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Act 29 of the Miskatonic Playhouse's Regency Cthulhu Campaign. With both Reverend George and Reverend Marsh being brought to the beach, Lord Hawthorne announces Lord Cosgrove's baptism can begin. A red light pulses in the captain's quarters of the HMS Devonshire as Anastasia awakes to find herself, scarred hand stuck to the red gelatinous egg holding the Incipient god Dythogua before her. Lord Hawthorne realises who are his allies and who is truly working against him as Reverend George and Lord Cosgrove begin to unfold their machinations of sabotage. It's when the tide begins to turn that we see the true faith is rather weak, as Lady Hawthorne fights for survival and the grotesquely physical and deluded Mr Jenkins attempts to save Anastasia from Lord Dunn. --------- Keeper of Arcane Lore: T A Newman Lord Thomas Prideaux: Stu Miss. Anastasia Prideaux: Phaedra Rev. George Prideaux: The Cosmic Outpost Mrs. Charlotte Lambert: Lydia Mr. Christopher Burrows: Mr. Howl M. Phillipe Lambert: Charles Mathe-Dumain Mr. Peter Owens: Pete Burgess with Lady Hawthorne: Lynne Hardy Lord Cosgrove: Scott Dorward and Lord Matthew Prideaux: Mike Mason Sound Editing: The Cosmic Outpost Video Editing: Pete Burgess --------- Find out more at http://MiskatonicPlayhouse.com Like what you've seen? Support us at https://ko-fi.com/miskatonicplayhouse
Dr. David Montgomery has been so prolific, that for several years I actually thought he was two people:First, Dr. D. Montgomery is a well known geomorphologist from the University of Washington (and a 2008 MacArthur Fellow) whose name is on much of the seminal, high-gradient channel transport and classification literature. And then there David Montgomery, the narrative non-fiction author from Seattle who wrote books like Dirt, The Rocks Don't Lie, and The Hidden Half of Nature.It actually took me an embarrassing amount of time to realize that this was the same person.So the first time I sat down to scribble a list of guests I'd like to invite on a yet to be named river process podcast, Dr. David Montgomery was on that first list…because who wouldn't want to talk to both those people...especially at the same time.In this conversation David and I moved between the spatial and temporal scales his work spans, discussing the deep sediment history from his books and his classical technical work. We cover the role of sediment in the rise and fall of ancient near-eastern civilizations, high-gradient river classification, a surprising story about the long temporal tail of wood impacts in natural river systems, incipient motion at the grain scale, and, somehow, a range of other topics. And, I found out that there is, actually, a third David Montgomery…guitar and vocals for the Seattle band Big Dirt, so most of the music you'll hear (after the opening theme) is from their new album. You can find David's books that we talked about here:Dirt - https://a.co/d/eaE9P3YThe King of Fish - https://a.co/d/2wArLH1The Hidden Half of Nature - https://a.co/d/eaE9P3YAnd you can access music from Big Dirt here:https://www.reverbnation.com/bigdirtmusichttps://www.bandmix.com/bigdirt/This series was funded by the Regional Sediment Management (RSM) program.Stanford Gibson (HEC Sediment Specialist) hosts.Mike Loretto edited the episode and wrote and performed the music.Video shorts and other bonus content are available at the podcast website (which was temporarily down but is back up now):https://www.hec.usace.army.mil/confluence/rasdocs/rastraining/latest/the-rsm-river-mechanics-podcast...but most of the supplementary videos are available on the HEC Sediment YouTube channel:https://www.youtube.com/user/stanfordgibson
Merriam-Webster's Word of the Day for January 1, 2024 is: incipient in-SIP-ee-unt adjective Incipient is used to describe things which are beginning to come into being or which are to become apparent. // The study clearly needs to be extended because the most recent data suggest incipient changes in the trends identified. See the entry > Examples: “While still in its incipient stages, working with AI will also become more important over the years. Automated systems are at the core of many things, from streaming apps and video games to online shopping platforms and navigation tools.” — Jon Stojan, USA TODAY, 4 Aug. 2023 Did you know? Incipient... incipient... where to begin? Well, there's its meaning for one: incipient describes something that is beginning to come into being or to become apparent, as in “the incipient stages of the process.” And of course a good starting point for any investigation of incipient is also the Latin verb incipere, which means “to begin.” Incipient emerged in English in the 17th century, appearing in both religious and scientific contexts, as in “incipient grace” and “incipient putrefaction.” Later came the genesis of two related nouns, incipiency and incipience, both of which are synonymous with beginning. Incipere's influence is also visible at the beginning of the words inception (“an act, process, or instance of beginning”) and incipit, a term that in Latin literally means “it begins” and which refers in English to the opening words of a medieval manuscript or early printed book.
