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In this Better Satellite World podcast, based on the June 2024 edition of the New York Space Business Roundtable, our panel of experts takes a hard-nosed look at how the public and private sectors share the world of AI. Among other questions, we ask: What role will AI have on military applications in Space and on the ability to anticipate threats and opportunities that the commercial sector can benefit from? Profit from? Provide a more secure and just world for? There is no doubt that space is increasingly a warfare theater. But will it also become a culture which, through commerce and global cooperation, becomes a place where conflicts are “de-risked”? Speakers include: Dr. James Cunningham, DoD Business Development, Wallaroo Chris Cummins, Chief of Staff, Voyager Space Stuart Daughtridge, Senior VP, Advanced Technology, Kratos; Chairman, DIFI; and Finalist 2023 Satellite Executive of the Year Jeremy Fand, Co-Founder and CEO, SeerAI, Inc.
Do you have big goals for your bridal seamstress business in 2024? In this episode, I walk you through how to break down your goals into more manageable steps with the help of SMART goals. If you have never heard of SMART goals, they were developed by George Doran, Arthur Miller and James Cunningham in their 1981 article “There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management goals and objectives.” This episode is the perfect way to start the new year. To help you with this, I have created a free downloadable template with journal prompts to help you get clear. This download is available throughout the month of January. Please send me your goals on Instagram @secretsofabridalseamstress because I would love to support you and cheer you on! Download Nadine's SMART Goals Worksheet: https://enchanting-sun-77080.myflodesk.com/vu8r210t62 Nadine's Book Recommendation: Finish, by Jon Acuff Connect with Nadine: Become a member: https://secretsofabridalseamstresspodcast.com/membership Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secretsofabridalseamstress/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@nadinebozeman
One of the most sought-after authorities on Palestine, Professor Rashid Khaldi will explain what's going on in Palestine and discuss his book, "The Hundred Years' War on Palestine." Before Dr. Khaldi, former Washington, DC Teacher-of the Year, James Cunningham talks about some of the problems instructors face in the Classroom. Before James, the head of the Washington Teachers Union, Jacquline Pogue Lyons discusses the stalled contract talks with City Officials. DC activist Dyrell Muhammad will also join us. FAQS Answered: Read Our Israel-Palestine Battle Breakdown Text "DCnews" to 52140 For Local & Exclusive News Sent Directly To You! The Big Show starts on WOLB at 1010 AM, wolbbaltimore.com, WOL 95.9 FM & 1450 AM & woldcnews.com at 6 am ET., 5 am CT., 3 am PT., and 11 am BST. Call-In # 800 450 7876 to participate, & listen liveSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Cultivation Elevated - Indoor Farming, Cannabis Growers & Cultivators - Pipp Horticulture
Tangled Trails by William MacLeod Raine audiobook. The aptly titled 'Tangled Trails, A Western Detective Story' takes the listener through a web of curious incidents revolving around the murder of a prominent man in Denver. Kirby Lane was quite obviously the guilty party in the murder of his uncle. Lane, among others, had had a falling out with his uncle, the victim James Cunningham. But there were some who believed his nephew to be innocent of the hideous crime. Lane feared the guilty party to be a female bronco rider whom he had befriended, as her presence at the scene of the crime was quite evident, albeit only to him. There were others also who appeared to be implicated in the murder for various reasons, thus leading to a veritable tangling of clues and suspects. Was there a detective capable enough to untangle this web? Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Ryan sat down with two old friends for a rich conversation on wielding innovation and smart policies to create an American renewal. Listen to his conversation with Dave McCormick, author of Superpower in Peril: A Battle Plan to Renew America (along with James Cunningham) and Chris Brose of Anduril Industries. The first 15 people that email editor (at) warontherocks (dot) com with a personal story about how you participated in innovation in some way will get a free hardcopy of Superpower in Peril.
David McCormick, 2022 Pennsylvania Senate candidate, former CEO of Bridgewater, and author (with James Cunningham) of Superpower in Peril: A Battle Plan to Renew America, joins The Realignment. David and Marshall discuss his takeaways from the 2022 Senate race, how the right can balance between populism and traditional conservatism, and the effectiveness of Biden administration policies such as the CHIPS Act.Subscribe to The Realignment to access our exclusive Q&A episodes and support the show: https://realignment.supercast.com/.REALIGNMENT NEWSLETTER: https://therealignment.substack.com/PURCHASE BOOKS AT OUR BOOKSHOP: https://bookshop.org/shop/therealignmentEmail us at: realignmentpod@gmail.com
James L. Cunningham, Jr. has been an attorney for more than two decades in the areas of estate planning, probate, trust administration, elder law, disability/special needs planning, and much more. He is one of the few attorneys certified by the State Bar of California as a Specialist in Estate Planning, Trust, and Probate Law. As founder of Cunningham Legal, he oversees six offices, along with a team of attorneys and professionals focused entirely on estate issues. James is a California native, a devoted husband, and the father of three children. During the show we discuss: What Estate Planning Entails What Happens When You Don't Get Estate Planning Right What Should Be in a Will What a Living Will Can Do for You What Advantages Estate Plans Offer Factors You Should Take into Account in Setting Up a Trust Why the Government Wants to Take All Your Money When You Die How Often You Should Update a Trust How Divorce for You or Your Kids Affects Your Estate How a Local Estate Planner Can Get Started Elements that Make Up Estate Planning How to Choose an Executor Elements that Constitute an Effective Estate Plan Key Papers for Estate Planning Elements of Estate Planning that are the Most Crucial The Issues Covered by Estate Planning The Best Way to Get Ready for Estate Planning Why Estate Planning is So Crucial Who Needs to Prepare Their Estate The Various Estate Planning Strategies and What They Accomplish Show resources: www.cunninghamlegal.com
We're Back! We return from the international break and dive into the week ahead, answering a few questions along the way. We take a look at a some alternative captain options, try to figure out the upcoming Arsenal/City dilemma, and take a quick look to see when pitchers and catchers report. Then on to some bets, including some CFB from James Cunningham, NFL, and close with a few EPL bets.Glad to be back and please rate and review.Opening and filler music by The Tan and Sober GentelmenFollow us on twitter @FPLGamble (we never check this) or join us on Discord:https://discord.gg/pkgY5aqqOpening and filler music by The Tan and Sober Gentlemen
A true waste of an episode this week neither covering the past week or what's upcoming all that well. A few league updates, some NFL bets and some late College Football entries from James Cunningham to wrap things up. Let's hope the players make it through the next week+ unscathed.Opening and filler music by The Tan and Sober Gentlemen
This episode contemplates lessons learned from America’s twenty years of war in Afghanistan. To do so, we're joined by Dr. Carter Malkasian, author of The American War in Afghanistan: A History, and James Cunningham, a senior analyst with SIGAR—the Office of the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction. The discuss whether, in the year following the US withdrawal, the United States and its allies have sufficiently reflected on lessons learned from the war. They then describe various reasons why the intervention in Afghanistan failed, based on their extensive research and on-the-ground experience—to include multiple lessons from SIGAR reporting and Dr. Malkasian’s argument that the Taliban won because it fought for values close to what it means to be Afghan, including religion and resistance to occupation. Our guests conclude with policy implications we can draw from twenty years of strategy that ultimately resulted in failure. Intro music: "Unsilenced" by Ketsa Outro music: "Launch" by Ketsa CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
Well, we all knew this year had the potential to get crazy but just when things were looking semi-stable, Week 7 showed up and kicked open the turnstiles of the Madness Saloon. Good luck writing the rest of the script. We start with a Tuchel sacking shocker, then discuss Liverpool's many woes, and then a Spurs/City chat. But none of that matters now because the whole game is on hold. Stick around until the end for some CFB bets from James Cunningham and we will come back next week and try to predict the unpredictable. Opening and filler music by The Tan and Sober Gentlemen
We start with a recap of GW 2, a quick review of our teams, and a look ahead to GW 3. We then recap La Ligarie and the @FPLGamble mini-league (1:00). We then move to bets starting with some College Football over/unders from James Cunningham and then some EPL bets. Wild start to the season, my friends, hold on to your butts(1:11).Opening and filler music by the Tan and Sober GentlemenFollow us on Twitter @FPLGambleOpening and filler music by The Tan and Sober Gentlemen
