POPULARITY
Inniu an deichiú lá de mhí na Bealtaine. Is mise Oisín Mac Conamhna.Toghadh Robert Prevost mar Pápa Leo a Ceathair Déag, ag an gceathrú vóta de chomhthionóil na gcairdinéal sa Séipéal Sistíneach sa Róimh Déardaoin. Is eisean an dá chéad seachtó seachtú Pápa ó Pheadar. Is as Chicago dó, an chéad Phápa as na Stáit Aontaithe, agus chaith sé cuid mhór dá shaol i bPeiriú. Rinne an Pápa Proinsias easpag de in 2014, agus cairdinéal de in 2023. Nuair a fógraíodh é tar éis an toghcháin, labhair sé in Iodáilís, in Spáinnís, agus i Laidin. Tá leid i rogha a ainm phápaigh go mbeidh an ceartas sóisialta ina théama tábhachtach dá phápacht. Tá cáil ar an bPápa Leo deireanach, a Trí Déag, as a imlitir Rerum Novarum, a chuir cearta an lucht oibre go lárnach i dteagasc na heaglaise Rómánaí.Tá cluiche ceannais camógaíochta na Mumhan idir Corcaigh agus Port Láirge curtha siar ag Camógaíocht na Mumhan, mar tá an dá fhoireann ag diúltú scórtaí a chaitheamh. Bhi agóid eile faoin cheist an deireadh seachtaine seo caite, nuair a d'fheistigh foirne Bhaile Átha Cliath agus Chill Cheannaigh chun cluiche ag caitheamh brístí gearra, acht bhí orthu na bristí gearra a athrú go scórtaí sular cuireadh tús leis an gcluiche. An babhta seo tá na himreoirí uilig go soiléir nach nglacfaidh siad leis na scórtaí in aon chur. Beidh comhdháil speisialta ag an gCumann Camógaíochta ar an dara lá is fiche den mhí seo, chun riail na scórtaí éigeantacha a phlé.Bhuaigh Zhao Xintong craobh an domhain sa snúcar in Amharclann an Bhreogáin in Sheffield Dé Luain, an chéad bhuaiteoir ón tSín riamh. Bhuaigh sé ocht bhfráma dhéag in aghaidh a dó dhéag i gcoinne Mark Williams, iarchuradh ón mBreatain Bheag, sa chluiche ceannais; agus bhuaigh sé ar Ronnie O'Sullivan, duine de na himreoirí snúcair is fearr riamh, le seisiún le spáráil sa chluiche leathcheannais. Dar le máthair Zhao, toisc nach raibh sé ró-ard nuair a raibh sé ina ghasúr, bhí nós aige cleachtadh ag caitheamh scataí rollála, mar gheall ar na horlaí breise a thug siad dó.*Léirithe ag Conradh na Gaeilge i Londain. Tá an script ar fáil i d'aip phodchraolta.*GLUAISceartas sóisialta - social justiceimlitir - circular (letter)scórtaí - skortsAmharclann an Bhreogáin - the Crucible Theatreiarchuradh - former championscataí rollála - roller skates
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/25bofwlj Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com 150k people have paid their respects to the Pope so far. 150k duine atá tar éis a n-ómós a léiriú don Phápa go dtí seo. The Vatican has said that 150,000 people have already come to pay their respects to Pope Francis, who is lying in state in St. Peter's Basilica in Vatican City for the third consecutive day. Tá sé ráite ag an Vatacáin go bhfuil 150,000 duine tar éis teacht cheana féin chun a n-ómós a thabhairt don Phápa Proinsias, atá ina luí faoi ghradam i mBaisleac Pheadair i gCathair na Vatacáine don tríú lá as a chéile. People are waiting up to four hours in queues to pay their respects. Tá daoine ag fanacht suas le ceithre huaire i scuainí lena n-ómós a léiriú. Pope Francis passed away on Easter Monday. Cailleadh an Pápa Proinsias Luan na Cásca. He was 88 years old. Bhí sé 88 bliain d'aois. The President of Ireland, Michael D. Bhí Uachtarán na hÉireann, Michael D. Higgins, and his wife, Sabina in St. Peter's Basilica earlier. Higgins, agus a bhean chéile, Sabina i mBaisleac Pheadair níos túisce. With world leaders expected to attend the funeral tomorrow morning, Italy is preparing for a tight security measure. Agus súil le ceannairí domhanda teacht chuig an tsochraid maidin amárach, tá beart dian slándála á réiteach ag an Iodáil. President Michael D. Beidh an tUachtarán Michael D. Higgins and Taoiseach Micheál Martin are among the heads of state and government who will represent the countries of the world in Peter's Square. Higgins agus an Taoiseach Micheál Martin i measc na gceann stáit agus na gceann rialtais a dhéanfaidh ionadaíocht ar son thíortha an domhain i gCearnóg Pheadair. They will be joined by US President Trump, British Prime Minister Keir Starmer, President Emmanuel Macron and Ukrainian President Volodymur Zelenskyy. Ina gcomhluadar beidh Uachtarán Trump na Stát Aontaithe, Príomh-Aire na Breataine Keir Starmer, an tUachtarán Emmanuel Macron agus Uachtarán na hÚcráine, Volodymur Zelenskyy. It was announced shortly afterwards that the First Minister of Northern Ireland, Michelle O'Neill, will be present at the funeral. Fógraíodh ar ball beag go mbeidh Céad-Aire Thuaisceart Éireann, Michelle O'Neill, i láthair ag an tsochraid. Former US President Joe Biden will also be there. Beidh iarUachtarán Mheirceá, Joe Biden, ann freisin. In addition, hundreds of thousands of visitors are expected in Rome between now and Easter Sunday, when Pope Francis was last seen making a short circuit through St. Peter's Square. Anuas air sin, tá súil leis na céadta míle cuairteoir sa Róimh as seo go dtí an Satharn Domhnach na Cásca an uair dheireanach a chonacthas an Pápa Proinsias agus é ag déanamh cúrsa gearr thrí Chearnóg Pheadair. Less than 24 hours later he died of a stroke that had struck him during the night. Níos lú ná 24 uair níos deanaí bhí sé básaithe den stróc a bhuail é i gcaitheamh na hoíche. He was recovering in the Vatican from a pneumonia infection that had put him in the hospital for 5 weeks. Bhí sé ag teacht chuige fein sa Vatacáin ó infhabhtú niúmóine a chuir san ospidéal ar feadh 5 seachtaine é. After the funeral, his body will be taken to his favorite church in Rome, the Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore, and will be laid to rest under a simple slab with a single word engraved on it, Franciscus. Tar éis na sochraide, tabharfar a chorp chuig an séipéal b'ansa leis sa Róimh, baisleac Santa Maria Maggiore agus cuirfear ann é faoi leac simplí a mbeidh aon fhocal amháin greanta air, Franciscus. In Ireland, a Solemn Mass was held this morning in St. Mary's Parish Church where prayers were held for the eternal rest of the Pope's soul. In Éirinn, bhí Aifreann Sollúnta ar siúl ar maidin i Leas-Eaglais Naomh Muire inar guíodh ar son suaimhneas síoraí d'anam an Phápa.
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/26c5khu5 Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Thousands in Rome bid farewell to the Pope. An slán deireanach á fhágáil leis na bPápa ag na mílte sa Róimh. Thousands are gathering in the Vatican to bid Pope Francis a final farewell in St. Peter's Basilica, where his body will lie in state for the next three days. Tá na mílte ag bailiú sa Vatacáin leis an slán deireanach a fhágáil ag an bPápa Proinsias i mBaisleac Pheadair, mar a mbeidh a chorp ag luí faoi ghradam go ceann trí lá. A long line of mourners and visitors stretched across St. Peter's Square before the doors of the basilica opened at ten o'clock in the morning, to allow entry to the public. Shín líne fhada na sochraideach agus cuairteoiri trasna Chearnóg Pheadair sular oscail doirse na baislice ar a deich ar maidin, chun cead isteach a thabhairt don phobal. The wardens estimated that there were approximately 20,000 people in the queue at that time. Mheas na maoir go raibh tuairim is 20,000 duine sa scuaine an t-am sin. Pope Francis, the leader of 1.4 billion Catholics around the world and the man from Argentina who was known for his reform, died on Monday at the age of 88. Dé Luain a fuair an Pápa Prionsias bás in aois a 88 mbliana, ceannaire 1.4bn Caitliceach ar fud na cruinne, an fear as an Airgintín a raibh cáil an leasaithe air. According to his death certificate, his death was caused by a stroke and heart failure, a day after he participated in the Cascais ceremonies at the Vatican. De réir a theastais bháis, stróc agus teip croí a thug a bhás, lá tar éis dó páirt a ghlacadh i searmanais na Casca sa Vatacáin. He had spent five weeks in hospital since February due to pneumonia that had spread to both lungs. Bhí cúig seachtaine caite aige san ospidéal ó mhí Feabhra de bharr núimóine a bhí tolgtha aige sa dá scámhóg. Since Monday, the pope's body has been lying in state in the Casa Santa Marta church in the Vatican, the house where he has resided since becoming pope, unlike his predecessors who resided in the Papal Apartments in the Vatican. Ón Luan, bhí corp an phápa as cionn cláir i séipéal Casa Santa Marta sa Vatacáin, an teach inar chuir sé faoí ó rinneadh pápa de, ní hionann agus na fir a chuaigh roimhe a rinne cónaí i Seomraí an Phápa sa Vatacáin. But this morning, Francis' body was taken from there to St. Peter's Basilica, one of the most beautiful and ornate churches in the world, and it will lie there until the funeral Mass on Saturday morning. Ach ar maidin, tugadh corp Phroinsias as sin go dtí Baisleac Pheadair, ceann de na heaglaisí is galánta agus is ornáidí ar domhain, agus is ann a bheidh sé go dtí Aifreanna na sochraide maidin Dé Sathairn. A crowd of priests and cardinals escorted his coffin through St. Peter's Square, where applause broke out among the thousands awaiting him, a traditional sign of respect at funerals in Italy. Slua de shagairt agus de cháirdinéil a rinne tionlacan ar a chónra trí Chearnóg Pheadair, mar a bhris bualadh bos amach i measc na mílte a bhí ag fanacht air, comhartha traidisiúnta ómóis ag sochraidí san Iodáil. The bells of St. Peter's rang and the Basilica choir sang psalms and Latin prayers as the pope's body entered the church. Bhuail cloig Naomh Peadair agus bhí cantaireachta salm agus páidreacha Laidne ag cór na Baislice ar theacht chorp an phápa isteach san eaglais. He will lie in state in a simple coffin in front of the altar, and beneath a niche painted by Michelangelo himself until his funeral. Beidh sé ag luí faoi ghradam i gcónra simplí os comhair an altóra, agus faoi bhun chuinneacháin a phéinteáil Michaelangelo féin go dtína shochraid. Prince is dressed in the white robes of the pope and, as one would expect from a devout Catholic, the rosary is woven into his fingers. Tá Prionsias gléasta in éide bhán an phápa agus, mar a bhéifí agus súil leis ó Chaitliceach cráifeach,
Neil has the hour by hour numbers. Panther arena rumors. Fox Trax, TSA, and who at IOD is dating "Super Dave"?
Dans cet épisode, John Karp et Rem accueillent Ramon Vos, cofondateur de la plateforme Cur8.io, dédiée à l'affichage, la curation et la promotion de collections NFT. Ramon revient sur l'origine de Cur8, ses fonctionnalités principales et ses ambitions futures.Présentation de Cur8Objectif : Permettre aux collectionneurs et créateurs de visualiser, organiser et partager leurs collections NFT via des galeries personnalisables.Multichain : Cur8 supporte actuellement 18 blockchains (Ethereum, Bitcoin, Solana, Tezos, Cardano, etc.), permettant d'afficher une grande variété de NFTs sur une même interface.Accès facile : Connexion simple via wallet ; Cur8 ne fait que lire les NFTs sans les héberger.Modules personnalisables : Création de galeries adaptées pour des écrans spécifiques (Apple TV, écrans en galerie, etc.) avec génération automatique de QR codes partageables.Application Mobile : Disponible sur mobile pour une expérience complète.Fonctionnalités principales* Affichage et curation : Création de galeries personnalisées par les utilisateurs, avec des designs et arrière-plans modulables.* Timeline des collections : Affichage des collections d'un artiste avec historique des œuvres et activités.* Partage et promotion : Possibilité de partager facilement sur les réseaux sociaux avec des liens directs vers les marketplaces.* Abonnements : Gratuit pour un compte de base, avec des options premium (2,99$ et 5,99$) pour connecter plusieurs wallets.Objectifs de Cur8.ioDéveloppement du produit : Poursuivre l'amélioration de la plateforme avec un focus particulier sur le côté galerie/musée.Expansion commerciale : Préparation d'une levée de fonds pour financer l'expansion marketing et attirer davantage d'utilisateurs.Intégration physique : Collaboration avec des galeries à Amsterdam, Singapour et aux États-Unis pour proposer des expositions sur écran via Cur8.Défis et visionConcurrence : Rivaliser avec des plateformes établies comme Deca.art.Différenciation : Offrir un écosystème complet intégrant visualisation, curation et promotion.Visibilité médiatique : Besoin de médiatisation pour se démarquer et attirer un large public.Liens utiles pour les auditeurs* Site web officiel de Cur8* Compte Twitter de Cur8* Profi LinkedIn de Ramon Vos* Replay vidéo de l'épisode ici : This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.nftmorning.com
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/24yz5g4c Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Earthquake damage in southern Italy. Damáiste déanta ag crith talún i ndeisceart na hIodáile. An earthquake struck the Naples area in southern Italy overnight, damaging several buildings and causing power outages. Tharla crith talún i gceantar Napoli i ndeisceart na hIodáile i gcaitheamh na hoíche agus rinneadh damáiste do roinnt foirgneamh agus gearradh an chumhacht ann dá bharr. Many locals spent the night sleeping outside – on the street or in cars – for fear that their houses would collapse on them. Chaith go leor de mhuintir na háite an oíche ag codladh amuigh – ar an tsráid nó i ngluaisteáin – ar fhaitíos go dtitfeadh a dtithe i mullach orthu. According to experts in Italy, the quake had a seismic magnitude of 4.4 three kilometers underground, but geological surveyors in the United States say it was 4.2 ten kilometers underground. Dar le saineolaithe san Iodáil gur méid sheismeach de 4.4 a bhí sa chrith trí chiliméadar faoi thalamh ach deir suirbhéirí geolaíochta sna Stáit Aontaithe gur 4.2 a bhí ann deich gciliméadar faoi thalamh. In any case, the earthquake was reportedly felt throughout the Campania region and is also said to be the strongest earthquake in the area in forty years. Pé scéal é, tuairiscítear gur airíodh an crith ar fud réigiún Campania agus deirtear freisin gurbh é an crith ba láidre sa limistéar é le daichead bliain. Pozzuoli, west of the city of Naples, was the town closest to the epicenter of the quake and one man was reportedly injured there when a wall of his house collapsed. Pozzuoli, siar ó chathair Napoli, an baile ba ghaire do chroílár an chreatha agus tuairiscitear gur gortaíodh fear amháin ansin nuair a thug balla a thí uaidh. Naples is located on a caldera, or volcanic crater, which is quite volatile and earthquakes occur from time to time. Tá Napoli suite ar chaildéara, nó cráitéar bolcánach, atá luaineach go maith agus tarlaíonn creathanna talún ann ó am go chéile. RTÉ News and Current Affairs Nuacht agus Cúrsaí Reatha RTÉ
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 12ú lá de mí Feabhra, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1972 dhiúltaigh an ceardchumann oibrithe in Éirinn an úsáid de dhá shagairt nach raibh páirteach den fhoireann, chun an t-oirniú an t-ardeaspag nua a chraoladh. I 2006 bhí an rialtas ag iarradh suaimhneas a thabhairt ar an tír nuair a tháinig an fliú éanúil chuig an Ghréig agus an Iodáil. Mharaigh an víreas níos mó ná 88 duine san Áise agus de bharr sin ciondíothaigh siad na mílte éin. I 1999 fuair Cluain Mheala an nuacht go raibh Schiesser International chun dúnadh agus de bharr sin bhí 150 duine chun a bpost a chailliúint. Tháinig an nuacht sin 12 mí tar éis a chaill 1,400 duine a bpost ag Seagate. I 2014 bhí oíche san Óstán Teampall Mhór de dhamhsa le Strictly Come Dancing. D'ardaigh an t-imeacht airgid don chlub GAA Moyne-Templetouhy. Sin Shayne Ward le That's My Goal – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 2006. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo I 1967 rinne na póilíní ruathar teach de Keith Richards ó The Rolling Stones I rith gcóisir. Bhí barántas ag na póilíní de bharr go raibh a lán drugaí ag an teach. I 1997 tharla preasócáid U2 ag an rannóg fo-éadaí ag Greenwich Village Kmart I Nua Eabhrac, chun a chamchuairt nua a lainseáil. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo rugadh aisteoir Jennifer Stone I Meiriceá I 1993 agus rugadh aisteoir Christina Ricci I gCalifornia I 1980 agus seo chuid de na rudaí a rinne sí. Beidh mé ar ais libh amárach le heagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Channel 10 Climate Specialist, Meteorologist, and Weather Presenter Josh Holt joins the podcast for this exciting two-part episode. Josh helps break down the climate drivers across Australia, including ENSO, IOD, SAM, Rossby Waves, the MJO and how they affect the mainland. We also delve into climate change and what it means moving forward with ocean temperatures on the increase, and the impacts that we can expect to see. We also discuss a little-known driver that impacts other parts of the globe. Throw in some sports and weather stories too!
