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Kurfii kana jalatti: Haala dhaabbileen siyaasaa garagaraa kan akka IHAPA, MEISON, ICHAT naanno sanatti sossohaa turan Hogganoonni ABO warri magaala lakkise gama dirree dhufuu eegaluu Warri Somalee wajjin tures as-dacha'uu Barnootni siyaasaafii seenaa tartiiban kennamuu eegaluu Humna waraana tartiibaan ijaaruu Marii jila biyya alaatti bobbahu qopheessuu Gaaga'ama jaallan jiddutti mulla'ateefi faca'iinsa waraanaa J. Jaarraafii J. Leencoon walduraa duubaan gama Jabuutti deemuufi taateewwan qabsoo keessatti mull'atan heddu Jaal Dhugoomsaan nuun qooddata Dhihaadhaa!
It's episode 400 for our little podcast, so this week Melanie and I do a little reminiscing and reflecting. We're delighted as always to visit with our most frequent podcast guest, Travis Cottrell, and we also revisit some audio clips that feature some of our favorite podcast moments. Plus we catch up on what's been going on in San Antonio and Birmingham. On top of all that, I share an airport story that continues to warm my heart, and it's my turn for Five Favorites. Hope you enjoy - and thanks, as always, for listening! - Join Us on Patreon - Our Amazon Shop Show Notes: - Travis Cottrell - Travis' first episode with us - iChat - what we first used to record - Vonda Braithwaite - "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" - Retha Nichole, our business coach - Pawhuska, OK - the episode with Juan - the episode with Phil Rosenthal - the episode with Mike Leach - Brats - Patrick Ta Major Headlines Double Take creme powder and blush duo in Just Enough - floral palazzo pants - Back 70 Teddy sneakers (I also love the hot pink) - all-in-one spray and wipe cleaner - H&M oxford buttondown Sponsors: - Boll and Branch - use this link for 20% your first order + free shipping - AG1 - use this link for a free one year's supply of vitamin D1 and K2 + 5 free travel packs - Zbiotics - use code BIGBOO for 15% off - Factor - use code BIGBOO50 to get 50% off your first box + 20% off your second month
Kurfii 11ffaa tana gubbaatti Jaal Nagariin seenaa qabsaawoonni ICHAT dahattuun sossohaa turan mootummaan DERGU irratti bobbaa gaggeessiteefii qunnamtiin jaallan jidduu kan magalaa fi dirree adda cite nuun qooddata. Dabalats tattaaffi jaallan hafan quunnamtii deebisanii diriirsuuf godhaa turan irraahis ball'innaan dubbata. Dhihaadhaa! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ilmaormaa/message
Kurfii kana jalatti Jaal Nagariin seenaa qabsaawoota dirqama adda-addaa itti laatame fudhachuun jaarmayaa ICHAT fii ABO jalatti qabsoof bobbahanirraa dubbata. Dhihaadhaa! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/ilmaormaa/message
Ever wonder why you said yes when you wanted to say no? If you tend towards helping others before helping yourself, this is the episode for you. In this Episode we chat with Allie Andrews about Fawning, why people-pleasing shows up, and much more. Allie helps individuals and couples have better sex and feel happier and more secure in themselves and their relationships. Allie is a Certified Somatica® Sex and Relationship Coach, Certified Yoga Teacher, and Certified Holistic Health Coach with her Master's in Education. In this Episode Allie and I Chat about: Fawning/People-Pleasing in relationships Embodied Boundaries Safety Allies Social Media Links: Instagram Facebook Allies Website and Freebies: Website Boundary Map Masterclass Sexy Conversation Calls (Consent Practice) Monique's Socials Instagram Facebook LinkedIn Building Regulation Presale Ends May 31st Book a Gifted Consultation
"It's just wild to look back at all of the things that I've learned throughout my career as an EA and then some of the changes and differences that I've noticed coming into the tech space."In this episode, Ichat with the amazing Kaleen Skersies about her journey as a career EA, transitioning from the private service industry to supporting the go-to-market operations team at Splunk. Our fun conversation delves into the challenges and rewards of navigating the ever-changing tech space, the importance of mentorship and support for administrative professionals, and the need for a structured administrative support community within organizations.So, grab a seat and join in as Kaleen and I delve into these fascinating topics and share our thoughts with you. Get ready to be inspired!Connect with Kaleen:https://www.linkedin.com/in/kaleenskersies/Support the showVisit the Have A Seat website for more conversations or Have A Seat with me and register to be a guest at: www.haveaseatconversations.com.Thanks for listening!
I Chat with Andrew about fat loss, why people fail on their journey and he uncovers how simple it is for long term results. Andrew writes for T-Nation and Generation Iron. These magazines have been around for years, in fact these were two of the first magazines that I used to read as a newby. Get a pen and paper ready and tune in, get ready for the truth and hear what we have to say with 30 years experience between the both of us.
This week I am SO happy to be sharing my conversation with Nash Jenkins! Nash is a fellow alum of Johns Hopkins and as in the Writing Seminars program. Although we only overlapped briefly, I was so excited to hear the news that he had published his debut novel Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos. "When Foster Dade arrives at Kennedy, an elite boarding school in New Jersey, the year is 2008. Barack Obama begins his first term as president. Kanye West's “Graduation” bumps from the newly debuted iPhone; teenagers share confidences and rumors over BlackBerry Messenger and iChat. The internet as we know it today is slowly emerging from its cocoon. So, too, is Foster emerging—a transfer student and lonely young man, Foster is stumbling through adolescence in the wake of his parents' scandalous divorce and his own budding anxiety disorders. But Foster soon finds himself in the company of Annabeth Whittaker and Jack Albright, the twin centers of Kennedy's social gravity, who take him under their wing to navigate the cliques and politics of the carelessly entitled. Eighteen months later, Foster will be expelled, following a tragic scandal that leaves Kennedy and its students irreparably changed. But when a nameless student inherits Foster's old dorm room, he begins an epic years long investigation into what exactly happened. Through Foster's blog posts, playlists, text archives, and interviews with former classmates, and the narrator's own obsessive imagination, a story unfurls—Foster's, yes, but also one that asks us who owns our personal narratives, and how we shape ourselves to be the heroes or villains of our own stories. Foster Dade Explores the Cosmos is about privilege and power, the pitfalls of masculinity and its expectations, and, most distinctly, how we create the mythologies that give meaning to our lives. With his debut novel, Nash Jenkins brilliantly captures the emotional intensities of adolescence in the dizzying early years of the twenty-first century." Like myself, Nash as a new sophomore at a prestigious boarding school in New Jersey, and his time at Lawrenceville made an incredible impact on his life and his writing. In this podcast interview, Nash and I talk about the unique and complex nature of the boarding school experience, as well as the perfect and painful process of being a teenager with little sense of direction. I can honestly say that Foster Dade is one of the most beautiful and powerful books I have read in a very long time (and I have been reading a lot). To learn more about Nash and to buy his new book, you can visit: http://www.nashjenkins.com/ and follow him on Instagram @pnashjenkins. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/zoescurletis/support