Email Us! Is there a financial question or market problem you would like to hear Louis work through on The Market Call Show? Email it info@wealthnetinvest.com and you may see it answered on a future episode! In this week's episode of The Market Call Show, Louis is joined by James Cunningham, founder of CunninghamLegal in California. He is the author of Savvy Estate Planning, a no-nonsense guide on how to avoid mistakes that could damage your financial succession plan. In this episode you'll hear: The biggest misconception people have about estate planning The discussions around estate planning and family What is an estate plan and who needs one Changes in the estate planning structure, today's economic status, and how taxes can affect it all What to expect in the next five years Living trusts - what are they and when would you want one? What happens when you don't have a will Finding the right professional to work with Disability, incapacity disability, and how it should be incorporated into estate planning When you are ready, here are some ways we can help YOU with your investing and financial planning: 1. Try the new RISK NUMBER SCORECARD Everyone has a risk number. Let's find yours. This tool can help you find YOUR personal risk number to have a peaceful investment journey – Click here 2. Read the Financial Freedom Blueprint: 7 Steps to Accelerate Your Path to Prosperity If you're ready to accelerate your path to prosperity, Financial Freedom Blueprint lays out a proven system for planning and investing to secure your financial independence. – Click here You can also get a personalize signed hard cover copy – Click here 3. Work with me one-on-one If you would like to talk about planning and investing for your future. – Click here
Listen to the Data Eng podcast: https://www.dataengineeringpodcast.com/snuba-event-data-warehouse-episode-108/ (11mins in)https://blog.cloudflare.com/http-analytics-for-6m-requests-per-second-using-clickhouse/TranscriptJames CunninghamYeah, so I'd say as far as all the decisions that we made in order to go into this new platform, one of the biggest leaders was that we had a big push for having environments be kind of like a first class filtration, we had to build a new dimensionality of data across all this denormalized data, essentially doubled the storage that we had. And then we said to ourselves, like all this is great, this looks cool. environments are dope. But what happens we want to add another dimension and have dimension or we're just going to continue to, I guess, like, extrapolate across this data set and eventually end up with 100 terabytes of, you know, five different dimensions of data. So we said ourselves That we kind of needed a flat event model that we'd be able to kind of search across and to ourselves, you know, there are a few other pieces that we want. And on top of that, we want to be able to search across these arbitrary fields that we really, really looked into whether those are custom tags or something that we kind of promote, whether that is like releases or traces or searching across messages. We didn't want that to take as long as it did. And some of the other parts is that we have all this data stored in, you know, this tag store and all these searches that we have to go through. But we have in a completely different side for time series data that again, had to have that dimensionality in it. If we search across these arbitrary fields, the next thing that a customer would ask for is, Hey, can I please see a pretty graph. So if we could boil down that search, and that time series data into the same system, we'd be destroying two systems with one rewrite.Ted KaemmingAnd also like as part of that process, I mean, you kind of always have this Standard checkpoints, you know, like the replication and durability is obviously really important for us ease of maintenance is huge, low cost as well for us. So even that just kind of ruled out some like the hosted magic storage solutions, like those kinds of pressures.Tobias MaceyAnd as you were deciding how to architect this new system, can you talk through some of the initial list of possible components that you were evaluating and what the process was for determining whether something was going to stay or go in the final right?James CunninghamYeah, of course. Um, so our first, I guess, thing that we kind of crossed off is no more orientation, Postgres to serve as well, probably wouldn't, you know, we hope that we could engineer a good solution on top of it, but ultimately, we decided we probably needed a different shape of database to get the query across. We've kind of had like, five major options. We had document stores, you know, we had Some sort of Google proprietary blend, because we are completely on GCP. We had, you know, more more generic distributed query stuff, you know, a little bit of Spark, maybe a little bit of presto, we took a look at other distributed databases, we ran a good amount of Cassandra and my old gig. So I know how to run that. And we also said, like, Oh, hey, we could just like, put data down on distance ourselves and not have to worry about this. Some of the other like, serious considered things that we had was a was a column restore some of these other ones that we actually like kick the tires on, was to do we kick the tires on Pino, and Druid. And ultimately, we found click house as a commerce store. And we kind of just started running it. And it was one of the easiest ones to kick the tires on. Some of these other like, I guess, you know, columnar stores built on top of distributed file systems. It really did take a good amount of bricks to put down in order to get to your first query. And some of the things that we wanted was figuring out operational costs on that. We want to be able to iterate across question You wanted to be able to kind of pare down all the dependencies that the service had. You know, while we weren't afraid to run a few JVM, or to run it, you know, a little bit of HDFS, that was something that realistically, I might not want to have to have, you know, an entire engineer dedicated to running something like that. And on the antithesis of that, you know, we can choose some of this Google proprietary blend, but how did it feel to go from having century only require Redis and Postgres to now saying, you can only run the new version on Google? Yeah, as a little bit silly. So we ended up really just getting through an MVP of I think, both Kudo and click house, and one of the one of the biggest ones that really did kick us and for anyone listening, go ahead and correct me if I'm wrong. But one of my memories was that one of our engineers, you know, started loading data into q2, and you didn't really know when it was there. It was great for you know, being able to being able to crunch down about your numbers, but one of our biggest things that you did kind of hint at Is that we do need real time data and to be able to write into this data store, and then to be able to read it on a consistent basis with one of the things we need it, we have the ability to have a feature called alert rules and what you say, hey, only tell me if, you know, any event with the tag, you know, foom in got in and the value equals to what it was only maybe like 10 events in the last hour. And you want to be able to read that pretty quickly so that when that 10th event comes in, you're not waiting minutes until that alert shows up and click houses able to do that. And so that kind of just got its way up to number one.Ted KaemmingYeah, I think also in general, like, at century we try and kind of bias a little bit towards relatively simple solutions. And it seemed like click house there was, at least to us, based on our backgrounds, it seemed more straightforward to get running. And I think that as well. appealed to us quite a bit. The documentation is pretty solid. It's also open source. You know, a lot of us will be but you know, click house has a pretty active repository. They've been very responsive when we've had questions or issues, they're very public about their development plan. So I think a lot of these things just kind of kind of worked out in its favor.Tobias MaceyYeah, it's definitely from what I've been able to understand a fairly new entrant into the overall database and data storage market. But I've heard of a few different stories of people using it in fairly high load environments. So I heard about the work that you're doing with Snoop, as far as I understand. CloudFlare is also using it for some of their use cases. And they definitely operate at some pretty massive scale with high data volume. So it seems like a pretty impressive system that has a lot of different capabilities. And I was pretty impressed when I had some of the folks from all tend to be on the podcast A while ago to talk about their experience of working it and working with some of their clients on getting it deployed. And I'm curious what some of the other types of systems you are able to replace with click house were given that you as you said, you have these four different systems that you had to be able to replicate event data to Were you able to collapse them all down into this one storage engine.Ted KaemmingYeah. So like in our code base, the those four different things, the TSP search, tag store, and node star all have kind of abstract service interfaces that really just sort of evolved from the fact that it's a open source projects, people wanted to use these these different methods for it. Three of those now are backed by the same data set and click house. So all the TSP data comes directly out of click house, there's no pre aggregation that happens anymore. It's just you know, we're just ripping over individual rows competing those aggregates on demand, at least for now. Search. Some of the data for search still lives in Postgres, but a lot of it now is it just runs in from log data in House essentially, tax store, we've removed how many servers were we using for tags?James CunninghamWe had? Oh, goodness, like 12 and one haiman 3232 core and maybe 200 odd gigs. But you know, getting getting into some of these other stats that we have a little bit more down the list. We went from 52 terabytes of SSD to two terabytes. Which is a good number to break down from. Yeah,Ted Kaemmingso we were able to absolutely, yeah, we were able to decommission like an entire Redis cluster, like cluster in quotes, and this entire Postgres cluster with drastically less hardware. And yeah, just the fact that it all reads from the same click house cluster. And there's none of this