Podcasts about Fermata

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  • 428EPISODES
  • 49mAVG DURATION
  • 1EPISODE EVERY OTHER WEEK
  • Jan 27, 2025LATEST
Fermata

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Best podcasts about Fermata

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Latest podcast episodes about Fermata

Ultim'ora
Inaugurata nuova fermata “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” su linea per Udine

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 3:16


VENEZIA (ITALPRESS) - “Quello di oggi è un importante tassello di un più ampio progetto del valore complessivo di 58,25 milioni di euro, oltre 46 milioni dei quali finanziati dalla Regione, con un contributo di Rete Ferroviaria Italiana di 10,25 milioni di euro e del Comune di Venezia di 2 milioni, che ha interessato il “Nodo della Gazzera”, un'area fortemente urbanizzata nell'omonimo quartiere qui a Mestre. Grazie all'azione sinergica e coordinata di Regione del Veneto, Comune di Venezia, RFI e Veneto Strade, l'intervento consentirà di migliorare gli spostamenti quotidiani di cittadini e pendolari. E se oggi entra in servizio la nuova fermata di Venezia Mestre Gazzera lungo la Venezia-Udine, entro il 2025 sarà completata anche la vicina fermata ferroviaria di via Olimpia, lungo la Venezia-Trieste. Il progetto sarà, quindi, ultimato con la realizzazione del raccordo viario per snellire il traffico veicolare da e verso Mestre. Obiettivo: garantire il collegamento ferroviario interurbano da e verso Treviso oltre che quello urbano tra la terraferma e Venezia, favorendo, al contempo, l'interscambio gomma-ferro. Un ulteriore passo avanti per rendere il nostro sistema di trasporto sempre più sostenibile e integrato”. Lo ha detto il Presidente della Regione del Veneto, Luca Zaia, oggi a Mestre in occasione della cerimonia di inaugurazione della nuova fermata ferroviaria “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea ferroviaria Venezia-Udine.xa7/tvi/gtr

Ultim'ora
Inaugurata nuova fermata “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” su linea per Udine

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 3:16


VENEZIA (ITALPRESS) - “Quello di oggi è un importante tassello di un più ampio progetto del valore complessivo di 58,25 milioni di euro, oltre 46 milioni dei quali finanziati dalla Regione, con un contributo di Rete Ferroviaria Italiana di 10,25 milioni di euro e del Comune di Venezia di 2 milioni, che ha interessato il “Nodo della Gazzera”, un'area fortemente urbanizzata nell'omonimo quartiere qui a Mestre. Grazie all'azione sinergica e coordinata di Regione del Veneto, Comune di Venezia, RFI e Veneto Strade, l'intervento consentirà di migliorare gli spostamenti quotidiani di cittadini e pendolari. E se oggi entra in servizio la nuova fermata di Venezia Mestre Gazzera lungo la Venezia-Udine, entro il 2025 sarà completata anche la vicina fermata ferroviaria di via Olimpia, lungo la Venezia-Trieste. Il progetto sarà, quindi, ultimato con la realizzazione del raccordo viario per snellire il traffico veicolare da e verso Mestre. Obiettivo: garantire il collegamento ferroviario interurbano da e verso Treviso oltre che quello urbano tra la terraferma e Venezia, favorendo, al contempo, l'interscambio gomma-ferro. Un ulteriore passo avanti per rendere il nostro sistema di trasporto sempre più sostenibile e integrato”. Lo ha detto il Presidente della Regione del Veneto, Luca Zaia, oggi a Mestre in occasione della cerimonia di inaugurazione della nuova fermata ferroviaria “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea ferroviaria Venezia-Udine.xa7/tvi/gtr

Ultim'ora
Inaugurata la fermata “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea per Udine

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 3:16


VENEZIA (ITALPRESS) - “Quello di oggi è un importante tassello di un più ampio progetto del valore complessivo di 58,25 milioni di euro, oltre 46 milioni dei quali finanziati dalla Regione, con un contributo di Rete Ferroviaria Italiana di 10,25 milioni di euro e del Comune di Venezia di 2 milioni, che ha interessato il 'Nodo della Gazzera', un'area fortemente urbanizzata nell'omonimo quartiere qui a Mestre. Grazie all'azione sinergica e coordinata di Regione del Veneto, Comune di Venezia, RFI e Veneto Strade, l'intervento consentirà di migliorare gli spostamenti quotidiani di cittadini e pendolari. E se oggi entra in servizio la nuova fermata di Venezia Mestre Gazzera lungo la Venezia-Udine, entro il 2025 sarà completata anche la vicina fermata ferroviaria di via Olimpia, lungo la Venezia-Trieste. Il progetto sarà, quindi, ultimato con la realizzazione del raccordo viario per snellire il traffico veicolare da e verso Mestre. Obiettivo: garantire il collegamento ferroviario interurbano da e verso Treviso oltre che quello urbano tra la terraferma e Venezia, favorendo, al contempo, l'interscambio gomma-ferro. Un ulteriore passo avanti per rendere il nostro sistema di trasporto sempre più sostenibile e integrato”. Lo ha detto il Presidente della Regione del Veneto, Luca Zaia, oggi a Mestre in occasione della cerimonia di inaugurazione della nuova fermata ferroviaria “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea ferroviaria Venezia-Udine.xa7/tvi/gtr

Ultim'ora
Inaugurata la fermata “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea per Udine

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2025 3:16


VENEZIA (ITALPRESS) - “Quello di oggi è un importante tassello di un più ampio progetto del valore complessivo di 58,25 milioni di euro, oltre 46 milioni dei quali finanziati dalla Regione, con un contributo di Rete Ferroviaria Italiana di 10,25 milioni di euro e del Comune di Venezia di 2 milioni, che ha interessato il 'Nodo della Gazzera', un'area fortemente urbanizzata nell'omonimo quartiere qui a Mestre. Grazie all'azione sinergica e coordinata di Regione del Veneto, Comune di Venezia, RFI e Veneto Strade, l'intervento consentirà di migliorare gli spostamenti quotidiani di cittadini e pendolari. E se oggi entra in servizio la nuova fermata di Venezia Mestre Gazzera lungo la Venezia-Udine, entro il 2025 sarà completata anche la vicina fermata ferroviaria di via Olimpia, lungo la Venezia-Trieste. Il progetto sarà, quindi, ultimato con la realizzazione del raccordo viario per snellire il traffico veicolare da e verso Mestre. Obiettivo: garantire il collegamento ferroviario interurbano da e verso Treviso oltre che quello urbano tra la terraferma e Venezia, favorendo, al contempo, l'interscambio gomma-ferro. Un ulteriore passo avanti per rendere il nostro sistema di trasporto sempre più sostenibile e integrato”. Lo ha detto il Presidente della Regione del Veneto, Luca Zaia, oggi a Mestre in occasione della cerimonia di inaugurazione della nuova fermata ferroviaria “Venezia Mestre Gazzera” sulla linea ferroviaria Venezia-Udine.xa7/tvi/gtr

XORUME
XORUMELAS 01 - AQUELE DO FERMATA

XORUME

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 11:38


Bom dia, boa tarde e/ou boa noite! Nesse projeto de férias do pior podcast do mundo, invadimos o site e lemos comentários para extintos podcasts! DOAÇÕES: pix@xorume.com.br FEED COMPLETO: https://soundcloud.com/xorume-podcast

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Fermata uses computer vision to detect diseases and pests in plants

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 8, 2025 4:42


When Valeria Kogan started her PhD program in bioinformatics, the scientific field that uses computation and software to analyze biological data, in 2017, she imagined her career would always be within the fields of mathematics, medicine, or biology. But after the first AI boom in the late 2010s, she got an intriguing opportunity in a sector she hadn't considered: agriculture. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

The Dictionary
#F62 (fermata to ferocious)

The Dictionary

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2024 30:57


I read from fermata to ferocious.     Alcohol occurs naturally and animals these days consume it on occasion so the "drunk ape hypothesis" makes sense! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drunken_monkey_hypothesis https://www.technologynetworks.com/applied-sciences/news/drunken-monkey-hypothesis-sheds-light-on-our-taste-for-booze-360256     Fermions "include all quarks and leptons and all composite particles made of an odd number of these, such as all baryons and many atoms and nuclei." https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fermion     Ferns are sometimes used for for remediating contaminated soil. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fern     So as far as I can tell, ancient people thought that fern seeds were invisible (in truth they're spores and too tiny for the human eye to see) and that started a whole thing through the ages of people thinking that the fern seed would make you invisible.  https://susanalbert.com/ferns-how-to-become-invisible-or-not/ https://britishfairies.wordpress.com/2018/02/18/fern-seed-and-invisibility/ https://www.blueridgebotanic.com/blog/ferns     The word of the episode is "fern bar".     Use my special link https://zen.ai/thedictionary to save 30% off your first month of any Zencastr paid plan.    Create your podcast today! #madeonzencastr     Theme music from Tom Maslowski https://zestysol.com/     Merchandising! https://www.teepublic.com/user/spejampar     "The Dictionary - Letter A" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter B" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter C" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter D" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter E" on YouTube   "The Dictionary - Letter F" on YouTube     Featured in a Top 10 Dictionary Podcasts list! https://blog.feedspot.com/dictionary_podcasts/     Backwards Talking on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLmIujMwEDbgZUexyR90jaTEEVmAYcCzuq     https://linktr.ee/spejampar dictionarypod@gmail.com https://www.facebook.com/thedictionarypod/ https://www.threads.net/@dictionarypod https://twitter.com/dictionarypod https://www.instagram.com/dictionarypod/ https://www.patreon.com/spejampar https://www.tiktok.com/@spejampar 917-727-5757

Le interviste di Radio Number One
Sarafine: «Dopo X-Factor mi sono fermata, ora so cosa voglio»

Le interviste di Radio Number One

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 10:59


Nel cuore del Weekend N1 di sabato 14 dicembre, in compagnia di Alvise Salerno, è stata ospite Sarafine, vincitrice della 17esima edizione di X-Factor nel 2023, in occasione del lancio del primo EP Un trauma è per sempre, uscito lo scorso 6 dicembre. Ad accendersi subito è il focus sul suo recente passato, quello legato al talent musicale. «Il post X-Factor è stato complesso - introduce la cantante -. Mi sono ritrovata in una dimensione che non conoscevo e mi son dovuta fermare per capire cosa volessi fare veramente. Ora so che pubblico voglio raggiungere con la mia musica, un anno fa non lo avrei saputo. A chi vuole iscriversi a un talent di questo tipo consiglio di ascoltarsi. A chi ha già una chiara identità musicale, cosa che io non avevo, consiglio di battere il ferro finché è caldo».