Join me as I Chat to Scotland's very own Rubi TBBS. We discuss her journey into wrestling through love for it and also it's medical benefits to her health From wrestling in Scotland to Wrestling in Denmark And lots more. We also sidebar into the Buffy universe and View Askew films --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/worktheleftsidepod/message
Come Have a listen , while Holly , and I Chat a bit about The Evil Dead Rise . Its, a fun , dark, and Wicked amounts of blood … --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rhofh/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/rhofh/support
The world of technology is expanding, and we're seeing a convergence of deep tech with traditional software and computation. Today, we're speaking with Andrew Busey, co-founder of Form Bio and Colossal Biosciences, two companies that sit at this intersection. With over 25 years of experience in the industry, Andrew has been a driving force behind some of the internet's most significant technologies. Andrew's career has taken him through several pivotal moments in tech history, including the early days of the internet, gaming, AI, and now bio.Episode HighlightsAndrew's career spanned key tech products such as Mosaic (the first web browser), iChat (the first web-based chat system), and Zynga (one the most popular gaming companies of the social media era)Software entrepreneurs are increasingly applying techniques, business models, and more to the bio, quantum, and AI fieldsHis approach is to make Reese's Peanut Butter Cups “…software is either the chocolate or the peanut butter and then I'm finding some other thing to combine with it to make something that tastes great and is novel”Form Bio, the first spinout from Colossal Biosciences, aims to solve the badly managed data issue in the biotech industryAI's impact on business and society is shifting toward distributed vertical intelligenceThe availability of remote work technology may lead to a more distributed talent pool and impact the future of Austin as a tech hubWhat's next Austin? “I think the big thing we're gonna see is fabs and Musk-related companies evolving here and how that affects the mix of things will be very interesting.”Episode linksAndrew Busey: Twitter, LinkedInForm Bio: Website, Twitter, LinkedInColossal Biosciences: Website, Twitter, LinkedIn Austin Next Links: Website, X/Twitter, YouTube, LinkedIn
Her many books will make you feel good. Very spiritual and sweet. We all have those deep feelings with our pets, and she describes them beautifully. She is a very clever writer who truly enjoys her craft. It was a fun interview. EPISODE NOTES: Join Me as I Chat with Author Allia Zobel Nolan
19 Reasons to Listen/Watch/Like/Subscribe... Welcome Writer/Youtuber/Podcaster, Dave Musson to the Podcast! In this Constant Reader Interview, Dave & I Chat: -90s King (The Greatest Decade?) -Favorite Stephen King Duo -Which Stephen King Character Needs Extra Spotlight? -Cranky King and Larger Body Characters -Which 70s King Title is Dave's #1? More from Dave Musson: Youtube: Dave Reads King Apple Podcasts: Constant Writers Please Give the Show some Love and Post a 5-Star Rating on Your Favorite Podcast Outlet! End Credits: (Keys of Moon) Sound Cloud Twitter: @UnderatedSKPod Insta: UnderratedSKPodcast Kim C. will Return with the Library Policeman!
Another guest star! This time, Matt (aka wicknix) of PowerPC web browser fame and other fascinating projects. He's is probably best known at this point for providing updated builds of TenFourFox in the form of InterWebPPC. Not only is he active and helpful on the MacRumors PowerPC Forums, he was also kind enough to spend some time with us on here on the show. Thanks again, Matt, for the great conversation! We also discuss our efforts to resurrect the venerable iChat AV to make it work with audio and video chat again! Wicknix's Github Projects: https://github.com/wicknix?tab=repositories Wicknix's contributions to the Macintosh Garden: https://macintoshgarden.org/author/wicknix Email: forkbombpodcast@gmail.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/forkbombpodcast/ Twitter: @forkbombpodcast https://twitter.com/forkbombpodcast Or leave us a message in the comments section below!
This Week I give you a few updates from My Adventures in Metal Detecting and I Chat about Minelab's recent release of the ManticoreBut before we start I want to thank you for listening to the podcast and I hope you enjoy the episode this week If you want to support the show there are many options available from the links in the episode notes below and if you want to interact with me and the show that information is there too but most importantly If you like this content please don't hesitate to tell your friends and don't forget to hit that subscribe button.Buy From KellyCoDetectors.com Helps the Show Stay aliveSupport the show
All Hail Stephen King KA-WEEN, Julia Marchese!!! We Celebrate Our 100th Episode with the Writer/Director of, "I Know What You Need!" In this 100th Episode & Constant Reader Interview, Julia M. & I Chat: -1st Stephen King Title at the Age of 11! -Underrated Bachman For the Win! -Adapting a Dollar Baby -Why is The Long Walk So Dang Good? -The Long Journey of the Dark Tower -The 90s Actor We Both Crush On For More Julia Marchese: www.juliamarchese.com Twitter/Instagram @juliacmarchese Please Say Hello! underratedsk@gmail.com Give The Show some Love and Post a 5-Star Rating on Apple Podcasts! Twitter @UnderratedSKPod Instagram @underrated_sk_podcast
In this episode Ichat about day 14 Roscommon. More lessons learned to take forward to the next 18 days. An injur comes back to remind me that this is a loooong project and to keep focused. Peace and love, Con.
I Chat with JILL TRACEY On Hot Talk about my 21 years On The B Side & Plans For The B Side Summer Of Soul
I Chat with JILL TRACEY On Hot Talk about my 21 years On The B Side & Plans For The B Side Summer Of Soul
In this episode I Chat with Emily Sewell from Intentionally Well https://intentionallywell.org and she shares how one of the hardest seasons of her life taught her that it's ok to not love every season you're in. That if you are struggling it doesn't make you any less of a wife, mom or friend. We chat about her move across the country with three young kids, how hard it can be to make new friends, and sometimes there is a physiological reason for how you're feeling.Emily also has a wonderful instagram account @intentionally_well_blog.
In this episode I Chat with Mira about her life and how she got into Holistic medicine and her journey from being born in Africa before living in India and getting married after university and moving to Dubai for several year then emigrating to Canada where she lives.
In this episode I Chat with Cetvies who lives in France and went from high school, to work, to university as a mature student? from life in shrinking countryside to polluted big cities and the fight to go on writing and researching in between. She is a blogger and a writer, the fight in her life, the one she chose at least, was this one. Here is the link to her book. www.inthenameofhumanrights.com
Na první operní dobrodružství pro nejmenší děti a jejich rodiče zve nová inscenace Jihočeského divadla v Českých Budějovicích. Mimi opera slibuje imerzivní zážitek i odlišný přístup k opernímu žánru. Jak toto nevšední dílo vznikalo a bavilo malé diváky? Na otázky Daniela Jägera odpovídají iniciátor projektu a šéf budějovického operního souboru Tomáš Ondřej Pilař, skladatel Lukáš Sommer, režisér Jiří Ondra a publicistka Helena Havlíková.
