabbi Aryeh Wolbe: NEW!! Prayer Podcast: https://prayerpodcast.transistor.fm/episodesJewish Inspiration Podcast: https://inspiration.transistor.fm/episodesParsha Review Podcast: https://parsha.tansistor.fm/episodesLiving Jewishly Podcast: https://jewishly.transistor.fm/episodesThinking Talmudist Podcast: https://talmud.transistor.fm/episodesUnboxing Judaism Podcast: https://unboxing.transistor.fm/episodesRabbi Aryeh Wolbe Podcast Collection: https://collection.transistor.fm/episodesFor a full listing of podcasts available by TORCH at https://www.TORCHpodcasts.com_____________EMAIL your questions, comments, and feedback: awolbe@torchweb.org_____________Please visit www.torchweb.org to see a full listing of our outreach and educational resources available in the Greater Houston area! ★ Support this podcast ★
Doha, Qatar - “Qatar Airways Cargo confirms that Mark Drusch has been appointed as Chief Officer Cargo effective immediately.” This in Qatar's Press Release: “with over 25 years in senior airline management roles, Mark is a well-known figure in the aviation world. His most recent role was SVP Revenue Management, Alliances and Strategy at Qatar Airways where he led the development and implementation of the company's revenue strategy as well as managing strategic alliances with key partner airlines. Prior to joining Qatar Airways, Mark spent 20 years at Delta Air Lines, Continental Airlines and Lufthansa LSG Sky Chefs as Senior Vice President where he led the transformation in commercial airline strategy execution, revenue management, network planning and alliances. In addition, Mark was CEO and co-founder of e-Rewards and e-Miles, leaders in online panel research and online advertising.” In other words, we are talking of a man with a distinguished background, were it necessary to remind the public. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/geoffrey-arend/support
Two ways to understand it based on Drush. Source Sheets: https://res.cloudinary.com/ouinternal/image/upload/outorah pdf/f3yt6q74mmiqhuixgi36.pdf --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/yechezkel-hartman/support
In this shiur, delivered to Mevaseret alumni at Lander College for Men, Rav Burg explains why Yehuda said that their brother (Yosef) had died. Rashi teaches that Yehuda lied to avoid having to produce Yosef. On a level of Drush, Rav Burg explains that to impact Yosef, Yehuda knew that he needed to speak words from the heart. In an honest moment Yehuda came to the recognition that Yosef could not have survived Mitzrayim without his brothers.
We are taking a break from the Bet Halevi today, to share a beautiful that I saw over the weekend from Rav Don Segal, one of the great Mashgichim of the generation. He says that David Hamelech says (Tehilim perek 27), “ אַחַ֤ת ׀ שָׁאַ֣לְתִּי מֵֽאֵת־יְהֹוָה֮ אוֹתָ֢הּ אֲבַ֫קֵּ֥שׁ Achat Sha'alti/There's One thing that I ask from Hashem, and that's what I request.” What is that One thing? שִׁבְתִּ֣י בְּבֵית־יְ֭הֹוָה כׇּל־יְמֵ֣י חַיַּ֑י לַחֲז֥וֹת בְּנֹעַם־יְ֝הֹוָ֗ה וּלְבַקֵּ֥ר בְּהֵֽיכָלֽו “To sit in the house of Hashem all days of my life, to gaze in the sweetness of God, to visit in His sanctuary. So simply, that's the one thing he's asking for. But Rav Segal explains, in what we call a Drush (which means it's not the simple reading of the pasuk), that the word אחת Achat also shows up where is says, בָּא חֲבַקּוּק וְהֶעֱמִידָן עַל אַחַת, שֶׁנֶּאֱמַר ״ Habakuk came and put the the entire religion on one pilla (on one mitzvah). And what is that? וְצַדִּיק בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ יִחְיֶה״. The righteous man lives with his Emunah. It's not just that the righteous man has Emunah in his mind, but he lives with Emunah. (This, by the way, is the source for the amazingly successful Living Emunah series. It's called Living Emunah because of וְצַדִּיק בֶּאֱמוּנָתוֹ יִחְיֶה״ Sadik B'Emunato Yihyeh The righteous man lives by his Emunah. That's where Rabbi Ashear got the title- from Habakkuk) So Habakuk took the whole religion and put it on one thing. Says Rav Don Segal, that's what David Hamelech meant when he said, אַחַ֤ת ׀ שָׁאַ֣לְתִּי מֵֽאֵת ה׳ “ I ask from Hashem, I want the Achat !I want the ONE thing.. I want that ONE main thing. That's what I'm asking Hashem for. Give me Emunah. Give me Living Emunah. I want to live with Emunah. That's all that I want.” That's what David Hamelech was asking for. What does the continuation of the pasuk mean? שִׁבְתִּ֣י בְּבֵית־יְ֭הֹוָה כׇּל־יְמֵ֣י חַיַּ֑י Shivti B'Bet Hashem.. I'll dwell in the house of Hashem all days of my life. If I have that Emunah, and I'm living Emunah , then I am in the house of God all days of my life. Wherever I go becomes the house of God because I have that Emunah, and so God's with me wherever I go. And that is Yosef HaSadik as well. Wherever Yosef HaSadik goes, the words of Hashem are on his mouth. Wherever he goes, they see God is with him, because he's always praying. He's always whispering. He's always saying something. His boss says, “ What are you saying? Are you trying to put incantations on me?” He says, “No . I'm praying that I should find favor in your eyes. I'm thanking Hashem that I was successful.” All day, God's name is on his mouth. Always . And that's why Vayehi Hashem Et Yosef/Hashem is with Yosef and brings him success. And that is why, although Yosef Hasadik is in Mitzrayim, in the most contaminated of places, he continues to grow and grow and grow like he's in the Bet Midrash. We have to realize that Yosef became Yosef HaSadik despite the fact that he was stolen from the yeshiva. He gave up the best 22 years of his life- from 17 till 39! He could have grown and grown and grown in yeshiva to become outstanding. And yet he did it in Mitzrayim, in the house of Potiphar, in a jail, in the king's palace. How did he do that? The answer is, wherever he went, he was B'bet Hashem. He was always in the Bet Midrash. He was always in the house of study. Why? Because, “ Achat Sha'alti M'et Hashem/ I asked for the ONE. I asked for Sadik B'Emunato Yihyeh. I asked for that pillar. When you have that pillar, it's Shivti b'Bet Hashem Kol Yeme Hayai I'm in the house of God always. I see the sweetness of God. I'm visiting in His palace, His sanctuary. ” When David Hamelech says (Perek 116) אֶ֭תְהַלֵּךְ לִפְנֵ֣י יְהֹוָ֑ה בְּ֝אַרְצ֗וֹת הַחַיִּֽים I'm going to walk in front of God, in the land of the living,” most commentaries say Arsot HaChaim refers to Eretz Yisrael, a place where God's Shechinah is. That's what it means. “I'll go in front of Hashem.” But the Gemara in Masechet Yoma, (71A) says that it refers to the marketplace . Why is it called Arsot HaChaim ? Because it's where you buy your food. That's the simple explanation. Others say it refers to Gan Eden. How could we have such different explanations? The Ben Ish Chai says in the sefer Ben Yoyada on Yoma, it means, “ I always see myself in front of God. Even when I'm buying things for bodily functions, I'm always in front of God. ” That's David Hamelech. That's the Sadik B'Emunato Yihyeh. As long as he's focusing on Hashem, living in Emunah, he's always in Gan Eden. He's always in Bet Hashem, wherever he is. That's the power of Achat, the power of One. One is Emunah. Have a wonderful day
Viel ist geschehen in den vergangenen Jahren und insbesondere seit dem Release der Definitive Edition von AoE II. Insbesondere die Art und Weise, wie Spieleröffnungen gestaltet sind, hat sich stark verändert. Wir nehmen dies zum Anlass, in einer neuen Reihe über Strategien zu philosophieren. Den Beginn machen wird mit einer Folge über den Dark Age Rush (Drush) sowie Men at Arms (M@A) Openings. Unter anderem geht es darum, welche Arten des Drushes es gibt, wann lieber Men at Arms geöffnet werden sollte und welche Follow-ups es üblicher Weise gibt. Viel Spaß beim Hören wünschen Felix & Christian Ihr möchtet unser Projekt unterstützen? Dann geht das hier: steadyhq.com/de/startthegamealready/about Homepage: www.startthegamealready.de Discord: discord.com/invite/SYp9dCXYsK Timecodes: 00:00 Das schlechteste Intro der Welt 04:11 Grundlagen des Drushs 13:45 Pre- & Postmill Drush 24:32 Follow-ups 30:00 Drush FC 34:23 French Drush 41:08 Stances 42:56 Men at Arms 56:05 Maps 58:02 Team Games Musik: "Spring War" vom offiziellen AoE 2 Soundtrack
Length: 47 minutesSynopsis: This morning (6/2/23), in our Friday morning Q&A, we took up five questions: (1) How should a person relate to teshuvah on aveiros one no longer does? (2) What is the Torah's stance on speaking about a person in an embarrassing way in the context of tochachah, considering how the pesukim openly talk about the faults of individuals? (3) What is svara? (4) What are the parameters of giving "drush" on halachic topics? (5) Is there such a thing as halachos which don't fall under the headings of any of the Taryag mitzvos?Please feel free to leave your questions, insights, and feedback in the comments! -----מקורות:רמב"ם - משנה תורה: ספר המדע, הלכות תשובה ב:א-ב; ז:גרמב"ם - משנה תורה: ספר המדע, הלכות דעות ו:ז-חיד פשוטה שםדברים כב:חRav Pesach Chait, "On Scientific and Halachic Thought": https://drive.google.com/file/d/1Yhre8PzRLCK46saHe1O8S6Y4MXuvzjNy/view?usp=sharingRabbi Matt Schneeweiss, "Three Types of Reasons for Mitzvos": https://rabbischneeweiss.substack.com/p/parashas-chukas-three-types-of-reasons -----This week's Torah content has been sponsored by Isaiah Blanks and Joey & Estee Lichter in honor of Tamar Lichter Blanks receiving her PhD in mathematics.-----If you've gained from what you've learned here, please consider contributing to my Patreon at www.patreon.com/rabbischneeweiss. Alternatively, if you would like to make a direct contribution to the "Rabbi Schneeweiss Torah Content Fund," my Venmo is @Matt-Schneeweiss, and my Zelle and PayPal are mattschneeweiss at gmail.com. Even a small contribution goes a long way to covering the costs of my podcasts, and will provide me with the financial freedom to produce even more Torah content for you.If you would like to sponsor a day's or a week's worth of content, or if you are interested in enlisting my services as a teacher or tutor, you can reach me at rabbischneeweiss at gmail.com. Thank you to my listeners for listening, thank you to my readers for reading, and thank you to my supporters for supporting my efforts to make Torah ideas available and accessible to everyone.-----Substack: rabbischneeweiss.substack.com/Patreon: patreon.com/rabbischneeweissYouTube: youtube.com/rabbischneeweissInstagram: instagram.com/rabbischneeweiss/"The Stoic Jew" Podcast: thestoicjew.buzzsprout.com"Machshavah Lab" Podcast: machshavahlab.buzzsprout.com"The Mishlei Podcast": mishlei.buzzsprout.com"Rambam Bekius" Podcast: rambambekius.buzzsprout.com"The Tefilah Podcast": tefilah.buzzsprout.comOld Blog: kolhaseridim.blogspot.com/WhatsApp Group: https://chat.whatsapp.com/GEB1EPIAarsELfHWuI2k0HAmazon Wishlist: amazon.com/hz/wishlist/ls/Y72CSP86S24W?ref_=wl_sharel
Machlokes the Rashba and Ran explained based on Drush. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/yechezkel-hartman/support
If you have been around the world of Jewish thought for a while, you might likely already be familiar with the concept encapsulated in the acronym - PaRDeS. This system of studying and interpreting Torah is ordered into (4) methods of interpretation; Peshat, Remez, Drush, and Sod.In this episode, we will unpack these levels and introduce you to a new way of reading scripture.Subscribe to our site for more:https://www.thehiddenorchard.comFor a written version:https://www.thehiddenorchard.com/peshat-pardes/
Hey Squids, today we have the pleasure to receive on board one of our brother from Marbella, Drush. After the success of African Typic Collection, he collaborate with Moojo for Enye Nyame for another banger summer track. Recently moved as resident Dj in Momento & Playa padre Marbella, Drush is definitely one to watch for the future. We Rise By Lifting Others.
