Village in Podlaskie Voivodeship, Poland
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Dryga 50 minuter får ni höra oss resonera om veckans stryktipskupong med en hel del sidospår. Vi diskuterar alltifrån den skotska Maradona till mardrömsveckor och mycket mer.Vill ni köpa en andel så är det bara att klicka på länken här nedan:https://spela.svenskaspel.se/spela-tillsammans/bli-medlem/ef78326b-ec52-4731-b0ab-05d550772d81
Dryga månaden återstår innan årets upplaga av Elitloppet avgörs och den här tiden på året är drömmarna många. Vissa drömmer om att få vara med och vissa drömmer om ett elitlopp att minnas. Det här är årets första avsnitt i vår serie Drömmen om Elitloppet – där vi tagit rygg på Solvallas Anders Malmrot på Enghien.
Den 33e frukosten - rätt version Become a member at https://plus.acast.com/s/hakeliuspopova. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Dryga böter för producenterna efter Alec Baldwins dödsskjutning vid filminspelning, vi recenserar den franska författaren Marie NDiayes senaste roman "Min är hämnden"och pratar med Storbritanniens representant i Eurovision Song Contest, Tiktok-stjärnan Sam Ryder. Programledare: Nina Sjöman Producent: Lina Kalmteg
Nyhetssändning från kulturredaktionen P1, med reportage, nyheter och recensioner. Producent: Måns HirschfeldtProgramledare: Maria Askerfjord Sundeby
I avsnitt 8 är det dags för Manuel och Heden att utmana varandra med varsin lista! Heden får utmaningen att lista sina topp fem mest minnesvärda trophies och achievements medan Manuel listar fem dryga spelmekaniker i annars bra spel. Vi går i vanlig ordning igenom alla spel vi spelat senaste tiden, bland annat hör vi om Hedens återupptäckande av Rune Factory Frontier. Trevlig lyssning! Joina vår Discord: https://discord.gg/7r2228C833 Stötta oss på Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/pantsoffgaming Kolla in vår e-shop: https://shop.spreadshirt.se/pants-off-gaming/
Kalle Berg och Babs Drougge på P3 Nyheter förklarar morgonens stora nyheter, alltid tillsammans med programledarna för Morgonpasset i P3. Folk som är med i realityprogram tvingas ofta skriva under snåriga avtal, där en spoiler kan kosta 100 000 kronor. Det visar kontrakt som P3 Nyheter tagit del av. En deltagare berättar att hon varit så rädd för att straffas att hon inte ens berättat för sin familj om hur dåligt hon mådde under produktionen. Sen grottar vi ner oss i vårdbolaget Attendo, som varit i hetluften den senaste tiden. Rubrikerna om bonusar, coronastöd och visselblåsare haglar och det kan vara svårt att hänga med. Vi sammanfattar och reder ut.
Lyssna på hela avsnittet via Patreon. Nytt avsnitt ute! I den öppna delen om: » Eddie Läcks avslöjande » Vidskepligheten BVK skapat » Fem trevliga kontraktsförlängningar I Patreon-delen: » Calle Själin gästar! » Har vi leksingar blivit... dryga? » Putte vill till Kinnarps! » Målkalassegern i Gävle! Avsnitt 117!
Åsiktskorridoren av och med Ulrica Schenström, Anders Lindberg, Lina Stenberg och Ingvar Persson
I detta avsnitt pratar vi om vad som hänt oss i veckan, och tar även upp nyheter. Dagens lauring blir en frågesport om musik och självklart så är dagens Nocco en perfekt avslut på vårt andra avsnitt! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kotbroadcast/message
Amanda bleker Celines hår samtidigt som de försöker ha en diskussion om hur okej det egentligen är att flörta på en arbetsplats. Multitasking kanske inte är den bästa taktiken så på jakt efter bättre ljud så flyttar Celine och Amanda höga på färgångorna in i garderoben. Där börjar de prata om deras tidigare fjortis fasoner. Ni kan kontakta oss via vår instagram: Vararlignupodcast där kan ni även hitta bilder och kommentarer relaterande till avsnitten.
