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G'day Mates! We are joined by the infamous Local AB, Black Hobbit Aiden Gleeson in this weeks episode to stand in for Brad. Your Mates yarn about current news and headlines surrounding P.Diddy, Jay Z and the hip hop industry. We uncover and reccomend some new finds through Netflix including the new series - Monsters around the Hernendez brothers amongst all the dribble and yarns in between. We cover the latest in the NRL Finals and give our takes as to who should represent Australia in the Pacific Nations Championship at the end of year. We also give our take on the NRL's Hottest Hot Boy. If you enjoy the episode and content, drop a comment below and let us know what you want to hear more of or your favourite yarn from the episode. As always we are brought to you by Brouhaha Brewery. Follow our mates across all social media platforms and head to your local bottle shop and ask them to order Locals Larger in. You can also order direct from their website www.brouhahabrewery.com.au Follow us on social media if you aren't already, @yourmatespodcast on Facebook, Tiktok & Youtube. @your.mates.pod on Instagram.
Could the news be any hornier? Not only do we cover the Olivia Nuzzi and RFK Jr romance, but then, with extreme reluctance, we move on to the odious Mark Robinson and his contradictory pornography habits. Throw in a quick update on Hezbollah, Trump and a breakdown on Kamala and Labor and you've got a Monday morning episode with Janaya Future Khan.
INTRO: [00:00:00] LFG: [00:03:40] X-MEN: [00:30:12] THE FALL GUY: [00:46:45] NO REST FOR THE WICKED: [00:56:36] OUTRO: [01:05:41]
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Was the hit from Minkah Fitzpatrick that caused Nick Chubb's season ending injury a dirty hit? Is Deshaun Watson struggling as a bad guy on the field considering he's out of excuses after eight games?
Cheek out the heel truth podcast and the late night wrestling pod thank you all for keeping the gut wrench podcast in 92% of the top wrestling podcast ( according to spotify wraped) and plz cheek out my merch http://www.redbubble.com/people/rrastore thank you all for 500 listens and reminder NO GUN VIOLENCE ON ANYTHING ESPECIALLY NOT WALMART thank you all have a great day
Cheek out the heel truth podcast and the late night wrestling pod thank you all for keeping the gut wrench podcast in 92% of the top wrestling podcast ( according to spotify wraped) and plz cheek out my merch http://www.redbubble.com/people/rrastore thank you all for 500 listens and reminder NO GUN VIOLENCE ON ANYTHING ESPECIALLY NOT WALMART thank you all have a great day
We have an update on Tree Guy! The guy who had a swat team called on his house and moved a polling place in the Fall primaries. Also, as the Rodgers situation continues we learn there is no Rodgers, only SUULL
On this episode we talk about the 1982 film “Q, The Winged Serpant.” We also bring back MANIFESTATION and perform Sheridan's Trash Blood Original Sequel for “Goblin 4: Return of the Trolls!” Enjoy, Trash Buds.
Hola, gente. De vuelta estamos, tras una semana en la que el "juego de tronos" nos ha tenido de vuelta y media. Y ya os decimos que esto no tiene nada que ver con las intrigas de poniente. Volvemos con el repaso al nuevo álbum de Buddy Guy, 'The Blues Don't Lie', un disco soberbio en el que el maestro no da ni un solo signo de cansancio, pese a sus 86 años. Luego nos metemos en el segundo rockurrí (que te vi), en el que nos mostramos desnudos a través de nuestros discos preferidos. Nos encanta el modo random. Y, entre tantas, Mayte Guerrero se vuelve a dejar caer por CDS para leernos su segunda página del cuaderno de viaje a su salón. Para estar malitos, poca broma. Esperamos que lo disfrutéis. 💙 Apoya este proyecto desde 1,49€ al mes. Tan solo tienes que pulsar el botón azul que tienes en la cabecera de este canal 💙 Gracias infinitas. Síguenos en Twitter: @CDSradioShow o si lo deseas súmate a nuestro grupo de Telegram: https://t.me/CDSpodcast para charlar sobre música, libros, películas... de todo un poco.
Another edition of Yes Guy No Guy with Jim Tatti on OverDrive as we get into the Leafs d-pairings, Tua's future & whether Aaron Judge can hit the 60 home run plateau again.
The guys talk ascended Horus, and the 'stache twirling word bearers. Music credit: Prison Planet by Karl Casey @ White Bat Audio
In this edition of Yes Guy No Guy, Host Jim Tatti, Producer Chris Horvat and Intern Owen take a look at the Rams' chances of returning to the NFC Championship, if the Yankees are contenders, Shohei Ohtani's MVP chances, if Donovan Mitchell will be on the move and more.
In this edition of Yes Guy No Guy, Jim Tatti, Producer Chris Horvat and Intern Owen take a look at Kevin Durant's future in Brooklyn, the possibility of Ross Stripling starting a playoff game, Aaron Judge's future in New York, if the Argos will finish the first in the East and more.
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Join Jim Tatti and Producer Chris for another edition of the critically acclaimed segment Yes Guy, No Guy. Find out whether the guys think Patrick Kane or Jonathan Toews will be traded before the season starts, whether Patrick Marleau is a Hall of Famer, if chicken wings are the greatest finger food ever, and more.
Join Jim Tatti and Producer Chris Horvat as they bring you another edition of the critically acclaimed segment Yes Guy, No Guy. Jim and Chris go back and forth on a variety of topics including whether Auston Matthews will re-sign in Toronto, Rasmus Sandin's reported frustration with his role on the team, if the Jays should roll the dice on a Juan Soto trade and more!
Langley Vale Wood is a really special place. Created as part of the Trust's First World War Centenary Woods project, it's a natural living legacy for the fallen that symbolises peace and hope. Memorials offer space to remember in an evocative and moving tribute. As well as these important reflections on the past, the site has a bright future. Previously an arable farm that became non-viable, nature is now thriving, with butterfly, bird and rare plant numbers all up. Join site manager Guy Kent and volunteer David Hatcher to explore the ‘Regiment of Trees', the ‘Witness' memorial and Jutland Wood. Discover too how the site is being transformed into a peaceful oasis for people and nature and why some of these fields are internationally important. Don't forget to rate us and subscribe! Learn more about the Woodland Trust at woodlandtrust.org.uk Transcript Voiceover: You are listening to Woodland Walks, a podcast for the Woodland Trust, presented by Adam Shaw. We protect and plant trees for people to enjoy, to fight climate change and to help wildlife thrive. Adam: Hello! I've got to start by telling you this. I have driven to Langley Vale today and I've been driving through suburban London, really not very much aware of my surroundings, and you come up this hill and suddenly everything falls away and you burst out onto the top of the hill and it's all sky and Epsom Downs. And the racecourse is just ahead of you! And it dramatically changes. So, it's quite, it's quite an entrance into the Langley Vale forest area. I've come to meet, well, a couple of people here. I've drawn up next to a farm, I don't really know where they are, but it gives me a moment to tell you a little bit about the Langley Vale project which is amazing. It's a lovely thought behind it, because it is about honouring those who died in the First World War, and of course, there are many ways in which we honour and remember the people whose lives were changed forever during that global conflict. There are war memorials, headstones, poetry and paintings – and those man-made accolades – they capture all the names, the dates, the emotions and the places. And of course, they are vital in recording and recounting the difficult and very harrowing experiences from that conflict. But, what this venture, I think, wanted to achieve with its First World War Centenary Woods Project was a natural, living legacy for the fallen. Flourishing places that symbolise peace and hope, as well as remembering and marking the dreadful events of war, but doing that in the shape of nature and hope for the future. Both now and for many, many generations to come, providing havens for wildlife and for people – and I'm one of those people – and so it's a great project, it's in its very early stages, but it's a great opportunity, I think, to have a look around today. So, oh! There's two people wandering down the road there in shorts, I think they're hikers, I don't think they are who I am seeing. [Pause] Adam: So, Guy you're the site manager here, just tell me a little bit about the site. Guy: So, we are on the North Downs here in Surrey. It's a huge ridge of chalk that runs along southern England and down through Kent, it pops under the channel and pops up again in France. And this chalk ridge has got very special habitats on it in terms of woodland, chalk grassland, and we're very thrilled here that we've been able to buy, in 2014, a formerly intensively managed arable farm that was actually not very productive. The soils are very thin here on the hills the chalk with flints, so, pretty poor for growing crops, and we were very lucky to buy it as part of our First World War Centenary Woods project as England's Centenary Wood. Adam: So, tell me a bit about the Centenary Woods part of this. Guy: So, the idea of the project was to put a new woodland in each country of the United Kingdom, that being Northern Ireland, Wales, Scotland and England. This is the England site, and it is the largest of the four sites. We've actually planted 170,000 trees here. We did go through a full Environmental Impact Assessment and this enabled us to find out where we could plant trees because there are some special habitats here, and there is a national character to the North Downs – national character being that much of the woodland is planted on the high ground and much of the lower land is actually open space, be that for arable use or pasture. Adam: This is a Centenary Wood, so, is this just an ordinary woodland planted in the name of those who died during the First World War? Guy: Yes. The difference is… one of the reasons this site was selected was because we do actually have history here from the First World War. We've got a number of memorials that I hope to show you today. One of which commemorates a day in January 1915. Lord Kitchener inspected 20,000 troops here that had gathered and recently joined, taking up the call to join his new army. So, there were many sorts of civilians here in civilian clothing. They got up at 4am in the morning, I'm told, to all assemble here for him arriving at 10am with his equivalent French minister, and they inspected the troops for a very short period of time because they had other troops to go and inspect nearby. But many of those 20,000 actually then ended up going over, obviously, over to the frontline and many were not to return. Adam: Shall we have a walk down? And what is there then to commemorate that? Are there, are these just trees planted in memory of that occasion, or have you got a sort of statue or something? Guy: Yeah, well, the Regiment of Trees as we're just about to see, as you go around the corner… An artist, we commissioned an artist called Patrick Walls who has actually created some statues for us replicating that event. So, we have men standing to attention carved out of sandstone… Adam: Wow, yes. Just turning around the corner here and you can see this, yes, individual soldiers standing proud of a field of, actually, white daisies just emerging made from that sandstone you say? Guy: Yes sandstone. Adam: