Non-metallic material used to bond various materials together
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Ohio says OUCH to new report; Daisy needs your vote; Gluing your feet inside your shoes idiocy; Weather Militia Threat; Calicriminals on parade; Florida Man/Kangaroo; What's Buggin' Brynn?; Tasty Tuesday and a dangerous item recalled.
It's your Ill-Advised News, the stupid criminals of the day. Support the show and follow us here Twitter, Insta, Apple, Amazon, Spotify and the Edge! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
THE Sales Japan Series by Dale Carnegie Training Tokyo, Japan
There is a process to sales. Amazingly, most salespeople don't know what it is. They are either ignorant, because they haven't been trained or arrogant, arguing they won't be entangled by any formulistic wrangling. They say they follow their muse and let the sales conversation go where it may, because they are “spontaneous” creatures, residing in the “here and now”. Both answers are rubbish. There are professional salespeople and there are dilettantes. Let's be professionals and master the sales process. We are going to go deeper into the sales process and look at some of the inner workings. Gluing the whole process together are seven bridges to move us through the sales continuum Bridge number one is the move from casual chit chat at the beginning of the sales meeting to a business discussion with the buyer. When is the best time to make that move and what do you say? The opening conversation will flow to and fro, as various small talk questions are answered and everyone becomes comfortable with each other. Let the buyer finish their point. Pause to make sure they have actually finished and are not about to expand their point. Then we simply say, “thank you for your time today”. This signals, now is the time to get into the sales conversation proper. Bridge number two comes after we have explained our agenda and after checking if they have any extra points, we start to move through the points we have chosen. The agenda gives the sales call structure and helps to control where the conversation will go. We must ask the buyer if they have any points of their own. This is important because it gives them control over what we will discuss and that makes them feel better about owning our agenda. Bridge number three is when we ask for permission to ask questions. We have outlined the agenda and now it is time to get down into the murky depths of their business. Never forget we are “blowins” off the street, the great unwashed. They are about to be asked to open up the kimono and share all of their mysteries and secrets with a total stranger. We need to point to some evidence showing where we have been able to help a similar company, in the same industry. We then proffer, “maybe we could do the same for you. In order to understand if that is possible or not, would you mind if I asked you a few questions?”. Bridge number four is what we say after hearing all of the answers to our questions. We are now in a position called the “moment of truth”. We have to make the decision for them concerning if they can buy and what they should buy. We know our line-up of solutions in depth, to a degree they never will. If we decide we don't have the proper solution for them, we should fess up now and then hightail it out there, to find the next prospect. If we can help them, then we need to announce it clearly and loudly. We need to reference some of the things they told us in the questioning phase. They mentioned to us the key thing they are looking for and also why achieving that is important to them personally. We now wrap our “yes we can do it” answer around those two key motivators for the sale. Bridge number five comes after we have gone through (a) the facts, (b) the benefits, (c) the evidence and then (d) the application of the benefit. This will be news to a lot of salespeople in Japan, because they have never gotten beyond (a), the detail, the spec, the nitty gritty of their widget. After we have told the story of how wondrous things will be for them after purchasing our widget, we then ask the trial close question. It is not complicated and anyone can memorise it. Here it is, “how does that sound so far?”. Bridge number six comes after the buyer answers our trial close with an objection. There has been a gap in our process located in the questioning component. We have not flushed out their concern and dealt with it already, so that is why it pops up here at this point. We ask why it is an issue for them and we keep asking if there are any other issues. We need to do this in order to know which key concern we need to answer. Once we have prioritised their concerns, we then give our answer to the major objection. We then ask, “does that deal with the issue for you?”. We do this to check we don't have any residual resistance preventing them from giving us a “yes” answer when we ask again for the order. We just say, “shall we go ahead then?”, or “do you want to start this month or next month?” or “do you want the invoice sent to you by post or can we send it by email?”. Bridge number seven comes after they say, “yes” they will buy. We must be very careful what we say next. We must bridge across to the delivery discussion of how and when they will receive their purchase. Under no circumstances keep selling at his point. Random things blurted out after receiving their “yes” may sidetrack them to a concern they hadn't thought about. Or it may get them confused about whether now is the time to buy or should they wait until a bit later? Rather, get deep into the detail of the next steps immediately and stop selling. Salespeople need to know the sales process and the glue that holds it all together. That is the mark of the professional and the path to sales success.
Doc is a new medical drama starring Molly Parker (House of Cards, Deadwood) as the hard-charging, brilliant Chief of Internal Medicine Dr. Amy Larsen, who suffers a brain injury that erases the last eight years of her memory. The accident leaves her with no recollection of patients she's treated, colleagues she's crossed, the soulmate she divorced, the man she now loves and the tragedy that caused her to push almost everyone away. But with the immense loss, comes a second chance to do things differently. Doc is inspired by a true story and based on the hit eponymous Italian drama series. This emotionally charged, life-altering-and-affirming medical procedural also stars Omar Metwally, Amirah Vann, Jon Ecker and Anya Banerjee.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/arroe-collins-unplugged-totally-uncut--994165/support.