In episode seven of Faculty Spotlight, Mark and Lauren sit down to chat with two BISR faculty whose interests, scholarly and otherwise, dovetail in fascinating ways—Sophie Lewis, writer, critic, and leading scholar of family abolition and the politics of reproduction; and Paige Sweet, writer, practicing psychoanalyst, and founder of the experimental writing project Infinite Text Collective. Following Sophie's personal reflections on her early experiences of the injustices in-built into middle-class heteropatriarchal institutions like the family and formal schooling (“nothing is apolitical”), the four of them discuss: what previously overlooked insights one might still unearth from so-called second wave feminists like Silvia Federici (is the witch a figure of incipient queerness?); how fecund and fungible was the time of transition from feudalism to capitalism, not least for thinking with gender; the “unruly undertows” of popular and “low” entertainment (Chicken Run as exemplary Marxist-feminist cinema!); autotheory, autofiction, autoanalysis, and the affordances of writing from the self; why children's liberation is to everyone's benefit; and the erstwhile pin-up career of Barnacle the cat—with much else in between and besides.
Welcome to What Matters Now, a weekly podcast exploration into one key issue shaping Israel and the Jewish World — right now. This week, the Knesset passed the first contentious judicial overhaul bill into law. So, six months after getting perspective from philosopher Dr. Micah Goodman in the inaugural What Matters Now episode, I went back for more. “Two constitutional instincts have been unleashed and are clashing with each other: The Israelis who want to be empowered through government versus the Israelis who want to be protected from government. I think that's what's happening in the streets of Jerusalem and Tel Aviv and all over Israel as we're talking,” says Goodman, the author of the best-selling “Catch-67” and “The Wondering Jew.” His book, “The Last Words of Moses” recently hit shelves in English. For much of the past six months, Goodman has been performing a unique kind of reserve duty: speaking with people from all sides of the judicial overhaul conflict, from teams of politicians during the negotiations at the President's Residence — at the request of President Isaac Herzog — to squadrons of pilots who are on the brink of refusing service -- again, at the request of the IDF. In keeping with this Tisha B'Av week, this is an in-depth and quite sober conversation. But, as you will hear, Goodman is, as always, a dedicated optimist. “I think the cynics will determine what happens tomorrow and next week, but I think it's the optimists who will determine what will happen next year and two years from now,” he says. So this week, we ask philosopher Dr. Micah Goodman, what matters now. What Matters Now podcasts are available for download on iTunes, TuneIn, Pocket Casts, Stitcher, PlayerFM or wherever you get your podcasts. IMAGE: Philosopher and public intellectual Dr. Micah Goodman (Yonit Schiller)See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this series Fr. Donald Haggerty and Kris McGregor discuss the depths of prayer as explored by St. John of the Cross, the Mystical Doctor of the Church. The post SJC13 – The Incipient Signs of the Grace of Contemplation – St. John of the Cross with Fr. Donald Haggerty – Discerning Hearts Podcast appeared first on Discerning Hearts Catholic Podcasts.
St. John of the Cross: Master of Contemplation with Fr. Donald Haggerty – Discerning Hearts Podcast
In this series Fr. Donald Haggerty and Kris McGregor discuss the depths of prayer as explored by St. John of the Cross, the Mystical Doctor of the Church. The post SJC13 – The Incipient Signs of the Grace of Contemplation – St. John of the Cross with Fr. Donald Haggerty – Discerning Hearts Podcast appeared first on Discerning Hearts Catholic Podcasts.
Sickness is Incipient death and Love is a release of Life.
from Thank You and OK! an American Zen Failure in Japan
Welcome to Episode 6 of ELTP Radio with your vocabulary lesson covering the Word of the Week – Incipient and Sports Idioms.Subscribe to future podcast episodes for TOEFL, TOEIC, and IELTS tips plus vocabulary lessons at: https://bit.ly/eltpradio1Hello and welcome to my classroom.I'm Professor Winn – your host and certified veteran English instructor who helps exam candidates maximize their scores.Today, enrich your vocabulary for a high score on the TOEFL, TOEIC, or IELTS Exam!Join my vocabulary blog for 15 lessons at: https://bit.ly/vocabemail Support the show
Tony Mayo Executive Coach Do you know the most crucial resource for starting a company? Find out here, from the Business Owner's Executive Coach. Just click here to listen now or subscribe on your device using Apple's Tunes, Android, and other podcatchers to have this and all new episodes placed on your device as they become available. ———————————————- […] The post 037 Executive Coach's One Question Quiz for Incipient Entrepreneurs • PODCAST [Refresh] appeared first on Tony Mayo.