Sandstone soldiers. We are just walking up to them now, but behind that is all, I mean, I'm assuming this is a statue, but a statue made of trees. Guy: Indeed, what you're looking at there Adam is a memorial that we've called Witness. It's actually created by an artist called John Merrill and it is made up of parts of oak trees that have been assembled and it's inspired by the World War One painter Paul Nash, who was a cubist artist, and a particular painting of his called ‘Trees on the Downs' and that's inspired by that. And we're very lucky to have included within the memorial part of an oak out of Wilfred Owen's garden. Adam: Wow! Guy: Yeah so it's constructed to look like trees that have been obliterated, effectively, on the frontline, very evocative. Adam: Yes, you get very evocative pictures of a single tree either, you know, scarred black or sometimes actually still alive in a field of chaos. Guy: That's right yeah. And that's kind of trying to illustrate that in our memorial here, and what you can do, the public can actually walk through it. We've got a couple of benches within it, actually, where people can sit and contemplate, and actually written on the inside of some of these beams that go up are actually excerpts from poems from First World War poets. Adam: So, this first statue we're actually standing by it's sort of transformed in the flow of the statue – so it comes out of the ground as a sort of textured rock and as you go up 5 foot, 6 foot the statue also transforms into a man, but this man is wearing a suit and flat cap, so is a civilian. Guy: Indeed, and that's kind of trying to illustrate the fact that many of them are just joined up and a number of them haven't even got their uniform yet. Adam: So, let's move on, ahead of us, there's this sort of city gent on the left but looks a bit grander, but on the right, there are obviously… these look like officers. Guy: Yeah, the best, how I can best describe this is, that we've actually got 12 statues here and they're actually sitting among standard trees that were planted. So, we've got birch here, we've got beech, we've got whitebeam and we've got maple. But, these statues, the twelve of them, are in four lines. The guys at the back have only just joined up and they haven't had their uniform yet. And what the artist wanted to illustrate was the fact that all classes joined up at the same time. So, we have a working-class guy with his flat cap down the end there, we have our middle-class guy here with his hat on, and then we have the upper classes as well – it's meant to illustrate that everybody was in it together and joined in. Adam: I thought this was an officer, but I can see from his insignia he's a corporal. Guy: Indeed, and if you look at the statues Adam, as we go nearer the front to where Kitchener would have inspected, they all put the guys at the front who had all their webbing, all their uniform already, and as we move back through the lines it was less and less uniform and equipment. Adam: It's very evocative, I have to say, it's much more emotional than I thought it would be. Shall we go over to the sculpture? Guy: Yes let's. Adam: So, this is called ‘Witness'. Guy: So, this is ‘Witness' yes, and this is… John Merrill created this, he's got a yard in Wales where he works wood of this size. As you can see, it's quite a structure. Adam: So, yes as you say this size… So, I'm very bad at judging, six… I am trying to think, how many six-foot men could you fit under here? Six, twelve, I dunno thirty foot high? Was that fair? Guy: I tend to work in metres, I don't know about you, but I'm going to say about six metres at its highest point. Adam: So, it's made of, sort of, coming into it… it's… actually, it's quite cathedral-like inside. Small but is that a fair description? Guy: Yeah, I think so. Adam: *inaudible* Now, every second tree here has a line of First World War poetry etched into it rather beautifully. Do you want to read just a couple out for us? Guy: Yes… so here we have one saying: “And lying in sheer I look round at the corpses of the larches. Whom they slew to make pit-props.” [editor: Afterwards by Margaret Postgate Cole]. “At evening the autumn woodlands ring with deadly weapons. Over the golden plains and lakes…” [editor: Grodek by Georg Trakl]. Adam: Amazing, it's an amazing place. There are a couple of benches here and these are… Guy: These are the names of the poets. So, we have W Owen here, we have E Thomas, J W Streets, M P Cole, amongst others. Adam: Very moving, very moving. Okay, well it's a big site isn't it, a big site. So, where are we going to go to next? Guy: Well, we can walk through now Adam, we can see a new community orchard that we planted in 2017. Adam: So, we've come into, well a big part of, well there are a huge number of trees here. So, is this the main planting area? Guy: Yes, this is the main planting area. There are approximately 40,000 trees in here. Adam: We're quite near a lot of urban areas, but here they've all disappeared, and well, the field goes down and dips up again. Is that all Woodland Trust forest? Guy: That's right, what you can see ahead of us there is actually the first planting that we did on this site in 2014, on that hillside beyond. Adam: 2014? So, eight, eight… Guy: Eight years old. Adam: [laughs] Thank you, yes mental maths took me a moment. So, the reason I was doing that, is that they look like proper trees for only eight years old. Guy: It just shows you that obviously, you think that when we're planting all these trees now – that none of us will perhaps be here long enough to enjoy them when they're mature trees, but I think you can see from just by looking over there that that woodland is eight years old and it's very much started to look like a woodland. Adam: Very much so, well, brilliant. Well, very aptly I can see, starting to see poppies emerging in the fields amongst the trees. They do have this sort of sense of gravestones, in a way, don't they? They're sort of standing there in regimented rows amongst the poppy fields. So, where to now? Guy: So, we'll go to Jutland Wood, which is our memorial to the Battle of Jutland. Adam: The famous sea battle Guy: Yes, it was the largest battle of the First World War which raged over two days, the 31st of May to the 1st of June 1916. We're going to meet our volunteer, lead volunteer, David Hatcher now, who's been working with us on the site for a number of years, and he's going to tell you about this memorial that we've got to the Battle of Jutland. Adam: Right, I mean, here it's, it's different because there are these rather nice, actually, sculpted wooden stands. What are these? Guy: Yeah, these are… actually commemorate… we've got what we call naval oaks. So, we've got a standard oak planted for each of the ships that were lost in that particular battle and we've also, between them, we've got these port holes that have been made by an artist called Andrew Lapthorn, and if I can describe those to you, they are sort of a nice piece, monolith of wood with a porthole in the middle of…, a glass porthole, that indicates how many lives were lost and it has the name of the ship. Adam: So, this is HMS Sparrowhawk where six lives were lost, 84 survivors, but HMS Fortune next door, 67 lives lost, only ten survivors, and it just goes on all the way through. Guy: As you walk through the feature Adam, the actual lives lost gets a bit more, bigger and bigger, and by the end it's… there were very few survivors on some of the ships that went down, and they are illustrated on these nice portholes that commemorate that. Adam: And this is all from the Battle of Jutland? Guy: Battle of Jutland this is yeah. Adam: And just at the end here HMS Queen Mary, 1,266 lives lost, only 20 survivors from 1913. Very, very difficult. [Walking] Guy: This memorial, actually illustrates…, is by a lady called Christine Charlesworth, and what we have here is a metal representation of a sailor from 1916 in his uniform. And that faces the woodland here, where you can see ancient semi natural woodland that would have been here in 1916. So, this sailor is looking to the past and our ancient woodland. If we look to the other side of the sailor, we have a sailor from 2016 in his uniform and he's looking in the opposite direction, and he's looking at our newly planted trees – looking to the future. Adam: Let's walk through here, and at the end of this rather… I mean it is very elegantly done but obviously sombre. But, at the end here we're going to meet David who's your lead volunteer. So, David, so you're the lead volunteer for this site? And, I know that's, must be quite a responsibility because this is quite a site! David: That's very flattering - I'm a lead volunteer - I have lots of brilliant colleagues. Adam: Really? So, how many of you are there here? David: About seven lead volunteers, there are about one hundred volunteers on the list. Adam: And what do you actually do here? David: Ah well it's a whole range of different things. As you know this was an intensively farmed arable site. And there were lots of things like old fences and other debris. It was also used as a shooting estate, so there were things left over from feeding pheasants and what have you. Adam: Right. David: A lot of rubbish that all had to be cleared because it's open access land from the Woodland Trust, and we don't want dogs running into barbed wire fences and things like that. Adam: And it's different from, well I think, almost any other wood. It has this reflection of World War One in it. What does that mean to you? David: Well, it actually means a lot to me personally, because I was the first chairman of the Veteran's Gateway. So, I had a connection with the military, and it was brilliant for me to be able to come and do something practical, rather than just sitting at a desk, to honour our veterans. Adam: And do you notice that people bring their families here who have had grandfathers or great grandfathers who died in World War One? David: Yes, they do and in particular we have a memorial trail in November, every year, and there's a wreath where you can pick up a little tag and write a name on it and pin it to this wreath, and that honours one of your relatives or a friend, or somebody like that, and families come, and children love writing the names of their grandpa on and sticking it to the wreath. Adam: And do you have a family connection here at all? David: My father actually served in the, sorry, actually my grandfather served at the Battle of Jutland. Adam: Wow and what did he do there? David: He was a chief petty officer on a battleship, and he survived I am happy to say, and perhaps I would never have been here had he not, and all of my family – my father, my mother, both my grandfathers were all in the military. Adam: And do you remember him talking to you about the Battle of Jutland? David: He didn't, but what he did have was, he had a ceremonial sword which I loved, I loved playing with his ceremonial sword. Adam: Gotcha. And you are still here to tell the tale! [Laughter] David: And so are all my relatives! [Laughter] Adam: Yes, please don't play with ceremonial swords! [Laughter] That's amazing. Of course, a lot of people don't talk about those times. David: No. Adam: Because it's too traumatic, you know… as we've seen how many people died here. David: Yes. Adam: Well look, it's a relatively new woodland and we're just amongst, here in this bit, which commemorates Jutland, the trees are really only, some of them, poking above their really protective tubes. But what sort of changes have you seen in the last seven, eight odd years or so since it's been planted? David: It's changed enormously. It's quite extraordinary