Episode 102 How do we mark the passage of time, and how do we encounter the divine within it? From Shabbat to the Eucharist, our religious rituals play with time in unexpected ways. Take some time with us and explore the many ways that you can create sacred time wherever and whenever you are. Support this podcast on Patreon at https://www.patreon.com/DowntheWormholepodcast More information at https://www.downthewormhole.com/ produced by Zack Jackson music by Zack Jackson and Barton Willis Transcript This transcript was automatically generated by www.otter.ai, and as such contains errors (especially when multiple people are talking). As the AI learns our voices, the transcripts will improve. We hope it is helpful even with the errors. Zack Jackson 00:05 You are listening to the down the wormhole podcast exploring the strange and fascinating relationship between science and religion. This week our hosts are Kendra Holt-Moore 00:15 Kendra Holt, more assistant professor of religion at Bethany college and my favorite TV show all time is Avatar The Last Airbender Zack Jackson 00:25 Zack Jackson, UCC pastor and Reading Pennsylvania and my favorite TV show of all time is Dr. Joe Ian Binns 00:31 Ian Binns Associate Professor of elementary science education at UNC Charlotte. And I got a lot of TV shows that kept popping up, but the one that just keeps coming to mind right now, I would say is probably Ted LA. So Rachael Jackson 00:45 Rachel Jackson, Rabbi Agoudas, Israel, congregation Hendersonville, North Carolina and favorite TV show of all time is the Big Bang Theory. Yeah, that's a good one is a good one. And this question is sort of a, you know, a little bit of an in and an intro to what we're talking about today, because it's our favorite TV show of all time. And that's what we're going to be talking about today. Thanks, like, Zack Jackson 01:15 I segue. I like that even smoother. Rachael Jackson 01:23 So we are talking about time. And unlike the the last two episodes, where we actually I think at this point, we'll have three episodes where we've talked about time, I wanted to talk about more of a corporeal human time and the experience and really just add the Jewish lens to this. We are saying before we really started recording that. Wow, I love being Jewish, and I have no problems talking about it and sharing it. I don't use that and present that as the lens. But that's really where my focus is going to be today. Because that's how I really understand time and its meaning. And so I'm going to give several examples of what that's going to look like. But I want to start with sort of a poetic read. This comes from reformed judaism.org. They have a blog series, and this comes from almost 10 years ago, but time doesn't matter. And words like this, get held thanks to social media and the internet. We can listen to them 10 years from now or 10 years from when it was written till now. So, but just giving it a little bit of a frame, this was written by Stacy's does Robinson, Zoho Nam live Aha. So she died. Not too not too long ago, and she died of COVID, unfortunately. But she's an incredible author and incredible poet. And so this is what she tells us. When my son was born, I cradled him against my heart, arms wrapped to gently get surely around his small and fragile body, I would stand holding him. Our breaths mingles our hearts beating in an elegant call and response, one beat to the next. And I would sway a slow and gentle side to side rock that lasted for the eternity, that exists between heartbeats, I could feel his body relax into the motion, like oceans, like drifting, like peace, above the simplicity of that rhythm, the warmth of him the smell of his newness and his infinite possibilities. As he drifted as he gem told my own body would react in kind, and I followed him, these moments became our own Fibonacci sequence, the delicate curve of our bodies in motion at rest, in motion again, twined in an eternal spiral, more intimate than a lover's kiss repeated again and again. And again. There's so much time that passes. Now, this is me, that is the end of what I'm going to share of hers for now at least verbatim. But I'll reference a little bit that too. There's so much time that passes in a heartbeat. If you ask someone, how long does this take? There cannot possibly be a single answer. It depends. But what were you how are you getting there? How old were you? How long has COVID lasted Technically speaking, technically, I can remember March of 2020. March 9, we did Perot, I, this is how I'm wound in Jewish time right now. So we did Param. And we had these Inklings. And there was something happening to the west to the east of us and something in a different country. And we weren't quite sure what was happening. And we did Param. And then we didn't come back to the sanctuary for 15 months, but in open the building for 15 months. And that's still been, that was still nine months ago. And here we are. My son, seven years old, finally got vaccinated in December. And there's still people here on this podcast and here who are listening, whose children have not yet been able to be vaccinated. So how long is this pandemic is still going on param for us is in three weeks. We'll be back in our sanctuary together. And we'll be wearing our masks, because that's what perm is about wearing masks. The problem is we'll be wearing two masks, the ones over our nose in our mouth and the one over our eyes, the ones that is a custom and the one that is for protection. So how long is COVID My son was in kindergarten when he got sent home. And he was at home in first grade. And he did virtual in second grade. And when I went and saw him this morning for STEM week show Intel he was in his classroom, five feet away from all the other students still wearing his mask, just like they all did. Not having any playdates. Because it's COVID. So how long is COVID for him? His whole life. He doesn't know times before COVID existed. That wasn't part of his memory. How long is COVID for me? A very, very long time. But something that I can see a life before and a life after. Because time, while quantifiable is meaningless. If we only use a clock, we have to use a relative understanding of time and how we relate to it. And in Judaism, it's I find it so beautiful. That we create time. So let me ask you, the three of you. When is Hanukkah Ian Binns 07:49 right before Christmas. Rachael Jackson 07:51 Right before Christmas. Ian Binns 07:55 The winter season? Rachael Jackson 07:57 Winter season. Ian Binns 07:59 Typically when What's the date? Kendra Holt-Moore 08:02 Is this a trick question? Zack Jackson 08:03 No. It's never the same day all the time. What if we lived every day like it was Rachael Jackson 08:15 a miracle. Clean up your stuff, rededicate yourself to your people and your God Zack Jackson 08:22 and slaughter some solutions and Rachael Jackson 08:25 don't forget to pick up the pig guts. Like that's just messy. Could we not? That's right. Yeah. So what is Hanukkah? Ian Binns 08:33 December actual real Rachael Jackson 08:35 true. When Zack Jackson 08:36 I mean, it's different every year, right? It's the lunar calendar. Rachael Jackson 08:40 The 25th of Kislev. You're giving me What's this? 25th of Kislev? Ah, that's the same every year the 25th of Kislev. It doesn't change. I know exactly when it is. But Zack Jackson 08:54 does it change according it only changes from my perspective, Rachael Jackson 08:57 right? It only changes from our calendar because the majority of our calendar is the Gregorian calendar, not the Jewish calendar. So when is Hanukkah in December, ish this last year, it was in November this coming year, it's going to overlap with Christmas and if we thought it was bad last year where there was nothing Hanukkah, nothing's gonna happen this year because Christmas will win out. There will be not even inkling of Hanukkah wrapping paper. That is what it is. Yeah. So when is it? Well, it depends whose perspective you're asking. And it depends how excited you are. I don't really care that much about Hanukkah. It's kind of a tiny little nothing holiday I only get excited because I have a child. We have the same question of when is Passover? When is Purim when is Rosh Hashanah, I have an exact date for when those things are. But that's not how I live my life. When is Shabbat? The Israeli calendar is marvelous. I love it. So Jews are terrible at naming things like absolutely terrible. Imagine if all of our holidays in America were named similar to July 4. Like if you didn't know, and you came into America and everyone's like, Whoa, it's July 4. And you have no idea what that means. It is just a date on the calendar. Right? It doesn't tell you Oh, it's independence day. It's Memorial Day. It's Veterans Day. It's Presidents Day. You know what the day is? Almost all of the Jewish holidays are to Shabbat of the ninth of have to have the 15th of have to be Shabbat, the 15th of the month of Shabbat like this is not helpful. Except for some biblical holidays. Where, you know, Rosh Hashanah isn't actually called Rosh Hashanah. Yom true on the day of the sounding it's the day you get to go make noise with the kazoo marvelous. So when we name the days of the week, we don't use Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, right? Those are Greek and Roman gods. Those are not the days of the week. It's yom, Yom Sheni, Yom slushy, Yom obra, day one, day two, day three, day four, day five, day six and Shabbat. We don't say Yom seven, we don't say the seventh day we say Shabbat. It is different in and of itself. Because our frame of reference is not that it's Saturday, our frame of reference is that this day is completely set apart from all other days. When we look on our calendars as Americans, we look on the calendar and go okay, Monday through Friday, those days are particular and then oh, Saturday, Sunday. That's what we're gearing for. we frame our mind differently because of our response to time. One other sort of piece that I want to add for how we then mix time, so I've only been talking about my time, right? I, in this day and age, I'm looking forward to you know, this next upcoming poram Or this upcoming PESA or this upcoming Shabbat, right like we're recording this on a Friday, and I'm going home, oh boy. I have to lead services and five hours and I haven't written my sermon. Oh, boy. Right. That's so exciting. So how do I? How do I understand that time, like not just freaking out that it's five hours from now, and I haven't finished my sermon or started it. Tell people. But when I think about Passover, which is the story of the Jews leaving Exodus, or leaving Egypt in the Exodus, and we can talk in chat, we can check on chat on our Facebook groups about how literal we might take that. Right, we can that's not the conversation that we're gonna have at this moment, though, did did the Exodus actually happen? So that's not going to be part of my conversation. But there is the question of not the question. I shouldn't frame it that way. When we celebrate Passover and commemorate the Exodus, there are four children. The wise child's this simple child's, the child's who is so simple, they do not even know how to ask, and then the wicked child. Okay. So if the why the y's child says, Tell me all about this and what is the purpose of these greens? And what is the purpose of this and ask all these questions? What do you think the wicked child is? Non rhetorical? There's no wrong answers. Zack Jackson 14:32 I feel like there's a few wrong it's Rachael Jackson 14:35 a right answer, but there's no wrong answers. Zack Jackson 14:37 Okay, cuz I'm thinking an Egyptian child would be pretty bad. But that's probably not the answer here. Kendra Holt-Moore 14:45 Kendra, ah, I'm trying to remember because I've been to Rachael Jackson 14:50 a few. Save right because you've been to a few supreme Kendra Holt-Moore 14:53 Yeah. And the wicked child when we go around the table. There's always like handful of people that are like, I think I'm the wicked child. So, I'm trying to remember because I think there's a couple that I get confused, but isn't the way your child, the one who, like asks too many questions or just is like a little bit. Like, out of the status quo of how they, like, think and problem solve. And so they're more disruptive, which is not, you know, I mean, it's like the wicked child, but in different contexts. It's not necessarily about like being good or bad. It's just different. Rachael Jackson 15:31 Okay? It's kind of you're kind of mixing several of them in together. I, there's Kendra Holt-Moore 15:35 two that I'm always like. So the Rachael Jackson 15:37 wise one is the one who's always asking the questions. This is what we want, right? Yay. Asking questions. The wicked one asks, but a single question. And he says, What does this have to do with me? Zack Jackson 15:54 Huh? Okay. Rachael Jackson 15:57 Yeah. Whoa. And when we read the text, when we go through the Haggadah, and we we read, we asked, we say my father was a wandering Aramean. Okay, spoiler alert. My dad wasn't my dad was born in Australia. Like, he was not a wandering Aramean. But we say it in the present tense. God took me out of Egypt with an outstretched hand, bah, bah, bah, bah, bah, right? I was there. I wasn't, I was there. I am there. I am going through this. And when we sing the same song, who is like you, Oh, mighty when Myka mocha by alien. I don't know who is like you're among the gods who? Who was this? Who took me out of this place? Who is taking me through redemption? Not going through the theology piece here today, just looking at time. Well, that exists in the Bible that exists in the Torah. That was theoretically, you know, 3300 years ago, I wasn't there. I'm only 41. But I was there. This is my story. This is my understanding of how time works, that it's now so even though it happened at one point, I was there and I am now and it is now. So that there's a meshing of while I might be looking at particular days in particular ways as how am I going to write my sermon? And when am I going to have for dinner? And who am I going to dress up as for Purim? Right. Am I going to be varsity this year? Or am I going to be I'm always a good character, by the way, always. I'm never the evil one. Ian Binns 17:48 I think that's fitting. Rachael Jackson 17:49 Thank you. I think so. Yeah. Ian Binns 17:52 No, I thought him were here. He was he Yeah, Rachael Jackson 17:54 he'd be Haman. Okay. Yeah, without a doubt he'd be or he'd be the guys. That's moto. Hi, spies. eavesdrops, on, where he's kind of there. But he's not really there. But he's totally a bystander. Now, I love Adam. He's much more of an upstander than any of those characters. He's just, he's easy to pick on. So time is not just what am I doing? It's about how do I go back and forth. And so my final thing, as I'm just like rambling at all, is, I understand time, Jewish type specifically, and my my life living a Jewish life as a slinky. So imagine your slinky, and I hope you've had the chance to play with a slinky recently because they're awesome. And it's closed. So imagine a closed slinky. And you're at the very start, and just go down one rung, it doesn't feel like anything has changed. It's the same time as last year, you're the same person that you were last year, not a whole lot. It's been different. But now imagine you're a slinky on a stair, and how far the distance is between one rung and the next rung. When it's opened like that. It's so much different, but it's the same time. So it allows us to come back together and allows us to check in with ourselves and say, Okay, I've been here before, but I'm completely different, or I'm not so different. It just asked us questions. So that's my sort of brief, very long sort of Drush on what time looks like and how we understand it quarterly. Kendra Holt-Moore 19:56 The, the thing that I I keep thinking of As you're talking about, I mean, it wasn't really like the central piece of what you're saying, but totally like thinking about time in Judaism. I'm blanking on the name of the, the, the book or like the essay that Abraham Joshua Heschel wrote about, like time was like the, the tabernacle of time, where like in Judaism, what is you can think of architecture as marking something off that is holy, in like, if you go to like a cathedral, like a Catholic Cathedral or something, there's way of using materiality to mark off space as designated, like holy locations. But I Abraham Joshua Heschel published a collection of like essays talking about how in Judaism, we have these really beautiful examples of, you know, not not so much like architecture, marking off holy space, but Shabbat as like a marker of holy time. And it's like, you know, he's like, using the metaphor of, like, the tabernacle of time, I think, is what he calls it. And so that's what I kept thinking about, because it's such a, like, the, the rhythm of Shabbat, being, you know, it's not just this, you know, it's more than just like something you take for granted, every week as a celebration, or like a time of rest. But Hashem just