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8 months ago, James Carlyle sat down with is to document the fall of a titan in the Houston beer scene. Now 8 months removed, James is playing a pivotal role I. the resurrection of City Acre Brewing. Listen in to learn how these 8 months has gone, how City Acre is re-emerging on the scene, and more importantly what is on the horizon!! Don't get out of the tub too early and miss your Christmas Bonus! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hottubbeer/support
The constables have been let out to graze.Topics in this episode include: 1904 popular culture, James Carlyle and the Irish Times, foxhunting, horsey people, Leopold Bloom's disdain for high class women, The Irish Field, a personal ad from the 1870's, Mrs Miriam Dandrade, the Purefoys, Fletcherism, the Chew-Chew Method, fad diets of yore, munching parties, hardy annuals, whether or not consumption makes you randy, phthisis, searching for Mrs Moisel, Mrs Thornton, Bloom mocks the police, The Pirates of Penzance, Thomas Moore, Avoca, and “The Meeting of the Waters.”Support us on Patreon to access episodes early, bonus content, and a video version of our podcast.Blooms & Barnacles Social Media:Facebook | Twitter | InstagramSubscribe to Blooms & Barnacles:Apple Podcasts | Spotify | YouTube
James Carlyle, Brewery Ops Manager at City Acre Brewing joined us this week to chat about all the fun things going on in his day to day. We start the show by getting his back story on beer and what made him get into the career. we chat more about his impressive resume in beer making. He opens up about his time at Ingenious and tells some cool beer stories you won't hear anywhere else. We play "Brew or False" as well. All this and so much more in this episode. Cheers
James Carlyle of Ingenious fame took the trip to Brash and hung out with the Hot Tub crew at another Sunday Metal Funday!! Listen in as we rate Ingenious beers, get to know James, and look into the Future!! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/hottubbeer/support
We stop by Ingenious Brewing in Humble, Texas and hang with Krista Sontag and James Carlyle.
In this episode of Web3 Innovators, Conor Svensson, founder and CEO of Web3 Labs, talks to James Carlyle & Cais Manai of Obscuro Network.Cais and James have both spent a number of years working at R3 on their Corda platform, before last year switching their focus to work on the Obscuro Network. The Obscuro Network is privacy first Ethereum layer 2 network.Lots of topics are covered in this discussion including how the Obscuro project came to be, the different approaches it is taking to privacy on blockchains compared with other L2 solutions such as ZKP and some of the new challenges they will need to overcome.This conversation is a fantastic primer on the Obscuro Network's approach to privacy, and also very helpful to understand the privacy limitations in many of the ZKP based layer 2 networks. We're sure you'll gain valuable takeaways from it too.Find out more - https://obscu.ro/To order your copy of the Number 1 Best Seller 'The Blockchain Innovator's Handbook, head to https://www.web3labs.com/innovators
This month on the Brews Less Traveled Beer Club Podcast, Molly and co-host Glenn explore the craft beer scene of Houston, TX. This week finishes out our stop in Houston with Ingenious Brewing's “Hall Pass” Kölsch and “Cookies and Cream” Imperial Milk Stout. Also, a conversation with special guest James Carlyle, Head Brewer of Ingenious Brewing. In this episode, Molly, Glenn, and James chat about sticking to traditions when brewing, while also pushing boundaries. James explains Ingenious Brewing's method of “deconstructing” a flavor when brewing a new beer. James shares how Ingenious Brewing approaches small-batch beers. You can drink along with Molly from the comfort of home! Join the Brews Less Traveled beer club, get delicious beers delivered monthly, then tune into our weekly interactive virtual beer tastings on Wednesday evenings. Visit https://brewvana.com/product/beer-of-the-month-club to join! Cheers! Subscribe to the most well-traveled beer podcast in the nation! Follow us as we travel the country finding America's BEST undiscovered craft beer! Instagram - www.instagram.com/brewvana Facebook - www.facebook.com/brewvana