Doc is a new medical drama starring Molly Parker (House of Cards, Deadwood) as the hard-charging, brilliant Chief of Internal Medicine Dr. Amy Larsen, who suffers a brain injury that erases the last eight years of her memory. The accident leaves her with no recollection of patients she's treated, colleagues she's crossed, the soulmate she divorced, the man she now loves and the tragedy that caused her to push almost everyone away. But with the immense loss, comes a second chance to do things differently. Doc is inspired by a true story and based on the hit eponymous Italian drama series. This emotionally charged, life-altering-and-affirming medical procedural also stars Omar Metwally, Amirah Vann, Jon Ecker and Anya Banerjee.Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/arroe-collins-like-it-s-live--4113802/support.
Huffing Cement Glue & Lucas Super Gluing His Fingers Part 2See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
This Episodes Questions: I want to put a touch screen on my ender 2 pro without any knob on like I have on my ender cr-6se and was wondering if you know if I get a cr-6 one would it be plug and play? Is there a community firmware for the ender 2 pro? Thanks, William I am looking at buying a new printer for myself as a Christmas present and right now there's two big questions in my mind. One is the Qidi plus 4. Seems like everything I want on paper with speed, accuracy, build quality and most important to me - Is its ability to print high temperature materials with the heated chamber. I am designing parts that could benefit from some more exotic materials like PBT, PP-CF, glass filled ABS etc. I know that there's a recall with the heater heated chamber relay on the plus 4, but it really does look like they're gonna make it right for customers. They're gonna give what's needed to repair it. I'm not concerned about repairing things, it's easy for me to do a little bit of work for some maintenance and upgrades over the years. On the other hand, I'm really really enticed by the new K2 max. I don't particularly need its larger volume. K2 max does a lot of the same things that the plus 4 does as far as high temperatures and heated chamber and the K2 max seems to be from a brand and a company that's a little bit more trustworthy. I don't particularly want the multimaterial system, I don't mind changing filaments. I am concerned about the price. It's $1200 versus $800 and I love the idea of longevity, maintainability and buying something of high quality and having it last for years longer so maybe reality is the right answer for me but, wow, that $400 difference just is really hard to justify going all the way up to that Creality K2. What other differences should I consider in my decision? Tim
On the phone-in: Patrick Crabbe and Dylan Ward discuss the idea of mass timber construction which is a new building technique that involves laminating and gluing pieces of wood together. Some mass timber projects are several stories high. And off the top, we speak with Michael Kabalen, executive director of the Affordable Housing Association of NS. He provides an update on the situation with tent encampments in Halifax and the hope to see an increase in housing options.
Carrie & Tommy Catchup - Hit Network - Carrie Bickmore and Tommy Little
Literal Team Building Toddler Bike Missing Parts Time Game - $2000 GUEST: Waleed Aly - US Election Super Glue Fear Sticky Situations GUEST: Jelena Dokic - Unbreakable Who Runs The World....Girls, Maybe? Big Red Suitcase Roulette Thanks To Flight CentreSubscribe on LiSTNR: https://play.listnr.com/podcasts/carrie-and-tommySee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This Episode's Questions: Brians Questions: Hey guys, I am building an arts and crafts style entryway table that is roughly modeled after a Stickley magazine stand. It will have an upper “shelf” that is surrounded on three side by the rails or stretchers on the side and back and is open on the front. The bottom “shelf” is identical. These two shelves are seated into the four legs. The front legs have a full depth groove cut into them that the shelf seats into and the rear legs have a cutout on the inside corner for the rear shelf support. I will include a link at the bottom showing the piece that I modeled my table after. The original is smaller and has three shelves, mine will only have two and will have spindles between the rear top and bottom stretchers as well. However, the way the shelves are attached will be the same. My question is this: How can I attach the shelves to the front and rear legs without causing issues with wood movement? The shelves will be somewhere in the 13-14” deep range. Gluing the shelf to the rear legs and letting the shelf slide in the groove in the front legs would work but there is no front rail or stretcher connecting the two front legs so I don't think that works. Can I glue the shelf to all four legs? Alternatively I suppose I could put a small low profile stretcher under the shelf connecting the two front legs, but I don't think it exists on the original and I'd prefer not to if I don't have to. Please feel free to contact me to clarify anything if I didn't explain well enough. Kellen I think the thing I struggle with the most in building furniture is laying out where each part is going to come from on the rough boards. All the wood I've bought so far was air dryed from Facebook marketplace, so maybe that has made it harder since the boards are never perfectly straight. I always use straight grain sections for the legs and I try to also use straight grain for any aprons, rails and stiles. This leaves alot of waste. If I have a 8" board and I use say 2.5" from each edge of straight grain, what do you do with the leftover center section that is just cathedrals? When do you not use straight grain on these types of parts? Any other advise on laying out parts on the rough boards? Thanks again for answering my questions and the best podcast. Jeff Guys Questions: Hey Guys, I love your show! I usually listen on my commute or while I'm working in the shop. I'm building a hayrake table out of walnut and haven't decided on the finish. I'm looking for something durable, easy to wipe clean (I have kids), and not super glossy. Any suggestions on what to use and how to apply it? Thank you for all the great tips! Ezra Thank you for your fantastic podcast! I really appreciate how accessible and practical you make woodworking for both beginners and experts alike. I've been woodworking for about two years now, mostly building cutting boards, boxes, gifts and simple furniture out of basic