Semestern är över, Philip har blivit fet och Tomas har blivit Pappa men inget stoppar stjärnsäljarna från att bespotta både holländare och svenska semesterfirare i säsongens första avsnitt. Kanske får du också veta hur du absolut inte skall starta en konversation på LinkedIn.
Rozmowa z Łukaszem Drygałą o wyzwaniach w testowaniu systemów rozproszonych, wpływie nieprogramistycznych problemów na pracę programistów i poczuciu odpowiedzialności za jakość w projekcie.
Tune in och hör vad Gubbsen ft. Ille Freeway & Life of Momo tycker om göteborgare kontra stockholmare, kosmetiska operationer, livets motgångar och mycket mer. Följ oss på insta & Twitter: @storanamnpodcast Prenumerera även på vår Youtube-kanal: Stora Namn Podcast. One Love!
Panel: Mark Ericksen Eric Berry Josh Adams Nathan Hopkins Special Guest: Andrew Dryga In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks with Andrew Dryga who is a software engineer (full-stack), entrepreneur, blockchain architect, and consultant. He currently works for Hammer and previous employers include Contractbook, Nebo #15, BEST Money Transfers among others. He studied at the National Technical University of Ukraine. Check out today’s episode where the panel and guest talk about Sagas and Sage. Show Topics: 1:52 – Our guest today is Andrew Dryga. Why are you into Elixir? 2:04 – Andrew: I have worked in Elixir for a few years. I worked on one of the biggest opensource projects for a while now. 2:42 – Let’s talk about Sage! 2:49 – Andrew: I felt like I was doing the same thing over, and over again. Andrew talks about how he was on a mission to solve a problem that he was having. 3:48 – Panelist: I have run into this problem before, and I am looking forward We have distribution systems and anything that is external for us (Stripe), and one of the solutions was to create a multi. Let’s create a user, register theses different pieces, and then... Then we realized that this request was taking too long. Our transaction is timing out. The other connection went to the other server. We had database records removed from the other side. People aren’t aware that they have these distribution problems. I think Stripe is a good example of that. I started with my multi... 5:24 – Andrew: I am trying to be very programmatic. I don’t want to do that, so write now the project is multi. It’s doable if you know what you are doing. If you are dealing with just one it’s simple. But if you can monitor them (Sage Read Me)... 56:16 – Let’s talk about Sagas! 6:19 – Andrew talks about what Sagas are. 8:20 – You are right it is a new mental model. That’s why I love the Sage library because it is simple. It gives structure to that mental model. The idea that I will take step one and create a user, step two another entry, step three now an external entry. It can fail for any reason. Then these compensating functions are saying: what is the undo for this? It could be just delete this specific entry. But do I have that right? 9:53 – Andrew gives his comments on those comments. 10:26 – Andrew continues his ideas. 11:09 – When you start with a new team, you don’t bring Sage right off the back? What is your strategy to figure out that pain? 11:32 – Andrew: I don’t have a plan – how do I feel about THAT coder. After about 2 services and 1 call it’s time to use Sage or it will be too complex. Integration is the case. So if you try to integrate substitution then... 12:29 – Question to Andrew. 12:35 – Andrew: Figure it out by judgment and it varies by situation. I enjoy working with them but I’m not like them. I use my best judgment. 12:59 – You talked at Code Beam and talked about Sagas and Sage. I think that’s a good resource to defend you case. To talk about the sequence of events, something goes wrong, and then rollback the changes. What feedback have you received? 13:46 – Andrew: Yes, good feedback. There some people will say that there are problems, but I know there are companies that are actively using it. People say that it simplifies their projects. I think the presentation slides can definitely help. 14:39 – Yes, check out the show notes links. 14:45 – Are you a consultant or are you fulltime? 