talks about it in this really beautiful way as being, like a marker to orient you to time itself as this special, special thing that is, it's, it's part of our rhythm of, you know, our bodies and our communities and our calendars. And I just love that metaphor of like, a tabernacle of time, in addition to or as a different thing from, like, a tabernacle in space. Rachael Jackson 22:11 I so glad that you brought that up. So I think the essays that you're referring to are contained in a book called The Sabbath. Kendra Holt-Moore 22:20 Yeah, yeah. Rachael Jackson 22:22 It's straightforward, straightforward. Again, we don't really, you know, mince our title is very much. You want to talk about time, the Sabbath. So one of the things that Heschel talks about and is actually in pretty much all Jewish books that talk about the tabernacle, or let's just use English, the sanctuary, a church, a synagogue, the place that you go, it doesn't matter. And that's, I know, we talked a little bit about this a year ago, maybe two years ago, when we're really talking about COVID. And not being in our spaces, and how that really isn't as challenging for Jews, as it is for other cultures and other religions. Because while we like our space, we don't define holiness, by the space our holiness is divided is defined solely by time, which means it can happen anywhere, it can be in the wilderness, it can be with ice cream, it can be with your child's it can be in a sanctuary, it can literally be anywhere. And that sacredness of time as opposed to sacredness of place is something you know that I love about Judaism, I'm not gonna say it doesn't exist in other religions a because I don't know all other religions be because I think that's a little too narcissistic, as, as a culture to say that we're the only ones to do it. But it does feel that it really doesn't matter where we are. It's about when we are so much so. I'm gonna poke fun of us for just a second. There are these rules that you there are things you can't do on Shabbat, right? Like you can't turn on light switches and you can't create a fire and you can't drive and you can't cook and you can't ride an elevator and I could keep going on and on about the sorry juice. Some of the extremely ridiculous things that we do in the name of Jewish law haha. But one of them that's been around for a long time is fire because we've had fire for a very long time. And so we're not supposed to light the Shabbat lights like fire is not fire is prohibited. You can't do that on Shabbat. But you have to light Shabbat candles. So how do you do that? Like how do you light Shabbat candles on Shabbat? We fool ourselves. We fool ourselves. It's beautiful. So what we do is we strike the match. We light the lights, we then cover our eyes, say the blessing. Open our eyes and go, Oh, look at that. candles are lit and now it's Shabbat. It's amazing. Zack Jackson 25:26 Whatever. Right? Okay, so Rachael Jackson 25:30 if you ever see somebody, right, I'm sure when you've seen Fiddler on the Roof, there's two sections when they're doing the Sabbath prayer, right? May the Lord protect and defend you that whole thing? Seriously, nothing. I'm looking at the three of you, and there's no recognition there. It's amazing. Well, but Zack Jackson 25:49 it's been a long time ago. Sorry. Rachael Jackson 25:52 Oh, Kendra, that's your homework. That is your homework. So anyway, so she's their blessing their family, and they like, do this whole, like waving the candle flames, and then they cover their eyes, and they say this beautiful blessing. It's because we're fooling ourselves of when that happened. Which leads me to sort of another question for you all, if we're looking at what time is, who decides? Who decides? So let's use a Shabbat as an example. In modern America, secular America, most Jews are not politically religious, in the sense of okay, Shabbat is when the sun goes down, and I have to be home and I'm not doing like etc, etc. Most Jews in America are not that way. And so, when is Shabbat at our particular synagogue, right now, we're having services at 530 on Friday night. And in three weeks, when we go through a time change, it's still going to be bright outside when we leave, and we're done with our service. Right? So we then have to say, well, when is Shabbat? So when is something actually happening? When we say it's happening? When we engage in activity? When the culture says it's happening, like when is or if we take also the majority of Jews. Question seven already, many Jews? Never. They don't observe Shabbat. So is Shabbat Shabbat because we observe it is or is it just a Saturday? So I'd ask the same question Quantum. Yeah. So I'm asking that question, again, using Shabbat as the example or the Sabbath as the example. But for anything, is it your birthday? Right? Again, we're all adults here. My birthday is technically March 2, because that's the day that I was born. I have four meetings on March 2, and it's a Wednesday. I'm celebrating my birthday on March 1. So when is my birthday? When should somebody say to me happy birthday, when do I open my cards Ian Binns 28:17 all of March. That's what I do. Like my, my birthday is on April 3, and this year, it's a it's a Sunday, so I'm good. But even like when my birthday is on the day that I have class. Oh, I tell my students, I let them know what y'all know. It's my birthday. Just Just saying. The class goes. Zack Jackson 28:46 So at the time of recording, and this obviously is going to go out in a couple of weeks. There's something similar going around in Christian circles. You may have seen in your Facebook feeds, that this one priest had been baptizing children incorrectly. One word wrong. He had, instead of saying, I now baptize you in the name of the Father, the Son of the Holy Spirit, he had been saying, we now baptize you, in the name of the Father, the Son of the Holy Spirit. We instead of I, we instead of I. And through a number of higher ups, having councils and discussing whether or not this actually changed the intent of the baptism itself, they decided that enough had been changed in the intent behind that word change that invalidated every baptism he had done for 20 years. Because the congregation present does not do the baptism. So their affirmation of it is irrelevant. Of course, according to the Catholic theology, God is the one that does the act, the actual, like sanctifying grace disposing act on dispensing not just those. No disposing of children, please. We go into that theology and the priest is the conduit by which that happens. And so the I in that sentence is the priest speaking through God. And so by saying, We, then you're just, it muddies the waters a little bit, and the priest has resigned and he has offered to re baptize anyone who's feels that their baptism is no longer valid, because technically, it's not valid anymore. And in all of the circles that I run in, between all Protestant circles, we were all people who were like, hey, nothing magical happens here. Our act of baptism is that it is not something that is happening in that moment. Nothing changes about that person in that moment. What is happening is it is a an A outward affirmation of an inward and invisible reality that a child is born. Beloved, already, a child is born already a part of the family of God, a child is born already having been awash in God's grace, and mercy and goodness. And the act of baptism is an act in which the community gathers together to affirm that truth that already existed time immemorial. And so whether that child is baptized on the day they're born, or when they're 99 years old, whether it is done using the right magic words, or some other totally different vernacular a bad thing? This is a good thing for me. I made something of the way goes, giant. I can't wait to see you're trying to Okay. Could you hear it? I want to Ian Binns 31:59 see his giant castle. Kendra Holt-Moore 32:00 Did he say the banjo is not a bad thing. It's a good thing. Zack Jackson 32:04 He says this is not a bad emergency. This is a good emergency. I made a giant Castle that's important. And I'll be up in a few minutes to come see it. Okay, Kendra Holt-Moore 32:14 got to work on your definition of emergency. Zack Jackson 32:19 Timing. I say one thing and that's when he descends into the basement and comes and plays the banjo in the back of this little studio. Rachael Jackson 32:28 And you were done such a Zack Jackson 32:29 train of thought was? Well. So you know, it's almost ironic, though, that my child were to come in here when talking about during the time in which I'm talking about in which God has granted God's blessing on to children before they were born. And before they had a chance to identify it, or have it be given to them from an exterior source because, man oh man, we need to be reminded of that sometimes when you are in the middle of something like recording a podcast and your four year old decides to play a banjo in the room you're recording it in, because that child has already been a Washington grace and goodness and forgiveness. And I too, have been a Washington that very same spirit and me to learn how to honor and forgive and appreciate the toddler's giant Lego Castle he wants me to see. But the point being in their theology, there was a particular moment in which Grace was dispensed in a special way from God on to that child, it can happen one time, you cannot be baptized again. In fact, they they murdered quite a bit of Anabaptists in the Reformation because of that, there's one time only that it can be done. And when you believe that there's one time only that this can be done then there's a whole lot of now stricter rules that have Ian Binns 33:59 to come with it. And the ramifications for this like I saw the headline and read a little bit about the situation with this you know the Catholic priests making an error with the use of the word we instead of I and you know I didn't spend too much time Reading an article about it but it just seemed like that there was there's some speculation I guess that this could have bigger impacts depending on how the whoever the powers that be decided on the rules, right? Like um, like, if you're not baptized, considered baptized, can you get married in the church? The Catholic Church are there certain rules that you cannot like you have to be baptized Catholic will do certain things in Catholic churches I thought or something along Zack Jackson 34:48 not to be married. No, at least one of you has to be Catholic but you can be baptized Protestant and still be married in a Catholic church as long as one of the other ones Catholic you can take promise to raise your children me Catholic You can't take communion? No. Okay. But if you promised to raise your child as a Catholic, then they will let you be married in a church. Ian Binns 35:08 Yeah. But anyway, I just remember seeing that and just being amazed by it. Rachael Jackson 35:13 Right. And I appreciate that you brought that that piece in Zach, because it's really talking about when does something happen? Right, when? Yeah, when does it happen? And there are a few, there are a few moments in life that give us those very definite, this is when it happened. When are you born? Well, let's, let's just go with the medical piece there. When you exit the womb, right, that's, that's when you're born Zack Jackson 35:48 when. But when the head exits? Well, because some children Rachael Jackson 35:51 are not born head first. Right? So, you know, but when someone puts on their birth certificate, What time were you born? Right? It's when you scream. Right? That's what time you're born when you scream. So your heads got to be out whether or not that was first or not. But you have to scream. And that's when you're born. Now modern medicine that feels modern medicine Zack Jackson 36:16 when you are first alive. Rachael Jackson 36:19 Yeah, that all happens within a minute, right? Even with even with babies or especially with babies that are not born headfirst. Right? They're just out. Zack Jackson 36:28 Rachel, I have a question for you about religious time. So as we're as we're talking, I'm remembering a concept. From I think I'd first read it in something written by Mircea Eliade, I'm sure I'm butchering the pronunciation of his name, about the importance of an axis mundi in religion, the center of the world, as it were, and that in the same older Israelite religions, that was the temple on mountain Zion, that was the, the place that connected the underworld with the heavens, that, that sort of central location to the world and every religion has that, right. That's, that's Mount Olympus, that's, you know, all the holy mountains, usually in the ancient world. And then the temples gone in 70 ad, and people are scattered, both Christian and Jewish people scattered to the winds. And the Christians later do find other centers at that point right in Rome especially becomes our center forever, and what becomes the Vatican and all of that the Jews don't get a center for arguably, even now don't really have a center, at least religiously. Christians seem to have then gone back to their being physical spaces, physical centers, as opposed to the temporal centers. As but what from what I hear you talking about? The Sabbath kind of becomes the temple. It does that does that track with kind of the the history of the development of the two religions? Rachael Jackson 38:26 I think so. And you're, I think from a point of interest you very much like second temple times, right? That's that's where that's where you thrive? First, yes, yes. Like you, like that's just sort of you, you really gravitate toward that time period. That is my least favorite time period in Judaism. Ian Binns 38:49 Why? And remind myself and those of us who are not familiar with the time frame, your calendar time frame, yearly time frame, what Rachael Jackson 39:01 Thank you. First Temple first Temple was destroyed 586 BCE. The Jews were then allowed to come back 60 years later reconstruction it reconstructed the tempo plus or minus 520 BCE. It was then destroyed 70 C. And so second temple is considered, you know, 520 BCE to 70. C, by the way, I'm using C as common era or Before Common Era, Zack used ad, which translates to a year of our Lord, which is pretty common, or BC, you know, typically understood as before Christ. And so, for those that do not use Christ as a center point in time, but we still need to communicate that this is the year 2022. We just have communicated as BCE and see. Zack Jackson 39:57 It also is a little problematic that Jesus was likely born between three or four BC, so Jesus was born before Ian Binns 40:04 I use, but Rachael Jackson 40:05 that makes a lot of sense. You know, I was born before I became something too, so. Zack Jackson 40:10 So why don't you like that period of time. Rachael Jackson 40:13 Um, so just generally speaking, I find that there's just, it's uncomfortable for me, because it feels very inviting. And that's to reminiscent of today. As far as Jews are concerned, I think that there's a lot of us and them within the Jewish world nowadays, just like, and I see that as an us and them when we look at Second Temple times. It's great Hanukkah started as a Jewish civil war. And I just don't, I don't like that. It just, it just makes me too sad. Frankly. That's why I don't like it. It makes me too sad. The Ian Binns 40:48 split with the northern kingdom, Rachael Jackson 40:50 the what split? Oh, that was. So the United Kingdom. Again, if we look at this, from a literal standpoint, the United Kingdom was 1000 BCE. And it was only united for three kings. So really not very long. And then the 10 tribes were theoretically lost, also known as probably the leaders got taken away and they got split up because, you know, bigger, better competitors came along, and that was 722 BC. Yeah, very, very different time period Zack Jackson 41:27 of sort of civil wars, totally different. There's the influence of the Greeks after Alexander comes through which there's a whole Hellenized wing aspect of, of that region, and then you've got the Jews and Alexandria and the Jews and Babylon and the Jews in Judea, not to mention the Samaritans and the rise of Pharisees, Sadducees, Essenes zealots, a whole Christians, the whole gamut of splintering, and it's very traumatic, which might be why I like it. Rachael Jackson 41:58 And that's why I don't Yeah, it's too much. It's like, are you reform or conservative? Well, I'm Reconstructionist. And I'm humanistic. And I'm Orthodox, but modern Orthodox, but open Orthodox, but just regular Orthodox, just ultra orthodox, and you're not even Jewish to me. And it's just, it's just to Ian Binns 42:15 all connected to this god. Rachael Jackson 42:20 Right. So it's just talking to somebody theoretically, I was just talking to somebody about you know, the prayer, the Shema, which comes from Deuteronomy, here, O Israel, the Lord is God, the Lord is One, etc. I like it better in the Hebrew, right Shema Yisrael, Adonai Eloheinu, Adonai. God. I said, Well, kind of person who's not Jewish say that. So