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie
Accusa di terrorismo: fermata 19enne che andava in Siria a combattere per l'Isis

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 2:06


Una 19enne, nata in Kenya e residente nel Milanese, è stata fermata mentre, all'aeroporto di Orio al Serio (Bergamo). Si stava imbarcando per raggiungere la Siria e combattere con l'Isis.

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie
Spacciava cocaina, crack ed eroina alla fermata di viale Camisano alla Stanga: arrestato pusher

Ecovicentino.it - AudioNotizie

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 29, 2024 1:13


Roma Tre Radio Podcast
CARTACCE - Un giorno come un anno

Roma Tre Radio Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 31, 2024 41:47


Valencia allagata in una notte, 95 morti e 120mila sfollati, scambio di accuse tra governo nazionale e regionale. Continuano le indagine della procura di Milano sul dossieraggio, coinvolto il presidente della regione Lombardia. Le molte accuse lanciate dalla presidente del consiglio Meloni nell'ultima puntata di Porta A Porta scontentano sia i sindacati che i vertici di Stellantis. Fermata un coppia di Italiani all'aeroporto di Buenos Aires accusati di traffico di esseri umani, avevano pagato un'organizzazione per accedere alla GPA. In chiusura l'intervista di Daniele Muriana e Sabrina Picardi a Patrizio Gonnella presidente dell'associazione Antigone.

Bla Bla Fantasy
Pit Stop 25 - "Sisu, Kalevala e Gatti Vari" - Una fermata ad Helsinki (con Maddalena Mazzola)

Bla Bla Fantasy

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 66:24


In questa puntata abbiamo avuto ospite Maddalena Mazzola, traduttrice editoriale dall'inglese, dallo spagnolo e dal finlandese. E proprio da quest'ultima lingua che quest'anno ha tradotto per la Mondadori "Indagine di un gatto" di Katja Kettu, un romanzo incentrato tra le vicende di due donne finlandese, una ambientata nella prima metà del '900 e l'altra ai giorni nostri, il tutto sorretto da una leggere flessione fantastica e mistica. Durante la puntata abbiamo anche affrontato una chiacchierata sul ruolo dei traduttori, sulle difficoltà ed elasticità in questo lavoro, sulle influenze della Finlandia nella cultura pop e qualche consiglio letterario/cinematografico. Opere citate nella puntata"Indagini di un gatto" di Katja Kettu"Kelavala" di Elias Lönnrot"Scompartimento n°6" di Liksom Rosa (libro)"Scompartimento n°6" di Juho Kuosmanen (film)"La memoria dell'acqua" di Emma Itaranta"Foglie al vento" di Aki Kaurismäki"Il mio gatto Jugoslavia", "Gli invisibili" e "Le transizioni" di Pajtim Statovci"L'anno della lepre" e "Piccoli suicidi tra amici" di Arto Paasilinna "Deadwind" serie tv creata e diretta da Rike Jokela "Max Payne" "Quantum Break" "Alan Wake" della Remedy Interactive Canale Telegram: https://t.me/blablafantas Pagina Instagram https://www.instagram.com/bla.blafantasy/ Pagina Facebook https://www.facebook.com/blablafantasy/ Canale Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCIx49Uo8_m7J-50mkCETu5Q Musica di sottofondo: Music from #Uppbeat (free for Creators!): https://uppbeat.io/t/night-drift/the-cleaner License code: UUSNNPLFONTPZLJC

Ultim'ora
Tg News - 23/9/2024

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024 6:10


ROMA (ITALPRESS) - In questa edizione:- Raid israeliani sul Libano, colpiti 300 obiettivi, 274 morti- Fermata 21enne per la ragazza uccisa a Molfetta - Giulia Cecchettin, al via il processo - Verona, morte cerebrale per 15enne ferito dalla madre - Inchiesta Liguria, Signorini torna libero - Istat rivede al ribasso la crescita 2023 - Polizze anticalamità, obbligo per le imprese da Gennaio - Energia, intesa tra Sicilia e Terna per il collegamento Italia-Tunisia - Previsioni 3B Meteo 24 Settembre/gtr

As The Money Burns
Cursed Hopes

As The Money Burns

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2024 32:02


As tough times persist, several dangers lie ahead for dreams, fortunes, and more importantly life itself.May – June 1933, many struggle as Prohibition and the Great Depression continues. Evalyn Walsh McLean attempts to sell the Hope Diamond and buy back the Washington Post. Doris Duke and other heiresses are under threat of kidnapping in Newport. Cobina Wright's new attempt to rebuild her fortune comes with some shady business connections and other troubles.Other people and subjects include: Barbara Hutton, Nanaline Duke, William May Wright aka “Bill,” Lil' Cobina Wright, Jr., James HR Cromwell aka “Jimmy,” James “Henry” Van Alen aka Jimmy, Jenny Renaud, Edward McLean, Countess Gladys Vanderbilt Szechenyi, Gertrude Vanderbilt Whitney, Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, Alice-Leon Moats, No Nice Girl Swears etiquette book, armed bodyguards, armed limousine, Lindbergh baby kidnapping, crime of the century, gold certificates, fraud, hoax, ransom, press, Gaston Means, John F. Condon, Cemetery John, J.J. Faulkner, Florence Nightingale Graham – Mrs. Thomas J. Lewis – Elizabeth Arden, cosmetics pioneer, operation, recovery, Primo Carnera, Jack Sharkey, John Factor, General Pershing, Admiral Cone, Barney Barusch, Jay “Rye” Ryland, Sam Rosoff, Mr. Dimples, amorous English gentlemen, Prince Kadhar, Alice Roosevelt Longfellow, Kermit Roosevelt, President Theodore Roosevelt, President Franklin Roosevelt, Eugene Meyer, William Randolph Hearst, Marion Davies, Rosemary “Rose” Douras Davies, Emily Post, Mahatma Gandhi, Tammany Hall, Hope Diamond, Kohinoor, Star of India, souvenirs, replicas, cursed gem, unlucky charm, bad luck, bankruptcy, pawn, 1933 booklet, multi-level exhibition, diamond mine, huts, shacks, Amsterdam diamond cutters, gold mining, Prohibition, repeals, beer, tax evasion, prison sentence, the Great Depression, monkeys, baboons, cruise lines, ocean liner Leviathan – SS Vaterland, Waldorf-Astoria hotels, Brearley, Fermata, convent in Rome, Rough Point, Maine Chance Farms, Madison Square Gardens, Yankee Stadium, Roosevelt hospital, Chicago's World Fair, “A Century of Progress” exhibition, Newport, New York, Boston, Washington, D.C., Chicago, the Rockies, Saratoga, horse races, Cobina Wright's autobiography I Never Grew Up, Max Baer, Max Schmeling, Murray Humphreys, Chicago underworld, FBI – Federal Bureau of Investigation, tapped phone conversations, Al Capone, prison baseball team, prison riot, jail time, making connections, World War I, World War II, refurbishment, scrap, Mahatma Gandhi hunger strike, Jewish writers, concentration camps, struggles, tv series, fashion designers, Hulu's Becoming Karl Lagerfeld, Netflix's Halston, Apple TV's The New Look, Christian Dior, Coco Chanel, Yves St. Laurent, Pierre Balmain, Thierry Mugler, Cristobal Balenciaga, Jean Patou, artistic and creative endeavors, rejection, setbacks, prey, predator, hedonism, chaos, multiple issues at once, Chris Williamson, Modern Wisdom podcast, Jimmy Carr, jealousy quote, blocks, happiness…--Extra Notes / Call to Action:New York Adventure Club www.nyadventureclub.comFriday, November 1st, 2024 5:30pm EST / 2:30pm PST – Waldorf Astoria Hotel Part 1: A New Standard of Luxury (pre-1929), Come learn more about the Astor family dispute behind the famous hotel and its construction as well as the hotel's influence on luxury travel and fine dining. Connections to the Titanic as well as other events and famous people will also be explored. But all good things come to and end.https://www.nyadventureclub.com/event/the-waldorf-astoria-hotel-part-1-a-new-standard-of-luxury-webinar-registration-1021721385167/Friday, November 8th, 2024 5:30pm EST / 2:30pm PST – Waldorf Astoria Hotel New York Part 2: Manhattan's Grandest Hotel (1931-present), The second version of this fine luxury hotel comes during the dawn of new era which will bring new challenges and excitement. A lingering Astor family connection adds to the saga until a new family the Hilton dynasty rises and takes over. More celebrities and events will add to allure of this hotel. Finally, updates reveal the recent renovations, an auction, and the future for the third incarnation.https://www.nyadventureclub.com/event/the-waldorf-astoria-hotel-part-2-manhattans-grandest-hotel-webinar-registration-1021721475437/ Share, like, subscribe --Archival Music provided by Past Perfect Vintage Music, www.pastperfect.com.Opening Music: My Heart Belongs to Daddy by Billy Cotton, Album The Great British Dance BandsSection 1 Music: Lost In A Fog by Coleman Hawkins & His Orchestra, Album Nightfall – Sophisticated Jazz ClassicsSection 2 Music: These Foolish Things by Benny Carter, Album Perfect BluesSection 3 Music: Just A Mood by Benny Carter & His Orchestra, Album Nightfall – Sophisticated Jazz ClassicsEnd Music: My Heart Belongs to Daddy by Billy Cotton, Album The Great British Dance Bands--https://asthemoneyburns.com/X / TW / IG – @asthemoneyburnsX / Twitter – https://twitter.com/asthemoneyburnsInstagram – https://www.instagram.com/asthemoneyburns/Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/asthemoneyburns/