14:53 – Andrew: I used to be fulltime and do large projects for companies. Andrew talks about those projects in detail. Andrew: Those projects we used Elixir (see above). I do a lot of opensource, too. Last time I check it was... 16:04 – That’s a good number. 16:08 – Andrew: I am trying to participate in conversations, but if I had more times I would work more in Sage and opensource; to have a persistent nature behind Sage. I think it can be done a much better way. 16:55 – How do you envision doing that? Configuring it to a repo or something else? 17:07 – Andrew: I want to solve the problem of... 17:56 – That’s cool. 18:03 – Andrew: Yeah, everything I find a new application built in. 18:17 – Andrew and panelist go back-and-forth. 18:32 – Andrew continues talking about Sage and models. 18:43 – Proxy channel – I think I want to do a Mud. Anyway... 18:59 – Question. 19:11 – There is a WX library that is built into Erlang which was talked about at the conference. That one looked interesting. How they built the debugger and the widgets. It looked that there was more there than I thought. 19:47 – Great to have out of the box. 19:56 – Andrew comments. Andrew: I saw the talk from Canada and... 20:08 – It’s early to work with. Someone tweeted about it and now I’m rambling. 20:08 – Andrew: Someone made the keyboard while on the plane. 21:04 – I hope we are going that route eventually. 21:12 – Panel and Andrew go back-and-forth. 21:39 – What other applications have you found that Saga would work for? 21:50 – Stripe. 21:56 – Panelist: When I make an authorization request, capture the funds. Even when I am dealing with one of their services there are multi-interactions. 22:03 – Andrew comments. 23:32 – I have an app that I would prefer using Saga because of the... 23:44 – Loot Crate! Check out their deal! 24:37 – Andrew talks about the core team, Elixir and Sage. 26:03 – Panelist: To solve a problem with SAGA let’s talk about the pros and cons. I had an umbrella application and one of the applications was supposed to be the interface to that service. It could be like a payment service and other payment gateways. I am going to make my request to this app, and it’s going to track the app. The main thing continues and talks to the bank and/or Stripe. Depending on the problems but you still have THAT problem because maybe the account wasn’t set up properly. Now we’ve talked to the bank, medium intervention, and let’s run this. I like SAGE and SAGAS because I don’t’ have to go to that level to break out the proxies. I just need to talk with the sales force or something. I need a reliable system when it can recover when something goes wrong. It might be over engineered but I don’t know. 28:17 – Andrew comments about that particular example (see above). 29:03 – With Sagas you can loose them... 29:09 – I haven’t played with Rabbit, yet. The one that is built into AWS? There’s Simple Q and there is something else. Rabbit is built with Erlang. What’s that like for you? 29:40 – Andrew: It’s pretty painful. Andrew mentions MPP. 30:37 – Interesting; I haven’t gotten that far, yet. 30:45 – My first Elixir application had...behind it. That was the worst part. I feel those pains. 31:00 – Andrew: That’s the case. 31:51 – The other service I was thinking of was... 31:56 – Question for Andrew. 31:59 – Andrew answers. 32:39 – That is the problem we are having at work because of older code. How can we resend them out? That probably will be a good fit for us. 33:18 – Andrew. 34:31 – Andrew: Once you’ve found the bug... 35:16 – When you are coming to a new language, it could be React or...the first few things will be pretty awful. What has this path been like for you, Nathan? 35:40 – Nathan: Yeah I am very early days. Yesterday, I had a set of code that I was creating to try just to function and it was really ugly. But I was okay with that because I was just trying to solve the issue. 36:05 – You have to be okay with that. The idea that: You are trying to just make it work. When you come to Elixir and being fresh and thinking I don’t even know what to do. 36:32 – I have a buddy with that now saying: How do I even start with this?! 36:40 – Andrew: It takes time to break your head and a different way to rethink the code. Once I have the basic concepts then it makes me feel super efficient. 