to see how some trees have really come on very well indeed, but also a lot of wildflowers have been sown. We have to be very careful about which we sow and where because it's also a very valuable natural wildflower site, so we don't want them getting mixed up. Adam: So, what's your favourite part of the site then? David: Ah well my favourite part…, I'm an amateur naturalist, so there's the sort of dark and gloomy things that are very like ancient woodland. We call them ancient semi-natural woodland. So there is Great Hurst Wood which is one of the ancient woodlands. Adam: Here on this site? David: Yes, on this site. It's just over there, but we have another couple of areas that are really ancient semi-natural woodland, but actually, I love it all. There's something for everybody: there's the skylarks that we can hear at the moment; the arable fields with very rare plants in; the very rare fungi in the woods. Actually, that line of trees that you can see behind you is something called the Sheep Walk, and the Sheep Walk is so-called because they used to drive sheep from all the way from Kent to markets in the west of the county, and they've always had that shelterbelt there – it's very narrow – so they've always had it there to protect the sheep from the sun, or the weather, or whatever. And it's the most natural bit of ancient woodland that there is, even though it's so narrow and it's fascinating what you can find under there. Adam: And I saw you brought some binoculars with you today. So, I mean, what about sort of the birds and other animals that presumably have flourished since this was planted? David: It's getting a lot better. The Woodland Trust has a general no chemicals and fertiliser policy and so as the soil returns to its natural state then other things that were here before, sometimes resting in the soil, are beginning to come up. We, I think, we surveyed maybe 20 species of butterflies in the first year… there are now over… 32! And there are only 56 different species over the country, so we have a jolly good proportion! We have two Red List birds at least here – skylarks and lapwings nesting. It's all getting better; it's getting a lot better under new management. Adam: [chuckle] Fantastic! Well, it's a real, a real joy to be here today. Er so, we're here in the Jutland woodland. Where, where are we going to next do you think? Where's the best place…? David: We're going to have a look at one of the wonderful poppy fields. Adam: Right. David: Because the poppies come up just as they did in Flanders every summer and it's, it really is a sight to behold. Adam: And is this peak poppy season? David: It's just passed… Adam: Just passed. David: So, we hope they are still there and haven't been blown away. Adam: It would be typical if I have got here and all the poppies have gone. Forget it, alright, let's go up there. So, well this is quite something! So, we've turned into this other field, and it is a field, well never in my life have I seen so many poppies! Mainly red poppies, but then there are…, what are these amongst them? Guy: Yeah. So, what you can see is a number of species of poppies here. The main one you can see, it's the red Flanders poppy. Adam: And is this natural or planted because of the First World War reference? Guy: No, it's mostly…, we did supplement this with some…, we've actually planted some of these poppy seeds, but most of them are natural and it's a direct result of the fact that we continue to cultivate the land. One of the most important conservation features we have here on site is rare arable plants. Bizarrely, these plants were once called arable weeds, but when intensification of farming began in the mid-20th century, the timing of ploughing was changed, the introduction of herbicides, all these things meant that these so-called arable weeds actually became quite rare and they were just hanging on to the edges of fields. What we've been able to do here is to continue to cultivate the land sympathetically for these plants and we now have much, much better arable plant assemblages here. We have rare arable plants here now, that mean that some of these fields are of national importance and a couple of them are of international importance, but a by-product of cultivating the land every year for these is that we get displays of poppies like this every year. Adam: And when you cultivate, you're talking about cultivating the land, you're planting these poppies, or what does that mean? Guy: No, it's almost like replicating the fact…, it's as if we're going to plant a crop, so we actually plough the field and then we roll it as if we're going to prepare a crop. Adam: But you don't actually plant a crop. Guy: No, no exactly. And then we leave it fallow and then naturally these arable plants tend to actually populate these fields. Poppies are incredibly nectar-rich, they're actually quite short-lived… Some of you may know poppies that grow in your garden, and they could be out in bloom one day and completely blown off their petals the next day. They don't, like, last very long, but they do pack a powerful punch for nectar, so definitely invertebrates… Because we don't use chemicals here anymore which would have been used constantly on this farm – and what that means is that many of these arable plants, they require low fertility otherwise they get out-competed by all the things you'd expect like nettles, docks and thistles. So as the land improves so will hopefully arable plant assemblages making them even more impressive than they already are. Adam: But actually, as the, as the soil improves isn't that a problem for things like poppies ‘cause they'll get out-competed by other plants which thrive better? Guy: It's a fair point, but what is actually crucial – is that to actually increase biodiversity in these fields it actually requires low nutrients. In terms of a lot of these fields, as well, we have, from years of chemical application, we have a lot of potassium, we have a lot of magnesium in them, and they have a lot of phosphorus too now. Magnesium and potassium tend to leach out of the soil so they will improve naturally, phosphorus tends to bind the soil and sticks around for a long time. So, we're trying to get these chemicals down to acceptable levels to make them more attractive for rare plants and therefore increasing biodiversity. Adam: Well, it is, it is like a painting and I'm going to take a photo and put it on my Twitter feed. I just, [gasp] so if anyone wants to see that, head over there. But it is beautiful, properly beautiful. I mean, so we were walking by this extraordinary painting of a poppy field to our right. It's a site which has been revolutionised because it was all arable farming less than a decade ago. What has that done for biodiversity here? Guy: Well, as we can imagine these fields, it's quite difficult to imagine them as we walk through them now, but these would have all been bare fields that were basically in crop production and there's clearly been an explosion of invertebrate activity here. We've got increasing butterfly species every year, our bird numbers are starting to go up, but also importantly we've got certain areas where habitats are being allowed to develop. So, we have a former arable field here that is now developing, it has been planted up with hazel coppice in a system we call ‘coppice with standards', where we plant… Adam: Coppice with standards? Guy: Coppice with standards yeah. Adam: Oo, well very grand! Guy: It is! It's an old forestry practice where they planted lots of hazel trees that would have been worked and then periodically in amongst them, there will be oak trees that would be allowed to grow longer and then harvested at a later date. What this has meant is that we've got long grass now that is growing between these trees and that's making it much more attractive for small mammals on site. Adam: Like what? What sort of small mammals? Guy: Things like voles, wood mice, field voles, these sort of things that make sort of tracks and sort of tunnels within the grass. And what that has meant is, as we go up the food chain is, that that's become more attractive now on the site for raptors. A nice story from two years ago - we have a volunteer that works with us who is a BTO bird ringer, and he sort of approached us to say “you've got barn owls nearby and your site is starting to develop nicely. How do you fancy putting up some raptor boxes to see if we can attract them in?” So, which was great, and we managed…, the local bird club donated some barn owl boxes, we put the barn owl boxes up in this field we have just talked about – the hazel coppice field – and the expert said “well they probably won't nest in it this year. They'll come and have a look…” Anyway, we put it up…, two months later… it was being used and we were able to ring those three chicks that came from that and they've been breeding ever since. Adam: Wow, how amazing! Must be very heartening to be working on the site which is growing like that so quickly. Guy: It is, it's amazing and when you consider that we're within the M25, we're very close to London, but we've got this site that is growing and it's only going to get better as we manage it sympathetically for the wildlife that it hosts. Adam: We're just coming round the bend and back to almost where we started into this field of standing soldiers amongst the growing trees, and the cathedral-like tree sculpture there which will take us back to the beginning. So we've just done a little tour… Guy: Yeah, Adam: So, I dunno half an hour, 40 minutes or so. Presumably, we skirted the edges of this… Guy: You certainly have Adam! It's a fraction of the site. We are 640 acres in size and we're just at the top part of it. This area that we've largely walked around today is very much focused on World War One and our memorials, but much of the rest of the site is, actually, is quite a bit quieter, there are fewer people around and the focus is definitely more on wildlife. Adam: Yes, well, it has been an amazing trip, I have to say, I've been to lots of different Woodland Trust woods all the way up the country, to the far stretches of Scotland. I have to say I think this is my favourite. It's quite, quite a site! And the memorial is done really tastefully and fits in with the landscape. I think this is quite, quite a site for you to manage, it's quite a thing. Guy: It's incredible and we are just so proud of it and we just can't wait to be able to open our car park and invite people from further afield, and not just locals who get to enjoy it as is the case at the moment. Adam: Absolutely. Well look, thank you! It started this morning, bright sun, it looked like I shouldn't need to bring a coat then all of a sudden, I thought “Oh my goodness”, we're standing under a completely black cloud but it has not rained, it is not raining, we're in running distance of the car so… Guy: Somebody's looking down on us Adam, at least for a couple of hours. Adam: They are indeed, well thank you very much! Voiceover: Thank you for listening to the Woodland Trust Woodland Walks. Join us next month when Adam will be taking another walk in the company of Woodland Trust staff, partners and volunteers and don't forget to subscribe to the series on iTunes, or wherever you're listening to us, and do give us a review and a rating. And why not send us a recording of your favourite woodland walk to be included in a future podcast? Keep it to a maximum of five minutes and please tell us what makes your woodland walk special. Or send an email with details of your favourite walk and what makes it special to you. Send any audio files to podcast@woodlandtrust.org.uk and we look forward to hearing from you.