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 12ú lá de mí Feabhra, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1972 dhiúltaigh an ceardchumann oibrithe in Éirinn an úsáid de dhá shagairt nach raibh páirteach den fhoireann, chun an t-oirniú an t-ardeaspag nua a chraoladh. I 2006 bhí an rialtas ag iarradh suaimhneas a thabhairt ar an tír nuair a tháinig an fliú éanúil chuig an Ghréig agus an Iodáil. Mharaigh an víreas níos mó ná 88 duine san Áise agus de bharr sin ciondíothaigh siad na mílte éin. I 1972 tháinig ráiteas amach ón IRA ag cáineadh na bagairt ar an ghuthán chuig daoine nach raibh de chuid na gCaitliceach in Aerfort na tSionainne agus áit eile sa chontae. Scar an IRA ó na bagairt sin ag rá ní raibh siad freagrach as. I 2006 fuair dílleachta ón Bhealarúis bás. Bhí sé ina chónaí in Inis do dhá bhliain agus fuair sé bás nuair a chuaigh sé ar ais chuig an Bhealarúis. In ómós dó, tháinig a luaithreach ar ais chuig an chontae de bharr go raibh sé an-sásta anseo. Sin Shayne Ward le That's My Goal – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 2006. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo I 1967 rinne na póilíní ruathar teach de Keith Richards ó The Rolling Stones I rith gcóisir. Bhí barántas ag na póilíní de bharr go raibh a lán drugaí ag an teach. I 1997 tharla preasócáid U2 ag an rannóg fo-éadaí ag Greenwich Village Kmart I Nua Eabhrac, chun a chamchuairt nua a lainseáil. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo rugadh aisteoir Jennifer Stone I Meiriceá I 1993 agus rugadh aisteoir Christina Ricci I gCalifornia I 1980 agus seo chuid de na rudaí a rinne sí. Beidh mé ar ais libh amárach le heagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 5ú lá de mí na Nollaig, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1977 thosaigh fiosrúchán den timpiste den eitleán Malaysian Airlines. Maraíodh 100 duine ar an lá. Bhí tuairimíocht ann faoin Japanese Red Amy agus an bhaint a bhí acu. Íospartaigh a bhí ann ná an tAire Talmhaíochta de Malaysia agus Ambasadór de Chúba. I 1982 chuaigh an parlaiminteach Iodálach chuig Washington. Chuaigh siad ann chun fiosrú a dhéanamh ar cad a dúirt baintreach Robert Calvi. Dúirt sí gur dúnmharaíodh é agus bhí nasc ann leis an scannal Vatacáin. I 1999 dhún bunscoil Convent of the Sacred Heart I Ros Cré de bharr go raibh a lán damáiste déanta don fhoirgneamh le deatach. Dúradh go n-osclóidh an scoil arís tar éis scrúdú a dhéanamh air. I 2001 d'oscail áit nua d'Oideachas agus áit chónaithe I dTeampall Mór. Chosain a fhoirgneamh suite ag an choláiste oiliúna Gardaí níos mó ná 5 milliúin. Sin Rockin All Over The World ó Status Quo – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 1977. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo I 2006 dhíol a lán rudaí ó dhaoine cáiliúla I gceant I Nua Eabhrac. Dhíol liricí lámhscríofa ó Paul McCartney do 192,000 dollar, giotár ó Jimi Hendrix do 168,000 dollar agus leabhar nótaí ó Bob Marley do 72,000 dollar. I 2011 bhí albam Adele 21 fós ag uimhir a haon ar na cairteacha do 45 seachtain. Ag an am bhí sé an t-albam a dhíol an chuid is mó sa Bhreatain. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo rugadh Walt Disney I Chicago I 1901 agus rugadh amhránaí Keri Lynn Hilson I Meiriceá I 1982 agus seo chuid de a amhrán. Beidh mé ar ais libh amárach le heagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Beidh taisí Carlo Aacutis,buachail óg ón Iodáil ata beannaithe ag an Eaglais agus a bheidh ina Naomh an bhliain seo chugainn a teacht dtí séipéal Bhaile an Fheirtéaraigh inniu.
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 22ú lá de mí na Samhna, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1989 dúirt an t-Ard Chúirt I Londain go mbeidh oidhre de Guinness ag fáil níos mó ná 200 milliún punt I gciste iontaobhais. Na daoine atá ainmnithe mar thairbhithe ná duine san Iodáil agus Maureen Guinness. I 1992 dúirt an IRA gurbh iad a bhí freagrach don dúnmharú de spiaire I nDoire. Tharla sé seo dhá lá roimh ar tháinig clár amach ar an BBC faoi bhrathadóir a fuair 150,000 punt I rith ceithre bliana. I 2007 chuaigh An Taoiseach Bertie Ahern chuid Teampall Mór. D'oscail sé raon reatha Oilimpeach – an t-aon raon a raibh i dTiobraid Árann ag an am. Bhí an dromchla mar an gcéanna leis an raon a d'úsáid siad san Aithin i 2004. I 2010 bhí pobail timpeall an domhain in iomaíoch lena chéile don phobail is fearr. Bhuaigh Emly an teidil an bhliain sin ag an imeacht idirnáisiúnta a raibh á óstach ó Ghradam Idirnáisiúnta do Phobail. Sin Rihanna le Only Girl In The World – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 2010. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo – I 1968 tháinig The Beatles amach lena albam nua. Bhí dhá albam ann darbh ainm The White Album. I 1975 chuaigh fear grinn Billy Connolly chuig uimhir a haon sna cairteacha le scigaithris den amhrán Divorce ó Tammy Wynette. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo, rugadh aisteoir Scarlett Johansson I Nua Eabhrac ar an lá seo I 1984 agus rugadh aisteoir Jamie Lee Curtis in LA ar an lá seo I 1959 agus seo chuid de na rudaí a rinne sí. Beidh mé ar ais libh an tseachtain seo chugainn le eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 5ú lá de mí na Nollaig, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1977 thosaigh fiosrúchán den timpiste den eitleán Malaysian Airlines. Maraíodh 100 duine ar an lá. Bhí tuairimíocht ann faoin Japanese Red Amy agus an bhaint a bhí acu. Íospartaigh a bhí ann ná an tAire Talmhaíochta de Malaysia agus Ambasadór de Chúba. I 1982 chuaigh an parlaiminteach Iodálach chuig Washington. Chuaigh siad ann chun fiosrú a dhéanamh ar cad a dúirt baintreach Robert Calvi. Dúirt sí gur dúnmharaíodh é agus bhí nasc ann leis an scannal Vatacáin. I 1982 dúirt bainisteoir an Chláir Joseph Boland go mbeidh sé ag éirí as. Bhí sé mar bhainisteoir do 22 bliain. D'éirigh sé as go hoifigiúil I gcruinniú le Comhairle Contae an Chláir. I 1984 dhíol James Melody ó Bhun Ráite bullán a raibh 1,080 cileagram do 2,850 punt. Dhíol sé an bullán I Luimneach ag seó. Sin Rockin All Over The World ó Status Quo – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 1977. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo I 2006 dhíol a lán rudaí ó dhaoine cáiliúla I gceant I Nua Eabhrac. Dhíol liricí lámhscríofa ó Paul McCartney do 192,000 dollar, giotár ó Jimi Hendrix do 168,000 dollar agus leabhar nótaí ó Bob Marley do 72,000 dollar. I 2011 bhí albam Adele 21 fós ag uimhir a haon ar na cairteacha do 45 seachtain. Ag an am bhí sé an t-albam a dhíol an chuid is mó sa Bhreatain. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo rugadh Walt Disney I Chicago I 1901 agus rugadh amhránaí Keri Lynn Hilson I Meiriceá I 1982 agus seo chuid de a amhrán. Beidh mé ar ais libh amárach le heagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Fáilte ar ais chuig eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo ar an 22ú lá de mí na Samhna, liomsa Lauren Ní Loingsigh. I 1989 dúirt an t-Ard Chúirt I Londain go mbeidh oidhre de Guinness ag fáil níos mó ná 200 milliún punt I gciste iontaobhais. Na daoine atá ainmnithe mar thairbhithe ná duine san Iodáil agus Maureen Guinness. I 1992 dúirt an IRA gurbh iad a bhí freagrach don dúnmharú de spiaire I nDoire. Tharla sé seo dhá lá roimh ar tháinig clár amach ar an BBC faoi bhrathadóir a fuair 150,000 punt I rith ceithre bliana. I 1992 bhí agóidí ann I mBaile na Caillí. Bhí tuismitheoirí á agóidíocht de bharr go raibh francaigh sna seomraí ranga agus de bharr sin bhí na bpáistí sa seomra na gcótaí. I 2010 bhuaigh Caisleán Drom Ólainn gradam sa éiceabhách fáilteachais. Bhuaigh siad an gradam don fheabhas seasta I rith an bhliain. Sin Rihanna le Only Girl In The World – an t-amhrán is mó ar an lá seo I 2010. Ag lean ar aghaidh le nuacht cheoil ar an lá seo – I 1968 tháinig The Beatles amach lena albam nua. Bhí dhá albam ann darbh ainm The White Album. I 1975 chuaigh fear grinn Billy Connolly chuig uimhir a haon sna cairteacha le scigaithris den amhrán Divorce ó Tammy Wynette. Agus ar deireadh breithlá daoine cáiliúla ar an lá seo, rugadh aisteoir Scarlett Johansson I Nua Eabhrac ar an lá seo I 1984 agus rugadh aisteoir Jamie Lee Curtis in LA ar an lá seo I 1959 agus seo chuid de na rudaí a rinne sí. Beidh mé ar ais libh an tseachtain seo chugainn le eagrán nua de Ar An Lá Seo.
Tá ráiteas eisithe ag an mBreatain, an Iodáil, an Fhrainc agus an Ghearmáin ina ndeir siad go bhfuil ionsaithe Iosrael ar misean UNIFIL sa Liobáin in aghaidh dlí daonnúil idirnáisiúnta.
Neil gets a new injunction to keep Jack Thompson away from him. They received a trove of documents from Jack about Neil, surveillance of Stan's and Neil's houses, including license plate numbers of visitors, and calls made to Dennis Collins, and Nick, warning about Neil. Jack also made many calls to Chicago when Neil had the mysterious car crash. Today is Sharon Mahony's last day at IOD, her send off is catered by Wayne Arnold and Wings Plus. Greg Budell call to make nice to Glen now that he is on AM.