hardwoods. I've also dabbled in making furniture with plywood, such as a bedside table for my 11-year-old. I'm fortunate to be a member of a shared woodworking shop at a local arts and crafts society, which is well-equipped with power tools including a SawStop cabinet saw. Our shop uses a shared set of well-worn Freud blades which get pretty beat up, but I've had the privilege of using nicer table saw blades loaned to me by the shop keeper, who has been incredibly supportive as I develop my skills. This brings me to my question: I am ready to purchase my own table saw blades and have zoomed in on CMT as a brand for their value. I'm considering three blades: an 80-tooth Hi-ATB crosscut, a 24-tooth flat top grind ripping blade, and a 50-tooth combination blade with ATB and one TCG tooth, all in full kerf. My research suggests that the main arguments for thin kerf blades are that they are easier on low power table saws and produce less waste. Since I have access to a SawStop cabinet saw, I don't need blades suited for low power saws, and I'm not sure the reduced waste is worth the trade-offs. Are there other advantages or reasons I should consider a thin kerf blade? It seems that full kerf blades offer more stability and cleaner cuts, and as I build my skills, my expectations for precision are increasing. What are your thoughts on kerf size and blade choice for someone in my situation? Thanks for your advice, and keep up the great work! Stuart Huys Questions: Hey gents, I'm getting into a kitchen remodel and will be building all the cabinets myself because I'm a glutton for punishment. I'm trying to find a white (tintable base) finish, but am a little overwhelmed by all the options. It for sure needs to be water based, and I have an Airless system as well as a 2-stage HVLP for application. Can you recommend any product for this purpose? I've been experimenting with Target Coatings water based pigmented lacquer (EM6500wp) with their CL100 cross-linker and was just "ok" with the results. I tried spraying it with the HVLP but I'm thinking the finish was too thick to properly atomize with a 2-stage turbine, so maybe I need to shoot it with the Airless? I'm not super keen on any finish with a real limited pot life, since I'll be doing this on the nights and weekends, and feel like that would lead to a significant amount of waste. Thanks in advance for the insight! Travis Hello guys, I have been a long time listener and I really appreciate all of the knowledge that you guys share with the woodworking community. I have seen the Critter Siphon Gun advertised in the Lee Valley catalog and watched a few videos about it on YouTube. Have you had any experience with the Critter Siphon Gun and how does it compare to other options like HVLP sprayers? Thanks, Daniel
Episode 128I spoke with Sergiy Nesterenko about:* Developing an automated system for designing PCBs* Difficulties in human and automated PCB design* Building a startup at the intersection of different areas of expertiseBy the way — I hit 40 ratings on Apple Podcasts (and am at 66 on Spotify). It'd mean a lot (really, a lot) if you'd consider leaving a rating or a review. I read everything, and it's very heartening and helpful to hear what you think. Enjoy, and let me know what you think!Sergiy is founder and CEO of Quilter. Sergiy spent 5 years at SpaceX developing radiation-hardened avionics for SpaceX's Falcon 9 and Falcon Heavy's second stage rockets, before discovering a big problem: designing printed circuit boards for all the electronics in these rockets was tedious, manual and error prone. So in 2019, he founded Quilter to build the next generation of AI-powered tooling for electrical engineers.I spend a lot of time on this podcast—if you like my work, you can support me on Patreon :)Reach me at editor@thegradient.pub for feedback, ideas, guest suggestions. Subscribe to The Gradient Podcast: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Pocket Casts | RSSFollow The Gradient on TwitterOutline:* (00:00) Intro* (00:45) Quilter origins and difficulties in designing PCBs* (04:12) PCBs and schematic implementations* (06:40) Iteration cycles and simulations* (08:35) Octilinear traces and first-principles design for PCBs* (12:38) The design space of PCBs* (15:27) Benchmarks for PCB design* (20:05) RL and PCB design* (22:48) PCB details, track widths* (25:09) Board functionality and aesthetics* (27:53) PCB designers and automation* (30:24) Quilter as a compiler* (33:56) Gluing social worlds and bringing together expertise* (36:00) Process knowledge vs. first-principles thinking* (42:05) Example boards* (44:45) Auto-routers for PCBs* (48:43) Difficulties for scaling to larger boards* (50:42) Customers and skepticism* (53:42) On experiencing negative feedback* (56:42) Maintaining stamina while building Quilter* (1:00:00) Endgame for Quilter and future directions* (1:03:24) OutroLinks:* Quilter homepage* Other pages/features mentioned:* Thin-to-thick traces* Octilinear trace routing* Comment from Tom Fleet Get full access to The Gradient at thegradientpub.substack.com/subscribe
On this week's show: Hubitat has a new UI, Home Assistant has a clever voice control hack for iOS, Sonos defends the new app, iRobot backs away from subscriptions, a pick of the week, project updates, and more!
RobChrisRob grouped up to talk about the efficacy of Shadowbans, and for once spoke about something about which they actually have great expertise, then we talked about AppleTV's Time Bandits TV show, Faxing code to a compiler, Google's genyus AI telling people to glue their pizza toppings on, Voyager 1 is sending science data again, Scientists are brewing beer with killer bees, a kid got busted for cheating at a science fair with a huge scholarship prize, a Self Driving Tesla nearly hit a train, Drone footage of a tornado, the Boeing Starliner on indefinite hold (astronauts breath sigh of relief?) and movie The Iron Claw, Star Trek Discovery winding down (at last) and the secret hidden in unused sectors of the space quest 2 floppies for decades! Join our discord to talk along or the Subreddit where you will find all the links https://discord.gg/YZMTgpyhB https://www.reddit.com/r/TacoZone/
Gluing down loose nails, bacterial infections, bad shortcuts, Naughty technicians, Naughty clients, Glitter as an answer, & How to not rebook difficult people by saying "Oooooo Looks like i am Booked till June" .....All this and more in this weeks conversation..... Megan Stedman, This one is for you!! Thank you for always being my hype girl and encouraging me to do things that I only considered in my mind........Thank you.
