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Ugh. This fucking guy. When the best thing you can think of to say about a guy is, "at least he's not as bad as Huckle," you know that dude is a giant piece of shit. And that's the case with today's person, Jake Davison. He went from being a half-retarded whiny piece of shit, to a half-retarded whiny piece of shit that also hurt innocent people. Great leap there in your quest to be less of a shithead, you fucking failure. Anyways, at least you don't have to feel guilty about the stuff we say about him, because he sucks. Enjoy!
Ugh, I gotta be honest with you, dear listeners. This episode is gonna be rough. I don't know if you can see the picture of this guy, but if you can, well, then you probably know what kinda crimes are gonna be popping up in this episode. The fucking worst. I'll just say, if you had a tough time with Peter Scully, well...So brace yourself as best you can, and enjoy? I guess? I dunno, good luck anyways!
The crew discusses threesomes that went left. What type are you: Demisexual, or Sapiosexual. And is A.I. out here generating beefs on social media? Tap in
Pán kobylek terorizoval ze svého Domu hrůzy celé město. Richard byl vlk v rouše beránčím. Více o epizodě na https://www.ozlociny.cz/e/275/
Having direct visibility into your access data is crucial for two reasons: 1. Simplifying audit preparation and 2. Managing progress of your identity program to ensure peak performance. Internal auditors and compliance managers need easy access to granular data points to understand and demonstrate compliance to external agencies. Gaining access to real time data creates a great deal of autonomy for audit and identity teams to be able to delve deep into their identity programs and prove compliance. However, making the data available even internally can put organizations at risk for data leaks and data policy violations. Erik will outline how companies can gain access to their current identity search and dashboard data and be able to query in their preferred BI tool based on their own data privacy policies and business needs, significantly reducing risk. This segment is sponsored by SailPoint. Visit https://securityweekly.com/sailpoint to learn more about them! There's still serious, late stage funding for compelling tech in cybersecurity, SpyCloud proves with it's $110M Series D. We discuss the SentinelOne/Wiz merger rumors. Sadly layoffs and even company failures are still occurring, thought Tyler thinks the market downturn is close to bottoming out. NordVPN spins off an AI skunkworks called NordLabs. The Browser Company has a great company vision page that's worth checking out. Two interesting LLM prompt-related tools to check out are PIPE and promptmap (both on github). Brazilian phone spyware WebDetetive (sic) gets hacked and all victim data deleted. US takes down QakBot and *removes* it from infected systems! Finally, a homing pigeon proves that birds are faster than gigabit Internet :D In this interview, Raghu discusses the specific challenges in securing the cloud and how to overcome them. He shares how to make your life easier by making security a team sport, how to gain the visibility you need across clouds, data centers, and endpoints, and how to get a return on your cloud security investments. This segment is sponsored by Illumio. Visit https://securityweekly.com/illumiobh to learn more about them! It's no secret that the attack surface is increasing and the best defense is one that's matched to the most relevant risks. Through proactive and reactive research, The SafeBreach Labs team helps customers discover their most critical threats and security gaps by building the industry's most current and complete playbook of attacks. In this session, SafeBreach Director of Research Tomer Bar will share how attacks are conducted, which APT group have been the most active, and how breach and attack simulation can help teams think like an adversary and leverage recent vulnerabilities to gain accurate insights. Segment Resources: https://www.safebreach.com/safebreach-labs/ This segment is sponsored by SafeBreach. Visit https://securityweekly.com/safebreachbh to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-330
Having direct visibility into your access data is crucial for two reasons: 1. Simplifying audit preparation and 2. Managing progress of your identity program to ensure peak performance. Internal auditors and compliance managers need easy access to granular data points to understand and demonstrate compliance to external agencies. Gaining access to real time data creates a great deal of autonomy for audit and identity teams to be able to delve deep into their identity programs and prove compliance. However, making the data available even internally can put organizations at risk for data leaks and data policy violations. Erik will outline how companies can gain access to their current identity search and dashboard data and be able to query in their preferred BI tool based on their own data privacy policies and business needs, significantly reducing risk. This segment is sponsored by SailPoint. Visit https://securityweekly.com/sailpoint to learn more about them! There's still serious, late stage funding for compelling tech in cybersecurity, SpyCloud proves with it's $110M Series D. We discuss the SentinelOne/Wiz merger rumors. Sadly layoffs and even company failures are still occurring, thought Tyler thinks the market downturn is close to bottoming out. NordVPN spins off an AI skunkworks called NordLabs. The Browser Company has a great company vision page that's worth checking out. Two interesting LLM prompt-related tools to check out are PIPE and promptmap (both on github). Brazilian phone spyware WebDetetive (sic) gets hacked and all victim data deleted. US takes down QakBot and *removes* it from infected systems! Finally, a homing pigeon proves that birds are faster than gigabit Internet :D In this interview, Raghu discusses the specific challenges in securing the cloud and how to overcome them. He shares how to make your life easier by making security a team sport, how to gain the visibility you need across clouds, data centers, and endpoints, and how to get a return on your cloud security investments. This segment is sponsored by Illumio. Visit https://securityweekly.com/illumiobh to learn more about them! It's no secret that the attack surface is increasing and the best defense is one that's matched to the most relevant risks. Through proactive and reactive research, The SafeBreach Labs team helps customers discover their most critical threats and security gaps by building the industry's most current and complete playbook of attacks. In this session, SafeBreach Director of Research Tomer Bar will share how attacks are conducted, which APT group have been the most active, and how breach and attack simulation can help teams think like an adversary and leverage recent vulnerabilities to gain accurate insights. Segment Resources: https://www.safebreach.com/safebreach-labs/ This segment is sponsored by SafeBreach. Visit https://securityweekly.com/safebreachbh to learn more about them! Visit https://www.securityweekly.com/esw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/securityweekly Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-330