ANSA Voice Daily
FOCUS | Nuovo tentato assassinio Trump, 'non mi arrenderò mai'

ANSA Voice Daily

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2024 3:05


Ultim'ora
La Barba al Palo - L'Inter non si è mai fermata

Ultim'ora

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 26, 2024 2:46


TRAPANI (ITALPRESS) - Il direttore editoriale di Italpress, Italo Cucci, analizza l'inizio di campionato dei nerazzurri che continuano a far bene dopo lo scudetto vinto nella passata stagione.ic/glb/mrv

The Frontier Psychiatrists
PRISM: Trauma Treatment You Don't Need to Talk About

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2024 6:58


I have been writing about PTSD treatments quite a bit in The Frontier Psychiatrists newsletter. One is offered at Fermata, the clinic I co-run in Brooklyn. I recently wrote an article about it. We provide Prism treatment for PTSD at our clinic, much like our colleagues at Homebase in Boston, with Veteran Populations.Sometimes, you'd rather listen. On that note, here is the podcast version of that article.Other PTSD-themed writing includes…Medical Cannabis for PTSD?PrazosinThe ICU is Traumatic For EveryoneAs well as a whole… Saga… on MDMA:Can MDMA-AT Be Saved, Part ICan MDMA-AT Be Saved, Part IIShould MDMA-AT Be Saved, Part IIISaving MDMA from AT: Part IVBad Touch!: MDMA Part VSaving MDMA (and other psychedelic therapies), Part VISaving MDMA VII: This Isn't The First Drug to Have Problems Getting ApprovedIt's worth noting I'll be appearing on a webinar with the Psychedelic Medicine Association to discuss the following…and I'll include the info from my friend and co-author Dr. Morski, MD, JD:The FDA Said No, What's Next? Exploring the Field's Next Chapter After the MDMA DecisionRegister now!In case you missed the news last week, the FDA officially denied Lykos Therapeutics' New Drug Application for MDMA-assisted therapy, requesting a new Phase III trial be conducted. This was a huge blow to the practitioners and patients who were hoping that MDMA would soon be a legal option to address PTSD, a condition where no other therapy has shown the same levels of efficacy as MDMA-assisted therapy.So you may have questions, like, “When is the next psychedelic medicine likely to be up for FDA approval” and “Which medicine may be the next to reach that stage?” And you may also want an update on what psychedelics (like ketamine) are legally available and how might they serve as a stand-in for the others while we await FDA approvals.This month we are truly fortunate to have panelists working in various arenas within psychedelic medicine and research to help lead a discussion regarding what psychedelic options are currently available and what's to come, including:* Which psychedelic medicines are next in the FDA pipeline* When might we see another psychedelic therapy up for FDA approval* How can we utilize the available psychedelic options in the meantime...and much more!Register now!Panelists joining us for this month's event are:* Owen Muir, MD, DFAACAP | Co-Founder, Fermata; Chief Medical Officer, iRxReminder* Carlene MacMillan, MD, FCTMSS, DFAACAP | Co-Founder, Fermata; Chief Medical Officer, OsmindYou can learn more about them on our event page.So please join us for this live panel discussion on Thursday, August 29th at 5 pm Pacific, 8 pm Eastern. A link to the recording will be provided afterward if you cannot make it to the live event.Hope to see you all on the 29th!You can find the Psychedelic Medicine Association on Twitter , LinkedIn, and Facebook.In service,Lynn Marie Morski, MD, JDPresident, Psychedelic Medicine Association This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano
"Ho ricominciato a creare con le mie mani e da lì non mi sono più fermata"

SBS Italian - SBS in Italiano

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 17:02


Dopo anni in cui si è sentita disconnessa dalla sua vera natura, Eleonora Pasti ha ritrovato se stessa e la sua vocazione artistica. Oggi vive a Sydney e i suoi temi creativi esplorano temi come il femminismo e l'ambiente.

radio.syg.ma
fermata w/ Izzanami

radio.syg.ma

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2024 59:12


info: https://radio.syg.ma/episodes/fermata-w-izzanami https://soundcloud.com/iizzanamii

Riley on Film
¡Zen y La Fermata!

Riley on Film

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2024 69:51


dog will hunt. I love this shit. https://rileyonfilm.com/the-audiobook-for-zen-y-la-fermata Any questions? Kiss my ass. ;) -DAME --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/damien-riley/message

Riley on Film
¡Zen y La Fermata!

Riley on Film

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 13, 2024 3:39


This is an AD reminding you my new album is now out there for FREE!! My imho masterpiece album ¡Zen y La Fermata! is now freely released on YouTube. If you enjoy, I hope you do. I made it to share with you specifically. -DAME

The Frontier Psychiatrists
We Need to Talk About Mental Health*

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2024 25:24


The Frontier Psychiatrists started as a room in on the clubhouse app. One of the enduring pleasures from that era is my friendship with (Jeremy Fox, P.C.). He's a licensed professional counselor, EMDR therapist, and a delight to speak with. This week's podcast features a discussion of a paper Jeremy brought to the table:Are mental health awareness efforts contributing to the rise in reported mental health problems? A call to test the prevalence inflation hypothesisThe inflation hypothesis posits that more talking about mental health problems leads to more actual problems. We also discuss the role of screening, including my very popular thoughts on the DSM-5-TR Level One Cross-Cutting Measure, as featured in my Osmind EHR, that I use in my work at Fermata.In our conversation, we evaluated the possible takes on this paper. While I'm at it, I'll remind readers that suicide risk assessment is important, and no one does a better job of explaining it than Dr. Tyler Black:Thank you for listening! Please share this podcast with your friends drop a a 5-star review on Apple Podcasts. It drives discovery like woah. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

The Nurses and Hypochondriacs Podcast
Unveiling the Chaos: United Healthcare and Optum in the Crossfire of Cyber Attacks, Antitrust Violations, and Senate Scrutiny

The Nurses and Hypochondriacs Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2024 64:00


Unveiling the Chaos: United Healthcare and Optum in the Crossfire of Cyber Attacks, Antitrust Violations, and Senate Scrutiny. Dr. Owen Muir joins N&H to decode the drama and its impact on you. Plus, insider tips for Emergency Room savings, Netflix's 'Baby Reindeer' 'Stalking' intrigue, and breakthroughs in depression treatment with accelerated transcranial magnetic stimulation. Owen Scott Muir, M.D., DFAACAP, is a distinguished fellow of the American Academy of Adolescent Psychiatry, dual board-certified, NIH grant-funded researcher, with his work focusing on the intersection of neuromodulation and artificial intelligence. He is the Chief Medical Officer of iRxReminder, an SVP for Strategy at Acacia Clinics, an Advisor to Videra Health, Magnus Medical, and Outro Health, and is the co-founder of Fermata, Neuromodulation's first clinic in New York City. He is also the author of 'Adolescent Suicide and Self-Injury: Mentalizing Theory Treatment', published by Springer Nature, and the Frontier Psychiatrist Substack, a daily healthcare-themed newsletter and podcast. This episode is sponsored by Rogue Nurse Media Empowering Nurses and Patients to tell their stories. Throw us some bucks, and help support our cause! Venmo: @Nurses-Hypo or PayPal paypal.me/eproguenursemedia Need consulting or have questions: nursesandhypochondriacs@gmail.com Give us a 5 star rating on apple podcasts For The Well Written Nurse Writing and Storytelling classes go to: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/whats-your-story-part-1-detox-intro-to-writing-and-storytelling-tickets-94768506153 Join our email newsletter http://mailchi.mp/f134561374e9/rogue-nurse-media-501c3-newsletter-empowering-nurses-and-patients-to-tell-their-stories  

Momenuum Audio Series

The penultimate episode finds Jin and Bodhi go from one terror to the next. Will they perish at the hands of the Eternal Beings or will they succumb to the pressure of Agent Nox? Find out in episode five of Momenuum the Audio Series.

The Roundtable
Michael Eck celebrates 60th Birthday and new album "Fermata" at Caffè Lena

The Roundtable

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2024 14:07


Michael Eck returns with special guests to Caffe Lena on Friday night for a combined 60th birthday party/album release show. Eck debuted at Caffè Lena in 1990 and offered a sold-out solo album release show in fall 2022.For this event, Eck will be joined by an all-star ensemble featuring Rosanne Raneri, Kevin Maul, and Sten Isachsen and Bob Buckley. Together they will join in on old favorites, new songs – from “Fermata,” being released at the concert.