This Episodes Questions: Brian's Questions: Hey guys I have a kinda lengthy question, so new to woodworking and I've been listening to your guys podcast and really like it!! Very helpful! Question #1 is it better to have a good table saw blade over a good saw #2 is it better to have a good table saw over a good incra fence!? Back story I have a delta table saw, I got for free from a friend, I was wondering if it's worth spending the money or save and eventually get a better saw like a powermatic table saw etc. maybe I get caught up in the details of tools and expect them to do the work for me, but I am someone that like to have the right tools for the job. Granted as new as I am it's hard to justify $10,000 to have all the right tools, just wondering if I should focus more on making something then, on the tools! Hope it all makes sense and it's not more of a rant!! Thank you for all the work you guys do!! Ivan I'm making a mantle for my living room out of rift-sawn white oak plywood. 74" long, with a miter fold design. My wife wants it to look the same way it does before applying finish, and I'm not sure how to do that or if it is even possible. I've tested with water-based poly (Minwax), but it causes it to look a bit "golden". Suggestions? Brian Guy's Questions: Hi fellas, Love the podcast and all your great advice. I recently glued up a free-standing (liquor) cabinet and was very nervous about it being square, especially since it was difficult to check for square (measuring corner to corner in the front and back) with all the various clamps on. I ended up making the back panel (which fits into rabbets), which I knew was square, and placed it in the back (without glue) while the glue dried on the various joints (through tenons on top and bottom shelves, mid-shelves sit in stopped dados). The idea was that if the square back panel fit correctly, it would help pull the whole cabinet into square. It turned out perfectly this time (wahoo!), but am not sure if I got lucky or if this is a reliable method to come back to. What do y'all think? Does this method make sense? Any other suggestions on how to check or ensure square with free-standing cabinets of a decent size (46" tall, 26" wide, 16" deep)? Thanks, Bryan Hi gents: long time listener here and as I've said before, thanks so much for the great content you deliver. You have discussed your spraying equipment set up in the past but I was hoping you could describe your spray BOOTH set up- obviously Brian is exempt from this question since he doesn't apply finish. How do you guys spray volatile finishes in the winter on your garage? Do you have a spray booth like set up? Do you openly spray in your garage workshops? How do you vent potentially dangerous fumes? Any details you can provide would be appreciated as I would like to do more spraying of shellac and I like wipe on poly both of which are challenges in winter time when you can't work outside. Liam from Indianapolis Huy's Questions: I've recently found the podcast and am loving going back and learning from each episode! I've noticed that a ton of time has been dedicated to doling out wisdom on different types of finishing techniques and products. I'm sure the best way to learn all of this is through experience, but do you have and resources to recommend budding woodworkers as a go-to guide? With the way my brain works, learning the origins of each finish, their make-ups, and how that brings about their use cases and strengths/weaknesses would go a long way for me to internalize all of the various do's and dont's. Do you have a resource you go to when considering applicable finishing materials on a new project? Jeremiah Love the show, I appreciate you guys giving it the time it takes to make it happen. My question is about a solid Walnut table that I built for my eat in kitchen. The material was 30yr + air dried Walnut milled down to a thickness of about 15/16" for the table top each board is six to eight inches in width and makes up a 32" wide table top by 5' and change in length. I used Domino's for alignment titebond two for the glue. The table base is inspired by conoid table style from Nakashima and is connected to the table top using "buttons and screws" connected to the two rails at top each of the splayed legs. I did not add any type of support down the center nor any type of skirting or an apron so there's about four foot in between the table legs of unsupported table top. - I've been using table for a few months now, and every once in a while I'll place my Veritas straight edge on it and check. It hasn't seemed to move at all in any direction but yet I still think about this multiple times a week what are your thoughts? Will this eventually sag in the middle with out a continuous support running the center if the table? Joe R.
Gluing your eyes shut by mistake? And would you have called the RCMP?
They spell your name wrong on the cup. They don't serve anything you can eat for breakfast. And then they charge you extra for vegan milk! Jamie and Justina get into exactly what's going on with Starbucks's outrageous vegan upcharge, and then they talk to the incredible Chef Babette Davis, who glued her hand to a Starbucks counter as a protest.
One of the cast of Oppenheimer had to quote “Have their face glued back together” in the middle of the night. And one musician's gender reveal was ruined…
Fit your miniature pieces together and get them ready for decoration! Shaping, sanding and glue are so important to getting the derired shape that fits your display exactly. So watch as I create some pieces for us to emboss in the next episode Yes this podcast episode is 1 day late.....I could not get my editor to work. Then the internet was offline for several hours! I guess it was not meant to be! So- better late thn never.... If you'd like to purchase some of my Fairy garden items, please head to my Etsy shop here: https://sprouteddreams.etsy.com Or visit the site here: https://www.sprouteddreams.com Thanks so much for watching or listening!
