Podcast appearances and mentions of ian ian

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Best podcasts about ian ian

Latest podcast episodes about ian ian

Untapped Potential
Developing Your Personal Board with Ian Braid

Untapped Potential

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 73:14


Ian's vision as CEO of the British Athletes Commission led to the sector strengthening the support offered to vulnerable adults in sport. He also played a key role in the DCMS review of duty of care in sport assisting Baroness Tanni Grey-Thompson. These became the platform for Ian to deliver sustainable positive change in sport, and mental health provision and for the next generation of sport leaders to apply his values, skills, and experience. Ian has brought together his significant experience in sport and his passion for helping others under the umbrella of DOCIAsport the company he founded in 2017. He brings a refreshing and independent view to all aspects of duty of care in sport from the perspective of coaches, officials, athletes, administrators, and the sector itself. Ian delivers change through consultation and collaboration, leading and embodying his values of helping others, equality, inclusion, fairness and honesty. What You'll Learn: In this episode, Ian shares some of the highs and lows of his career including some personal challenges, but what is clear is the impact he has had on the sporting system and many individuals by bringing attention to some hugely important issues. And this is why I'm excited to have this conversation with Ian. He has a view that I don't know or understand with regard to the funding and system perspective. Talking Points: The jigsaw of performance sport The cost of the performance systems' pursuit of medals The cost this had on Ian The seduction of sport to the detriment of allowing it to define who we are Developing your personal board The greatest challenge and most important journey is looking within Turning the performance system into a society Why independent support is key If you enjoy this episode please leave a review on iTunes or Spotify platforms, and by doing this you will actively help in spreading this content to the practitioners that need it. Resources: Men Behind Sport: www.menbehindsport.com Practitioner Needs Analysis Coaching (1-1 & GROUP OPTIONS): Read Full Details Paper: Exploring Mental Health and Illness in the UK Sports Coaching Workforce UK Coaching GB Gymnastics Whyte review The Long Win by Cath Bishop Original Sins by Matt Rowland Hill Connect with Ian: Ian's LinkedIn DOCIA Sport

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage
Taking Creative Risks with Podcasting Pro, Ian Faison

Talking Too Loud with Chris Savage

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 48:45


Ian Faison, founder of Caspian Studios, is talking too loud about ‘puffy pants', the chilly morning staple you didn't know you needed. Chris Savage is talking too loud about Netflix's hilarious and educational animated teen series, Big Mouth. And Sylvie is talking too loud about the cinematic masterpiece that is BlackBerry, and the iPhone before-times. Links to learn more about Ian:Ian's LinkedInFollow us:twitter.com/wistiaSubscribe:wistia.com/series/talking-too-loudLove what you heard? Leave us a review!We want to hear from you!Write in and let us know what you think about the show, who you'd want us to interview on future episodes, and any feedback you have for our team.

The breathing body
Healing anxiety and finding your health - with Ian Wright

The breathing body

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2023 55:46


Hello and welcome to another episode of the podcast «The breathing body». My name is Flurina and I am your host -  and I am so happy that you are here. YES we live in a world in which electronic devices rule our days and overstimulation often is our normal state! A high percentage of our society is suffering with various anxiety disorders, including the very young children - it seems that we lost our natural rhythmic connection to nature, inside and outside us, and rather than celebrating our connection to the wholeness we are, we despair in separation.  And YES, this is a world in which self-empowerment is so important and we need tools and resources which support us to change this state of overstimulation and anxiety. And this is what today's episode is all about: Ian and I talked about his newest book «Healing anxiety» and how we can actively and consciously use our breath to rewire our brains and heal anxiety - and even more and deeper find back and reorientate to your own health - which means to connect to the natural process of unfolding - a force and gesture which was and is always present in all of us, right form the start of our journey as a conceptus in our mother s womb.  My colleague and friend Ian graduated from the British School of Osteopathy in 1992 and has been practicing as an Osteopath since. He studied and later taught at the Osteopathic Center for Children in London - he has further been involved in teaching Osteopathy in the Cranial field for the Sutherland Cranial College as well as the British School of Osteopathy. Today Ian is based in Ireland where he set up his own clinic and established the Irish Diploma in Paediatric Osteopathy whilst he continues to teach internationally. The Irish diploma in paediatric osteopathy involved setting up «The Daisy clinic trust» - a charity with the dual purposes of treating children with special needs and training osteopaths in paediatrics. For more than 10 years Ian has also been teaching a course called «The Dynamics of stillness» which teaches osteopaths and non-osteopaths a sequence of meditations, contemplation practices and exercises designed to deepen sensory awareness. Behind each technique, he describes, is a process of developing a deeper and deeper connection to the stillness in and around us, alongside connection with the deep fluid tides of nature and, importantly to the expression of our underlying potential for deep Health. In this conversation with Ian we talked about: … how we can use our breath to restore our fundmental connection to health …  … and experience empowerment about our own health through this healing experience. … what the job of an osteopath is which is to support a patient to access their own health potential  … what healing means to Ian … Ian`s new book «Healing anxiety» and what happens with your brain structurally if you suffer anxiety for a long time …  … that anxiety is born from a sense of disconnection and separation from wholeness  … and the self-empowering practices Ian is teaching offering an active practices to rewire  the brain and reorientate ourselves to health I am looking forward reading your thoughts and comments about it on instagram or Facebook or any podcast platform you are listening from at the moment, tell me what did you take from this episode and how did it inspire your path and journey. Love, Flurina  More information about Ian's work: You can find all about Ian's work on his webpage www.dynamicsofstillness.com  Credits: Intro/outro music – ‘Hymn for Jim' by Aspyrian: Robin Porter – saxophone, Jack Gillen – guitar, Matt Parkinson – drums, composed by Robin Porter, listen to the full track here.  Graphic: Annina Thali, for more information click here Mix engineer: Jack Gillen, for more information click here

Dudes And Dads Podcast
How God used Ian: Ian Edwards – S5E6

Dudes And Dads Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 18, 2023 43:50 Transcription Available


On this episode Ian Edwards tells us about his journey to faith. From his parents splitting up to his drug use and how God moved him and now he is a youth pastor. Links: Youtube video of this episode Support the show on Patreon and get bonus content and more Support the show on Paypal with a one-time donation Website: Dudes And Dads Podcast Facebook: Dudes And Dads Instagram: Dudes And Dads Podcast Twitter: Dudes And Dads YouTube: Dudes And Dads Time stamps: (00:00:00) Intro (00:03:18) Feedback on Into The Light Episode (00:06:52) Interview with Ian (00:37:32) Dudes and Dads Pop Quiz (00:42:44) Outro

We’re All Psychic
Fun with Ian - Ian's Interview

We’re All Psychic

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 27, 2022 29:36


Misty and I interview Ian about acting and more! This is a video podcast on Spotify. Want to know more about Ian? Instagram: @iancwhitt Support the podcast! We have goodies! https://www.wereallpsychic.com/ Thank you for watching and listening. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lisa-rusczyk/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/lisa-rusczyk/support

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NeuroRadio
#48 In search of thalamo-cortical computational principles

NeuroRadio

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 17, 2022 91:37


We sat down with Lukas Ian Schmitt (@lucidianS), a team leader at RIKEN CBS, and talked about his trajectory, life in Japan, past and ongoing projects about the distributed computation in the cortico-thalamic loop, and related works (Recorded on 9/10) Show Notes: Ian's lab at RIKEN: Laboratory for Distributed Cognitive Processing Miho: Miho Nakajima-san Mike Halassa's lab @NYU->MIT Phil Haydon's lab @Tufts The Neuron by Kaczmarek (and Levitan) (Still have the original on my shelf here. – Ian) Ian's work at the grad school: the astrocyte-neuron interaction Ian's works during postdoc: Rule representations in the cross-modal sensory attention task #1 #2 (mentioned as ”The thalamo-cortical paper”, MD-mPFC loop) #3 Guo/Inagaki's paper (VM/VAL-ALM loop) If you change the rule sets, the dynamics change a little bit in subgroups of MD thalamic neurons A review discussing the region identified as the PPC - Ian Ian's strategy for the research Ahena Akrami's paper Jeremiah Cohen His recent publication on representation of the task history in PL Computational Advantages conferred by biologically inspired networks Structured networks sometimes perform better/faster Idea of having a parallel stream of processing through the thalamus is useful: I was thinking of some ideas from Murray Sherman and Sabine Kastner (e.g. this paper, and this) – Ian Editorial Notes: Really nice conversation though I guess we have some difference as to whether thalamic computational roles are an inevitable network design or just based on evolutionary history (I guess time and research will reveal who's right!) In any case, I really enjoyed talking science with you both! - Ian I enjoyed the discussion and it was nice to see the connection between Ian's work and others' on the thalamus. It seems the time has finally come to decipher thalamic functions and I hope our new work will change the way we think about how the brain computes information! -Miho Recent evolutionary expansion in thalamus/LP could be just optimization around local minima. Let's see how Ian's work would discard this possibility! For now, we can happily agree to disagree! - Kenta/萩 It was a perfect way to drop our first episode for both domestic and international listeners. Thanks, Ian and Miho! -Tak/脇

C-SPAN Radio - Washington Today
Hurricane Ian Ian makes landfall in southwest Florida as Category 4 storm

C-SPAN Radio - Washington Today

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2022 49:00


Hurricane Ian makes landfall in Florida at strong Cat 4, interview with Politico's Meredith Lee Hill on President Biden's call to end hunger in U.S. by 2030 (26), State Dept reaction to results of Russian annexation referends in Ukraine. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Skates At The Stakes
Episode 50 : In Defense of the Back End

Skates At The Stakes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 7, 2022 111:36


The boys have friend of the pod on Ian @Ian_10_19 on twitter to talk about the defensemen within organization, as well as some good ol' fashioned AEW talk at the end of the podcast.