Well, sure. Right. It's, it's in the Bible. Lots of people say it. It's just sort of what your intent is. So what does it mean for God? I said, well, it it's a statement of if you believe in up to one god up to one god yeah, so yes, and Ian. But to go back to Zacks to go back to Zags, a whole point of where and when, and does that track? Yes, I think that totally tracks for it's not a when, and frankly, let's look at Judaism from the scriptures itself. Were like where, where was Judaism in the Torah? Nowhere, which means everywhere. So the Torah was given in the wilderness, the Torah wasn't given in Jerusalem, the Torah was given in Israel, the Torah was given in the wilderness, they were just wandering. They didn't know who or where they were. And that's when we get the tour. That's quite literally what's happening in this week's post shocky Tisa, like this week, we're Reading about when Moses goes up onto the mountain and God's like, Here have some stones that I carved and Moses is like, sweet, and then God's like, he should go back down there because they made an idol out of gold, and it turned into a calf and perhaps you should control that better. And Moses comes down and she's like, Are you kidding me? And pearls, the tablets and all that stuff? Like that's literally what we're Reading this week. So now y'all at home can check when we recorded this. So there is no place in Judaism. It's all about time. And in this exact same portion, it talks about the Sabbath. Like this is what you should do. And let me just also clarify one other piece when I'm talking about Sabbath and we talk about rest. We're not resting because oh my god, the other six days are so hard. That's Saturday. I that's what a Saturday is. It's a whole boy, I had so many meetings and so many emails and these kids are driving me nuts. Like, I just need a day like that Saturday, that's a day of rest. Mazel Tov, we all 100% need that Shabbat is, I am not resting to recover or prepare for I am resting simply to acknowledge that I exist now in this time, not for what I was or what I will be for right now. That's why Jews also still need a two day week right? We still are Americans. We still need a Sunday. We need a day that does not do. Right. That's our Sunday but that's not Shabbat. Shabbat rest is not weekend rest. It's a it's a complete wholeness of right now. And being connected to the text that was 3000 years ago and 3000 years from now. But really, it's just this moment. And we don't, we don't need a place for that. So our centrality? Yeah, wherever you want to be. Which is why a shout out to Rabbi Jaime Korngold who was the rabbi who had my did my bat mitzvah with her. She's the adventurer, Rabbi, I've talked about her a couple of times, right? She has Shabbat on the ski slopes, right? Shabbat on the slopes, they keep talking about mountains, Zach, great, go skiing and then have a Shabbat together. Right 15 minutes and the Shema say a few other prayers and go back skin. That's amazing. It was good enough for Israelite ancestors is good enough for us. Ian Binns 47:10 One, so some of the readings you sent. Yeah, it makes me like I want to get the whole book. First of all, you know, like, the rejoice in your festivals, the Jewish year, sacred time in the Jewish calendar, just Reading some of that, but you know, the whole it is the when and not aware of prayer that counts the most in Judaism. Judaism is a religion. Indeed, the first religion and by and large the only religion that sanctifies time over space. And I just, I just find that really interesting. So it's not it's not the where you do it. It's the the time that you stopped to pray, is that right? Rachael Jackson 47:59 It's not even stopping to pray, necessarily. It's a time of connection, whether that's connection. And so this is why I say up to one God, because when you pray, there's this idea that you're praying to God. Right? That's a very Christian. Ian Binns 48:17 Yeah, please. So I guess what, I just keep thinking back to the, what we continue to find ourselves in with this pandemic. Right, and how, you know, we, you know, the whole world obviously went, has gone through time periods, some still going through it, and around the world have not been able to do like, go into places of worship, they want to people, you know, places around the world where people don't worship at all, they have no faith at all, in any kind of deity that we consider. Right? But that they're still limited on where they can go. How about that. So places, you know, that's still occurring around the world, and in some spaces in the US as well. And so, you know, but I remember when this first started, you know, and, and everything happened and people initially came together when everything was shut down. But then finally, it was, especially in our state, Rachel, in North Carolina, the you cannot shut down our churches, you cannot shut down our churches, like if we cannot be in our church, then we are not able to worship and I did not instill do not hold to that view. You know, I? Yes, when I go into the sanctuary of our church, it is a very, it has a very profound and powerful impact on me. It becomes very inspirational. I mean, there are many times where I start I'll take my phone out, start writing notes, and just things because it just inspires me every time I'm there, because I feel that connection, right. But I was I still felt to me it was like, I think especially with me, as one of the The lay leaders of the church of trying to help, you know, offer up worships at worship service every week on faith on Facebook for almost a year. I took it as like, almost like a, not a test of my faith, but as they making sure I understand, at least to me, the true meaning of all this and the faith is that it's not necessarily in that building. That's, that's not where it should occur for me. Right? It needs to be within me my time I, wherever I am. Right? It does not matter, I guess. And so that's why Reading that just really has such a profound impact on me, because it's just like, to me that's beautiful, of recognizing that it's more than the bricks and mortar that we find ourselves in. That should be bigger than that. Right? And that's, again, goes back to the whole limiting thing, I think back to our first episode in this miniseries on time, and we talked about how do we think of God? And how if we think of God as within the human concept of time, how that limits the power of God. And, you know, what God can or cannot do, is greatly limited by our our understanding of how time flows, right? Or at least the way we think about it, I think Rachael Jackson 51:16 our connection? Yeah, and I think our connection, not again, I'm trying to keep this, I love that you keep bringing it back to God, I'm like, Nah, leave God out of the conversation. Bringing it back to community, and culture and connection, that it's not, right. I think the building can be beautiful. And I think that there can be holiness in the building. But were for those of us that may not have an interventionalist God concept. What was missing is that we weren't next to pitfalls, that the issue wasn't, Oh, I missed seeing the BMR. And then there to me, the eternal light, and I missed being physically in the presence of the Taurus. It was that I didn't hear the other people singing. I didn't, I didn't watch their faces as they prayed and cried, and that was hugged. Ian Binns 52:11 And, yeah, that was a struggle for me with the way we did the Facebook worship, and the way Facebook Live works. Because I cannot see the people, right, you don't see the other people, but then also to one of the struggles that I dealt with. And again, it wasn't the space, it was that, as you said, a community of being together and worshiping as one, right. And so I started really struggling when people would, when it was just me and one other person live, knowing that, you know, people would then tell me, but even you so many people watch the video later, you know, and they take time later, which is something to be appreciative of, but at the same time to it, it was like, right, but I don't feel that community. Like, and there was a it wasn't just about offering it to other people it was also offering it's myself. Right, and so I needed that community, and I at times didn't feel it. And that's nothing against anyone of any of the my fellow church members go, you know, listen, that's nothing against anybody. It was just a recognition of, you know, Zack Jackson 53:17 you know, Rachel, you say that nobody in your context said that they miss seeing the tour miss seeing that. But in my context, in which we are much more concerned with sacred space than sacred time, we, I was recording the services in my dining room for the first six months. And then after Nicole and I kind of parted ways as it were. I started recording services in the sanctuary. And I had dozens and dozens of people tell me how comforting it was, for them to see the stained glass to see the cross to hear the Oregon to, like, see the things in the sanctuary they weren't allowed to be in. And I think about the people who were really excited to be able to just go to the sanctuary, like open sanctuary hours, you can come in and just sit there in the space at any time. And like that was really important for them to connect spiritually, more so than it being on a Sunday morning. Like the time was just like that was just almost accidental. It was like a habit that it was going to be at that time. But the space is what mattered. People found it very hard to worship from their hallway. And Ian Binns 54:31 so I want to make, you know, I want to clarify, sorry to interrupt, I want to clarify something that, you know, I still highly value that space. Right? And so I feel exactly what you're talking about Zach but the very first time that Father Greg, led a service from our church and our sanctuary. Shout out to one of our huge supporters that when the very first time he got one from there during the pandemic, it was a very powerful moment. I remember being very emotional because I could see it again, right? So yes, I have that deep connection to that space. But for me, what I found fascinating, were those who would advocate that the only way they felt they could worship was in that space. Like that was it. And it wasn't about the words, the connection outside of that space at a different time. That was they had to be in that space where they were not actually worshiping. And I struggled with that. Because to me, that seems limiting. Zack Jackson 55:30 The only bit of our worship that is connected to time, specifically to time and not to space is the act of communion, or the Eucharist. It is, by its, by its elements in the way it's constructed in the words that you say, of institution around it. It is a a recreation of an event that happened 2000 Some years ago, that you're bringing into the present, and that you are looking into the future of a final reconciliation, we say the words and communion, all together as one people Christ has died, Christ is risen, Christ will come again. And in that way, the act of communion acts as a sort of temporal Axis Mundi to us, you know, big old fancy words. But just like it stakes us in eternity, in that moment, reaching to the past, being in the present, pulling the future towards us. But aside from the act of communion, we are all about space. And we all care about time. So I am, I have learned so much from you, Rachel, today, and I've gleaned so much wisdom from you in this time. As you all didn't struggle the same way we did during the beginning of the pandemic, you struggle in the different ways, but not in the way that we struggled. Rachael Jackson 56:49 Yes, so true. I love I love talking about this stuff. I love our ability to share and find appreciation in our differences and find commonalities. And that we all are seeking to find something sacred, whether that's time or space, whether that's now or eternity. So I appreciate my dialogue. Zack Jackson 57:19 So welcome to a bonus edition of the dead Christian story hour. I think we're going out of order a little bit, but I have one prepared today. And we're not going to ask Rachel to talk more about about something and Ian has something but it's going to save it until the next time because and you'll see why then it's going to be great. So I'm going to go out of order because I have a fun story to share with you today about a dead Christian that I think is great. So our story today takes place in the little community that St. Francis had put together sometime in the early 1200s, late 1100s. Somewhere in there in Assisi in Italy. They were a wild and crazy group of people who left society because they thought it was getting too. Too rich, too wealthy, too disconnected. They were they ran away from their their family's prosperity from all of the wars and all of that stuff that was happening and they went out and they made their own communes out in the middle of the of the woods in the fields. And they lived this peaceful, happy sort of a life and they had some wild stories that are contained in a book called the little flowers of St. Francis. And now like all good hagiography, this takes this you take this with a grain of salt. Because all of our stories about our heroes of faith, a little bit of a comic book, sort of a bend to them. So this story, there was a there was a good fellow named Brother Rufino i Brother affino was in the woods and he was praying fervently. And suddenly, Jesus Christ appears in front of him. He's got the holes in his hands and all that stuff. He's like, look, it's me. It's JC. I'm here to talk to you. And brother finos. Like, wow, what is the great, this is great is the guy this is the guy rose talking about and he's right here. And he's got something to say to me. And so Jesus opens his mouth and says to him, Oh, brother Rufino. Why do you afflict yourself with penance and prayer? Since you are not among those predestined to eternal life, believe me, because I know who might have chosen and predestined and don't believe in that son of Pietro that St. Francis, if he should say the opposite. You know what, don't even ask him about this matter? Because neither he nor others know it, but only I know, because I'm the son of God. Therefore, believe me, you are certainly among the number of the Damned. And the son of Pietro This again is St. Francis As your father, and also his father, they're all damned as well. And whoever follows him as being deceived. Brother Ruffino at this point, he just met Jesus. And Jesus just told him, he's damned to hell. And sorry, dude, that's just the way it goes. And don't tell anyone about this, by the way. So kids, if you're listening out there and a grown up tells you don't tell anyone about this. That's a red flag. So he, he goes off and he's so sad and he's so despondent, and he says, I knew it. I knew it all along. I am an imposter. I really, I don't belong here. Everyone else is so much more righteous than me. And I am damned from the start. But God's like, I saw that. I saw that sneaky thing there. And tell St. Francis, hey, the devil just showed up. It was wearing my clothing, and is pretending to be me. I need you to go talk to brother Rufino. So St. Francis goes to Brother Rufino and he says hey, look, I know what you just saw. That's not Jesus. You can always tell it's Jesus because of the sorts of things he says that's the kind of words that the devil would say, Brother finos, like, wow, really? All right, if you say so. I'm just Dude, you're you're St. Francis. So San Francis says to him, go back out to the woods. And when this imposter Jesus shows up to you again, I want you to say these words to him verbatim. You say, Hey, open your mouth again. And I'm gonna take a minute. And I'm gonna bleep that out. But that is your King James II and translations may say, I shall expel dung upon thee or something like that. But there's a four letter word. So, brother afina, goes out into the woods again. And then, you know, Jesus, the fake Jesus shows up to him again. And because I thought I told you to go home. You are a damned soul. You have no place being here. What on earth are you even doing trying to pray? Stop wasting your time. And brother fino goes, Look, I'm gonna let you finish. But first, open your mouth again. And I'm gonna take a kid in it. And the devil at that point, you just bust out of his Jesus costume. And he's like, wow, you found me. How dare you speak to me like that. And he basically explodes and flies off into the distance and knocks the top of a mountain off. And there's this massive earthquake in like all of the region that everyone reported hearing, and seeing and a huge landslide that came down off of that mountain that other people saw and can attest to and totally definitely happened and was because the devil was so offended by brother Ruffino because he caught him in his in his traps. And that is the story of how brother Ruffino caused an earthquake in a landslide and destroyed the top of a mountain because he talked back to the devil. That's amazing. Okay, very good. 1:03:06 That's it.