Having direct visibility into your access data is crucial for two reasons: 1. Simplifying audit preparation and 2. Managing progress of your identity program to ensure peak performance. Internal auditors and compliance managers need easy access to granular data points to understand and demonstrate compliance to external agencies. Gaining access to real time data creates a great deal of autonomy for audit and identity teams to be able to delve deep into their identity programs and prove compliance. However, making the data available even internally can put organizations at risk for data leaks and data policy violations. Erik will outline how companies can gain access to their current identity search and dashboard data and be able to query in their preferred BI tool based on their own data privacy policies and business needs, significantly reducing risk. This segment is sponsored by SailPoint. Visit https://securityweekly.com/sailpoint to learn more about them! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-330
Having direct visibility into your access data is crucial for two reasons: 1. Simplifying audit preparation and 2. Managing progress of your identity program to ensure peak performance. Internal auditors and compliance managers need easy access to granular data points to understand and demonstrate compliance to external agencies. Gaining access to real time data creates a great deal of autonomy for audit and identity teams to be able to delve deep into their identity programs and prove compliance. However, making the data available even internally can put organizations at risk for data leaks and data policy violations. Erik will outline how companies can gain access to their current identity search and dashboard data and be able to query in their preferred BI tool based on their own data privacy policies and business needs, significantly reducing risk. This segment is sponsored by SailPoint. Visit https://securityweekly.com/sailpoint to learn more about them! Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/esw-330
On December 14, 2014 officers from Britain's National Crime Agency arrested a man at London's Gatwick Airport on suspicion of serious offences against children. The officers had been tipped off by Australia's Task Force Argos. The man, 30 year old Richard Huckle was accused of using his work as a missionary in Malaysia to facilitate his crimes.Merch StoreJoin the Coffee ClubFacebookPlease check out this weeks sponsors:Use my special link https://zen.ai/deathcast to save 12% at blendjet.com. The discount will be applied at checkout!Ready to shop better hydration, use my special link https://zen.ai/deathcast1 to save 20% off anything you order.The Deathcast is a production of Corpse Creek Publishing and Big Pond Podcasts#truecrime #TheDeathcast #Deathcast #truecrimeaddict #Truecrimepodcast #UK #Britian #Malaysia #RichardHucker #Argos
On this week's episode of the Thinking Global podcast, Abigail Glyn, Nigel Huckle (@NigelHuckle), Daniel McDaid, and Tusharika Deka (@Tusharika24) - four of the podcast's co-hosts - chat with Kieran (@kieranjomeara) about what they have been reading recently. Thinking Global is affiliated with E-International Relations - the world's leading open access website for students and scholars of international politics.
This week, Rachel and Lynne chat with PR consultant and writer Erin Huckle of Chuckle Communications. Erin specialises in award writing and shares her knowledge. She talks about: Where she finds her clients What she likes about award writing How winning awards can help small business What makes this type of writing different from content writing The secret to being a successful freelancer Connect with Erin at: https://chucklecommunications.com/ (where you will find her amazing awards calendar) Don't forget... If you're an Aussie freelancer, please take our new pay rates survey here: https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/6CSXSNV Find us: Rachel's website https://rachelsmith.com.au/ Lynne's website https://lynnetestoni.com/ Rachel's List https://rachelslist.com.au/ As always, thanks to Rounded https://rounded.com.au/ for sponsoring The Content Byte! Episode edited by Marker Creative Co www.markercreative.co
Today I have the amazing Erin Huckle who is going to make you challenge the idea that thought leadership is "overused" instead Erin encourages everyone to find their areas of expertise to share."It's that idea of flipping it around so it's less about, oh, I'm putting myself out there, and I feel like I'm really arrogant for doing that. It's not that at all. It's about what have I learned, what do I know and how could that help other people?"Erin Huckle, the founder of Chuckle Communications, is in the business of raising the profiles of her clients through proactive PR, amazing award entries and compelling written content. She works with innovative, ethical and creative small businesses and leaders, to find their voices and tell their stories. Her focus is on helping clients connect with their ideal customers, by turning up where they hang out. With almost 20 years' of experience in PR, Erin has worked across sectors including tourism, IT, major events, not-for-profits, tech and publishing. She still gets a huge buzz out of helping her clients get featured in the media, and she loves celebrating the awesomeness of her clients through the power of PR. Based in Wollongong, Erin is a mum to three very busy boys, and in her spare time she loves any opportunity for a moment of peace, ideally with her head in a book. In this episode, you will learn the following:1. How to become a thought leader by sharing your expertise and lessons you have learned from running a business or in your career.2. Ideas for creating and sharing stories to your network and build your profile as a speaker.3. Tips for using platforms like LinkedIn to effectively showcase and share your expertise.Resources:Access Erin's awards calendar: https://chucklecommunications.com/award-writingConnect with Erin: www.chucklecommunications.com.au DOWNLOAD MY CONTENT PLANNER - https://becchappell.com.au/content-planner/Instagram @bec_chappellLinkedIn – Bec Chappell If you're ready to work together, I'm ready to work with you and your team.How to work with me:1. Marketing foundations and strategy consultation 2. Marketing Coaching/ Whispering for you a marketing leader or your team who you want to develop into marketing leaders3. Book me as a speaker or advisor for your organisation4. Get me on your podcastThis podcast has been produced and edited by Snappystreet Creative