Fire Code Tech
59: Automation, Revit, and Dynamo with Sean Fruin

Fire Code Tech

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2022 53:36


Sean Fuin is a formally trained mechanical engineer who specializes in automation with python and dynamo. On episode 59 of Fire Code Tech we discuss Sean's career and roles in the architecture, engineering, and construction industry. Sean gives great tips and resources for professionals interested in getting into coding and automation.    Sean's Consultancy:  https://www.sigma-aec.com/   Testfit:  https://testfit.io/   Hypar:  https://hypar.io/   Expert Systems: Principles and Programming: https://www.amazon.com/Expert-Systems-Principles-Programming-Fourth/dp/0534384471     [00:00:00] Hello, all welcome to the show. I'm Gus Gagliardi, and this is fire code tech on fire code tech. We interview fire protection professionals from all different careers and backgrounds in order to provide insight and a resource for those in the field. My goal is to help you become a more informed fire protection. Professional fire code tech has interviews with engineers and researchers, fire marshals, and insurance professionals, and highlights topics like codes and standards, engineering systems, professional development, and trending topics in the industry. So if you're someone who wants to know more about fire protection or the fascinating stories of those who are in the field, you're in the right place. Construction industry. In this episode, we're talking again about automation. This episode specifically talks about automation that can benefit engineers, contractors, but the topic of automation and how machine learning AI and other big technology concepts can apply to professional life in general is really ubiquitous in the discussion of how to become more efficient as a professional. Sean is a trained mechanical engineer and he gives great tips for people who are interested in the cutting edge of technology. And if you have a proclivity for coding automation, BIM Revit, or any of the above, you're gonna really enjoy this episode. don't forget to subscribe and follow us on social media. Also, if you could do us a huge favor, give us a five star review on apple podcasts. Let's get into the show. Really enjoy this episode. Don't forget to subscribe and follow us on social media. Also, if you could do us a huge favor, give us a five star review on apple podcasts. Let's get into the. Well, Sean, welcome to fire code tech. Thanks for speaking with me. Hey, thanks for me. It was good to talk about automation. yeah. Automation. I'm gonna talk about automation. Who's not talking about automation. I don't know. It seems like AI. And I keep thinking about AI and machine learning and automation and how that's going to apply to our industry. But. Yeah, I don't know. We could just get right into it. If you have thoughts on that. I like have been trying to pick up a little bit of Python in my spare time and thinking about machine learning and it's not so like clear to me, you know, automation part's clear to me how that would apply to our industry. But do you have any thoughts on like AI and machine learning? What we'll see in the future for those kind of buzzwords for what you and I do on a daily basis. Yeah. I don't know. I've never, I haven't jumped on the machine learning bandwagon. I think it's more of a buzzword. No one really understands the amount of data that you need to make it work. So we have to get a lot better at other things before we can start machine learning our way to success. We have to right. Yeah. I was thinking like, if you had thousands of projects and thousands of device layouts, you know, like really you need like, you know, like 10,000 plus would even, I bet would be a small data set for some of these machine learning projects. Right. So you would need so many projects in order for it to be meaningful. So yeah, it seems like just the baseline automation stuff. Yeah. Makes a lot more sense. I got in debate with a friend of mine, who's working at a firm that's really aggressive, progressive, and they are working on starting to implement some machine learning stuff. And they're just like trying to identify like plumbing fixtures. So we have a fun conversation about that, but I'm like, it's only giving you like this five more percent. And like, so all this work has to go in just to get that extra, like 5% success, but it's like, wouldn't it just be easier if the architect called to sync a. Standardized way. I think that's the approach that we should take. Yeah, but obviously that's had struggles too, so yeah. That's yeah, to my point, I don't think we can get to machine learning if we can't even call a sync, a sync in a consistent manner. That's true. Yeah. I think that it, as with most things in automation, the true value of it is to be found in like the. Repetitive tasks that you do every day. And then eventually you can get to these kind of like highminded ideas about really complicated stuff. But I will say, I think there is a lot of potential there. So should maybe like auto routing and stuff like that. Right. You can almost turn that into a simpler, like 2d problem. [00:05:00] So yeah, there's so many algorithms out there. Like maybe that I just heard something about. They're trying to map the what is it called? The galaxy like web and they're using some type of algorithm that's based off of some type of mold, I think. Huh. And so I saw that like YouTube video on that and I was like, oh, maybe that could work for like auto routing. Do you know? Yeah. That makes sense. I mean, so yeah, that like that auto routing is a really interesting topic. Yeah. It's a really hard one, especially fire protection, right? Oh yeah. Fire protection and fire sprinkler. You guys usually like the last ones to go. Yeah. It's, it's a dynamic. We talk about a lot in inside the firm that I work for is. Fire protection is such a, an odd burden in the sense that, you know, there's so much delegated design that's baseline in our industry. So the engineers by and large will just like shove off the task of actually routing to the contractor so frequently. So it just causes more consternation in the field and between disciplines and H V a C guys mad. Sprinkler guy got in first and routed wherever he wanted it to. And then just said tough. You know, even though we do our best to try to make sure that people coordinate contractors coordinate and we require coordination drawings and our specs, but it's always a pain. Yeah. I personally think we kind of design buildings completely wrong. Right. Like we try to lay out. the architecture first, which of course there needs to be like a form, but we sh like we, you know, as mechanical engineer, I'm used to getting a detailed architecture model before I even start running duct work with ceiling Heights already in the model. And then right. It's always the battle of, I need more room for my ceiling and then not when I do it where right. If you. Kind of have the form of the building, obviously kind of, you know, generically what spaces are, but then you could start to route maybe like the mains, at least using algorithm and even doing plumbing, fire protection, all that together, and then build the architecture's job should be around billion around the infrastructure. Right? Yeah. And making it look. you know, have them, alternatively, how do we hide this infrastructure? You know what I'm saying? Yeah. It seems like a chicken or the egg problem. Exactly what needs to come, what needs to come first and speaking with the biology, you know, metaphor. I mean, again, I don't think if you watch a baby grow, right. It starts with like the spinal cord, like the brain, the spinal cord, and like the limbs and everything grow out from there. You know, so you almost have to like, think of the building as having like the spinal cord for the infrastructure and then build around that. That's an interesting thought. I've never, I mean, that makes sense from a that I, I would think that an engineer would think that though. Yeah, it did the battle between the architects and engineers over, you know, it, I worked at a startup called I. and it was kind of a disaster and this was one of the reasons why. And so I came in late in the game, but also I was in charge of like all the mechanical stuff and they had me design the mechanical stuff around their structural stuff and around just, it was a modular. So just around all these co. I was assigned to figure out the mechanical and I kept on saying, right, like, no, the mechanical is you should be designing structural architecture around the mechanical, not the opposite way around. And yeah, the owner of the company never really got that. I could see that I've never been able to. I mean, at least you could have that conversation. I feel like fire protect. Unless it's just like some really specific instance, you know, like with storage sprinklers, sometimes we get into situations where we're pushing around the structural engineers columns and, and Joyce layout. Because if you can't fit these storage sprinklers into this space, you can't build the space. Like you can't sprinkler it. You can't get a code compliant, build it layout, but arm that. One of the things that modular was like, alright, how are we gonna bring fresh air in? Like, [00:10:00] that was the number one question, at least in my mind was like, how are we gonna bring fresh air into this space? And so my idea was to go to the outside wall and now we, again, we're trying to modular and keep it all tight. So then it was like, okay, we, so we're like, we're trying to design these things, the modules, right. So like how can we have repeatable pieces that come together? Right. So like a kitchen module might. A closet in it. And my idea was to put, like, try to get really small HVC equipment, but to maybe go in that closet, that would act as like the also act as the washer and dryer closet. And then we'd have to go out in the wall. Well, my idea was like first put ideally where the H HP equipment should be and then build all the structure around. They were doing the opposite where here's the structure. Tell me where I need to put the H V C. So yeah, those working with those seems like there's always constraints, but the more heavy the building in, or site constraints, just the more difficult the entire process is. So I think modular is like the extreme of. Constraint. I mean, you're like the whole idea is to get it as confined as possible or, you know, just kind of these succinct little pieces. So that's, it's interesting. It's almost like putting right. If you always have the analogy of like, if you put, if you're trying to like pull of Legos back in a box in ways, if you put all the small Legos first, then the big Legos aren't gonna fit. Yeah. Okay. So it's almost like that with the structural, the architecture first before the H V C. Hmm. Yeah, I think that's a interesting way to think about it. I guess we'll just have to get faster in the automation and the prototyping to where that is. Like we can have a conceptually generated layout that's quick so that we can raise that red flag fast, but there's so many options for. Mechanical engineers. I mean like fire protection sprinklers are straightforward. Like you got like what maybe, maybe