Sean White's Solar and Energy Storage Podcast
Bidirectional EVs with Alex Cattelan, COO Fermata Energy and UL 9741 EV Power Export Equipment

Sean White's Solar and Energy Storage Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 7, 2024 50:45


In this podcast, we learn how UL issues first certification to UL 9741 (and UL 1741 SA) for an AI-Driven Vehicle-to-Grid Compliant EV Charger to Fermata Energy. https://www.ul.com/news/ul-solutions-issues-first-certification-ul-9741-and-ul-1741-sa-ai-driven-vehicle-grid Alex Cattelan has been working on EVs for 2 decades and has experience engineering many famous electric and hybrid vehicles, including the Chevy Volt for GM. She also has extensive experience working for Polaris, Johnson Controls and many others. At the end we decide to go to Burning Man together on a bidirectional electric bus and she is going to teach me how to do wheelies on an electric motorcycle. Nothing can compete with the torque of electric motors, much more than those old fashioned explosion driven motors. Here are some of the topics we cover: UL 9741 EVPE (Electric Vehicle Power Export Equipment) John Deere EVs AI for EVPE Software engineering Drive trains Electric vehicles   Nissan Leaf Chevy Volt Lithium-ion batteries Hybrid EPA (U.S. Environmental Protection Agency) Mechanical Drivetrain CO2 UL 9741 & UL 1741 VPP (Virtual Power Plant) Cost Savings Public utility commission (PUC) Stationary Storage Nissan Leaf Nissan Kicks Bidirectional charging Commercial fleets Bus fleet Johnson Controls Pop a Wheelie Ford F-150 Cyber Truck Tesla Developing Software AI Driven Data Science Residential bidirectional chargers Check out Alex on LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/alexandra-cattelan-59abbb11 Email: alex.catelan@fermataenegy.com Check out the Fermata website: https://fermataenergy.com/ Learn more at www.solarSEAN.com and be sure to get NABCEP certified by taking Sean's classes at www.HeatSpring.com/Sean

Securing Our Future
SOF 025: The Evolution of an Investigative Tech Startup with Amanda von Goetz

Securing Our Future

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 26, 2024 29:15


Host Jeremy Hitchcock sits down with Amanda von Goetz, CEO of Fermata Discovery, one of New North Ventures' portfolio companies. Amanda von Goetz earned her BMus degree in Piano Performance from The Juilliard School, where she studied from 2000 to 2005. Later, she pursued her Master of Business Administration (MBA) from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, completing her studies from 2012 to 2014.Discover how Amanda's background as a classical pianist paved the way for her transition into the tech field, where she harnessed her understanding of hierarchical structures to revolutionize intelligence gathering. And explore real-life examples of Fermata's impact in solving mysteries and aiding law enforcement agencies while uncovering the unique culture and values that drive Fermata's success. 

Innovation Matters
Fermata Energy's Claire Weiller on the opportunities for vehicle to X

Innovation Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 12, 2024 44:57


Claire Weiller, head of Product and Partnerships at Fermata Energy, joins Anthony, Mike, and Karthik to discuss how electric vehicles can act as energy storage for the grid.

The Frontier Psychiatrists
Trauma Therapy You Don't Need To Talk About

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2024 17:48


I checked in with Jeremy Fox, P.C., about a new FDA-cleared device, the PRISM system by GrayMatters Health. This is a treatment modality for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder that doesn't require talking about your trauma! is one of my favorite trauma therapists, so I called him to discuss.This is now offered at four sites in the US, and Fermata in Brooklyn, NY, is one of them. I discuss the experience of having PTSD myself and the role of trauma exposure in medical training and practice.I do the quick version of explaining the Prism System in 50 seconds here…More Jeremy Fox Themed Content:Bipolar Disorder: Myths BustedLSD for Anxiety?!: A PodcastPTSD and EMDR: A PodcastPeople I Mostly AdmireSome Other Content About Trauma:The ICU is Traumatic For EveryoneThe Once-Suicidal PsychiatristSo, Someone Has Been Stalking You?What Should Parents Say About Mass Shootings?Being Shot With a Gun is the Leading Cause of Death Among Children In AmericaA special thanks to the team at Graymatters Health, who visited our offices for deployment this past week! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

FemTech Focus
2023 End of Year Review with Dr. Brittany Barreto - Episode 224

FemTech Focus

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2023 87:40


It's been another year of major growth in the women's health innovation industry. In this annual end of year review with our host, Dr. Brittany Barreto, we cover the major trends, wins, and challenges faced in 2023. We discuss societal shifts affecting our industry, review last year's predictions and see if they materialized, and make predictions for 2024. We look at the key industry influencers of 2023, investments, organizations, conferences, exits, startups that all shined this year and highlight ones to watch in 2024.We loved doing this episode to wrap up an incredible year for the podcast! Thank you for sticking with us throughout 2023, we can't wait to talk more about women's health innovation in 2024!Remember to like, rate and subscribe and enjoy the episode!Host bioDr. Brittany Barreto is a passionate advocate for advancing female health and wellness innovation. With a focus on building awareness, catalyzing investment and innovation, and providing data-driven insights and strategic advice, Dr. Barreto works tirelessly to positively impact women's lives.After earning her doctorate in Molecular and Human Genetics from Baylor College of Medicine, Dr. Barreto became a serial entrepreneur, most notably known for founding Pheramor, the world's first DNA-based dating app. She also served as a senior venture associate at Capital Factor and co-founded Coyote Ventures, gaining valuable experience in the investment space.Today, Dr. Barreto is a leading voice in the FemTech community. She hosts the FemTech Focus podcast, is a FemTech Forbes contributor, and founded FemHealth Insights, a boutique consulting firm with market research software specializing in women's health innovation.Episode SponsorGood Clean LoveWhen my vagina is feeling a little off–like a little out of balance–I go for Good Clean Love's Restore Moisturizing Vaginal Gel. It's made to help with vaginal dryness, itching and unusual odor; so it's my go-to before I feel like I should make a doctor's appointment. And I feel comfortable using it, because of their Bio-Match Technology. Good Clean Love's patented Bio-Match Technology taps into three factors that can maintain a healthy vaginal microbiome; which are osmolality, a healthy vaginal pH range and lactobacilli. Good Clean Love's products are iso-osmolar to help you retain moisture and not strip any away. They have a pH range of 3.5 to 4.5 so their products match your vaginal pH range. And they contain lactic acid to help maintain a healthy vaginal biome. Holiday travel and stress always throws me a little out of whack, so if you're like me, make sure to get yours before you travel! 10% off your first order using promo code FemTech. Shop products that are made to match your vaginal biome at goodcleanlove.com.FemTech Focus Podcast bioThe FemTech Focus Podcast is brought to you by FemHealth Insights, the leader in Women's Health market research and consulting. In this show, Dr. Brittany Barreto hosts meaningfully provocative conversations that bring FemTech experts - including doctors, scientists, inventors, and founders - on air to talk about the innovative technology, services, and products (collectively known as FemTech) that are improving women's health and wellness. Though many leaders in FemTech are women, this podcast is not specifically about female founders, nor is it geared toward a specifically female audience. The podcast gives our host, Dr. Brittany Barreto, and guests an engaging, friendly environment to learn about the past, present, and future of women's health and wellness.FemHealth Insights bioLed by a team of analysts and advisors who specialize in female health, FemHealth Insights is a female health-specific market research and analysis firm, offering businesses in diverse industries unparalleled access to the comprehensive data and insights needed to illuminate areas of untapped potential in the nuanced women's health market.Organizations featured (in alphabetical order):AIVF, Amboy Street Ventures, Aveta Medical, BD, Cranberry, Daye, Ema, Essence, Evvy, FathomX, FemTech Association Asia, FemTech Canada, FemTech France, FemTech India, Fermata, HERA Biotech, Hertility, HLTH, HyIvy Health, iSono Health, kegg, Magee Women's Institute,MedFemTech Congress, Midi Health, Milkify, MiM Fertility, MobileODT, Mosie Baby, National Institutes of Health (NIH), Rosy, Unfabled, Vitala Globa, We Seek Care, Women of Wearables, Women's Health Innovation Summit (WHIS)Individuals featured (in order of feature):Rachel Bartholomew, Susan Stover, Lindsay Davis, Navneet Kaur, Oriana Kraft, Valentina Milanova, Gila Tolub, Jamie White, Joanna Strober, Priyanka Jain, Dr. Helen O'Neill, Dr. Natalie Getreu, Deirdre O'Neill, Carli Sapir, Hannah SamanoEpisode ContributorsDr. Brittany BarretoLinkedIn:  @Brittany Barreto, Ph.D.Twitter: @DrBrittBInstagram: @drbrittanybarreto FemTech Focus PodcastWebsite: https://femtechfocus.org/LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/femtechfocusTwitter: @FemTech_FocusInstagram: @femtechfocus FemHealth InsightsWebsite: https://www.femhealthinsights.com/LinkedIn: @FemHealth Insights ResourcesFemHealth Insights DatabaseFemHealth Insights Mentor NetworkFemHealth Insights Slack CommunityFemHealth Insights Deals Newsletter - Investor SignupFemHealth Insights Investor Newsletter - Founder/CEO Deal Submission FormAI Breast Cancer ArticleSilicon Valley Bank Report on Women's Health

radio.syg.ma
fermata w/ Kakha Gelashvili

radio.syg.ma

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 14, 2023 56:44


info: https://radio.syg.ma/episodes/fermata-w-kakha-gelashvili https://soundcloud.com/kakhagelashvili

fermata gelashvili
The Frontier Psychiatrists
PTSD, EMDR, and TFPs: Jeremy Fox, P.C. Joins for a Conversation About Trauma Therapy and The Brain