Herzlichen Dank an unsere WERBEPARTNER:Carnivoro: Supplemente rund um die Carnivore Ernährung Mit dem Gutscheincode CARNITARIER erhältst du 10 % Rabatt auf deinen ersten Einkauf!KaufneKuh: Fleisch aus artgerechter Haltung mit fairen Preisen für Landwirte Mit dem Gutscheincode CARNITARIER erhältst du 10 € Ermäßigung auf deinen Einkauf ab 50 €._____________________________________________________________Folge 161: Hormongesundheit auf Höchstniveau mit Marc BorchertMarc Borchert, 52, Arzt und Unternehmer, spricht im Podcast über seine nahezu carnivore Kost mit einem großen Anteil an Eiern. Eier hält er für ein Superfood, weil es nicht nur Nährstoffe, sondern auch Wachstumsfaktoren enthält. Neben allen tierischen Lebensmitteln empfiehlt er eine ausreichende Salzzufuhr ohne übermäßiges Trinken. Warum er Ausdauertraining nicht für vorteilhaft hält im Gegensatz zu Krafttraining erklärt er im Podcast. Es geht außerdem um Rohmilchprodukte, die Mikronährstoffe Iod und Bor, über unsere Stressachse mit einer ausreichenden Cortisolversorgung, Sexualhormone, den Bodybuilder Vince Gironda, Um sich fit und vital zu fühlen, ist eine richtige Balance der Hormone nötig. Auf die Diagnostik dazu hat er sich spezialisiert und betreut seine Patienten online. Über seine Firma “Wish you more” bietet er auch Ernährungsberatung an.Ihr könnt Marc Borchert erreichen unter kontakt@arztpraxis-borchert.de, über Instagram @marcborchert, über Facebook @Marc Borchert oder über seine Webseite .___________________________________________________________Fleischzeit ist der erste deutschsprachige Podcast rund um die carnivore Ernährung. Hier erfahrt ihr Tipps zur Umsetzung des carnivoren Lifestyles, wissenschaftliche Hintergründe zur Heilsamkeit sowie ökologische und ethische Informationen zum Fleischkonsum. Eine Übersicht über alle Folgen findet ihr hier: www.carnitarier.de/fleischzeitpodcast Andrea Siemoneit berichtet nach über drei Jahren carnivorer Ernährung über ihre Erfahrungen und Erkenntnisse. Außerdem interviewt sie andere Carnivoren und Wissenschaftler. Ihr findet sie hier auf Instagram. Handbuch der Carnivoren Ernährung⎯#carnitarier #carnetarier #carnivor #carnivoreernährung #carnivorediät #fleischbasiert #keto #lowcarb #ketogeneernährung #ketogeneernaehrung #paleo #paleoernährung #ohnezucker #zuckerfrei #paleodiät Haftungsausschluss:Alle Inhalte im Podcast werden von uns mit größter Sorgfalt recherchiert und publiziert. Dennoch übernehmen wir keine Haftung für die Richtigkeit, Vollständigkeit oder Aktualität der Informationen. Sie stellen unsere persönliche subjektive Meinung dar und ersetzen auch keine medizinische Diagnose oder ärztliche Beratung. Dasselbe gilt für unsere Gäste. Konsultieren Sie bei Fragen oder Beschwerden immer Ihren behandelnden Arzt.
Sandy King lives with her husband Jay in an 1840s log cabin home tucked in the woods, the charming historic town of Madison Indiana. She creates hand soldered inspirational jewelry to encourage the soul. She is a Mixed Media artist and a creative heart. She collects and sells all things vintage, antique, and patina'Ed as well as creative product like Debi's DIY Paint, IOD, decoupage papers, German Glass Glitter, and more. You can find her booth space in Riverwest antique mall 1029 W. 2nd St. Madison, Indiana. She also sells her jewelry in several darling boutiques in Texas, Kentucky, and Indiana. Upcoming Events: Madison Chautauqua Madison, IN Sept 28-29 Stream Cliff Farm Commiskey, IN Oct 11-12 Chandelier Barn Market Montgomery, IN Nov 8-9 Website https://thehouseatwhiterock.com/ Facebook https://m.facebook.com/thehouseatwhiterock/ Instagram https://www.instagram.com/thehouseatwhiterock/
Die Themen in den Wissensnachrichten: +++ Zu wenig Iod, Eisen, Calcium und Vitamin E - vielen Menschen fehlen Mikronährstoffe +++ Neue Starlink-Satelliten verursachen mehr Lichtverschmutzung +++ US-Behörde will hunderttausende Eulen töten +++ **********Weiterführende Quellen zu dieser Folge:Hörtipp: Podcast "Update Erde"Global estimation of dietary micronutrient inadequacies: a modeling analysis, The Lancet Global Health, 29.8.24Brightness Characterization for Starlink Direct-to-Cell Satellites, Arxiv 2024U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Finalizes Strategy to Manage Invasive Barred Owls to Protect Imperiled Spotted Owls, 28.8.24Polyolefin waste to light olefins with ethylene and base-metal heterogeneous catalysts, Science, 29.8.2024Alle Quellen findet ihr hier.**********Ihr könnt uns auch auf diesen Kanälen folgen: Tiktok und Instagram.
Jeannette talks to Richard Selby, the MD and co-founder of Pro Steel Engineering, as well as the chair of the Institute of Directors in Wales and the Prince's Trust Development Committee. Richard shares insights into his diverse career and the challenges of balancing multiple roles. He discusses the importance of networking, resilience in business, and the value of physical well-being in maintaining a positive mindset KEY TAKEAWAYS The Institute of Directors has made efforts to increase diversity within its membership, particularly focusing on increasing female representation and engaging underrepresented ethnic groups. The Institute of Directors operates on three key pillars: connect, develop, and influence, guiding its activities and initiatives to provide value to its members. The organisation has shifted towards a more member-led approach, encouraging members to contribute, represent, and engage with the organisation's activities and policy discussions. Networking has been highlighted as a key aspect of success, with Richard emphasising the importance of building relationships, attending events, and leveraging the network for opportunities. BEST MOMENTS "I sometimes wonder, and I've tried to shed off some roles over the years, but things keep coming back." "I bumped into my predecessor at the IOD at an event in Carlisle Airport and she started talking to me about what a membership organisation was all about." "I think the first thing when I started the business, it was all focused on the business." "I had no idea how troubled and how difficult some of the circumstances that some of the young people who were helped by the Trust have come from." This is the perfect time to get focused on what YOU want to really achieve in your business, career, and life. It's never too late to be BRAVE and BOLD and unlock your inner BRILLIANT. Visit our new website https://brave-bold-brilliant.com/ - there you'll find a library of FREE resources and downloadable guides and e-books to help you along your journey. If you'd like to jump on a free mentoring session just DM Jeannette at info@brave-bold-brilliant.com. VALUABLE RESOURCES Brave Bold Brilliant - https://brave-bold-brilliant.com/ Brave, Bold, Brilliant podcast series - https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/brave-bold-brilliant-podcast/id1524278970 ABOUT THE GUEST Richard is the Managing Director and Co-founder of Pro Steel Engineering in Pontypool, National Chair of the Institute of Directors Wales, Chair of The Prince's Trust Cymru Development Committee and Chair of Torfaen Strategic Economic Forum. He was appointed a Deputy Lieutenant of Gwent in 2021 and awarded an MBE in the 2023 King's Birthday Honours for services to the economy and charity in Wales. He has a civil engineering degree from Swansea University and has delivered extensive and complex structural steelwork projects across the UK and around the world. Notable projects include the 22 tonne dragon at ICC Wales, The transformation of the Olympic Stadium, the East Stand Redevelopment of Twickenham Stadium and more recently the new high adrenaline adventure rooftop experience on Cardiff's Principality Stadium known as Scale the Stadium. In his role as Chair of IoD Wales he has redefined the Institute offer across Wales to ensure a more inclusive feel and exclusive events plan where he now leads a membership of 500 across Wales representing business leaders to policymakers and politicians at all levels of Government. He Chairs The Prince's Trust Wales Development Committee and is committed to raising £1m to support young people in Wales in time for the charity's 50th anniversary in 2026. Socials: LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/richard-selby-prosteelengineering?lipi=urn%3Ali%3Apage%3Ad_flagship3_profile_view_base_contact_details%3BT15hDxgMTeOcDEzRiGjkrA%3D%3D ABOUT THE HOST Jeannette Linfoot is a highly regarded senior executive, property investor, board advisor, and business mentor with over 30 years of global professional business experience across the travel, leisure, hospitality, and property sectors. Having bought, ran, and sold businesses all over the world, Jeannette now has a portfolio of her own businesses and also advises and mentors other business leaders to drive forward their strategies as well as their own personal development. Jeannette is a down-to-earth leader, a passionate champion for diversity & inclusion, and a huge advocate of nurturing talent so every person can unleash their full potential and live their dreams. CONTACT THE HOST Jeannette's linktree - https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot https://www.jeannettelinfootassociates.com/ YOUTUBE - https://www.youtube.com/@braveboldbrilliant LinkedIn - https://uk.linkedin.com/in/jeannettelinfoot Facebook - https://www.facebook.com/jeannette.linfoot/ Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/jeannette.linfoot/ Tiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@jeannette.linfoot Podcast Description Jeannette Linfoot talks to incredible people about their experiences of being Brave, Bold & Brilliant, which have allowed them to unleash their full potential in business, their careers, and life in general. From the boardroom tables of ‘big' international businesses to the dining room tables of entrepreneurial start-ups, how to overcome challenges, embrace opportunities and take risks, whilst staying ‘true' to yourself is the order of the day.Travel, Bold, Brilliant, business, growth, scale, marketing, investment, investing, entrepreneurship, coach, consultant, mindset, six figures, seven figures, travel, industry, ROI, B2B, inspirational: https://linktr.ee/JLinfoot
Nuacht Mhall. Príomhscéalta na seachtaine, léite go mall. * Inniu an ceathrú lá is fiche de mhí Lúnasa. Is mise Niall Ó Siadhail. Tá ionchúisitheoirí san Iodáil ag smaointiú ar chúisimh dúnorgana maidir le bás seachtair nuair a chuaigh an t-oll-luamh Bayesian go tóin poill amach ó chósta na Sicile Dé Luain. I measc na marbh tá Mike Lynch, Sasanach de bhunús Éireannach a bhunaigh an comhlacht idirnáisiúnta teicneolaíochta Autonomy. Bhí Lynch ag ceiliúradh go bhfuarthas neamhchiontach é i gcúisimh calaoise sna Stáit Aontaithe. Tháinig a bhean chéile slán ón tubaiste ach cailleadh iníon dá gcuid. Comhtharlú tragóideach ab ea é nuair a maraíodh a chomhchosantóir sa chás calaoise, Stephen Chamberlain, i dtimpiste bóthair, roinnt uaireanta i ndiaidh don long dul go tóin poill. Tá sé ráite ag póilíní i Sasana nach raibh cúinsí amhrasacha bainte le bás Chamberlain. Bhí comhdháil náisiúnta an Pháirtí Dhaonlathaigh ar siúl i Siceágó an tseachtain seo, agus ghlac Kamala Harris leis an ainmniúchán le dul san iomaíocht i gcoinne Donald Trump i dtoghchán uachtaránachta Mheiriceá ag deireadh na bliana. Cháin sí Trump in óráid Déardaoin inar leag sí amach a fís don uachtaránacht. Tharla seo i ndiaidh seachtain d'óráidí móra tugtha ag leithéidí Joe Biden, Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, Hillary Clinton agus Tim Walz, gobharnóir Minnesota, a bheidh ag seasamh le Harris sa toghchán. Tá ag éirí níos fearr leis an Pháirtí Daonlathach sna pobalbhreitheanna ó shocraigh Biden ar éirí as an bealach a fhágáil do Harris. Tá tús curtha le trialacha an chéad vacsaín riamh in aghaidh ailse scamhóg. Deirtear go dtiocfadh leat an vacsaín nua a bheith “ceannródaíoch” sa troid i gcoinne an ghalair, an chúis bháis is mó i measc na gcineálacha ailse. Tá an triail ar siúl sa Ríocht Aontaithe, sna Stáit Aontaithe, sa Ghearmáin, san Ungáir, sa Pholainn, sa Spáinn agus sa Tuirc agus táthar ag súil go mbeidh freagairt imdhíonachta níos fearr ag othair gan dochar ar bith a dhéanamh, rud a tharlaíonn le leithéidí ceimiteiripe. Ba é Janusz Racz as Londain an chéad duine chun an vacsaín a fháil, agus é ag rá go bhfuil sé ag súil le Maratón Londan a rith nuair a bheidh biseach air. * Léirithe ag Conradh na Gaeilge i Londain. Tá script ar fáil i d'aip phodchraolta. * GLUAIS cúisimh dúnorgana - manslaughter charges oll-luamh - superyacht calaois - fraud cúinsí amhrasacha - suspicious circumstances ailse scamhóg - lung cancer freagairt imdhíonachta - immunity response
S4 Ep12 - Faisal Khan, an influential figure at the Institute of Directors, serves as the chair for the southern region and is a pivotal member of the IoD's expert advisory group for Science, Innovation, and Technology. In this engaging episode, Faisal Khan sits down with Shelley and Bulent to delve into the critical role of corporate governance in startups, exploring the intricate relationship between cybersecurity and effective management. Faisal highlights the paramount importance of education for board members, the role of a non-executive chairman, and the benefits of establishing strong governance principles from the outset. The conversation also touches on the implications of AI on business and offers a reflection on Faisal's esteemed career at IBM, emphasising patience and diligence.
Neil is alone, Glen is on vacation. Neil ran into Sally Fitz in the parking lot, and they had a nice chat, baseball, a 14 year old fan calls, and yentas to picket IOD.
jQuery(document).ready(function(){ cab.clickify(); }); Original Podcast with clickable words https://tinyurl.com/2b7qcsrl Contact: irishlingos@gmail.com Gold medal at McClenaghan. Bonn óir ag McClenaghan. This country has won another gold medal at the Olympic Games in Paris. Tá bonn óir eile buaite ag an tír seo ag na Cluichí Oilimpeacha i bPáras. Rhys McClenaghan did the action for us in the gymnastics competition. Rhys McClenaghan a rinne an beart dúinn i gcomórtas na gleacaíochta. The County Down man managed to defeat every other competitor and showed his mastery of the odd horse throughout the evening. D'éirigh le fear Chontae an Dúin chuile iomaitheoir eile a shárú agus thaispeáin sé a mháistreacht ar an gcapall corr i gcaitheamh an tráthnóna. Nariman Kurbanov of Kazakhstan took the silver medal and Stephen Nedoroscik of the United States finished in 3rd place. Fuair Nariman Kurbanov ón gCasacstáin an bonn airgid agus chríochnaigh Stephen Nedoroscik óna Stáit Aontaithe sa 3ú háit. In other events Daniel Wiffen has won the men's 1500m freestyle in the Olympic swimming competition. In imeachtaí eile tá rás ceannais saorbhuille 1500m na bhfear i gcomórtas snámha na gCluichí Oilimpeacha bainte amach ag Daniel Wiffen. The Irishman managed to come in first place easily in the half distance race in Paris this morning. D'éirigh leis an Éireannach teacht sa gcéad áit go héasca sa rás leathchraoibhe i bPáras ar maidin. His time was 14.40.34 and it was clear within 200m of the goal that this man from County Armagh would not be surpassed despite the strong efforts of the Italian, Gregorio Paltrinieri who finished in second place. 14.40.34 an t-am a bhí aige agus ba léir i bhfoisceacht 200m don sprioc nach sárófaí an fear seo as ContaeArd Mhacha ainneoin na dtréan iarrachtaí ón Iodálach,Gregorio Paltrinieri a chríochnaigh sa dara háit. Wiffen in search of his second gold medal Daniel Wiffen will swim in the final at 6.35 tomorrow evening. Wiffen ar thóir a dhara bonn óir Is ag 6.35 tráthnóna amárach a rachaidh Daniel Wiffen chun snámha sa rás ceannais. The entire Irish community will be hoping that he succeeds in winning his second gold medal at these games. Beidh pobal na hÉireann uilig ag súil go n-éireoidh leis a dhara bonn óir a bhuachan ag na cluichí seo. He already has one thanks to his achievements in the pool in the 800m freestyle race earlier in the week. Tá ceann aige cheana féin a bhuíochas dá chuid éachtaí sa linn snámha i rás an 800m saorbhuille níos túisce sa tseachtain. Today is the eighth day of the Olympic Games and among the other competitors from this country who could be successful today is the boxer Kellie Harrington. Is é inniu an t-ochtú lá de na Cluichí Oilimpeacha agus i measc na n-iomaitheoirí eile ón tír seo a bhféadfadh rath a bheith orthu inniu tá an dornálaí Kellie Harrington. Rhys McClenaghan.He's done a feat today Kellie Harrington has already won a bronze medal, but if she wins her round tonight in the ring against Brazil's Beatriz Soares Ferreira that will ensure her at least a silver medal at these games. Rhys McClenaghan.Gaisce déanta aige inniu Tá bonn cré-umha buaite cheana féin ag Kellie Harrington, ach má bhuann sí a babhta anocht sa bhfáinne in aghaidh Beatriz Soares Ferreira ón mBrasaíl cinnteoidh sé sin ar a laghad bonn airgid di ag na cluichí seo. Kellie Harrington hoping to be in the final round That fight in the light heavyweight semi-final will take place shortly after 9 o'clock. Kellie Harrington agus í ag súil le bheith sa bhabhta ceannais Beidh an troid sin sa mbabhta leathcheannais éadrom mheáchan ar siúl go gairid i ndiaidh a 9 a' chlog. McClenaghan with his gold medal McClenaghan lena bhonn óir
Tá Liam Ó Néill taréis filleadh ó thuras ar San Giovanni na h-Iodáile. Deir sé go bhfuil sé buioch do Padre Pio,agus go mbraitheann sé go dtugann sé faoiseamh do go leor daoine bhíonn i ngreim.