Episode:Title: Amish Drive-by Show: ohmTown Daily News Show - Science, Technology, SocietySeason: 3Episode: 24Date: 1/24/2024Time: Weekdays 8PM, Weekends 6PM ET@ohmTown Episode Article Vote: https://www.ohmtown.com/elections/Past Episode Votes: https://www.ohmtown.com/past-elections/Live on Twitch: https://www.twitch.tv/ohmtownYoutube: https://www.youtube.com/ohmtownPodcast: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/ohmtown/id1609446592Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/ohmTownDiscord: https://discord.gg/vgUxz3XWe also have two new shows, Reality Hacker and The Continuity Report that is on Sunday and Saturday, respectively, directly after ODNS.Gluing the Cable Back Togetherhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/netflix-is-turning-into-cable-tv/... and then we brought in a cussing parrot.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/zoo-hopes-plan-to-introduce-famous-cursing-parrots-to-larger-flock-doesnt-backfire/Social Media is Toxichttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/new-york-city-mayor-declares-social-media-an-environmental-toxin/It's an Intermittent Featurehttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/a-fellow-pilot-told-boeing-jet-that-its-tire-popped-off-before-takeoff-it-just-rolled-off-the-runway-behind-you/Get ready for an Amish Drive By...https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/amish-horse-and-buggy-stolen-from-walmart-parking-lot-while-family-shopped/So babies DO grow on trees, I knew it.https://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/tcd-to-give-away-100-baby-trees-grown-accidentally/eBay fires 1000 peoplehttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/ohmtowndaily/f/d/ebay-will-lay-off-1000-employees-9-percent-of-the-company/Well that isn't very smileyhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/the-etsy-sellers-getting-sued-for-using-a-smiley-face/DnD'n'VRhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/late-nite-geeks/f/d/soon-youll-be-able-to-play-dungeons-dragons-in-vr-if-you-want/Worlds Most Popular Coffee, Sequencedhttps://www.ohmtown.com/groups/mobble/f/d/new-buzz-about-coffee-genes-a-more-complete-genome-sequence-of-worlds-most-popular-variety/Broadcasted live on Twitch -- Watch live at https://www.twitch.tv/ohmtown
To find the "DIY Guitar Making" podcasts AND videos all in one place visit:www.diyguitarmaking.comFor information on the Hands-on Guitar Building Workshops and online guitar building courses visit:www.ericschaeferguitars.com
Don't get stuck! Join Aubrey and David as they discuss one of their favorite Montessori lessons -- How to Glue! They talk about how to give the lesson, what materials you'll need, and why it's so awesome! As always, remember to monitor your Littles when doing lessons that involve small objects, like the glue containers referenced in the Live. To learn more about Child of the Redwoods, visit us at www.childoftheredwoods.com.
Bob Van Dyke joins Mike and Ben to discuss sharpening to 80 grit, which wood is best for bending, bandsaw blade issues, and shoulder planes. Sign up for our Woodworking Fundamentals journey here - www.finewoodworking.com/fundamentals 0:00 - Intro 2:23 - What's new at Bob's? 11:34 - Gluing hinges on a box? 19:41 - Steam bending wood 29:48 - Segments 40:35 - Sharpening to 80 grit 52:15 - Breaking bandsaw blades 59:10 - What shoulder plane to get? For more information about our eLearning courses - http://www.finewoodworking.com/elearning Join us on our new Discord server! - https://discord.gg/8hyuwqu4JH Links from this episode can be found here - http://www.shoptalklive.com Sign up for the Fine Woodworking weekly eLetter - https://www.finewoodworking.com/newsletter Sign up for a Fine Woodworking Unlimited membership - https://www.finewoodworking.com/unlimited Every two weeks, a team of Fine Woodworking staffers answers questions from readers on Shop Talk Live, Fine Woodworking‘s biweekly podcast. Send your woodworking questions to shoptalk@taunton.com for consideration in the regular broadcast! Our continued existence relies upon listener support. So if you enjoy the show, be sure to leave us a five-star rating and maybe even a nice comment on our iTunes page.
Much like President Franklin D. Roosevelt's series of radio broadcasts during WWII, “Uncle” Dave's fireside chats have become a cornerstone of the AML nation, bringing calmness and stability to the fast-paced, ever-changing world of model railroading. Just like FDR, “Uncle” Dave's fireside chats are designed to make complex issues and policies more accessible while at the same time avoiding that most common of all mistakes… Gluing your finger to your eyelid. Whether Dave is discussing the ebb and flow in world of business and railroading, the hiring of conductors and engineers, getting ready for next year's big Springfield show, his family taking precedence over all things railroading or just talking about one of his favorite railfanning spots, it all makes for great conversation. So grab yourself a big bowl of shredded hotel bed sheets, a tall cool glass of melted candle was wax and enjoy!!
