Podcast appearances and mentions of jim barton

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Best podcasts about jim barton

Latest podcast episodes about jim barton

JCC:  Sermons and Teachings
A Matter of Perspective - Proverbs - Jim Barton

JCC: Sermons and Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2025 34:12


JCC Elder, Jim Barton, focuses on Proverbs 3:5, exploring what it truly means to trust in the Lord with all your heart and not lean on your own understanding.

lord proverbs jim barton
The Chris and Joe Show
Jim Barton, Attorney at Barton Mendez Soto

The Chris and Joe Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 9:48


Jim Barton joins Chris and Joe to talk about the recent mass deportations. He explains rights within Visas, birthrights and other protections of people.

The Chris and Joe Show
Jim Barton, Attorney at Barton Mendez Soto

The Chris and Joe Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 11, 2025 8:44


Jim Barton joins Chris and Joe to talk about mass deportations. Giving his insight as an attorney he shares what is legal, what is questionable and what is unconstitutional. 

JCC:  Sermons and Teachings
More - Jim Barton

JCC: Sermons and Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2024 29:58


Through the contrasting lives of Solomon and Paul, we discover profound truths about contentment. Despite having unlimited wealth, power, and wisdom, Solomon's pursuit of worldly pleasures left him empty and dissatisfied. Paul, however, found lasting contentment despite facing imprisonment, beatings, and constant hardship. His secret lay in anchoring his satisfaction not in circumstances but in his relationship with Christ. This profound difference reveals that true contentment comes not from having everything, but from having the right foundation.

jesus christ jim barton
JCC:  Sermons and Teachings
The True Millennials - Genesis - Jim Barton

JCC: Sermons and Teachings

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023 39:21


Jim Barton, one of the church elders, walks us through some fascinating genealogies from the time of Adam to the time of Noah. We marvel at the unparalleled longevity of early humans, the unimaginable depravity of the human heart, and the unfathomable grace of God who longs to restore us to our original goodness.

god millennials jim barton
The New Stack Podcast
Ambient Mesh: No Sidecar Required

The New Stack Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 22, 2023 14:22


At Cloud Native Security Con, we sat down with Solo.io's Marino Wijay and Jim Barton, who discussed how service mesh technologies have matured, especially now with the removal of sidecars in Ambient Mesh that it developed with Google. Ambient Mesh is "a new proxy architecture that, according to the Solo.io site, "moves the proxy to the node level for mTLS and identity. It also allows a policy-enforcement policy to manage Layer 7 security filters and policies. A sidecar is a mini-proxy, a mini-firewall, like an all-in-one router, said Wijay, who does developer relations and advocacy for Solo. A sidecar receives instructions from an upstream control plane. "Now, one of the things that we started to realize with different workloads and different patterns of communication is that not all these workloads need a sidecar or can take advantage of the sidecar," Wijay said. "Some better operate without the sidecar." Ambient Mesh reflects the maturity of service mesh and the difference between day one and day two operations, said Barton, a field engineer with Solo. "Day one operations are a lot about understanding concepts, enabling developers, initial configurations, that sort of thing," Barton said. "The community is really much more focused and Ambient Mesh is a good example of this on day two concerns. How do I scale this? How do I make it perform in large environments? How can I expand this across clusters, clusters in multiple zones in multiple regions, that sort of thing? Those are the kinds of initiatives that we're really seeing come to the forefront at this point." With the maturity of service mesh comes the users. In the context of security, that means the developer security operations person, Barton said. It's not the developer's job to connect services. Their job is to build out the services. "It's up to the platform operator, or DevSecOps engineers to create that, that fundamental plane or foundation for where you can deploy your services, and then provide the security on top of it," Barton said. The engineers then have to configure it and think it through. "How do I know who's doing what and who's talking to who, so that I can start forming my zero trust posture?," Barton said.

The Dan Abrams Podcast
The Dan Abrams Podcast on Trump, Jack Smith and the Arizona Midterms

The Dan Abrams Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 2, 2022 43:51


Dan discusses both the right and Trump vilifying Jack Smith, and then is joined by AZ election lawyer Jim Barton to break down the legal implications of Arizona's Cochise County refusing to certify election results.

The InfoQ Podcast
The Future of Service Mesh with Jim Barton

The InfoQ Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 14, 2022 31:38


When building a distributed system, we have to consider many aspects of the network. This has led to many tools to help software developers improve performance, optimize requests, or increase observability. Service meshes, sidecars, eBPF, layer three, layer four, layer seven, it can all be a bit overwhelming. In this podcast, Jim Barton explains some of the fundamentals of modern service meshes, and provides an overview of Istio Ambient Mesh and the benefits it will provide in the future. Read a transcript of this interview: https://bit.ly/3UClLG6 Subscribe to our newsletters: - The InfoQ weekly newsletter: https://bit.ly/24x3IVq - The Software Architects' Newsletter [monthly]: https://www.infoq.com/software-architects-newsletter/ Upcoming Events: QCon Plus online: https://plus.qconferences.com/ - Nov 30 - Dec 8, 2022 QCon London https://qconlondon.com/ - March 26-31, 2023 QCon San Francisco: https://qconsf.com/ - Oct 2-6, 2023 Follow InfoQ: - Twitter: https://twitter.com/InfoQ - LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/infoq - Facebook: https://bit.ly/2jmlyG8 - Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/infoqdotcom/ - Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/infoq