Rich Kreuger, Co-founder and CEO of Hospital IQ, the leading provider of predictive hospital operations software, discusses how the company provides an operations management software platform that uses AI to anticipate and direct actions, enabling health systems to achieve and sustain peak operational performance. He talks about the importance of streamlining provider operations post-pandemic and the value of building tech with scalability. As CEO of Hospital IQ, Rich uses technology to limit waste in the healthcare industry and help hospitals provide outstanding care to as many patients as possible. He has a proven track record of developing and commercializing new technologies, and has been directly involved in software products that continue to solve major industry problems and generate over $100m per year in revenue. Prior to joining Hospital IQ, Rich was the founder and CEO of DynamicOps, a cloud automation software company that was acquired by VMware in 2012. He also held executive roles at companies like Incipient, Continuum Software, Conley Corporation, and Discreet Logic's Stone+Wire Division. Rich earned his MBA and MS from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and a BS from Rutgers University. #HospitalIQ
In this episode, Jim Jacoby, Tyson Johncock, and Tom Bailey try to come to an agreement on the difference (if there is one) between compressor stall (rotating stall), incipient surge, and surge.
This episode is also available as a blog post: https://garycgibson.wordpress.com/2020/01/05/incipient-shia-neo-theocracy-of-iraq-and-conflict/ --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/garrison-clifford-gibson/support
Finding the right time to bloom often means waiting patiently. As I indulge in a whole weekend of song writing I feel it's my time to blossom & grow.
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists’ playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood’s incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists' playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood's incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
Professor Emily C. Burns, Terra Foundation Visiting Professor in American Art, gives the third in the series of The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914. Performing Innocence: Primitive / Incipient The Terra Lectures in American Art: Performing Innocence: US Artists in Paris, 1865-1914 Moderator: James Smalls, Professor and Chair of Visual Arts, University of Maryland, Baltimore County Between the end of the US Civil War and the start of World War I, thousands of American artists studied and worked in Paris. While popular thought holds that they went to imbibe culture and attain artistic maturity, in this four-part lecture series, Professor Emily Burns explores the various ways that Americans in Paris performed instead a cultural immaturity that pandered to European expectations that the United States lacked history, tradition, and culture. The lectures chart knowing constructions of innocence that US artists and writers projected abroad in both art practice and social performance, linking them to ongoing conversations about race, gender, art making, modernity, physio-psychological experience, evolutionary theory, and national identity in France and in the United States. Interwoven myths in art and social practice that framed Puritanism; an ironically long-standing penchant for anything new and original; primitivism designed by white artists’ playing with ideas of Blackness and Indigeneity; childhood’s incisive perception; and originary sight operated in tandem to turn a liability of lacking culture into an asset. In analyzing the mechanisms of these constructions, the lectures return to the question about the cultural work these ideas enacted when performed abroad. What is obscured and repressed by mythical innocence and feigned forgetting? Abstract: Projections of different ideas of innocence became entangled in the representation of Black US character in fin-de-siècle Paris. By pairing new research on blackface minstrelsy and painter Henry Ossawa Tanner in the American Art Association of Paris with the displays of Blackness curated by Black intellectuals in the “Exhibit of American Negroes” in the Paris Universal Exposition of 1900, Professor Burns argues that American minstrelsy in Paris built a racialized “primitive” identity that caricatured Black men as effeminate and emasculated, while the latter exhibit constructed innocence grounded in claims of youth, newness, and incipient culture. While the curators staunchly and effectively rejected narratives of primitivism, these tropes of the new simultaneously paralleled and reinforced performances of cultural innocence in the largely white US community in Paris. Biographies: Emily C. Burns is an Associate Professor of Art History at Auburn University where she teaches courses on eighteenth- and nineteenth-century American, Native American, and European art history. Her publications include a book, Transnational Frontiers: the American West in France (University of Oklahoma Press, 2018), which analyzes appropriations of the American West in France in performance and visual and material culture in the tripartite international relationships between the United States, France, and the Lakota nation between 1867 and 1914, as well as journal articles, exhibition catalogue essays, and book chapters related to art and circulation, US artists in