"It's an amazing opportunity to reflect and I agree, it gives you that winning mindset - once you've entered an award, you're sort of like throwing things out to the universe and saying, I'm worthy of what I do and people should know about it."Erin Huckle, the founder of Chuckle Communications, is in the business of raising the profiles of her clients through proactive PR, amazing award entries and compelling written content. She works with innovative, ethical and creative small businesses and leaders, to find their voices and tell their stories. Her focus is on helping clients connect with their ideal customers, by turning up where they hang out. With almost 20 years' of experience in PR, Erin has worked across sectors including tourism, IT, major events, not-for-profits, tech and publishing. She still gets a huge buzz out of helping her clients get featured in the media, and she loves celebrating the awesomeness of her clients through the power of PR. Based in Wollongong, Erin is a mum to three very busy boys, and in her spare time she loves any opportunity for a moment of peace, ideally with her head in a book. Are awards worth the hype? For many small business owners, the answer is a resounding "yes"! Awards are a great way to not only celebrate your success, but also increase your credibility and connect with customers. But writing the award entry can be daunting and often time-consuming. In this episode, you will learn the following:1. Discover how to write a winning award entry that will stand out to judges.2. Learn how to repurpose award entry content for marketing and other materials.3. Explore the range of award programs around the country with a live calendar.Resources: Access the awards calendar: https://chucklecommunications.com/award-writingReach Erin: www.chucklecommunications.com.au DOWNLOAD MY CONTENT PLANNER - https://becchappell.com.au/content-planner/Instagram @bec_chappellLinkedIn – Bec Chappell If you're ready to work together, I'm ready to work with you and your team.How to work with me:1. Marketing foundations and strategy consultation 2. Marketing Coaching/ Whispering for you a marketing leader or your team who you want to develop into marketing leaders3. Book me as a speaker or advisor for your organisation4. Get me on your podcastThis podcast has been produced and edited by Snappystreet Creative
Who is The Unstoppable Stylist? Sharon Huckle is the Unstoppable Stylist. She joins Kevin and Graham on The Next 100 Days Podcast. Graham met Sharon in Orlando Florida at a conference - Graham to see Dan Kennedy and Sharon to see Russell Brunson at Click Funnels Funnel Hacking Live. We spoke at 10 am in Canada, and late afternoon in the UK. What Does Sharon Do? Sharon is a serial entrepreneur. http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Serial-Entrepreneur.mp4 Her main clientele are ladies, but she also has loyal male clients and kids too. Sharon has run the salon for 20 years! She jokes that for some clients, she has done their hair for BOTH their weddings! She sees it as them having true love for her salon. After all, Sharon has outlasted their first marriage! Kevin Goes to The Barber Bus in Northumberland http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Kevins-Barber-Bus.mp4 Just in case you don't understand what a barber bus is... What's Her Secret? Sharon gets things done. After all, she's the unstoppable stylist. No roadblocks here. http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Her-Secret.mp4 Sharon runs the Canadian equivalent of a Car factory! http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Car-Manufacturer-of-Sorts.mp4 Where did the entrepreneurial drive come from? http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Inspiration-from.mp4 Graham and Sharon met at Click Funnels Live - What Was it Like for Sharon? A Rock Concert for Entrepreneurs. http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Click-Funnels-Live.mp4 So, How Does Sharon Help Stylists? With her programme. http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Helping-Stylists.mp4 Discover The Unstoppable Stylist on the Web! Sharon Huckle provides this testimonial We made her giggle! And Kevin attacks a guest! You'd never see Graham doing that!! http://thenext100days.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/Sharon-Huckle-Testimonial-1.mp4 The Next 100 Days co-hosts… Graham Arrowsmith Graham runs Finely Fettled to help organisations that want to market to affluent and high-net-worth customers. He also runs Meet Professionals which is being offered to financial advice groups as a white-labelled lead generation and conversion system. Contact Graham on LinkedIn: Visit Graham's LinkedIn Profile and by email. Kevin Appleby Kevin specialises in finance transformation and implementing business change. He's the COO of GrowCFO which provide both community and CPD-accredited training designed to grow the next generation of finance leaders. You can find Kevin on LinkedIn and at kevinappleby.com
When you Google ‘copywriter', you might notice one thing. There are a lot of us. And if you check out most copywriter websites, they're very similar. And the socials? We're all posting Ernest Hemingway quotes, sharing advice on how to use colons and popping up pictures of our dogs. So how do you stand out in a crowded market? How do you become known for what you do? Build that solid trustworthy reputation and become the go-to human in your niche? Well, our guest today is not only a successful copywriter but a PR guru and my personal guide to becoming more known. Using a smart combination of award entries, PR, blog posting, podcasts and more, she helps people just like us, raise their profile and in turn win more customers and charge more money. Tune in to learn: Erin's career journey before becoming a copywriter How the worlds of copywriting and PR crossover How to overcome shyness and getting yourself out there Award writing and entering awards - is it worth it? How to handle client's expectations How Erin raised her profile The biggest mistakes copywriters make when trying to raise their profiles Erin's top copywriting tip Head to episode notes Freebies Free webinar: Your first month as a copywriter Free rates guide Membership: Join now