weird replication lag between all these systems. That's it's a huge positive.Tobias MaceyCan you talk a bit more about the overall architecture of Snoopy itself and just some of the operations characteristics and experience that you've had in terms of click house itself and maybe some of the early pain points and sharp edges that you ran into as you are getting used to this new system.Ted KaemmingYeah, sure. So I guess just to give you kind of a brief overview of the architecture, because it's, it's something that's really not particularly fancy. It's really Snoopy is just a small, like, a relatively small flask application at least small when you compare it with like the remainder of century. So it's a Yeah, it's a flask application and it just speaks HTTP. It's in Python. It's generally stateless rights as they come in. They go through a Kafka topic. It's published directly from the the remainder of the century kobus. The central code base in this new book codebase are actually completely independent, at least as far as like the project. Get to read. So century rights in this Kafka topic. This new book, consumer picks them up, does some de normalization Some data munging you know, kind of conventional Kafka consumer stuff and writes large batches of events to click house. We don't use the click house Kafka engine or anything particularly special for that we just use the complete Kafka driver from confluent, which is live already Kafka based. And that's all in on Python reads just me about half and also over HTTP. Not anything also particularly fancy there. We have some various optimizations that we we do kind of just a general query cache and duplication of queries. So that way, we don't have large queries that have long run times, executing concurrently on the cluster. We do some optimizations where we move some stuff from the where clause in click house sequel to a pre WHERE clause, which is basically the closest thing you get to any sort of query optimization. And we just some other just like query rewriting stuff based on our domain model. There's other rate limits and Quality of Service metrics logging type stuff that happens in there as well. As long as that all goes well, responses returned to the caller with something that is almost identical to what you would get if you're just interacting with the HTTP interface, click house itself. If it doesn't go, well, that ends up getting locked a century. And we we then kind of entered the system again to go to go look at it. So that's kind of a brief overview. It's, it's nothing particularly fancy.Tobias MaceyYeah, sometimes simple as best, particularly when you're dealing with something that is critical path is this.James CunninghamYeah, for sure. Yeah, so talk a little bit of the early engineering that you might have alluded to. One of our I say one of our biggest early difficulties was that we've you know, we've we've spent a lot of eggs in the Postgres basket. So we turn this on and, you know, the queries that we've set up for a rather oriented database are just like, absolutely not met. columnar store, which is a crazy thing to say,Ted Kaemmingit's so easy to type select star.James CunninghamSo easy spelling is Howard. But, you know, there's there's some things that just absolutely did not cut over to this column or store that we kind of had to like redesign how we had every query, you know, a century kind of had a quick application of order by some arbitrary column and then limit by 1000, to be able to like, explicitly hit a binary tree index in Postgres. And that didn't matter in click house, you know, any sort of limits just kind of truncated, what rose you're returning if you applied an order by that would have taken your entire data set and ordered it so many other things is that we have a lot of select stars everywhere, like Ted said, and that is, honestly one of the worst ways to operate on a column or store because you're just reading from every liberal file. So maybe change that a little bit. Some of the other things that we kind of had, you know, we we didn't have a quarter planner, so there was a lot of like, Taking a query and just kind of moving pieces around. One of the things that Ted alluded to was the notion of a pre where when you have, you know, multiple columns that you want to you want to filter on and aware clause, you kind of have the ability to give click house a little bit of heuristics and say, This is the column that we believe has the highest selectivity. And you put them in a pre WHERE clause, it will read through that column first, you know, decide which block IDs it's going to read from for the rest of them. So if you have something along the lines of an event ID that for us is, you know, global unique, that might have a little bit higher selectivity than environment or you know, it release might have a little bit of higher selectivity. So we were kind of working around these edges by just swapping variables around and saying, Well, did that make it faster? And then we said, Yes, we kind of threw some high fives around.Ted KaemmingYeah, they're like, also just the integration into some of the query patterns we have in century was a bit of a challenge. Click house is really designed to do particularly well with inserts, it does not do particularly well with updates or deletes to the point where they are actually like syntactically valid in the like click house flavored sequel. So we have except century as a whole is particularly insert heavy but it's not insert only and so we had to kind of work around. Basically the fact that click houses is extremely oriented towards inserts. We kind of ended up with something that actually James mentioned he worked on Cassandra in a past life I did as well. We ended up with a architecture that is fairly similar to Cassandra tombstone for how we delete data, where we kind of implement our own last right wins semantics on top of the replacing merge tree and click house. There's a long blog posts About how we do that, as part of, we have this field guide series that we've been working on where we go into some of these like weird things that we do with cookhouse. Similarly, for things like those alerts that James mentioned earlier, we basically require sequential consistency to be able to execute those queries effectively. That becomes a problem when you're dealing with multi master replication, like click house does. So we ended up having to do some kind of dodgy load balancing stuff, where we, we don't have a literal primary for all rights, but we kind of have this ad hoc primary, that all rights go to as long as that is up. And for some subset of queries, they are only allowed to evaluate on that that primary. It's not like guaranteed sequential consistency and like a true distributed system sense but it's it's good enough for what we need. It's also particularly complicated because the system doing the querying is not smoother. It's lives in the century codebase. And so we basically need to be able to notify the century codebase that these rows have been written to click half from Cuba as part of this. So we ended up having to engineer this solution where we have a commit log coming out of the smooth Kafka consumer that the century application is actually subscribed to that Kafka topic, the commit log Kafka topic and gating its own progress based on the progress of this new writer. There's also a blog post that goes into more depth about how we specifically implemented that on the century blog as part of this field guide series. But just yeah, things like that, that you like we knew things like the mutations were going to be something that we had to manage. We didn't particularly have strategy around it and The sequential consistency stuff probably caught us a little bit more by surprise than it should have, as we were doing some of our our kind of integration testing in production with us. And notice that some of the queries weren't exactly returning what we thought they would have. So that was that was something we also had to solve.Tobias MaceyAnd you mentioned that one of the reasons that you ended up going further forward with click house than any of the other systems is that it was pretty easy to get up and running with and seemed fairly simple operationally. So I'm curious what you have found to be the case now that you're actually using it in production and putting it under heavier load in a clustered environment. And any sort of useful lessons that you've learned in the process. Do you think anybody else is evaluating click has to know about?James CunninghamAbsolutely. So this is this is my time to shine.So one of the things that I kind of had to had to make a concession Is that I've never worked with a database that possibly be bound by CPU. It's always been, you know, make sure that your disks are as fast as possible, you know that the data is on thedisks, you got to read from the disk.And the reason that you know, it very well could be bound by CPU is that, you know, I've seen compression in the compression in the past, and I didn't really understand what compression could actually give you until we returned click house on sort of compression realistically, you know, brings our entire data set, you know, we kind of alluded to it earlier, brings our entire data set from 52 terabytes data, two terabytes, and about 800 gigs of those are surprisingly uncompressible because they're unique, you know, 32 character strings. If anyone can tell me a, an algorithm that helps compress that, I think that we made a TV series around that or something like that, but you know, for the for the right The rest of the data, it's so well compressed that being able to actually like compute across it does so well, you know, we, we run a small amount of servers to supply what is a large amount of a data set? You know, we've, we started, I wouldn't say that, like, if there was any advice to anyone out there, start by sharding. Never Never shard by two, because two is a curse to number in terms of distributed systems. But we really just started with, you know, three shards, three replicas. And you know, with that, with that blessed number of