France, and American impressionism. She is currently completing a co-edited volume with Alice Price on global impressionisms entitled Mapping Impressionist Painting in Transnational Contexts (forthcoming from Routledge). During her tenure as the Terra Foundation for American Art Visiting Professor in the Department of History of Art at the University of Oxford and a Visiting Fellow at Worcester College, Professor Burns will complete her second book, Performing Innocence: Cultural Belatedness and U.S. Art in fin-de-siècle Paris. Dr. James Smalls is an art historian, with a focus on the intersections of race, gender, and queer sexuality in the art and visual culture of the nineteenth century, as well as the art and visual culture of the black diaspora. He is the author of Homosexuality in Art (Parkstone Press, 2003) and The Homoerotic Photography of Carl Van Vechten: Public Face, Private Thoughts (2006). He has published essays in a number of book anthologies and prominent journals, including American Art, French Historical Studies, Third Text, Art Journal, and Art Criticism. His book chapters and articles include: Menace at the Portal: Masculine Desire and the Homoerotics of Orientalism (2016), The Soft Glow of Brutality (2015), A Teacher Uses Star Trek for Difficult Conversations on Race and Gender (2015), Racial Antics in Late Nineteenth-Century French Art and Popular Culture (2014), Sculpting Black Queer Bodies and Desires: The Case of Richmond Barthé (2013), and Exquisite Empty Shells: Sculpted Slave Portraits and the French Ethnographic Turn (2013). Smalls is currently completing a book entitled Féral Benga: African Muse of Modernism. In 2006, Smalls curated a two-part exhibition at the Baltimore Museum of Art on the art, career, and international influence of the African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner. In 2009-2010, he served as the Consulting Editor for the five-volume set of The Grove Encyclopedia of American Art. In 2015 he was appointed to the Advisory Board for The Archives of American Art Journal. Dr. Smalls holds degrees from the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA), in Ethnic Arts (B. A.), and Art History (M. A., and Ph.D.). He has taught at Rutgers University, Columbia University, and at the University of Paris.
This week I talk to Amit Shah, Partner & CEO of Incipient Corp.Incipient Corp is a full service software development group located in Rutherford, NJ.The company started in 2010, Amit’s sophomore year in high school. The first big milestone was finally defining the mission and focus and the types of people they wanted to work with. The second milestone was where they become laser focused on their customer profile. This meant being very comfortable and looking forward to the growth that comes with knowing your customers.Key takeaways in this episode:1. How Incipient Corp grew from creating grew from creating websites to core software development in startups and small to medium sized companies.2. Company growth through iterating through the mission and customer profile3. Unique experience of merging product development processes and software development processes and how this defines digital transformation4. Challenges customers face to adopt new technologies and how Incipient Corp can help them navigate a growth strategy.For more information, go to Incipient Corp.
Incipient, Concept and Conceive have the same root word that means 'Take'. In Season 1 Episode 10 Finale, we explore the different words coming from the root word Cip/Cept/Ceive. (Includes a Season 2 teaser)
The introductory segment to this week's series of podcasts including the word of the week "INCIPIENT" and a thought for the week from Maya Angelou - "I've learned that people will forget what you said, people will forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel". We are joined for this segment by Eugenio Jaramillo, author of "The Purple Squirrel Speaks". ______________________________________________________________________ This is part 1 from Programme 6 of 2020/21 season - published on August 7th with Ted Mellamphy, Moira O'Brien & Paul O’Mahony. The show is in four parts and usually has this format: (1) Introducing a “Thought for the Week” and a “Word of the Week” together with general conversation arising out of these two topics. Published at 4pm on Fridays. (2) Either an Interview, the recording of a speech or external media. Published at 4pm on Saturdays. (3) Discussion on a topic usually led by Paul. Published at 4pm on Sundays. (4) Discussion on a topic usually led by Moira. Published at 4pm on Mondays Contact us : email: info@irishtalkers.com Website: www.irishtalkers.com Facebook: The Talk Show for Talkers Magazine: "Public Speaking Weekly" on www.irishtalkers.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/irish-talkers/message
More great books at LoyalBooks.com
Today's slide deck: bit.ly/2L1350RToday we discuss the latest surge in equities and whether we are talking about an incipient bubble forming here. Also, an important discussion of potential equity winners in the wake of the Covid19 crisis, which is supercharging the shift to online presence for companies and economic activity in general. Also a look at the massive crude oil surge yesterday, the German court ruling against the ECB and impact on the euro and much more. Today with Eleanor Creagh on Australia and equities, Peter Garnry on equities, Ole Hansen on commodities and John J. Hardy on FX.