37:24 – I am curious what languages have you had experience with? 37:38 – Andrew: I started commercial projects in my teenage years. I built websites for them. I have some JavaScript knowledge and that was good going to Elixir. 39:04 – I favor that side, too. It’s not hard to build solutions with the things that are in the box (Erlang). I don’t like to bring in all of these libraries that people are creating. It’s great but, at the same time, I have been burned by Rails and JavaScript where you bring in all of these different libraries, and it becomes really nasty. I could have solved it more natively. 39:55 – Andrew: In Elixir you can... 40:28 – Oh, that’s all I needed – those 2 lines. 40:40 – Andrew. 40:46 – That’s an interesting dynamic. 41:09 – Andrew comments talks about Elixir and Hex. 41:23 – Andrew: I think it’s a good thing. I think there needs to be work in Hex because it’s underdeveloped. To name a few... 43:08 – Part of the keynote this year that it won’t be merged, or they aren’t promising to merge it. 43:29 – Andrew. 44:08 – I haven’t used 3, yet. 44:10 – Andrew. 44:55 – They are talking about the Read Me. I didn’t know there was an Ecto Mnesia? 45:20 – Andrew: Yeah I helped build it and the plan was... 45:50 – Yeah I can see the issue there, do I maintain it or...? 46:02 – Andrew comments and talks about the community and different codes. 46:36 – Andrew, anything else that you want to talk about? 46:48 – There are tons of notes in our chat, which the listeners can’t see. 46:58 – Advertisement – Fresh Books’ Advertisement! 30-Day Trial! Links: Ruby Elixir JavaScript React Erlang – Disk Log Erlang WX Railway Oriented Programming Nebo 15 GitHub – Scenic Kafka Rabbit MQ AWS AWS – Kinesis GitHub – Firenest XHTTP GitHub – Ecto GitHub – Ecto Mnesia Saga and Medium Introducing Sage Andrew Dryga’s Website Andrew Dryga’s Medium Andrew Dryga’s GitHub Andrew Dryga’s LinkedIn Andrew Dryga’s Twitter Andrew Dryga’s FB Andrew’s YouTube Channel Andrew’s Sagas of Elixir Video Sponsors: Loot Crate Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Mark Mark of the Ninja Josh A Sneak Peek at Ecto 3.0: Breaking Changes Nate Pragmatic Studio Eric Looking of Elixir Developers Metabase.com Polymail Andrew Tide of History
Panel: Mark Ericksen Eric Berry Josh Adams Nathan Hopkins Special Guest: Andrew Dryga In this episode of Elixir Mix, the panel talks with Andrew Dryga who is a software engineer (full-stack), entrepreneur, blockchain architect, and consultant. He currently works for Hammer and previous employers include Contractbook, Nebo #15, BEST Money Transfers among others. He studied at the National Technical University of Ukraine. Check out today’s episode where the panel and guest talk about Sagas and Sage. Show Topics: 1:52 – Our guest today is Andrew Dryga. Why are you into Elixir? 2:04 – Andrew: I have worked in Elixir for a few years. I worked on one of the biggest opensource projects for a while now. 2:42 – Let’s talk about Sage! 2:49 – Andrew: I felt like I was doing the same thing over, and over again. Andrew talks about how he was on a mission to solve a problem that he was having. 3:48 – Panelist: I have run into this problem before, and I am looking forward We have distribution systems and anything that is external for us (Stripe), and one of the solutions was to create a multi. Let’s create a user, register theses different pieces, and then... Then we realized that this request was taking too long. Our transaction is timing out. The other connection went to the other server. We had database records removed from the other side. People aren’t aware that they have these distribution problems. I think Stripe is a good example of that. I started with my multi... 5:24 – Andrew: I am trying to be very programmatic. I don’t want to do that, so write now the project is multi. It’s doable if you know what you are doing. If you are dealing with just one it’s simple. But if you can monitor them (Sage Read Me)... 56:16 – Let’s talk about Sagas! 