nine, we haven't gone up yet. We kind of have a high watermark of a terabyte per machine. Google gives a certain amount of read and write off that disk based on how much storage you have. And we've kind of unlocked a certain level and one terabyte for a machine on if anyone else is somehow running click house on GCP I guess on GCP that is, you know, we're we're about to apply our fourth shard. But realistically, some of the other things that are operationally sound is That, you know, as as much as we'd all love to, I guess like hammer on or praise XML. It is it is very explicit about about what you have to write in. Its configured via XML. There's no runtime configuration that you're applying. There's no you know, magic distribution of writing into an options store and watching that cascade into a clusterauto scaling.Yeah, I'm not I'm not, you know, crunching in any Kubernetes pods or anything like that. One of the things I'd be remiss to not say is that you did mention CloudFlare is running click house and shut out CloudFlare they run real hardware and I'll never do that again in my life. But uh, one of the things that they alluded to and one of their kick ass blogs about click house is that it replicates so fast that they found it more performance that when a disk in a like raid 10 dies, they just wipe all the data, rebuild the disk essentially empty and just have click house refill it itself. It is crazy fast in terms of rough application. Since all that is compressed, it really just sends that across the wire. Some of the other stuff that, you know, we found completely great in terms of operationalize is that since it is CPU bound, it's mostly by reads when you are right heavy company, and you're now bound by reads in terms of cost of goods sold, like, I can throw around a million high fives after that. It's great to just watch, you know, people log in and actually look at their data and watch our graphs tick up, instead of just saying, Well, you know, we spent a lot of spend a lot of money on this, and people are only reading, you know, 1% of their data. One other piece that I'd be remiss to not answer is that some some niceties about click house that kind of separated for a few of the databases I've worked with is that the ability to kind of set some very quick either like throttling or kind of like turbo ng settings that you have on a client side. So some of the things that we might do is that if we know that a query is going to be expensive, we could you know, sacrifice a little bit of resources and Kind of like turn it back fast. So there is just a literal setting that is Max threads where I say, you know what, I really want this to run faster set max threads to eight instead of four. And it does exactly what it says it does, it'll run twice as fast if you have it twice as many threads. So they're pretty easy things that we kind of run around in terms of operational wise, I think that as far as a database goes, you know, one of the hardest things to do is just kind of read all of the settings to figure out what they do. But after you kind of get versed in it, you'll understand you know, what applying this setting might be or at what threshold, you might set something, and it's not very magical, you know, some of these settings, realistically are for very explicit types of queries that you'd only supply from a client side if you really needed them. So fairly, I wouldn't go so far as a simple like the configurations almost like dumb, and then either straightforward, very straightforward. Yeah.
Too many people make the wrong choices when it comes to estate planning. If it's not done properly, you could leave your love ones facing trouble when you pass away or become incapacitated. ... The post Savvy Estate Planning: James Cunningham, JR appeared first on Author Hour.
We open with a preview and discussion of the Festive Fixture period of the EPL/FPL season and try to prepare you for the chaos ahead. We follow that up with some twitter questions (36:45) and some bets, including a some CFB bets from James Cunningham aka the Drama Llama Rama. This is a long episode but hopefully at least 10 minutes of helpful content in the 1:30 + runtime. Follow us on Twitter @3GDIEOpening and filler music by the Tan and Sober Gentlemenhttps://tanandsober.bandcamp.com/Opening and filler music by The Tan and Sober Gentlemen
Today's guest is Margaret Jenkins. Margaret Jenkins, founder and artistic director of the Margaret Jenkins Dance Company, celebrating the 50th anniversary of her Company in 2022, is a choreographer and mentor to many artists as well as a designer of unique community-based dance projects. In the 1960's, Margaret moved to New York to study at Juilliard, continued her training at UCLA and returned to New York to dance in the companies of Jack Moore, Viola Farber, Judy Dunn, James Cunningham, Gus Solomons, Jr. and Twyla Tharp's original company with Sara Rudner. In addition, Jenkins was a member of the faculty of the Merce Cunningham Studio and restaged his works for companies in Europe and the United States for over 12 years. In 1970, Jenkins returned to San Francisco, and in 1973, formed the MJDC. She opened one of the West Coast's first studio-performing spaces and a school for the training of professional modern dancers. In the last five decades, she has created an impressive body of work, with over 85 works created on her Company, as well as resident companies in the United States, Asia and Europe. For her unique artistic vision, Margaret has received numerous awards, including a Guggenheim Fellowship, an Irvine Fellowship in Dance, the San Francisco Arts Commission Award of Honor, three Isadora Duncan Awards (Izzies), and the Bernard Osher Cultural Award for her outstanding contributions to the arts community in San Francisco and the Bay Area. Fore more on this episode: Movers & Shapers: A Dance Podcast and The Moving Architects
In part two of their discussion, CNA counterterrorism experts Alex Powell and Jon Schroden sit down with James Cunningham the lead author for two comprehensive lessons learned reports published by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). They discuss some positive takeaways from the development of the Afghan National Security Forces and what lessons the U.S. government can learn from Afghanistan. Timestamps by Topic 1:17: Were there effective approaches to developing the Afghan National Security Forces? 7:05: What lessons should the U.S. government learn from Afghanistan? 12:59: Will the U.S. government make any actionable change because of these lessons? Guest Biographies James Cunningham is the lead author and project lead for two comprehensive lessons learned reports published by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction focused on reconstructing the ANDSF. For over 16 years, James has worked Afghanistan-related issues as a member of the Intelligence community and providing independent oversight of U.S. reconstruction programming. Jonathan Schroden is the Director of CNA's Countering Threats and Challenges Program (CTCP), whose mission is to support US government efforts to better understand and counter state and non-state threats and challenges. Schroden has deployed or traveled to Afghanistan 13 times. Alex Powell is an expert on terrorist group tactics, counterterrorism, and special operations forces (SOF). He has worked extensively on security issues in Afghanistan, traveling there numerous times to conduct assessments of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces. Additional Resources SIGAR Website: https://www.sigar.mil/ Divided Responsibility: Lessons from U.S. Security Sector Assistance Efforts in Afghanistan, June 2019 (https://www.sigar.mil/pdf/lessonslearned/SIGAR-19-39-LL.pdf) Reconstructing the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces: Lessons from the U.S. Experience in Afghanistan, September 2017 (https://www.sigar.mil/pdf/lessonslearned/SIGAR-17-62-LL.pdf)
In this episode, CNA counterterrorism experts Alex Powell and Jon Schroden sit down with James Cunningham the lead author for two comprehensive lessons learned reports published by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction (SIGAR). They discuss the collapse of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces (ANDSF) in the face of the Taliban offensive, how the Taliban were able to take territory with so little resistance and problems with how the U.S. military trained the ANDSF. Guest Biographies James Cunningham is the lead author and project lead for two comprehensive lessons learned reports published by the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction focused on reconstructing the ANDSF. For over 16 years, James has worked Afghanistan-related issues as a member of the Intelligence community and providing independent oversight of U.S. reconstruction programming. Jonathan Schroden is the Director of CNA's Countering Threats and Challenges Program (CTCP), whose mission is to support US government efforts to better understand and counter state and non-state threats and challenges. Schroden has deployed or traveled to Afghanistan 13 times. Alex Powell is an expert on terrorist group tactics, counterterrorism, and special operations forces (SOF). He has worked extensively on security issues in Afghanistan, traveling there numerous times to conduct assessments of the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces. Additional Resources SIGAR Website: https://www.sigar.mil/ Divided Responsibility: Lessons from U.S. Security Sector Assistance Efforts in Afghanistan, June 2019 (https://www.sigar.mil/pdf/lessonslearned/SIGAR-19-39-LL.pdf) Reconstructing the Afghan National Defense and Security Forces: Lessons from the U.S. Experience in Afghanistan, September 2017 (https://www.sigar.mil/pdf/lessonslearned/SIGAR-17-62-LL.pdf)
WQED-FM's Jim Cunningham spoke with the "other" James Cunningham, Music Director of Pittsburgh CLO, as well as CLO's Executive Producer Mark Fleischer to talk about their 75th Annivesary - their "Broadway Musical Celebration" taking place at Heinz Field July 21-24; their favorite selections from different CLO productions and much more.