'ON THE GROUND' FOR DECEMBER 20, 2019 Whether it is the brutal repression of Muslims in India or the doublespeak of American creation mythology, Gerald Horne breaks down the elements of today's incipient fascism for our final F-Word segment for 2019. And scores of people have joined actress Jane Fonda in being arrested every Friday at the US Capitol to demand action on the climate crisis. We present voices at 'Fire Drill Fridays' speaking about a just transition to green energy with good jobs. Headlines: The House voted to impeach President Donald Trump.The Senate pushed through 12 more Trump, right-wing judges.The secretive FISA court accused the FBI of misleading its judges.The Senate approved a $738 billion budget for the Pentagon.An analysis found that "exposure to toxic air, water, soil, and chemical pollution" kills 8.3 million people worldwide each year, Several actions in DC this week, addressed violence against women.Chantal James reports on a forum to protect lack girls from sex trafficking. A setback and a victory for the Fight for $15 movement. BECAUSE you enjoy our grassroots news show, which we provide free online, on podcast and on Pacifica stations and affiliates, please click here or click on the Support-Donate tab on this website to subscribe for as little as $3 a month. We are so grateful for this small but growing amount of monthly crowdsource funding on Patreon. You can also give a one-time donation on PayPal. The show is made possible only by our volunteer energy, our resolve to keep the people's voices on the air, and by support from our listeners. In this new era of fake corporate news, we have to be and support our own media! Thank you!
En förskräcklig plan har satts i verket, som hotar att förstöra mänskligheten såsom vi känner den, om den går i lås. Men allt är inte förlorat. Om några modiga själar kan avslöja och sammanföra viss information, kan de stå emot mörkret och förhindra att det otänkbara sker. I möten med mörka kulter, besynnerlig lore, hemska monster och en mängd oöverkomliga fiender, påbörjar utredarna en upptäcktsresa för att möta den ultimata skräcken. Detta är deras historia. Detta är det femte avsnittet av Syndikatets inspelning av Masks of Nyarlathotep, och äntligen är utredarna på väg på den expedition som de är här för att utföra. Döm om allas förvåning när Nathaniel Fawcett plötsligt dyker upp precis innan avfart. Var har han varit, varför kom han tillbaka och vem är det egentligen han inte litar på? Detta och mycket mer i detta road radio-avsnitt av Masks of Nyarlathotep! Masks of Nyarlathotep (5th ed) är skrivet av Larry DiTillio, Lynn Willis, Mike Mason, Lynne Hardy, Paul Fricker och Scott Dorward och är utgivet av Chaosium Inc, till deras spel Call of Cthulhu (7th ed). Omslaget är gjort av Sam Lamont och Rhys Pugh © Chaosium Inc. Spelledare: Adam Yngvesson David di Fazio: Simon Karlsson Bonnie Peck: Eric Herlin Ian O’Sullivan: Daniel Skaljac Palm Nathaniel Fawcett: Martin Sellgren
This episode kicks off a multi-part series on the Jomon period. Known to some as Japan's Neolithic period, and named for the distinctive cord-marked pottery found from sites of this time, the Jomon period in Japan spans thousands of years as humans on the archipelago moved from a nomadic to a more settled lifestyle, yet still before any widespread use of full scale agriculture. In this series we'll examine the early transitional phase into the growth of Jomon culture, we'll then look at the boom period in the Middle Jomon, and then the consolidation into northern and southern regions in the Late and Final Jomon periods, before the coming of the Yayoi. This episode will focus mainly on the transition into the Jomon period, the Incipient, Initial, and Early periods. We'll look at the life of the people of this time as well as their homes, rituals, and food. We'll discuss technological achievements beyond just pottery, such as lacquerware, and we'll see the importance of fishing for coastal settlements. Next episode we'll look at the boom period in the Middle Jomon, when the Kanto and Chubu regions grew to their most populous, ever. For now, give a listen to
“Artistic expression is vividly imaginative and ingenious when created and shared. The self-expression of the creative and genuine artist resonates with the collective consciousness. Art is a reflection of society. The artistic and creative representation of society is vital in the process of society moving forward, developing, and progressing.” “And, ultimately, art is a vehicle for social change.” “I focus on the narrative, the story I am telling. By embracing authentic truth, the boldness and vulnerability of the characters I play and the narratives I share all go hand-in-hand, in my creative journey of being a storyteller." Yuval David describes this as he illustrates his own process. Award-winning actor, host, and filmmaker Yuval David has become acclaimed for his work, including evocative and sometimes provocative performances on screen and stage. His art of storytelling through the perspective lenses of the characters involved in the stories he shares is compelling and captivating. He transports himself and his audiences along on the journey. Each