As England Netball and the Netball Players Association continue to work hard behind the scenes on a positive outcome we hear from Josie Huckle. Essential Listen to the latest episodes with no download: www.pod1.co/netballshow NOW AVAILABLE VIA SKY HD / Q / GLASS via the sports podcasts rail The Netball Show is proudly partnered with Flyhawk.com Please email the latest info from your club here
Richard Huckle was a school teacher, christian missionary and photographer. He would travel the world and take pictures of all of his christian missionary work in third world countries. But behind all these photos was the Uk's worst child predator. Richard Huckle traveled to third world countries and took advantage of 200+ children. But how he would later be caught for his crimes, is an even darker rabbit hole. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
"PR gives you instant access to established audiences and the ability to collaborate with some amazing people."Today on the show we have Erin Huckle talking all things building your profile (without the cringe factor)In this episode, you will learn the following:1. How to use PR to grow your career or business2. The importance of having a strong personal profile3. The power of effective storytellingThis is Erin Huckle's story...Erin Huckle, the founder of Chuckle Communications, is in the business of raising the profiles of her clients through proactive PR, amazing award entries and compelling written content. She works with innovative, ethical and creative small businesses and leaders, to find their voices and tell their stories. Her focus is on helping clients connect with their ideal customers, by turning up where they hang out. With almost 20 years' of experience in PR, Erin has worked across sectors including tourism, IT, major events, not-for-profits, tech and publishing. She still gets a huge buzz out of helping her clients get featured in the media, and she loves celebrating the awesomeness of her clients through the power of PR. Based in Wollongong, Erin is a mum to three very busy boys, and in her spare time she loves any opportunity for a moment of peace, ideally with her head in a book.Resources:www.chucklecommunications.com.au https://www.instagram.com/chucklecommunications Chapter Summaries:[00:00:22] - Erin Huckle is the founder of chuckle Communications. She works with innovative, ethical and creative small business leaders to find their voices and tell their stories. Erin has almost 20 years of experience in PR. She's based in Wollongong and is a mum of three boys.[00:02:09] - PR is about creating new ways to interact with your audience and building your profile. The most basic thing you need to do is to have a bio about yourself ready to go and it could be your LinkedIn profile or a separate 100 words about yourself. PR gives you instant access to established audiences and it looks to collaborate with some amazing people. She recommends following and engaging with the people you would like to be featured by. She also recommends listening to the podcast and writing a pitch to help their audience ”i would get the go ahead just from a synopsis rather than writing the full article first even if you write the whole article you can repurpose that anyway” ”i think that's really great advice and yeah definitely something that I mean as you said.[00:12:08] - This is great because from a marketing point of view, I'm always looking for content. I've got a few people at the moment starting from scratch, and they need content in the beginning. The most important thing is to have a brainstorming session with the potential client or the new client. Then someone like me will go away and look at the topics and potential media targets.[00:14:26] - There is an opportunity to build a personal profile. If yDOWNLOAD MY CONTENT PLANNER - https://becchappell.com.au/content-planner/Instagram @bec_chappellLinkedIn – Bec Chappell If you're ready to work together, I'm ready to work with you and your team.How to work with me:1. Marketing foundations and strategy consultation 2. Marketing Coaching/ Whispering for you a marketing leader or your team who you want to develop into marketing leaders3. Book me as a speaker or advisor for your organisation4. Get me on your podcastThis podcast has been produced and edited by Snappystreet Creative
How to Overcome - Ps Chris Huckle by Equippers Church Essex
Bill Balderaz is the Founder and President of Futurety. We had Bill on the show before we even hit 100 episodes to talk about Futurety, and since then Bill and his team have been hard at work. Today, we're talking to Bill about a SaaS product called Huckle, which their team is getting ready to …
In October of 2019, prison officers at HMP Full Sutton in West Yorkshire discovered the body of a prisoner who'd been subjected to 89 minutes of torture before being strangled to death by another inmate. The victim was 33-year-old Richard Huckle. Dubbed by the media as "The Gap Year Paedophile", Huckle was serving a life sentence for carrying out a 9-year-long, systematic campaign of abuse against some of the world's poorest children. Huckle documented his atrocities on the dark web, authored a how-to-guide for paedophiles, and contributed to one of the largest nonce-networks ever discovered. This is the story of Richard Huckle and the incredible officers who brought him down. Become a patron: Patreon Order a copy of the book here (US & Canada): Order on Wellesley Books Order on Amazon.com Order a copy of the book here (UK, Ireland, Europe, NZ, Aus): Order on Amazon.co.uk Order on Foyles Follow us on social media: Instagram Twitter Visit our website: Website Sources: https://www.ecpat.org.uk/news/wake-up-call-needed-over-abuse-of-children-abroad-ecpat-uk-warns https://www.malaymail.com/malaysia/article/pmo-sets-up-task-force-to-review-child-protection-laws https://thethunderbird.ca/2008/01/22/pedophiles-destroying-views-about-teaching-overseas/ https://www.nationalcrimeagency.gov.uk/news/british-teacher-jailed-for-sexually-abusing-children-in-the-uae https://edition.cnn.com/2021/06/04/china/david-mcmahon-us-china-shanghai-prisoner-intl-hnk/index.html https://www.ecpat.org.uk/news/wake-up-call-needed-over-abuse-of-children-abroad-ecpat-uk-warns