two most common system types, you know, wet are dry sprinkler systems. There's no like manufacturers really that are driving these big configuration changes. But how much variation do you guys get with building. I mean a lot, a lot of barriers. That's another huge right thing to tackle. Yeah, for sure. The, the jurisdictional stuff is the biggest variability. Just as far as like military versus commercial versus, you know, you could work for department of defense or you. VA or what, you know, all these different government, high rise Highrise, you know, so all that like has a big impact. Yeah. Not auditoriums and stuff, but, but yeah. So I know that we we've had for the listeners just tuning in we've, you know, we had some technical difficulties on the, on the first go around. My, my recording program just was given us fits, but I wanted to. Yeah. That's classic problem for technology. I can't open up laptop walls today with rabbit, so oh yeah. Clap. Wait, what is it? What kind of walls with rabbit? I'm having trouble opening up Autodesk docs models right now. Oh man. Yeah. It's like that one day when everything Autodesk's cloud client went down, it's like, I was like, well, Autodesk never goes down. Surely it's not that. And then you get the email and it. There whole cloud servers down for a day or whatever. I forget when that was, but seems like there's always something it's harder. It makes things harder. Yeah. But I wanted to let people know a little bit about your background and you could keep it abridged, but, you know, tell, tell the listeners about kind of your working history and kinda how you found your role map. So I am a mechanical engineer degree. Got my EIT T still wanna get my PE so work on that. Just one more test to take. Yeah. So going through school, I had my first internship at a H V C firm in St. Louis. And I hated it. They were still, they were just starting to play around with Revit. I actually remember, I somehow I got access to Revit and to get the internship, I like pretty much printed out a model of somebody else's work and threw some ducks in there and was like, look, I know Revit guys. But yeah, I was left doing a whole bunch of CAD stuff there and like, dude, they had me getting photocopy [00:15:00] stuff. So I saw a lot of manual. You know, I was the lowest man on the ton pole. So was a lot of manual tedious stuff and I hated it. Then I got like a year and a half long co-op at a place called tech manufacturing, which they like are a C C shop for aerospace parts. And so that was really, really cool. So at tuck manufacturing I guess I should back up the. In college. I started learning Excel. That's I think where the story should begin. So in college I started learning Excel and we got really good at it. Me and my buddies that we had to do labs with. So we had labs. You have to make these Excel spreadsheets and, you know, before, even the lab, we were doing it. So I was starting to get good at Excel. The firm that I had, my internship was used in a lot of Excel and there's this old, old timer. Awesome. Dude taught me even more. He was always showing me little tricks in the. Excel. So that's been really good, which led me to, I think, in the co-op job, cuz they had an Excel spreadsheet. That was just the most insane thing I've ever seen. So they would bring in so like Boeing or Lockheed would like give these packets of all these parts. And my job was to like find the boing box of the part, right. For the raw things, get out what material it is. So it might be aluminum might be titanium. The grain, which way the grain runs. You just had to like pull all this information out and then put it into this Excel document. And then at that point it would just kind of do its thing. And you did some other stuff to try to get an estimate on the CNC time, but like do this thing and sew many formulas and so many sheets at the end of it. It even calculated like shipping cost and all this. And it made what was called, like the red sheet, I think, is what they called it. And it would be like this big review of all the parts and they'd say, yay or nay. So all the higher ups would come in and we'd review all the parts. After all this information's populated in Excel. And like I said, it's given you cost. It's like it's gave you everything you need to know to say the part is if they're gonna bid on the part, what they're gonna bid and if they'll move forward or not. So I was just like, this is really. So I learned even more Excel there that internship or co-op was up and I needed a job and guess where I landed H VC designer, the thing that I thought I would hate. So yeah, luckily the time dynamo was starting to become a thing and began my Excel. I was like, oh, DMO can get stuff from Excel into Revit. So that started. And then I realized you could do stuff with geometry and then snowballed from there. Now I've been consulting for three years, four years building custom workflows for clients. That's very cool. That's neat that you had that saw the power of this kind of streamlining of, of very difficult and unique process. And so you kind of had that seed planted early in your career for the, the possibilities. Yeah, for sure. Before all that, by the way I worked at restaurants for like my early twenties and I worked under this guy, Vita Elli, who's now the executive chef's chef for Anheuser Bush, but he's like a Gordon Ramsey type. And he, he was all about, I started with him when I was 16. And so he is all about efficiency. So I. I think that's maybe when it was really embedded in my mind, but then just got reinforced in all these, you know, other little adventures I had. Huh. Interesting. When you're talking about, you know, you make custom kind of like dynamo and Python, like solutions, is there anything like you don't have to get specific? Specific projects or tools, but like, can you give examples or maybe talk a little bit about your project work and give the people listening some ideas of these applications? Yeah, I mean, I guess there's anytime the big, the first big success I had with dynamo, I think was studying up projects. So I missed a softball game one night and I was really disappointed, but the night was literally spent we behind it was a huge hospital. I forgot the sheet count, but my, I, I had to work overtime, literally dragging sheets and legends on art dragging views in legends on the sheets. Like it was so silly. So yeah, dynamo again was starting to mature. Yeah, just automating that whole process down to a couple clicks was like, whoa, this is crazy. So that's first. So any like little [00:20:00] things like that, especially in things that have like a very defined recipe is good for that. So now I've done that with like setting up electrical panel schedules, sheets, and doing a whole bunch of stuff. Like the annotations, like there's like this annotation. I guess another advanced thing that I did was that was really cool, was working for electrical contractor. So we made a thing called room in a tote. So it'd go into the Revit model and you'd pretty much section the building off by essentially rooms. And the whole idea was we'd get those elements. We'd make cut sheets for all those elements, fill the materials for all those elements. And then in the warehouse. All the elements, the instructions and the tools, like all the materials, I should say, not elements. So actually the materials, the instructions, how to install the materials, the tools need to install those materials would all go in a tote and be shipped to the construction site. And that tote would make its way into the room. And then the room would, the tote would open up and the electrical guys would do their installations. Wow. So you were doing like material. Material stock listing basically from yeah. Revit model. Right. So right from directly from the rev model and these guys the company hired a lot of people from the field to do the detailing work inside Revit. So like they were doing detail work downs, like the bolt. Wow. Which we were pushing our computers so hard to do this. Yeah, it's really cool. That was very advanced. So, yeah, so we'd go through and like make cut sheets, essentially, like get the front view, the side view, the 3d view, the back view, you know, of every electrical panel and then boom, bill of materials. And then, yeah, there's multiple layers of it. So stuff would build up from like, you know, bolt level to component level. And I forgot that little details of how we did it, but yeah. In other words, you went from Revit model to. All the parts that you needed in a tote that got shipped to the construction site. That's really cool. That's for people who maybe aren't as aware of like Revit and the common detail level, I mean, like that's like detail level 500 for, I mean, there's kind of like different gradients of how much detail is you can go from like a 2d annotation with no. Information tied to it all the way down to where Shawn is saying where the bolts and the RTS on a piece of equipment are detailed. And so there's kind of a sliding spectrum and, and that is on the extreme end of like, I'd say most commonly in the architecture, engineering and construction industry. You're at like the middle of that spectrum, probably like 200 or 300. Level of design, you know, you have either 3d models with a limited amount of information or 2d models or at least that's in my experience, what I've seen in the industry. Well, I like they do have analytical models, right? So I've seen more of that happening where I haven't physically modeling stuff, but you're starting to use Revit more as a design tool rather than a documentation tool. Interesting. Yeah. That's if I add on another thing I've done. So my favorite script I've ever wrote in for mechanical engineering is like zoning a building, and it's just speaking of machine learning so that like uses some clustering algorithms, like canines clustering, and it was a silly problem to solve of just how do you like group these things? And that was the solution was clustering. Interesting. Yeah. I think that can snowball. To whole bunch of other stuff, but also just allows you to start doing, using Revit as a design tool. Huh? That's really interesting. So you would establish H V a C zones based on your automation. Yeah. So it's all about data, right? So you have a whole bunch of spaces in a building to zone a building like common spaces usually get grouped together. So spaces like the same thermostat set points, right. Could be grouped together. Exhaust might be grouped together, excuse me. On exhaust fan exterior spaces, right? So north exteriors would be grouped together. South exteriors could be grouped together. Different windows sizes. Right? If you have a, you know, two rooms next to each other one has a lot more windows, then they wouldn't be grouped together, but right. So you can use all this data to kind of start grouping these things together. And then you're left with like these clusters of spaces that now you have to divide evenly. And so you can't just like draw a line in the middle. You have to like try to find the right [00:25:00] clusters of spaces. So that's where the clustering comes. And then yeah. So then you can actually do like a decent zoning and yeah, it got to a point where we took this to