Jim Tatti and Golf Talk Canada's Adam Scully bring you another edition of Yes Guy, No Guy while filling in for Matt Cauz . In today's show, Tatti and Scully revisit the Nazem Kadri and Tuuka Rask trades, Luka Doncic's chances of becoming the next NBA billionaire, and whether there will ever be a second NBA expansion team in Canada.
Join Jim Tatti and Producer Chris for another edition of Yes Guy, No Guy. Jim and Chris debate some of the spiciest takes in the world of sports including the Avalanche being cup favourites without Darcy Kuemper, Raptors making no changes to the starting 5, and using Nate Pearson as a starter when he returns.
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En este episodio estaré hablando de Free Guy y de No Exit. Free Guy está disponible en HBO Max y Disney+ mientras que No Exit está en Hulu.
This week on The Recruiting Guy Podcast, Richard Davenport discusses the recruiting process with the No. 1 inside linebacker prospect in the nation, Tackett Curtis of Many, La., along with his uncle and coach, Jess Curtis.
Can I marry someone who isn't as religious as me?Support the show (https://www.paypal.me/BaisBezalel)
If you love Dynasty, you love Rookies. Look no further than The Rookie Fever Podcast. You've heard of a youth movement, Rookie Fever takes it one step further. We can't get enough, we are hot for Rookies. Stay up to date on Rookies. Rookie Fever is everything Rookies. Be sure to check out our new Rookie Fever Store https://rookie-fever.creator-spring.com Thanks for listening, please download, subscribe, 5 star review, please tell a friend. Follow us on Twitter: @RookieFever @AardvarkTV Michael Fanaro @ff_spaceman Dave Wright @SwagzillaZeroG Shane Swager
In de buurmannen bespreken filmmakers Alwin en Anthony iets wat ze gelezen en gezien hebben. Alles komt aan bod. Van actualiteit tot persoonlijke verhalen. Deze aflevering hebben we het over Squid Game, Lobbyisten, Woningcrisis, YOU s3, Dansmarathon, Videoland Docu's, THE BATMAN, Free Guy & No Time To Die!
On this episode of The Movies Made Us Do It, Durs and Matt review Free Guy, No One Gets Out Alive, Infinite, Till Death, Bingo Hell and more! #TMMUDI #FreeGuy #NoOneGetsOutAlive #Infinite #TillDeath #BingoHell #MovieReview #MoviePodcast #FilmReview #FilmPodcast #DursProductions #Podcast
Free guy review, NWH trailer reaction, Iron Heart debut in BP2, Black canary movie in development, Field of Dreams tv show in development. ACC, Big Ten and Pac 12 form an alliance, who should teams start at QB, NHL to advertise on front of jerseys starting 2022.
My thoughts on the film Free Guy! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/bshu89/support
FREE GUY! No te pierdas esta increíble entrevista Además, -Rick y Morty -The Witcher: la pesadilla del Lobo -Macabro Lo mejor para comentar esta aquí, en #YOUROCKET ¡Comenzamos! #ADRNetworks
Los Huevitos nos robaron los micrófonos para platicarnos de su nueva película, además tenemos declaraciones en exclusiva de Ryan Reynolds y Jodie Comer, ¿te has preguntado qué hubiera pasado si Thanos hubiera sido del equipo de 'Los Vengadores'? Y conoce la segunda entrega de 'No Respires' en voz de su director, Rodolfo Sayagues.
I show you how to be the one guy no girl can resist. In order to become this man you have to be willing to do something that most men are not willing to do...and you must WATCH THIS CRAZY VIDEO: http://globalseducer.com/video (This is an affiliate link. If you click through and make a purchase, I'll earn a commission, at no additional cost to you) Are you ready to rise like a Phoenix from the ashes? https://www.globalseducer.com/rise-of-the-phoenix/
About GuyGuy Raz is a Sr. Systems Engineer at ExtraHop with previous experience as a Network Engineer and Solution Architect. Guy is one of the SMEs leading the unique ExtraHop approach to cloud-native NDR for the hybrid multi-cloud enterprise. Before joining the Sales Engineer team, Guy was one of the ExtraHop Solution Architects, responsible for conducting deep technical and business discovery sessions, assisting in troubleshooting and problem resolution during war-room and security/network investigations, and developing strategies for acquiring high-value data from the wire; requiring in-depth technical understanding of L2-L7 networking principles.Links: https://www.extrahop.com/ https://extrahop.com/demo TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by Thinkst. This is going to take a minute to explain, so bear with me. I linked against an early version of their tool, canarytokens.org in the very early days of my newsletter, and what it does is relatively simple and straightforward. It winds up embedding credentials, files, that sort of thing in various parts of your environment, wherever you want to; it gives you fake AWS API credentials, for example. And the only thing that these things do is alert you whenever someone attempts to use those things. It's an awesome approach. I've used something similar for years. Check them out. But wait, there's more. They also have an enterprise option that you should be very much aware of canary.tools. You can take a look at this, but what it does is it provides an enterprise approach to drive these things throughout your entire environment. You can get a physical device that hangs out on your network and impersonates whatever you want to. When it gets Nmap scanned, or someone attempts to log into it, or access files on it, you get instant alerts. It's awesome. If you don't do something like this, you're likely to find out that you've gotten breached, the hard way. Take a look at this. It's one of those few things that I look at and say, “Wow, that is an amazing idea. I love it.” That's canarytokens.org and canary.tools. The first one is free. The second one is enterprise-y. Take a look. I'm a big fan of this. More from them in the coming weeks.Corey: This episode is sponsored in part by our friends at Lumigo. If you've built anything from serverless, you know that if there's one thing that can be said universally about these applications, it's that it turns every outage into a murder mystery. Lumigo helps make sense of all of the various functions that wind up tying together to build applications. It offers one-click distributed tracing so you can effortlessly find and fix issues in your serverless and microservices environment. You've created more problems for yourself; make one of them go away. To learn more, visit lumigo.io.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Once a year in San Francisco, if I find myself being overly cheerful, all I have to do is walk up and down the RSA Expo Hall and look at a bunch of vendors talking about how their on-premises product kind of sort of works in the cloud, and then I'm not overly cheerful anymore. One notable exception to this is a company called Extrahop. I've spoken about them before and on this promoted episode, we're going to dive a little bit deeper. Today, my guest is Senior Systems Engineer Guy Raz. Guy, thanks for taking the time to speak with me.Guy: Thanks, Corey, happy to be here.Corey: So, for those who have not caught previous episodes, or heard me ranting from the rooftop about it, at a very basic level for folks who have not even, I guess, dip their toes in the RSA space because they, you know, want to be happy with their lives, what is ExtraHop?Guy: ExtraHop is a cloud-native approach for analyzing wire data. Historically, customers have, kind of, looked at TAP SPANs, but with cloud, there's a ton of ways of getting this natively. You know, AWS, GCP, Azure give us ways of collecting this data. ExtraHop is a platform for analyzing that network traffic and, in real-time, providing context to application and security teams.Corey: So, when you take a look at that from, I guess, the perspective of security, it's easy to sit here and say, “Oh, so how do you wind up thinking about security in a place or time of cloud?” Because there's an awful lot of ways to view it: you can go down the path of, “Ah, I'm going to just use all the first-party tooling from my provider, and that's it,” which, that could be fair. Alternatively, you could go down a different path of, “I'm going to just go ahead and buy whatever they'll sell me at RSA,” which is great because the hardest part there is the booth attendees not making actual cash register sounds with their mouths when you walk past with an open checkbook. But security always feels like a thing that's kind of an afterthought. It's something that is tied too closely, on some level, to this idea that you're never going to be secure, so you may as well just give up. It's also something people only care about after it's been a little too late, where they really should have been caring about it. How do you see that?Guy: It's a really unfortunate space, but you're absolutely right, Corey, there. What we end up seeing as a lot of customers, and just the industry as a whole tends to be an afterthought when it comes to cloud. They assume cloud-native solutions or built-in free solutions have their best foot forward, have their best instance in mind. And that's not always the case. There's a lot of, like you mentioned, built-in solutions that these cloud providers can give us.And while a lot of them are kind of scratching the surface of what security in the cloud can provide, there's a lot that it kind of leaves unanswered. And the unfortunate thing is, the cloud journey isn't always the easiest. There's a lot of lift-and-shift, there's a lot of refactor, and sometimes the security portion of that gets put on the side street until it becomes a priority or an event happens.Corey: So, given that you can effectively not even swing a dead cat anymore without hitting 15 different security vendors all claiming to do everything you'd want, start to finish, what makes ExtraHop different? How do you approach security that's differentiated from the rest of the, I guess, entire security industry?Guy: Yeah, that's a really good question. I think my favorite part, and one of the reasons I love our product is the data stream that we collect. Network data is a huge source of information that's just sitting there silently, kind of, waiting to be consumed and analyzed. In the old on-premise environment, there were legacy packet capture solutions, or ways of grabbing this information from a SPAN or a TAP. But it's still the same data stream as we go to the cloud, it's just a slightly different way of collecting it.So, the biggest thing that I would encourage people is, use the data that's there. The network traffic is passing your infrastructure: it's EC2s hitting your S3 buckets, it's RDS instances going through a load balancer to a Lambda function. It's all just traversing through infrastructure that you just