Na první operní dobrodružství pro nejmenší děti a jejich rodiče zve nová inscenace Jihočeského divadla v Českých Budějovicích. Mimi opera slibuje imerzivní zážitek i odlišný přístup k opernímu žánru. Jak toto nevšední dílo vznikalo a bavilo malé diváky? Na otázky Daniela Jägera odpovídají iniciátor projektu a šéf budějovického operního souboru Tomáš Ondřej Pilař, skladatel Lukáš Sommer, režisér Jiří Ondra a publicistka Helena Havlíková.
I Chat with Andrew about fat loss, why people fail on their journey and he uncovers how simple it is for long term results. Andrew writes for T-Nation and Generation Iron. These magazines have been around for years, in fact these were two of the first magazines that I used to read as a newby. Get a pen and paper ready and tune in, get ready for the truth and hear what we have to say with 30 years experience between the both of us. Download my FREE 53 fat loss hack cheat sheet https://freetraining.name/optinyryc3cmp
Försnack Jocke hittar en B-film Isaberg över helgen - fullt mentalt semesterläge från nu och framåt? Jocke har fått första Covid-sprutan. 5G-täckningen har aldrig varit bättre. Apple återgår till campus. Christian åter på kontoret Trådlös CarPlay med dongel Forndata Jocke håller på och konsoliderar konton och annat till en enda e-postadress. Klart utmanande, i synnerhet när det ska skickas bekräftelser till domäner han inte äger längre… 20 års kluddande med domäner och annat som nu kommer och biter en i rumpan Playdate - oj vad gullig den ser ut Panic gjorde fin video också, såklart Ämnen WWDC SPECIAL: Spatial audio Swift playgrounds kan nu bygga appar på iPad Mail privacy protection - gömmer IP-adress, om du öppnat mail, mm (“lånat” från Hey.com månne?). Safari gömmer IP-adress också men hur det ska fungera i praktiken vette tusan Safari gömmer allt gränssnitt - iPadOS gör multitasking upptäckbart Siri behandlar röstigenkänning on-device istället för som tidigare via Apples servrar. iCloud - Account recovery man kan ange kontaktpersoner som får en återställningskod. Kan även fungera om man dör så kan nån annan öppna ditt konto. iCloud+: Private Relay. Egen domän för e-post. Hide my email - skapar en random mailadress för nyhetsbrev och sånt. Homekit secure video stödjer oändligt antal kameror. Universal control - Det magiska muspekartricket Shortcuts kommer till Mac - med stöd för att köra skript och ha sig Shared with you - läslista som en magisk bakgrundsfunktion i hela OS:et Live text i bilder - kan bli något Allt i Monterey kommer tydligen inte till Intel-Macar, har dock inte läst vad än Apple jobbar på AR/VR - fotogrammatristöd (Object capture, som API dessutom, så man kan skapa sina egna objekt enkelt i en app), och saker som handigenkänning med kameror som session under veckan Film och TV Mare of Easttown på HBO. 8,6 på IMDB - Christian har strecktittat Länkar Unit 11 Blackstock boneyard Isaberg Urbergskulle Apple återgår till kontoret i höst Christians dongel för trådlös Carplay i bilen Dongel som passar Jockes bil Forndata Playdate Playdate-“keynoten” WWDC-keynoten State of the union-videon Ichat theatre Quickpath Mobileme .mac SPF-records Mare of Easttown L.A. confidential Memento Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-262-utvecklarergonomi-copy.html.
Texts are sent and received using SMS, or Short Message Service. Due to the amount of bandwidth available on second generation networks, they were limited to 160 characters initially. You know the 140 character max from Twitter, we are so glad you chose to join us on this journey where we weave our way from the topmast of the 1800s to the skinny jeans of San Francisco with Twitter. What we want you to think about through this episode is the fact that this technology has changed our lives. Before texting we had answering machines, we wrote letters, we sent more emails but didn't have an expectation of immediate response. Maybe someone got back to us the next day, maybe not. But now, we rely on texting to coordinate gatherings, pick up the kids, get a pin on a map, provide technical support, send links, send memes, convey feelings in ways that we didn't do when writing letters. I mean including an animated gif in a letter meant melty peanut butter. Wait, that's jif. Sorry. And few technologies have sprung into our every day use so quickly in the history of technology. It took generations if not 1,500 years for bronze working to migrate out of the Vinča Culture and bring an end to the Stone Age. It took a few generations if not a couple of hundred years for electricity to spread throughout the world. The rise of computing took a few generations to spread from first mechanical then to digital and then to personal computing and now to ubiquitous computing. And we're still struggling to come to terms with job displacement and the productivity gains that have shifted humanity more rapidly than any other time including the collapse of the Bronze Age. But the rise of cellular phones and then the digitization of them combined with globalization has put instantaneous communication in the hands of everyday people around the world. We've decreased our reliance on paper and transporting paper and moved more rapidly into a digital, even post-PC era. And we're still struggling to figure out what some of this means. But did it happen as quickly as we identify? Let's look at how we got here. Bell Telephone introduced the push button phone in 1963 to replace the rotary dial telephone that had been invented in 1891 and become a standard. And it was only a matter of time before we'd find a way to associate letters to it. Once we could send bits over devices instead of just opening up a voice channel it was only a matter of time before we'd start sending data as well. Some of those early bits we sent were things like typing our social security number or some other identifier for early forms of call routing. Heck the fax machine was invented all the way back in 1843 by a Scottish inventor called Alexander Bain. So given that we were sending different types of data over permanent and leased lines it was only a matter of time before we started doing so over cell phones. The first cellular networks were analog in what we now think of as first generation, or 1G. GSM, or Global System for Mobile Communications is a standard that came out of the European Telecommunications Standards Institue and started getting deployed in 1991. That became what we now think of as 2G and paved the way for new types of technologies to get rolled out. The first text message simply said “Merry Christmas” and was sent on December 3rd, 1992. It was sent to Richard Jarvis at Vodafone by Neil Papworth. As with a lot of technology it was actually thought up eight years earlier by Bernard Ghillabaert and Friedhelm Hillebrand. From there, the use cases moved to simply alerting devices of various statuses, like when there was a voice mail. These days we mostly use push notification services for that. To support using SMS for that, carriers started building out SMS gateways and by 1993 Nokia was the first cell phone maker to actually support end-users sending text messages. Texting was expensive at first, but adoption slowly increased. We could text in the US by 1995 but cell phone subscribers were sending less than 6 texts a year on average. But as networks grew and costs came down, adoption increased up to a little over one a day by the year 2000. Another reason adoption was slow was because using multi-tap to send a message sucked. Multi-tap was where we had to use the 10-key pad on a device to type out messages. You know, ABC are on a 2 key so the first type you tap two it's the number the next time it's an A, the next a B, the next a C. And the 