The Urim ViTumum Are Not a Maaseh Uman As the Other Bigdei Kehuna –Ramban (pg. 517) The Urim ViTumum are Sheimos Kedoshim –Ramban (pg. 518) [05:49] The Merit of Ahron with the Urim ViTumum was Midah Kineged Midah –Drashos HaRan, Drush 3 (pg. 520) [19:11] To join this shiur live each week – sign up… Continue reading Yesodei HaTorah Series 2 (pp 0517-0520) – Tetzaveh
NEW SERIES! Taamai Hamitzvos - understanding the Mitzvos on a deeper level.
00:00 – Although usually the Torah advises not getting involved in controversy, there are some disputes that we should enter to defend the truth. The dispute about the righteousness of Dovid HaMelech (King David) is an example of a controversy we are obligated to enter to uphold the testaments of the Torah sages that his intentions and deeds with regard to Batsheva were pure.01:37 – Everything in the Torah She'Be'Csav (Written Torah) has 4 dimensions: Pshat (literal), Remez (hint, allusion), Drush (deeper explanation), and Soad (secret). The initial letters of these four dimensions spell “PaRDeS” (orchard, paradise).02:33 – The account of Dovid HaMelech and Batsheva on a literal level.17:14 – The account of Dovid HaMelech and Batsheva according to the understanding of sages in the Talmud.19:07 – The rebuke of Nasan HaNavi (Nathan the Prophet) – deeper implications.21:48 – Shabbos 56a: Uriah divorced his wife Batsheva before going into battle.25:20 – Shabbos 56a: Uria committed two acts of rebellion against the king for which he incurred the death penalty.27:32 – Sanhedrin 107a.35:55 – Avoda Zara 4b-5a and the Zohar – Rabi Shimon Bar Yochai's defense of Dovid HaMelech in the incident of Batsheva assures every Jew that Hashem can forgive no matter how far a person has fallen.
Topics:Tournament around 1100 - 1300 ELO July 3rd. Join discord and react with a green check mark to the announcement if you'd like to join.https://discord.gg/8xeR5jStrPOtherwise streamed on my twitch channel:https://www.twitch.tv/theasapweeklynetwork/Drush: https://www.windowscentral.com/age-empires-2-definitive-edition-drushRedBull Wololo 4: https://liquipedia.net/ageofempires/Red_Bull_Wololo/4
Hey Squids, Today we have the pleasure to welcome on board our dear friend Paul Drush, from Paris to Marbella, Paul always delivered eclectic dj sets full of groove and good mood, we love his energy since day one, One more squid for the books
Moshe Weitzman is one of the most long-standing contributors to Drupal, with one of the lowest user IDs around. His many additions to the project include the long-term maintenance of Drush, to his most recent addition: Drupal Test Traits. In this edition of our Tag1 Team Talks, Moshe takes time out of his schedule to talk with Michael Meyers, Managing Director of Tag1 to talk about the ups and downs and all of their experiences over the past 19 years and 10 months - just a couple of months short of the actual beginning of the Drupal project’s release to the world.
Dj MB, Adrien Priami,Lumberjack, Camelto, Drush, Dixon Hill, Chaps, Dj Lewis
Starts with a quick recap of the VP debates, followed by 2 debates between Mesh and DRush. Debates are over Lockdowns and UBI, one with the 2 minutes format we see in presidential debates, the other with a more long form 5/10/5 style that we are using as a thought exercise. Neither of us have any debate history or topic expertise, so this is more of a thought experiment on the pros/cons of each style.
00:00 - Mesh gives a True/False quiz on the weeks headlines 09:15 - Answers are revealed 34:00 - State of Discourse 42:25 - How to Avoid Politics 56:55 - Prioritization of Threats 1:06:00 - Voldemorting 1:10:00 - When Left met Right
Wir präsentieren stolz unsere neueste Ausgabe der Age of Empires II: DE Miniserie. Wir sprechen über eine beliebte Spieleröffnung, den Drush, d.h. Dark Age Rush. Falls ihr also eurer Lobby den Titel "No Rushing Plz" gebt, ist das vielleicht nichts für euch... oder vielleicht ja gerade dann? Wir konzentrieren uns auf: - Vor- und Nachteile des Drushens - Strategien - Maps & Zivilisationen
Sefer Shomer Emunim Drush Emunah Ch. 2 by Rabbi Avi Zakutinsky
Rabbi Mark Gottlieb is Senior Director of the Tikvah Fund and founding Dean of the Tikvah and Maimonides Scholars at Yale University. Prior to joining Tikvah, Rabbi Gottlieb served as Head of School at Yeshiva University High School for Boys and Principal of the Maimonides School in Brookline, MA.His writing has appeared inFirst Things,Public Discourse,the University Bookman,the Algemeiner,andthe Jewish Review of Books. Rabbi Gottlieb is a member of the Orthodox Forum Steering Committee and serves on the Editorial Committee ofTradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought.Rabbi Gottlieb poses a courageous question as to the efficacy and relevance of the Yovel laws which on the surface seem counter intuitive,and leads to a disincentive for private property.Making use of ideas expressed by Rav Aharon Lichtenstein Zt"l in regards to the status of Shmitah,in a world where the Heter Mechirah is so prevalent,Gottlieb offers an explanation of the Jubilee that serves as a reexamination of our over industrialized society.He anchors his Drush with perspectives culled from the American poet, essayist, social commentator Allen Tate and the Pulitzer-prize winning American historian Herbert Agarthat manage to intertwine an idealization of the distinctly American concept of Freedom with a hopefulvision of our Messianic future.The Yeshiva of Newark @IDT is proud to partner with Rabbi Gottlieb in sharing his insightsand thoughtsto as wide an audience as possible .We thank the Tikvah Fund for use of this materialPlease visithttp://tikvahfund.orgto discover the richness of the programs and educational opportunitiesoffered by that institution as well as scintillating lectures and interviewsPlease leaveusa review or email us atravkiv@gmail.comFor more information on this podcast visityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.
Rabbi Mark Gottlieb is Senior Director of the Tikvah Fund and founding Dean of the Tikvah and Maimonides Scholars at Yale University. Prior to joining Tikvah, Rabbi Gottlieb served as Head of School at Yeshiva University High School for Boys and Principal of the Maimonides School in Brookline, MA.His writing has appeared in First Things, Public Discourse, the University Bookman, the Algemeiner, and the Jewish Review of Books. Rabbi Gottlieb is a member of the Orthodox Forum Steering Committee and serves on the Editorial Committee of Tradition: A Journal of Orthodox Jewish Thought.Rabbi Gottlieb poses a courageous question as to the efficacy and relevance of the Yovel laws which on the surface seem counter intuitive,and leads to a disincentive for private property.Making use of ideas expressed by Rav Aharon Lichtenstein Zt"l in regards to the status of Shmitah,in a world where the Heter Mechirah is so prevalent,Gottlieb offers an explanation of the Jubilee that serves as a reexamination of our over industrialized society.He anchors his Drush with perspectives culled from the American poet, essayist, social commentator Allen Tate and the Pulitzer-prize winning American historian Herbert Agarthat manage to intertwine an idealization of the distinctly American concept of Freedom with a hopefulvision of our Messianic future.The Yeshiva of Newark @IDT is proud to partner with Rabbi Gottlieb in sharing his insights and thoughts to as wide an audience as possible . We thank the Tikvah Fund for use of this material Please visithttp://tikvahfund.org to discover the richness of the programs and educational opportunitiesoffered by that institution as well as scintillating lectures and interviewsPlease leave us a review or email us at ravkiv@gmail.com For more information on this podcast visityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
לזכר נשמת יואל צבי בן ישעי׳, DefinitionOfShogeg, ShabbosAndLosingTrackOfTime, Drush, MGFLC, Radvaz’sShabbos
Our thoughts are with the Drupal community as the world fights Covid19. On today's show we have Preston So joining us to talk about that tool we all know and love Drush. www.talkingdrupal.com/242 Topics Nic - Vet story Stephen - The reality of the times John - New job Intro - Preston So Sustaining the Drupal Association in uncertain times Brief history of Drush How important is Drush Drush in core Drush 9, a re-write Drush 10, whats coming Resources Sustaining the Drupal Association in uncertain times New Drupal Module Versioning Drush 10 & the Future of Drupal CLI Preston's Links Website Decoupled Drupal in Practice: Architect and Implement Decoupled Drupal Architectures Across the Stack - Amazon and Apress NEW Monthly Newsletter Tag1 Team Talks Decoupled Days Hosts Stephen Cross - www.stephencross.com @stephencross John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLighteneddevelopment.com @nicxvan Guests Preston So @prestonso preston.so
Paul est résident au Boum Boum Club Paris.
Today, we preempt our planned topic to discuss outages, because we had one. www.talkingdrupal.com/238 Topics John - take a walk Stephen - in the weeds Nic - Joined a gym Stories - HTML Titles and Drush 10 What type of outages afect your website Preventing outages (?) Outage now, next step What happened yesterday Hosts Stephen Cross - www.stephencross.com @stephencross John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLighteneddevelopment.com @nicxvan
With the release of Drupal 8.8, Drush is also due for an upgrade — to Drush 10. For this venerable command-line interface that many Drupal developers know intimately well, what does the present and future look like? What considerations should we keep in mind when selecting Drupal Console or Drush? What new features are available in Drush 10 that characterize the new CI/CD approaches we see expanding in the Drupal community? In this Tag1 Team Talk, join the creator and maintainer of Drush Moshe Weitzman (Senior Technical Architect at Tag1), Fabian Franz (Senior Technical Architect and Performance Lead at Tag1), Preston So (Editor in Chief at Tag1), and Michael Meyers (Managing Director at Tag1) for a journey through Drush’s history and promising future. We take a deep look at what made Drush what it is today, the most compelling features in Drush 10, and how a hypothetical Drush in core could look.
Rabbi Weiss develops the sublime idea of how the Jewish people interact and partner with the greater culture around them in a robust fashion,guarding their unique nature all the while.He makes brilliant use of classical Drush sources-a true 13 minute treat!Please leave us a review here or email us at ravkiv@gmail.comFor more information on this podcastvisityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information. This podcast is powered by JewishPodcasts.org. Start your own podcast today and share your content with the world. Click jewishpodcasts.fm/signup to get started.
Rabbi Weiss develops the sublime idea of how the Jewish people interact and partner with the greater culture around them in a robust fashion,guarding their unique nature all the while.He makes brilliant use of classical Drush sources-a true 13 minute treat!Please leave us a review here or email us at ravkiv@gmail.comFor more information on this podcastvisityeshivaofnewark.jewishpodcasts.org See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In episode #162 we talk about Project Management tools we use. www.talkingdrupal.com/162 Topics News Drupal 8.5 released Drush sanitize issue Types of PM tools Basecamp Jira Redmine Rally Trello Asana HipChat Slack Notebook (yes) OmniFocus Email Timetracking Hosts Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLighteneddevelopment.com @nicx
Adam och Kristoffer samtalar om de bästa sessionerna från Drupalcon. Diskussion om keynotes. På plats i Wien gjordes även intervjuer med Johanna och Andreas från Lunds Universitet och Tomas från Digitalist. Vi diskuterar även Drupal(con) Europe 2018. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Dagens avsnitt Drupalcon Vienna 2017 Driesnote Monique J. Morrow Everyone Has Something to Share Responsive Images and Art Direction in Drupal 8 State of the media initiative The Layout Initiative Estimates are dead, long live forecasting! Drush 9 - Lean and Modern Lunds Universitet Lunds Data Central LDC Commerce 2.x: Lessons learned 10 Ways Drupal 8 Is More Secure Digitalist DrupalEurope - Hello World!
The Thursday Night Shiur - Maayon Yisroel - Rabbi Reuven Wolf
Thursday night Shiur The post Bamidbar/Shavuos – Biur Al Drush USfartem Lachem D’Chag HaShavuos appeared first on Maayon Yisroel.
This is a conversation with Scott Carlson. Scott has had an amazing career leading teams at some of the most creative shops in the business including Deutsch, Chiat, dRush, the Love Collective and Mother. In 2012, he launched Van’s General Store with his partner Liev Schreiber. Since then, they’ve worked with the likes of Cadillac, Vespa and Pepsi. We talked about his career in the business and what it takes to make a great idea today. Enjoy!