production and we actually put like sliders on stuff. So you could limit how much area is on one zone, you know, set a max into that. You could set a maximum to like. The load difference into the spaces you're comparing. There's a whole bunch of sliders on it, so you can start to generate different zone layouts with the same script. Yeah. What I'm trying to get to, what I think is really cool and kind of my north star right now is then taking those zones and going to energy modeling. So now you could run in theory, right? A whole bunch of different. Run energy models on whole bunch of different systems and, you know, even get you know, upfront cost and life cycle cost and all that sounds really familiar to what I was doing at the manufacturing plant. So, Hmm. That's awesome. It that's such a time consuming process. I'm sure. Oh, crazy. All those. When I was a designer again, when I was low on the totem pole, just watching all this stuff, I'm like this, cuz they're doing all the calculations to like, you know, decide which system to pick. And then you have to like write, you know, we, we went through system a, B and C and we're picking system a because of X, Y. and yeah, it was really time consuming. Yeah. So Revit has access now to energy plus, which, which is what I've been working a lot on. That's awesome. Yeah. That's and I can't see, you know, application to this for really so many engineering systems, like, I mean easily for electrical, definitely for fire protection and you know, other disciplines where, you know, Zoning equipment zoning based on whatever parameters you wanna build in, you know, whether it's a voltage drop or, you know, friction loss you know, all that I could see just so much potential for that. Right. It's kind of cool is too. Yeah. I've thought about it with electrical a lot and I haven't done it yet, but like, you know, taking receptacles and grouping those for panels, right. So, yeah, that's why I seen doing the stuff that I was doing with the electrical contractor. Like when I was doing that, I was really interested in like automating the process before the processes that we were automating there. Cause we were just automating the documentation and already I was looking at like, how do you guys know what? Like, cause they were having to put in a lot of information, right. To make room in a tote work. So it's like you just keep on knocking. Let's keep on knocking chunks out of the thing. And that's why the zoning algorithm was so exciting to me, cuz it, it was a huge whole bunch of people told me it couldn't be done. I was like, and I didn't believe that. So, you know, it was just like, it was this huge gap in the workflow and to solve that gap was just really. Isn't that the start of any good story that they told you that it couldn't be done. I 'em there yet. I haven't won the, the automation princess yet, but oh, does that, did they have awards? Is that a thing? I'm just saying the, you know, you're always, oh yeah. A struggle. Virtual, the virtual automation princess. You haven't gathered her out of the castle. Hopeful it'll happen in my career. Right. I mean, you're off to a good start. That's fun. I like thinking about these big ideas and yeah. Holistically looking at how can you take the whole process and kind of make it into discreet chunks for everything to run smoothly is a really fun idea. Yeah. I think that's what I'm really good at. I'm made a dyslexic. And so if you read stuff about like dyslexic and what they're good at. Exactly. What we just said is exactly what like typically dyslexics are good at. And so, yeah, that's kinda like my superpower now is being able to zoom in and out of like these big problems and just make the connections. Yeah, it's fun. I love it. It's solving, it's solving puzzles and problems. All the. Yeah. So I'd like to, you know, hearing your big thoughts on like the future and what you'd like to, to do with your consultancy, but yeah, like what what, what else is getting you excited? And do you want to do with, with automation or like what kind of gets you charged up on a like a project level or just like an, an automation conceptually I'd like to keep chasing that thread. Yeah, I think I, I mean the whole reason I started the consultancy was not to get rich or anything. The whole reason was I wanted to do what I wanted to do and [00:30:00] work on the stuff that I wanted to work on and I couldn't find that avenue. So yeah, I, cause I didn't mention this earlier, but yeah, I quit my job as a mechanical designer cause I knew I wanted to like pursue automation and I, I tried to find a job around Dallas. to do that. And I couldn't find one. So that's when I started the consultancy. As far as motivation, I think my Northern light has always been this vision. I've kind of already described of getting an architect model and then being able to quickly generate a whole bunch of different options for the H VC. I guess branching that off into plumbing and electrical would be awesome. And then I guess the biggest, the like end game would be, if you could do that and start to optimize with all the systems and architecture and structure all in one algorithm. Which man there's a right. I'll know we get there, I think in theory, but of course it's just like, like computational time is a struggle. Maybe with quantum computing, right? Throw another buzz. There's computers are getting bigger and bigger and faster and faster, so right. That is how we're doing buildings. The super computers and just algorithm. Yeah, I guess it gets into like kind your thing of like where the industry's going. And I don't know. That's where I'm, that's where I see it going. That's my Northern light. It's also kind of scary. Right. Once if someone beats me to writing that algorithm, am I a job? But so far it's been kinda proven not to be the case. Right? So. Automation's gonna take her job south park in reference there . Right, but it hasn't, and we are still talking about, you know, we started off talking about the struggles of data and data entry. And so there's like these two forces, there's these entrepreneurial spirits that are pushing really hard for automat. But then there's just like this force holding it back due to like, I almost wanna say like people problem with just understanding, right. Just understanding, you know, how databases work, understanding computer science. Building code, I think is holding us back. Right. I think we need to digitize building code if we're ever gonna. Right. An algorithm like that. Cause right. If you, like, we were talking earlier, if you change one thing that changes the other. Yeah. That's an interesting thought. You know, in something that I've thought about a decent amount, because you know, like if you take a look at this company up codes who is a definitely super somebody. Yeah. So they want to like make the, kind of take a tech angle on the building code. And there's been a lot of litigation over that. Yeah. That is about saying that was huge. The fact that they won, that was huge. Yeah, definitely. So, and I was watching that closely because that kind of, you know, if you don't have free license to work with that data set, then like, what are you gonna do? How can you, how can you innovate on top of that? It's like even upgrades though. Isn't really there to what we need. Like I played around with up codes a lot. And it's great. Yeah. I know they're doing, trying to do some compliancy checks, audience, compliancy checks, but not the, so I've been thinking a lot about, and I was, I went to bill recently and I was asking everybody it's, it's hard to even formulate the question, but like, You start having all these databases connecting, and we all know the pictures that you see, but it's like, how do these things really connect? And then it's like, how do you take that stuff to scale? And so the example is, let's say I have an algorithm that is diffuser is already, I'm gonna make it real simple. That's not how it's written, but like diffusers are placed 10 feet apart, right? That's algorithm supply diffusers based tend to feet apart code. So then you're reading you go, now you're doing a project somewhere else. And this one says a supply diffuser will be placed in the center of the room and the exhaust diffuser will be placed by the door. Right. Human language. How can you build a system at scale where you can just keep on adding those rules in?[00:35:00]  Right. So next, you know what I'm saying? Yeah. Next rule is. Code or whatever, for whatever reason, rule number three is slot diffuser goes on window. You know what I mean? Yeah. The flow control for the such a big process is really difficult. Snowballs on you so quick. And I ran up diffusers cause I was thinking of'em a lot about this with just diffusers recently and yeah, so I've so yeah, bringing back to bill, I asked a whole bunch of people, this question of like, how can we start to do this stuff at scale? And. Make a system that you can just add more layers on top of really simple, right? The only person to give me an answer or a path to even start to go down was Ian from high park. Who's actually the creator of dynamo. I forgot his last name. Sorry, Ian. . Yeah. And so they're working on this thing called Hy par, which is really cool, but they essentially build things that are functions and the functions wrapped inside the functions is kind of like that design logic is the elements that, you know, use that design logic that get placed. And so then their kind of workflows to layer function on top of function, which again is kind of getting back to the idea of. Function a will make floors function. B will divide the floors into offices and corridors and whatever right function maybe Q would be right now put in diffusers function. Z might be right now, route ducks. Yeah, so they have a point and his thing was talking about is he recommended that I look at at the book, I forgot what it's called expert systems. So I've done a little bit look at expert systems. I think that's kind of a route and that's a lot older, the machine learning by the way, expert systems, the book. Yes. There's a cool book. You wanna know the principles of programming principles are programming. I mean, it's not, or it's not even just program. It's more of like a way to structure data in a way. Who's the author expert systems, principles and programming. Josh C G I a R R a T a N O author link up in the show notes. But it's also another thing that I've been thinking a lot about is right. We have a lot, like the turnovers happening in the industry so bad and like, so a lot of senior engineers that have all this knowledge in their head. And, and again, that's another just like building code. Like there's also this database of knowledge. It just like we have building code that's in written word. Right. And that has to be translated into some type of algorithm. There's also the knowledge in all of these engineers heads that has to be translated. Oh, no, sorry. I keep interrupting. I was gonna say, I read a terrible article today. They were posting, they said 25% of the professionals in fire life safety think that their knowledge transfer is being completed from people aging outta the in industry. So like, there's just this terrible. Loss of industry specific knowledge. And