Franklin (MA) Matters
FM #825 - Allegra Marketing with Jim Barton - 06/21/22

Franklin (MA) Matters

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 6, 2022 35:52


This session of the radio show shares my conversation with Jim Barton of Allegra Marketing Print Mail here in Franklin. We had our conversation in person, in the office on Union St in the Crossing section of Franklin.  We talk about his Franklin story, doing business in Franklin, and helping businesses succeed. The recording runs about 35 minutes, so let's listen to my conversation with Jim. -------------- Allegra Franklin webpage -> https://www.allegramarketingprint.com/locations/franklin-ma-downtown/your-allegra (https://www.allegramarketingprint.com/locations/franklin-ma-downtown/your-allegra)  Follow Allegra on Instagram -> https://www.instagram.com/allegrafranklin5339/ (https://www.instagram.com/allegrafranklin5339/)  -------------- We are now producing this in collaboration with Franklin.TV and Franklin Public Radio (wfpr.fm).  This podcast is my public service effort for Franklin but we can't do it alone. We can always use your help. How can you help? If you can use the information that you find here, please tell your friends and neighbors If you don't like something here, please let me know Through this feedback loop we can continue to make improvements. I thank you for listening. For additional information, please visit Franklinmatters.org/ If you have questions or comments you can reach me directly at shersteve @ gmail dot com The music for the intro and exit was provided byhttp://www.eastofshirley.com/ ( Michael Clark and the group "East of Shirley"). The piece is titled "Ernesto, manana"  c. Michael Clark & Tintype Tunes, 2008 and used with their permission. I hope you enjoy! ------------------ You can also subscribe and listen to Franklin Matters audio on iTunes or your favorite podcast app; search in "podcasts" for "Franklin Matters"

tv marketing east crossing michael clark union st jim barton franklin public radio tintype tunes
Institute for Government
Unification Of Probation Services One Year On

Institute for Government

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2022 59:07


The new unified Probation Service combined the previously outsourced management of medium- and low-risk offenders with the public sector National Probation Service, which managed high-risk offenders. Launched by the government on 26 June 2021, it was the fourth major restructuring of probation services in 20 years. This involved hundreds of thousands of cases, thousands of staff across hundreds of sites, six companies and scores of sub-contractors – all with different ways of working. One year on, how well has the transition worked? What more needs to be done to improve the running of probation services? And what opportunities – and challenges – could the next year bring? To discuss these questions and more, the IfG was delighted to bring together an expert panel including: Jim Barton, Executive Director for the Probation Reform Programme at the Ministry of Justice Suki Binning, Chief Social Worker at Seetec and Executive Director at the Interventions Alliance Linda Neimantas, Head of Probation Inspection Programme at HM Inspectorate of Probation. The event was chaired by Nick Davies, Programme Director at the Institute for Government. #IfGprobation

Empire Flippers Podcast
The EF Referral Program: Earn from Online Businesses Without Owning One With Jim Barton

Empire Flippers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 42:30


How would you like to make money from buying and selling online businesses without having to purchase or operate an online business of your own? This exciting prospect is now within your reach thanks to the launch of the Empire Flippers referral program. By becoming a referral partner, you can earn 20% of our commission by referring businesses that are then successfully bought or sold on the Empire Flippers marketplace. Having spearheaded the creation of the referral program, Jim Barton, the Partnerships Manager at Empire Flippers, joins us to explain the many opportunities that the referral program offers to interested entrepreneurs.  Jim provides a step-by-step guide on the different types of referrals, how referrals partners are paid, what the process of making a referral actually looks like, and the qualities we look for in a good referral. Jim explains, “The Empire Flippers referral program works in two ways. We have seller referrals where you refer somebody who wants to sell their business and buy-side referrals where you refer somebody who wants to purchase a business.  As a referral partner, you will get paid for everything your referral does with us from our two-year cookie, meaning if they buy or sell multiple businesses, you would collect referral commission on all of those.” Jim also gives us a peek behind the curtain of what it takes to create a referral program from scratch, and shares stories of the enormous success the entrepreneurs who joined our pilot program have already experienced. Whether you're looking for a way to diversify your income, cash in on your large professional network, or leverage the traffic coming to your site, listen closely because this episode will tell you everything you need to know about the Empire Flippers referral program. Topics Discussed in This Episode: Jim walks us through how he ended up running the referral program (03:52) The motivation behind starting the Empire Flippers referral program (06:15) How our referral program differs from affiliate contracts and other payout projects (07:51) The nuts and bolts of how the Empire Flippers referral program works (11:15) The process of making a successful referral (13:08) What does, and does not, qualify as a valid referral (16:32) The different kinds of people who could benefit from the referral program (18:40) The various tools available to referral partners to track their referrals (24:16) The benefits of using the Empire Flippers referral program (27:04) The success stories Jim has already witnessed from the referral program (28:56) Jim describes his experience starting a referral program from scratch (33:23) Mentions: Empire Flippers Podcast Empire Flippers Marketplace Sign up for the Empire Flippers referral program Sit back, grab a coffee, and discover the many advantages of Empire Flippers' groundbreaking new referral program!