6:19 – Andrew talks about what Sagas are. 8:20 – You are right it is a new mental model. That’s why I love the Sage library because it is simple. It gives structure to that mental model. The idea that I will take step one and create a user, step two another entry, step three now an external entry. It can fail for any reason. Then these compensating functions are saying: what is the undo for this? It could be just delete this specific entry. But do I have that right? 9:53 – Andrew gives his comments on those comments. 10:26 – Andrew continues his ideas. 11:09 – When you start with a new team, you don’t bring Sage right off the back? What is your strategy to figure out that pain? 11:32 – Andrew: I don’t have a plan – how do I feel about THAT coder. After about 2 services and 1 call it’s time to use Sage or it will be too complex. Integration is the case. So if you try to integrate substitution then... 12:29 – Question to Andrew. 12:35 – Andrew: Figure it out by judgment and it varies by situation. I enjoy working with them but I’m not like them. I use my best judgment. 12:59 – You talked at Code Beam and talked about Sagas and Sage. I think that’s a good resource to defend you case. To talk about the sequence of events, something goes wrong, and then rollback the changes. What feedback have you received? 13:46 – Andrew: Yes, good feedback. There some people will say that there are problems, but I know there are companies that are actively using it. People say that it simplifies their projects. I think the presentation slides can definitely help. 14:39 – Yes, check out the show notes links. 14:45 – Are you a consultant or are you fulltime? 14:53 – Andrew: I used to be fulltime and do large projects for companies. Andrew talks about those projects in detail. Andrew: Those projects we used Elixir (see above). I do a lot of opensource, too. Last time I check it was... 16:04 – That’s a good number. 16:08 – Andrew: I am trying to participate in conversations, but if I had more times I would work more in Sage and opensource; to have a persistent nature behind Sage. I think it can be done a much better way. 16:55 – How do you envision doing that? Configuring it to a repo or something else? 17:07 – Andrew: I want to solve the problem of... 17:56 – That’s cool. 18:03 – Andrew: Yeah, everything I find a new application built in. 18:17 – Andrew and panelist go back-and-forth. 18:32 – Andrew continues talking about Sage and models. 18:43 – Proxy channel – I think I want to do a Mud. Anyway... 18:59 – Question. 19:11 – There is a WX library that is built into Erlang which was talked about at the conference. That one looked interesting. How they built the debugger and the widgets. It looked that there was more there than I thought. 19:47 – Great to have out of the box. 19:56 – Andrew comments. Andrew: I saw the talk from Canada and... 20:08 – It’s early to work with. Someone tweeted about it and now I’m rambling. 20:08 – Andrew: Someone made the keyboard while on the plane. 21:04 – I hope we are going that route eventually. 21:12 – Panel and Andrew go back-and-forth. 21:39 – What other applications have you found that Saga would work for? 21:50 – Stripe. 21:56 – Panelist: When I make an authorization request, capture the funds. Even when I am dealing with one of their services there are multi-interactions. 22:03 – Andrew comments. 23:32 – I have an app that I would prefer using Saga because of the... 23:44 – Loot Crate! Check out their deal! 24:37 – Andrew talks about the core team, Elixir and Sage. 26:03 – Panelist: To solve a problem with SAGA let’s talk about the pros and cons. I had an umbrella application and one of the applications was supposed to be the interface to that service. It could be like a payment service and other payment gateways. I am going to make my request to this app, and it’s going to track the app. The main thing continues and talks to the bank and/or Stripe. Depending on the problems but you still have THAT problem because maybe the account wasn’t set up properly. Now we’ve talked to the bank, medium intervention, and let’s run this. I like SAGE and SAGAS because I don’t’ have to go to that level to break out the proxies. I just need to talk with the sales force or something. I need a reliable system when it can recover when something goes wrong. It might be over engineered but I don’t know. 28:17 – Andrew comments about that particular example (see above). 