Over the last 12 months Decentralised Finance also known as DeFi has really exploded with reported total value locked reaching $250bn. R3 who operates in the permissioned blockchain space is spinning out Obscuro into the permissionless space of DeFi. In this podcast we're joined by James Carlyle who explains the DeFi landscape, the challenges it faces in terms of privacy and scalability and how Obscuro can address these. What is blockchain? Blockchain is a distributed databased. Instead of one party running it, it is run as a network by a group of entities who don't necessarily trust each other. It contains features that ensure that entities don't need to trust each other, they can trust the infrastructure and the code itself. James has been on a blockchain journey since 2015 when he started off with permissionless public systems like Bitcoin and Ethereum prior to joining R3 in 2015 and helping to design Corda. Corda though had a very different principles than permissionless public systems as it was designed as a permissioned blockchain. The participants all have a verified identity so you know who you are dealing with, whilst on permissionless system they have a pseudonym. Now with Obscuro, James is returning to permissionless public systems. Decentralised finance (DeFi) Over the last 12 months Decentralised Finance also known as DeFi has really exploded. A few weeks ago JP Morgan reports that total value locked (TVL) has grown from last year's $20bn to $200bn today. For James, Defi is an expression of freedom and of innovation. It's growing very rapidly as it's able to innovate at lightspeed. All of these applications are open source which means that it is possible to take an existing idea to either build upon it or in some cases to steal it and simply rebrand it. These things increase the level of innovation and increase the level of take up. At the heart of DeFi is transparency. It runs on permissionless systems, which means anyone can take part, download the data and help in the validation process. The first generation of DeFi builders and users were not interested in privacy and James believes that DeFi is heading towards a new generation to builders and users who are aiming for a more mass market where privacy is important. The ECB released a report on the digital Euro where privacy is seen as a key digital enabler. Whilst privacy is important it can unfortunately also be used as a cloak for illegal behaviour. For DeFi to be picked up and used by the mass market it has to be more regulated. Regulation needs identity and KYC. R3 is uniquely placed to interact in this space as it has this rich heritage of having very strong ties with regulation and regulators Miner extractable value (MEV) In a public blockchain system such as Ethereum there are participants who are submitting transactions. Miners who are here to confirm transactions can see the contents of the transactions that users have submitted. They can take advantage of it in some cases in what is called front running. For example, if you want to buy something on the market you don't want someone else to bid the price up ahead of the transaction. That's what is possible when a miner can spot that a user is trying to something and they decide to step in first and thus get the transaction before the user and the user is left behind buying it at a higher price. It has been estimated that around $1.4 billion of MEV is being taken from Ethereum blockchain users annually from a total DeFi market of around $50 billion. Global financial markets are worth $100 trillion. One of the main motivations of Obscuro is to help solve some of these issues. Ethereum scalability issues Ethereum to some extent is a victim of its own success as it suffers from scalability issues. With the explosion of DeFi projects, and their corresponding transactions that need to be processed by all of the nodes on the Ethereum network,
If you are new, SUBSCRIBE - https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCXUZo-bXorL7W1DAWuiZyHA?sub_confirmation=1 Live from House of Blues Houston with Ingenious Brewing's James Carlyle and music guest DEM Roots Music. Check it out - http://www.drinkofages.com Like us - http://www.facebook.com/drinkofages.com Listen to old shows sponsored by No Label Brewing Company - http://www.soundcloud.com/drinkofages https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/badass-beers-and-badass-music/id1040734081 #beer #craftbeer #beerstagram #beerlover #instabeer #beerporn #cerveza #bier #birra #beergeek #cerveja #ipa #bar #wine #cheers #food #beers #brewery #drinks #beerme #beertography #beertime #drinklocal #craftbeerlover #beerlovers #craftbeerlife #beersofinstagram #craftbeerporn #cocktails #bhfyp #katy #texas
This week we talked to James Carlyle, the head brewer at Ingenious Brewing Company in Humble, Texas (don't pronounce t wrong). We discussed the history of the brewery, how they come up with new beers, the creation of pastry pilsners, and many other topics. Subscribe to our YouTube ChannelFollow Chris on Instagram Like us on Facebook! Presented by Roasthouse Pub in Frederick. And supported by ACS - Brand My Beverage, Idiom Brewing Co., District East, and McClintock Distilling.