This episodes questions: With the new addition of podcasts to youtube music, do you guys have any plans of uploading podcasts to that platform on a separate channel? Shortandstumpy A month ago one of the capacitors on the mainboard exploded. It stunk quite bad but the whole 3D-Printer still works. I did use it for a long time but I didn´t do any upgrades or changes on it. Can I still use it? Love your podcast! David So I'm relatively new to the 3D printing community and I've been able to acquire a few printers from an auction site here in Vegas where 3D printers go extremely cheap. An Ender 3 S1, Flashforge Adventurer 3 Pro and Phrozen Mighty 8K resin printer. I've also been lucky enough to find an original stock Prusa i3 MK2 for $100 through the Marketplace. If you were to choose between the MK2 and S1 which would you choose and why? Linus something that JJ mentioned in this episode was power outages (whilst printing a helmet for example)… I don't really understand when/who needs an uninterrupted power supply. These power outages that people talk about, are they momentary outages that cause print failures, or are they longer outages? I ask because I am about to buy my first 3d printer, and I've never owned any kind of battery-based power supply protection. Using my computer, I never notice any power outages other than the longer outage kind. So my question is, what kind of power outages are you referring to and are they common? I would guess the sort of very short power interruptions that commonly occur but most people never notice, are usually handled by capacitors for small electronics. But I'm supposing the power consumption of a 3d printer means the capacitors they have for the motor drivers are not specified to provide much power supply protection… please could you discuss the topic of power supply, the sorts of power outages that people can commonly expect, and who really needs to invest in power supply interruption solutions. Great podcast, thanks in advance. Tom
A woman is going viral because she accidentally put super blue in her eye
Online marketers can learn a LOT from direct response TV (DRTV) ads. The power of an irresistible offer.The art and science of a problem-solution ad.The appeal of a “magic product demonstration.”To name a few!This episode features Jordan Pine, a seasoned DRTV veteran who has also had success in the online marketing space. I wanted to pick his brain on how to be successful with DRTV. I'm convinced that some of the lessons he knows and that other DRTV pros know can be leveraged by online marketers. Recording this episode was an absolute BLAST! We went a full hour, and I could have easily continued for another couple. It was fun and insightful! Here's a look at what we cover:The “Divine 7” for choosing the right product to advertise.The 10 TNT (Tried-and-True) elements of DRTV.Why the Ginsu Knife commercial belongs in the DRTV Hall of Fame.The “problem scale” and how to use it to analyze a product and the strength of a problem/solution opening.Gluing people to ceilings, running over flashlights with tanks, and other “torture test” product demos.Lessons from the Godfathers of marketing like Claud Hopkins, Rosser Reeves, Joe Sugarman, and more.
Online marketers can learn a LOT from direct response TV (DRTV) ads. The power of an irresistible offer. The art and science of a problem-solution ad. The appeal of a “magic product demonstration.” To name a few! This episode features Jordan Pine, a seasoned DRTV veteran who has also had success in the online marketing space. I wanted to pick his brain on how to be successful with DRTV. I'm convinced that some of the lessons he knows and that other DRTV pros know can be leveraged by online marketers. Recording this episode was an absolute BLAST! We went a full hour, and I could have easily continued for another couple. It was fun and insightful! Here's a look at what we cover: The “Divine 7” for choosing the right product to advertise. The 10 TNT (Tried-and-True) elements of DRTV. Why the Ginsu Knife commercial belongs in the DRTV Hall of Fame. The “problem scale” and how to use it to analyze a product and the strength of a problem/solution opening. Gluing people to ceilings, running over flashlights with tanks, and other “torture test” product demos. Lessons from the Godfathers of marketing like Claud Hopkins, Rosser Reeves, Joe Sugarman, and more.
This Episode: We talk to Ian McKinlay from RedandBlacks.com - Gluing shoes then and now - Tapering heals now for landing - Feet pack with mud for blacksmiths - Using 'Bondo' in the 60's
Lords: * Ichiro * Adam Topics: * I learned how to animate by watching cartoons as a child (and I'm curious what else folks absorbed as a child that impacted the kind of adult they became) * I created a Totally Human Rapper that can read up on a game and cut a rap video. * Frog Fractions is banned from AGDQ * "Frog Fractions" by Totally Human Rapper * Tiny Mass Games small games cycle. Microtopics: * One of the episodes with a cold open. * Live from New York, it's. * Using ocean water as a mixer. * Being of poop and returning to poop. * Using the Boston river as a mixer. * Learning everything you know about love from Robotech. * Losing your fiancee and marrying an alien instead. * Paying $6/hr to play a MUD. * Corresponding with your MUD lover via dead tree letters. * Playing a MUD and cheating on one avatar with another avatar and eventually realizing that they are played by the same person. * Sleep is Death. * The cool part of the Metaverse circa 2005. * Learning what human relationships look like by watching Saturday morning cartoons. * Sarah and Duck. * Pocoyo. * Busting ghosts. (A very important time in a boy's life.) * Retired Men's Nude Beach Volleyball League. * The center of your Venn diagram as a creator. * Ichiro Paydirt. * If Tank Girl were a streamer. * Endless Seinfeld pulling a Microsoft Tay. * The year of the deluge of AI generated crap. * Making a BBS door game about traveling into space. * Zooming out of yourself and looking at it with ghost eyes. * A game that appears to be family-friendly but is actually porn-adjacent. * The Timic skip. * A very respectful way to play Frog Fractions. * The two concessions Jim made to game design in the Frog Fractions remaster. * Catering to the you demographic. * Blanking on Tim Ambrogi's name. * Noted base jumping game "ahh" * An underlying engine that just won't swear. * Saying something interesting enough to be debated by a bunch of people. * Stemming the tide of mediocrity across streaming platforms. * The value of making dinner for two people vs. making art for millions of people. * Having a thought in your head and wanting people to hear it. * Gluing all the ports shut. * Games that gradually destroy themselves. * Follow the Frog, an arcade action adventure. * Where Totally Human Rapper gets his ideas. * How to jailbreak ChatGPT. * A deck building auto battler without the deck. * A well-scoped game design. * Not really having anything to say but loving to wrestle with language. * An AI generated game about AI generated games. * Polishing a prototype enough to put it in front of a mass audience. * Rating AI-generated food. * Synergies and combinatorics. * The development process for each Frog Fractions game. * Answering to ask things. *
In the final of our series on Table Tennis, we look at the use of glue to cheat in table tennis. When Hungarian player Tibor Klampár discovered volatile glues gave the rubber on bats 30 per cent more spin and speed, it led to an arms race for the most toxic glues. Titus O'Reily and Mick Molloy look at the dangerous trick that led to players passing out and police raiding table tennis shops. Follow Sports Bizarre on: Instagram Facebook Twitter TikTok YouTubeSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This week, the boys look at Testing and the upcoming season opened at BahrainWho's Hot and who's not?Are we on the Aston Martin Hype Train?Gluing sand to the trackWill Dan's dogs bark in the background once again?Proudly partnered with NordVPN for this episode, visit nordvpn.com/engine for your exclusive offer Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Kevo and special guest Kelli Decelle talk about everything under the sun....I mean everything. From mice to therapy to OCD to anxiety to what Kelli cooks or what she cant cook, etc. Its a WORMHOLE of a podcast that was a blast to record and will be even funnier to listen to.