don't own anymore, but getting that information is a huge differentiator. You're talking about every packet of every transaction being analyzed in real-time at a cloud-scale, which, you know, you need a smaller instance today—it's smaller today—you need a bigger instance tomorrow, it just auto-scales up.Corey: Now, back in the world of data centers, I agreed an awful lot with what you're saying, as far as looking at the network as the first point of, I guess, the arbiter of truth, for lack of a better term. And, on some level in cloud, I feel like I've drifted away from that. Now, back in our days at data centers, you don't know what's running on these systems; you don't know what various engineers are shoved onto them, but generally speaking, you can mostly trust the network. Please don't email me. So, once you move into a cloud world, everything sort of changes a bit.You don't really have to think about any of the layer 2 networking, and most of the layer 3 networking sort of goes away, too. Plus, let's be very realistic; from the perspective of the virtual machines you're running in a cloud environment, everything beyond that is kind of a lie. There's a bunch of encapsulation, you're higher up the stack, you're not on hardware anymore so, on some level, it always felt that, eh, networking is not really the same thing in the cloud environment. I can ignore it. And I have to admit, back when I first started talking to you folks, I was something of a skeptic.And then you, more or less, made me change my perspective through a very sneaky approach of spinning up a test account for me with ExtraHop, and now I get it in a way I never did before. Is that aha moment common to the, I guess, the cloud-native set, or do most people come into this with a much more rational and reasoned approach to networking in the cloud?Guy: I would say it's both. We have customers who are familiar with the type of information we can provide going through their cloud journey, or are starting their cloud journey and they want the same type of visibility. But for our net-new customers, when we hit that whitespace, that aha moment comes, and it's so much fun to see. Someone who had no idea what this type of data can provide; they're used to legacy telemetry or log information. So, that aha moment is something that, as someone who gets to interact with customers, is one of my favorite parts of the job. And I would say it's fun to play with and show that.Corey: Now, I want to be clear that, again, in the interest of full disclosure, now, since I've put this in my test account, ExtraHop is now the second most expensive consumer of AWS services. But it's not as bad as folks might think. It's using a VPC mirror in order to look at traffic, and that costs me the princely sum of somewhere between $10 and $11 a month. And that doesn't really vary, regardless of how much traffic I shove through this thing. It's not doing a whole lot in the AWS account; if I didn't know that was there and that's what it was doing, I would ignore the spend line entirely. How does this work? What are you doing in order to get access to seeing what is happening, “On the wire,” quote-unquote, in a cloud environment?Guy: Just focusing on AWS for a second, since that's what you called out. It's using a native built-in functionality that Amazon provides. It's called VPC packet mirroring. It's super simple: you deploy an ExtraHop collector into your VPC, you set that up as a destination of your traffic, and then you configure what's called a monitoring session in VPC. You can say I want it to do based on these tags, I want it to send traffic based on this subnet—or any there combination of—and it just kind of works. You know, it's beautiful.And where we're kind of taking this to the next step is using some intelligent Lambda automation to ensure that anytime a new instance gets spun up, whether it's tagged, untagged, deployed into a different VPC, or is a different instance size, it gets automatically added into this data feed. So, you know, you talk about the ephemerality of the cloud and how instances can spin up and spin down almost instantaneously, as soon as an instance is up, before it even gets any traffic sent to it, traffic is [laugh] coming to the ExtraHop, right? We'll see IMDS traffic, we'll see instance metadata, we'll get the ENI information, all just by sitting there, passively listening.Corey: One of the things that I found particularly, I guess—appreciated about your entire approach is I didn't have to change anything about what was actually running in this account. I didn't have to teach the EC2 instances that something else was going on. I didn't have to reconfigure anything on an application basis. This was purely done in the underlying VPC configuration. It was done without any downtime whatsoever.And I feel like that is an understated benefit for an awful lot of tooling. “Oh, just go ahead and roll this thing out to all of your environment.” Like, yeah, there are tens of thousands of instances and VMs scattered throughout our entire estate. Exactly how long do you think we're going to spend on this? You don't have that problem here, and it's kind of nice.Guy: It is really nice. And not to take anything away from some agent solutions because they do have their [crosstalk 00:09:46]—Corey: Oh, I will, but please go on.Guy: [laugh]. But this approach to security and monitoring in the cloud, to your point, Corey, is seamless. Application owners don't know it's there. It doesn't add any added load. I'm a former network engineer. Troubleshooting different instances or different virtual machines, the first thing I used to do is turn off those agents, right? Is this consuming CPU resources? Is this slowing down my agent? That's no longer the case in cloud. That's no longer the case with this network-based approach.Corey: I'll also point out that it always feels like there's a false dichotomy when we're talking about security vendors. And it either feels like, oh, you're in a bunch of data-center style environments, you're migrating into the cloud, but basically today, your environment is a bunch of VMs, and maybe a load balancer or an object store. And a lot of tooling speaks super well to that use case. But then if you take a step back and look at well, the lie that all these companies love to tell themselves, and I'm no more immune to this than they are, to be very clear here, but we all tell ourselves this beautiful lie which is after this next sprint ends, then, then we're going to go ahead and pay off all of our technical debt and things are going to be done properly with a capital P. And it never happens, but it's the lie we tell ourselves.And we make financial decisions, in some cases, tied to that false vision of, “Well, why would I wind up embracing something that is aimed at that particular use case because once we wind up going full-on cloud-native and embracing our provider of choice, all of this stuff is going to change?” What I like about ExtraHop is, all right, assume you're in that mythical born-in-the-cloud world where you have a significant estate that everything runs on top of these higher-level services. ExtraHop is still there, still working, and still doing exactly the sorts of things we're talking about here. No matter where you are on that transformational journey, it feels like there's an answer here. Is that accurate? Have I been gargling the marketing tea too heavily? What's the story here?Guy: No, that's pretty accurate. And it doesn't really matter where you are on your cloud journey; security can't be foregone for the sake of this cloud instance. We see this day in, day out. You know, if you subscribe to as many news alerts as I do, it's a scary world. Just even recently this past weekend, we had a—not our customer, but there was an attack against an oil pipeline.That came through a cloud vulnerability. IAM account leakage, and service accounts, and open S3 buckets. It's a scary part of this cloud journey. We want to make sure that we're scaling, we want to reduce our physical footprint, but we can't forgo the security and the trust that our customers have in our applications. And that means that having an approach to security in the cloud needs to be top of mind, regardless of where you are in that cloud journey.Corey: I think one of the, I guess, biggest concerns in the security space is very similar to what I deal with in the cost optimization space, which is people care about it only after they really, really, really should have cared about it, on some level. Now, over in the billing world that I live in, people generally have a failure mode of, “Well, we spent a little too much money,” and that is generally a very survivable thing. I used to say—tongue-in-cheek, only I was being completely serious—one of the reasons I went with AWS billing as my direction of choice was that no one is going to come and call me at two o'clock in the morning with a billing emergency; it is strictly a business hours problem. Security is a very different world. But if you screw up the bill, you spent too much money.If you screw up security, well, your company's name is mud, you could try and pull a SolarWinds with a ring of ablative interns to wind up trying to pass the buck off onto, but in practice, you're probably losing a CSO and a few other high-level execs as a sort of token offering to the market gods. And it's painful, and I'm hard-pressed to name a company these days that has not suffered at least some form of data breach somewhere. It almost feels like it's a losing game.Guy: It's not a losing game, but it is a post-breach world, right? It's not a question of, if you get breached. It's more a question of what security holes have been left open, and what can they collect from these holes? And minimizing that attack surface is obviously critical, but understanding the damage and reacting to it as fast as possible is just as important. And honestly, that's, kind of, my favorite parts about the cloud.You know, I can see something like a suspicious transaction, or a large increase in web traffic, and then fire off an API to Lambda that says, “Deploy the security group onto this instance.” That whole process takes milliseconds. So, the reaction time that we have with the cloud vastly surpasses what we ever had in the data center. And yeah, you're right, maybe that adds up costing a little bit more, or creates a slightly higher bill because we called a couple Lambda functions, but no exfiltration of data; no loss of customer information. You can't trade that off, at the end of the day.Corey: The thing that always, I guess, sort of bothered me about various breaches or various security reports is whenever companies will say definitively, “We have never suffered