## Drupal Console * What is Drupal Console? * It is a suite of tools that you run on a command line interface (CLI) to generate boilerplate code and interact with a Drupal 8 installation. * How is it different from Drush? And are there overlapping features? * There are many similarities between these two tools, but the main difference is how it was built, using an object-oriented architecture and Symfony components. * Will we continue to use both? Or will Drupal Console replace Drush? * I think we will keep using both at least for now and maybe at some point we can merge both tools. * What are some of the things that you will keep using Drush for in Drupal 8? * Site alias (sync, backup), download modules, installing the site. * Are you planning to introduce those features into Drupal Console? * Yes we are actually working on site alias. * What are some things that Drupal Console can do that Drush can’t? * Who is the intended audience of Drupal Console? * You can use Drupal Console to help you developing faster and smarter with Drupal 8 * Developers and SiteBuilders since you can Generate code and files required by a Drupal 8 module and Interacting with your Drupal installation (debugging services, routes) you can put your site in Maintenance mode or Switch system performance configuration. * But you can use this tool to Learn Drupal 8. * We are also working on a GUI so if you are afraid of CLIs we will provide a web site you will be able to use and select what you want to generate (module, controller, services, blocks, entities, etc…) and generate and download the generated code. * Would it be fair to say that right now, it’s most useful to developers who are actually writing code, while later, it will also be useful for sitebuilders who are used to using Drush to create site, install modules and themes, and perform routine tasks? ## Use Cases * What are some things you can do with DrupalConsole? * Drupal Console help you developing faster and smarter with Drupal 8. * Generating the code and files required by a Drupal 8 module. * Interacting with your Drupal installation. * Learning Drupal 8. ## Updates and Future * You were on the Drupalize.me podcast back in February talking about Drupal Console, what are some of the improvements that have been made since then? (Especially with Drupal 8 progressing the way it is.)
## Dropfort * What is Dropfort? * Dropfort is a suite of tools to develop and manage Drupal applications. On the development side, it integrates with GitHub and GitLab to track commits, issues and tags. It then packages releases based on those tags and lets you share those releases with your Drupal sites. Same way you tag and create releases on Drupal.org. The only difference is the released modules are private. Meaning a site that wants to use those modules needs to authenticate to download them. For example, if you want to download a custom module to your site from dropfort, you can just do a “drush dl mymodule --source=https://app.dropfort.com/fserver/release-history”. Dropfort generates the same XML data for its modules as does Drupal.org for contrib modules. Meaning the Update module works with Dropfort, all your Drush commands work and Drush make works too. It’s all pretty seamless. The only difference with our XML is that it's not publicly available. Your site has to be allowed to see the update feed which is what you configure in the Dropfort web app itself. The other half of Dropfort are the operations or “ops” tools. You connect your sites to Dropfort using the Dropfort Update module (which is available on Drupal.org) and it will start doing a few things. The most obvious is tracking the update status of your site. Being a Drupal shop, we monitor a few dozen Drupal sites at once and so logging into each site to see what modules need updating and the status of those sites is time consuming. What Dropfort let’s us do is see all those sites in one dashboard. I can login and see the update status and status report data from all the sites in one place. Dropfort then uses this data to generate some graphs about your sites. For example it can tell you how many dev modules you’re using across all your sites, it shows you a list of what sites have security updates and it does some fancy calculations to grade your site’s health as well. Lots of metrics to know what’s going on and how things are changing over time. The last part, and this is what I’ve been working on mostly these last few months, is an Environment manager. It’s still pretty fresh and there are some rough edges but it does work. You can create a set of environments (dev, testing or production) to store machine configurations to both do your development and run your Drupal applications. You can say “I want a server running apache, with MySQL and the Commerce Kickstart distro” on it. Then you can either download a Vagrant file which will provision a vm, or you can download a docker container which will do the same. Or you can run a bash script on an existing machine to link the server to Dropfort and have that configuration deployed. It’s pretty neat stuff. Basically any server anywhere can be turned into a managed Drupal cloud. Like I said, there’s a whole suite of stuff in here. * Why did you create Dropfort? Where did it start? It all really came from using Feature Server for Drupal 6. When we incorporated Coldfront in 2011 and really turned it into a full time job, we wanted a way to distribute code to all our clients (even though at the time I think we only had one). We setup FServer to deploy code to your client sites. But manually creating the releases and the pages and stuff was kind of a pain. So we came up with a special commit syntax we could add to Subversion (this was before Git was a big thing). So could make our svn commit and in the message we’d write [release:full] and some post-commit scripts would run on the svn server. They’d look at the commit message and then take the code, create a tgz file, create a tag, commit the tag and then upload the tgz file to FServer using some REST web service endpoints we create on a Drupal 6 site with Services. That would create the release page, the release notes, add the files and generate the update XML. It was pretty well a mini Drupal.org but with Subversion (instead of CVS which D.O was still using at the time). It actually worked really well. So well in fact that the University of Ottawa asked if we could install a version for them to manage their Drupal stuff (which they’re actually still using today until their git migration is done). That’s when the lightbulb went off I guess. We had built this stuff for us but as it turns out, other people want to deploy custom modules too! Who’da thunk it? And that’s when the idea for a more “web app” version of our SVN workflow came to be. At the time I thought “Yeah we can totally rewrite this in no time, I give is 6 months and we’ll have a web app ready to go”. That was 3 years ago I think? It took a bit longer than expected. Mostly I kept adding features… Yay scope creep. But now we’ve got a pretty awesome suite of tools and we’re focusing on the polish now. I’ve been told I’m not allowed to make feature requests for at least a month. We’ll see how that goes. * Can this be used to compete with Drupal.org? Meaning can people share public releases here instead of on d.o? Nope. Public modules should be on Drupal.org. No module can be downloaded from Dropfort without authenticating first. We don’t want to supersede d.o in any way. We actually looked into writing a feature to automatically move a project from bieng private to a public one on d.o but since Drupal.org doesnt’ have an API we couldn’t do that. But yeah, this is for privately distributed modules only. * Does the monitoring dashboard check both the private projects as well as public ones on d.o? * Yes * What did you build it with? Is Dropfort open-source? The original SVN workflow using Subversion, CLI PHP, Drupal 6, 2 custom modules and some REST / Services stuff. Dropfort uses Git, Drupal 7, Services, about 20 or so custom modules, Puppet and our Drupal 7 port of FServer. So Dropfort is a Drupal application itself. We actually use Dropfort to manage Dropfort. Meaning we track it’s own updates and status using itself, and it packages releases for itself. A little inceptiony but it works. Most of the parts which make up Dropfort are open. Some of the custom modules aren’t openly available. But that’s mostly because we don’t have the bandwidth to help and support the distro on D.o. Especially the stuff involving setting up a Puppet master. We’d spend more of our time debugging that than actually making things work. Doesn’t mean we won’t share everything eventually, just not right now. * What’s the plan for Dropfort? Is it a paid service or is it free? Right now it’s free to use. The main reason for that is we haven’t written the commerce component yet so we can’t actually charge for it so… yeah. But we’re looking at different ways of monetizing. It’s tricky cause we want people to use it but at the same time we don’t really know what people will use. There’s such a variety of things in there it’s tough to decide what should be charged for. For example Github is pretty straightforward in their pay structure. If the code is open, your repo is free. If your code is closed, you pay for the repo. For us, I think it’s a question of usage. We’re leaning towards all tools are free to use with any account, it’s just a question of how much storage or how many sites you’re using. But regardless, anyone who uses it now is free to use it as much as they want. And we’ll have some special plans for early adopters as a thanks for their feedback. More than likely a bunch of free stuff. * How does this compare to other tools like Platform.sh, Pantheon, Acquia Dev Cloud? The big difference is that they’re primarily a hosting platform. Dropfort is a management platform. You can connect a Pantheon site or an Acquia Dev cloud site to Dropfort and use most of the features no problem. You’d probably skip the release packaging stuff and environment management (for now) but the stats tracking and collaboration tools would work just fine. Dropfort doesn’t care where or how you run your Drupal site. As long as it can reach the internet, you can use Dropfort. But you can use Dropfort with GitHub or GitLab or neither. You can use Vagrant or Docker or both. We do our best to integrate with anything which might make building Drupal application easier. It’s all about choice. As for the hosting side of things, we give you tools to deploy your own server or cloud of servers. Meaning you can run an optimized network of Drupal web servers on whatever provider you want. It’s a philosophical difference. We let you host your code and sites wherever you want whereas with others you live on their machines. Which can have a lot of advantages and for the majority of folks out there, that’s fine with them. But for us we’ve found it difficult for some enterprises here in Canada to get hosting on services in the US which are bound by the Patriot Act. We have FIPA, the Freedom of Information and Privacy Act which states that we can’t share information about users unless the user has explicitly allowed that agency access. The Patriot Act is pretty much the exact opposite of that. So we figured we’d bring most if not all of the advantages of a cloud solution (the optimized configuration, automated deployments / scaling, generated environments) to anyone’s infrastructure. You just supply the hardware, Dropfort does the rest. I see it as just another option in how you can host your Drupal site. You can choose how much or how little you want to be involved in managing the hosting environment. Whichever way works best for you is the one you should go with. * How does this handle dev/staging/live scenarios? * How about local? ## Use Cases * Let’s talk about the current use cases for Dropfort. * Managing several sites in one place * Create custom, shareable development environments * Create releases of projects destined for more than one application * Why would you use Dropfort instead of just Git to manage deployments? * We use Drush Make for just about everything. We control our releases using Drush make. We apply patches with Drush make. We really like Drush make. And we really don’t like merge conflicts. The number of times I’ve come into a project where the entirety of Drupal core and all the contrib modules are in a single repo with a team of people trying to all work on it at once has taught me that’s not the way to work. Treat your projects like d.o does, as self contained sets of functionality. Use make files to build your application and drush to manage updates. This is how Drupal is designed to work. Drupal is a collection of modules. When you all of a sudden lump it all together into a single repo you’re breaking how Drupal was meant to be managed. * Can you explain a bit more about how Drush Make works? * You just mentioned automated updates. * What’s in the near, and far future for Dropfort?
## AcquiaU While this episode might end up sounding like a giant advertisement for AcquiaU, it’s really not intended to be. I wanted to have you on to talk about the concept of, how a company that hires Drupal developers, can and should go about training them _before_ they are hired. In order to set the backdrop for the rest of our conversation, I’d like to quote a bit from the [AcquiaU website](http://u.acquia.com/about): The challenge the community is facing is one of supply and demand. Simply put, there just aren’t enough people to fill the needs. At any given time in the past 6 months, job aggregator Indeed.com has over 2,500 open position across the US for Drupal talent. How do we close the gap? Find the people with the right passion and grow their talent from the inside-out. We're not looking for people with years and years of Drupal experience. We're looking for people who are curious, motivated, determined, and who can inspire a little crazy in us all. At Acquia, culture and a person's POTENTIAL to contribute and grow with us matters. A lot. These are the underpinnings of a successful candidate. What I love about that is that you’re not looking for senior level developers with 5+ years experience. Because you’re not going to find them. They all already have jobs. Mike and I ranted about that in the last podcast, so I won’t rehash it here, but what we boiled it down to is that Drupal shops need to create a talent pipeline for recruitment, which, as I understand it, is essentially what AcquiaU is for Acquia. Ok, with all that said, I’ll shut up now, and let you do the talking. * Can you give us your description of what AcquiaU is? * The program is 14-weeks of hands-on training in Drupal, Acquia Products, related web technologies, and professional development skills like team building, leadership, and communication skills. We spend the first 6 weeks in a classroom environment, which is a combination of lecture, group projects, individual assignments, and self-paced learning. The most recent graduates’ project was to redesign the program’s website, u.acquia.com Each participant is assigned an Acquia Mentor who is there to not just be a buddy, but to help from a technical perspective. The next 8 weeks are spent with job rotations where they work with our customer facing Professional Services developers and customer support. Each person is assigned a client team and works side-by-side on real projects. You might think it is like any other tech bootcamp out there but we differentiate ourselves in a couple of key areas. First, we make sure we have an open job opportunity for each person who joins the program and second, we pay people to learn. Many other bootcamps have a high cost- on average up to $10,000 and while they help with job placement, I can’t say how many have jobs lined up for graduates BEFORE they join the program. * How do you select your candidates? Or can anyone join the class? * We have a rigorous screening process and look for people with 2-3 years of technology experience, but who might not be able to get a job with a development shop. A lot of times, this level of talent is overlooked because companies don’t have the internal mechanisms to train, mentor, and coach junior level talent. They are already stretched thin and want new hires to hit the ground running at a fairly high level of proficiency. * What types of skills do you teach? * We dive deep into Drupal and other web tech skills like Drush, GitHub, and Agile and a dive into our own products and services. Helping people become well rounded also means that we do workshops in team building, communication skills, and presentation skills. The next session will have an engineering focus so we will be digging into LAMP stack and web architecture. * Do the students have any obligation to Acquia at the end of the program? (Like they have to work for you for a given time period after the program?) * People are hired on as temp employees and we really hope they have had a great experience and want to stay on. The program’s goal is to hire them at Acquia or with one of our partners. * What percentage of students would you say you hire on average? * So far we have a 90% hire rate. The goal for 2016 is to expand the program and hire more people into other Drupal shops * Do you have information about those that you don’t hire? Do you know if they’re employed somewhere else? Or did they decide Drupal wasn’t for them? * ## Expanding the Concept * Now that you have a few classes under your belt, is this something you think other shops should look into doing? * People have asked me this and I think they should think about what the end goal is. Our program is not to just train more people for Acquia, but to give back to the Drupal community by creating a long-form drupal training program with learning paths and a structured hands-on curriculum. * We were talking before we started recording about this idea. Mike had mentioned that shops should create a talent pipeline. And while I agree with that in theory, what that means is that the shops first have to develop a training program, and one or more people who are skilled at both Drupal and teaching in a way that doesn’t alienate the trainee. From your perspective, how would you respond to that? * Having a talent pipleline means that you have a people development strategy that aligns to your business strategy, and that you have launched that people plan long before you launch the business strategy. Most companies play catch-up and are more reactive than proactive. Being proactive means you’re looking ahead 2-4 years out and making plans for your people. * If there is a shop owner out there listening right now, what would your advice be on how to go about creating a program like this? * I think you really have to be prepared to commit. Budgets need to allow for hiring junior talent, the business needs to be ready to bring in this level of need. It takes a lot of planning to launch a program like this. For companies that can’t support hiring 5-10 junior level talent, they should start out with a smaller number. A really strong learning program doesn’t just focus on the skills, but on different ways that people will need to learn and being able to translate really complex ideas into ways that different people will relate to. If you’ve ever heard about the adult learning cycle and experiential learning, we know that people tend to be most successful learning new skills when they can reach back into their own experience and apply them to the new content. Being a really strong developer doesn’t always mean that you can tap into other peoples’ experiences and make it relevant to them now. So when you look at creating that pipeline and having junior level talent come on board, you also have to figure out the most effective way to do it.