like you were saying, this turnover, this, this, this exiting of this longstanding knowledge base from the industry is a huge problem. So yeah, I guess back to the question of like, where do we go or what's gonna look like in a few years, I think it's an open ended question. When I was at built last time, I actually left pretty pessimistic cause. I'm fairly new to the industry on like five, six years experience now and right. COVID happens. So we all didn't see each other for a good two years. It's a tight knit community at that conference and we all come back and we're all talking about the same problem about data and standardization. And how do we implement this in our firm? And I'm just sitting there. Thinking if I retire and I'm still having these conversations, I'm gonna be very disappointed in my life. like, you know what I mean? And I see other people there that have been there for have way more experience than me. I mean, there has been some success of going from like AutoCAD to Revit, but yeah, I Don. I hope we're on like the, you know, exponential path right now. It seems pretty flat, but soon we're gonna take off. So I guess that's to wrap up that question two options, right? We either stay [00:40:00] linear pretty much linear flat as we have been with our efficiency in the AC industry, are all this technology that we've been talking about finally gets us to, you know, go off exponentially. . Yeah, that's interesting. Everything. We need that exponential to happen, right. With everything going on in the world. Yeah. I believe that it's gonna happen. And to, to me, what makes me excited is just like how I can finally see companies or individuals like you even existing, like the fact that they, you and March do exist and you are making good content and automation and like, and then you have companies that are becoming. You know huge, critical successes, like D roots and stuff. So I mean, look back 20 years ago and we didn't even have companies doing custom software. I mean, like in our, in the AEC industry for as a business, right. I consider myself so lucky. It's like, it's incredible. It's just crazy. I came in at the right time for like, there to be this opportunity. Yeah, that's awesome. And so that part about it just makes me think that we're just at the launching point of this automation trend and, you know, 20 years, you know, test it, test it. Mm-hmm wow. You need to look at test it. You should, they should be on your podcast too, by the way. Shout out to them, but they just got 20 million in funding or something. Oh, wow. Yeah. I mean, that's just one example of last start. You brought up up codes co tools kinda working on energy model stuff I'm working on. Actually. Yeah. Another question to ask. Will Autodesk always be the top dog in the game, man? I stop test fit, audit desk, stop test fit from having a booth at this. Esque university. Oh, wow. That's incredible. I I was talking with mod about who's gonna be the Autodesk killer or if there was going to be one in our lifetime and he, you know, kept boiling it down to like, whoever can really captured the holistic picture of the building and all the engineering disciplines would be the, the one to roll them. All right. I think H park there again, Hy Park's another one. They have it. What's really cool to me about test fit. What I've always seen is they're pretty much doing like, like they're doing test fits. That's the name where it comes from mm-hmm . So they're like, you know, you give a site, you draw out a polygon and it just starts like creating multi-families and they keep the ratios between like you know, units and parking stalls and stuff like that. But what I see is this really simple geometry. And back to my original thing about like how routing MEP stuff, how we're doing it wrong with trying to do it. When it's really complex, we have a really complex maze. Well, what test fit's output is, is just like, pretty much like massing. So then I've always wanted to layer MEP on top of that. Cause I, I know what their output's gonna be. Like, I know what I'm getting. Yeah, and it's simple. So those two things right there, those two things makes energy modeling a lot simpler makes you know, like auto writing algorithms, a lot simpler. So I see someone like that's why I see with test fit is because they started the very beginning stage, but now they can just keep adding. One of the things is engineer to build custom softwares and engineers. You don't know what you're getting from the. Right. So that's like the biggest struggle that I see with writing tools for, or writing tools for engineers is right. We all know what the, a architects come through and I'm like writing the input is so variable from what the architect can provide. Right. It's, it's a very frustrating thing. Again, one of those times where I always get told I'm wrong, but I'm always like, or like they don't have control, but I'm like, write it into your bid execution plan. Hey, architect. We expect this brand to carry our fodder wall rating. Is that how you guys do it? If not. Okay. Let's change it. Or can you please do it that way? Here's why, cause I'll save you so much time on the back and forth. You know what I mean? So there's, there's countless countless examples of that. When you go from architect to engineering, you know that the data drop the model transfer. Oh, yeah. It's it can be done just like a hundred different, like a thousand different ways. Why is machine learning when you can just write a simple execution plan, find an architect that understands automation and what's needed. Right. So, yeah, I don't know. I guess the business models have to change. And I'm not an expert on the business models, so yeah, but it's fun to think about, I think that's funny that you're like, let's start with mechanical, cause maybe it's good to be naive and not think about, not understand the [00:45:00] business models. Cause then you can come at it clean perspective. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, I think that's awesome. It makes me really excited to see things like test fit. And for those who are interested in taking a look it's looks like it's mostly kind of residential and building development projects for. Developers and kind of this blocking and programming sort of early design phase, like even before schematic design, kind of programmatic design phase, and you know, anybody who is aware of the money involved in the development for these type of facilities would quickly realize how much market capture and money there is for this type. Service. I mean, it's, it's immediately seems like a no brainer from, you know, whatever three minutes looking at it. I keep on bringing up. Ian Ian told me when, well, like one of the first times was met when he was starting high par was, and I use it all the time in so many presentations. It's like, why are we starting off projects with a blank screen? Right. And test fit's a perfect example. What we could be starting projects off with what is high bar? What do you keep saying? I don't know what that is. A company. It's hard to explain what high is. I think they're struggle explaining what it is. Another person podcast would love to I'll leave. I'm gonna leave it there. I tried to explain it earlier. The business model kinda. I've always looked at the business model as like, huh. Cause they're trying to bring like a community kinda like DMO sense to it, but it's like, huh, it's weird. that's interesting. Well, maybe I'll do a solo cast or something about it, but interesting stuff. Well, I like, you got a lot of different perspectives and people so far that I've never even heard of. So I appreciate all that perspective, but so for people who want to get started. Dynamo or for automation, like where would you suggest that they start or resources that they should investigate? I would start with having a problem and trying to solve it in a simple problem. Not a hard problem. I say this story real quick, or just thing I learned through consulting. I'll like when I first decide to work with a client or not, one of the big red flags that I get is when someone. I want you to auto route MEP for me, like, to me, that's a huge red flag, because if that's just that simple of a statement, they have not taken the time to think about the complexity of that problem, the amount of data that's needed to even start thinking about that problem. Right. Cause what are you, where, where are your sources and where are your targets? Is that data in the model? What do you wanna avoid? How is that data in the model? Are we gonna do it in 3d 2d? Why not 3d? Because it's really com you know what I mean? Like, just, if you ask for something like that, that complex, then you don't have a grasp on what it takes to build tools and you don't have understanding of the data are the geometry behind. So again, if you're gonna, if you're trying to get into automation, start with a task, don't have it be auto routing, have it be like getting data from Excel to rev. That's where I started setting up projects putting legends on sheets, something that's relatively linear, you know? And there's a lot of tools out there. There. There's VBM Excel. There's dynamo. There's Python. Dynamo. If you're working in Revits probably your easiest best shot get hooked. And then yeah, just keep on learning until you can never stop learning. So I guess that's what adds say. Well, I think that's a beautiful point to end on keep learning to never stop learning. Cause that says something that I'm throttling myself. That's gonna be the guarantee, right? The Northern star is to. Northern star. I wanna have the, you know, in star wars when they have like the death star plan, that's what I would, that's what I picture. It's what you want for your flow chart for your process and your dependency. I want, I want a hologram in the middle of a desk where I can flip some knobs and just the MEP infrastructure, right? Just like you say, the generative design stuff just switches and you get. Again, just like the red sheet at manufacturing facility that tells you the critical information. And then you, we all sit around that desk and we debate and we have conversations about, [00:50:00] you know, the right choice and to get there. Yes. Never stop learning. Hmm. Cause it takes so many hats to pull that off. Probably hats that we haven't thought exist. Yeah, I like that. Well, that's a good note, Sean. Well, where can people find you if they want to reach out to you about custom rev solutions or if they wanna learn more about your company? So within email website, YouTube, Twitter usually my name, our Sigma AAC. Cool. Well, I'll throw some links to your consultancy down in the show notes. If people want to come find you, but yeah. Thank you for coming on the show, Sean. Thank you. Good conversation. Thanks for listening, everybody. Be sure to share the episode with a friend, if you enjoyed it, don't forget that fire protection and life safety is serious business. The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are by no means a professional consultation or a codes and standards interpretation. Be sure to contact a licensed professional. If you are getting involved with fire protection and or life safety. Thanks again, and we'll see you next time.  