Today I speak with two amazing and strong mothers. They both went through pregnancies' where everything that could go wrong, went wrong. We cover the lack of communication and aftercare they both experienced along with topics such as PPD, PPA, PTSD and the death of a child. Visit us online. Episode Sponsors: Storyworth - Help your family share their story this holiday season with StoryWorth. Go to StoryWorth.com/Peripheral today and save $10 on your first purchase! Wondery Exhibit C - Join the Exhibit C online community at Wonderyexhibitc.com
Two pieces from the price of zero! A very stupid one about protests and a very-stupid-but-there-are-also-serious-parts one about writing outside of your identity. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In hour 3, guest host Mike Opelka talks about climate protests in europe from Gluing their hands to a cold garage floor to throwing mashed potatoes at artwork, all of this is for the planet somehow... For more coverage on the issues that matter to you download the WMAL app, visit WMAL.com or tune in live on WMAL-FM 105.9 from 9:00am-12:00pm Monday-Friday.To join the conversation, check us out on twitter @WMAL and @ChrisPlanteShowSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
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Chris also started Speedgoat, one of the earliest online retailers back in the 1990s, and has spent more than a decade in the marketing trenches at Stan's NoTubes, giving him a unique perspective on the cycling industry and the future.
Support Topic Lords on Patreon and get episodes a week early! (https://www.patreon.com/topiclords) Lords: * Erica * David Topics: * A partnership between you and a tool * Schmalhausen and Vernadsky, my own personal ARG * Stop trying to make "a wedge is a machine" happen. It's not going to happen * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Machine * The Poetry Teacher, by Mary Oliver * https://voetica.com/voetica.php?collection=2&poet=27&poem=5712 * Drinking vinegar * https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Short-chainfattyacid Microtopics: * Taking an allergy pill and getting something unexpected. * Nap skeptics. * Non-stop napping. * Wanting to eat nothing but spinach for two days so you go to Disney World and pay extra for all the park employees to tell you that in the happiest place on Earth we only eat spinach. * Who gets to chew the grape next and for how long. * Forgetting a story after you tell it, so you can tell the story back and forth forever. * A plastic grape that dissolves in your nose. * The least favorite thing that you bought during the pandemic. * The collective politico-pandemical nightmare. * A shitty partnership between you and a shitty tool. * Ol' Slicky. * Tools that bring you distress. * Whether it's legal to open carry a claymore in Texas. * A decoration you can put on your truck just in case nobody knows what an asshole you are. * Whether you can open-carry a dildo in Texas if the dildo is also an assault rifle. * Gluing a penis to things you don't like and explaining that "this is a partnership between you and a tool." * Papers that you really approve should've read fifteen years ago. * The parallel world of the Modern Synthesis. * Soviet biologists who were recognized in their time but have since been forgotten. * Stalin's purge of scientists researching Mendelian genetics. * Being evacuated to Kazakhstan and fed only wilted spinach so that you can finally write the book you've been thinking about. * Bringing your adopted pet wolf back with you from Kazakhstan. * Growing up after the Russian revolution in St. Petersburg. * Delegating research by convincing the Game Detectives folks that there is a pop culture reward behind it. * Your own personal ARG that only you care about and doesn't lead to any goal except knowing more facts. * The point of games. * The creativity that exists in fiction that you wish you could capture in nonfiction. * The advantages of reality over fiction. * Becoming disenchanted with capitalism in the 1920s. * The Demon Haunted World. * Escaping from Stalinist Russia into Nazi Germany. * Cheers to a boring life. * A slightly tilted floor. * Electrifying the wedge so it's finally a machine. * The xkcd comic from 15 years ago that lampooned the way Wikipedia articles used to be stereotypically bad. * Being good at math and assuming that also means you'd be good at writing an encyclopedia. * Whether Wildlife Ecology is a different field from Wildlife Biology. * The shittiest source that Wikipedia will accept as a citation. * Citing George W. Bush as a source in your peer-reviewed paper about climate change. * All the dogs arriving at once. * Dogs teaching students how to write thirsty happy poems. * Dog Songs (2013) * Deliberately putting line breaks where they seem least intentional. * The Wedge of the Poetry World. * Dinging the pan to proceed. * The manufacture and use of short-chain fatty acids. * Fixing an ulcer with vinegar. * Fuck you, I'm drinking a shrub. * Drinking balsamic vinegar and then rinsing with baking soda. * Butter and vinegar, together at last.