Hooks är en otroligt viktig del av Drupal - utan hooks hade alla moduler fått hitta andra sätt att kommunicera med Drupal - och i det här avsnittet tar Adam på sig dumstruten och ställer alla de frågor som en nybörjare kanske kan tänkas ställa när man vill börja titta på hur hooks fungerar i Drupal. Vi berättar om tanken och tekniken bakom hooks, var man hittar dem, var man kan lära sig om dem, vilka nackdelar det kan finnas och hur du ska ta svart bälte i hooks. Några ordvitsar hinner vi med också, samt eftersnack såklart. Detta poddavsnitt sponsras av Kodamera Det här poddavsnittet sponsras av Kodamera, en webbyrå med inriktning på öppen källkod. Dagens program: hook_podcast_info När använder man hooks Hur hittar man mer information om hooks: api.drupal.org Hur skriver man hooks Moduler har egna hooks Begränsningar och nackdelar Hjälpmedel hook_form_alter hook_node_presave Add another-modulen dpm() Drush Drush & Module builder drush fn-hook hook_menu Top 10 used hooks in Drupal 6 and 7 contrib modules Node API Hooks Colobox modulens api.php Hook Eftersnack Laverne Hooks Öppna kanalen Växjö vis.js VisJS module Community Media Agenda The Aaron Winborn Award
Drupal vs Wordpress - två stora open source system. I detta poddavsnitt diskuterar Kristoffer och Moa de olika systemens styrkor och svagheter, hur lika och olika är de. Vilka verktyg finns för utveckling, struktur och design. Detta poddavsnitt sponsras av Kodamera Det här poddavsnittet sponsras av Kodamera, en webbyrå med inriktning på öppen källkod. Dagens program: Drupal vs Wordpress Drupal.org Wordpress.org Plugin Directory Wordpress CKeditor in Drupal 8 Drush WP CLI Build, embed or integrate with Drupal Eftersnack Joomla CMDrupal Study finds that refactoring doesn’t improve code quality
## Profiler Builder * What is Profiler Builder? * Profiler Builder was created cause I’m lazy and wanted to just build a site, then figure out the profile, not build both at the same time. My work on profiler builder started to lead me toward the notion that install profiles and distributions can be more of a pain then they are worth, hence recipes. * Is there anything that Profiler Builder doesn’t catch? * How are you using Profiler Builder? ## Drush Recipes * What is the Drush Recipes plugin * Drush Recipes is a series of drush calls chained together in a lightweight command-file, similar to chef and it’s recipes / roles structure. * Why do this instead of just using standard drush calls? * You might need to mess around w/ it to get a sense of some of the things you can do with it since it’s a lot more then just chain automation as it supports branching path logic, automatic recipe authoring, drush commandline recording to author recipes, the ability to take two sites and engineer the difference between them (as drush calls), remote loading of recipes, etc. * I use TextExpander to do this, so I just type a shortcut, and my commands are filled in. How is using Drush Recipes different? * Use cases for this? * First-time site builds * Development/Testing * drush ddt * drup * dvr * Chain them together (reference) * dwr - Interactive (What theme do you want to install?) * Madlib (Tokenize Drush commands) * Reference Make files * Where can we see your recipes and contribute our own?
Vi pratar om Drush pluginen "Site audit" som kan generera en informationsspäckad rapport om din webbplats. Vi går igenom den rapport vi fick på drupalsnack.se. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: En ny programledare sökes Är du intresserad att vara en av Drupalsnacks programledare? Skriv då en rad till oss! Site audit Site Audit projektsida Site audit rapport för drupalsnack.se (drush audit_all –html –detail –bootstrap > site_audit.html) Modulen Hacked Modulen Security review Säkerhetsmeddelandet från Drupal.org från den 15e oktober Bredbandsbolagets modem är lätta att kapa DrupalCamp Gothenburg 14-16e november Eftersnack Apple Pay Shellshock Winter is coming Föreningen Drupal Göteborg
## Deployotron * What is Deployotron? It’s a deployment tool. A low-key approach to easy and safe deployment. * When did you start developing it? Dec. 2013 * Why did you feel it was necessary to add another layer on top of Drush? Needed simple, safe, easy to grok deployment process. Not a Swiss army knife. Other solutions proved to be either too complex/feature-rich or require 3rd party software beyond a simple drush command. * How does it work? Deployotron is implemented as a drush command. When deploying it runs a set of “actions” that does the different steps of deploying. * What kinds of actions can you perform with Deployotron? * Is this extendable? Can other developers add their own commands to be performed during deployment? * Is there a way to configure deployment per environment? So that certain commands are always performed on Staging but not on Live. * What needs to be setup before you can use Deployotron? Deployotron requires drush and the appropriate ssh public keys on the target servers. And Git. * How does it improve the deployment workflow? Easy and fast deployment to other enviroments from the command line. Quick to set up for a new project. * What if you mess up? Is there a rollback feature? There’s an OMG command which will import a dump and reset the codebase to the one that was deployed at the time. * How does this integrate with other tools like Capistrano, Aegir, etc. It doesn’t. Deployotron was meant to be more of an alternative; a simpler one. * So, is this aimed at people hosting on shared hosts? Or do you need a VPS at minimum? Not aimed at shared hosts, as such, but it does support it, given that you have ssh access and drush availability of course. ## Use Cases * How are you guys using it at Reload? Very carefully :-) With careless abandon. * Do you know of anyone else using it? No, not specificly, but there was some interest at the DrupalHagen DrupalCamp.
Topics Design Tools Editors/IDE/Compilers (sass) Tools Source Management and Tools Project Management Tool Issue Tracking & Time tracking Tools Note Taking Tools Todo Tracking Tools Other Tools Communication Tools Module of the week Views Flipped Table https://www.drupal.org/project/views_flipped_table This module provides a views table style with rows and columns flipped. This is useful for views showing few entities with many fields, such as product comparison. Resources Trying out Sketch - http://bohemiancoding.com/sketch/ Typecast! - http://typecast.com Balsamiq (wireframing) - https://balsamiq.com/ Omnigraffle: https://www.omnigroup.com/omnigraffle Coda - http://panic.com/coda/ Codekit - https://incident57.com/codekit/ PHP Storm - http://www.jetbrains.com/phpstorm/ Github - https://github.com/ Bitbucket - bitbucket.com BeanStalk - http://beanstalkapp.com/ Tower - http://www.git-tower.com/ MAMP (Mac) - http://www.mamp.info/en/ Drush - http://drush.org Freshbooks http://freshbooks.com/ Harvest - https://www.getharvest.com/ Tempo - http://www.tempoplugin.com/ Basecamp - https://basecamp.com/ Jira - https://www.atlassian.com/software/jira Evernote - http://www.evernote.com Etherpad - etherpad.mozilla.org Workflowy - https://workflowy.com/ Nozbe - http://www.nozbe.com HipChat - https://www.hipchat.com Zoom.us - http://wwww.zoom.us Guest Dani Nordim - tzk-design.com @danigrrl Hosts Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross Jason Pamental - www.hwdesignco.com @jpamental John Picozzi - www.oomphinc.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLightened.net @nicxvan
Både Kristoffer och Fredrik har börjat använda Ansible under sommaren och går igenom sina erfarenheter. Varför vi både valde Ansible, hur det kan användas för att sätta upp såväl produktions-servrar för Drupal som lokala utvecklingsmiljöer. Hur Ansible fungerar med Aegir. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Sätta upp servrar med Ansible Ansible Ansible Galaxy | Find, reuse, and share the best Ansible content Ansible Playbooks Puppet Chef Ubuntu Big Blue Button Video Conferencing Drush SaltStack Vagrant Vagrant Cloud VirtualBox Aegir Jinja 2 Eftersnack Svenska Bridgeförbundet släppt av Fredrik och SthlmConnection. Geocaching – Wikipedia Adams nya hobby
Drupal 7.26 & 6.31 + i18n, custom_serach etc. Drupal 8, Paragraphs, Radioactivity, Migrate from HTML, Snazzy Maps, Cache Bully och många fler nyheter. Drupal Association Drupal 7.27 & 6.31 Custom Search custom_search-7.x-1.16 Internationalization i18n-7.x-1.11 DrupalCon Amsterdam Hello Drupalcon Amsterdam sprints do not require a ticket Drupal Developer Days 2014 Organizers Report Drupal grow in China Holly Ross the 2014th Contributor Drupal 8 This week (or two or three) in Drupal Core Hiding form fields in Drupal 8 Rolling out the welcome Mat Watch as I try to upgrade this module to Drupal 8. What happens next you won’t BELIEVE! IE8 for Drupal8 Jobb Arbetsförmedlingen Modultipset Paragraphs Radioactivity Migrate from HTML Snazzy Maps Cache Bully Developer blogg artiklar Flag checkboxes Drush CLI input Eget bastema eller inte? Top 10 Drush commands follow up 5 Tips to debug Drupal front-end with Chrome The cost of building a “perfect” custom Drupal installation profile 3 Tips for Making Your Drupal Features Highly Reusable Extra Drupal loggor
## Project * First off, what is Indivizo? Indivizo is a web application that provides a set of products for human resources specialists. Our flagship product is Indivizo Selection, that is a video interview platform. * Allows HR professionals to use video interviews as part of their selection process * Asynchronous interviews — no need to schedule anything, everything is automatic * Question databank, interview plans * Each answer is recorded as a standalone video * Unique workflow: allows you to focus on the competencies and skills of your candidates * Other products: ATS, Search * Why is it a good approach to use video interviews in the selection process? * Saves time (up to 90%) * Better evaluation: objective, easier... * We recommend to use it for first-round selection, but... * Where did the idea come from? * My partners are HR consultants and organizational developers with over a decade of experience on the field. They have helped many organizations in selection processes… * The project emerged from real world needs, with real expertise on the field * Our strength is how we work together * We are an HR company with technology * Global trends show that supporting HR and talent management with technology is getting more and more significant. An HR department plays a key role in an organization’s success, making the need of developing this area imperative. * What is your target group? * Everyone! :) * Large-scale corporations (IT, telecommunication, SSC, bank and insurance) * Small and medium scale companies (without HR department) * Switching to the technology side… What’s the biggest architectural decision when building a Saas app? * Separation of customer spaces: application vs. server level * What are the pros and cons for these two? * Important factors: * Access control * Provisioning new “user space” * Deployment * Building server infrastructure * Scaling * Centralized billing system * Client customization * Which direction was taken with Indivizo? Why? * Installation profile, separation on the server-level, provisioning a separate instance for each customer * Drush make * Build script * Scaling and customization * What is the server infrastructure behind Indivizo? * One single VPS, custom scripts * Waiting for Commerce Platform to be released: * Modern, scalable, cloud-based hosting solution that is modeled on agile development best practices. Its unique capability revolves around managing the infrastructure topology and configuration using the same git-based tools that you use to manage your code. * What are the key modules of the installation profile of Indivizo? * Bootstrap * Page manager and Panels everywhere * Message stack * Organic Groups * Naturally: Views, Entity API * How are the videos recorded? * With the help of a third-party vendor * Recording happens through a flash widget * Videos are hosted by our vendor * We use video.js to play the videos * You mentioned a question databank. How does that work? * Centralized place to curate the content - separate Drupal installation * Client sites fetch the content through a RESTful API * We have future plans with this question databank… * Big organizations often have existing systems in place. Can you integrate with those? * It’s common that a client already has an ATS * We can retrieve applicant data through our RESTful API * What is it like to build a product with Drupal * Insanely fast until about the 80%... * Amazing prototyping tool * I learnt what agile really means: for me is changing directions as quickly as we can * Reacting on customer feedback * Releasing as early as possible * “If you are not ashamed of your product when you launched, you launched too late” - Reid Hoffman, founder of LinkedIn * I jumped into this project as a developer, but working on a product requires more of a business mindset * As a developer I liked polishing things until they are (nearly) perfect... * Shipping on time and on budget is essential, even when what you ship is rough * I’m gonna do a session