Rotarian James Cunningham from Melbourne provides remote communities with pop up cinema systems bringing isolated communities together to share a meal and experience a movie. Does wonders for the morale of those in regional areas afflicted by the hardships of drought, bush fire, floods and the pressure of surviving difficult times. A generous example of service above self.
From the cannabis black market to being a CEO of one of the most innovated companies on the central coast, James Cunningham has made quite a name for himself. I'm impressed every time we meet up. This guy's thought pattern is unique and very forward thinking. Through in your ear phones, crank the radio in your car and get ready for a cannabis tale.
James Cunningham '02 is the State General Agent of American Income Life Indiana (Cunningham Agency). Cunningham Agency is one of the premier financial services companies in Indiana. James discusses how he translated his national championship football & track career at Mount Union, and NFL aspirations, into a successful career in the insurance industry.
*** LIKE if you enjoyed the video and tell me your thoughts in the COMMENTS. SUBSCRIBE & SHARE *** Instagram : www.instagram.com/Iamchrismcbride www.instagram.com/Jctha3rd Clubhouse: IamChrisMcBride James Cunningham Website: www.ailofindiana.com Get My Free Book: Healing In Hindsight https://christophermcbride.org/healinginhindsight1 The McBride Institute's Facebook Page https://www.facebook.com/McBrideInstituteLLC Looking For Coaching: Schedule A Free Strategy Call https://calendly.com/themcbrideinstitute/free-constulation?month=2021-03 The McBride Institute's Cashapp -----} Thank You For Your Support!!! $TheMcBrideInstitute LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/christophermcbride Email ------} Send Testimonials & Reviews christophermcbride1988@gmail.com #RisingTidePodcast #RisingTide #ProgressOverPerfection #PardonTheMasculinity #IVMovement *** LIKE if you enjoyed the video and tell me your thoughts in the COMMENTS. SUBSCRIBE & SHARE *** --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/tmi-risingtide/support
Quantum Nurse: Out of the rabbit hole from stress to bliss. http://graceasagra.com/
Show: QUANTUM NURSE LIVESTREAM https://www.quantumnurse.life/ presents MARCH 14, 2021 SUNDAY @ 12:00 PM EST 5:00 PM UK 6:00 PM Germany GUEST: Marie Alonzo – Harvesting Rocks: Dancing during this Pandemic (Healing through Dance: Hula and Duncan works. Creativity and modern dance in an island.) Bio: Marie Alonzo is the founder and artistic director of Tangerine Dance Collective, a modern dancer, choreographer, author, scholar and educator. Born in the Philippines, Marie was raised in Italy and eventually settled in New York City attending New York University's Tisch School of the Arts earning her BFA and MFA in Dance. In NYC she trained with Larry Rhodes and Maggie Black. She has performed and toured with HT Chen & Dancers, Asian American Dance Theater, Hikari Baba Dancers, Second Avenue Dance Co., Maude Baum & Co., and performed works by Don Redlich, Ruby Shang, Joan Finkelstein, Cliff Keuter, Remy Charlip, James Cunningham, Yung Yung Tsuai, and Rozalind Newman. Some of her many YouTube performances: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m8SmIxpMhHw&feature=you&fbclid=IwAR11jFuVXUQFBC1DIjyDKrrHJdHD77DbEA7pljRXxhElqgFUVhluCZ9pQDg Zouk dancing - improvising non choreographed social dancing with Dadinho https://youtu.be/7WBWpYrSp44 Dancing along steam vents of volcano with Joel -(not a smart idea!!!) https://youtu.be/O4JS5UVbI4Y Zouk manage a trois with Hisako with student https://youtu.be/s6IAmPhIzYM Host: Grace Asagra, creator, Podcast: Quantum Nurse: Out of the Rabbit Hole from Stress to Bliss Broadcasting to Quantum Nurse YouTube and Grace Sunga Asagra Facebook Donate to support Quantum Nurse Podcast Production. Mabalos. Thank you.
On episode 16 of the PANTHERSNAT1ON NETWORK the gang decides to share the love and spotlight with some fans for Valentine's Day. Jack, Tyler and Shontis are joined by Brock Sale, James Cunningham and Michael from Panthers Ranter. Together they talk about the future of the Panthers organization, the potential for this offseason, and everything and anything Panther's fans might talk about.
Many people get New Year's Eve Syndrome and make quick impulsive resolutions and unrealistic goals, never seeing either of them come to pass. In this episode Sistah's get educated and equipped with S.M.A.R.T.E.R. goal setting strategies for the new year. S = SpecificM=MeaningfulA=AchievableR=RelevantT=Time BoundE=EvaluateR=ReadjustIn 1981 George Doran, Arthur Miller and James Cunningham penned SMART goal setting in the article, Management Review. Since then many versions of SMART and SMARTER goals have emerged by others. Setting goals is the first step in turning the Invisible into the The Visible -Tony Robbins
Colin Hayhurst a successful entrepreneur , and startup mentor, shares his experience in starting and shutting down the YCombinator backed company GoScale that he co-founded with James Cunningham. The YC practice interview app, referred too, can be found here and the associated TechCrunch article here.Colin has a deep technical and commercial background with startups in engineering and applied physics software, web infrastructure, machine learning and search. He alo spent several years supporting and mentoring numerous technology startups. He is the CEO of Mojeek, the first privacy based and only web-crawler search engine that does not track.
Thinking OTB | Thinking Outside the Box with Steve Valentine and Bernie Espinosa
“It's not what you see, it's what you don't see.” These are the words that inspired today's podcast, taken from the book The Road Less Stupid by James Cunningham. https://www.amazon.com/The-Road-Less-Stupid-audiobook/dp/B07DJWQ7JN/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=the+road+less+stupid&qid=1606697728&sr=8-1 Today we discuss the unknowns of the market and how things have changed since the 2008 financial crisis. People like to compare the 2008 housing crisis with the 2020 housing market. We say that much has changed since 2008, not only in the market but in the business of Real Estate itself. To understand those differences, first we need to look at what the market was like in 2008: Banks were approving home loans for people who couldn't afford them, creating a market that couldn't be hold itself up, as well as being investor heavy with many homes being bought by people who had no intention on occupying them. Negatively Amortizing Loans, or Neg Am loans, were being offered to people who shouldn't have qualified for them. Neg Am loans allow the borrower to pay less than what is owed on interest, tacking negative principal on the back end of the loan. For more information, see: https://www.investopedia.com/terms/n/negativelyamortizingloan.asp Tactics like 100% financing, Non-Owner-Occupied agreements skewed the market irresponsibly toward a more investor driven market, which is not the case today. The 2020 Phoenix market is much more diversified, and homeowner driven than it was in the past. This doesn't mean that the market is perfect, but if too much weight is put on the past newer possibilities aren't being explored. The Rental market in Phoenix is rising, showing great potential for home buyers looking to diversify and get the most out of their home investments. Today we're sharing our take on today's market and what we've been hearing from people close to us. Our experience as veteran realtors, along with thinking outside the box, has shown us how the market can be used responsibly without getting spooked by those inevitable negative trends. We hope to give realtors and home buyers the guidance, strategy, and preparedness necessary for sound investments in today's housing market. “Every agent should be working on investing, not just for themselves, but so they can create a better business and a better strategy for their clients.” – Steve Valentine “If you stop to wait, nothing else does.” – Bernie Espinosa Also Mentioned in the podcast: Falling Forward by John Maxwell https://www.amazon.com/Failing-Forward-Turning-Mistakes-Stepping/dp/0785288570/ref=sr_1_1?dchild=1&keywords=falling+forward&qid=1606699219&sr=8-1 Remember to subscribe and leave a 5-star rating, as well as a review if you'd like us to talk about a subject or if you just want to let us know how much you like the podcast! You can follow us on Social Media! Follow Thinking OTB at: Steve Valentine: https://www.instagram.com/stevedvalentine/ Bernie Espinosa: https://www.instagram.com/bernzpix/
Comedian Jenn Labelle paints the perfect picture of every Canadian family on movie night, and from our comedy vaults, James Cunningham takes you on a journey...across the ironing board! Recorded pre-pandemic at Icebreakers Comedy Festival at Ravine Winery in Niagara-on-the-Lake.