[English version below] Úrscéal nua-aimseartha suite sa tSairdín i lár an chéid seo a chuaigh thart. Aistriúchán le Máire Nic Mhaoláin ón Iodáilís ar an leabhar 'Accabadora' le Michela Murgia. Láithreoir: Seán Ó Catháin Aíonna: Hannah Rice agus Stiofán Ó Briain [Leagan Gaeilge thuas] A modern novel set in Sardinia in the middle of the last century. Translation from the Italian of the book Accabadora by Michela Murgia. Presenter: Seán Ó Catháin Guests: Hannah Rice and Stiofán Ó Briain
In this panel discussion arranged by Ministry of Awesome, got the chance to share about governance for startups along with Flip Grater, Jeff Wallace and Zach Warder-Gabaldon. We kept it practical and relevant for founders on what you need to know when it comes to advisory boards, directors, legal duties, paying people, finding the right fit, selecting investors, how to keep on track and quite a lot more! If you like this, check out the other content at www.theseeds.nz Resource on how to chair a meeting well: https://www.parryfield.com/wp-content/uploads/2024/03/How-to-Chair-a-Meeting-Well.pdf "Ministry of Awesome presents a dynamic panel of expert advisors offering quick-fire advice to guide you through the early stages of your business journey. Our experts will demystify industry jargon about governance and structure and clarify how today's decisions can impact the future success of your business.” Bios on panellists Zach: Zach is responsible for developing and managing the startup innovation programmes at Ministry of Awesome. After spending two and half decades in the Valley immersed in and surrounded by entrepreneurship and innovation, he is incredibly well equipped to helping Aotearoa's startup sector realise its potential as a unique and powerful incubation nation. Jeff: Jeff is a long-time Bay Area resident who works with global startup ecosystems, including governments, corporations & startup accelerators/entrepreneurs, to help catalyze startup environments & create a bridge to Silicon Valley. He is an Adjunct Instructor at UC Berkeley and is co-founder of Silicon Valley in Your Pocket, a global virtual startup accelerator, serving 1000s of companies across 40+ countries. He is co-founder & former President of Batchery, an incubator for seed stage startups. He is an active angel investor with equity positions in 250+ companies and an active advisor & investor at Berkeley SkyDeck. He is an Executive Board Member for the Rutgers Business School Road to Silicon Valley Program (RSVP). Previously, he worked at Cognizant & Brillio as founder & Global Head for Mobility & UX practices. He is a frequent keynote speaker at global tech & startup events. He holds a BA in Economics/Finance from Rutgers College & an MBA from UC Berkeley. Flip: Flip Grater is an author, musician and activist, founder and CEO, chef and entrepreneur. After 15 years in the music industry as a music label owner and singer-songwriter, touring the world and releasing five albums and two books she moved home to Otautahi and started plant based food production company and restaurant Grater Goods. She is currently the CEO of Grater Goods and a Press columnist. Steven: Steven Moe is a Partner at Parry Field Lawyers with a focus on start-ups and small business and helping them succeed through practical support on topics such as structures, shareholders, raising capital and IP. He has edited free guides for startups including this one on raising capital and this one on common start-up issues. He has worked as a lawyer for 20 years including 11 years overseas based in Tokyo, London and Sydney, and since 2016 has been based back in Aotearoa. Steven hosts seeds podcast which has a focus on “for purpose” organisations and people doing inspiring things which has 388 episodes and another on governance for the IOD called Board Matters.
Cuirfidh toscaireacht as an Iodáil tús inniu le cuairt a mhairfeas dhá lá ar na hoileáin Árainn mar chuid den phlean na hoileáin a nascadh leis na hoileáin Aeólacha, atá ó Thuaidh den tSicil sa Mheánmhuir.
Do you constantly doubt your abilities and achievements? Are you haunted by the fear of being exposed as a fraud? Well, listen up entrepreneurs, here's how to conquer your imposter syndrome once and for all. Clare Josa is a renowned expert in tackling imposter syndrome, from speaking at the IoD to European parliament, and she is here to share her proven strategies to help you break free from self-doubt and step into your true potential. With 10 books under her belt, Clare also runs Soultuitive, a leadership development programme dedicated to overcoming all the barriers that are preventing you from becoming the leader you were born to be. Stay tuned to discover how to recognise and challenge self-sabotaging thoughts, cultivate self-confidence, and build resilience in the face of criticism. This is truly an episode you don't want to miss!
Series FourThis episode of 'The New Abnormal' podcast features Louise Mowbray, founder of Mowbray by Design, author of 'Relevant: Future-Focused Leadership' and co-author of 'Uncertainty: Making Sense of the World for Better, Bolder Outcomes'. She specialises in the future of work & future of leadership, working with some of the world's most respected leaders and C-suite teams at the intersection of leadership, innovation, transformation and purpose-driven business. Clients include those such as PWC, EY, Cass Business School, The IoD, Boston Consulting Group, Henley Business School, the Law Society, and more. She's also a Conscious Leadership Coach, Natural Foresight Practitioner, and a behavioural science practitioner. So, in the podcast, we discuss all of the above in what I hope you'll find is a wide-ranging and deeply interesting conversation!
Las campanas del horror (The Bells of Horror) —también publicado como Campanas del horror (Bells of Horror)— es un relato de terror del escritor norteamericano Henry Kuttner (1915-1958), publicado originalmente en la edición de abril de 1939 de la revista Strange Stories. Las campanas del horror, tal vez uno de los cuentos de Henry Kuttner menos conocidos, pertenece a los Mitos de Cthulhu de H.P. Lovecraft, y relata la historia de un inquietante hallazgo arqueológico: las campanas perdidas de la Misión de San Xavier, según se dice, consagradas a una entidad telúrica, subterránea, llamada Zushakon (ver: Criaturas de los Mitos de Cthulhu). SPOILERS. Según afirma el Libro de Iod (ver: Libros malditos en los Mitos de Cthulhu), el tañido de las Campanas de San Xavier produce efectos escalofriantes, entre otros, el deseo incontenible de arrancarse los ojos. Por otro lado, las vibraciones del metal son capaces de obturar las ondas de luz, produciendo un manto de oscuridad en cuestión de segundos, y generando de este modo el entorno ideal para el surgimiendo de esta entidad subterránea, ciega, llamada Zushakon; a su vez, procreado por Ubbo-Sathla, según algunos, o quizás la progenie degenerada de Shub-Niggurath y Hastur. Las campanas del horror de Henry Kuttner combina algunas escenas memorables con otras que resultan predecibles. Las idea de que las vibraciones del sonido —en este caso, de tres campanas malditas—, son capaces de anular las ondas de la luz, resulta interesante. Pero el elemento más inquietante de la historia es esta compulsión ocular, esta necesidad imperiosa de arrancarse los ojos de todos aquellos que oyen el doblar de las campanas. Incluso los animales padecen esta extraña compulsión, que comienza con una ligera picazón en los ojos; de hecho, hay una escena notable donde un sapo se frota un ojo desesperadamente contra una roca, literalmente arrancándolo a pedazos (ver: Los Mitos de Khut-N’hah) El descubrimiento arqueológico de las Campanas de San Xavier está rodeado de este tipo de sucesos. No obstante, y a pesar de las objeciones de sus protagonistas, algunos de los cuales han tenido acceso al Libro de Iod, y en consecuencia a la leyenda de Zuschakon, las campanas son colocadas nuevamente en su lugar. No queda claro quién las hace sonar originalmente, pero sabemos que las vibraciones de las campanas obturan la luz del día, y que Zushakon, súbitamente invocado, produce un terremoto (quizás al desperezarse de su sueño subterráneo), haciendo que las campanas doblen incesantemente, y generando a su vez una cerrazón total en el pueblo, ahora repleto de personas desesperadas que corren de un lado a otro en la oscuridad, arrancándose mutuamente los ojos. En este contexto, Las campanas del horror es uno de los aportes más interesantes de Henry Kuttner a los Mitos (ver: Henry Kuttner en los Mitos de Cthulhu). Análisis de: El Espejo Gótico http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2020/07/las-campanas-del-horror-henry-kuttner.html Texto del relato extraído de: http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2020/07/las-campanas-del-horror-henry-kuttner.html Musicas: - 01. Mind Tricks - Experia (Epidemic) Nota: Este audio no se realiza con fines comerciales ni lucrativos. Es de difusión enteramente gratuita e intenta dar a conocer tanto a los escritores de los relatos y cuentos como a los autores de las músicas. Nota: Este audio no se realiza con fines comerciales ni lucrativos. Es de difusión enteramente gratuita e intenta dar a conocer tanto a los escritores de los relatos y cuentos como a los autores de las músicas. ¿Quieres anunciarte en este podcast? Hazlo con advoices.com/podcast/ivoox/352537 Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals
Recomendados de la semana en iVoox.com Semana del 5 al 11 de julio del 2021
Las campanas del horror (The Bells of Horror) —también publicado como Campanas del horror (Bells of Horror)— es un relato de terror del escritor norteamericano Henry Kuttner (1915-1958), publicado originalmente en la edición de abril de 1939 de la revista Strange Stories. Las campanas del horror, tal vez uno de los cuentos de Henry Kuttner menos conocidos, pertenece a los Mitos de Cthulhu de H.P. Lovecraft, y relata la historia de un inquietante hallazgo arqueológico: las campanas perdidas de la Misión de San Xavier, según se dice, consagradas a una entidad telúrica, subterránea, llamada Zushakon (ver: Criaturas de los Mitos de Cthulhu). SPOILERS. Según afirma el Libro de Iod (ver: Libros malditos en los Mitos de Cthulhu), el tañido de las Campanas de San Xavier produce efectos escalofriantes, entre otros, el deseo incontenible de arrancarse los ojos. Por otro lado, las vibraciones del metal son capaces de obturar las ondas de luz, produciendo un manto de oscuridad en cuestión de segundos, y generando de este modo el entorno ideal para el surgimiendo de esta entidad subterránea, ciega, llamada Zushakon; a su vez, procreado por Ubbo-Sathla, según algunos, o quizás la progenie degenerada de Shub-Niggurath y Hastur. Las campanas del horror de Henry Kuttner combina algunas escenas memorables con otras que resultan predecibles. Las idea de que las vibraciones del sonido —en este caso, de tres campanas malditas—, son capaces de anular las ondas de la luz, resulta interesante. Pero el elemento más inquietante de la historia es esta compulsión ocular, esta necesidad imperiosa de arrancarse los ojos de todos aquellos que oyen el doblar de las campanas. Incluso los animales padecen esta extraña compulsión, que comienza con una ligera picazón en los ojos; de hecho, hay una escena notable donde un sapo se frota un ojo desesperadamente contra una roca, literalmente arrancándolo a pedazos (ver: Los Mitos de Khut-N’hah) El descubrimiento arqueológico de las Campanas de San Xavier está rodeado de este tipo de sucesos. No obstante, y a pesar de las objeciones de sus protagonistas, algunos de los cuales han tenido acceso al Libro de Iod, y en consecuencia a la leyenda de Zuschakon, las campanas son colocadas nuevamente en su lugar. No queda claro quién las hace sonar originalmente, pero sabemos que las vibraciones de las campanas obturan la luz del día, y que Zushakon, súbitamente invocado, produce un terremoto (quizás al desperezarse de su sueño subterráneo), haciendo que las campanas doblen incesantemente, y generando a su vez una cerrazón total en el pueblo, ahora repleto de personas desesperadas que corren de un lado a otro en la oscuridad, arrancándose mutuamente los ojos. En este contexto, Las campanas del horror es uno de los aportes más interesantes de Henry Kuttner a los Mitos (ver: Henry Kuttner en los Mitos de Cthulhu). Análisis de: El Espejo Gótico http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2020/07/las-campanas-del-horror-henry-kuttner.html Texto del relato extraído de: http://elespejogotico.blogspot.com/2020/07/las-campanas-del-horror-henry-kuttner.html Musicas: - 01. Mind Tricks - Experia (Epidemic) Nota: Este audio no se realiza con fines comerciales ni lucrativos. Es de difusión enteramente gratuita e intenta dar a conocer tanto a los escritores de los relatos y cuentos como a los autores de las músicas. Nota: Este audio no se realiza con fines comerciales ni lucrativos. Es de difusión enteramente gratuita e intenta dar a conocer tanto a los escritores de los relatos y cuentos como a los autores de las músicas. ¿Quieres anunciarte en este podcast? Hazlo con advoices.com/podcast/ivoox/352537
Neil is not feeling well on WIOD today. A long call from Johnny Dark who claims he could hear IOD on I-95 all the way to South Carolina. Steve Kane's guest today is Shirley Peters. River Phoenix got married? Scot Chapin has really cranked up the volume in the production studio next door. Stan Major walked off the Lee Fowler Show yesterday, and a little baseball. Glen Hill as the Bird
Neil thinks they should all do their shows from WSUN while the WIOD studios are being renovated, but he may have to raise the money for the trip. Florias brought in a big lunch, but all Neil got was 1 slice of pizza, the chazzers at IOD took the rest of the food. Jim Schuyler calls, and are the fart sounds real?