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2023 20:16


The Frontier Psychiatrists is a health-themed media empire(!) with a newsletter as its home base here on Substack. It started as conversations on the app Clubhouse, and one of our—Owen and Carlene's— earliest friends is Jeremy Fox—a licensed professional counselor. He's a specialist in trauma, an EMDR trainer, and a great explainer of things complex. I also think he is a decent human I love talking to. In this interview, we dig into the neuroscience of EMDR—eye movement desensitization and reprogramming—for trauma and more. Please share with your friends, and give the show a follow-up and 5-star review on Spotify, Apple podcasts, etc.Here is us with the lord of Winterfell, given Winter is Coming. He needs a better coat. Advertising For Other Things Section!I work at a practice in NYC for those interested in neuromodulation-first approaches to mental health problems. That means not drugs. It's called Fermata. We are enrolling for the fMRI Guided Depression Trial: The SAINT OLO Study! If you are interested in the treatments we discuss, you can either become a patient or enroll in a research trial, depending on what is right for you. A note: Some of our trials (like SAINT) require payment from patients, and we pay you for others (like TDetect). This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

Il Fatto di domani
Quelli che non si dimettono

Il Fatto di domani

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 24, 2023 7:40


Il Fatto di domani 25 novembre. Fermata ad personam, Santanchè fa da scudo umano a Lollobrigida. Israele-Hamas, il primo giorno di tregua regge: liberi 25 ostaggi per 39 palestinesi

Sean White's Solar and Energy Storage Podcast
Vehicle to Grid (V2G & V2X) David Slutzky Fermata Energy Founder and Chairman of the Board

Sean White's Solar and Energy Storage Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 20, 2023 56:25


Learn about bidirectional EV charging/discharging with former White House and EPA policy advisor Clinton Administration, former County Supervisor in Virginia, Faculty at University of Virginia 23 years, Commerce, Architecture, Engineering who has a Philosophy degree and is an entrepreneur who started multiple companies. David Slutzky started Fermata Energy in 2010.   Here are some of the topics we covered: V2G Vehicle to Grid V1G smart charging V2X Vehicle to Everything V2B Vehicle to Building  V2L Vehicle to Load Behind the meter Load management Power quality VARs CAISO Independent System Operator Grid vs. Utility is different ISO is grid made up of different utilities VPP Duke and Ford F-150 Lightning TEPCO Fukushima brought on V2X CHAdeMO protocol Nissan Leaf bidirectional in 2013 Offboard DC charger Software platform Vehicle battery comes free with leather seats and air conditioning EV battery warranty with V2X AI software Data science Grid facing market opportunities Vehicle to grid services provider Defining 100% state of charge (SOC) 2000 Ford Ranger EV Setting parameters of SOC to protect battery LFP NCA NMC 4.2 volts per cell (VPC) at full charge Child labor in the Congo and cobalt Climate Early adopters Storage in EVs dwarfs stationary grid storage Beacon power flywheels University of Virginia vs. Virginia Tech UL testing of bidirectional EV chargers UL 1741 SB UL 1741 SA UL 1741 Siemens CCS North American Charging Standard = Tesla

The Frontier Psychiatrists
I Explained The Pandemic To Myself: Episode 4

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 16, 2023 16:18


I'm Owen. This week of posts is different from the usual…it's a bit of an origin story for this newsletter, The Frontier Psychiatrists. It's a daily health-themed newsletter by Imperfectionist physician Owen Scott Muir, M.D. There is a podcast (this), videos, a therapy training book, chapters in other therapy manuals, some poetry books, a live event in January, and even a brain-stimulation first clinic in NYC where your depression can be treated in an open-label clinical trial—to remission in 79% of people—without drugs or talk therapy.How did all this come to be? That is what this week's series of podcasts are the slow-roll story of!It all started with a podcast about the pandemic. For those listening closely, the last episode was from March 22, 2020. This podcast was recorded the NEXT DAY, on March 23rd. believed in me, and we all need that. Michelle and I were working together at a practice at the time, and the pandemic hit. She is the person who taught me about the hero's journey and narrative structure. She encouraged me to keep telling a story. The story was about the pandemic at the time. This episode is based on an interview with a nurse struggling to endure the horrors of the early pandemic in New York. As it relates to this newsletter and your author, the story is about the dates. Episode 3 ended, and I was recording Episode 4 the next night. I was dropping perfectionism in the heat of the moment and striving to tell stories that didn't have to be perfect..I am, by necessity, becoming an imperfectionist. There is no perfect in a pandemic. It's chaos, and perfection stopped being an option.This week's articles tell the story of how I got to write a daily imperfectionist manifesto by showing you how I started telling imperfect stories.Your feedback, dear readers, is welcome! Thanks for listening, and stay tuned for the next thrilling episode, where I get a bit more ambitious and fall off the wagon a little. It's not a linear journey!Plug 1: I work at a practice in NYC for those interested in neuromodulation-first approaches to mental health problems. That means not drugs. It's called Fermata. We are even enrolling for the SAINT OLO Study! Plug 2: Tickets are available for the Frontier Psychiatrists live event: Rapid Acting Mental Health Treatment 2024, Jan 7th, in San Fransisco! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

The Frontier Psychiatrists
I Explained the Pandemic To Myself: Episode 3

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2023 20:10


The Frontier Psychiatrists is a health-themed newsletter and podcast. It's a little bit of a media empire; there is a YouTube channel, Instagram, TikTok, and music I do over on Spotify up top. This article is a bit of a meta-article on my journey, with historical audio as reference material.I'm Owen Scott Muir, M.D., and I'm prolific, if nothing else. My first pass, as it were, at content creation was more plodding because podcasts—after music—were my first love. I consider myself an imprefectionist, now. This is a maxim for me—the done imperfectly and on to the next iteration is better than the perfect. One of the perils of podcasting is my fancy taste—I love Radiolab. I have Radiolab production alumni in my life. I love craftsmanship in a production! The Frontier Psychiatrists is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.The flip side is I am one person. Who isn't perfect? Believe it. This person—the modern imperfectionist version of me—has had guides on getting more iterative things done. One is featured in the podcast attached to this very set of words. It's my friend who writes ! My mom is also in this episode.Enough preamble, now to the prologue. My journey to imperfection as a maxim began with the hero's journey. I was in the ordinary world—pre-pandemic, and then there was the call to adventure. Except there was nowhere to go and nothing to do. Cause there was a pandemic. I started getting less-than-perfect content out in the world. This is the third episode of that “body of work.”Michelle—a nurse with whom I worked at the time— and with whom I am still proud to call a friend today, taught me about narrative structure and the hero's journey. She had a very dear friend teach her the same lesson. Slowly, I began to realize the hero's journey I was on was as a storyteller myself…and the story I was telling was both about imperfectionism and in an imperfect format.Much of that story will later be told, over and over, on the Clubhouse App in late 2020…but at this point—the March 19th date on which I recorded this podcast was subsequently released on March 22nd. That is a quick turnaround.I am trying to understand the weirdness of the pandemic, yes. I am trying to understand how to communicate about public health. I am scared; you can hear it. But I also got a thing done and then another. I am starting to let go…to get going.This is episode 3. It's an origin story of a sort!Plug 1: I work at a practice in NYC for those interested in neuromodulation-first approaches to mental health problems. That means not drugs. It's called Fermata. We are even enrolling for the SAINT OLO Study! Plug 2: Tickets are available for the Frontier Psychiatrists live event: Rapid Acting Mental Health Treatment 2024, Jan 7th, in San Fransisco! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

The Frontier Psychiatrists
I Explained the Pandemic To Myself: Episode 2

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2023 13:13


The frontier psychiatrists is a Substack written by Owen Scott Muir, M.D.—a child and adult psychiatrist. This podcast is shared from the vaults…here is the story.I live in Brooklyn, New York. For those who remember 2020, we had a pandemic! I know, right? Ancient history! This is audio archeology. I did what I like to do to calm down to cope, which is I started recording stuff. That stuff became a short-ish run podcast, which I called “Remotely Possible: Uncertainty, Anxiety, and Existential Despair.” Was it content marketing for the end of the world? Regardless, it is, in retrospect, a strange time capsule about how I was thinking about the pandemic at the time, and I think it holds up pretty well. The uncertainty of that time was defining.In retrospect, listening to these podcasts, given everything we know and all the things we don't…My bottom line? Uncertainty is hard for us as humans. We're deeply unsettled by the uncertainty. We'd rather things be sh*tty than unclear. We strive to make things bad when we have uncertainty because it's easier than sitting with it. And, frankly, this makes some sense to me. We are not completely irrational — it's avoidance behavior. People avoid things that hurt. People avoid things that suck. One of the things that hurts and sucks is uncertainty. Thus, there's some degree of predictable behavior from humans when things are uncertain. They're going to take the path of most certainty. Even if that path sucks. My issue with the pandemic response ended up being around creating a primrose path straight to hell, which may have been a trap we didn't need to leave for ourselves.We wanted the certainty of what to do—even if it was sometimes dumb. We wanted a vaccine that would be perfectly efficacious—which doesn't exist. And perfectly safe. Which doesn't exist.We are predictable. We will avoid “not knowing”— if we don't build trust first. The pandemic was a giant trust fall that went south cause we forgot about the trust building, in retrospect. With that musing…I hope you enjoy episode two of my pandemic retrospective.Plug 1: I work at a practice in NYC for those interested in neuromodulation-first approaches to mental health problems. That means not drugs. It's called Fermata. We are even enrolling for the SAINT OLO Study! Plug 2: Tickets are available for the Frontier Psychiatrists live event: Rapid Acting Mental Health Treatment 2024, Jan 7th, in San Fransisco! This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

radio.syg.ma
fermata w/ misha kurilov

radio.syg.ma

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2023 45:44


info + tracklist: https://radio.syg.ma/episodes/fermata-w-misha-kurilov https://soundcloud.com/mkmkmk_kmkmkm