3 key is D, E, and F. The 4 is G, H, and I and the 5 is J, K, and L. The 6 is M, N, and O and the 7 is P, Q, R, and S. The 8 is T, U, and V and the 9 is W, X, Y, and Z. This layout goes back to old bell phones that had those letters printed under the numbers. That way if we needed to call 1-800-PODCAST we could map which letters went to what. A small company called Research in Motion introduced an Inter@active Pager in 1996 to do two-way paging. Paging services went back decades. My first was a SkyTel, which has its roots in Mississippi when John N Palmer bought a 300 person paging company using an old-school radio paging service. That FCC license he picked up evolved to more acquisitions through Alabama, Loisiana, New York and by the mid-80s growing nationally to 30,000 subscribers in 1989 and over 200,000 less than four years later. A market validated, RIM introduced the BlackBerry on the DataTAC network in 2002, expanding from just text to email, mobile phone services, faxing, and now web browsing. We got the Treo the same year. But that now iconic Blackberry keyboard. Nokia was the first cellular device maker to make a full keyboard for their Nokia 9000i Communicator in 1997, so it wasn't an entirely new idea. But by now, more and more people were thinking of what the future of Mobility would look like. The 3rd Generation Partnership Project, or 3GPP was formed in 1998 to dig into next generation networks. They began as an initiative at Nortel and AT&T but grew to include NTT DoCoMo, British Telecom, BellSouth, Ericsson, Telnor, Telecom Italia, and France Telecom - a truly global footprint. With a standards body in place, we could move faster and they began planning the roadmap for 3G and beyond (at this point we're on 5G). Faster data transfer rates let us do more. We weren't just sending texts any more. MMS, or Multimedia Messaging Service was then introduced and use grow to billions and then hundreds of millions of photos sent encoded using technology like what we do with MIME for multimedia content on websites. At this point, people were paying a fee for every x number of messages and ever MMS. Phones had cameras now so in a pre-Instagram world this was how we were to share them. Granted they were blurry by modern standards, but progress. Devices became more and more connected as data plans expanded to eventually often be unlimited. But SMS was still slow to evolve in a number of ways. For example, group chat was not really much of a thing. That is, until 2006 when a little company called Twitter came along to make it easy for people to post a message to their friends. Initially it worked over text message until they moved to an app. And texting was used by some apps to let users know there was data waiting for them. Until it wasn't. Twilio was founded in 2008 to make it easy for developers to add texting to their software. Now every possible form of text integration was as simple as importing a framework. Apple introduced the Apple Push Notification service, or APNs in 2009. By then devices were always connected to the Internet and the send and receive for email and other apps that were fine on desktops were destroying battery life. APNs then allowed developers to build apps that could only establish a communication channel when they had data. Initially we used 256 bytes in push notifications but due to the popularity and different implementation needs, notifications could grow to 2 kilobytes in 2015 and moved to an HTTP/2 interface and a 4k payload in 2015. This is important because it paved the way for iChat, now called iMessage or just Messages - and then other similar services for various platforms that moved instant messaging off SMS and over to the vendor who builds a device rather than using SMS or MMS messaging. Facebook Messenger came along in 2011, and now the kids use Instagram messaging, Snapchat, Signal or any number of other messaging apps. Or they just text. It's one of a billion communications tools that also include Discord, Slack, Teams, LinkedIn, or even the in-game options in many a game. Kinda' makes restricting communications a bit of a challenge at this point and restricting spam. My kid finishes track practice early. She can just text me. My dad can't make it to dinner. He can just text me. And of course I can get spam through texts. And everyone can message me on one of about 10 other apps on my phone. And email. On any given day I receive upwards of 300 messages, so sometimes it seems like I could just sit and respond to messages all day every day and still never be caught up. And get this - we're better for it all. We're more productive, we're more well connected, and we're more organized. Sure, we need to get better at having more meaningful reactions when we're together in person. We need to figure out what a smaller, closer knit group of friends is like and how to be better at being there for them rather than just sending a sad face in a thread where they're indicating their pain. But there's always a transition where we figure out how to embrace these advances in technology. There are always opportunities in the advancements and there are always new evolutions built atop previous evolutions. The rate of change is increasing. The reach of change is increasing. And the speed changes propagate are unparalleled today. Some will rebel against changes, seeking solace in older ways. It's always been like that - the Amish can often be seen on a buggy pulled by a horse so a television or phone capable of texting would certainly be out of the question. Others embrace technology faster than some of us are ready for. Like when I realized some people had moved away from talking on phones and were pretty exclusively texting. Spectrums. I can still remember picking up the phone and hearing a neighbor on with a friend. Party lines were still a thing in Dahlonega, Georgia when I was a kid. I can remember the first dedicated line and getting in trouble for running up a big long distance bill. I can remember getting our first answering machine and changing messages on it to be funny. Most of that was technology that moved down market but had been around for a long time. The rise of messaging on the cell phone then smart phone though - that was a turning point that started going to market in 1993 and within 20 years truly revolutionized human communication. How can we get messages faster than instant? Who knows, but I look forward to finding out.
In episode 19 I Chat with the owner Justin who owns and runs Low Life League. We talk about how and when he started, how he came up with the name as well as things he has learnt so far in running the brand.
In this episode I Chat with Farhan Gilani who recently recreated the Iconic Song Jab Dil Mile from Yaadein. Farhan is a Saudi based singer, composer and song writer, signed to Tips Industries Limited - Music Label which is one of the largest corporate houses in the field of music and films, in India. Farhan rose to prominence worldwide with his most recent romantic single "Udd Chalein", his debut after signing to Tips Industries . Farhan was chosen by the makers of Bollywood's one of the biggest film franchise " Race3 " , " Tips Industries Limited and Salman Khan Films " to do an Arabic Version of the Party Anthem " Heeriye " from the film . The high energy dance track "Heeriye Arabic Version" became a huge chartbuster within India and the Middle East. The visuals of the song show Farhan's electrifying performance, combined with Salman Khan's swag and Jacqueline Fernandez's sizzling moves. Farhan , to date is the only Urdu / Hindi and Punjabi singer , who can sing in Arabic as well . Currently, Farhan is working on several Bollywood playbacks.