role Yuval marvelously brings to life he treats as a masterclass in using art as a fundamental agent for social change. He skillfully conveys other perspectives as both unique and universal. He is known for his creative vision, perceptive approach, transcendent performances, and his seemingly effortless ability to make people laugh and cry in the same moment. His profound dexterity to get to the soulfulness of each character’s humanity has landed him major series regular and guest starring roles in some of the most widely celebrated and talked about television series and films in recent years. Whether he’s appearing in HBO’s new series ‘The Plot Against America,’ CBS’ hit political drama ‘Madam Secretary’ or ABC’s long-running primetime hidden camera show ‘What Would You Do?’ his appearances not only entertain with heart and pathos but explore the mosaic human experience. No role is squandered as Yuval always uses his robust public platform to engage his audience. He invites them to take an active role in improving the world around them. He simultaneously empowers his audience, and makes them feel deeply appreciated. His mission to entertain, uplift, and inspire, hasled him to host, narrate, create, produce and direct engaging and thought provoking content. His work is seen across YouTube and a myriad of social media channels. He currently produces almost a dozen web-series, short films, documentaries, and regularly performs his one-person shows in theatres. The charming, captivating, witty and funny powerhouse of energy is frequently invited to emcee and speak on behalf of countless cultural, humanitarian, philanthropic, social and political initiatives and institutions. This includes the Israeli Consulate in New York, most recently hosting Israel’s 70thAnniversary Celebration in Times Square, in front 30,000 live eventgoers and millions of viewers around the world. He has become a go-to host and narrator for short- and long-form video content and documentary features for Jewish, Israeli, LGBTQ, Arts, Cultural and Humanitarian Organizations and Initiatives, including The National LGBTQ Task Force, the Jewish National Fund (JNF USA), and Stand With Us. As a social journalist and keynote speaker, sometimes this advocacy work takes on a more literal approach. He regularly travels across the United States and abroad, in recent years bringing him to the illustrious heights of Capitol Hill and to powerful major multinationals and nonprofit organizations. He often speaks about the significance of using art and creativity as a dynamic engine toward social good. Yuval empowers people to see themselves as advocates for their communities, uniting together to support their own communities and others, and seeing these efforts as equally important. Yuval has a sensitivity and flair for inclusively interfacing with cast and crew, and equally with the audience and participants. He says, “I aim to create a safe space and a brave space, in which I can bring out the best in others and myself. This is a collaboration, unifyingus all.” In addition to “Madam Secretary,” “The Plot Against America,” and “What Would You Do?” Yuval’s on-screen credits also include “The Michael J Fox Show,” “Unforgettable,” and “Days of Our Lives;” leading and supporting roles in films such as “Incipient,” “Beauty and the Beast,” “Nephilim,” “Awakening of Spring,” “You,” and “The Fifth Estate;” and lead roles in contemporary and classic theatrical works, including: Broadway in “The Game;” Off-Broadway in “Daddy Issues,” “Bunburry,” “Romeo and Juliet,” and “In The Swing.” As much as possible, Yuval enjoys performing in regional theatres across the United States and abroad. Yuval regularly does voice overs for animation, commercials, narration, documentaries, and industrials. As a TV host, Yuval specializes in human interest, environmental, travel, food, culinary, and lifestyle shows. He is the host of multiple shows on television and online. You can follow him on his journey through: Instagram.com/Yuval_David_ Facebook.com/YuvalDavid Twitter.com/YuvalDavid YouTube.com/YuvalDavid IMDB.me/YuvalDavid Listen as we talk about: I have this platform where I can reveal truths In order to inspire to entertain - to get people to think Ears don't blink Vulnerability is the most interesting thing to reveal I like to find the ugly and make it beautiful Everything is an adventure; Treat it like an adventure To be able to make somebody else shine and know it Sign up or hear more about our Path to Purpose course here Join our purpose seeking podcast community at... Facebook Instagram YouTube Channel Facebook Group - Purpose Seekers Sign up for the Bi-Weekly Newsletter by emailing: peopleofpurposepodcast@gmail.com Help More Find Their Purpose by Donating to the Podcast
Dental podcast hosted by Dr. Phil Klein: This Viva Podcast will discuss the applications, clinical indications and benefits of resin infiltration for both the patient and clinician. Our guest is Dr. Carla Cohn, a practicing dentist in Canada, and is a clinical instructor in Paediatric Dentistry at the University of Manitoba. Dr. Cohn lectures internationally on prevention and Paediatric Dentistry for the general dentist.