Catch Up Crew
Nov 26 2021 - Thanksgiving Special

Catch Up Crew

Play Episode Play 15 sec Highlight Listen Later Nov 26, 2021 13:03


In this Thanksgiving Special the Catch Up Crew team wants to thank some of the teens that were on our show during the last couple of months that make it their mission to help others. Listen back to our interviews with Nigel (Klothes for Kids

The Wiggin Sessions
Ian Silverberg—Make Better Decisions with Intentional Living EP31

The Wiggin Sessions

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 52:55


In the modern world, people waste a lot of energy on things we cannot control. Faced with information overload, we get overwhelmed and make poor decisions. A dilemma Ian Silverberg calls Modern Society Syndrome. But what if we shifted our focus to the things we can control? What could we accomplish if we made conscious decisions about where to put our energy?  What would it look like to build an intentional life? Ian is an international real estate investor, entrepreneur and strategic business advisor. He has 30 years of experience building businesses in the health and wellness, real estate and business coaching industries, and he is currently developing a portfolio of intentional communities in New Zealand, Costa Rica and Utah. On this episode of The Wiggin Sessions, Ian joins me to explain how to overcome Modern Society Syndrome and make better decisions through intentional living. He shares his experience working with entrepreneurs to apply intentional living strategies in their personal and professional lives. Listen in to understand how Ian's concept of intentional living shows up in his Harmony Ranch communities and learn how to own your sh*t and take on the role of Chief Energy Officer in your life! Key Takeaways   What inspired Ian's shift from stocks to international real estate Why Ian made the decision to be a Pro Dad and how he teaches his kids to own their sh*t Ian's development of intentional living communities in New Zealand, Costa Rica and Utah The concept of intentional living and why It's so important to Ian Ian's idea of Modern Society Syndrome and how it leads to poor decision-making Ian's concerns around our growing inability to see all sides of a story Ian's experience working with entrepreneurs to apply intentional living strategies in their personal and professional lives How Ian's concept of intentional living shows up in his Harmony Ranch micro-communities Ian's advice on overcoming Modern Society Syndrome to pursue an intentional life What it looks like to take on the role of Chief Energy Officer in your life Connect with Ian Silverberg Harmony Ranch Eden  Ian on LinkedIn Connect with Addison Wiggin Consilience Financial Be sure to follow The Wiggin Sessions on your socials. You can find me on— Facebook @thewigginsessions Instagram @thewigginsessions Twitter @WigginSessions Resources  5-Minute Forecast Agora Financial  Agora's Platinum Reserve Membership  Med Retreat  Alec Ross on The Wiggin Sessions EP029 Rancho Santana La Estancia de Cafayate

The Mind Your Gut Podcast
11. Sound Healing for the Gut with Ian Morris

The Mind Your Gut Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 6, 2021 67:43


Listening to Smile Code: betterhealth 40% off albums Paul Check's podcast with Ian Ian's health story What is music therapy? How Ian practices sound healing What is frequency? Targeting frequency for health Dr. Royal Raymond Rife Wilhelm Riech Frequencies used to heal and target viruses, bacteria and cancer cells The difference between listening to our favorite bands and frequency-minded music Dr. Joe Despenza How frequency-minded music can help with habit changing Schumann Resonance Featuring the Frequency Minded Music of Listening to Smile https://listeningtosmile.com/. Listening to Smile creates a new Frequency Minded Music Monthly in the theme of astrological energy. Get 40% off albums with code betterhealth Sound and Movement Healing for SIBO & IBS on December 7th 4pm PST Click Here or visit Monica's Website

CHARGE Podcast
Ep: 198 Dr. Ian Brooks

CHARGE Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 1, 2021 32:22


Dr. Ian D. Brooks, the CEO and founder of Rhodes Smith Consulting - a Personal and Professional Development firm specializing In behavioral transformations - and the Author of Intention: Building Capabilities to Transform Your Story. For over 24yrs, Dr. Brooks' career has taken him from working in a clinical ward to organizations and people - with the goal of helping individuals build skills toward achieving new heights. His clients include Netflix, Shondaland, Bank of America, Guitar Center, Nike Inc. Sony, and Warner Brothers. His passion for working with individuals seeking expansion and leaders within organizations to develop key skills toward navigating their organization and working with their teams is built on the mastery of intentions and consistency of capabilities. Show Notes: Dr. Brooks works with leaders seeking the pursuit of expansion. He helps people step into the limelight. Look inward and ask yourself what you're passionate about and what you've been good at. Write a letter to your future self about who you've become and what you've achieved. This is a benchmark and comparison point. We make between 2,000 and 10,000 decisions each day. We have to work with intention. It's about purpose. It's about thoughtfulness. It is necessary to build the capability to acknowledge what we're actually discovering. 'The principle of You' asks which characters in your story are you enabling and which do you need to change. What is my now plan? What am I willing to do? Build your plan. Bringing the best of ourselves is sometimes knowing when to step back. We're not going to change all at once. Attunement is about making sure that we have time to go back and to check and adjust. If we aren't learning, we'll stay in the same place. You're going to have to let some things go in order to grow. Let it go not because it's bad but because it's outlived its purpose. You have to trust yourself because there will be situations where no one else will be able to pull you through. It might not be easy, but you can do it. "He who does not lay his foundation beforehand may do so with great ability afterward but with great trouble to the architect and danger to the building." - Niccolo Machiavelli Dr. Ian Brooks' Recharge Round What habit do you think has led to success in your life? Dr. Brooks is very purposeful. What's the simple positive action that you take each day to move forward to achieve your goals? He invests time in himself. He pauses, processes, and reflects. What's your biggest life lesson and what have you learned from it? Dr. Brooks always has a plan and has a good plan, but his path is his path. Connect with Ian: Ian's website rhodessmith.com Facebook Twitter Instagram Learn more about Gary's Mastermind group at goascend.biz/mastermind/

Dodging Sleep - A UK Dodgers Podcast

This week Ian & Ian recap the last week in dodger Baseball, the trade deadline, unwritten rules and look ahead to a big week for the boys in Blue!

baseball ian ian
The Podcast on alanarnette.com
K2 2021: Interview with Graham Zimmerman - West Ridge

The Podcast on alanarnette.com

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 10, 2021 40:04


This summer K2 will see a rare event, an attempt on the fully unclimbed West Ridge. Canadian Ian Welsted and American Graham Zimmerman will make an alpine attempt with no oxygen. While the route has been partially climbed three times, the final few hundred meters have never been completed for various reasons. They leave for Pakistan on June 17. After an extensive acclimatization program which may include climbing the 8000er Broad Peak, they hope to summit near the end of July. Ian and Graham have a long impressive history of difficult technical climbs. Graham has climbed the 7000-meters peaks including: Southwest Ridge of K6 West (7040m), Pakistani Karakoram North ridge of Changi tower (6500m), Pakistani Karakoram Northeast buttress of Mt. Laurens, Alaska Southeast Face of Link Sar (7041m), Pakistani Karakoram. He told me: The Karakoram is the mountain range that I find most inspiring. It is where I have seen some of my biggest success as an alpinist, and it is where I have learned some of my most important lessons.There is one peak in the Karakoram that literally stands above the rest, a peak that I have seen on the horizon from several different summits and has always attracted my attention, the majestic and steep 8611m Chogori, or K2. From the Canadian Alpine Club on Ian: Ian is best known in climbing circles as one of only two Canadians to be awarded the Piolets D'or, for his first ascent of K6 West (7000m) in Pakistan. Born and raised in Brandon Manitoba Ian moved to Chamonix France at the age of 17. From this year in the mountains he returned to Canada to attend Ottawa University and McGill University where he studied economics and philosophy. In his youth, Ian ski raced but was exposed to the full gamut of mountain pursuits in Chamonix. From skiing and snowboarding the backcountry powder of Nelson and Rogers Pass he moved to Canmore in 2005. Quickly integrating into the climbing community, he pursued waterfall ice climbing with 100 day winters before turning his attention to alpine first ascents. With this experience he began casting further afield and undertook expeditions to the Coast Range, Patagonia, Denali, to the Khumbu area of Nepal, and 3 trips to the Pakistani Karakoram. In 2016 Ian began the process of gaining ACMG certification so that he can share his experience gained over 25 years, and his love of the mountains. I was able to get Graham for an extensive interview on the climb. We cover a lot of topics including: His and Ian's history (both Piolet d'Or winners) The style of climbing The route And their plans on how to return from the summit and more Best of luck to Ian and Graham. Let's chat when you get back. Climb On! Alan Memories are Everything

Helping Sells Radio
266 Ian Bower Intentional graphic design improves customer confidence

Helping Sells Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 7, 2021 50:24


Ian Bower is the founder of Graphic Rhythm, an innovative graphic design firm that helps small businesses build customer confidence and loyalty through strong visual content. We talked about the importance of bolting a design agency to your business, how to create images that convert, and most importantly for me, how to communicate effectively with a designer or design agency.More about Ian:Ian on LinkedinHis company Graphic Rhythm Get on the email list at helpingsells.substack.com

Alexa in Canada
The Voicefluencer Show with Ian Utile

Alexa in Canada

Play Episode Listen Later May 5, 2021 12:05


In this episode, Teri welcomes Ian Utile. Ian is a tech entrepreneur and CEO of Attn.Live. Attn.Live is a sonic streaming platform that utilizes social audio to create NFTs while broadcasting live to Alexa and YouTube. Some fun facts about Ian: Ian has 2 boys, lives in a treehouse, and loves building tech companies. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.