a security breach,” that might mean that they are absolutely on point—though, you always have this probabilities question—but it could also mean that they have no effective visibility or effective logging, and that is the dangerous part. It's similar to this idea of back once upon a time in the early days of unbreakable Linux, when Oracle was pushing that and they said, “It is unhackable.” The entire internet proved them wrong within hours because everything can be broken into at some point. It's just a question of how high do you raise that bar? Ideally, a little bit above random people just scanning S3 buckets.Guy: Yeah, and you know, that's really scary, kind of, the data that we get to see when—you know, you called this earlier that aha moment. Because we're an always-on solution, we get to see the hygiene of the network, too. I can tell you when someone hit an insecure S3 bucket, or an IAM role logged in at two in the morning that it never has before, or someone sent an API command to Lambda to spin up another instance at two in the morning, using a service account that has admin permissions. It's a scary world in the cloud, and making sure you have that surface covered gets you to those aha moments quicker.Corey: This episode is sponsored by ExtraHop. ExtraHop provides threat detection and response for the Enterprise (not the starship). On-prem security doesn't translate well to cloud or multi-cloud environments, and that's not even counting IoT. ExtraHop automatically discovers everything inside the perimeter, including your cloud workloads and IoT devices, detects these threats up to 35 percent faster, and helps you act immediately. Ask for a free trial of detection and response for AWS today at extrahop.com/trial.Corey: One thing that I do want to draw a little bit of attention to as well, having kicked the tires on ExtraHop for a few months now, I keep forgetting that I have it in place. And the only time I really get reminded is that $10 a month for that attachment to the VPC that I see on my bill when I go over that thing with a fine-tooth comb because of who I am and what I do. My point being is that I have instances in that account that are doing a bunch of relatively strange things from time to time. And the behavior is not consistent from day to day. One of them has an IRC bouncer hanging out on it because I used to spend a disproportionate amount of my time on freenode, and it does a whole bunch of different things that looks super weird.And every time I wind up pointing a typical security product at it, it starts shrinking its head off—if it can even get that far into it—of, “This thing is clearly exploited. Shut it down, shut it down, shut it down.” And none of that happens. I mean, this thing looks very weird on the network, I'm not going to deny otherwise. This is my development box.When I'm on the road—remember back when we used to travel places?—and I would just be connecting from an iPad and remoting into this thing, and then I would have it do all of the things I would normally do on a desktop computer. But it doesn't make noise. Now, to be clear, I also have a somewhat decent security posture on this thing so it's not a story of it getting actively exploited and it should be making noise. But it just doesn't say anything. It just sort of sits there quietly in the background. And it works. Whenever I log in, I have to click around to make sure it actually is still working because there's nothing on the dashboard where it's just giving you noise to talk about noise. Why is this such a rarity?Guy: [laugh]. So, your environment is probably pretty secure. I imagine you're not deploying hundreds and thousands of containers and EC2s and spinning up all this type of data, but—Corey: No. It's tiny, I spend 50 bucks a month on this account.Guy: So, it's not atypical, the behavior you see. You know, I've been in POCs and proof of values where we deployed the ExtraHop, and it doesn't see too much. And so one thing I've started doing for a lot of my customers is deploying a lab for them. Do you trust that something like an ExtraHop will see ransomware? Do you trust that ExtraHop will see credential harvesting, and lateral movement, and exfiltration?Or are you using your ExtraHop to troubleshoot your web applications? Let me spin up a lab for you, throw some workloads in there. We'll drop a Kali instance or a Kubernetes cluster and show you what an attack surface can look like. Not to scare or, kind of, build on what customers are experiencing, but knock on wood, I don't want any of my customers to be attacked, but I also have to build that confidence that if or when something happens, they're covered.Corey: Back when I first had ExtraHop demoed for me, I was convinced it was going to be garbage, let me be very honest with you. And the reason was that the dashboard looked like it was demoware. It was well-designed, well-executed, it had a very colorful interface. It felt like bossware if I'm being perfectly honest. My belief has always been, you either get a good interface that works and is easy to use and navigate within, or you get something that looks super flashy when you do a demo on stage somewhere, but it is almost impossible to wind up effectively nailing both of those use cases. And then I started using this and I am having to eat those words because you actually did it. You wound up building something that looks great and is easy to navigate. How much work did that actually take? I mean, is that where all the engineering on this product has gone?Guy: We really appreciate it. Our UX team and our engineering group work very, very hard. We spend more on R&D and research than we do on a lot of our marketing and front-end sectors and it shows. The product kind of speaks for itself. And the experience that you're describing with the easy-to-consume UI, with the data to support that experience behind it is our goal. And I'm happy to hear that you're enjoying it in your lab.Corey: I just did a little poking around while I have you on the phone, and if I dig deep enough, it does tell me that there's some weak ciphers in use. And every single one of these things is talking to an AWS-owned endpoint, which is, first, a little bit on the hilarious side, since I keep this thing current. Awesome. Secondly, the fact that I had to dig for that and it wasn't freaking out about it. There are no alerts; it doesn't show up on the dashboard.I had to really start diving into this. Because, yeah, it's good to know if I'm doing some sort of audit activity, it's good to know if I need to dive in and look at these things, but it doesn't need to wake me up at two in the morning because, “Holy crap. The Boto3 library isn't quite using the latest cipher suite.” How much tuning did this take?Guy: Not much. So, there is a learning period, as with any application that has a backend on behavioral analytics. But most of my customers, usually two to three weeks after we start seeing a data feed, are in a state of excellent tuning. Very little manual tuning required, the system will learn normalities, it'll learn behaviors, and it'll flag anomalies, kind of, on its own. So, the same experience that you're having where you're running a compliance scan, or you're running an audit, or you're trying to look for, in this world where—I'm going to make a joke here—we all have free time, and you have the time to go look at, you know, “How do I clean up some of these hygienic issues that are not currently causing me heartache?” The data is there. That's the beauty of the network is some of your users may be familiar with Wireshark, or something like a tcpdump. There's boatloads of data in. There are thousands and thousands of data points you can analyze though. If you want the data, it's there, but like you said, no reason to wake you up at two in the morning unless we see things that are super critical.Corey: Encrypt everything sort of becomes the theme, especially when Amazon's CTO slaps it on a t-shirt, and then in some cases charges extra for it; but that's a diversion. What is the story as you start seeing more and more traffic wind up being encrypted at a bunch of different levels? In fact, I'll take it a step further. With the rise of customer-managed keys and things like KMS in the AWS world, does that mean that ExtraHop is effectively losing visibility beyond just the typical TCP flow?Guy: So, ExtraHop is unique in the space that we have the ability to decrypt TLS 1.3 data. It came out a couple years ago and it's a way of encrypting traffic between servers and clients in a manner that isn't as breakable as historic encryption mechanisms were. We can parse that data, we can ingest those decryption mechanisms, we can—in real-time, without being a man-in-the-middle so we're not breaking any of this trust chain that you have to explicitly build to the internet in a lot of cases, or you don't have to upload any of your private keys to the ExtraHop. So, it's a super unique approach for how we can unpack that envelope.This goes back to when we were kids, and we all got those Christmas presents and you check the box and you try to guess what's inside. And maybe you're right, maybe you're not, but until you open that wrapper, you can't really know what's being said. So, something like a hidden database transaction underneath a web call just shows up as a web call when you're not unpacking the envelopes. Decryption is an underrated feature, in my opinion, and I would—you know, true security posture team should probably have something where they can look inside those payloads.Corey: This is where it starts to get a little weird, too, because, on some level, great, the whole premise of TLS is that my application talks to something far away—or nearby. It doesn't really matter—but there's a bit of a guarantee that from the point it leaves that application and hits the encryption side on the instance to the other end, there should be no decryption there. The only way I've ever seen that get around that is effectively man-in-the-middling these things, which in some level, “Oh, decrypt all of your secure traffic in the name of security,” always felt a little on the silly side.Guy: Not only is it silly, it's a little harder to manage when we talk about cloud because those man-in-the-middle decryption mechanisms typically involve building explicit trust so that they can decrypt the traffic, and then the client and the server both agree that, “Yeah, sure. You can read my information. You use your own certificate. I don't care.” That gets harder to do as you start talking about containers, as you start talking about ephemeral instances.Sure, you can build a golden image of a container and make it trust your IPS—which most people should have—but you still have to