K3chang is out, about, and more evasive than ever. Data breached at Bulgaria’s National Revenue Agency has turned up online in at least one hacker forum. Facebook’s planned Libra cryptocurrency received close scrutiny and a tepid reception on Capitol Hill this week. Emsisoft offers some common-sense reflections on why local governments are attractive ransomware targets. Please patch BlueKeep. And a hair care product is vulnerable to hacking. Johannes Ullrich from the SANS Technology Institute with tips on ensuring your vulnerability scans are secure. Guest is Richard Clarke, former National Coordinator for Security, Infrastructure Protection and Counter-terrorism for the United States, and coauthor of the book The Fifth Domain. For links to all of today's stories check our our CyberWire daily news brief: https://thecyberwire.com/issues/issues2019/July/CyberWire_2019_07_19.html Support our show
55. Warfare Keys
We covered so many areas of business in today's interview, but the aspects that stood out to me the most were how to be an adaptive leader and thinker in business. Bryan Weinert is a detail-oriented leader with a passion to develop ingenious products for his clients. As a Partner of Incipient, he oversees product strategy and execution through an adept team that is determined to push the envelope in custom software technology. Recently, Bryan has shifted his focus deeply on the problems faced by those in the Hospitality industry which has resulted in seeking to build the first smart restaurant and change the way consumers interact within the environment. Resources: Connect with Bryan further: Facebook | LinkedIn | Instagram Learn more about Incipient! THANK YOU! Thanks again for listening to the show! If it has helped you in any way, please share it using the social media buttons you see on the page. Also, reviews for the podcast on iTunes are extremely helpful and greatly appreciated! They do matter in the rankings of the show and I definitely read each and every one of them. Become part of the 25 Tribe! Join the OFFICIAL 25 Tribe Community! Subscribe to the Entrepreneur Before 25 Podcast. Enter your email for regular emails from Chelann Gienger on how to live a life of freedom and balance while being a young entrepreneur. Follow @chelanngienger on Instagram! Know someone who needs to hear this episode? Take a second and share it!
Erik Townsend and Patrick Ceresna welcome Russell Napier to MacroVoices. Erik and Russell discuss deflationary risks in the U.S. and context on current higher inflation prints. Erik asks Russell how high are risks of a credit event and what risks are there emanating from China. They further consider the impact of higher interest rates and ask if there a concern of the U.S. government not being able to fund itself. They ask what comes next for the equity markets, the impacts on junk bonds and what is next for Japan.
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Tony Mayo Executive Coach Do you know the most crucial resource for starting a company? Find out here, from the Business Owner’s Executive Coach Just click here to listen now or subscribe on your device using Apple’s Tunes, Android, and other podcatchers to have this and all new episodes placed on your device as they become available. […] The post Executive Coach’s One Question Quiz for Incipient Entrepreneurs • PODCAST appeared first on Tony Mayo.
As the Founding Partner of Incipient, Bryan Weinert oversees product strategy, implementation, and client relations while spearheading an adept team that is determined to push the envelope in custom software technology. From funded startups to large-scale enterprise solutions in finance, healthcare, pharmaceutical, and supply chain management industries, his foolproof solutions have benefited a wide range of clientele. Resources Incipient (product growth company) Incipient on Twitter Bryan Weinert on LinkedIn
November 6, 2017 What Is Your WHAT? Steve Olsher, Cladwell Blake Smith and Incipient Bryan Weinert
Bryan oversees the product development life cycle for a range of customers from matured startups to mid-sized and large customers. With a prime focus on establishing an MVP to vet assumptions and get to market. Incipient is a leader in creative technology solutions, fueled by a passion for growth. SHOW NOTES How Bryan became a Work @ Home RockStar Bryan shares his biggest mistake Great tips on pricing your product appropriately Identify key variables that go into product pricing Always continue learning Interviewing tips for how to find good people Bryan is an early riser Bryan discusses work / life balance
Bryan oversees product development, implementation, and client strategies while spearheading an adept team that is determined to push the envelope in custom software technology.From funded startups to large-scale enterprise solutions in finance, healthcare, pharmaceutical, and supply chain management industries, his foolproof solutions have benefited a wide range of clientele.Learn More: www.incipientcorp.comInfluential Influencers with Mike Saundershttp://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/