The Rent Roll Radio Show
Trash Flow to Cash Flow and a Family Office

The Rent Roll Radio Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 31, 2021 25:10


“I was making somebody else money...and it murdered me.”   In this episode of Rent Roll Radio, host Sterling Chapman welcomes Ian Djuric to the show. Ian is the Principal Investor at Djuric Family Office. Ian shares his journey into real estate investing, how he niched down and filled a gap in the real estate industry, what a family office is, and what he would change if he could go back and do it over.   Connect with Ian:  Ian@djuricfamilyoffice.com Website Instagram TikTok

trash cashflow family office ian ian sterling chapman
HR Data Labs podcast
HR Data Labs podcast - Episode 4 - Regulation S-K: What it is and Why you should listen to this NOW!

HR Data Labs podcast

Play Episode Play 33 sec Highlight Listen Later Oct 22, 2020 27:20 Transcription Available


This episode of HR Data Labs is quite interesting. It is on the new SEC Regulation S-K which mandates the disclosure of material Human Capital issues for FY 2020. To answer that question we are welcoming back Dino Zincarini and introducing Ian Cook from Visier. Dino, as you may remember, is a passionate HR Technologist who works with me and Ian. He’s an advocate for the crucial role that people play in helping companies thrive. Working with Visier, Ian led the development of our market-leading solution, and now leads the overall strategy for the People Analytics business. Let’s dive into the new S-K Regulations and why it’s important that we learn and apply it now. [00:01 - 03:42] Opening Segment ● Let’s get to know Dino and Ian● Ian gives a bit of background on himself and today’s topic [03:43 - 11:25] Summary of S-K and Why it’s Urgent ● Ian breaks down the why the S-K Regulation needs to be applied now ● What makes S-K different from standard operations for SEC requirements ● So what rules do we need to start following? The people element of disclosure [11:26 - 18:01] What to Share With Internal Leaders Based on These External Disclosures● Ian talks about what to disclose internally to managers and why ● The skills we need now as HR managers and how to get them [18:02 - 23:52] Where to Begin, Based on Submitting Material Issues for FY 2020● Ian talks about where to go in order to get the information needed to follow through● Finding the right people for balancing risk ● Tying HR directly to the business [23:53 - 27:18] Closing Segment● Summary of our conversation ● How this affects investor share price ● Final Words Tweetable Quotes:“It’s not just that you gotta work out how to follow what’s being specified, you actually have to work out what you should be disclosing to minimize your risk… there’s a lot of nuance in exactly how you disclose.” - Ian Cook“Get stuff out of the way, get focused, get going!” - Ian Cook“It’s time to free up the people in HR who know the data really well and then match them with people who understand people analytics, and get the party started.” - Dino ZincariniConnect with Dino on LinkedIn.Connect with Ian on LinkedIn. Visit https://www.visier.com/ to learn more about Visier's industry leading People Analytics tools.--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Connect with David Turetsky: LinkedIn TwitterEmail: david@turetskyconsulting.comThis show is brought to you by Turetsky Consulting LLC, our company providing business consulting on Analytics, HR Processes, and Rewards with a focus on getting answers that organizations need by demystifying People Analytics. Did you love what you heard? LEAVE A REVIEWSupport the show (https://www.buymeacoffee.com/hrdatalabs)

It Starts With A Click
11. BONUS EPISODE: Ian Hippolyte on Running a Studio, and Shooting with Flash

It Starts With A Click

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 16, 2020 30:51


Surprise! I’m back with one more bonus episode for season 3. This week, I’m chatting to Ian Hippolyte, a London based fashion photographer who at the age of just 22 already runs his own photo studio. I discovered Ian via his Youtube channel, and ended up binge watching his videos for a couple of hours. He’s incredibly talented, and we chat specifically about shooting with studio lighting in this episode. I hope you love it as much as I do! Download my FREE pitching template here: https://view.flodesk.com/pages/5f355800307c160026261e7b Follow and connect with Ian: Ian’s Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ianhippo/ Ian’s Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCg9BZWMbeK_kv9ZbX-1Y4_g Ian’s website: https://www.ianhippo.com/ Ian’s Studio, Ding Studio’s: https://www.instagram.com/dingstudios/ Follow Olivia: Olivia's Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/oliviabossert Olivia's website: https://www.oliviabossert.com Olivia's education website: https://www.oliviabosserteducation.com 

Animation Industry Podcast
Episode 77: How Ian Boone Got Two Internships At Laika & Worked On Tumble Leaf

Animation Industry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2020 89:53


This chat features stop motion animator Ian Boone, who shares the story of how he got an internship at Laika, twice, and then got to work on Amazon Prime’s Tumble Leaf. He also shares: *Tips to animate what a character is thinking *A simple switch in mindset that will improve your animation performance 10x *The simple trick that will get you animating twice as fast ~[Sponsored Message]~ This episode is sponsored by Bloop Animation, which is an animation learning platform packed with premium online video courses for aspiring animation filmmakers. They have courses for all major animation programs like Maya, Animate CC, Toon Boom, Blender, TVPaint, and many others, as well as some non-software courses like a storyboarding course, Animation foundations course, and even one about making graphic novels, which covers absolutely everything you need to know from start to finish. The courses are all in video-form, so there’s no deadlines or application process, you simply pick a course and start learning in seconds. They even offer a free ebook titled “Making an animated short”, which covers their entire process, step-by-step, of how they made one of their films, from coming up with the idea, to storyboarding, animation and all the way to exporting the film. You can get that book for free at www.bloopanimation.com/animationindustry. You can check out their complete course library at www.bloopanimation.com/courses. *Free ebook on making a short film: www.bloopanimation.com/animationindustry *Bloop Animation’s course library: www.bloopanimation.com/courses ~~ More about Ian: Ian is a stop motion animator from Louisville Kentucky. Ian was an animator on JibJab Bro’s Ask the Storybots, and Amazon Prime’s Tumbleleaf. Currently he is animating on Henry Selick’s Wendell and Wild. On top of this, he is very proud to have used his stop motion skills to further environmental advocacy through the Save the Dells Arizona and Raptors and the Solution projects. Besides stop motion, Ian loves to play the banjo. Watch Ian’s reel on Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/325098136 Follow Ian on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ianbooneanimation/ Check out Ian’s YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCr8xDo7TSmHDNR0hg_8nSrA

Assisted Listening
Ed Harris is a Bitch

Assisted Listening

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 12, 2020 60:13


(Forgot to add to the description that the title comes from alcohol encouraged texts to Ian) Ian and I catch each other up on what we have been up to since the COVID19 madness began. We talk some about Star Trek, Tiger King, Mr. Right, and a plethora of other various film matters. Special background guests include Luna, Winnie, and Watson.   If you would like to contact us on Twitter we can be found @Assisted Listen or you can follow me @damnitpam on either Twitter or Instagram. We also have an e-mail which is assistedlistening@gmail.com Our buddies Austin and Anthony of The Midnight Morning Show can be found @MidnightMorningShow42 on Instagram and @ShowMidnight on Twitter.  --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/AssistedListening/message

Drumeo Gab Podcast
VIP - 04/08/20 - The Positive/Negative Episode

Drumeo Gab Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 8, 2020 60:44


Sign up for only $5 (all proceeds go to the Covid Solidarity Response Fund) to enroll in the Drumeo Learn Songs Faster Masterclass. This is for a limited time only. (Closes April 10th at Midnight)   VIP is created in part by YOU, the audience. Submit your media to Seamus@drumeo.com.   Update on Ian - Ian and his wife Joanna have returned home to Toronto safe and sound. Yay!!   Lou Santiago Jr. talks about his experience working in the ER in NYC during the Covid pandemic.   Here is the link to the podcast where the astronaut Scott Kelly provides advice for people in isolation.   Here is the link to Austin's new podcast.

& Rob’s Your Uncle - An Advice Variety Show
Ep. 40 - ARYU Ian Bein’ Ian, Ian? With Ian Swick

& Rob’s Your Uncle - An Advice Variety Show

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 21, 2019 94:31


Three quick things: 1. We are very sorry about the quality of Ian’s recording.. it took a lot to get it to where it is now. And we are lucky that it wasn’t just AM radio frequencies. I will never understand that. 2. This episode was extraordinarily long reaching over 2 hours so I’m sorry about the un-palatable length. Don’t worry you can just stop around an hour and miss nothing. 3. I’m sorry about the extra 4th thing I’m about to bring up and I understand if you never return. 4. Thank you Ian for joining us on this episode.

bein swick ian ian
Golf Talk Live
GTL - with special guest - Ian Peterson, Founder/CEO of Dialed In Golf Solutions

Golf Talk Live

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2019 58:00


Welcome to Golf Talk Live! Tune in this Thursday at 6:00 PM Central Joining me on this week's show: Ian Peterson - Founder & CEO of Dialed in Golf Solutions. More on Ian: Ian's the Founder and CEO of Dialed in Golf Solutions, he's also a Level 1 and Level 2 Certified TrackMan Professional, Director of Technology at Megan Youkman Golf Academy in Tampa, FL. Over 20+ years in corporate America overseeing Finance and Governance organizations for IT and Insurance companies. Ian took up golf late in life, but fell in love with the game immediately. "I grew up in the Bronx, New York and moved to St. Petersburg, FL in the early 90’s, where I attended Boca Ciega High School and Eckerd College". "I am married to my beautiful wife Ariminta in 2016 and I have has a bright and lovely 14-year old daughter named Rhian". Join me LIVE every Thursday evening from 6:00 - 8:00PM Central http://www.blogtalkradio.com/golftalklive Or listen on any of these social media platforms:  iTunes , Stitcher, Tunein, Castbox, TalkStreamLive & Spotify.