about this topic at Drupal Developer Days in Szeged * Where are you at with Indivizo? * Expanding on the Hungarian market… * Working on a strategy to reach out customers in broader Europe ## Use Cases * Things I hope this has inspired you to do something! ## NodeSquirrel Ad Have you heard of/used NodeSquirrel? Use "StartToGrow" it's a 12-month free upgrade from the Start plan to the Grow plan. So, using it means that the Grow plan will cost $5/month for the first year instead of $10. (10 GB storage on up to 5 sites)
## Kalatheme * What is Kalatheme? * Does this play nicely with Panels/Context etc? * I don’t actually have any experience with Panels In Place Editor. What functionality does that provide the theme? * What version of Bootstrap are you using? * Is Sass-ability built in? * On the Project Page, it says you can use other Bootstrap themes. How does that work? * You mentioned a subtheme generator. What is that? How does it work? * Is this a base theme that people should sub-theme? Or can people use it out of the box. * What are the Drush commands that work with Kalatheme? ## Use Cases * What do you see as the target audience for Kalatheme? * Do you know of any sites using Kalatheme that we can look at? ## NodeSquirrel Ad Have you heard of/used NodeSquirrel? Use "StartToGrow" it's a 12-month free upgrade from the Start plan to the Grow plan. So, using it means that the Grow plan will cost $5/month for the first year instead of $10. (10 GB storage on up to 5 sites)
## Master * What is the Master module? * Does this integrate with Features? * How does this work in a Dev-Stage-Live configuration? * How do you go about defining your Master modules? * I was looking at your “Introducing Master” blog post, and noticed that any module that is not declared as either a master module, or a dependent of a master module are considered redundant and won’t be active on the site. Is that right? And what’s the reason for such tight control? * I saw that there was a D6 version, and that it had configuration in the UI. But it looks like the only way to use Master in D7 is with Drush is that right? * Are there any plans to introduce a UI in D7? ## Use Cases * There are a few commands on the project page. “drush master-status”, “drush master-execute”, “drush master-removables” and “drush master-absent”. Can you explain what those are and what they do? * drush master-status * drush master-execute * drush master-removables * drush master-absent * What are scopes? * How can this be used to find modules that are enabled, but not in use? ## Comments on your blog post * I'm curious, a lot of this functionality is similar to that of install profiles and features. Also it is very development oriented. Once the project ages and people forget to add dependencies to code, wouldn't the ensure command be a recipe for disaster? Maybe I need to try it to understand the exact purpose :) * If you've got a different workflow you might be interested in using the --no-disable option. ## NodeSquirrel Ad Have you heard of/used NodeSquirrel? Use "StartToGrow" it's a 12-month free upgrade from the Start plan to the Grow plan. So, using it means that the Grow plan will cost $5/month for the first year instead of $10. (10 GB storage on up to 5 sites)
Vi har tittat närmare på vad DrupalCon Prag har i kappsäcken, vilka förändringar som har gjorts jämfört med föregående 'cons', vad vi ska hålla utkik efter, vad vi förväntar oss, hur ett DrupalCon tas fram och lite minnen från tidigare DrupalCons vi har varit på. Vi avslutar naturligtvis avsnittet med lite nyheter, nya lanseringar samt modultips från Drupalsfären. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Blandade länkar som dök upp i podden DestinationJobb.se DestinationJobb på Facebook Drupalsnack #14: Utvecklarmoduler PHP REPL för Drupal BORIS Drupalsnack #10: Drush är fantastiskt Drupal Geek Meet i Göteborg DrupalCon Prag DrupalCon Prague Gänget bakom DrupalCon De olika spåren Sessionsschema Tutti fan Drupal - DrupalCon Explained Sprintdeltagarschema Training på måndagen Community Summit Addison Berrys blogginlägg BOFs: Birds of a feather Drupalnyheter DrupalHagen - DrupalCamp Köpenhamn Hello World för CMI Take the pain out of Drupal’s admin forms SEO vid webbplatsmigrering Zen and the art of innovation Dries skriver om de stora arkitektuella förändringarna i Drupal 8 Låt 19e november bli Dries Day Drupal.org på Drupal 7 Kandidaterna till Drupal Association Drupal Associations sessions-inspelningar på YouTube Nya sajter Lights in Alingsås Mora IK Samsung Music De mest besöka Drupalsajterna i Sverige (Alexa) Svenska Drupalsajter på Drupalsverige.se Modultips TTR Configurable Widget Commerce Payson Integration Din feedback Vad tycker du om våra podcasts? Är det något du saknar? Något du tycker är onödigt? Skicka in dina tankar till oss.
Show Topics - What is drush? - Benefits of using drush - Installing drush - Security and Running at root - Where to run drush from - Useful drush commands - Site setup with drush - Scripts and Make files Links Drupal - Drush.org Drupal project - https://drupal.org/project/drush Hosts Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross Jason Pamental - www.designco.com @jpamental John Picozzi - www.RubicDesign.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLightened.net @nicxvan Jay Lee - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @jayrandolphlee
Show Topics - Design 4 Drupal - Working on local machine - Tools and software stacks - Update two Drupal systems (keeping things in sync) - Backup and Migrate - Team development - Source Code Management - Drupal configuration in dev environment - PHP Time Limit and Memory Size - Admin and test user accounts - Module of the Week - Devel Module - Drupal PVD - http://www.drupalpvd.org/ Hosts: - Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross - Jason Pamental - www.hwdesignco.com @jpamental - John Picozzi - www.RubicDesign.com @johnpicozzi - Nic Laflin - www.nLightened.net @nicxvan Modules: - Drush - https://drupal.org/project/drush - Features - https://drupal.org/project/features - Strongarm- https://drupal.org/project/strongarm - Backup and Migrate Module - https://drupal.org/project/backup_migrate - Boost Module - https://drupal.org/project/boost - Masquerade - https://drupal.org/project/masquerade/ - Devel Module - https://drupal.org/project/devel Links: - Design 4 Drupal - http://boston2013.design4drupal.org/ - Cygwin - http://www.cygwin.com/ - Virtual Box - https://www.virtualbox.org/ - MAMP - http://mamp.info - Coda - http://panic.com/coda/ - Tower - http://www.git-tower.com/ - Git - http://git-scm.com/ - Drush - https://drupal.org/project/drush
Show Topics: - Search for a Module - Searching in Drupal.org or Google (site:drupal.org keyword) - Criteria for choosing a module - Process for testing modules - Module of the Week Modules: - Views Conditional - https://drupal.org/project/views_conditional - Filter Module - https://drupal.org/project/module_filter Links: - Drupal IRC - https://drupal.org/irc - Nick Lewis - 40+ Essential Drupal Modules - http://www.nicklewis.org/40-essential-drupal-6-modules - Drush - https://drupal.org/project/drush - Comparison on Contributed Modules - https://drupal.org/node/266179 - MAMP - http://www.mamp.info/ - Trevor - @tdsportsfacts Module of the Week Filter Module - https://drupal.org/project/module_filter Hosts: Stephen Cross - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @stephencross Jay Lee - www.ParallaxInfoTech.com @jayrandolphlee Jason Pamental - www.hwdesignco.com @jpamental John Picozzi - www.RubicDesign.com @johnpicozzi Nic Laflin - www.nLightened.net @nicxvan
Vi pratar om Drush och delar med oss av våra mest använda kommandon. Hannes Lilljequist från SthlmConnection är gäst i detta avsnitt. Vi presenterar stolt Drupalsnacks första sponsor, hostingföretaget Cloudnet. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Detta avsnitt sponsras av Cloudnet Cloudnet kör managed hosting av Linux. De sätter upp din server, ser till att den är optimerad för de tjänster du vill göra samt håller den uppdaterad. Ingen av oss programledare använder Cloudnet ännu men vi har inte hört annat än gott om dem från många av våra kollegor. Hannes Lilljequist från Sthlm Connection berättar i detta avsnitt om varför de använder Cloudnet för alla sina servrar. Vill du att testa deras tjänster så skriv gärna in kampanjkoden “drupalsnack5” som en kommentar på Cloudnets beställningsformulär för att stödja Drupalsnack. Då får du dessutom en födelsedagstårta för att fira! Hannes Lilljequist, avsnittets gäst Var med och startade http://www.sthlmconnection.se/ zoo33 på Drupal.org http://drupal.org/user/37075 hannes_l på Twitter https://twitter.com/hannes_l Drupal-projekt som Hannes är med i: http://spring2013.drupalcamp.se/ http://drupal.org/project/pjax http://localize.drupal.org/translate/languages/sv Nyligen lanserat av Hannes: http://www.snick-snack.se/ Annat Hannes nämnde: http://drupal.org/project/leaflet http://jekyllrb.com/ http://emberjs.com/ Tack Hannes, var väldigt trevligt att ha dig med! Drush Drush.org med documentation Drush på drupal.org Homebrew. Pakethanterare för Mac OS X som bl. a. gör det enkelt att installera Drush. Acquia Dev Desktop har Drush förinstallerat, troligen bästa lösning för utveckling på Windows. Drush Windows Installer på Drush.org De kommandon vi tittar på och pratar om: drush dl drush en drush dre -y colorbox drush sql-dump –gzip –result-file drush sql-sync @drupalsnack.prod @drupalsnack.dev drush up –version-control=bzr –bzrsync –bzrcommit drush up drush drush @drupalsnack.prod cc all drush cc all drush upwd admin –password=”1234” drush uli admin drush fua -y drush zen drupalsnack Moduler vi nämnde som har egna Drush-konnadon: Devel Colorbox Features Module Builder Zen theme DrupalCamp Göteborg DrupalCamp Göteborg Nyheter https://association.drupal.org/node/17873 http://www.webomelette.com/drupal-community-what-makes-it-awesome http://insready.com/en/blog/drupalcampchina-2013-milestone-drupals-growth-china http://janezurevc.name/help-vincenzo-rubano https://association.drupal.org/node/17828 Nya Drupal sajter http://www.mkse.com/2013/04/16/folkoperan-satsar-pa-drupal-cms/ http://www.mkse.com/2013/04/18/svenska-orient-linien-goes-drupal-7/ http://www.mkse.com/2013/04/17/webapp-pa-drupal-av-ninetech-for-nordic-camping-resort/ http://www.mkse.com/2013/04/19/almondy-tartor-satsar-pa-drupal-cms/ http://www.mkse.com/2013/04/25/westpride-live-pa-responsiv-drupal-7/
Utvecklingsmiljöer för Drupal. Vi går igenom hur vi själva arbetar och diskuterar deras för och nackdelar. Intervju med Mattias Axelsson, en av organisatörerna av DrupalCamp Stockholm 8 mars 2013. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Utvecklingsmiljöer LAMP - Linux, Apache, MySQL och PHP MAMP WampServer MacPorts Homebrew VirtualBox Vagrant Program och moduler Drush - guide Drush (projektet) Features Putty Sequel Pro Versionshantering Git BitBucket GitHub SmartGit Text-editorer Sublime Text Ultra Edit BBEdit Eclipse PDT vim DrupalCamp Stockholm DrupalCamp Stockholm Drupal Awards Modultipset Block Up Down Meta tags (ersätter numera Page Title) Drupalnytt Drupalsprint weekend @ drupalcamp Stockholm | Drupal Groups How To: Start Contributing in Drupal.org Issue Queues | julian.granger-bevan.me Senior Drupal Themer/ Front end developer-£400-500 Per Day | Enterprise Client- Stockholm, Sweden | Drupal Groups Tips for using Gmail | Mediacurrent Blog Post Adopting the Drupal Culture | THINKDROP Facebook To App Developers: Good Idea, Now Stop Using Our API - Slashdot The Module Off Challenge #2 | Mike Kadin Panels, where did my time go? | Wunderkraut
Vi pratar om våra favoritmoduler och introducerar oss själva och Drupalsnack poddradioprogram förstås. Länkar till moduler, webbplatser och tjänster vi pratade om i detta avsnitt: Kodsnack Drupalsnack Drupalsnack på Twitter Meimi Sverige-gruppen Drupalsverige SthlmConnection DrupalCamp Stockholm 8 mars 2013 Drush Commerce Klarna Colorbox Modal forms Mollom App.net frjo på App.net Kristoffers Top 10 moduler för Drupal Views Display Suit Administration menu Chaos tool suite (ctools) Panels (För tutorial se NodeOne Learning library och Johan Falk Four weeks of Drupal) Email Field Pathauto @font-your-face Entity reference Module Filter Fredriks Top 10 moduler för Drupal Localization update Search API Entity view modes Entity cache Nodequeue DraggableViews Markdown filter Markdown editor for BUEditor Typogrify Transliteration
1- Track #1 2- Track #2 3- Paris Luanda (Sunnery James & Ryan Marciano Remix) 4- Nicky Romero - Camorra (Original Mix) 5- Track #5 6- Lucky Charmes & Kid Kaio - Plain Dots (Original Mix) 7- Michael Calfan - Resurrection (Axwell's Re-Cut Club Version) 8- Swedish House Mafia VS Knife Party - Antidote (Vocal Mix) 9- Track #9 10- Track #10 11- Swanky Tunes vs Hard Rock Sofa - Carry Me Home Smolengrad Phantom (Afonso Amaral Tribute To Russians Edit) 12- Track #12 13- Ronan Portela - Beat Up (Original Mix) 14- Azari - Hungry For The Power (Jamie Jones Ridge Street Remix) 15- Digitaline - Africa 16- The African Drummer (Zepherin Saint Instrumental) Full Playlist => http://facebook.com/deepdrushfan Contact@deepdrush.com www.deepdrush.com