In this leading edge episode, Emma Maslen, CEO & Founder of inspir'em ltd, shares her own rags to riches story and how she helps others create a personal board to help get them the wisdom and advice they need to succeed now and in the face of tomorrow's challenges as well.You will discover:- Why you should start building a personal board of advisors- Why as a founder you should avoid a board of directors until you have to have one- How to approach someone who you want on your personal board Emma Maslen has 20 plus years' experience in the technology sector working for household names such as Sun Microsystems, BMC Software, and SAP Concur & Ping Identity. Emma has extensive technology go-to-market experience in multiple geographies. Now an angel investor, NED, start-up strategist, coach and consultant - Emma uses her industry experience and skills to help companies and individuals achieve their potential. Emma is IOD certified, part of the Henley School for Coaching Alumni and also Hogan Certified. Want to learn more about Emma Maslen's work at inspir'em Ltd? Check out her website at https://www.inspirem.coach/. You can also get a copy of her book and find a wealth of resources at https://www.emmamaslen.com
This is a short preview of Board Matters Season 2 - I am the host of this other podcast for the IOD so sharing it here! Join me to learn about leadership and governance there with 7 episodes in this season... You can subsribe to it in spotify, apple podcasts etc. More info here https://www.iod.org.nz/news/articles/season-two-of-board-matters-podcast-launches Spotify https://open.spotify.com/show/6aHNCIYEOwqoghkGlwKruU Apple Podcasts https://podcasts.apple.com/au/podcast/board-matters/id1635454049 iHeart Radio https://www.iheart.com/podcast/269-board-matters-99622637/ Season 2 podcast guests Glenn Moir CMInstD Julie Read MInstD Marama Royal MInstD David Glover CMinstD Raveen Jaduram CMInstD Murray Dickinson CMInstD Natasha Cockerell CMInstD. More info on Seeds www.theseeds.nz
Show notes and Transcript Andrew Bridgen MP is one of those rare individuals in UK politics. He is driven by convictions and critical thinking as opposed to fame and power which is the norm in Westminster (or on Capital Hill I assume). He was an absolute Brexiteer and led part of that campaign for The UK to have freedom from the EU. He joins Hearts of Oak to discuss how he fought for Brexit all through his political life, but his biggest battle has been against the Covid Tyranny imposed on us by the UK government. Andrew spoke up for all who have been vaccine injured and for that he was thrown out of the Conservative party and vilified in the media. But the Conservatives loss was the gain of The Reclaim Party as he now represents them as the MP for North West Leicestershire. His bravery and boldness is plain for all to see and as long as we have people like Andrew Bridgen in Parliament, we have a glimmer of hope in the UK. Andrew Bridgen was elected in 2010 after spending 25 years running his successful family business, AB Produce, based in the constituency at Measham. Prior to this Andrew attended local state schools and Nottingham University. He has also trained as an officer in the Royal Marines. During his time in Parliament, Andrew has been a prolific speaker and has campaigned on a variety of local and national issues in Parliament. Locally Andrew campaigned for grant funding to bring all of NW Leics District Council housing up to the Decent Homes Standards. Andrew has also campaigned for better transport infrastructure which led to the duelling of the A453 and the planned electrification of the midland mainline. He has also worked with business and community groups to bring down the rate of unemployment in the District, as well as holding a jobs fair. On a national level, Andrew led the successful campaigns to decriminalise non-payment of the TV Licence and to scrap Air Passenger Duty for Children. He has also used his business experience to serve on the Regulatory Reform Committee as well as the Deregulation and the Enterprise Bill committee. Connect with Andrew... X: https://x.com/ABridgen?s=20 The Reclaim Party: https://www.reclaimparty.co.uk/andrew-bridgen Interview recorded 22.9.23 *Special thanks to Bosch Fawstin for recording our intro/outro on this podcast. Check out his art https://theboschfawstinstore.blogspot.com/ and follow him on GETTR https://gettr.com/user/BoschFawstin and Twitter https://twitter.com/TheBoschFawstin?s=20 To sign up for our weekly email, find our social media, podcasts, video, livestreaming platforms and more... https://heartsofoak.org/connect/ Support Hearts of Oak by purchasing one of our fancy T-Shirts.... https://heartsofoak.org/shop/ Please subscribe, like and share! Transcript (Hearts of Oak) Andrew Bridgen, it is wonderful to speak to you today. Thank you so much for your time. (Andrew Bridgen MP) Yeah, you're welcome. Andrew Bridgen, of course you can find him @ABridgen on Twitter and he has served as Member of Parliament for North West Leicestershire since 2010, re-elected 2015, 2017 and 2019 with a whopping 62% off the vote, one of the few MPs with anywhere near that. Obviously, thrown out of the Conservative Party, the whip removed, and then that was in April 2023 for raising concerns on the Covid jab, and Andrew now represents the Reclaim Party in Parliament as an MP. Andrew, may I ask you first, what got you into politics? You entered Parliament in 2010. What made you think it would be a good idea to get into politics? Frustration, Peter, and I've been running a business for 22 years, which would start it up the thousand pounds. So I've been I've been MD and chairman of the company and we built it up to 25 million turnover company employing 300 people by 2006. And I'd give, I'd been interested in politics. I joined the Conservatives in 1983 at Nottingham University. And I'd been chairman of the Institute of Directors and on the council of the IOD in Pall Mall, and through working during the Blair years with the East Midlands Regional Assembly as a business member. Obviously I'd met a lot of ministers and I can't say that I was impressed. Well, it was pretty clear they were going to bankrupt us. So a group of friends, most, they were all really sort of small and medium-sized business people and their wives, we used to meet in a pub locally and every Friday night it was sort of a groundhog day, so they always moaned about the state of the country. I'd given a reasonable donation to the Conservative Party in 2005 and I think we had a half a percent swing to the Conservatives so worked out at that rate we're never going to get rid of Tony Blair. And so they moaned every Friday night and it eventually it got to me but I mean by that time I was running a business that was making about three million pounds a year across the group. I've got a good management team and no debt whatsoever and one pint of Marston's Pedigree on a Friday night too many and I said to this group of collected individuals, that's it then. It's no good relying on anybody else. There's only us. So in North West Leicestershire was supposed to be a rock solid Labour seat. The council I don't think had ever been conservative controlled properly. I think they may have had control for about three months once out of 40 years after a by-election. So I said well you all stand for the council, the district council, I'll stand for MP, we'll take over and we'll get it sorted and to a man and a woman every single one of them agreed. And so I put most of the money up for the, I put the money up for the campaign and I got the nomination. Nobody really wanted to be the MP for North West Leicestershire, well the candidate for North West Leicestershire because no one, the Conservatives told me we can't win North West Leicestershire, 83rd target seat. They also said they weren't giving me any money but I said that's fine, I've got my own money and my factory was in the, in the, so I actually did have a payroll vote. So 300 people plus their families in the constituency and the District Council elections came round first in 2007 and I was already selected as the parliamentary candidate. I ran those elections and put the money up and it was the first time the Conservatives had put a full slate up in the seat and they said I was running them too thin but I always thought basically if you didn't put a candidate up at an election it's very difficult to see how how they're going to vote for somebody aren't they? So we put a full slate of candidates up and took Labour down to five councils out of 38 in one night, the biggest swing in the country in the District Council elections in 2007. We took control of the council obviously, and I had the second biggest swing in against Labour in 2010, so I turned a rock-solid four and a half thousand Labour majority with a much loved Labour MP, who sadly died, into seven and a half thousand Conservatives at one, so that's like a 12.5% swing. The seat's my home and, you know, I'm very comfortable in North West Leicestershire. And we moved it to, in 2015, it went up to 11,200 majority. And despite Theresa May's best efforts in 17 with her manifesto, which was appalling, I moved it up to 13,300 majority. Then in 19, I led the leave campaign in the referendum for the East Midlands. I told my seat that if they didn't back me I would have to resign as their MP because we didn't agree on the big issues but to be honest Peter I was fairly sure they would. So the East Midlands voted 59-41 to leave and my own seat voted 61 39 and I'm actually the MP who persuaded Boris Johnson to back leave. He was no way that he was a natural Brexiteer and also if you look back on YouTube you'll find that on the eve of the referendum Boris Johnson came to my seat and we went round Ashby de la Zouch. That's when I told him we were going to win and you should have seen his face when I told him we were going to win. I don't think that that wasn't actually part of the plan Peter and in fact he tried to talk me out of it he said no no it's going to be close but we're not going to win. I said no no we're going to win tomorrow. No, it's going to be close. I said, well, maybe I said, but certainly not around here, not around here. It's not going to be close. You know, the bit we're running. So, and then in 19, on the get Brexit done election, which now seems so much happened since 19. It feels like a very long time ago, more than four years away. And I got a 20,400 majority, it was 62.8% of the vote. And the BBC, I had no sleep that night, the next morning the BBC interviewed me and they said, Mr Bridgen, you must be delighted, this is your fourth election victory, each time you've increased your vote, you've increased your majority, your percentage of the vote, you must be delighted. I said, no, it's terrible actually. They said, why is it terrible? I said, well, I've, you know, it's nine years since I was first elected as the MP, I've delivered the highest economic growth in the country. We've taken the poorest constituency in Leicestershire and made it the richest, the only part of Leicestershire with above-average UK salaries and wages. We've got the happiest place to live in the Midlands now, Colville, which was the most deprived town in Leicestershire. I said one in three of the electorate are still not voting for me. I'm gonna have to work much much harder. Tell me about that whole Brexit battle. I mean my time was UKIP and UKIP was easy because 100% of Kippers were on board. The Conservative Party have always had that tension and division over Europe. What was that like actually in the Conservative Party pushing something that wasn't necessarily what the Conservatives wanted? Well it wasn't what the establishment wanted, all the established parties were backing Remain. I think it was interesting that the Conservative Party was like, a very civilized internal war, and there were probably only a quarter to 30 percent of conservative MPs who were for leave, so still the majority were, remain, or indifferent, and some of them maintaining indifference, which I mean, I don't know what you're into politics for. If a big question like whether we should remain or leave the European Union, they say, I don't want to get involved in this. I'll just sit down and see what my people say. I mean, that's not exactly leadership, is it? I mean, I think that should be pretty much automatic deselection, if you can't make your mind up on that sort of issue. And what comes back to mind is that the Conservative Party, we used to, when I was in the Conservative Party, before they threw me out, well, first I'll tell you this, Conservatives have never been encouraged in the Conservative Party, they're only ever tolerated. And the Conservative Party, Parliamentary Party, had something called an away day every two years, and they pay for them in advance to get a good deal. So despite the fact that there was this internal schism over the referendum that was coming, the party had paid for an away weekend in Oxfordshire at this basically hotel that's like a Bond villain's hideout, with an underground lecture theatre, which is a very weird place, and because we paid for it, we were told we'd all got to go there, and this is only sort of three months before the referendum, and we had a very civilised weekend of talking about policy, but no one mentioned the EU and no one mentioned the referendum over the whole two and a half days and the dinner, but I do remember that Craig Oliver sat with me at the final dinner he sat next to me on my table at the final dinner and I told him, I said have you got yourself another job lined up for when you lose, and he said to me he said that's fine he said if we win by one vote that's it settled and that's that's it done. I said well I'll be honest I'll take though I'll take that on as as it cuts both ways, you know, if we win by one. And I knew we were going to win, Peter, because, I'd been around the East Midlands and I could tell we were definitely going to win. But it's about driving the vote up because it wasn't just winning by a seat, all the votes were cumulative, so every vote counted. And what I'd sussed out is in my seat and in the East Midlands is that people who didn't normally vote were going to come out and vote. They weren't, those people who didn't normally engage with politics, they weren't coming out to, they weren't coming out to vote for the status quo, they were voting for change. So I concentrated my campaigning efforts the last six weeks. And did a lot of campaigning and also I was running a load of field operatives who were, 90% of it, they were UKIP. The Remain campaign had nobody on the ground willing to deliver leaflets, hardly at all, for them. We were destroying them on the ground battle. Obviously, in the air campaign we could only be responsive because they got all the media, they got all the established parties, and we were the insurgents. So that was more of a struggle, but on the ground we were doing very, very well. And what I'd sussed out was that people were going to come out and vote who didn't normally vote and every time I saw the polls I was not disappointed because I knew that we were probably, we probably got five or six percent better than the polls were saying because these people who were going to come out and vote and they told me they were and I believe they were, They're not engaged in politics, they're not on YouGov's polling panel, and when Com Res or somebody else rang them up and they said, oh, I'm going to vote to leave the European Union, they'd say, well, did you vote in the last general election? No. Did you vote in the local? No. Did you vote in the one before? No. Have you ever voted? No. And they'd put them down as zero chance of voting. Well, I knew as long as we got those people out, it was all going to come as a bit of a surprise to the Remain campaign. In North West Leicestershire, and we counted our votes, so I know it's fine, I know exactly what the vote was in North West Leicestershire, but you could terminate my seat of North West Leicestershire until the next boundary changes. I think it was a sort of 70-75% turnout to get me in in 2010, important election. And then ever since then, as my majority had gone up, the turnout had gone down and it dropped to sort of 68.5% or something in 19. But I mean, it was a stonking massive majority. And obviously the referendum, I was very encouraged when it was nearly 80%. And I'd spent all my time in Northwest Leicestershire and across the East Midlands. In my villages, I mean, it's a general election, they turn out 85 percent anyway. I'm not going to squeeze much more out of those people. You know, it's very hard to squeeze that they're on the second, third pressings of the pips. So I went to all the areas that normally turn out 50, 55, 60 percent because there was plenty of low-hanging fruit and you know it was that turnout in North West Leicestershire and across the East Midlands some people who didn't normally vote and that's why we won and that's why the polling was so wrong and that's what people like David Cameron who'd come to my seat in 2008 when he was leader of the opposition and he really upset me Peter so I'm a a candidate. We've just taken the council with the biggest swing in the country for the first time in living memory and Cameron told me in front of constituents that my seat was a dump and it should never be conservative. And they weren't giving me any money and I said I don't need your money and to be honest David if that's your view, never ever come to my constituency again and I will with it. And to be honest, David Cameron is a man of his word, he never came, he never came again. So that's fine. And I think now my majority is bigger than Whitney, so I mean what a dump the Cotswolds must be. North West Leicestershire. And we've gentrified. So people used to say Coalville was a very poor place and it didn't have a chance and now it's Coalville and proud. In fact I'm speaking to you from Coalville today. I want to get on to the COVID discussion situation, but just you, you talked at the beginning about having a business and I guess part of your reason for getting into politics was you wanted the government to butt out, you want local businesses to be able to