29:03 – With Sagas you can loose them... 29:09 – I haven’t played with Rabbit, yet. The one that is built into AWS? There’s Simple Q and there is something else. Rabbit is built with Erlang. What’s that like for you? 29:40 – Andrew: It’s pretty painful. Andrew mentions MPP. 30:37 – Interesting; I haven’t gotten that far, yet. 30:45 – My first Elixir application had...behind it. That was the worst part. I feel those pains. 31:00 – Andrew: That’s the case. 31:51 – The other service I was thinking of was... 31:56 – Question for Andrew. 31:59 – Andrew answers. 32:39 – That is the problem we are having at work because of older code. How can we resend them out? That probably will be a good fit for us. 33:18 – Andrew. 34:31 – Andrew: Once you’ve found the bug... 35:16 – When you are coming to a new language, it could be React or...the first few things will be pretty awful. What has this path been like for you, Nathan? 35:40 – Nathan: Yeah I am very early days. Yesterday, I had a set of code that I was creating to try just to function and it was really ugly. But I was okay with that because I was just trying to solve the issue. 36:05 – You have to be okay with that. The idea that: You are trying to just make it work. When you come to Elixir and being fresh and thinking I don’t even know what to do. 36:32 – I have a buddy with that now saying: How do I even start with this?! 36:40 – Andrew: It takes time to break your head and a different way to rethink the code. Once I have the basic concepts then it makes me feel super efficient. 37:24 – I am curious what languages have you had experience with? 37:38 – Andrew: I started commercial projects in my teenage years. I built websites for them. I have some JavaScript knowledge and that was good going to Elixir. 39:04 – I favor that side, too. It’s not hard to build solutions with the things that are in the box (Erlang). I don’t like to bring in all of these libraries that people are creating. It’s great but, at the same time, I have been burned by Rails and JavaScript where you bring in all of these different libraries, and it becomes really nasty. I could have solved it more natively. 39:55 – Andrew: In Elixir you can... 40:28 – Oh, that’s all I needed – those 2 lines. 40:40 – Andrew. 40:46 – That’s an interesting dynamic. 41:09 – Andrew comments talks about Elixir and Hex. 41:23 – Andrew: I think it’s a good thing. I think there needs to be work in Hex because it’s underdeveloped. To name a few... 43:08 – Part of the keynote this year that it won’t be merged, or they aren’t promising to merge it. 43:29 – Andrew. 44:08 – I haven’t used 3, yet. 44:10 – Andrew. 44:55 – They are talking about the Read Me. I didn’t know there was an Ecto Mnesia? 45:20 – Andrew: Yeah I helped build it and the plan was... 45:50 – Yeah I can see the issue there, do I maintain it or...? 46:02 – Andrew comments and talks about the community and different codes. 46:36 – Andrew, anything else that you want to talk about? 46:48 – There are tons of notes in our chat, which the listeners can’t see. 46:58 – Advertisement – Fresh Books’ Advertisement! 30-Day Trial! Links: Ruby Elixir JavaScript React Erlang – Disk Log Erlang WX Railway Oriented Programming Nebo 15 GitHub – Scenic Kafka Rabbit MQ AWS AWS – Kinesis GitHub – Firenest XHTTP GitHub – Ecto GitHub – Ecto Mnesia Saga and Medium Introducing Sage Andrew Dryga’s Website Andrew Dryga’s Medium Andrew Dryga’s GitHub Andrew Dryga’s LinkedIn Andrew Dryga’s Twitter Andrew Dryga’s FB Andrew’s YouTube Channel Andrew’s Sagas of Elixir Video Sponsors: Loot Crate Fresh Books Cache Fly Picks: Mark Mark of the Ninja Josh A Sneak Peek at Ecto 3.0: Breaking Changes Nate Pragmatic Studio Eric Looking of Elixir Developers Metabase.com Polymail Andrew Tide of History
Idag om satsmelodiernas betydelse: både för hur du uppfattar andra och hur du själv uppfattas som människa. Men är verkligen alla göteborgare goa och glada? Eller alla stockholmare dryga och tuffa? Programledare: Fredrik Lindström Slutmix: Frida Claesson-Johansson Producent: Marie-Caroline Biver Producent: David Rune Dialekt i P1 görs av produktionsbolaget Munck.