https://www.the-sun.com/news/2763075/sex-attack-convict-teacher-changed-name/ https://www.theguardian.com/social-care-network/2014/dec/19/simon-harris-british-citizens-child-abuse https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2016/06/08/najib-heed-lessons-from-richard-huckle-case/ https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2016/06/03/he-wasnt-a-teacher-says-british-council https://www.thestar.com.my/news/nation/2016/06/03/have-laws-on-child-pornography-or-another-richard-huckle/ https://www.theweek.co.uk/73210/richard-huckle-britains-worst-paedophile-handed-22-life-sentences https://www.nspirement.com/2021/09/13/child-sex-tourism-the-scale.html http://www.inquiriesjournal.com/articles/34/child-sex-tourism-us-and-them-in-a-globalized-world https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2016/jun/02/richard-huckle-parents-threw-him-out-court-told https://www.nst.com.my/news/nation/2017/09/284002/paedophiles-diary-richard-huckle-kept-account-his-grotesque-acts https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/hull-east-yorkshire-news/paul-fitzgerald-paedophile-richard-huckle-4717343 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2nBgCCLGiw8 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-54991643 https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/hull-east-yorkshire-news/paul-fitzgerald-murder-richard-huckle-4729347 https://news.sky.com/story/richard-huckle-prisoner-found-guilty-of-murdering-britains-worst-paedophile-12140521 https://metro.co.uk/2020/11/24/man-who-murdered-britains-worst-paedophile-laughs-as-hes-jailed-for-34-years-13650057/ https://peoplepill.com/people/richard-huckle https://allthatsinteresting.com/richard-huckle-death https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/hull-east-yorkshire-news/richard-huckle-murder-paul-fitzgerald-4732115 https://www.hulldailymail.co.uk/news/hull-east-yorkshire-news/paul-fitzgerald-jailed-richard-huckle-4731528 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-55061443 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-humber-55061443 https://www.sundayworld.com/crime/cannibal-killer-who-raped-and-murdered-paedophile-richard-huckle-committed-first-sex-offence-at-12/39813976.html https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mRSpa_6jDrU&t=1202s https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=47Q-N252ZNE https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2016/06/01/britains-worst-paedophile-who-targeted-poverty-stricken-children/ https://news.sky.com/story/1705161/huckle-tried-to-cash-in-on-child-abuse-pics https://www.kentlive.news/news/kent-news/gruesome-details-revealed-over-death-3436632 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWgruUf1NNk https://dailyuknews.com/uk-news/prisoner-found-guilty-of-murdering-britains-worst-paedophile/ https://www.kentlive.news/news/kent-news/psychopath-who-raped-murdered-richard-4733739 https://www.kentlive.news/news/kent-news/prisoner-who-killed-kents-most-4715058 https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10141515/richard-huckle-murder-making-of-britains-worst-paedophile/ https://www.news.com.au/lifestyle/real-life/innocentlooking-schoolboy-turned-britains-worst-paedophile/news-story/e7ef359a22d22f5afb5125adf9f0b87e https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2zVGsKIM2_Y https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2016/06/03/british-paedophile-met-victims-at-community-of-praise-church-source-says/1133555 https://www.reuters.com/article/us-britain-abuse-malaysia-idUSKCN0YV061 https://www.straitstimes.com/asia/se-asia/uk-paedophile-who-wrote-child-lover-guide-admits-to-sex-attacks-on-malaysian-children https://www.malaymail.com/news/malaysia/2016/06/04/report-troublemaker-uk-paedophile-wanted-to-marry-indian-girl-at-kl-welfare/1133897 https://www.buzzfeed.com/patricksmith/paedophile-given-23-life-sentences https://www.sundayworld.com/crime/cannibal-killer-who-raped-and-murdered-paedophile-richard-huckle-committed-first-sex-offence-at-12/39813976.html https://www.nst.com.my/news/2016/06/149621/huckle-never-drew-suspicion https://www.kentlive.news/news/kent-news/sickening-crimes-richard-huckle-how-3426139 https://malaysia.news.yahoo.com/report-convicted-paedophile-richard-huckle-030505307.html?guce_referrer=aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZ29vZ2xlLmNvbS8&guce_referrer_sig=AQAAAIcsqBAR1k-zKCW69HKZIbqBYFPkJe6z0fKtqH99QqEv_p1WBCfHVZAroIy2uc337Gx3kQ0-Ctwl9yaxbBVRBp1UxeuTFbgOaTV29kHspTS5e-nOE8l9dJjURgPIGcJlDi1GtvICpav29qwCV3GZKFOk3Q0YgkXGlE0o6CZ35Bnl&guccounter=2 https://www.theguardian.com/society/2016/jul/13/shining-a-light-on-the-dark-web-how-the-police-ended-up-running-a-paedophile-site https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-36435349 https://vpnoverview.com/privacy/anonymous-browsing/the-dark-web/ https://www.nst.com.my/news/2016/06/149621/huckle-never-drew-suspicion https://abcnews.go.com/International/inside-world-cambodias-child-sex-trade-told-eyes/story?id=45990734 https://subsaga.com/bbc/documentaries/crime/2018/the-gap-year-paedophile.html https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/4537502/britains-worst-paedo-richard-huckle-who-raped-kids-as-young-as-3-boasted-of-kissing-little-girl-at-sunday-school-in-sick-diaries/ https://www.thesun.co.uk/news/10141515/richard-huckle-murder-making-of-britains-worst-paedophile/ https://www.bbc.co.uk/bbcthree/article/7b60672a-c67f-4ed8-8bd6-28efd0506733 https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-36437856 https://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/britains-worst-paedophile-richard-huckle-8102681
Marlawn's Podcast NetworkMy Store/Closet: https://posh.mk/nnGWfGh7vob Marlawn Heavenly VII 307 Cañon Ave #123Manitou Springs, CO 80829 ------------------Cash App: $Marlawn7PayPal: SportyNerd@ymail.com Venmo: Marlawn7 www.Marlawn.comMarlawn's Podcast Network (On All Platforms)They Shooting! How Not to Get Murdered Mirror of QuestionsThe Cult of The Individual Colorado Rocky Motives Elon Musk Fail… The Black Briefcase Hello I Am… Marlawn A Genius! Billions Black Breakdown Braincell MatesSherlock Homeboy Marlawn's Brief History in Rhyme Emoji-Less Words I Hate I love Boxing Internal Negro Affairs Culture Blues
Marlawn's Podcast NetworkMy Store/Closet: https://posh.mk/nnGWfGh7vob Marlawn Heavenly VII 307 Cañon Ave #123Manitou Springs, CO 80829 ------------------Cash App: $Marlawn7PayPal: SportyNerd@ymail.com Venmo: Marlawn7 www.Marlawn.comMarlawn's Podcast Network (On All Platforms)They Shooting! How Not to Get Murdered Mirror of QuestionsThe Cult of The Individual Colorado Rocky Motives Elon Musk Fail… The Black Briefcase Hello I Am… Marlawn A Genius! Billions Black Breakdown Braincell MatesSherlock Homeboy Marlawn's Brief History in Rhyme Emoji-Less Words I Hate I love Boxing Internal Negro Affairs Culture Blues