@zaramizrahi and I Chat the biz Family Guy, American Dad and Burritos! So fun
Steve Jobs left Apple in 1985. He co-founded NeXT Computers and took Pixar public. He then returned to Apple as the interim CEO in 1997 at a salary of $1 per year. Some of the early accomplishments on his watch were started before he got there. But turning the company back around was squarely on him and his team. By the end of 1997, Apple moved to a build-to-order manufacturing powered by an online store built on WebObjects, the NeXT application server. They killed off a number of models, simplifying the lineup of products and also killed the clone deals, ending licensing of the operating system to other vendors who were at times building sub-par products. And they were busy. You could feel the frenetic pace. They were busy at work weaving the raw components from NeXT into an operating system that would be called Mac OS X. They announced a partnership that would see Microsoft invest $150 million into Apple to settle patent disputes but that Microsoft would get Internet Explorer bundled on the Mac and give a commitment to release Office for the Mac again. By then, Apple had $1.2 billion in cash reserves again, but armed with a streamlined company that was ready to move forward - but 1998 was a bottoming out of sorts, with Apple only doing just shy of $6 billion in revenue. To move forward, they took a little lesson from the past and released a new all-in-one computer. One that put the color back into that Apple logo. Or rather removed all the colors but Aqua blue from it. The return of Steve Jobs invigorated many, such as Johnny Ive who is reported to have had a resignation in his back pocket when he met Jobs. Their collaboration led to a number of innovations, with a furious pace starting with the iMac. The first iMacs were shaped like gumdrops and the color of candy as well. The original Bondi blue had commercials showing all the cords in a typical PC setup and then the new iMac, “as unPC as you can get.” The iMac was supposed to be to get on the Internet. But the ensuing upgrades allowed for far more than that. The iMac put style back into Apple and even computers. Subsequent releases came in candy colors like Lime, Strawberry, Blueberry, Grape, Tangerine, and later on Blue Dalmatian and Flower Power. The G3 chipset bled out into other more professional products like a blue and white G3 tower, which featured a slightly faster processor than the beige tower G3, but a much cooler look - and very easy to get into compared to any other machine on the market at the time. And the Clamshell laptops used the same design language. Playful, colorful, but mostly as fast as their traditional PowerBook counterparts. But the team had their eye on a new strategy entirely. Yes, people wanted to get online - but these computers could do so much more. Apple wanted to make the Mac the Digital Hub for content. This centered around a technology that had been codeveloped from Apple, Sony, Panasonic, and others called IEEE 1394. But that was kinda' boring so we just called it Firewire. Begun in 1986 and originally started by Apple, Firewire had become a port that was on most digital cameras at the time. USB wasn't fast enough to load and unload a lot of newer content like audio and video from cameras to computers. But I can clearly remember that by the year 1999 we were all living as Jobs put it in a “new emerging digital lifestyle.” This led to a number of releases from Apple. One was iMovie. Apple included it with the new iMac DV model for free. That model dumped the fan (which Jobs never liked even going back to the early days of Apple) as well as FireWire and the ability to add an AirPort card. Oh, and they released an AirPort base station in 1999 to help people get online easily. It is still one of the simplest router and wi-fi devices I've ever used. And was sleek with the new Graphite design language that would take Apple through for years on their professional devices. iMovie was a single place to load all those digital videos and turn them into something else. And there was another format on the rise, MP3. Most everyone I've ever known at Apple love music. It's in the DNA of the company, going back to Wozniak and Jobs and their love of musicians like Bob Dylan in the 1970s. The rise of the transistor radio and then the cassette and Walkman had opened our eyes to the democratization of what we could listen to as humans. But the MP3 format, which had been around since 1993, was on the rise. People were ripping and trading songs and Apple looked at a tool called Audion and another called SoundJam and decided that rather than Sherlock (or build that into the OS) that they would buy SoundJam in 2000. The new software, which they called iTunes, allowed users to rip and burn CDs easily. Apple then added iPhoto, iWeb, and iDVD. For photos, creating web sites, and making DVDs respectively. The digital hub was coming together. But there was another very important part of that whole digital hub strategy. Now that we had music on our computers we needed something more portable to listen to that music on. There were MP3 players like the Diamond Rio out there, and there had been going back to the waning days of the Digital Equipment Research Lab - but they were either clunky or had poor design or just crappy and cheap. And mostly only held an album or two. I remember walking down that isle at Fry's about once every other month waiting and hoping. But nothing good ever came. That is, until Jobs and the Apple hardware engineering lead Job Rubinstein found Tony Fadell. He had been at General Magic, you know, the company that ushered in mobility as an industry. And he'd built Windows CE mobile devices for Philips in the Velo and Nino. But when we got him working with Jobs, Rubinstein, and Johnny Ive on the industrial design front, we got one of the most iconic devices ever made: the iPod. And the iPod wasn't all that different on the inside from a Newton. Blasphemy I know. It sported a pair of ARM chips and Ive harkened back to simpler times when he based the design on a transistor radio. Attention to detail and the lack thereof in the Sony Diskman propelled Apple to sell more than 400 million iPods to this day. By the time the iPod was released in 2001, Apple revenues had jumped to just shy of $8 billion but dropped back down to $5.3. But everything was about to change. And part of that was that the iPod design language was about to leak out to the rest of the products with white iBooks, white Mac Minis, and other white devices as a design language of sorts. To sell all those iDevices, Apple embarked on a strategy that seemed crazy at the time. They opened retail stores. They hired Ron Johnson and opened two stores in 2001. They would grow to over 500 stores, and hit a billion in sales within three years. Johnson had been the VP of merchandising at Target and with the teams at Apple came up with the idea of taking payment without cash registers (after all you have an internet connected device you want to sell people) and the Genius Bar. And generations of devices came that led people back into the stores. The G4 came along - as did faster RAM. And while Apple was updating the classic Mac operating system, they were also hard at work preparing NeXT to go across the full line of computers. They had been working the bugs out in Rhapsody and then Mac OS X Server, but the client OS, Codenamed Kodiak, went into beta in 2000 and then was released as a dual-boot option in Cheetah, in 2001. And thus began a long line of big cats, going to Puma then Jaguar in 2002, Panther in 2003, Tiger in 2005, Leopard in 2007, Snow Leopard in 2009, Lion in 2011, Mountain Lion in 2012 before moving to the new naming scheme that uses famous places in California. Mac OS X finally provided a ground-up, modern, object-oriented operating system. They built the Aqua interface on top of it. Beautiful, modern, sleek. Even the backgrounds! The iMac would go from a gumdrop to a sleek flat panel on a metal stand, like a sunflower. Jobs and Ive are both named on the patents for this as well as many of the other inventions that came along in support of the rapid device rollouts of the day. Jaguar, or 10.2, would turn out to be a big update. They added Address Book, iChat - now called Messages, and after nearly two decades replaced the 8-bit Happy Mac with a grey Apple logo in 2002. Yet another sign they were no longer just a computer company. Some of these needed a server and storage so Apple released the Xserve in 2002 and the Xserve RAID in 2003. The pro devices also started to transition from the grey graphite look to brushed metal, which we still use today. Many wanted to step beyond just listening to music. There were expensive tools for creating music, like ProTools. And don't get me wrong, you get what you pay for. It's awesome. But democratizing the creation of media meant Apple wanted a piece of software to create digital audio - and released Garage Band in 2004. For this they again turned to an acquisition, EMagic, which had a tool called Logic Audio. I still use Logic to cut my podcasts. But with Garage Band they stripped it down to the essentials and released a tool that proved wildly popular, providing an on-ramp for many into the audio engineering space. Not every project worked out. Apple had ups and downs in revenue and sales in the early part of the millennium. The G4 Cube