Join me as i have my friend and peer in my business James Cunningham!
Michael Pallas is joined by Mason Smoller, Matt Mauro, and James Cunningham to discuss the recent cancellations of fall sports by the PAC-12 and and B1G. Why couldn't they control the spread like the NFL? Should the NFL explore Saturday games? What can these players do to show their talent on the field? Those questions and more.
In this episode, we are joined by James Cunningham and Ian Swift of Fog City Farms in Watsonville, CA. We will be discussing what it takes to be “Confidently Clean” in the cannabis industry. Pat Malo leads a conversation about best practices, regulatory requirements for producers, and how 3rd party certification helps them differentiate their product in a competitive marketplace. They also discuss their innovative, double stacked, LED lit, indoor cultivation that utilizes Jame's patented air movement system and how finding every efficiency adds to their sustainability and bottom line.
In this episode of Intelligence Matters, host Michael Morell speaks with James Cunningham, former U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan, Israel and the United Nations. Morell and Cunningham review the country's efforts at arriving at a peace deal with the Taliban and the Afghan government, and explore why a deal remains elusive. They also examine the obstacles to an Israeli-Palestinian peace deal, China's crackdown on Hong Kong, and Russia's interests in the Middle East. Cunningham offers views on the future of U.S. diplomacy.
In this week’s episode, we speak with James Cunningham. James shares a little bit about his family, moving constantly during his childhood, his role as the Executive Assistant here at New Horizons, and the lessons he has learned during quarantine. He is a fierce competitor, passionate self-advocate, and a beloved member of our New horizons family.
Case ########-6.Lamentation of those left below. Audio recording by the Archivist, in situ.Thanks to this week's Patrons: Darria Leigh Dennison, Grace Anne, Alex Surname, Teaghan McCreary, Kairon Coates, Shuu, T. A., Fitzlet, Chrys Sterling, Evan Cody, Mandy Huynh, smallmediumproblems, Big Carl, Babet Halberstadt, Azaana, Nick Oliverio, Annemarie Windhorst, Say, Claire Martin, Brooke Griffith, Angela DeFrancis, Rebecca, Emrys, stef, Emory L, leah addison, Brianna Craveiro, Rym SAOUD, Taran Winnie, James Cunningham, Kaiya Lewis-Marlow, Bex, James Furber, Sami Yuhas, Creatrixanimi, Hannah Francis, Anna Sparlin, Vasya, Hilliard, Ashley Andersen If you would like to join them, be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEdited this week by Nico Vettese, Elizabeth Moffatt, Brock Winstead & Alexander J Newall.Written by Jonathan Sims and directed by Alexander J Newall.Produced by Lowri Ann Davies.Content warnings:- Screams - Claustrophobia - Reported violence- Dehumanisation - Anxiety- Suffocation - Worms (including SFX)- Explicit languageSound effects this week by khenshom, cameronmusic, crcavol, elvish_paisley, tomattka, visions68, Pep_Molina, tvilgiat, AlineAudio, drotzruhn, giddster, jorickhoofd, jacobmathiassen, AderuMoro, purplereptar, silversatyr, FreqMan, tosha73, DigestContent, xtrgamr, UncleSigmund, Triad330670, thanvannispen, tim.kahn, FreqMan, Paul Sinnett, GiovanniProvenzale, lzmraul, sandufi, dav0r, Anthousai, rkeato, theshuggie, youandbiscuitme, khenshom, DanielsonIII, el-bee, viznoman, kyles, TimPryor, spookymodem, ohmypro, SilentStrikeZ, aUREa & previously credited artists via freesound.org.Performances:- "Martin Blackwood" - Alexander J. Newall- "The Archivist" - Jonathan Sims - "Helen Richardson" - Imogen Harris - "Annabelle Cane" - Chioma NwaliobaSpecial Thanks to this week's sponsor "Crypto-Z" for more information visit www.euphonie.mediaCheck out our merchandise at https://www.redbubble.com/people/rustyquill/collections/708982-the-magnus-archives-s1You can subscribe to this podcast using your podcast software of choice, or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribePlease rate and review on your software of choice, it really helps us to spread the podcast to new listeners, so share the fear.Join our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillDISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comThe Magnus Archives is a podcast... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 46Gonk and Grandiosity CLIENT - Gonk, Cleaning - Disgruntled Gonk, a disgruntled and mopless cleaner, would like to have basic equipment and respect in return for his years of thankless service.Expeditors’ recommendations: Oh Gonk, weapons equal respect; mutually assured hammers; obey all the Trexmandments; find out which kind of god you are.Comedic ViolenceEmotional AbuseAlcoholismSpecial thanks to Jon Clark for this episode's Brief Submission, and this week's Patrons: Darria Leigh Dennison, Grace Anne, Alex Surname, Teaghan McCreary, Kairon Coates, Shuu, T.A., Fitzlet, Chrys Sterling, Evan Cody, Mandy Huynh, smallmediumproblems, Big Carl, Babet Halberstadt, Azaana, Nick Oliverio, Annemarie Windhorst, Say, Claire Martin, Brooke Griffith, Angela DeFrancis, Rebecca, Emrys, stef, Emory L, leah addison, Brianna Craveiro, Rym SAOUD, Taran Winnie, James Cunningham, Kaiya Lewis-Marlow, Bex, James Furber, Sami Yuhas, Creatrixanimi, Hannah Francis, Anna Sparlin, Vasya, Hilliard, Ashley Andersen.If you'd like to join them be sure to visit www.patreon.com/rustyquill.Created by Tim Meredith and Ben MeredithProduced by Katie SeatonExecutive Producer: Alexander J NewallPerformances:I.M.O.G.E.N: Imogen HarrisDavid 7: Ben MeredithTrexel Geistman: Tim MeredithEditing: Maddy Searle and Alexander J NewallMusic: Samuel DF JonesArtwork: Anika KhanFeatured SFX by kyles, 14G_Panska_Kaminkova_A and previously credited artists via freesound.org, and original Foley by Maddy Searle.Subscribe using your podcast software of choice or by visiting www.rustyquill.com/subscribe and be sure to rate and review us online; it really helps us spread across the galaxy.Join our community:WEBSITE: www.rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: www.facebook.com/therustyquill/TWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: www.reddit.com/r/RustyQuill/DISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comStellar Firma is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Sharealike 4.0 International Licence. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Big improvements on both sides of the ball once again as the Wolfpack put together their most complete display in Super League despite the odds begin stacked against them even before kick off losing Jon Wilkin to injury and replacement James Cunningham just minutes in to the game. Eventually though, fatigue set in and the Wigan Warriors ran away with it come the full time whistle, though the score line doesn't perhaps reflect the closeness of the game until late on. Catch the match analysis first up. In general news, Israel Folau makes his much anticipated debut for the Catalans Dragons amid RFL investigations regarding rainbow flags at the Stade Gilbert Brutus - can anyone say "Flag Gate"? Referee Ben Thaler is currently on suspension pending an investigation by the RFL. Chase Stanley's visa issues come back to haunt once again perhaps. And, Salford's Kevin Brown doesn't use his brain, just his head as he faces a 2 game suspension for headbutting. Gareth & Rob briefly discuss the concept of a Magic Weekend 9s competition as a way of showcasing the sport and making it more marketable to the masses before turning attentions to upcoming Rd.4 opponents, Warrington Wolves. Would a 9s competition prove a more successful commercial endeavor than yet another loop fixture? In what is being billed as the first Super League battle of the Wolves, which pack will come out on top? Will Toronto be able to improve enough this week to get their first 'W' on the board despite so many injuries? Or will The Wire hunt them down and put right their shock loss to Wakefield this past weekend? Tune in and come run with the Pack once more!