Main Business Issues: Trouble focusing when running 3 businesses Guest's Key Insights And Takeaways: Sharon was someone who had a very hard time focusing on just one thing and even felt it was ‘impossible' It turned out she had a sense of ‘FOMO' when it came to focusing on just one thing In addition, she felt a deep sense of significance at being able to juggle a lot of things at once Despite that however, she actually found authentic expression in that space and felt guilt over ‘not being focused' Connect w/ Guest: instagram.com/theunstoppablestylist www.theunstoppablestylist.com
What really happened to Richard Huckle? Who is Paul Fitzgerald? What is Project Spade? Who is Task Force Argos? Well in this shocking and disturbing true crime documentary we will dive into the lives of Paul Fitzgerald and Richard Huckle.This dark true story leave you with question after answering some very scary questions about the world. It's not just Paul Fitzgerald and Richard Huckle we'll be looking at but Shannon McCoole and Brian Way too. This true horror story murder mystery is one of the strangest and most disturbing stories I've ever researched. And I've turned over every stone looking for answers.From AZOV FILMS to The Love Zone, you're going to learn it all and how it closely relates to "hiya's". This story is scary and true. It will leave you sleepless with a real feeling of dread. Be warned.I'm MrBlackPasta and this is the disturbing truth about what happened to Richard Huckle.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The FOF HOTLINE IS OPEN 24/7, CALL TODAY, 864-241-4318 Headlines with Justin Bieber talking about what's going on with his face
Are you the World’s Best Kept Secret? I know so many talented women with the most fantastic service offering who will do anything to avoid actually telling anyone about it. Maybe you’re one of them? Does the thought of “putting yourself out there” make you want to run and hide? I would like you to meet Erin Huckle, founder of Chuckle Communications and my guest in this episode. Erin is in the business of shining the spotlight on others, helping the World’s Best Kept Secrets share their stories with confidence. Erin takes the cringe-factor out of profile raising activity and shares some brilliant tools to make it as pain-free as possible for you. She has a great mindset shift if you struggle with the idea of “putting yourself out there” and she wraps up our chat with a really great life boost for you too. GUEST PROFILEErin Huckle, the founder of Chuckle Communications, is in the business of raising the profiles of her clients through proactive PR, amazing award entries and compelling written content. She works with small businesses and leaders, to find their voice and tell their stories. Connect with Erin LinkedIn Michelle BroadbentConnect with me via email at michelle@michellebroadbent.com.au Follow @michbroadbent on InstagramSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today on Talk About That, Jonnie needs closed captions at the movies, and gets a zero for the day. Meanwhile, John lets his daughter watch Tommy Boy, and makes a bad butterfly metaphor
WARNING: The following episode is quite possible the most DISTURBING podcast ever produced. It features horrible crimes against children, including torture, rape and murder. Recording these stories made me feel physically. If you are on the fence about continuing I suggest you skip it and come back next time. This is the story of the scum of the Earth.In the most disturbing episode yet, your host JD Horror brings you five tales centering around the red rooms of the Dark Web. This episode was very difficult to get through the production of and just hearing about these cases and their perpetrators has left a stain on all of our staff's souls. LISTENER DISCRETION IS STRONGLY ADVISED.Case #1: Hurt to the Core (@Lux/Matthew Graham, Australia)Case #2: Daisy's DestructionCase #3: No Limits Fun (Peter Scully, Australia/Phillipines)Case #4: The Love Zone (Shannon McCool, Australia)Case #5: The Worst Pedophile in Britain (@Huckle / Richard William Huckle, England)If you like what you hear here on True Crime Horror Story please subscribe and give us a 5 star review. You can also think about joining our Patreon At www.patreon.com/truecrimehs and then Stay tuned after this show on Patreon for the True Crime Horror Story After Show w/ Dom & JD as well as early access to Ad free episodes and exclusive bonus content available only on Patreon.This episode features research and writing by Mis Demeanor, music by Mechanical Ghost, Producer LB from the No One Likes Us Podcast, and The Quiet Type as well as Artwork by Nuclear Heat Graphics. Sources for this episode's cases are available in the credits section of our website.Has violent crime impacted you or someone close to you? Send us your story at truecrimehorrorstory@gmail.comhttp://www.truecrimehorrorstory.com
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/mathematics
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/history
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/technology
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/science-technology-and-society
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/systems-and-cybernetics
A true understanding of the pervasive role of software in the world demands an awareness of the volume and variety of real-world software failures and their consequences. No more thorough survey of these events may be available than Thomas Huckle and Tobias Neckel's Bits and Bugs: A Scientific and Historical Review of Software Failures in Computational Science (SIAM, 2019). Their book organizing an extensive collection of episodes into eight chapters that expand on an array of flavors of failures, increasing in intricacy from precision and rounding errors to the software–hardware interface and problems that emerge from complexity. As I see it, this book serves three audiences: Instructors of computer engineering or numerical methods will find an educational text uniquely suited to a focus on software failures; software engineers will find an equally unique reference text; and students of the practice or the history of computational science will find a fully blazed trail through these complicated stories. Dr. Huckle joined me