ThirtyFifty's WSET L3 Podcast
Italian Overview with Ian Ian D Agata

ThirtyFifty's WSET L3 Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 28, 2018


Italian wine expert Ian D Agata gives us a brilliant overview of Italy.

italy italian ian ian ian d agata
Revival League Playhouse
Episode 10 - Shorts in a Bunch: Back to School

Revival League Playhouse

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2018 93:02


It’s time to get back in touch with your inner child with the first-ever Revival League/Damn Dirty Geeks Cross-Stream Production: “Shorts in a Bunch: Back to School!” Starring the Revival League regulars (joined by the lovable albeit annoying Kruzunka Wunkas), as well as special guests Frank Conniff and Trace Beaulieu (MST3K’s The Mads), Frank Dietz (Zombie Nightmare/Damn Dirty Geeks) and Carolina Hidalgo (SiriusXM/The Mads Are Back! Podcast), this brand new radio play passes the test when it comes to putting the “ass” back in “class.” From an awkward blind date with a singing social outcast, to a gorilla that knows exactly when to lend a hand, to the single most spot-on Donald Trump impersonation of all time, “Shorts in a Bunch: Back to School” features a busload of silly skits written and performed by the Revival League Podcast gang! Now, there will be a quiz at the end, so spit out that gum, sit up straight, and pay attention! Oh--- also, enjoy the show! STARRING: Frank Conniff – President Donald J Trump Trace Beaulieu – Sledgehammer Salesman Frank Dietz – Tim Doyle Deana Dolphin – Hostess / Grace Kelly Jaime Flowers – Christine / Molly Willy Golden – Ted the Waiter Carolina Hidalgo – Herself Erik Koski – Himself / Narrator / Sledgehammer Enthusiast Emm Ledsam - Couch Gutters Testimonial 3 Robb Maynard - Phantom / Dalton / Chad / Not Justice Shill/ Couch Gutters Testimonial 1 /Oddzo The Odd-Nificent / Bahskar The Louse / House Flipping Ma’am / Himself Ron McAdams – James Lipbalm / Band Member 1 / Couch Gutters Shill /Glam Manatee / Knickerbocker / Himself Morrison, Ian – Ian the Gecko Erica Rodriguez - Couch Gutters Testimonial 2 James Rohling – Himself Robert Swanson – Grappling Hook Enthusiast Smith, Ryan – Mr. Garrison / Christine’s Ex / The Scottsdale Ripper / Jimmy Stewart / Assistance Gorilla / Muscles / Himself Greg Tally – Record Executive / Tim / Jingo The Hawk / Batty Fledermaus / Blover / Algonquin / Dr Elon Muskmelon / Archduke Tally / Petri / Himself ***Warning! This radio play is rated NSFW, Not Safe For Work. It contains strong language and adult situations. Listener discretion is seriously advised.*** *The Legal Eagles over at Shout Factory would like us to point out that this radio play doesn't represent, "Mystery Science Theater," Shout Factory or Alternaversal. It's an unofficial fan production, and we hope you enjoy it. **The views and opinions expressed in this play are solely those of the authors, and do not reflect the official policy or position of any other agency, organization, employer or company.

TeamClearCoat - An Automotive Enthusiast Podcast by Two Car Nerds
128-Dave Teases Ian, Ian Doles Out Facts, And We Soak In Our Poor Timing

TeamClearCoat - An Automotive Enthusiast Podcast by Two Car Nerds

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2018 74:04


Episode 128-Cliffhanger!!! Look, we have a bit of an inverse Midas touch. We worked hard to line up an interview with one of the best voices in automotive journalism, Alanis King. The very next day with our interview stored safely away, F1 announced that they were no longer going to use Grid Girls. Sigh. It would have been nice to reverse the order of those events, but let's not get hung up on things we can't change. Focusing on the things that we can change, Ian sprung into action like a ski jumper duct-taped to a social justice warrior. For some idiotic reason, the Grid Girl issue seemed to be the breaking point for morons on the internet motivating them to start complaining; rationalizing their arguments for how ultimately they think they're entitled to objectify women in any venue that they enjoy. Folks, we have a lot of reasons to enjoy being automotive enthusiasts, it's a great hobby. Unfortunately, there are a lot of unsavory elements of that culture that make it inaccessible and unapproachable to people outside of it, in addition to making it super difficult for people in that culture that aren't misogynist xenophobes. Let's freaking fix this. Our community has disappointed us with its reaction to the F1 announcement, so let's keep the focus on moving the culture forward in a positive direction. Car culture is changing, culture is changing, and we have an opportunity to be an example. Let's not make decisions that we wish we could reverse later on. Buy stuff with our hashtag brand on it! TeamClearCoat website AutoWerkz Blog TeamClearCoat Drivetribe TeamClearCoat YouTube Channel TeamClearCoat Instagram TeamClearCoat Twitter TeamClearCoat Facebook TeamClearCoat Video Game Recommendations on Steam

Stage One Startup: Interviews with Influential Entrepreneurs & Innovative Startups
EP011: Ian Fielding-Calcutt - How to Start a Luxury Bespoke Tailoring Company

Stage One Startup: Interviews with Influential Entrepreneurs & Innovative Startups

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 11, 2016 65:05


Today’s Guest: So in today’s episode, we have the pleasure of interviewing Mr Ian Fielding-Calcutt, the Founder of a million pound luxury bespoke tailoring company called Fielding & Nicholson. Who is Ian? Ian started the company from scratch and now has over ten years industry experience. His mantra is that the customer is always right and he strives to go the extra mile every time to ensure his clients are getting a first class service. What is Fielding & Nicholson? Fielding & Nicholson work closely with some of the best British cloth merchants, all of which have access to an extensive range of cloths and offer the finest made in the old English mills in Huddersfield, Yorkshire. Fielding & Nicholson’s consultants work their business around the customer. They visit you in the comfort and privacy of your office, home or studio & your garments are delivered to you and fitted in person. For full show notes, visit stageonestartup.com/ep011

Classical Guitar Insider
Episode 76 Ian Ian O’Sullivan

Classical Guitar Insider

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 29, 2016 75:14


It's Shark Week! Hawaiian hybrid classical guitarist and spear fisherman Ian O'Sullivan told me he eats Spam Sushi! Gross Ian. Gross. 

gross hawaiian o'sullivan ian o ian ian it's shark week ian o'sullivan
MyCockpit's Podcast
MyCockpit Podcast "Tips And Discussions" Episode 3, with Ian (IAN@737NG)

MyCockpit's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2010


In this 3rd Edition of "Tips And Discussions", Vybhav again talks to the famous Ian, well know for his wonderful B737 project. This Podcast is about "Tips and Discussions" on how to plan and build your cockpit. Many new builders ask questions, such as where to start, how much will cost, how much time will it take, and many, many more questions. This edition also includes a document which you are encouraged to download and keep as a reference as you will be refered to this document during the podcast. This will serve as a useful handout. The PDF Handout can be downloaded at the following address: http://mycockpit.org/podcasts/final/TipsAndDiscussions/MyCockpit_Podcast_Tips_and_Discussions_with_IAN-003.pdf

tips b737 ian ian
MyCockpit's Podcast
MyCockpit Podcast "Tips And Discussions" Episode 1, with Ian (IAN@737NG)

MyCockpit's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2010


In this Edition "Tips And Discussions", Vybhav talks to the famous Ian, well known for his wonderful B737 project. This Podcast is about "Tips and Discussions" on how to plan and build your cockpit. Many new builders ask questions, such as where to start, how much will cost, how much time will it take, and many, many more questions.

tips b737 ian ian
MyCockpit's Podcast
MyCockpit Podcast "Tips And Discussions" Episode 2, with Ian (IAN@737NG)

MyCockpit's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2010


In this 2nd Edition of "Tips And Discussions", Vybhav again talks to the famous Ian, well know for his wonderful B737 project. This Podcast is about "Tips and Discussions" on how to plan and build your cockpit. Many new builders ask questions, such as where to start, how much will cost, how much time will it take, and many, many more questions.

tips b737 ian ian