Martin Jee and Mike Hearn discuss his early days in programming, Conclave, Corda and where the internet is going next in what must be said is a very positive vision for the future, and a very positive way to end what has been a rather downbeat year. Listen on Spotify, Apple Podcasts or Youtube etc : https://anchor.fm/fromthebasement Mike Hearn is a programmer extrordinaire, an early Bitcoin contributor, who joined R3 to take distributed ledger technology to its next logical level and (alongside Richard Gendal Brown and James Carlyle) created Corda. Today the main thing taking up Mike's time is bullet-proofing Conclave, the everyman's confidential computing solution and R3s new product. Presented by Martin Jee, Independent Corda Recruiter : Oxenbury Partners, http://www.oxenburypartners.com Edited by Tess Shepherd-Smith. A Basement Production by Oscar Bennett.
UFC Heavyweight Derrick Lewis & Ingenious Brewings, James Caryle Come over for a thanksgiving spectacular.
Catherine sits down with Dave Sutter (TradeIX) and Tobias Nafe (Landesbank Baden- Württemberg) to chat with a beer to discuss the Marco Polo network and how the trade finance industry is evolving! Listen on your favorite podcast app! Guests: Dave Sutter - LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/sutterdavid/) Tobias Nafe - LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/tobias-nafe-709101161/) Important links... First episode with Dave Sutter (https://www.r3.com/podcasts/episode-6-were-not-calling-it-cryptolandia/)Marco Polo website (https://www.marcopolo.finance/) TradeIX website (https://tradeix.com/)LBBW website (https://www.lbbw.de/homepage/homepage_6kyjj4koh_e.html)Corda Network (https://corda.network/) Corda Network Episode with James Carlyle (https://www.r3.com/podcasts/episode-21-announcing-corda-network-anddddd-james-carlyle-was-lost-at-sea-for-a-month-say-what/) Catherine Rutter - LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherinemrutter/) - Twitter (https://twitter.com/breadandrutter) Music by bensound.com
Shiner is not pleased with Karbach, Anheuser-Busch to buy out Craft Brew Alliance, 'Bud Light Guy' Jeff Adams wins free beer for Washington hockey fans, ‘Epstein Didn’t Kill Himself’ Beer, Belgian nuns selling the world’s first Trappist Beer shampoo, Virginia Brewery introduces ‘Sell The Team’ IPA, Plus, how breweries deal with negative feedback. Featuring special guest James Carlyle. All this and so much more. Enjoy the show!
Recorded 10-17-19. This episode is Hop’n!! Michael Pulvino and Rick Tyler of Republic Hops sit in with Ingenious Brewing‘s James Carlyle, The Grain Cellar‘s Preston Brown and Liquid Lunch’s Josh Stewart & Chris Kennedy to discuss Republic Hops’ upcoming harvest. Along with hop talk we try some awesome beers from Ingenious and talk shop with … Continue reading Liquid Lunch 160: Republic Hops & Ingenious Brewing at The Grain Cellar →
Recorded 6-6-19. Ingenious Brewing Company Brewer and Liquid Lunch Super Friend James Carlyle joins Liquid Lunch host along with Kennedy in Stew-dio to talk and drink beer! Wooooo!!!
Whole Foods Brewing Company head brewer James Carlyle stops in DoA Pub and the gang behind La Izquierda Fest in Galveston hangs for some pints.