to discuss his and his coauthor's motivations for assembling the book, a sampler of the chapter headliners, and some of his thoughts on new and evolving computational tools with their own attendant opportunities for failure. Technical readers will appreciate the mathematical excursions that rigorously introduce topics essential to understanding each chapter's headlining episodes, the exercises and MATLAB code provided at the book's website, and links to sources at Dr. Huckle's website. I found value in the recurring lesson that real-world failures arise from the coincidence of multiple, often multitudinous errors, as well as in the authors' consistent emphasis on the real human toll that the study of these errors is driven to prevent. That said, all readers may appreciate the fanciful taxonomy given in the introduction and the amusing (though sometimes apocryphal) idiosyncratic failures surveyed in the appendix. Suggested companion works: Peter G. Neumann, Illustrative Risks to the Public in the Use of Computer Systems and Related Technology Nancy G. Leveson, Safeware: System Safety and Computers Glenford J. Myers, Software Reliability: Principles and Practices Lauren Ruth Wiener, Digital Woes: Why We Should Not Depend On Software Ivars Peterson, Fatal Defect: Chasing Killer Computer Bugs Thomas Huckle completed a degree program in mathematics and physics education and in pure mathematics, received a doctorate in 1985, and acquired his postdoctoral teaching qualification (habiliation) in 1991 at the University of Würzburg. A German research Foundation (DFG) grant enabled him to spend time performing research at Stanford University (1993–1994). In 1995 Professor Huckle joined TUM as professor of scientific computing. He has also been a member of the Mathematics Faculty since 1997. His primary research area is numerical linear algebra and its application in fields such as informatics and physics. His work focuses on solving linear problems on parallel computers, image processing and reconstruction, partial differential equations, and structured matrices. Tobias Neckel has studied applied mathematics at the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and received a doctorate in Computer Science at TUM in 2009. He is currently senior researcher in scientific computing at TUM and has conducted research at the École Polytechnique, France (2003), the Tokyo Institute of Technology (2008), and the Australian National University (2017). His research interests include the numerical solution of differential equations, hierarchic and adaptive methods, uncertainty quantification, and various aspects of high-performance computing. Cory Brunson is an Assistant Professor at the Laboratory for Systems Medicine at the University of Florida. His research focuses on geometric and topological approaches to the analysis of medical and healthcare data. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
My guest this week has a different type of grief story. Brandon Wainwright is an animal lover, a police officer, and a Reiki practitioner. He lives with his wife, daughter, two dogs, and a chinchilla in the San Francisco Bay area, although they're moving less than a week from when this episode is released. Brandon wrote a wonderful book, Tyson's Gift, after the passing of their family dog, Tyson. The book follows the story of Tyson and their family, the impact Tyson had on Brandon while Tyson was in this life, and the spiritual awakening Brandon had after Tyson went to Spirit.I know a lot of my listeners are animal lovers just like I am. Animals are Souls just like we are, and the impact they have on our lives is immeasurable. The gifts that Tyson brought to Brandon and his family live on. I highly encourage you to get a copy of this book. I cried through a lot of it because Brandon lets you feel as if you know Tyson on an intimate level. The story of his healing through his spiritual awakening is really special, and Tyson clearly orchestrated that. How a pint sized dog named Tyson helped create a spiritual awakening in an agnostic police officerHow Tyson came into their livesWhy Brandon wasn't initially excited about his wife bringing Tyson into their livesWhat Brandon had to do to win Tyson's trust and respectHow Tyson helped open Brandon's heart in ways he didn't know he neededThe questions he asked after Tyson left this life that led to his spiritual awakeningHis experiences with animal communicatorsThe reasons he wrote “Tyson's Gift”Why he was compelled, but not necessarily convinced, by some of the stories of animal communicationHow he went from "belief" about the Afterlife to "knowing"The experiences his wife and daughter had “hearing” Tyson after he went to SpiritThe hilarious story of Tyson and their other dog, Chloe, getting into the pantry and what they ate!The bond between Tyson and Chloe both in this life and now that they're both in SpiritHis first experience with a medium when some of his loved ones in Spirit came throughThe fears he had as he embarked on his Reiki training (you will probably relate to these!)What Tyson's Gift really is - and where the name of the book came fromHow Tyson's Spirit is kept alive every dayWhile losing a pet and losing a child are not the same, the similarities he sees in both lossesMy experience with an animal communicator this summer when my dog, Huckle, had cancerBe sure to visit Brandon's website, and pick up a copy of his book, Tyson's Gift, on Amazon, Barnes & Noble, and other bookstores (or directly from his website).
You all asked for more on working in tech so here you go!Erik is a former Marine who got his MBA at the University of Texas. After that, he entered a career in tech, going from Amazon to being a co-founder, to working at a startup. Listen in to lear what a product manager actually does. Visit the Job Board
While looking back at old school photographs of the man who grew up to become Richard Huckle it can be hard to imagine this pleasant-looking young boy turning into one of the UK's worst criminals -- a man who would seriously harm up to 200 children before he was eventually arrested and sentenced to carry out the rest of his days in a jail cell where he would brutally lose his life in October of 2019. Last year, the man responsible for Huckle's passing, fellow inmate Paul Fitzgerald, was found guilty and handed a life sentence for the crime. So, how did we get to the point where one crazed and maniacal criminal is neutralizing another in cold-blood and calling it “Poetic Justice”? The answer to that question is shocking, disturbing, and absolutely horrific.