The Frontier Psychiatrists
The Neuroscience of Fear

The Frontier Psychiatrists

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2023 18:40


This is an episode of the Frontier Psychiatrists Podcast. It's a conversation between my Fermata team member, Chelsey, and Myself. This conversation is about us, at work, trying to understand neuroscience together. We recorded this one! An edited version of the transcript follows.Owen Muir, M.D.: So we were chatting about the amygdala, and if you want to ask me any questions about it, I can answer them and edit it together. And that's a podcast. Chelsey Fasano, BA: There's a lot of discussion in the field right now about location neuroanatomy or chemistry neurobiology. And I'm always thinking about how the two crossover, so we're talking about the up-regulation or down-regulation of the amygdala.What are the neurochemical aspects of how the amygdala would be up- or down-regulated?Owen Muir, M.D.: Neurochemistry is a great way of selling drugs and selling explanations that are easy to understand.When we talk about neurochemistry, we're talking about a synapse between two nerves that are trying to communicate. There's a tiny little gap, and the way a nerve communicates with another nerve cell is a neurotransmitter is released from one and floats its way across a tiny little gap, and then hits a receptor on the other side, and that creates a change in that subsequent cell, which makes it either more likely or less likely to fire.What's happening next is within that cell. There are intracellular changes that lead to an increasing likelihood of reaching an action potential and itself firing and effectuating the next change in its neighbor cells. We focus narrowly on neurochemistry, because we can look at and modify it.We're getting obsessed with answerable questions— not with important questions. For example, we don't give people “hyper-glutamate,” the excitatory neurotransmitter in the brain. They'll have a seizure. Those excitatory impulses open ion channels that cause immediate depolarization and firing of neurons. Uncontrolled depolarization leads to seizure and death. GABAergic drugs do the opposite thing. So, anything binding to the GABA receptor opens a chloride channel. Chloride's negatively charged.And that changes the inside of the cell's voltage to negative, which means it's less likely to fire because you need more glycine and glutamate to increase the voltage. GABA is safe to agonize, because you're not going to get a seizure—but withdrawal is dangerous because now you're more likely to fire in the absence of the GABA drug.We're focusing on other compounds like serotonin, norepinephrine, and dopamine, which functionally regulate the internal cellular environment, making firing more or less likely. And we focused on it because it's safer. We got obsessed with what we knew we could do and not immediately kill somebody— as opposed to what might actually be effective or is happening naturally because, on their own, our cells are firing and releasing neurotransmitters and pulling them back up and regulating their voltage without us messing with it at all.For example, the chemistry argument at the amygdala level is part of the story. But when we're talking about what information the amygdala is kicking out, it's really how fast it is firing. That's my kind of argument. It's a rhythm answer. If we looked at the stage plot for AC/DC and saw they had a lot of cables and started worrying about which cable plugged into the guitar as opposed to they are going to play in time --and you can replace the strings, the guitar, the cables. You do not have a good AC/DC show if they play at a time, and if they're playing in time, even if the guitar cuts out like bass drums, Angus is still locked in, and it rocks.We've focused on what's focused-on-able, not what matters.Chelsey Fasano, BA: The primary neurotransmitters of the amygdala are precisely the ones you were talking about!Owen Muir, M.D.: The n methyl D aspartate receptor is a binding site that modulates glutamine.Chelsey Fasano, BA: So that makes sense as to why ketamine would strongly affect PTSD since it works primarily on NMDA and GABA. That would downregulate the amygdala, which would help to buffer against the overactivity associated with PTSD and subcortical areas.Owen Muir, M.D.: The firing rate functionally comes down because each nerve in the amygdala firing becomes less likely by some amount. Chelsey Fasano, BA: Is the feeling something to this whole hippie thing of vibration and vibe?Owen Muir, M.D.: It's true at the level of the neurons in the brain. Yes. I think wavelength is an accidental term. I don't know. But it's the literal truth.Chelsey Fasano, BA: We know that neural firing from some research that I've read affects motor movements and speech patterns, and so there probably is some truth to the fact that upregulation of specific circuits is going to cause speech pattern and motor movement differences that are going to be the bodily rhythmic reflection of the brain activity. We would pick up a vibe because we all sense those things about each other through our brains.Owen Muir, M.D.: We're building a model of the vibe. I propose that a firing pattern represents everything in the brain. It's click click of one nerve group, right? And in the other person's brain, it's click click.But in our brains, we build a model of our click. And then, we make a model with clicks in our neurons of the other person. We're constantly building models of other people's minds in our minds with our pattern of firing. Then, we pick up signals from their motor movements and behavior. We're resynchronizing our model. with their model, and we're constantly just getting it a little bit wrong and getting back into sync, and what humans love is feeling in sync.When we dance, we're dancing in time. Like the guy who dances badly, we find displeasure. When we dance together, we find it joyous. When we're dancing to the beat, we enjoy that because our brains all represent the beat simultaneously. We can look and see and feel with high bandwidth sensory cortex and high bandwidth motor cortex that we are together, and that lets us not bump into each other when we're dancing and emotionally not bump into each other's feelings when we're communicating.The dopamine system, for example, which profoundly regulates ventral striatal activity around motor gating, is also implicated in not just motor gating but also the gating of behavior. Some of that behavior is our feelings, how we react to the feelings, and how we talk, think, or sing.This is how we can do things like lie to each other politely and not get enraged. Because there are times when someone lies to you, and it's bad, and how dare you lie to me. There are times when someone says, thank you so much for calling. And we recognize that their thanks may not be sincere.And both of us are definitely on the same page about that, but the underlying intent we have modeled for the statement is beneficent.We're both on the same page about that metadata, which is, oh, the person's lying to me, but it's because they care and want me to feel good. And so I'm going to think this lie is kind in this context, and in other contexts, my internal model was that they shouldn't have lied as opposed to should have lied.So it's not the lie; it's the intent that we model and can reconnect to that allows human behavior and motion. To go well. If someone's a lousy dancer because they have Parkinson's, you're not going to love it, even if you don't know they have Parkinson's, and you may feel more positively inclined to them if you understand they have a reason for it.But it doesn't feel good. We feel good when we move together.Chelsey Fasano, BA: We've had some discussions about this previously about you not valuing agreeableness or not liking that quality of when people pretend to be polite, and I tend to be more like that.And I think when I do that. Often, when I attempt politeness or I attempt positivity, even in a situation where things feel pretty dire, and I don't think that way, what I'm doing, my intention, is I'm trying to slow down the dance. I'm trying to introduce something to the dyad that I'm a part of that is not necessarily totally authentic in that I'm not feeling it at that moment, but I want both me and the other person to handle it.I desire. So, I create the desired state in affect, hoping the dance will move in that direction. It often works. If you fake it till you make it, and you choose grace, and you choose to give someone calmer and more positivity than you might feel like they deserve, they often follow suit by giving it back to you.Owen Muir, M.D.: What mentalizing and Peter Fonagy would say about this is like the way to do that most successfully because some people will interpret it because their experience and trauma, for example, as a lie—an aversive lie— and that'll create mistrust, and they'll get agitated, right?Like, how dare you be polite to me, right? For those individuals and people who like politeness, you can do the same thing: mark your intentions. I'm going to be polite now. It's just that much—set it up. “I am behaving in a way because I hope it will be helpful.”You can tell me if that's different from how it comes across. You can do whatever you want, and you have the spoonful of acknowledging the rationale for your behavior that gives them the additional information that you're doing it within the intent of XYZ, as opposed to just being polite. They can assume you're scamming them with your politeness.Because they're people who've been harmed, scammed, and traumatized by polite people who wanted to abuse them. Thus, politeness for them may be a signal of risk. And so it's the ability to mark that I wonder if politeness is the right way to go, but I will try it out. That is the kind of permission slip to behave; however, you need to behave and also eat if it goes poorly… in a tolerable way.“Wow, my politeness came across badly there. I can see by the look on your face that politeness was the wrong approach,” Then suddenly, they feel understood and don't want to argue with you anymore.Chelsey Fasano, BA: We've talked before about having a mini version of the other person in your head, which, according to this conversation, the mini representation of the person that we have would be not only our conceptions of them and abstract representations but be a literal rhythmic firing of neurons, which explains sort of emotional contagion and how you can feel someone else's feelings.Owen Muir, M.D.: Mirror neurons are a metaphor for mirror patterns of circuits firingChelsey Fasano, BA: When we're looking at different schools of therapy, and some people are saying all of the feelings that you're feeling are definitely counter-transference are all coming from your past. It sounds like what you're saying is that's not accurate. What is happening is that we're getting rhythmic representations of the person that are combining with the conceptions that we previously had of what those rhythmic representations mean to create a sort of mini person inside of us that then informs both Our immediate affect as well as our ability to predict another person's behavior across time.Owen Muir, M.D.: a million percent correct. So it's yes. Therapy is neuromodulation using the sensory experience of another plus the representation they have of us and the representations we have of them, and the desync/resync on repeat —is what therapy is. If you've seen projective identification when you come across that term, the ability to invoke in another person Psychodynamically a behavior that's true because of my ability as a human to create a model of you and perturb that model and react to the perturbances. I see it in a way that's in keeping with my internal representation.It's a fish swim in schools. They're not sending a letter to all the other fish in advance, being like, okay, so in second 17 — turn left. They're modeling all of the other fish and then swimming in context with the model and then adjusting the model in each fish, so there's the constant adjustment of how much the school is moving because we're all building models of the school and checking them with each of the nodes in the network.In therapy, you have a dyad that's doing the same thing. I move left, and I expect you to move right, and you move right as far as you move right. And then that hits or doesn't hit the model I have, and then we move back to the center and do it repeatedly. That's the misunderstanding that is the neuromodulatory agent in psychotherapy. Still, it's brain rhythms in both people's brains firing and then checking, and error checking against the visual sensory interpretation as presented to consciousness and heavily edited by subcortical structures that make that dance happen. It's the getting it wrong, just like in meditation, -- we're attending, losing the attention, bringing it back to the flame. And bringing it back to the flame is why we meditate, not simply “staying on the flame.” It's supposed to be challenging.It's better if it's hard because it's a workout. -- Therapy is better if it's hard because it's a workout. But it's not just for attention regulation; it's a process of re-syncing to better inter-human and intra-personal things because when you do it in therapy, you get to do it out in the world when the therapist isn't there to help. So, being a therapist who's a little bit wrong all the time and then gets back to it is the honest answer. Ta-da! How's that?Chelsey Fasano, BA: Good.Owen Muir, M.D.: Let's see if it turns into anything. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