Bryan oversees product development, implementation, and client strategies while spearheading an adept team that is determined to push the envelope in custom software technology.From funded startups to large-scale enterprise solutions in finance, healthcare, pharmaceutical, and supply chain management industries, his foolproof solutions have benefited a wide range of clientele.Learn More: www.incipientcorp.comInfluential Influencers with Mike Saundershttp://businessinnovatorsradio.com/influential-entrepreneurs-with-mike-saunders/
Join the NCT Divines on our first ever live show and this week we are joined by Network Partners The Council Of Google+ as we discuss Incipient Hyper Calvinism, The Free Offer of the Gospel, The Love of God, The Will of God, and in typical CoG+ style... Much, Much More! Many of you have been asking to interact with the Porch and you wish is our command. Join us every other Thursday for a live recorded show. ————————————————————————— Episode #54 Resources: A Primer on Hyper-Calvinism - The Spurgeon Archive http://www.romans45.org/articles/hypercal.htm The Difficult Doctrine of the Love of God: By D.A. Carson http://s3.amazonaws.com/tgc-documents/carson/2000_difficult_doctrine_of_the_love_of_God.pdf The Gospel Offer is Free: By David H.J. Gay https://drive.google.com/file/d/0Bw8DX7Vtr3vJeVF3NzhRVHNDMWs/view Does God Desire All to Be Saved?: By John Piper http://www.desiringgod.org/books/does-god-desire-all-to-be-saved Can I know God's Will?: By RC Sproul http://www.wtsbooks.com/common/pdf_links/9781567691795.pdf Spurgeon V. Hyper-Calvinism: The Battle for Gospel Preaching: By Iain H. Murray https://www.amazon.com/Spurgeon-V-Hyper-Calvinism-Battle-Preaching/dp/1848710976 ————————————————————————— Porch-Con Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Porch-Con-2017-A-New-Covenant-Theology-Conference-193107494426990/?hc_ref=SEARCH&fref=nf NEW DAVID GAY TRACT: Two Questions… A big thanks to Marv Plementosh of www.onemilliontracts.com http://shop.onemilliontracts.com/ ———————————————————————— Blake White Resources: Blake’s Article ‘What is The Law of Christ?”: http://ablakew.blogspot.com/2015/06/what-is-law-of-christ.html Blake’s Books on Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/-/e/B004ROZCXA Blake’s Blog – Barabbas: http://ablakew.blogspot.com/ Blake White on GoodReads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/show/3450080.A_Blake_White?utm_medium=api&utm_source=author_widget ————————————————————————– What is New Covenant Theology? What is New Covenant Theology? An Introduction – Blake White https://www.amazon.com/What-New-Covenant-Theology-Introduction/dp/192896544X/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr= Cross to Crown Ministries: A short Primer on New Covenant Theology, by Blake White http://crosstocrown.org/article/a-short-primer-on-new-covenant-theology-essentials/ Providence Theological Seminary: What is New Covenant Theology http://ptstn.org/nct.html ————————————————————————- Striving For Eternity: Theology Discussion/Debate Series: Covenant Theology vs New Covenant Theology https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuuUQ7v1zMw&feature=youtu.be&fb_ref=Default New Covenant Theology vs Dispensational Theology https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=89cMw-Edpec Covenant Theology vs Dispensational Theology https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=efAzzvVM-Yo —————————————————————————— Steve Atkerson and NTRF New Testament Reformation Fellowship Website: http://www.ntrf.org/ NTRF’s NCT Series: http://ntrf.org/index.php/new-covenant-theology/ NTRF/SteveAtkerson on Sermon Audio: http://www.sermonaudio.com/source_detail.asp?sourceid=ntrf —————————————————————————— David H.J. Gay Resources: http://www.sermonaudio.com/source_detail.asp?sourceid=davidhjgay David H.J. Gay Archive Website: All David’s books are now available for FREE in PDF, Mobi, and EPub formats! www.davidhjgay.com ——————————————————————————— Contact CFTP: Facebook: CFTP Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/1710049122585165/ NCT Porch Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/574200849397709/ New Covenant Baptist Church: https://www.facebook.com/ncbcnorcal/?fref=ts Ask The Porch: (916) 399-3878 Email: NCTPorchcast@Gmail.com YouTube Channel: New Covenant Baptist Church: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCgx_0oUu3EELtdTET6rNBPQ —————————————————————————————– Dem Interwebs: New Covenant Baptist Church: http://www.
Starting big with The Madison, new Luke Bond music, Fisherman & Hawkins strike again with a huge remix, Will Rees' "Incipient" and many other great tunes.
When studying root words, there are often numerous variants to a primary root word. The primary root word cept: “taken,” for instance, present in the words concept and inception, has variant spellings of cap, cip, and ceiv. Examples containing these variant spellings, all of which mean “take” as well, are capable, recipient, and receive.Like this? Build a competent vocabulary with Membean.