have the ability to see this traffic when you're bypassing certain metrics. If you're bypassing traffic back to your data center so you can [unintelligible 00:24:45] your point of sale application, or if, maybe, you're a multi-cloud environment where you have to pass from cloud to consume all of your data space. You still have to be able to see that data to understand what's really being said during the conversation without always being able to break that trust chain.Corey: One thing that I want to make very clear I call out because otherwise, I am going to get letters on this. This is a promoted episode. You folks have paid to sponsor. Thank you. It is appreciated. But I want to be very clear you buy my attention, not my opinion. I know I've been, sort of, gushing about what ExtraHop does, and how it works, and how I view these things, but that's not because you're paying me to do that. I am legitimately excited about the product itself.This is one of those things where it finally is giving me visibility into something that I understand from my olden sysadmin network admin days combined with how I know the cloud works today, and I'm looking at this and the strange spots that I see of, “Ohh, I would improve that a bit,” there aren't that many and they're not that big. This is something that is legitimately awesome, and I would encourage people to kick the tires and see what they think.Guy: Yeah, we appreciate that feedback, Corey. A lot of us are previous users. I myself, you know, before coming to ExtraHop, used ExtraHop at a previous job and that was one of the big reasons I came to work for the company is I believe in the software. A lot of our people here and we have long-time-term employees believe in what we do. And our goal is to build this partnership and trust with our customers, too, so that they have the same experience that you do. It's a fun product to play with, and kicking around and tires is fun and we'd love to show you.Corey: When you start talking to folks who are going through their, I guess, ExtraHop journey of discovery—don't ever use that term. It sounds awful—what do you find that they are getting the most confused about? What do they misunderstand that would be helpful for them to have more clarity around?Guy: There's a lot of what ExtraHop can provide when it comes to data ingestion, and data collection, and even data aggregation, but where a lot of my customers fall in the confusion space tends to be in, “Do I care about this data? Should I care about this information?” And that really falls down to the individual user's responsibility. A security team cares about all of it, whereas an application team may only care about the website's performance, or the network latency, or the error rates. And it spans the gambit.So, one thing that I do with a lot of my customers is weekly training sessions, or give them access to videos that we've recorded in advance so they can self-teach. As an engineer myself, I hate when people talk me into things: I like to play, and I like to see. So, let me give you a guide, you want to play with it, kind of poke the toes, kick the tires, have fun, that seems to get customers excited, and again, back to that aha moment a lot quicker. There's so much data that gets exposed, and sometimes it can be overwhelming. But when it comes to visibility, it's all stuff that's useful at the end of the day.Corey: If people want to learn more, where can they go next? How do they begin this journey? And of course, mention me just because every time someone talks to a sponsor and brings my name up, the reflexive wince is just my favorite look in the world.Guy: Yeah, so definitely mentioned Corey's name. [laugh]. We have online demos where people can play with the lab, you go to extrahop.com/demo. We also offer AWS trials if you want to actually deploy one and see what it looks like in your environment for a period of time. And we have teams all over the world, from the United States, EMEA, APACs, that are happy to help answer questions, help deploy, and help automate a lot of this, whether it be through something like a CloudFormation template, or Terraform scripts, whatever infrastructure as code language you choose to use.Corey: Excellent. Thank you so much for taking the time to speak with me today. I really do appreciate it.Guy: Yeah, Corey, it's been a pleasure talking to you. And I'm looking forward to maybe having another one with you in the future.Corey: Oh, I would expect so. I'm curious to see what happens next. Guy Raz, senior systems engineer at ExtraHop. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn, and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice and an insulting comment that will no doubt get flagged by ExtraHop as being something that shouldn't be on the network.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.
Andy shares his school trip to one of Sweden’s foremost cultural sites A Modest Proposal Teddy's first official FL2 appearance
Message from Tyler Chenault on January 10, 2021
Message from Tyler Chenault on January 10, 2021
Rebecca calls out Nathan for being "that guy" who wears his mask in his car! Plus, some not-so-ambitious New Year's resolutions & a hilarious post-holiday Booty Call!
Jim Tatti is in the driver's seat today so you know we have to play some Yes Guy, No Guy! Topics include Raptors struggles, Maple Leafs, and more.
Jim Tatti is in the driver's seat today so you know we have to play some Yes Guy, No Guy! Topics include Raptors struggles, Maple Leafs, and more.
(0:07 ) Intro (2:16) What caught our eye? 1.If You Need Us, We'll Be Here Watching This Endless Mashup of Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy" 2. Ikea Announces the End of IKEA Catalogues 3. A Majority of CEOs Will Change How Their Companies Interact With Consumers 4. Walmart Debuts Interactive Shoppable Cooking Videos (31:58) What do you think of this campaign? 1.Match made in Hell - Match.com's latest ad 2. Jeep ‘Repurposes' the Mysterious Utah Monolith (40:45) Innovation Corner 1. Spotify taps big-name musicians to help test Instagram-like stories 2. TikTok is experimenting with longer-form, three-minute videos (46:38) The Breakdown 1. PepsiCo's in-house technology informs radical shift to digital (56:58) Yeah I'd buy this 1. L'Oréal's Plastic Bottles from Industrial Carbon Emissions 2. Whiskey barrel aged Kit Kat bars (59:40) What are we consuming? 1. Book: Contagious 2. TV - Industry 3. Books: Bill Gate's list of must reads 4. TV: Borgen
Hey you ❤️ In this episode, I give an overview of my year so far...How I've come to accept and deal with my emotions and how I've come to have a deeper appreciation of my relationships after going through the worst part of the year alone . Thanks for listening ❤️ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/katherine267/message
Bill Belichick confirmed what many already suspected about Easterby, but ITL disagrees on the reason why. James Harden wants out, will the Rockets learn from mistakes of the recent past in this town? SportsRadio 610’s Adam Spolane gives the latest. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Have you been attracting nice guys with no spark? How long should you give it a chance before calling it quits? Can you cultivate chemistry or should it be there from the beginning? I answer all of this and more in today's episode. Join my free Facebook community for women, Confident In Love, for exclusive dating resources, trainings, and an amazing sisterhood: https://www.facebook.com/groups/904645606349156/ Connect with me: http://madelinecharlescoaching.com/ Send me a DM: https://www.instagram.com/madelinecharlescoaching/
Pete talks with his friend Jeff Ryan, farmer/writer from Cresco, IA. Ryan is known as "Guy No. 2" for his long-time online blog/columns about life and farming in northeast Iowa, always with a humorist slant that brings a smile. Or a tear. Ryan tells Pete about overcoming the Essential Tremor he grew up with and how an incredible brain surgery in 1998 - while he was awake on the table, changed his life. Guy No. 2 has been known to drive his yellow dune buggy on Christmas Day around Cresco, IA....snow or no snow.
Pete talks with his friend Jeff Ryan, farmer/writer from Cresco, IA. Ryan is known as "Guy No. 2" for his long-time online blog/columns about life and farming in northeast Iowa, always with a humorist slant that brings a smile. Or a tear. Ryan tells Pete about overcoming the Essential Tremor he grew up with and how an incredible brain surgery in 1998 - while he was awake on the table, changed his life. Guy No. 2 has been known to drive his yellow dune buggy on Christmas Day around Cresco, IA....snow or no snow [:40] - Live auctions are happening again! [3:00] - Machinery Pete sets up interview with Jeff Ryan [4:25] - Interview with Jeff begins [9:45] - Jeff’s writing background [15:00] - Longform storytelling approach [16:54] - Growing up with Essential Tremor [24:48] - Jeff undergoes brain surgery [29:35] - Recovery from surgery [32:05] - Speaking to Medtronic leadership [37:24] - The “Penny Story” [42:14] - Stories about Ada Austin “The Goat Woman” and Mark Pearson [47:12] - The yellow dune buggy [57:33] - What do you love about farming? [1:00:45] - Final words from Machinery Pete Machinery Pete was founded in 1989 and has grown from its humble beginnings to a full-fledged marketplace for farming equipment. Greg Peterson, founder and host, has also released Machinery Pete content across platforms including YouTube with his long-running Machinery Pete TV show.If you'd like to receive new episodes as they're published, please subscribe to the Machinery Pete Podcast in Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify or wherever you get your podcasts. If you enjoyed this episode, please consider leaving a review in Apple Podcasts. It really helps others find the show.
In this hot take I talk about if Joel is a good guy or not and explain my reasoning behind my opinion. I think some people confuse good character with good person enjoy
Another edition of OverDrive's favourite game Yes Guy No Guy with the moustache'd wonder & legendary TSN 1050 Host, Jim Tatti.
Another edition of OverDrive's favourite game Yes Guy No Guy with the moustache'd wonder & legendary TSN 1050 Host, Jim Tatti.
Another edition of OverDrive's favourite game of Yes Guy, No Guy with Jim Tatti, The O-Dog & Craig Button.
A special edition of Yes Guy No Guy with Jim Tatti in the host chair playing "our" game ;)
durée : 00:04:46 - 100% Stade Lavallois FB Mayenne - Rencontre avec le joueur lavallois des années 90, le milieu de terrain camerounais Guy-Noël Tapoko.
durée : 00:02:46 - Vivre ici - FB La Rochelle - Depuis 3 ans, Guy-Noël VANUXEEM vous propose une très bonne cuisine gastronomique.