Often not considered as “sexy” in the blockchain world, but building effective governance is probably one of the most important tasks in building a resilient blockchain ecosystem. For this podcast we were very privileged to have James Carlyle, Head of Network and Operations at R3. What is blockchain? Blockchain is a distributed ledger system that makes a fundamental promise which is “what I see, is what you see”. The idea being that although people share a common view, they actually have their own copies of data and that matter for numerous reasons such as the one of control. . It means with a copy of their own data and the promise that what they see is what the other side sees, that they don't need to rely on intermediaries. What is governance? I always say if you haven't figured out who is in control, it's because you haven't been looking hard enough; there is someone there Governance is about control first and foremost. What had initially attracted James to Ethereum was the idea of an unstoppable world computer where no one was in control. The initial bitcoin and Ethereum community were people who believed in small government or not government and perhaps they thought that these systems came without control. However James view is “I always say if you haven't figured out who is in control, it's because you haven't been looking hard enough; there is someone there”. R3’s initial governance for running a consortium In R3’s early days it was solely focused on running a consortium and the consortium was there to explore how blockchain technology could be used in finance. Right from the start R3 set out to encourage participation and collaboration, which is absolutely fundamental for blockchain, and thus governance became important from the very start. In its early days R3 had a steering committee that decided what it should focus on. A steering committee had representation from every one of the 42 initial bank members of R3. One of the first things the steering committee decided to do was for example to set up an architecture working group and the architecture working group had its own governance. The architecture working group’s governance was comprised of leading and chief architects from banks thinking about the right technology choice for distributed ledger's in banking. But governance has always mattered with these collaborative and heterogenous groups. The Corda Network When Corda was first designed its founder imagined a platform in which people could use Corda to manage agreements with each other for any business between any businesses and at any time… ie. the corda network. This can be thought of as an internet of Corda nodes. Corda nodes that are connected together and across which business transactions can take place. In the initial days of Corda most groups of banks and other companies wanted to deploy their blockchain software together in the form of many consortiums who weren’t necessarily connected. Corda’s original vision of a corda network couldn’t be achieved in this manner. The reason is because each network per application has its own boundary of trust and that means that what happens in that network is trusted within the network itself, but it isn't trusted by anyone else. Each network has a “trust route” where all of the digital signatures and so on can be traced back and it's not possible easily at least to bring the advantages of blockchain across the boundary of one network to another. That's because the provenance for example which is supported by things like the digital signatures and the hash chains and everything else, that provenance doesn't move across boundaries very easily. If we take the analogy of two villages who want to trade with each other. In the real world what they need is a common trust boundary and that trust boundary is provided by things like language, a set of laws and currency. For example, they can trade together,
Guests: James Carlyle - LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/jamescarlyle/) - Twitter (https://twitter.com/jwgcarlyle) Catherine Rutter - LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/catherinemrutter/) - Twitter (https://twitter.com/breadandrutter) Music by bensound.com Links Corda Network press release (https://www.r3.com/news/corda-network-launches-with-new-governing-foundation/) Corda Network website (https://corda.network/) Corda Network Foundation document history (https://github.com/corda-network/corda-network.github.io/blame/master/about/index.md) James Carlyle's blog (https://medium.com/@james_85389/e5ced4287123) Special Guest: James Carlyle.
On tap this week: Miller Brewing cared about Millennials just a few months ago, now they don’t, Heineken now has the world’s best-selling beer. Are breweries getting out of the beer business? How to promote diversity in the beer industry? The newly promoted Head Brewer of Whole Foods Market Brewery, James Carlyle will be joining us in studio. All this and more. Enjoy!
Recorded 6-28-18. On the go home episode before the July 4th break, Whole Foods Brewing Co. Brewmaster James Carlyle calls in to talk about their collaboration with Baa Baa Brewhouse. Haidyn drinks all the milks, Josh worries about going bald, the dad jokes fly, the 100th episode of Liquid Lunch is discussed, Kennedy pours beer … Continue reading Liquid Lunch 098: Whole Foods Brewing Co.’s James Carlyle →
Episode 166 of InterBrews was recorded at Whole Foods Market Brewing Company on Post Oak in The Galleria area of Houston. Newly crowned Brewmaster James Carlyle sat down with host Josh Stewart on the big green couch at WFBC to discuss his journey from Texas Homebrewers to the brewhouse at WFBC. Baa Baa Brewhouse owner […]
Recorded 9-15-16. James Carlyle from Texas Homebrewers sits in Stew-dio and discusses his awesome barley wine, home brewing and more.