was released in 2000 and while it is hailed as one of the greatest designs by industrial designers it was discontinued in 2001 due to low sales. But Steve Jobs had been hard at work on something new. Those iPods that were becoming the cash cow at Apple and changing the world, turning people into white earbud-clad zombies spinning those click wheels were about to get an easier way to put media into iTunes and so on the device. The iTunes Store was released in 2003. Here, Jobs parlayed the success at Apple along with his own brand to twist the arms of executives from the big 5 record labels to finally allow digital music to be sold online. Each song was a dollar. Suddenly it was cheap enough that the music trading apps just couldn't keep up. Today it seems like everyone just pays a streaming subscription but for a time, it gave a shot in the arm to music companies and gave us all this new-found expectation that we would always be able to have music that we wanted to hear on-demand. Apple revenue was back up to $8.25 billion in 2004. But Apple was just getting started. The next seven years would see that revenue climb from to $13.9 billion in 2005, $19.3 in 2006, $24 billion in 2007, $32.4 in 2008, $42.9 in 2009, $65.2 in 2010, and a staggering $108.2 in 2011. After working with the PowerPC chipset, Apple transitioned new computers to Intel chips in 2005 and 2006. Keep in mind that most people used desktops at the time and just wanted fast. And it was the era where the Mac was really open source friendly so having the ability to load in the best the Linux and Unix worlds had to offer for software inside projects or on servers was made all the easier. But Intel could produce chips faster and were moving faster. That Intel transition also helped with what we call the “App Gap” where applications written for Windows could be virtualized for the Mac. This helped the Mac get much more adoption in businesses. Again, the pace was frenetic. People had been almost begging Apple to release a phone for years. The Windows Mobile devices, the Blackberry, the flip phones, even the Palm Treo. They were all crap in Jobs' mind. Even the Rockr that had iTunes in it was crap. So Apple released the iPhone in 2007 in a now-iconic Jobs presentation. The early version didn't have apps, but it was instantly one of the more saught-after gadgets. And in an era where people paid $100 to $200 for phones it changed the way we thought of the devices. In fact, the push notifications and app culture and always on fulfilled the General Magic dream that the Newton never could and truly moved us all into an always-on i (or Internet) culture. The Apple TV was also released in 2007. I can still remember people talking about Apple releasing a television at the time. The same way they talk about Apple releasing a car. It wasn't a television though, it was a small whitish box that resembled a Mac Mini - just with a different media-browsing type of Finder. Now it's effectively an app to bootstrap the media apps on a Mac. It had been a blistering 10 years. We didn't even get into Pages, FaceTime, They weren't done just yet. The iPad was released in 2010. By then, Apple revenues exceeded those of Microsoft. The return and the comeback was truly complete. Similar technology used to build the Apple online store was also used to develop the iTunes Store and then the App Store in 2008. Here, rather than go to a site you might not trust and download an installer file with crazy levels of permissions. One place where it's still a work in progress to this day was iTools, released in 2000 and rebranded to .Mac or dot Mac in 2008, and now called MobileMe. Apple's vision to sync all of our data between our myriad of devices wirelessly was a work in progress and never met the lofty goals set out. Some services, like Find My iPhone, work great. Others notsomuch. Jobs famously fired the team lead at one point. And while it's better than it was it's still not where it needs to be. Steve Jobs passed away in 2011 at 56 years old. His first act at Apple changed the world, ushering in first the personal computing revolution and then the graphical interface revolution. He left an Apple that meant something. He returned to a demoralized Apple and brought digital media, portable music players, the iPhone, the iPad, the Apple TV, the iMac, the online music store, the online App Store, and so much more. The world had changed in that time, so he left, well, one more thing. You see, when they started, privacy and security wasn't much of a thing. Keep in mind, computers didn't have hard drives. The early days of the Internet after his return was a fairly save I or Internet world. But by the time he passed away there there were some troubling trends. The data on our phones and computers could weave together nearly every bit of our life to an outsider. Not only could this lead to identity theft but with the growing advertising networks and machine learning capabilities, the consequences of privacy breaches on Apple products could be profound as a society. He left an ethos behind to build great products but not at the expense of those who buy them. One his successor Tim Cook has maintained. On the outside it may seem like the daunting 10 plus years of product releases has slowed. We still have the Macbook, the iMac, a tower, a mini, an iPhone, an iPad, an Apple TV. We now have HomeKit, a HomePod, new models of all those devices, Apple silicon, and some new headphones - but more importantly we've had to retreat a bit internally and direct some of those product development cycles to privacy, protecting users, shoring up the security model. Managing a vast portfolio of products in the largest company in the world means doing those things isn't always altruistic. Big companies can mean big law suits when things go wrong. These will come up as we cover the history of the individual devices in greater detail. The history of computing is full of stories of great innovators. Very few took a second act. Few, if any, had as impactful a first act as either that Steve Jobs had. It wasn't just him in any of these. There are countless people from software developers to support representatives to product marketing gurus to the people that write the documentation. It was all of them, working with inspiring leadership and world class products that helped as much as any other organization in the history of computing, to shape the digital world we live in today.
Episode 135.) 2/12/2021Spoilers, obviously this is from 2014…Frank and Aj have decided that 2021 will be a special time for catching up on some older content and podcast #MissedOpportunies! We will be discussing and looking back many of the super hero films from the post-modern era 2008-2017 that we did not cover on the podcast, but had fervent discussions over AIM, FB Messenger and iChat respectively. For this week’s episode we wanted to dive into the origin of the first Peter - Quicksilver with a special look at his intro to the X-Men Fox Franchise. This is a great movie, we consider it the center of the franchise and are excited that we could go anywhere after this movie! A great classic comic arcThe return of the awesome acting talent throughout this universe!X-Men 2000 was the go-to super hero team-up movie before Avengers 2012This was X-Men’s answer to The Avengers2014 was a great year for Super Hero MoviesThe plot gamePeter DinklageJ-Law GuffawHugh JackmanQuicksilverRemember to Subscribe on iTunesSubscribe on Google Play Subscribe on SpotifyPlease Leave us a rating or review.Follow us on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram @LLHPodcast
I skuggan av det snöblandade regnet utspelar sig det kritiska tvåhundrafyrtioandra avsnittet av bjoreman://melin. Kritiska dryckesproblem löses Krya på dig Christian Hjälp, har jag slitit ut GT?! Fredrik besöker veterinären Det känns inte som om arbetsåret börjat riktigt. Bieffekt av corona? Gemini - äntligen, den felande länken mellan webben och … Gopher? Alpine i macOS Fredrik bygger ut sitt meshnät, lite men lagom överdrivet Poddlistan är tom. Rätt skönt Har Fredrik lagt 25 timmar i veckan på poddlyssnande? Det är inte omöjligt! Elpriset skjuter i höjden. Jocke stänger av saker. Fredrik testar mp3-enkodare. Now behold the power of this fully operational battle station Hejdå Trump! Extremt bra avsnitt av The Talk Show med Mike Monterio som gäst Film och TV Jocke med son och Fredrik har sett klart Mandalorian S02. Vi spoilar från första början! Säsong ett: Fredrik: 4/5BM, Jocke: 5/5BM Säsong två: Fredrik: 3,5/5BM, Jocke: 3/5BM Länkar Ichat Hernö gin - rekommenderas Gemini Tofubitar Samuels bloggar om VoIP och 46Elks ihop med sin mobiltelefon 46elks SIP Gopher Lagrange - klient för Gemini till macOS Brew - Homebrew Alpine - mejlklienten Pine Amplifi instant Amplifi HD Cortex CGP Grey Ida Teknikpäron On the metal John Graham-Cumming-avsnittet Charles Babbage Ada Lovelace Jonathan Blow Braid Indie game: the movie The Witness idrive.com LAME Hindenburg Superfast Fre:ac Smooth Forecast Jason Snells text om Forecast Jules Suzdaltsev minns Donald Trump Mike Monteiro Mule The Talk Show - Total Landscaping - The Talk Show med John Gruber och Mike Monteiro Fuck you, pay me How to fight facism Mandalorian säsong 2 Front 242 Fredrik Björeman och Joacim Melin. Fullständig avsnittsinformation finns här: https://www.bjoremanmelin.se/podcast/avsnitt-242-ingen-relation-till-boba-fett.html.