Join Alex, Helen, Bryn, Lydia, and Ben as the party finally reunites!This week Hamid suddenly becomes hard of hearing, Azu grows a comfort beard, Cel gets a hug, Zolf conducts himself quite well, and Shoin makes a piece offering...Thanks to this week's Patrons:Brooke Griffith, Angela DeFrancis, Rebecca, Emrys, stef, Emory L, leah addison, Brianna Craveiro, Rym SAOUD, Taran Winnie, James Cunningham, Kaiya Lewis-Marlow, Bex, James Furber, Sami Yuhas, Creatrixanimi, Hannah Francis, Anna Sparlin, Vasya, HilliardIf you'd like to join them visit www.patreon.com/rustyquillEditing this week by Lowri Ann Davies, Tessa Vroom & Alexander J NewallSFX this week by ancorapazzo, Yolande180138, hinzebeat, RutgerMuller, apolloaiello, PeteBarry, funky muskrat, ReadeOnly, LiamG_SFX, Zangrutz, Kreastricon62, Kyster, MissCellany, JoelAudio, mickyman5000, yottasounds, Corruptinator, rastaman94, adambar, PhreaKsAccount, Soundud3, klakmart, Marissrar, Yarmonics, ianoboe, speedygonzo, Jagadamba, nothayama, "Magical Zap" Copyright 2013 Iwan Gabovitch CC-BY3 license and previously credited artists via Freesound.org“Scary Church Organ” by FoolBoyMedia (https://freesound.org/people/FoolBoyMedia/sounds/218201/)As always, today’s game system is available for free at d20pfsrd.comCheck out our merchandise available at https://www.redbubble.com/people/RustyQuill/shopJoin our community:WEBSITE: rustyquill.comFACEBOOK: facebook.com/therustyquillTWITTER: @therustyquillREDDIT: reddit.com/r/RustyQuillDISCORD: https://discord.gg/KckTv8yEMAIL: mail@rustyquill.comRusty Quill Gaming is a podcast distributed by Rusty Quill Ltd. and licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Share alike 4.0 International Licence. For information regarding your data privacy, visit acast.com/privacy See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this podcast, first recorded at the 2nd annual Drug Delivery West conference, Dr James Cunningham, Allergan leads a panel on exploring other routes of administration for ophthalmology. Discussion points include: Barries/challenges associated with drug delivery to the back of the eyeProlonging delivery & reducing frequency of administrationAlternative/less invasive routes of administration for delivery to the back of the eyeDelivery for emerging modalitiesImpact of delivery system design choices on development/scalabilityHow to effectively assess novel delivery approaches Panelists include: Dr James E Chastain, Novartis Institutes for BioMedical Research, IncDr Susan Crowell, GenentechDr Viral Kansara, Clearside Bio To learn more about the 3rd annual Drug Delivery West conference happening May 17-18, 2021 in San Francisco, CA please visit www.drugdeliverywest.org
SMART goals were developed by George Doran, Arthur Miller, and James Cunningham in 1981 for Management Review in an article titled "There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management goals and objectives." Specific Measurable Attainable Relevant Time-bound I'm Kimberly Azevedo at Azevedo Family Psychology in Cary, NC. Please reach out with more questions or new topics! Kimberly@afpsych.com | www.azevedofamilypsychology.com
Cultivation Best Practices round table with Cody Hitchcock and James Cunningham. Cody Hitchcock is a horticulturist and grower for Smokey's Cannabis Co who has researched and performed field trials with a variety of plants and organic growing techniques in an effort to create sustainable and economic solutions for producing high-quality crops. James Cunningham is a native of Santa Cruz and the founder and driving force behind Fog City Farms, and Vertical Air Solutions. Fog City Farms is a leading-edge vertical cannabis farm located in Watsonville, CA.
Cultivation Best Practices round table with Cody Hitchcock and James Cunningham. Cody Hitchcock is a horticulturist and grower for Smokey's Cannabis Co who has researched and performed field trials with a variety of plants and organic growing techniques in an effort to create sustainable and economic solutions for producing high-quality crops. James Cunningham is a native of Santa Cruz and the founder and driving force behind Fog City Farms, and Vertical Air Solutions. Fog City Farms is a leading-edge vertical cannabis farm located in Watsonville, CA.
The team at Sentry has built a platform for anyone in the world to send software errors and events. As they scaled the volume of customers and data they began running into the limitations of their initial architecture. To address the needs of their business and continue to improve their capabilities they settled on Clickhouse as the new storage and query layer to power their business. In this episode James Cunningham and Ted Kaemming describe the process of rearchitecting a production system, what they learned in the process, and some useful tips for anyone else evaluating Clickhouse.
We get into conversation with James Cunningham, co-founder of P.A.C.E (Penticton and Area Cooperative Enterprise), which provides workplace training and employment opportunities to those struggling with addictions and mental challenges, who are also often homeless or disabled. P.A.C.E trains them to be responsible adults who can not only start to piece their life back together, but make a difference in the community around them. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/may-cooper/message
In Part 1 we discussed having a plan. In Part 2 we discussed reviewing and revising our plan on a regular basis. Today, in Part 3 we are discussing S.M.A.R.T Planning. "The SMART acronym first appeared in the November 1981 issue of Management Review. "There's a S.M.A.R.T. way to write management goals and objectives." was the title and it was written by George Doran, Arthur Miller, and James Cunningham." according to smart-goals-guide.com. According to the same source: "When the S.M.A.R.T goal was first introduced to the world it was an acronym which stood for: S. - Specific M. - Measurable A. – Assignable R. - Realistic T. – Time-based - In other words when you set a goal you had to ensure it was specific, measurable, assignable, realistic and time-based." Here are some other words that came be used to perhaps make it better fit your needs. "S - Specific, or significant, stretching, stimulating, simple, self-owned, strategic, sensible M. - Measurable, or meaningful, motivating, manageable, maintainable A. – Achievable, or attainable, action-oriented, appropriate, agreed, assignable, ambitious, accepted, audacious R. - Relevant, or rewarding, results-oriented, resourced, recorded, reviewable, robust T. – Time based or time-bound, timelined, track-able" During today's broadcast, we created our own from the above ... listen and see what's up. Tune in next week as we wrap up Q1 with 2 other planning methods. ================================================================================================================= Want to meet me in person, and a room full of potential new connections, speakers and- trainers? Purchase your ticket for the 2019 Live Your Legacy Summit and I'll see you March 24-25, 2019 ... feel free to ask for me at the registration table ... I'll be one of the event's staff/ambassadors buzzing around like a mad woman. LOL --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/rhonda-r-hudgins/support
Dallas Jenkins & James Cunningham join Angie at the table to catch up on the last 20 years since college and talk about their current project The Chosen.