Avsnitt 7 av IoT-podden berör alla som i någon form arbetar med persondata. Den 25 maj 2018 ersätts Personuppgiftslagen (PUL) av EU-direktivet GDPR (General Data Protection Regulation). För att slippa dryga böter är det hög tid att planera inför förändringen. Kristoffer Arfvidson från IT-säkerhetsföretaget Basalt och Marielle Eide från affärsjuristbyrån Delphi delar med sig av sina bästa tips.
Dryga två timmar där La Liga och Bundesliga stöts och blöts! Gäster: Adam Pinthorp och Adam Nilsson.
Nu har vi knåpat ihop en del av den svenska bussåkandes extremvänsterns utvärdering av händelserna i Hamburg under G20 mötet när världens ledande våldsverkare träffades för att diskutera världens framtid. Det utbröt såklart protester och kravaller i samband med detta, och sen kom klagolåten på ledarplats. Ja, ni vett. Det är ett lite kortare avsnitt än vanligt och det är mycket vi missat men aktualiteten kallar för en gångs skull lite extra. Dryga är vi i alla fall. Mycket nöje!
Episode 17 Dryga gotlänningar, barndomslegenden Pengu och en massa annat inget speciellt. Dagen till ära gästas vi av vår vän Victor Larsson. Trevlig helg! @: hultan4life@gmail.com
I veckans avsnitt handlar det om en enda sak: Batman V Superman. Veckans panel med Peter, Niklas, Victor och Malin "diss"-ikerar denna kritikersågade film som även har delat fanbasen i två läger. Men en sak är säker, det finns mycket att säga om filmen! Dryga två timmar snack blir det om DC:s språngbräda för sitt framtida filmuniversum. Lyssna och bedöm själv. Men varning för spoilers! Tack och förlåt! Puss Hej!
Hur vet du egentligen om du har magproblem? Och hur göder du dina goda tarmbakterier? I det här avsnittet får du några svar på det jättestora ämnet tarmflora och hälsa. Här får du bl.a. lära dig om resistent stärkelse, inulin och lösliga fibrer. Och hur är det egentligen med tillskott av probiotika, funkar det? Och hur ska den med överväxt av tex jästsvampen candida tänka? Dryga halvtimmen att lyssna på … läs mer
I veckans avsnitt av Känd från internet hänger Athena med bloggerskorna Nicole Falciani och Chloé Schuterman. De är bara 16 och 18 och gamla men har redan hundratusentals följare. Förutom att blogga har de också en podd och en egen serie på SVT. Hör de berätta om vad de tänker om folk som blir provocerade av dem, varför de började jobba ihop och hur de ser på feminism.
Semlor, Tor Modeen, "Alla mina kamrater" och mycket mycket mer!
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Nu kommer äntligen första avsnittet av Mineurd, som innehåller en fett awesome intervju med Paul och Joe DeGeorge från Harry and the Potters, som ju just var i Sverige på turné.Intro:- Vad är det här för något?- Vi (Maria och Ch) pratar om vad vi nördar just nu och kommer in på politik...- ...men sen går vi över till att prata om det största som hänt i svensk wizard rocks liv...Harry and the Potters turné i Skandinavien!- Vi berättar om våra upplevelser av Harry and the Potters spelningar i Östersund, Göteborg, Oslo och Stockholm- Första intryck av Paul och Joe- Göteborg var bäst- Dryga norska fans, men också trevliga norska fans- HatP spelade på samma ställe som Ebba Grön- JIMMYYYYYYYYYYYYYYYY! ...vi tycker att du är skitcool.Vi fick intervjua HatP (!!!!!) om deras nördigheter:- Maria är nästan lika nördig som Paul när det gäller spellistor- Ms Pacman- Svensk pizza äger amerikansk pizzas strumpor- Och de ger oss veckans läxa som är...Länkar!Harry and the Potterswizardrock.co.ukThe Daemons (Paul's mugglarband)Ed in the Refridgerators (Joes mugglarband - 926 Main Street Apt. 2 är hans nyare band som Ch glömde nämna!)Avsnittet kan du ladda ner här eller så kan du subscriba till oss på iTunes - då kan du lätt ladda ner nästa avsnitt när det kommer om ungefär två veckor!