Today on Another 12 Pod Of Christmas , Edray and I Chat and give our opinions and react to the Best Selling Christmas Gifts in the last 50 years, Some were surprises, others were questionable and then some were too on the nose.... we react , you listen, we drink, maybe you drink too ... let us know on social media, what your thinkin and what your drinkin you can join our Opinions and Beer facebook group , or wherever , as we are EVERYWHERE , the most entertaining Craft Beer Podcast ... OF ALL TIME ... Thank You For You Support! 12 Stouts of Christmas we Review Eclipse German Chocolate Cake Bourbon Stout .... WOOOOOO
12/12/10 - Advanced Workgroup Manager/LDAP stuff in Mac OS X Server (self-taught myself dock settings for users) 12/13/10 - iChat does video chat over AIM. 12/14/10 - Podcast Producer (+ Podcast Capture) on Servers/Xserves can do email 12/15/10 - UNH requires 12 credits/semester to be considered a full time student. 12/16/10 - SCAN TV apparently helped out on some DVD that was played on PBS. 12/17/10 - Intel Xserves have a case of the derps during their first initial setup...seems they forget how to set an admin password. 12/18/10 - Scott Pilgrim vs. The World on the Xbox can be played with the Rock Band drumset. This episode's music comes from YouTube free music repositories and the Free Music Archive. Tracks featured in this episode include: TrackTribe - A Night Alone John Deley - Play Song JR Tundra - The Night Falling MK2 - The Big Score JR Tundra - Brother Jack The 126ers - The Low Seas SousLePont - LacNuit
I Chat with my friend William Grundfest the man that created The Comedy Cellar!
I Chat to CA & Market Analyst Sinesipho Maninjwa about whether or not we should be investing in agriculture or property. How high food prices are and what she would like to do to change it and how many of us are not being paid enough. Support the show (https://paypal.me/letspodcast?locale.x=en_US)
In this episode I Chat with Catherine Bell, a Birth Cartographer @birthmapping, about her book "The Birth Map".
In this bonus episode Matthew Brickman explains how to schedule and attend a virtual mediation session with iMediate Inc. where you can mediate your legal matter on his iChat platform from anywhere in the world.Items mentioned in the podcast:CalendarPricing StructureScheduler SelectionLaw Firm SchedulerNon-Law Firm SchedulerIf you have a matter, disagreement, or dispute you need professional help with then visit iMediate.com - Email mbrickman@ichatmediation or Call (877) 822-1479Matthew Brickman is a Florida Supreme Court certified family and appellate mediator who has worked in the 15th and 19th Judicial Circuit Courts since 2009 and 2006 respectively. But what makes him qualified to speak on the subject of conflict resolution is his own personal experience with divorce.Download Matthew's book on iTunes for FREE:You're Not the Only One - The Agony of Divorce: The Joy of Peaceful ResolutionMatthew Brickman President iMediate Inc. Mediator 20836CFAiMediateInc.com
I Chat to Callum Woodard, Youtuber, PE Teacher and gardening Dad, about how he gardens with his daughter. We discuss why he started gardening with his daughter, why he created his YouTube channel on it and how he thinks getting gardening and the benefits of gardening in the school system is. Plus its the last clue for the Flymo Robotic competition. Will you Win? SUBSCRIBE to the podcast! Be sure to see each garden episode pop into your device when its ready! Sponsored by Flymo. Flymo your Life Easy. Find more at Flymo.com If you loved, or even just a little enjoyed the podcast be sure to share it on social and tag.. Facebook: @skinnyjeangardener Instagram: @skinnyjeangardener Twitter: @skinnyjeangard or email: lee@skinnyjeangardener.co.uk and let me know what ya think The NEW˜How to get Kids Gardening Book is available now! With over 30+ gardening ideas to bring the family together and create real memories. Available at skinnyjeangardener.co.uk/shop LISTEN to the podcast now FREE on all awesome podcast stores and skinnyjeangardener.co.uk/podcast
In this episode I Chat with Oliver who is one half of the tech and gaming podcast Northbound Oliver talks about how he started streaming and tips for starting out. I ask questions about how he started podcasting and how his tech and gaming podcast will be different from the rest. and we briefly talk about our live for video games.
The latest episode of In Touch With iOS Dave and Warren are join by guest Chuck Joiner. Almost 100 episodes and We talk Apple TV+ buying back catalog and creating Podcasts original content. Apple was ahead of its time with iChat and now tech is on iPhone. WWDC debate will iOS 14 come out and more. The show notes are at InTouchwithiOS.com Direct Link to Audio News Google Fi Rolls Out eSIM support for Existing iOS Subscribers Apple Releases watchOS 6.2.5 With ECG App in Saudi Arabia, New Pride Watch Faces Apple Seeds tvOS 13.4.5 GM Update to Developers HomePod 'Sold Out' on Apple's Online Store [Updated] T-Mobile to Start Phasing Out Sprint Brand This Summer Ad review panel tells AT&T to stop using misleading '5G Evolution' claims Google Podcasts 2.0 Adds CarPlay Support to iOS App Topics Beta testing this week. iOS 13.5 has been released to the public! We discuss what was added and the COVID-19 controversy Apple releases iOS 12.4.7, iOS 13.5, iPadOS 13.5, tvOS 13.4.5 updates Who remembers iChat? Dave was going through some old documents and found an old MacOSX Leopard manual and started realizing that Apple was at the forefront with Chat, video conferencing, messaging, and presentations way back in 2007 the year the iPhone was introduced. You could do video backdrops, iChat Theater for presentations, screen sharing, and more. Now we know it as Messages, and FaceTime but its not the same. We discuss this and how Apple was ahead of its time with the iChat product. Apple TV+ now has 10 million subscribers and granted many of those are the free 1 year subscriptions with new device purchase. But they are also buying movie and TV back catalogs too. We discuss the content of Apple TV+ and our views on where it is going. Link Apple hunting for podcast chief to lead original content push, Apple TV+ tie-ins Apple is looking to expand the podcasting as Spotify signed exclusive deal 'The Joe Rogan Experience' to ditch Apple Podcasts, YouTube for Spotify and Apple is building up its original podcast content to boost Apple TV+ WWDC is coming on June 22nd will iPhone 12 and iOS 14 be released this year? We debate what Guy Serle said on MTTF Go will iOS 14 come out this year? Apps Dave MusicSmart ios Warren T-Mobile Digits iOS About our Guest Chuck Joiner is the host of MacVoices and hosts video podcasts with influential members of the Apple community. Make sure to visit macvoices.com and subscribe to his podcast. You can follow him on Twitter @chuckjoiner and join his MacVoices Facebook group. About our Co-Host Co-Host Warren Sklar @Wsklar is an IT Consultant and moderator of the Mac To The Future FaceBook Group with over 3000 members talking about all things Apple. Request to join this group to be among people who love Apple.