get on, to have, not to have restrictions on them actually doing well, making money, employing people. What kind of other kind of interests or passions? Well, I've actually cut my teeth in politics when I was chair of the Institute of Directors, which they didn't like particularly because they were fairly pro-EU, is that I got involved as a businessman in the,business for sterling in the no campaign to keep the pound so 25 years ago and thank goodness we didn't join the euro otherwise I mean it'd be much much more difficult to extract ourselves. Yes and Simon Wolfson the chairman of Next we used to meet at Enderby in his boardroom and plot business for Sterling in the No campaign. So I suppose that's where I got involved. And a chap called Chris Eaton Harris, who's gone on to great things, apparently, he was an MEP. And his father had a fruit and vegetable wholesale pitch in Covent Garden Market. And since I was into washing, packing, and distributing vegetables, mostly potatoes, nothing sexy. Chris was one of my customers. I used to buy from Mark Potatoes from Mark Spencer. And Philip Dunn as well. They're farmers. So we had the whole supply chain between us, do you know what I mean? But I made most of the money. Which is just as well because they're not in parliament. Just as well. So yeah, I wanted to put something back and yeah, that's where we ended up. Obviously being a Brexiteer, there was backlash in the media, there was probably some pushback within the party itself. But I guess none of that even prepared you for the backlash whenever you addressed COVID tyranny. Is that a fair assessment? Well I know that the two years under Theresa May were purgatory quite honestly. I mean I was a Spartan so I voted three times against Theresa May's deal which you know it wasn't, you know, some colleagues were conflicted and there was Steve Baker crying his eyes out. Well I mean there's nothing to cry about because I've already voted against it twice, it hasn't got any better and once you've come to the conclusion, which was the correct conclusion, that Theresa May's deal was constitutionally and democratically worse than being in the European Union. I mean at least if you're in the European Union you have a chance of leaving whereas Theresa May's deal we would be in vassalage forever and there's no way of leaving. Well I mean that's not a deal, not in my name and that vote on the third time Theresa May's deal came up before the Commons I was pretty convinced that there were probably going to be 28 Conservatives in the no lobby. The rest of Parliament would vote yes and that we would have been slung out of the Conservative Party within a few days. That was where I thought we were. Thank goodness. I mean we always criticise Jeremy Corbyn but he is a man of principle and he is secretly a Brexiteer really I think and he marched the Labour Party in behind us and the rest, as they say, is history. But I mean, a politically savvy Keir Starmer would never, would have taken Theresa May's deal and consigned us to EU vassalage. So thank goodness it was Jeremy Corbyn. But he did win the Conservatives the 19th election. That wasn't, down to Boris, it was pure fear of Jeremy Corbyn. Yeah, no, it was, you don't want Corbyn, 100% I remember that well. Well, I actually had two, during that 19 election, I can remember when I was going around the doorsteps, two members, two paid-up locally members of the Labour Party came to me and said I'll be voting Conservative, I can't vote for Jeremy Corbyn. And they actually told me they were paid up members of the Labour Party locally. Well I mean if you, I mean that is your core, ultra core vote. They weren't even voting for him. Wow. On to the COVID. I've never seen anything and I mean I've loved politics, forever with Northern Ireland parties, the DUP and we've had Ian Paisley and Sammy Wilson on before and then conservatives then over to UKIP, but nothing has divided people like what we've had in the last three years with the COVID tyranny. But you spoke a step, it wasn't just on the restrictions that we had, that civil liberty, but you also saw what was happening with harms and went on that. Tell us about that, how you worked that out, because that was a big step and that was an unacceptable step. I think there's an element of destiny about all of this Peter. When I was 18 and I'm the only member of my family that's been to university, I had a foreground because my parents weren't very wealthy, they were poor. So about two and a half percent of people went to University when I went in the 80s and I went to Nottingham locally but I studied biological sciences with biochemistry specializing in genetics, virology and behaviour. Oh dear! And I don't know why, just they were things I found quite fascinating so I've tried to keep my knowledge up so I mean in February when we'd had the 19 election and then we had a sort of six weeks period and then we had then we had COVID and everything changed. Well in the February I was sent and I looked through the scientific papers for the efficacy of hydroxychloroquine, its effectiveness against coronaviruses and it was compelling. They were scientific papers and because I've got, my degree a very long time ago in those subjects I mean I can read them and I can understand the papers and I sent the papers to Mark Spencer, Chief Whip, and said the government need to look at this urgently, this could be could be very useful and also sent them to Jeremy Hunt who was at the time, Chair of the Health Select Committee, and I didn't get anything back from Spencer. And I also told Spencer, I said, you realise that I've got qualifications in all the areas that'll be useful, if you want some help in the number 10, with someone who can actually read the papers and understand it and put it across politically, I'll be quite happy to help. They never, Mr Stewart never asked me to help, and I rang up Jeremy Hunt a week later, and this shocked me, Peter and it will shock your listeners. So I rang him Hunt up and said Jeremy I sent you these papers, have you have you looked at them? And he said Andrew he said don't send me scientific papers he said I don't understand them and I said but Jeremy you're chairman of the health select committee and you were health secretary for seven years. I said what? You don't understand scientific papers, and what you have no access to anyone who does understand them he could actually explain them to you and he put the phone down and that was it and so my suspicion, so I hadn't got a great deal of confidence I did support the first lockdown because I don't think anybody knew, well somebody knew what was going on it certainly wasn't me, you know was it three weeks to flatten the curve. Anyway, so, and I was, from then on, things just didn't seem to stack up. The masks, I couldn't see the sense behind the masks. I mean, those paper masks, they are to stop saliva from the doctors and nurses going on to the patient's wounds and to stop blood and other bodily fluids squirting into the medic's mouths, which they don't really like, they don't like that. That's what they're there for. So not to stop viruses and the gaps around the edges And I was briefly in the military. And if you had a full nuclear biological chemical suit, you've only got an 80% chance of keeping a virus out. Well, I mean, that's not what these paper masks are. And I guess, I hated putting them on anyway. They're horrible. So I was on that. And then the continuous lockdowns, and Northwest Leicestershire was chucked in with Leicester. And so we were locked down as much as anywhere in the country. It was completely unprecedented and unwarranted. I also really objected to the schools being closed. And I objected. I mean, they were making the children wear masks. And even some schools were making the children wear masks when it wasn't mandated. And none of this seemed right. And there are some, speaking to some scientists who were speaking out about their concerns, And the fact that they were silenced, and they said all the science is all settled, I mean we've heard that one before several times, I'm sure we'll hear it again, but I mean science is never settled. It's a bit like politics, there's always another view, and if you can't defend your position, then there's something wrong. You know, every scientific thesis is open to challenge, or should be able to challenge, and most of them, I mean half of everything that doctors are taught in medical school within 10 years will be proved to be completely wrong. That's a fact, I mean that's just a fact. So, you know, the only constant is the evolution of science and new theories to supersede old ones and saying that, you know, we're not having any debate about this and cancelling eminent scientists. Then my concerns grew and grew and grew but I didn't want to believe the worst of the government. I actually am double vaccinated. They will call me an anti-vaxxer so which is difficult when I'm vaxxed. I'm more the sort of concerned vaxxed and I had two shots of AstraZeneca, I wish I had none, and I had a bad reaction after the second jab, which really, really hurt me. So I'd bitten my tongue, that also uncovered a lot of corruption around PPE. My whistle-blower was sacked. We uncovered £860 million worth of PCR tests that had disappeared from stock at Kuehne & Nagel were the distributor. We traced some of the unique barcodes and they turned up in Berlin. They'd been resold. So nearly a billion pounds. And my whistle-blower could only go back 12 months on his computer. And he was only in one of the three channels. He was in the channel to do with bulk. So it was only sort of prisons, schools, hospitals, things like that. But 860 million pounds worth of PCR tests had gone missing the taxpayer paid for. We took it to the government and the civil service. My whistle-blowers computer was switched off on the day and he was sacked within seven days, no investigation. I was pretty annoyed. And I mean, the corruption of the Boris Johnson regime was the first one I'd, and he was the he'd been the first Prime Minister I'd actually voted for and I was feeling very betrayed. So I hadn't voted for David Cameron, obviously, I voted for David Davies, and Cameron got in and I didn't vote for Theresa May. She got in. And so then Boris turned out to be as crooked as all the rest of them. So that wasn't good. And then my pretty view on the vaccines and the mRNA technology, the messenger ribonucleic acid technology. I was working behind the scenes and obviously Matt Hancock had to go and we had, Sajid Javid became health secretary. But there are about five Conservative MPs who are qualified doctors. Well Matt Hancock, not a good man, but he had said in the House of Commons that these vaccines were for adults, they weren't for children, so no one under 18 was going to have them. I know that every one of the doctors, qualified doctors, went to see Sajid Javid and told him not to use the experimental vaccines on under-18s and he listened to all of them and then approved it. It's interesting that these two health secretaries are both leaving the Commons at the next election, isn't it? I wonder where they'll land, you know what I mean? I suspect Peter, there'll be earning a lot more money than MPs get paid, let's just put it that way. And then when the MHRA came out in November last year and wanted to extend the experimental vaccines to babies, down to six months of age, and I'll declare an interest, I've got a five-year-old and I thought now, I've got to speak out and I knew there'd be a huge backlash from the party, politically and I knew the vested interests that were involved in it but I also knew that it was probably going to cost me my position in the Conservative Party because they were so committed, but that I could win, that I'm pretty sure I thought, well there's no point doing it for nothing, you've got to win and I was pretty sure that I could put the science over that there were no healthy child of that age had died anywhere in the world of COVID-19 so there was minimal, minuscule risk from the virus but there was a risk from the vaccine. I thought even the most pro-vaccine person I could persuade that since the manufacturers still had immunity from prosecution that there had to be a risk. But there was no risk for those children. I thought I could get that message across and we could actually do some good and so I'd spoken out in a Westminster Hall debate, in I think it was October and then on November 13th I secured an adjournment debate and and blew the lid off the childhood vaccines, vaccination with the experimental mRNA. And that night, my life changed. I was basically immediately cancelled by the mainstream media. And from that moment onwards, I had hundreds of thousands of emails from around the world from people who were telling me about the vaccine harms and the vaccine deaths that they were seeing and that was it really. So after that, although the government will say that I'm a conspiracy theorist and anti-science, anti-vax, and all the people who call me anti-science and everything, I mean they haven't got any science degrees between them and the fact is that the government, our government was never able to approve those vaccines for healthy under fives, whereas all the other countries around the world did. So despite the fact that they said that I was talking absolute rubbish, they never bought the policy and every other country did. And then we got round to sort of January and the infamous tweet, which was actually, I mean, yes, so I retweeted, I actually didn't do it, but it was retweeted on my Twitter, a tweet from Dr. Josh Guetzkow of the Hebrew University of Jerusalem and it's fair to say that Mr. Guetzkow is a Jewish gentleman, that he'd been told by a top cardiologist that the rollout of the vaccine was the biggest crime against humanity since the Holocaust, and the party seized on that, the Conservative Party seized on that, to say I was an anti-Semite, and suspended me immediately from the party. I had a meeting at that time with a Conservative Party grandee who'd clearly been briefed by the party. We had an hour together in his office and I told him all of my concerns around the vaccine harms, the midazolam and morphine, the creation of the first wave of deaths by moving people out of care homes and then putting them onto the death pathway, putting them down, treating them with respiratory suppressants to give them the symptoms of COVID-19 which will appear on their on their death certificate and they were pretty much all cremated very shortly afterwards so there was no autopsies and we had an hour of that. I also knew that the person I was meeting with, because I'd done my research and I've got plenty of informers, he knew full well all of my concerns because he'd been told them. I also know that his sister had had to go into hospital after the second Pfizer jab with chest pains, but I didn't tell him any of this. And at the end of the meeting this grandee turned around to me, obviously with the party line, I've been suspended and said that there is currently no political appetite for your views on the vaccine, Andrew. They may well be in 20 years time and you're probably going to be proved right but in the meantime you need to bear in mind you're taking on the most powerful vested interest in the world with all the personal risk for you which that will entail, and at that point I said well the meeting's over then isn't it? I'm not, don't ever threaten me and I don't like being threatened by public school boys. You know, as a comprehensive school boy, if they had been at my school, they'd have spent most of their time with their head down the toilet. It was a very comprehensive education. So we basically called it a day at that and then they just fast-tracked the investigation and found me guilty and permanently expelled me from the Conservative Party, which is interesting because in their investigation what they didn't discover is I never put the tweet out myself anyway. I've never ever had the codes to my own Twitter. It was actually posted by my association chairman who remains in the Conservative Party. Can I ask you about... I need to ask you about the conversations with colleagues and obviously not breaking confidentiality of that, but working with Lord Pearson I'm always amazed people come to him after a debate and says well done. I could never say that but well done you said that. Did you have any kind of similar? Yes, it's coming up to a year since I first spoke out so yeah I've probably had 20, I probably had 30 backbenchers have come up to me and said you're definitely onto something with these vaccine harms, keep going but that's a million miles from standing in the chamber and saying anything. I've had senior members of the Conservative Party have come to me and said that they're going to speak out. I've had a very senior MP came to me before summer recess and said he'd been approached by a constituent representing 1,100 vaccine-harmed people and he'd have to speak out, but he hasn't, and I had a very senior minister who came to me and said that they're, I mean this is all in private in parliament, no witnesses, so I mean they can deny it if they want to, but you have my word it's the truth, and come to me and said you do realize that my sister's just taken the Moderna booster and now she's paralyzed from the neck down. And I said well that's that's that's terrible news but clearly you're going to have to speak out now aren't you? and they said no, well she doesn't want any publicity and they think they're going to get her to walk again. I said well you don't have to name names I mean you know, you've got to speak out you know and the minister said I'm not speaking out and walked off. And I don't know what to go, I mean, we're supposed to speak without fear or favour, you know, I think the job of an MP is to, certainly I see the job as being to represent, the people, start with my people in North West Leicestershire, against the government and the establishment. And now what we seem to have is a lot of MPs who represent the government and the establishment against the people. That's an inversion of the job of a Member of Parliament. They said to me, you know, why are