#63 "I have so much feelings..."Roundtable 2018.01.02 This week, your nice hosts get into it. Stephen is split on everything, Mark is the bad guy, and it's all Martha's fault.Stephen and Mark talked about their Ludum Dare 40 game, Widget Satchel, which Martha played on last week's Nice Plays episode! Loot Systems 0:03:58 Stephen McGregorGame DesignZelda: Breath Of The Wild Players Are Tricking Amiibos To Grind For Rare Loot - Ethan Gach , KotakuNioh's latest patch fixes its most annoying flaw - Jeffrey Matulef, Eurogamer Stephen brought up our recent episode on repetition in games, "Schrödinger's Animal Crossing."NeuroVoider Chock-Full of Rogue-Like KillBot Twin-Stick Shooting - James Cunningham, Hardcore GamerBungie says it " betrayed" Destiny 2 fans over transparency - YouTube Loot Boxes 0:29:30 Martha MegarryGamingMarketingLoot boxes in video games will soon get a review flag from OpenCritic - Sam Machkovech, Ars TechnicaWhat You Need To Know About Shadow of War's Controversial Loot Boxes - Patricia Hernandez, KotakuA Guide To The Endless, Confusing Star Wars Battlefront II Controversy - Gita Jackson, KotakuGearbox boss Randy Pitchford is ‘very much against predatory monetization schem… - Dustin Bailey, PCGamesNAn inconvenient truth: game prices have come down with time - Ben Kuchera, Ars TechnicaI Just Got A Bunch Of Overwatch Gift Cards, And I'm Terrified To Use Them - Nathan Grayson, KotakuHow Luis Von Ahn Turned Countless Hours Of Mindless Activity Into Something Val… - Alison Griswold, Business InsiderGame Designer Damion Schubert posted a thread on Twitter about how to do loot boxes ethically. Mark was not convinced.
#63 "I have so much feelings..." Roundtable 2018.01.02 This week, your nice hosts get into it. Stephen is split on everything, Mark is the bad guy, and it's all Martha's fault. Stephen and Mark talked about their Ludum Dare 40 game, Widget Satchel, which Martha played on last week’s Nice Plays episode! Loot Systems 0:03:58 Stephen McGregor Game Design Zelda: Breath Of The Wild Players Are Tricking Amiibos To Grind For Rare Loot - Ethan Gach , Kotaku Nioh's latest patch fixes its most annoying flaw - Jeffrey Matulef, Eurogamer Stephen brought up our recent episode on repetition in games, "Schrödinger’s Animal Crossing." NeuroVoider Chock-Full of Rogue-Like KillBot Twin-Stick Shooting - James Cunningham, Hardcore Gamer Bungie says it " betrayed" Destiny 2 fans over transparency - YouTube Loot Boxes 0:29:30 Martha Megarry Gaming Marketing Loot boxes in video games will soon get a review flag from OpenCritic - Sam Machkovech, Ars Technica What You Need To Know About Shadow of War's Controversial Loot Boxes - Patricia Hernandez, Kotaku A Guide To The Endless, Confusing Star Wars Battlefront II Controversy - Gita Jackson, Kotaku Gearbox boss Randy Pitchford is ‘very much against predatory monetization schem… - Dustin Bailey, PCGamesN An inconvenient truth: game prices have come down with time - Ben Kuchera, Ars Technica I Just Got A Bunch Of Overwatch Gift Cards, And I'm Terrified To Use Them - Nathan Grayson, Kotaku How Luis Von Ahn Turned Countless Hours Of Mindless Activity Into Something Val… - Alison Griswold, Business Insider Game Designer Damion Schubert posted a thread on Twitter about how to do loot boxes ethically. Mark was not convinced.
The ALTdot Comedy Lounge broadcast on SiriusXM's Canada Laughs - October 5, 2018.Gavin Stephens Fundraiser Part 2Featured in this episode: MC James Cunningham, Derek Edwards, Aisha Brown, Mike Wilmot, and Gavin StephensFollow us on Twitter @AltdotComedy and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/AltdotComedyLoungeClick Here to Sign up for our weekly emailer to be updated on the latest show listings and special events.Hear the Altdot Comedy Lounge on SiriusXM's Canada Laughs (channel 168) Fridays at 8pm EST, Saturdays at 12am & 3pm EST, Sundays at 8am EST
The ALTdot Comedy Lounge broadcast on SiriusXM's Canada Laughs - September 28, 2018.Gavin Stephens Fundraiser Part 1Featured in this episode: MC James Cunningham, Jean Paul, Monty Scott, Laurie Elliott, Kate Davis, and Darren FrostFollow us on Twitter @AltdotComedy and like us on Facebook at www.facebook.com/AltdotComedyLoungeClick Here to Sign up for our weekly emailer to be updated on the latest show listings and special events.Hear the Altdot Comedy Lounge on SiriusXM's Canada Laughs (channel 168) Fridays at 8pm EST, Saturdays at 12am & 3pm EST, Sundays at 8am EST
Host Kyle Hirshkind sits down with FPC Jets writers James Cunningham and Alessandro Senatore to review the New York Jets' monster win over the Denver Broncos. They also debate the future of head coach Todd Bowles and whether or not the Jets can keep the ball rolling throughout 2018. Join the conversation on social media: Twitter: @FPC_Jets @KyleHirshkind Guests: @JCunninghamNFL @AMS1928
Kyle Hirshkind and James Cunningham go off on the New York Jets' collapse against the Cleveland Browns in Week 3 of the NFL season. They also dive deep into their upcoming matchup against the Jacksonville Jaguars and if Sam Darnold & Co. can bounce back. Join the conversation on Twitter: @FPC_Jets @KyleHirshkind @JCunninghamNFL
The New York Jets dominated the Detroit Lions on Monday Night Football during Week 1 of the 2018 NFL season. However, in Week 2 Gang Green will face a tougher matchup in the Miami Dolphins. Host Kyle Hirshkind from Full Press Jets dives deep into the Jets schedule with co-hosts James Cunningham and Alessandro Senatore. They talk predictions, injuries, surprises, and much more during the inaugural episode of the Livin' The Jet Life Podcast.
Media Design School produces world class talent for 3D and Visual Effects. James Cunningham explains how the course sets students up for success with the short films they produce. Companies: Media Design School Digi Post Weta Digital The Third Floor Visualization Double Negative Short Films: Media Design School: Vimeo Channel Media Design School: YouTube Channel The Dragon’s Scale Accidents, Blunders and Calamities Escargore Over the Moon Shelved Dr Grordbort Presents: The Deadliest Game Rotting Hill Das Tub Time For Change First Contact Christian Rivers - Feeder Dave Whitehead - Possum James Cunningham’s Links: James Cunningham - Poppy Lester Banks Every Frame a Painting NZ On Screen Buster Keaton - The Art of the Gag Edgar Wright - How to Do Visual Comedy Conferences: FMX
@Hokiesmash and @TalkinACCSports have a allsportsdiscussion.com contributor, and NC State fan James Cunningham, coming on the podcast - and you can follow him at . We talk ACC Basketball in this podcast.
James Cunningham is better known as a comedian but on Eat Street, a show that airs on the COOKING Channel he is all about finding North America's tastiest, messiest and most irresistible street food and eating it. He's admits he's not much of a cook but he knows good food. The Eat Street Cookbook, for me, is like no other. It is a beautiful book to look at, with gorgeous pictures of street food and stories about the people cooking it all up. I highly recommend this book for a novice chef or even for the more experienced. This is not just another cookbook, it has a little bit of everything in it from Maine to San Francisco and even beyond. Because "street food" is part of a living and breathing culture that almost everyone enjoys taking part in, and is finally enjoying its day in the "spotlight", or maybe I should say "street light". By the book at your local book store or online at Amazon.com: http://www.amazon.com/Eat-St-Tastiest-Messiest-Irresistible/dp/0143187481/ref=sr_1_1?ie=UTF8&qid=1365232547&sr=8-1&keywords=eat+street Watch the Cooking Channel and visit the website: http://www.cookingchanneltv.com/shows/eat-street.html Keep up with James: http://www.james-cunningham.com/
Anything Goes is a no-holds-barred talk show focusing on events in the news, in pop culture and the state of Canadian stand-up comedy. It is hosted by Darren Frost, Dave Martin Christina Walkinshaw and Kathleen McGee. It's a funny, informative, uncensored look at the worlds' highs and lows from a uniquely Canadian perspective.
In this episode we discuss the AMD Eyefinity, the SGI Octane III, new Augmented Reality projects from metaio, and some new short films from James Cunningham and Mike Stern.