LinkedIn Easy Peasy Podcast: Building a Personal & Professional LinkedIn Presence
Linda Huckle and Gillian Whitney chat about Avoiding the Muddy Puddles of LinkedIn. Linda believes that learning how to use LinkedIn optimally and ethically isn't hard but takes time, patience, and support. Based in the United Kingdom, Linda Huckle (aka #LinkedInLinda) is an independent LinkedIn Trainer and Consultant. Linda's vision is a world where we use LinkedIn efficiently and with maximum impact on a daily basis for lead generation, building trust and authority and nurturing our audience. During this LinkedIn Live chat, Linda and I will talk about ethics, honesty, and how to avoid the hazards of LinkedIn. We'll also discuss the things people might be unaware of that breach LinkedIn's User Agreement. For more information: videoeasypeasy.com Gillian Whitney https://www.linkedin.com/in/gillianwhitney/ Linda Huckle https://www.linkedin.com/in/lindahuckle/
Mary herself was diagnosed with breast cancer in August 2007 and with secondaries in July 2014. Despite her own diagnosis she endeavours to raise awareness of the disease, in particular of secondary breast cancer. By sharing her experience and through her patient advocacy she helps others in her position. A little bit about Mary: Mary Huckle is a personal trainer and Pilates instructor from Enfield, North London and is the founder/owner of Breakthrough Fitness. She is married with 3 children. Her passion for anything health and fitness related has been a lifelong affair and after working in finance for many years she eventually changed her career path in 2003 when she left the world of finance to retrain as a personal trainer and Pilates instructor at the YMCA. She is also qualified in pre and post natal, breast cancer rehabilitation and children's fitness. Mary also takes pride in the fact that for over 13 years she's helped dozens of women regain their confidence and fitness during and after cancer treatment.
Justice & Drew are joined by Paul Allen to share a recap of the Vikings loss to the Bengals and some interesting facts about huckle bearers. Later, they chat with Kim Crockett about an upcoming event focused on election integrity.
Even Salt Looks Like Sugar is a true crime podcast which explores the darkness of the world and the reality in which we live. Join your host Billy Housh for our nineteenth episode. Episode 19: Evil is Richard Huckle When we think of the world wide web, we think of a system of networks that … Continue reading "Evil is Richard Huckle" The post Evil is Richard Huckle appeared first on Even Salt Looks Like Sugar.
In ancient times, banking was more of an art than a science. Your wealth had to be weighed against blocks of lead or whatever. Even though North American Banking Company has been around for over 20 years, officially making them ancient, they stay on the cutting edge of money counting. Nary a bronze scale to be seen. That's how you know you can trust them with your money. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In Episode XVII, Phil grapples the grim details dealing with the numerous indecent acts committed by Richard Huckle- once dubbed “Britain's worst ever paedophile”. His perverse desire for gratification expanded far beyond his native Kent and took in continents across the globe; all done behind the charade of trusted roles such as teacher and photographer. Carla looks into the case of Richard Mare Evonitz. On the surface, a man with a distinguished US Naval career and budding business entrepreneur… beneath that revealed his deviant motivations for rape and murder- young girls unfortunately being his primary focus. Needless to say, this is one episode where listeners can expect very little by way of understanding and empathy for the perpetrators involved. #theunspeakableisspoken
This week's episode sees us head to Malaysia as we take a deep dive into the life and sadistic crimes of 33-year-old Englishman Richard Huckle... Please be warned, this is one of our most graphic episodes. There are (absolutely minimal) descriptions of child sex abuse and extremely graphic descriptions of adult violence. I will be glad to see the back of this case. Please help me to support my need for wine by heading to www.patreon.com/seeingredpodcast Show Sponsors: Best Fiends www.betterhelp.com/red Theme music provided by the extremely talented Holly-Jane Shears - check out her amazing work at www.soundcloud.com/DeadDogInBlackBag
This week's episode sees us head to Malaysia as we take a deep dive into the life and sadistic crimes of 33-year-old Englishman Richard Huckle... Please be warned, this is one of our most graphic episodes. There are (absolutely minimal) descriptions of child sex abuse and extremely graphic descriptions of adult violence. I will be glad to see the back of this case. Please help me to support my need for wine by heading to www.patreon.com/seeingredpodcast Show Sponsors: Best Fiends www.betterhelp.com/red Theme music provided by the extremely talented Holly-Jane Shears - check out her amazing work at www.soundcloud.com/DeadDogInBlackBag
I det her program af GameBoys snakker vi om nogle af de spil som er blevet annonceret til E3. Først snakker vi om Guardians of the Galaxy spillet. Derefter snakker vi om Sea of Thieves X Pirates of Caribbean og til sidst taler vi om Elden Ring. Efter E3 snakken har vi et interview med Huckle_TV hvor vi snakker om hendes successfulde subathon og hvordan det har været at lave
This week John spoke to Paul Turner& John Huckle in a far-ranging episode which covered teaching critical school geography and what is it to be a radical school geographer. Many thanks to Edquas for sponsoring season 5 of GeogPod. Links from the pod John's website, where his book Critical School Geography can be downloaded. Paul's website where you can find some of his great teaching resources + more.
Lady Farmer sits down with Christine and Anca, the duo behind the Huckle & Goose cookbook and meal planning program, to talk about what it really means to cook, eat, and live seasonally. Their book is designed to speak to even the most intimidated home cooks, and the habit-forming plans and recipes that they offer make space for true transformation in your life. Scroll down to view notes by timestamp, and links to all the resources we mention throughout the episode. 00:51 - Intro with Mary and Emma 02:53 - Early Bird tickets on sale now for the Virtual Slow Living Retreat on November 14 and 15 04:32 - Submit to the Lady Farmer Blog - Form on website Let's get into the interview! 08:53 - Inspiration behind Huckle and Goose 18:17 - How has the concept of eating/cooking changed 26:15 - Breaking down barriers to create healthier habits 29:40 - Why cooking at home is more beneficial - the less obvious reasons 33:05 - Eating seasonally connects you to nature 39:43 - Set a day aside to schedule and plan out meals 53: 32 - Keeping habits during the pandemic 1:08:32 - Origin of the name Huckle and Goose Resources: Buy the book here! Virtual Slow Living Retreat Submit to the Lady Farmer Blog Share with us what you thought about this episode on our Instagram @weareladyfarmer