Another edition of OverDrive's original game Yes Guy, No Guy with Jim Tatti, Noodles & The Grappler
Another edition of Yes Guy No Guy with Jim Tatti, Dave Naylor & The Grappler!
The original edition of Yes Guy No Guy with Jim Tatti, Carlo Colaiacovo & The Grappler
On this week's show, we cover Josh Gordon's most recent suspension from the NFL and recognize that Patrick Reed is the biggest spare on the PGA tour. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sportsnerds/support
Welcome to GeekScholars Movie News presented by LRM Online! This regular podcast features The GeekScholars—Jill, Chris, and Fox—as they discuss a roundup of current happenings in Hollywood! On this week’s show GeekScholars Jill, Chris, and Fox talk about all the huge trailers that recently … Continued
In this episode, I am joined by JayratedR for a special Hollowatson episode. Not only are we dropping gems, we are setting you up for success! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/fidelcashflowva/support
Boom, host Ryan is back with a new special guest. He sits down with an old high school friend at his old high school to discuss frat parties, celebrity encounters, and Ryan's dating life. Tune in as Host Ryan pioneers the outdoor podcast and pulls out two booms in one episode. There's only two more episodes until our hosts are reunited so make sure to catch the end of TGOLD's nationwide tour next week. As always follow the instagram @twoguysonelapdog and give us a follow on twitter @2guys1lapdog. Welcome back to the best podcast you've never heard of.
BOOM! We're back, or should we say Hosts Matt's back. Host Matt is on assignment reporting from Chico State University with a few members of TGOLD Nation. Host Matt talks Cardi B, homemade lozenges, and partying at Chico. The Lapdog sends her regards and can't wait to kick off Q1 with a blast! Host Ryan is still in the beautiful Rainbow state preparing for the much anticipated TGOLD Travel Series. Everyone here at the TGOLD is hoping you're enjoying this holiday season and don't forget to tune in this Thursday for a new episode of the best podcast you've never heard of.
And we're back. Get ready as we kick off our holiday set of TGOLD episodes today. For the next few weeks, we'll be diving into the holiday season with a slate of special guests and hometown specials as our hosts spend some much needed time away from each other. They may be apart, but you best believe they will be producing the kind of quality content you've come to know and love here in TGOLD nation. But don't despair, this time apart is only the lead up to a the first TGOLD Travel Series as Host Matt and Host Ryan reunite in sunny Hawaii later this year. Tune in to keep up to date with your favorite content creators and look out for the TGOLD Youtube Channel launching January 2019. Get ready for the best holiday special you've never heard of.
Toast and Task give the great film antman a short review and talk comics for the rest of the episode. Tune in!
Support ATL here: https://www.patreon.com/AmongTheLilies :)
Get the podcast bonus pack: www.startupmilestones.eu/bonus Why you should get a sales guy early; and the benefit of industry experience - with Paulo Gomes, Wizdee Cofounder&CEO
Andddddd we’re back with another spanking new podcast this week!On today’s show: to procreate or not procreate, what to do when there’s no chemistry, and is the safe bet the best bet. And as a bonus, I tell you how supportive my friends were when I first started dating my husband and by supportive I mean, dicks.Keep your questions coming to me at sasha@laineygossip.com. Check us out on iTunes to leave your comments and feedback, and visit www.laineygossip.com for all your entertainment updates. Sasha xx See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
For the first time in 110 episodes, Nuzzy & Guy don't have a celebrity guest. Their scheduled guest, Andy Dick failed to show up for the episode so the boys called Andy on the phone to find out why he didn't show. Did Andy answer? Also during the podcast, Nuzzy contacted comedians Brody Stevens & Tom Green. Did they answer? And stay tuned long enough for this other important question to be answered: What awful thing happened to Guy this week following a cough? Enjoy the show. Next week on Decently Funny: Susan Olsen (Cindy, Brady Bunch) and Artie Lange. Download our brand new app for the iPhone: https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/decently-funny/id741726884?mt=8 and for android http://www.amazon.com/ItsApp2You-Decently-Funny/dp/B00GLBAVYC/ref=sr_1_1?s=mobile-apps&ie=UTF8&qid=1384791768&sr=1-1&keywords=decently+funny Follow us all on twitter @theNuzzy @theguydf & @DecentlyFunny. Music to close the show by: https://soundcloud.com/princessofathens/princess-supernormal Download all of our shows on iTunes, Soundcloud, Stitcher and DecentlyFunny.com. Theme song written by Little Mikey and performed by Panic! at the Disco.
Hello and welcome to a very special episode of Just One Of The Guys, a Green Lantern Podcast. No, it's not special in that we learn about those funny hairs growing on our bodies, but it's special in the fact that Thomas Deja (host of Better in the Dark and author of Shadow Legion Volume 1: New Roads to Hell) and I got to sit down and chat with the manliest man in comic-dom, Mr. Beau Smith! We talk extensively about Beau's run on Guy Gardner Warrior, and we also get the skinny on the various projects that were to have sprung out of that. Want to know about the crossover Beau had planned for Wonder Woman? Of course you do! Do you desire to find out how Batman and Guy would have resolved their differences? Without a doubt!! Can you even imagine what creator called Beau up to ask him about the new direction he was going to take Guy? No, you can't, it's just THAT mind bogglingly awesome!!! So unless you're just not macho enough to handle this much audio excellence, I suggest you grab your mp3 player of choice, download the show, and start to listening! Sam Elliot would want you to.Feedback for this show can be sent to: justoneoftheguyspodcast@gmail.comJust One Of The Guys is a proud member of the Two True Freaks! (http://twotruefreaks.com/main.php) family of podcasts, the best place on the internet to find shows about Star Wars, Star Trek, Comics, Movies, and anything else that the modern geek could ever want. If you are downloading the show through iTunes, be sure to leave a rating, hopefully a FIVE STAR RATING, because every rating we get helps grow the shows on the network! Thanks for listening, and be sure to come back next Friday for another episode of Just One Of The Guys: A Green Lantern Podcast.
Hello and welcome to a very special episode of Just One Of The Guys, a Green Lantern Podcast. No, it's not special in that we learn about those funny hairs growing on our bodies, but it's special in the fact that Thomas Deja (host of Better in the Dark and author of Shadow Legion Volume 1: New Roads to Hell) and I got to sit down and chat with the manliest man in comic-dom, Mr. Beau Smith! We talk extensively about Beau's run on Guy Gardner Warrior, and we also get the skinny on the various projects that were to have sprung out of that. Want to know about the crossover Beau had planned for Wonder Woman? Of course you do! Do you desire to find out how Batman and Guy would have resolved their differences? Without a doubt!! Can you even imagine what creator called Beau up to ask him about the new direction he was going to take Guy? No, you can't, it's just THAT mind bogglingly awesome!!! So unless you're just not macho enough to handle this much audio excellence, I suggest you grab your mp3 player of choice, download the show, and start to listening! Sam Elliot would want you to.Feedback for this show can be sent to: justoneoftheguyspodcast@gmail.comJust One Of The Guys is a proud member of the Two True Freaks! (http://twotruefreaks.com/main.php) family of podcasts, the best place on the internet to find shows about Star Wars, Star Trek, Comics, Movies, and anything else that the modern geek could ever want. If you are downloading the show through iTunes, be sure to leave a rating, hopefully a FIVE STAR RATING, because every rating we get helps grow the shows on the network! Thanks for listening, and be sure to come back next Friday for another episode of Just One Of The Guys: A Green Lantern Podcast.
As much as Nuzzy & The Guy love interviewing celebrities, they also love to hear themselves talk. That's why episode #72 explores the lives of our hosts as they strip the show down to its humble beginnings, without a celebrity guest and without their sidekick... Just Nuzzy, Guy and 2 mics. The boys discuss past episodes, stand up wipers, what they can expect next weekend in Vegas, why their guest for this episode cancelled, what it's like to get a professional massage, friends who legally change their names and then tease us with future guest commitments... Follow us on Twitter. @theNuzzy, @theguydf and @decentlyfunny... download all of our shows "Decently Funny" on iTunes, listen to us on the go with our mobile app at Stitcher.com/DecentlyFunny and at home on DecentlyFunny.com.
Guy and Gaz finally get back together after the Macworld Expo and go over all the major events as seen through the eyes of Guy (No guarantees about accuracy). Gaz in withdrawal does about a billion other podcasts. There was a lot of listener feedback which they only kinda half-answer (they'll get back to it, promise!). A longer show because Guy doesn't when to stop TALKING!
Because you've made us the most downloaded gay podcast from the Philippines, we offer you a series of clips called Hot Guy by Gumamela. For what ultimate purspose, we still don't know. Guy No. 1 is a random person we saw at Morato who had nothing better to do that night. It took a little bit of convincing to get him aboard. See, for some people, "podcasting" is still a made up word, and anything dealing with a video camera means the movies or the boob tube. It was hard to explain how he would be seen by the entire terrestrial world and yet would not be seen in the big screen. Vote for us on http://www.filipinopodcasts.com And watch out very soon for our take on the Gay Games in Chicago--The Great Make-up Challenge. Very, very soon!