you willing to die on the hill of vaccine harms, you know, of an issue? And I said, well, because that's the hill you're killing my people on. No completely. I want to add two things to finish. One, you're in the Reclaim Party because that seemed to be the only option. Course you could do as an independent, that doesn't really happen in the UK, but also you're continually asking the government questions. One of the latest questions is did the MHRA inform the Minister of the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine had been switched? Tell us about Reclaim and I'm assuming you're yet to receive an answer to that government question. Well Reclaim are a political party, they didn't have any MPs but they're well funded and they've got some lovely premises and they've got great people and they're also aligned with something called the Bad Law Project, so I have access to lawyers and solicitors and so I'm taking Matt Hancock to court for defamation and we have a very strong case. I'm probably going to take the Conservative Party to court for the way they handled my dismissal from the party, which is unbelievable. I'm on my fifth subject access request to the Cabinet Office. I mean, Peter, I've put in for all the information they're holding on me, and even when I'm over four, this is the fifth one going in now, I keep cutting down the number of keywords and compressing the time, and every time they come back and say, I mean, they must have a library on me. They haven't got a black book, they've got a whole library on me. And every time they come back and say, it's too much work. I mean, the last one was about 10 key words. And I said, it's only from 1st of January, 2017. I'll publish all the papers one day and it'll be fascinating, but goodness knows what they're hiding. They're certainly not willing to release any documentation. So I think we're going to have a massive, massive, massive bust up with the government over that. And if they're doing it to me, it won't be just me, will it? There'll be. Yeah, I mean, if there is any mitigation of my colleagues, and I'm not thinking of any any mitigation at all for their inactivity when so many of them, I mean, what you've got to understand, Peter, is people say to me, So there was a lovely female Conservative MP who will remain nameless, but she was elected in 19. And she came up to me a few months ago and said, Andrew, I'm really worried about you. You speak in the chamber on your own. You have all your meals on your own. You sit on your own table in the tea room and the dining room. No one talks to you. You seem really isolated. I'm really worried about you. I said, well, that's very touching. I said, but you've got to remember, 4,000 real people work in Parliament. The cooks, the cleaners, the waiters, the security guards, the police, I said, and they all come to me and 80% of those agree with me. So I'm not really isolated at all, am I? I said, actually, you're isolated, you just don't realise it. So it's not been that bad in Parliament. As far as the Pfizer data, it was again Dr. Josh Guetzkow sent me some from the Hebrew University, sent me some evidence and he's not a scientist, he's a criminologist but he's a specialist in fraud and he went through the Pfizer papers and discovered how they'd switched the vaccines. There were two batches in the initial batch, one that they basically made a Rolls-Royce vaccine up which they gave to 22,000 individuals and they had 22,000 in the placebo group who got a saline shot and that's what they got approval for with the MHRA and every other regulator around the world. But that wasn't the vaccine, that wasn't the Pfizer vaccine that was rolled out. And the smoking gun for the switch of the vaccines is the fact that the MHRA changed the protocols on day two of the mass rollout of the vaccination in the UK, and said that everyone got to stay at the vaccine centre for 15 minutes after day two because of the risk of anaphylactic shock and you only get anaphylaxis if there's endotoxins in the vaccines and you only get endotoxins in the vaccines if they're cultured up in bacteria such as Escherichia coli and the MHRA hadn't expected anaphylaxis because that is not how the vaccine that was given approval for was manufactured, it wasn't manufactured in bacteria with all the contaminants that would go with it. Now, you can't, to get approval for a drug, you have to use the same mechanism of production. You can't change anything because then you've got a different drug with different side effects. So basically, what my allegation is, supported by 44 pages of evidence supplied to me by a doctor of criminology from the Hebrew University of Jerusalem, the government will not answer or even acknowledge, is that the vaccine that was rolled out in the UK and around the world was effectively completely untested and it also explains why the, I mean that the harms from the Pfizer trials of the very best vaccine they could make in in a very small, basically a bespoke vaccine that they made for 22,000 doses, I mean that was horrific enough and that should never have had approval but it was nothing like the harm profile we've seen in actuality through the VAERS system and the yellow card system and the fact that the vaccine is a different vaccine basically explains that as well. If they were doing that with Pfizer, I mean I have no doubt that Moderna and the same and of course I had the AstraZeneca vaccine which which was actually that bad. It was just quietly withdrawn, wasn't it? And it's interesting that the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, which is the AstraZeneca vaccine is not a messenger RNA. It's a DNA strand in an adenovirus vector. So it's different technology to the Pfizer and the Moderna. It's because obviously the DNA then will code for the messenger RNA. And so it's one step further back. It's interesting also that the, I asked for an urgent question in Parliament a few months ago because the Johnson & Johnson vaccine was withdrawn in America and I saw the FDA, the Federal Drugs Agency guidelines and it said stop basically, stop injecting the Johnson and Johnson and all stocks are to be destroyed. And the Johnson and Johnson that was also, a DNA strand not a messenger RNA strand and also in an adenovirus vector to get it into the into the cell. So it's interesting that basically both the vaccines, experimental vaccines were using the DNA adenovirus vector method, they were, both withdrawn and destroyed. But it is interesting that India are still producing effectively AstraZeneca under license. They call it Covishield in India. And of course they didn't stop the Australian version of the AstraZeneca vaccine until only a couple of months ago, so there's going to be a big kickoff there as well. So that's it. I sent it to the Attorney General because one of the questions I did ask was did the MHRA tell the Minister that they'd switched the vaccines, in which case if they didn't then the MHRA are guilty of potentially a crime which is I think it's a two-year prison sent us an unlimited fine, but if they did tell the minister, then how could the minister go out and say they're safe, effective, and tested when they knew that they weren't? I don't understand why the prime minister doesn't want to come back to me. I'm afraid the letter I sent him was a bit of a, do you still beat your wife question. There isn't a good answer, because either I'm going to nail the MHRA, or I'm going to nail the ministers. And it's also interesting, I think, you know, so many health ministers are deciding to not stand at the next general election. No, 100%. Andrew, I've watched your many speeches in the Commons and followed those written questions and I think for our UK viewers and listeners who are very frustrated at UK politics, I think as long as there remains someone like you speaking this truth, then there is hope. So thank you for what you do and thank you for your time today. Thank you very much for having me on. I'm sure we'll speak again in the future.
Tá fiosrúchán curtha ar bun ag foras faire do chomórtais san Iodáil mar go líomhnaitear go bhfuil an comhlacht Ryanair ag baint leas as an chumhacht atá acu sa mhargadh ó thaobh praghasanna de.
Dionne Woods chats with Debi Beard on today's Paint Talks Podcast. Debi is the Creative Director for DIY PAINT and host at Debi's Design Diary, YouTube channel. Upcoming Events: September 30 launch party at DIY headquarters with the IOD sisters for the unveiling of Debi's new inlay. Fun Facts: As an introvert, Debi likes to think of art as a language, to communicate thoughts and feelings that are hard to articulate, it's a way to create connection that could otherwise be very socially awkward. Website https://www.diypaint.co Facebook https://www.facebook.com/debisdesigndiary?mibextid=LQQJ4d Instagram https://www.instagram.com/diypaintco/ YouTube https://youtube.com/@DebisDesignDiary
Brothal dearg i ndeisceart na h-Iodáile,ach faoiseamh le fáil sa bhfoithin a deir Colm Ó Muircheartaigh agus é ar mhí na mealla.
Dónal Ó Liatháin; Foirgnimh an Údaráis i gCuige Mumhan.Jeaic Ó Conchúir;Súil chun cínn ar chluiche ceannais peile na h-Éireann. Louise Cantillon;Luimneach sa chluiche iomána. Antóin Ó Suilleabháin;Regatta Bhaile an Sceilig. Darrán Ó Droma;Rás na Rinne. Colm Ó Muircheartaigh;Brothal na h-Iodáile.
Ceaptar go leanfaidh an teas damánta atá i gcuid mhaith do dheisceart agus lár na hEorpa ar feadh cuid mhaith den tseachtain seo. Táthar ag comhairliú do dhaoine a bheith airdeallach ar an teocht an-ard go deo atá san Iodáil, sa nGréig agus sa Spáinn le laethanta.
New RADEON Navi 32, GeForce AD107, and Intel Raptor Lake Refresh details are discussed…and more! [SPON: Get AtlasVPN Premium for $1.83/mo + 3 months FREE: https://atlasv.pn/MOORESLAW ] [SPON: dieshrink = 3% off Everything, brokensilicon = 25% off Windows: https://biitt.ly/shbSk ] [SPON: Get 10% off Tasty Vite Ramen with code BROKENSILICON: https://bit.ly/3wKx6v1 ] 0:00 Sick Dan, HBO Max (Intro Banter) 5:55 GDDR6 VRAM Prices Plummet - Is the 4060 Ti 16GB Pricing Justified? 11:32 Game Developers respond to accusations of VRAM Laziness 26:45 RTX 4060 Launch Accelerated...to forget the 4060 Ti? 36:15 Could the 4080 & 4070 have had acceptable prices AND good margins? 40:59 Navi 32 Pictured, AIBs register the “RX 7800 XT 16GB” 53:29 AMD Details Bergamo, Zen 4c, and MI300 1:06:02 Zen 5 Turin-AI Leaks 1:16:40 AMD R5 5600X3D Rumors 1:22:25 Intel 14th Gen Ultra Updates 1:31:46 Apple's new tool can run Windows games on a Mac! 1:39:29 M2 Ultra, Zen 4 Threadripper, Starfield 30FPS, MS Activision Deal (Wrap-up) 1:51:41 Putting Cores on AMD's IOD, APU Gaming Laptops, AM5 APUs (Final RM) https://www.tomshardware.com/news/gddr6-vram-prices-plummet https://twitter.com/3DCenter_org/status/1667044900066705411 SSDs are DIRT Cheap now: https://amzn.to/3qNGSvg https://twitter.com/SheriefFYI/status/1666760435524161536 https://twitter.com/NVIDIAGeForce/status/1668966525062062082 https://videocardz.com/newz/nvidia-confirms-geforce-rtx-4060-launches-on-june-29th https://twitter.com/AnhPhuH/status/1668584620991082496 https://videocardz.com/newz/alleged-amd-navi-32-gpu-pictured-with-four-mcd-dies https://www.tomshardware.com/news/asrock-files-rx-7800-xt-model-names-with-eec https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q2dtZB39MG4&ab_channel=AMD https://www.techpowerup.com/310057/amd-zen-4c-not-an-e-core-35-smaller-than-zen-4-but-with-identical-ipc https://twitter.com/9550pro/status/1669002027253518336 https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1669079620874825729 https://wccftech.com/amd-pushes-gpu-power-closer-to-1kw-with-its-instinct-mi300x-gpu-consumes-750w/?dark=1 https://www.anandtech.com/show/18913/amd-intros-epyc-97x4-bergamo-cpus-128-zen-4c-cpu-cores-shipping-now https://www.anandtech.com/show/18915/amd-expands-mi300-family-with-mi300x-gpu-only-192gb-memory https://youtu.be/QU1DFBtbRWY?t=1043 https://youtu.be/O_4Yn67B_34?t=386 https://twitter.com/g01d3nm4ng0/status/1667502118456918016 https://www.youtube.com/live/kszJINTC3Hc?feature=share https://www.techpowerup.com/review/amd-ryzen-5-7600-non-x/19.html https://videocardz.com/newz/intels-new-branding-for-meteor-lake-core-cpus-revealed https://videocardz.com/newz/intel-core-i9-14900k-and-raptor-lake-s-hx-refresh-to-use-old-core-series-branding https://www.theverge.com/2023/6/7/23752164/apple-mac-gaming-game-porting-toolkit-windows-games-macos https://www.reddit.com/r/macgaming/comments/14342uz/hogwarts_legacy_on_m2_max/ https://www.reddit.com/r/macgaming/comments/142vjdz/i_got_cyberpunk_2077_running_on_an_m1_macbook/ https://www.apple.com/newsroom/2023/06/apple-introduces-m2-ultra/ https://twitter.com/momomo_us/status/1667173707217874946 https://www.newegg.com/p/pl?d=RX+6700+10GB https://twitter.com/mooreslawisdead/status/1668385632031330305 https://wccftech.com/nvidia-beta-driver-big-ssd-performance-boost-directstorage-1-2-gen5-up-to-50-percent-faster/?dark=1 https://youtu.be/i9ikne_9iEI https://videocardz.com/newz/microsoft-xbox-series-s-console-with-1tb-and-black-design-launches-september-1-at-349 https://www.cnbc.com/2023/06/12/ftc-files-to-block-microsoft-activision-blizzard-deal.html https://wccftech.com/xbox-one-dropped-microsoft-no-more-first-party-games-moved-on-gen-9/ https://www.amd.com/en/products/graphics/amd-radeon-rx-6650-xt https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radeon_200_series https://www.hp.com/us-en/shop/pdp/omen-gaming-laptop-16t-wf000-161-76w27av-1 https://www.notebookcheck.net/NVIDIA-GeForce-RTX-3050-6GB-Laptop-GPU-GPU-Benchmarks-and-Specs.692276.0.html
Nuacht Mhall. Príomhscéalta na seachtaine, léite go mall. * Inniu an seachtú lá déag de mhí an Mheithimh. Is mise Gwyneth Nic Aidicín Ní Loingsigh. Fuair Christy Dignam, príomhamhránaí Aslan, bás ag aois 63 Dé Máirt, tar éis tinneas fada. D'fhás Dignam aníos i bhFionnghlas agus thosaigh sé ag seinm ceoil sna seachtóidí, leis an ngrúpa ceoltóirí a bhunaigh an banna Aslan ag tús na n-ochtóidí. Bhí rath mór orthu lena gcéad singil “This Is” agus shínigh an grúpa conradh leis an lipéad ceoil mór EMI. Bhí fadhbanna andúla ag Dignam, topaic a raibh sé an-oscailte fúithi, agus d'fhág sé Aslan ar feadh tamaill. Tháinig an banna le chéile arís sna nóchaidí agus ag an am seo scríobh siad a n-amhrán is cáiliúla, “Crazy World”. In 2013 diagnóisíodh go raibh aimileoideois ar Dignam ach lean sé leis ag seinm, idir tréimhsí drochshláinte, sna deich mbliana ina dhiaidh sin, go mí Eanair na bliana seo. Thaifead Donald Trump pléadáil neamhchiontach maidir le cúisimh fheidearálacha choiriúla, ina ndeirtear gur choimeád sé doiciméid slándála náisiunta tar éis a uachtaránachta. Tá cúisimh roimh shainchabhróir Trump, Walt Nauta, freisin. Seo an chéad uair riamh i stair Mheiriceá atá cúisimh fheidearálacha curtha roimh iaruachtarán. Deir saineolaí nach mbeidh an triail ar siúl go dtí an bhliain seo chugainn. Seo an dara huair atá Trump sna cúirteanna le cúpla mí anuas ach is léir nach bhfuil dochair déanta dá thacaíocht. Deir Trump go bhfuil na cúisimh éilitheach agus tá sé ag iarraidh a bheith atofa mar Uachtarán i mí na Samhna 2024. Fuair iar-phríomhaire na hIodáile Silvio Berlusconí bás Dé Luain ag aois 86. Bhí sé ag streachailt le drochshláinte le roinnt blianta anuas. Mar sin féin, toghadh é chun an tSeanaid arís anuraidh agus lean sé leis mar cheannaire oifigiúil dá pháirtí ar an eite dheis, Forza Italia. Pearsa conspóideach a bhí in Berlusconi, agus lean scannail agus cásanna caimiléireachta agus calaoise é i gcónaí. Bhí cáil agus rachmas aige sular thosaigh sé a ghairm phoilitiúil, bhunaigh sé an comhlacht meán is mó san Iodáil. Chaith sé trí sheal ina phríomhaire, naoi mbliana san iomlán idir 1994 agus 2011. Gheall sé sláinte eacnamaíochta dá thír ach bhrúdh as an bpost é sa deireadh mar gheall ar ghéarchéim fiachais. * Léirithe ag Conradh na Gaeilge i Londain. Tá an script ar fáil i d'aip phodchraolta. * GLUAIS príomhamhránaí - lead singer fadhbanna andúla - addiction problems cúisimh fheidearálacha - federal charges sainchabhróir - aide casanna caimiléireachta agus calaoise - corruption and fraud cases géarchéim fiachais - debt crisis
In this week's Scale Your Sales podcast episode, my guest is Rob May. Rob is the Founder and Managing Director of the cybersecurity firm Ramsac. Ramsac helps its clients to get the best out of technology- implementing, managing, and supporting secure, resilient, flexible IT solutions. Rob is also the president of PSA in the Southeast. He is also the UK ambassador for cybersecurity with the IoD. Rob sits on the advisory board of the Cyber Resilience Centre in the Southeast and is a Leadership fellow at Windsor Castle. In this episode, we talked about the recent Ramsac national awards. How they built their sales team as relationship builders, the culture within their organization, how they continued to nurture their customer relationships during covid and more. Welcome to Scale Your Sales podcast, Rob May. Timestamps: 3:10 - What initiated Rob to start Ramsac? 6:45 - Life and work pre Ramsac 8:50 - Ramsac achieves business and employee national awards 11:50 - Enabling employees to have a better life 16:16 - Proper communication will leave no one behind 19:05 - Always do the right thing 21:41 - Why the sales team is a relationship team? 26:30 - A players are hard to recruit without commission-based profit 28:50 - Launching an innovative product. https://www.linkedin.com/in/rpvmay/ Janice B Gordon is the award-winning Customer Growth Expert and Scale Your Sales Framework founder. She is by LinkedIn Sales 15 Innovating Sales Influencers to Follow 2021, the Top 50 Global Thought Leaders and Influencers on Customer Experience Nov 2020 and 150 Women B2B Thought Leaders You Should Follow in 2021. Janice helps companies worldwide to reimagine revenue growth through customer experience and sales. Book Janice to speak virtually at your next event https://janicebgordon.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/janice-b-... Twitter: https://twitter.com/JaniceBGordon Scale Your Sales Podcast: https://scaleyoursales.co.uk/podcast More on the blog https://scaleyoursales.co.uk/blog Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/janicebgordon Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/ScaleYourSal...