Murilo Cardoso, André Gumieri e Bruno Trazzini batem um papo sobre gadgets, sites e tecnologias que envelheceram mal. Exemplo: ICQ, Palmpilot, Altavista, Cadê, MSN Messenger, Google Reader, Wunderlist, Pager, Nextel, iTunes / iPod, Johnny Castaway, GTalk, Skype, iChat, Internet Explorer, Firefox, Winamp, Orkut, Google+, Snapchat, entre outros... Envie seu comentário ou sugestão de pauta em nossa página do Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/1980podcast/ Ou no e-mail: muriloscardoso@gmail.com MAIO DE 2020 - S01E09
Today I want to thank all the brave men and women for their service. Without their sacrifices, our way of life would not be possible. Only fitting to bring on a Veteran for the podcast. Today, I Chat with my brother, Eric Morin as he shares his story and some of his experiences in the Army. We also discuss building comradery through difficult situations, how fitness is evolving and physical challenges he faced in the Military.
The Joel Comm Show - A podcast about business, life and doing good stuff
In this episode of Joel.LIVE on Belive.tv, Joel has a discussion with one of the creators of the first iPhone, Andy Grignon. The original developer for iChat and Dashboard for MacOS, Andy was one of ten members on the original iPhone development team and the first person in the world to receive a phone call on an iPhone!See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
- Windows 9 eliminará la pantalla de inicio para volver al menú de inicio.- El lamentable estado de las herramientas de desarrollo Android, por Diego Freniche- Nueva decoración en las Apple Stores y campaña de vuelta al cole.- iChat deja de tener soporte AIM para cuentas @me.com y @mac.com en OS 10.7.1 y anteriores.
[embedplusvideo height="343" width="560" standard="http://www.youtube.com/v/nGNe-26PwKQ?fs=1&hd=1" vars="ytid=nGNe-26PwKQ&width=560&height=343&start=&stop=&rs=w&hd=1&autoplay=0&react=1&chapters=¬es=" id="ep5764" /] On this episode of The AIE Podcast... - Book of Heroes has turned a page - AIE rocks some boss socks - Rift goes Free to Play - Join the Nerdtacular roll call - And we talk Middle Earth with Dux, Apolas, and VanFlicke All that and more coming up right now... AIE NEWS The Great Merge has completed for Book of Heroes! Or at least, the first phase of such. There was a lot of shuffling going around with faces old and new meeting in the new guilds! There doesn't seem to be a need for limits on alts anymore, so if you'd like alts in the same guild, seems fine. Make sure and watch the forums as things develop! AIE has now conquered all of the bosses in World of Warcraft MoP! The raid team “If Looks Could Kill” has taken down Lei Shen and is now currently working on heroic modes! We don't normally make these sorts of announcements, but a ‘AIE First' was worth a mention! Yet another game has joined the AIE Family of being a drain on simply time, not time AND money. Rift has announced they are going Free to Play! Join your fellow guildies in the world of Telara and enjoy all the dynamic content they have to offer... for free! There have been various threads that have gone up surrounding Nerdtacular this year, and it looks like someone has made a ‘roll call' that you can sign up on. Keep in mind, ALL of the information that is requested is completely optional, so feel free to share only what you would like to let folks know who you are and when yer coming! Do you miss the big green wall of friendly text when you're in that realm called Real Life? Don't forget, AIE has a Jabber server! What's Jabber you say? Jabber is an instant messaging platform that you can use to chat with other AIE members while they also wait for that workday queue to time out. It's completely free, and best of all, you're already signed up! Jabber accounts are integrated into our UMAMI membership system, so all you have to do is find a Jabber client you like, such as Pidgen, iChat, Trillian, or about 300 other options, and sign in with your UMAMI account. For more details, check out the We now have Jabber thread in our forums World of warcraft and DC comics are giving away free graphic novel previews for kindle and IOS users! So if you have been curious about the comics and want to check them out you give them a shot. They currently have previews up for pearl of pandaria, Dark riders, and bloodsworn. For links to all of the news items we just mentioned, see our show notes at theaiepodcast.com And now it's time to jump into AIE's adventures in Lord of the Rings Online... GAME NEWS Dux: Update 11 dropped - Treachery of the White Hand. 5 new areas (rolling hills now frozen, vast areas of tundra, along with flash frozen forests, lakes, everything). Saruman's hold over Rohan brings a chill to all - the chill effect. Mounted Combat changes Combat. On mounts. What is more awesome than that?!?!?! Removed the ‘mobility' elements of the tree and integrated parts of it in to the base warhorse itself. Also reworked the trees to allow for more integration (synergy - ugh) with the character that rides it. The goal is to make the transition of playing your character on foot doesn't seem so different to riding on horseback. Apolas >Lalia's Market >Hobbit Gifts Vanflicke >Housing upkeep and new foreclosure - you can prepay your taxes/rent further in advance and it will hold for six months before going into escrow. >Changes to VIP (paid) vs. F2p or B2p - better experience bonus for VIPs >Spring Festival Spring Festival runs from May 21 to June 4th (only two weeks) this year. Lots of events in the Spring Festival, it seems like it gets busier every year.
A recording of Travis and Danny's iChat session... Danny still didn't quite understand how the Hot Topic acoustic tour worked...
A mish-mash of topics, including Mail, Backups, BootCamp, iChat, and more. Show notes for TMO To Go: Mac Geek Gab For March 26, 2007 Direct Links: MP3 Version or AAC Enhanced Version (courtesy of [removed]eval(unescape(‘[removed](‘Michael Johnston‘)'))[removed]Michael Johnston). A mish-mash of topics, including Mail, Backups, BootCamp, iChat, and more. Sponsor: Audio […]
After a week-long hiatus, Dave and John are back in full swing, answering your questions and playing your comments about remote controls, iChat nicknames, freezing Macs, and more! Show notes for TMO To Go: Mac Geek Gab For December 11th, 2006 Direct Links: MP3 Version or AAC Enhanced Version (courtesy […]