Automotive News Weekend Drive
Oct. 2, 2023 | Barra has strong words for UAW; Fermata CEO Tony Posawatz

Automotive News Weekend Drive

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 21:34


Oct. 2, 2023 | Barra has strong words for UAW; Fermata CEO Tony Posawatz by Automotive News

The Frontier Psychiatrists

My favorite opening line of an academic article (this week) follows:Mental illnesses are prevalent, cause great suffering, and are burdensome to society.Welcome to the Frontier Psychiatrists. It's a newsletter that I write all by myself. I'm doing a series on medications, largely (but not entirely) in psychiatry. I'm a child and adult psychiatrist, and I still see patients. I've also been a patient since I was 16 years old. Please consider subscribing and sharing widely.The first antipsychotic introduced after clozapine would be a big deal—especially if it didn't cause life-threatening side effects. Risperidone was first developed by the Johnson & Johnson subsidiary Janssen-Cilag between 1988 and 1992 and was first approved by the FDA in 1994. It's one of the very few drugs with data for bipolar disorder that I, personally, have never been prescribed.Risperidone—Risperdal as a trade name—was ready to be a huge hit.It was presented as very atypical—this was the post-clozapine branding of choice. The “second generation” label was added years later. I have a confession to make. After residency, when the attending doctors told me, as a trainee, what to prescribe, I never prescribed risperidone ever again. I think this compound—and paliperidone, the metabolite— still has an important role in managing schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. There are more formulations of long-acting injectable risperidone and related compounds than I can remember. I think those are going to be useful drugs for a long time. Oral risperidone? Nope.Clozapine was an exciting drug. No horrible motor side effects? (Plausibly) More effective? It was better than every drug that came before. It had this pesky adverse effect that could lead to death called agranulocytosis, which I addressed in my first research paper in 2011. We needed more drugs that were this atypical!We—the field of psychiatry, at least— needed things that were not gonna kill you abruptly, in a terrifying manner, like clozapine had the rare potential to do. But we didn't want more of the same old antipsychotics. After Psychiatry got a taste of not having to explain permanent tardive dyskinesia as a likely side effect of antipsychotic medication, we wanted to keep doing that. Editors note: It is still a side effect of all non-clozapine antipsychotics, and we should never have let our guard down.Risperidone was the first antipsychotic that came to market after clozapine rocked the world of psychiatry by being better. Risperidone is similar, and they even use the accidental branding of clozapine— “atypical”—for this medication. The Food and Drug Administration (FDA)-approved indications for oral risperidone (tablets, oral solution, and M-TABs) include the treatment of:* schizophrenia (in adults and children aged 13 and up), * bipolar I acute manic or mixed episodes as monotherapy (in adults and children aged 10 and up), * bipolar I acute manic or mixed episodes adjunctive with lithium or valproate (in adults)* autism-associated irritability (in children aged 5 and up). Also, the long-acting risperidone injection has been approved for the use of schizophrenia and maintenance of bipolar disorder (as monotherapy or adjunctive to valproate or lithium) in adults.The “mechanism of action” of all of the drugs that have efficacy in psychosis was presumed to be dopamine D2 receptor blockade, a mechanism shared with all of the prior medication from Thorazine (chlorpromazine) through Haldol (haloperidol). The assumption—which clozapine disproved—was motor side effects were required for the drug's efficacy in psychosis. This primacy of the D2 blockade as a mechanism of action has since been disproven. This is the mechanism that leads to gynecomastia, leading to a bevy of lawsuits from men who developed breasts. It also causes related side effects like galactorrhea—breast milk from breasts that can be on men or women who are not nursing— and erectile dysfunction. Dopamine—it does a lot of work in the brain, not just pleasure.This motor side effect profile was not true with clozapine. It had various additional receptors, particularly in the serotonergic family (5HT-2a, for example), and alpha-adrenergic, histaminic, and other receptor sites throughout the brain. This broad profile of different receptors explains the wide range of side effects. But more importantly, these are complex, “messy,” and hard-to-predict outcomes given the complexity of the brain. The complex pharmacology allowed psychiatrists like me to think—hard!—about which particular witches brew of receptors we would choose to tickle (agonize) or antagonize. It's very satisfying. I also suspect this is a story we tell ourselves that is not as closely moored to truth as we'd like. We enjoy thinking about science-ish stuff. Receptor binding profiles are seductive— because they are knowable. Our patient's heart, hope, dreams, and heartbreak? Less so.The most important feature of risperidone today—and its 1st order metabolite, paliperidone—is that is deliverable as pills, rapid-acting dissolvable tablets, and long-acting injectable formulations, lasting between 2 weeks and 6 months between doses. A psychiatric treatment that isn't an oral once-daily pill? One you have to take twice a year? Medicine that is intended for people who often—like many—feel conflicted about taking a daily pill? That is a big enough deal. That is a real innovation— it considers human frailty, ambivalence, and common failures of mind. Not because it's a magic drug. Rather, long-acting medicine that doesn't make crippling relapse easy —thanks to good design— is exactly the kind of medicine that works. My second research effort was on the acceptability of such medicines in youth. It's responsible for my presence at the academic conference where I met my now wife.Oral medicines were popular because they were easy to sell. Novel medicines and technologies will be easy to take. The story of my fascination with the risks and benefits of these medicines doesn't end there, though.I still research these medicines and their adverse effects— funded by NIMH— for identifying Tardive Dyskinesia with Machine Learning and closed-loop Internet of Things physical medication compliance tech with my team at iRxReminder and colleagues at Videra. We are enrolling in a study at Fermata in New York and other sites. Thanks for reading.This article is another in my series about one drug or another. Prior installments include Depakote, Geodon, Ambien, Prozac, Xanax, Klonopin, Lurasidone, Olanzapine, Zulranolone, Benzos, Caffeine, Semeglutide, Lamotrigine, Cocaine, Xylazine, Lithium, dextromethorphan/bupropion and Adderall, etc.Sponsored Content!One way of supporting this publication is buying stuff from Amazon, like a nifty box from Apogee that I used to record the voice-over: the BOOM. In fairness, it's just the A/D. I am also using the API 512c mic pre, plugged into an AnaMod 660 500 series compressor, nestled in a reliable RND R6 Lunchbox, and all of that plugs into the Boom into my Mac. It's a Microtech Geffel mic. Most of the audio post-processing is done with Izotope RX 10. I get money if you purchase any of these things— not a trivial amount since they upped my affiliate rewards.In case anyone was wondering if I was an audio nerd… This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit thefrontierpsychiatrists.substack.com/subscribe

Winning In Asia: A ZoZo Go Podcast
From the Volt to the Bolt to the Lucid Air: Tony Posawatz, CEO, Fermata Energy 

Winning In Asia: A ZoZo Go Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2023 37:18


For most of his career, Tony Posawatz was a highly successful engineer working in GM's lucrative truck division. That meant big rigs powered by gasoline and diesel engines. Then one day in 2006 GM's top leadership appointed him to lead a breakthrough initiative. "Build us an electric car that will make people forget all about the Toyota Prius," they said. GM had taken a shot at an all-electric vehicle in the 1990s called the EV1. Tony and his team of top notch GM engineers knew that the way to beat the Prius was to go electric. But range anxiety was an issue. So, they got inventive and designed a propulsion system that featured both an electric battery and a gasoline engine. This set-up, in time, would become known as a plug-in hybrid electric vehicle or a PHEV. That product, which debuted 11 years ago, served as a bridge to a barrage of pure electrics like the Tesla Model 3, the Hyundai IONIQ, the Mustang Mach E, the Rivians and the Lucids now hitting the market today. How far along have we advanced on the path to electrics. And how much work still remains to be done before we reach electric nirvana?