Anti-oil activist have taken to gluing themselves to works of art to make a point. As if we were going to pass that one up! Also on the show, we're joined once more by Sarah Longwell of the Bulwark, who reveals what her focus groups are telling her about the January 6th Commission. Plus, HIMARS systems are advanced weapons having a big impact in Ukraine; compared to American forms of threat abatement, they're pretty straight forward. Produced by Joel Patterson and Corey Wara Email us at thegist@mikepesca.com To advertise on the show, visit: https://advertisecast.com/TheGist Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In hour 3, Chris talks about silly glue-protests in the UK and France, also Biden is dumb overseas, and it's a nice patriotic holiday weekend, so enjoy it! For more coverage on the issues that matter to you download the WMAL app, visit WMAL.com or tune in live on WMAL-FM 105.9 from 9:00am-12:00pm Monday-Friday. To join the conversation, check us out on twitter @WMAL and @ChrisPlanteShow See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
WOKE Climate Change Activist DISRUPTS play at the French Open by GLUING and WIRING herself to net!
Rob Fitzpatrick is the author of The Mom Test, and he'll help you fight the good fight to bring your ideas into the world.-----You can also read this episode here.Sign up here to get upcoming audio essays emailed to youFollow the MTTM journey on Twitter or LinkedIn!If you haven't already would you do me a favor and take ~40 seconds to rate/review the show on Apple Podcasts ? It really helps. (Scroll to bottom of page for rate/review links.)Links & resources mentionedSend episode feedback on Twitter @askotzko , or via emailRob Fitzpatrick - Twitter, websiteBooks:The Mom TestThe Workshop Survival GuideWrite Useful BooksNonfiction Author's CommunityRelated episodes#56 Ash Maurya: The Innovator's Gift#54 David Kadavy: Creative Self-ActualizationPeople & orgsSherry WallingBooksThe Entrepreneur's Guide to Keeping Your Sh*t TogetherRocket FuelPartnering: Forge the Deep Connections That Make Great Things HappenFour Thousand Weeks: Time Management for MortalsMind Management, Not Time ManagementOther resources mentionedThe shape of an idea - Rob FitzpatrickEffectuationTrends.vcThe new biz model for indie creators? Gluing it all together with an Outcome-Oriented Community.
Succession actor James Cromwell superglued himself to a Starbucks counter to protest vegan milk costing more than regular milk, Patti Lupone was filmed screaming at an audience member at her Broadway show for not wearing their mask right, and we need to hypnotize Giorgio so he can recover horrible memories from his childhood. Buy Drinkin Bros' new HardAF Seltzer Here! Go to ghostbed.com/drinkinbros and use code DRINKINBROS for 30% off EVERYTHING (Mattresses, Adjustable Base, and more) -- plus a 101 Night Sleep Trial and Mattresses Made in the USA!
The art of peaceful protesting has been the same for years now. You make signs, you chant, maybe you stage a sit in, or you lock yourself to something with handcuffs. Same old Same old. But have you noticed the newest innovation in peaceful protesting. People have been gluing themselves to stuff. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this 67th episode of About the House with Troy Galloway, Troy talks about drywall. Find out what type of drywall to use in your garage to slow a fire from spreading quickly to the rest of your house. Submit your questions at the Galloway Building Services Facebook page https://www.facebook.com/GallowayBuildingServices About the House brought to you by http://gallowaybuildingservices.com/ and https://www.jhpropertiesrealestate.com/ 3:40 Drywall has changed a lot even during the 44 years Troy has been in the construction business 4:15 Plaster has been used a lot longer than drywall and is much more labor intensive 5:15 The United States Gypsum Corporation was founded in 1901 8:00 Old drywall should be tested for lead, asbestos, and formaldehyde 10:00 The American Housing Act of 1949 created a big housing boom 13:15 Plaster in stairwells 14:45 The less joints there are the less chance there is for imperfections 16:10 Types of drywall 16:30 Regular, whiteboard, and smooth board 17:30 Popcorn ceilings are a nightmare to patch 18:05 The color of the drywall helps builders quickly tell the difference 18:30 Greenboard is moisture resistant 19:40 Blueboard 20:05 Fixing plaster pops 21:10 Paperless drywall 23:30 Purple drywall 25:00 Type X is fire resistant 26:45 Sound proofing 31:15 Having drywall hangers and drywall tapers to work together to prevent issues later 34:00 Gluing drywall to studs and ceiling 34:30 Nail pops and drywall screws 35:10 Drywall tape goes over the perimeter nails 35:40 What happens when everything dries 38:00 Practicing drywall techniques in the garage and closets first 40:00 Instant mud 42:00 Getting ruptures out 43:05 Chinese drywall 44:10 Exterior drywall
Our Brainy Lecture looks at the wiggly jiggly world of superstring theory and we ask whether a whole generation of physicist have just wasted their lives. We turn our attentions and saucepans to a Cider Beurre Blanc. This week's song under microscope considers the enduring charm of Polly Put The Kettle on and examine what exactly has kept this infusion centric ditty in the charts for the last two hundred years. That gets us thinking about the whole canon of gruesome english language nursery rhymes. In literally the last section we investigate how words enter the english language. We also look at the body image issues and the glorification of binge eating in the blockbuster book by Eric Carl, The Very Hungry Caterpillar.