Nuacht Mhall: Cothrom an Lae, i gcomhair Sheachtain na Gaeilge * Inniu an ceathrú lá de mhí an Mhárta. Is mise Siubhán Nic Amhlaoibh. Cothrom an lae seo sa bhliain 1678, tháinig ceoltoir agus cumadóir Antonio Vivaldi ar an saol i Venice, san Iodáil. Tríd a shaol, chum Vivaldi go leor píosaí tábhachtacha agus aitheanta de cheol barócach, agus is fearr aithne air mar chumadóir an choinséartó “Na Ceithre Shéasúr”. I ndiaidh dó bualadh leis an Impire Naofa Rómhánach Séarlas VI, bog Vivaldi go Vín agus é ag súil le tacaíocht ríoga, ach fuair an tImpire bás go gairid ina dhiaidh sin agus d'éag Vivaldi féin agus é beo bocht an bhliain dár gcionn. Ina ainneoin sin, is mór an tionchar a bhí ag Vivaldi ar cheol clasaiceach sa domhan thiar, agus thángthas faoi athbheochán ar a cheol le deanaí i gceolfhoirne thart an domhain. * Léirithe ag Conradh na Gaeilge i Londain. Tá an script ar fáil i d'aip phodchraolta. * GLUAIS cumadóir - composer ceol barócach - baroque music Impire Naofa Rómhánach - Holy Roman Emperor ceolfhoirne - orchestras
Karen Berg of Redoux Interiors joins Dionne Woods today on the Patin Talks Podcast! Karen is the kind of person who will talk to anyone in a grocery store line, dance in public or in her car to a good song, and just fully soak up a fun moment. Karen's friends call her "the people collector" because Karen has never met a stranger and loves to connect with like-minded people, constantly expanding her circle of friends. As a kid, Karen was a serial maker. She never outgrew her love of creating. Now as an adult, she can't stop making, upcycling things and creating things. With an emphasis on Upcycling Old Furniture and Dumpster found artifacts. Karen is a wife to husband and best friend “Mark” of 30 years, a Mom of 3 grown kids and a dog that will never grow up. Karen spends most of her time upcycling old things and teaching others to create beautiful things using DIY Paint and IOD products, through video, social media, and in-person workshops. Upcoming Events: Head to Redouxinteriors.com for information on how to get on the waitlist and be the first to know about workshops, be notified of her latest blog posts and promotions, and more. Karen has an online cabinet course coming Spring 2023. You can get on the waiting list here. In-person workshops coming in Spring 2023, in Brentwood, (Northern, CA): The link to know more is here. Fun Fact Karen has an incredible memory for unimportant facts, trivia, and song lyrics and is a champion at Trivial Pursuit. Karen can spot random actors in a new movie or TV show from something she saw years ago and recall their faces and what show or movie they were in. TOTALLY useless knowledge, but it makes for good bets with her husband Mark when she almost always proves she is right. Website: http://www.redouxinteriors.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/redouxblog/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/redouxinteriors/ Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCn3p_oNCGXZ68frkFaMPbBA
Happy New Year! Joining us for the first episode of 2023 is Betsy Humphreys, Karen Volle and Karina Mancini, who will share their experience with the New Hampshire-Maine Leadership Education Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (LEND) and the New England Regional Genetics Network programs, and how they relate to genetics advocacy. Elizabeth Humphreys is the Director of the Leadership Education in Neurodevelopmental Disabilities (LEND) Program at the University of New Hampshire, a graduate leadership training and workforce development program aimed at improving systems of care for children with special health care needs. Since 2010 she has secured nearly 11 million dollars to implement the program in collaboration with the University of Maine UCEDD and Dartmouth Hitchcock Medical Center. She is a Research Assistant Professor of Early Childhood Special Education in the UNH Department of Education. Dr. Humphreys has worked extensively throughout early intervention settings since 1985 in collaboration with public education, Head Start, state partners and childcare programs with a focus on developmental monitoring and screening in infants and toddlers. Dr. Humphreys research integrates two research to practice areas: 1) evaluating the effectiveness and accessibility of evidence-based interventions and services for young children with neurodevelopmental disabilities and their families, and 2) examining leadership frameworks that establish and support cross-systems collaborations for health and early education professionals. She has also co-authored book chapters, as well as numerous peer-reviewed manuscripts and presentations.Karen Volle has been a Project Director with the Institute on Disability at the University of New Hampshire since February 2008 . Directly before this position Karen worked as a research assistant with the Crimes Against Children Center at UNH. Karen has a strong background in human services, having directed a Juvenile Intake program for eighteen years prior to working at UNH. This experience spanned child welfare, the juvenile court system and social services, and helped Karen learn to look across systems as well as to manage day to day activities. She now uses those skills at the IOD. She received her BA in psychology from Coe CollegeKarina is a LEND trainee, student, genetics professional, and prospective genetic counseling student based in New Hampshire. She completed her undergraduate degree in Diagnostic Genetic Sciences with a concentration in Cytogenetics at UConn. After graduation, she worked for two years as a cytogenetic technologist for a diagnostic hospital lab. Karina has a passion for genetics education and advocacy. Currently, she is a student in the NH-ME LEND program working on furthering her experience with the disability community, and hopes to attend a Master's in Genetic Counseling program in the near future.In this episode we discuss:The mission of the LEND ProgramHow LEND helps people and families affected by neurodevelopmental disabilities Concepts and skills taught in LENDWho is eligible to participate in LENDThe LEND student experienceHow LEND prepares students for careers in genetic counselingUniversities that offer LEND and how students can get involvedTo learn more about LEND and how to get involved, check out their website. Stay tuned for the next new episode of DNA Today on January 13th, 2023! New episodes are released every Fridays. In the meantime, you can binge over 215 other episodes on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, streaming on the website, or any other podcast player by searching, “DNA Today”. Episodes since 2021 are also recorded with video which you can watch on our YouTube channel. DNA Today is hosted and produced by Kira Dineen. Our social media lead is Corinne Merlino. Our video lead is Amanda Andreoli. Our outreach Intern is Sanya Tinaikar. Our Social Media Intern is Kajal Patel. And our Graphic Designer Ashlyn Enokian.See what else we are up to on Twitter, Instagram, Facebook, YouTube and our website, DNAToday.com. Questions/inquiries can be sent to info@DNAtoday.com. As a listener of DNA Today, you probably heard me talk about NIPT, non-invasive prenatal screening, that looks for extra or missing chromosome conditions during pregnancy. But did you know there is one that can also screen for recessive disorders (like cystic fibrosis) and fetal antigens? BillionToOne offers UNITY Screen, which does all this from one blood draw from a pregnant person. Visit unityscreen.com for more info. And stay tuned for our upcoming episodes with BillionToOne exploring non-invasive prenatal screening for recessive conditions and red blood cell fetal antigens! (Sponsored) I don't know about you, but I am always looking for the next podcast to add to my queue. When I subscribe to a new one, I like letting you know. If you are thinking about going to grad school or are currently in grad school I recommend checking out my friend David's podcast, Papa PhD. I am a little biased, he had me as a guest back in May. The episode is titled, “Applying to Grad School in 2022 with Kira Dineen”. If you also speak French, he also does some episodes in French! I've enjoyed episodes about science communication, leadership, networking, science policy, public speaking skills, mentorship and more. Search “Papa PhD” in your podcast app to stream!
EP. #2 [THEME TWO] Should you reinvest your business’s profits or take home distributions instead? In this episode, Ali Nasser, founder and CEO of AltruVista, is on the show to help us answer this question and continue our current theme: are you running a lifestyle business or creating a valuable asset? Ali talks about the three critical dilemmas that are on every entrepreneur's mind when it comes to growing your business and lifestyle. He explains how to think about reinvesting in your company vs. taking the money home and investing (or spending) outside your company, how to plan for an exit, and how to create a legacy you are proud of. The first topic he challenges us to get clarity on is… well, you guessed it, what do you want long-term? Ali walks us through different reinvestment strategies as well as how to plan for an eventual exit based on the capital you need for your lifestyle and legacy (which is tightly integrated into the Intentional Growth™ Principle #2 - Financial Targets). Many entrepreneurs feel trapped when it comes to thinking about an exit, which is why we’ve been talking about how to view your company as a financial asset that gives you choices to exit when and how you want if you build a company worth what you want–or need–it to be worth. If you know what you want long-term and how much it costs to live the lifestyle you want–while saving some money for low-risk investments–you will find clarity on the right mix of reinvesting back in the business and saving outside the business so you can hit your long-term financial goals. //WATCH THE INTERVIEW ON YOUTUBE: Intentional Growth™ Podcast What You Will Learn The Three Dilemmas that every entrepreneur deals with. The six categories that define the entrepreneur wealth spectrum (WISE). Lifestyle wealth versus legacy wealth and how it ties into net proceeds. How to navigate the intersection of wealth planning and life planning. Exit planning versus a value enhancement strategy. Why you need to know what you want from your company–both financially and emotionally–before creating an investment or exit strategy. The different reinvesting options every business owner has–demonstrated by Ali’s IOD chart. How to think about risk as it relates to investing in your business and all the other asset classes outside of your company. Why and when it’s important to diversify your net worth outside of your business. Why it’s so important to understand your own perception of risk and how that compares to the real risk when investing in any asset.
EP. #2 [THEME TWO] Should you reinvest your business’s profits or take home distributions instead? In this episode, Ali Nasser, founder and CEO of AltruVista, is on the show to help us answer this question and continue our current theme: are you running a lifestyle business or creating a valuable asset? Ali talks about the three critical dilemmas that are on every entrepreneur's mind when it comes to growing your business and lifestyle. He explains how to think about reinvesting in your company vs. taking the money home and investing (or spending) outside your company, how to plan for an exit, and how to create a legacy you are proud of. The first topic he challenges us to get clarity on is… well, you guessed it, what do you want long-term? Ali walks us through different reinvestment strategies as well as how to plan for an eventual exit based on the capital you need for your lifestyle and legacy (which is tightly integrated into the Intentional Growth™ Principle #2 - Financial Targets). Many entrepreneurs feel trapped when it comes to thinking about an exit, which is why we’ve been talking about how to view your company as a financial asset that gives you choices to exit when and how you want if you build a company worth what you want–or need–it to be worth. If you know what you want long-term and how much it costs to live the lifestyle you want–while saving some money for low-risk investments–you will find clarity on the right mix of reinvesting back in the business and saving outside the business so you can hit your long-term financial goals. //WATCH THE INTERVIEW ON YOUTUBE: Intentional Growth™ Podcast What You Will Learn The Three Dilemmas that every entrepreneur deals with. The six categories that define the entrepreneur wealth spectrum (WISE). Lifestyle wealth versus legacy wealth and how it ties into net proceeds. How to navigate the intersection of wealth planning and life planning. Exit planning versus a value enhancement strategy. Why you need to know what you want from your company–both financially and emotionally–before creating an investment or exit strategy. The different reinvesting options every business owner has–demonstrated by Ali’s IOD chart. How to think about risk as it relates to investing in your business and all the other asset classes outside of your company. Why and when it’s important to diversify your net worth outside of your business. Why it’s so important to understand your own perception of risk and how that compares to the real risk when investing in any asset.