Radio Rossonera
PROSSIMA FERMATA: JONATHAN DAVID - Chiama Milan

Radio Rossonera

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 4, 2023 58:47


radio.syg.ma
fermata – phew

radio.syg.ma

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2023 60:00


info: https://radio.syg.ma/episodes/fermata-phew https://soundcloud.com/nikitamillennialrain

Comics In Motion Podcast
SWCIC: Hidden Empire 4 & Zuckuss' Backstory: The Fermata Cage Opens & The Edgehawk Among Asteroids (Hidden Empire 4 & Bounty Hunters 32) – Ep 127

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2023 27:44


HIDDEN EMPIRE NEARS IT'S END, AS THE FERMATA CAGE OPENS AGAIN… For ep 127, Mike delves into the penultimate issue of the Hidden Empire, where the Archivist activates the Fermata Cage on Amaxine Station, as Vader & Palpatine see to it personally! Meanwhile, the Bounty Hunter crew is pursued by Inferno Squad through an asteroid field while Zuckuss is trapped in a vision of his past, meaning we get his backstory! Mike also gives more information on the Gand, Amaxine Station and more! For Hidden Empire 1, 2 & 3 check episodes 121, 122 & 123. The comic episodes set between Crimson Reign & Hidden Empire are 114 for Bounty Hunters, 115 for Star Wars, 117 for Doctor Aphra, 119 for Darth Vader, and Crimson Reign 5 was tackled in ep 110! Last episode, Mike delved into the first volume of High Republic comics in the second phase, following Jedi Vildar Mac, padawan Matty, the Sephi Tey Sirrek, Guardians Of The Whills, The Path of The Open Hand and more! Mike explores this Jedha-based story, noting along the way how it connects to the rest of the High Republic while providing information along the way – this serves as a perfect prequel to The Battle Of Jedha audiodrama by George Mann (which Mike tackled on this show, weeks prior). Mike, Maff & Dave's new show; Rebels Reviewed is out now, listen on any podcast app or watch on YouTube: ⁠⁠https://pod.fo/e/166659⁠⁠  - ⁠⁠https://youtu.be/oVXItTYLe68⁠⁠ Mike hosts Star Wars: Comics In Canon every week on Comics In Motion & YouTube and you can find all of Mike's podcast shows & social media details here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://linktr.ee/GenuineChitChat⁠⁠⁠⁠  If you want to support Mike, consider going to ⁠⁠⁠⁠http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat⁠⁠⁠⁠, where Mike has released several exclusive Star Wars Legends book reviews/plot overviews including Rogue Squadron, Shatterpoint, Revan, Darth Maul: Shadow Hunter, the Darth Bane Trilogy and Darth Plagueis as well as weekly movie & TV “Afterthoughts” review episodes! Subscribe to the Pop Culture Collective Newsletter for weekly updates on both of Mike's shows, the Femme On Collective and plenty of other incredible creators, here: ⁠⁠⁠⁠https://pccnewsletter.com⁠⁠⁠⁠  Find all of Mike's social media & links at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠linktr.ee/GenuineChitChat⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Outro read by BZ The Voice: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠http://www.bzthevoice.com⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠www.soundimage.org⁠⁠⁠ Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:27 What To Expect 02:04 HE4 Personnel & Timeline 02:46 HE4 Crawl 03:48 Hidden Empire 4 Plot 10:13 BH32 Personnel 10:47 BH32 Crawl 11:50 Bounty Hunters 32 Plot 18:29 Return Of The Jedi 40th Anniversary 19:05 Coming Up 22:46 Visions Volume 2 23:03 Ahsoka Series 23:18 Support & Patreon 26:25 Outro --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/comics-in-motion-podcast/message

Energy Evolution
Electric vehicles: Earning money from the grid, keeping batteries cool and extracting lithium from oilfield brines

Energy Evolution

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2023 32:06


This Energy Evolution episode features three guests from across the electric vehicle supply chain. Our first guest is David Slutzky, the founder and CEO of Fermata Energy. The company hopes to accelerate the adoption of electric vehicles and the transition to renewable energy. Fermata's bidirectional charging technology enables customers to earn revenue from their electric vehicles while combatting climate change and supporting grid resilience.  Our second guest is Kulr Technology Group CEO Michael Mo. Kulr is also accelerating a transition to broader electrification. The company's technology ensures that batteries stay cool and safe.  We also chat with Volt Lithium President and CEO Alex Wylie about his company's efforts to extract lithium from oilfield brines in Canada. The company recently announced a resource report indicating 4.3 million tonnes of lithium resources at its Rainbow Lake project. Energy Evolution co-hosts Dan Testa and Taylor Kuykendall are veteran journalists with broad expertise covering the energy and mining sectors. They are joined by correspondents Camellia Moors and Camilla Naschert, reporters who write about mining and power issues for S&P Global Commodity Insights. Subscribe to Energy Evolution on your favorite platform to catch our latest episodes!

WILDsound: The Film Podcast
April 26, 2023 - Filmmaker Preston Bowe (FERMATA)

WILDsound: The Film Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 30, 2023


FERMATA, 4min., USA, Thriller Directed by Preston Bowe A struggling pianist makes a peculiar discovery. Get to know the filmmaker: I was inspired to make Fermata after thinking about my and my friends' experiences with creating art—these tendencies to doubt ourselves or hold ourselves back in fear of what others might think. As someone who struggles with that sense of creative self-doubt, making the film was really a cathartic experience. At the same time, I really wanted to make a film that paid homage to the bizarre horror films of the '70s and '80s, complete with practical special effects. Movies like The Thing, Possession, and Eraserhead were some inspirations. I tried to draw from how it felt to catch glimpses of horror movies on TV as a young child—the uncanny and dreamlike feeling of seeing the unreal treated as something mundane. Ultimately I tried to marry that horror style with more of a modern, coming-of-age sensibility. You can sign up for the 7 day free trial at www.wildsound.ca (available on your streaming services and APPS). There is a DAILY film festival to watch, plus a selection of award winning films on the platform. Then it's only $3.99 per month. Subscribe to the podcast: https://twitter.com/wildsoundpod https://www.instagram.com/wildsoundpod/ https://www.facebook.com/wildsoundpod

Energy Transition Solutions
Bi-Directional Charging with Dr. Anna Demeo of Fermata Energy – Ep 89

Energy Transition Solutions

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2023 41:00


In this episode, our host Joe Batir talks with Dr. Anna Demeo, Chief Product Officer of Fermata Energy. Joe and Anna talk about: What is bi-directional charging? What have been the primary challenges to bi-directional charging? Just how much power storage is there in electric vehicles in the US? How EVs could effectively change the US grid overnight. Dr. Anna's book recommendation: This is how they tell me the world ends by Nicole Perlroth These show notes contain affiliate links. Show your support for this show, the information we provide, and our energy community by using these links. Fermata Energy's Website: Fermata Energy Dr. Anna Demeo's LinkedIn: Anna Demeo, Ph.D. | LinkedIn This episode is made possible by AWS Energy. Enjoying the show? Leave me a review here! Brought to you on the Oil and Gas Global Network, the largest and most listened-to podcast network for the oil and energy industry. More from OGGN ... Podcasts LinkedIn Group LinkedIn Company Page Get notified about industry events

Comics In Motion Podcast
SWCIC: Hidden Empire 2: The Fermata Cage Activates! Plus Sana Fights Domina Tagge & Valance Discovers The Truth (HE2, DA28 & BH30) – Ep 122 Star Wars Comics In Canon

Comics In Motion Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2023 27:02


CRIMSON DAWN STARTS TO CRUMBLE UNDER THE MIGHT OF THE EMPIRE… OR DOES IT?! For ep 122, Mike continues the final chapter of the Qi'ra trilogy along with the Bounty Hunters & Aphra comic crossovers in Hidden Empire 2! As The Archivist & Kho Phon Farrus reactivate the Fermata Cage, Palpatine & Vader notice and take pursuit! Meanwhile, Sana Starros, Just Lucky & their crew attempt to kill Domina Tagge for her nephew Ronen and T'onga & the Bounty Hunter crew confront Beilert Valance with a truth the Empire has been harbouring from him for too long… Hidden Empire 2 was released December 7th 2022, was written by Charles Soule, with Steven Cummings as penciller, Victor Olazaba as inker and Guru eFX as colour artist. The trade paperback of all 5 Hidden Empire issues is due for release July 4th 2023. Doctor Aphra 28 was released January 25th 2023 and was written by Alyssa Wong with artist Minkyu Jung and colour artist Rachelle Rosenberg. Bounty Hunters 29 was released January 18th 2023 and was written by Ethan Sacks with Paolo Villanelli as artist and Arif Prianto as colour artist. Ep 121 was Hidden Empire 1 and the comic episodes set between Crimson Reign & Hidden Empire are 114 for Bounty Hunters, 115 for Star Wars, 117 for Doctor Aphra, 119 for Darth Vader, and Crimson Reign 5 was tackled in ep 110! The Fortress Vader episode featuring Momin is number 74 and the first volume of Bounty Hunters comics was tackled in episode 75. The first & second episodes of the weekly Mandalorian discussion shows are out now on the podcast feed of Comics In Motion and the video version is on YouTube: https://pod.fo/e/16b5dd- https://youtu.be/ux9JpP6VDmM Mike, Maff & Dave's new show; Rebels Reviewed is out now, listen on any podcast app or watch on YouTube: https://pod.fo/e/166659 - https://youtu.be/oVXItTYLe68 Last week's episode had Mike's review on Force Collector! Mike gives his spoiler-free thoughts on the novel and why he thinks few people have heard much about it, before talking about the era & themes within the book! He also gives his full thoughts on the book's plot & characters after a spoiler warning! Subscribe to the Pop Culture Collective Newsletter for weekly updates on both of Mike's shows and plenty of other incredible creators, here: https://pccnewsletter.com To hear Mike's exclusive book reviews, including A New Dawn and the Legends books Shatterpoint, the Darth Bane Trilogy & Darth Plagueis, plus movie & TV “Afterthoughts” episodes, support the show at http://patreon.com/genuinechitchat Find all of Mike's social media & links at linktr.ee/GenuineChitChat Outro read by BZ The Voice: http://www.bzthevoice.com Intro theme arranged by Mike Burton, backing music by Eric Matyas at www.soundimage.org Timestamps: 00:00 Intro 01:09 Hidden Empire Crossover's Future 02:04 What To Expect In This Episode 03:04 HE2 Personnel & Crawl 04:31 Hidden Empire 2 Plot Overview 09:31 DA28 Personnel & Crawl 10:29 Doctor Aphra 28 Plot Overview 15:36 BH30 Personnel & Crawl 16:19 Bounty Hunters 30 Plot Overview 20:29 Mando S3 Weekly Discussion Shows 21:09 New Show; Rebels Reviewed 21:37 Pop Culture Collective Newsletter 22:05 Social Media 22:31 Coming Up On SWCIC 24:30 Star Wars Celebration 2023 24:52 Support & Patreon 25:39 Outro --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/comics-in-motion-podcast/message