MERRY CHRISTMAS!!! Just in time for May is the InterBrews Christmas show. Caleb Wilson from Texian Brewing, James Simpson from What’s on Tap Radio, Catherine Contreras from She’s Crafty Podcast and James Carlyle from Texas Homebrewers all joined Josh around the table for merriment and cheer. So enjoy a little peace on earth and good […]
The 2015 InterBrews Roundtable is here. A little over a year from our last go, we’ve added beers, facial hair, beer industry experience and a few pounds. The All-Star line up is back: Texian Brewing Company’s head brewer Caleb Wilson, Texas Homebrewers homebrewing guru James Carlyle, What’s On Tap Radio host James Simpson and The […]
Episode 93 of InterBrews was recorded at Huff Brewing in Bellville, TX. Ryan, Jake and Dustin welcome us to the brewery to talk and drink delicious beer. Huffmeister, Original Ostia and more. We played Name that Hank, we introduced Brew U and welcomed Roy Huff to the show. Of course we also heard James Carlyle’s […]
Episode 90 of InterBrews was recorded at the mecca of home brewing in Katy, TX, Texas Homebrewers. James Carlyle invited in the InterBrews crew to discuss the latest in home brewing and beer in general. There was a bunch of good craft beer sampled as well a home made strawberry wine and a watermelon mead. […]
Oh can you believe how time has flown. Texas Homebrewers is turning 3 and to celebrate we recorded an episode of InterBrews while James Carlyle and the guys from the CIA brewed a Vanilla Hefeweizen. June 6 is the big party at the shop so be sure to mark your calendar. Also on this episode […]
InterBrews episode 46 is the first ever beer round table. James Simpson from What’s on Tap Radio, Caleb Wilson from Texian Brewing Company, James Carlyle from Texas Home Brewers & Josh Schultz from The Growler Spot join me at The Growler Spot for an epic beer centric conversation. We talk about everything from craft beer […]
This Episode of InterBrews finds Josh back out on the beer trail. He headed over to Texas Homebrewers in Katy, TX to interview James Carlyle. They of course talked homebrew, evaluated some beers including a compare and contrast of Southern Star’s Burried Hatchet Stout and St Arnold’s Icon Blue Brown Porter. Also mentioned were plans […]
This week's playlist: • Ice Storm by Boo Boo Davis, from East St. Louis (2007), available from Black & Tan Records. Visit BooBooDavis.com and Boo Boo's page at the IODA site for more information. • Sweet Home New Orleans by Phillip Walker, from Going Back Home (2007), available from Delta Groove Productions.com and the iTunes Music Store. Visit PhillipWalker.com for more information. • Insecurity by Doc Bates, from Hard Headed Heart (2006). Visit Doc's page at Podshow.com for more information. • Wine, Women & Song by Johnny Ferreira, from Rock & Roll Saxophonist (2006), available from CD Baby and the iTMS. Visit JohnnyFerreira.com for more information. • One Thing's For Certain by Robert Wuagneux, from It's a 1-Uful World (2003), available from his site. The individual track may be purchased through his page at Broadjam.com. Visit Robert's site, 1-uproductions.com for more information. • Workin' So Hard by Robert Wuagneux, from Love Is Easy (2004), available for purchase through his site. A variety of tracks are also for sale as individual downloads from Robert's download page at Broadjam.com. Visit Robert's site, 1-uproductions.com, for more information. • Poor Man's Train by Gerry Wall, from Winter Grass (2006), available from CD Baby and the iTunes Music Store. Visit GerryWall.com for more information. • Guaranteed Recipe by The Raunch Tones, from Standing Room Only: Songs from the Last Roadhouse (2005), available from Silk City Records and the iTMS. Visit RaunchTones.com for more information. • Hooked On You by Albert Collins, from Cold Snap (1986), available from Alligator Records and the iTMS. Visit Albert's bio page at the Alligator site for more information. • Ya Better Treat Me Right by The Mitchell Blues Band. For more information, visit the band's GarageBand page. Mentioned during this show: Mary4Music.com, one of the very best online blues directories I've ever seen; MarkKerrLtd.com, the home page of Mark Kerr, a smokin' blues guitarist, a great friend to Murphy's Saloon and the host of the Mark Kerr's Blues Nation podcast; James Carlyle's podcast Hambone's Blues Rumshack, which originates in the Shetland Islands; and Chicago radio demigoddess Cara Carriveau's podcast, Cara's Basement. Excellent online resources for more information about the blues: The Blues Foundation and the Delta Blues Museum; and be sure to download and listen to the DBM's top-notch (and free) podcast, the Uncensored History of the Blues. (Music on Murphy's Saloon #70 courtesy of the artists and the PROMONET program of the Independent Online Distribution Alliance, the Podsafe Music Network or Garageband.com)