The Opportunity Podcast
The EF Referral Program: Earn from Online Businesses Without Owning One With Jim Barton [Ep. 82]

The Opportunity Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2022 42:30


How would you like to make money from buying and selling online businesses without having to purchase or operate an online business of your own? This exciting prospect is now within your reach thanks to the launch of the Empire Flippers referral program. By becoming a referral partner, you can earn 20% of our commission by referring businesses that are then successfully bought or sold on the Empire Flippers marketplace. Having spearheaded the creation of the referral program, Jim Barton, the Partnerships Manager at Empire Flippers, joins us to explain the many opportunities that the referral program offers to interested entrepreneurs.  Jim provides a step-by-step guide on the different types of referrals, how referrals partners are paid, what the process of making a referral actually looks like, and the qualities we look for in a good referral. Jim explains, “The Empire Flippers referral program works in two ways. We have seller referrals where you refer somebody who wants to sell their business and buy-side referrals where you refer somebody who wants to purchase a business.  As a referral partner, you will get paid for everything your referral does with us from our two-year cookie, meaning if they buy or sell multiple businesses, you would collect referral commission on all of those.” Jim also gives us a peek behind the curtain of what it takes to create a referral program from scratch, and shares stories of the enormous success the entrepreneurs who joined our pilot program have already experienced. Whether you're looking for a way to diversify your income, cash in on your large professional network, or leverage the traffic coming to your site, listen closely because this episode will tell you everything you need to know about the Empire Flippers referral program. Topics Discussed in This Episode: Jim walks us through how he ended up running the referral program (03:52) The motivation behind starting the Empire Flippers referral program (06:15) How our referral program differs from affiliate contracts and other payout projects (07:51) The nuts and bolts of how the Empire Flippers referral program works (11:15) The process of making a successful referral (13:08) What does, and does not, qualify as a valid referral (16:32) The different kinds of people who could benefit from the referral program (18:40) The various tools available to referral partners to track their referrals (24:16) The benefits of using the Empire Flippers referral program (27:04) The success stories Jim has already witnessed from the referral program (28:56) Jim describes his experience starting a referral program from scratch (33:23) Mentions: Empire Flippers Podcast Empire Flippers Marketplace Sign up for the Empire Flippers referral program Sit back, grab a coffee, and discover the many advantages of Empire Flippers' groundbreaking new referral program!

Next Level eCommerce
(Favorite) How I Sold My eCommerce Business With Details And What To Think About If You're Considering Selling - Jim Barton

Next Level eCommerce

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 21, 2021 69:21


Guest Jim Barton and Host Isaac Smith discuss what it was like to sell Isaac's eCommerce store.  They get into the details, and the emotional journey that it was.Jim (Isaac's long time mastermind buddy) is a Seller Advisor with Empire Flippers, the online business broker that Isaac sold his business through.  He and Isaac go through everything you need to be thinking about if you're considering selling your business.Jim also talks about what attracted him to the apprentice model, after having been his own boss for a couple of years.This is a can't-miss episode, so just click play to listen!Show notes can be found at:http://nextlevelecommerce.coWant help acquiring a cash flowing eCommerce site?Contact Ian Bond - ianbond@professionalwebsiteinvestors.com

Good Company in the Car
He was a police lieutenant, that made him the Chief Suspect! Get it? Anyway, yeah, murder.

Good Company in the Car

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2021 32:48


When a policeman in a rural Ohio town tries to, oh well, we don't wanna give away the plot. Let's just say Fargo-like shenanigans ensue and it takes 10 years before the case is brought to justice. Ladies and gentlemen, we give you the hapless Jim Barton...

The Opportunity Podcast
The Opportunity Ep.25: How to Position Your FBA Business for a Lucrative Exit

The Opportunity Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 38:42


In this episode of The Opportunity Podcast, we will be speaking with Jim Barton, a Senior Seller Advisor with Empire Flippers. Jim takes a deep dive on exiting FBA businesses and the changes of Amazon's marketplace as a whole. Amazon never seems to stand still and that certainly applies to the growth the platform has seen in the past year. Jim opens up as to why that matters to the sellers he mentors at Empire Flippers. He explains how this is a moment in time that FBA sellers should consider where they are with their businesses and walks us through the steps sellers should take early to best position themselves for an exit. Jim also compares the changing landscape of Amazon to the changes to our marketplace and shares updates to deal making that will hit home with those who are looking to buy or sell in the near future. Sit back, grab a coffee, and get ready to hear from an M&A expert what's new and unfolding in the FBA acquisition space.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch: Death and the Bible Ep. 1

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2020 15:25


Rev. Abby and Jim Barton begin the new season of Bloody Mary Bible Brunch considering Death and the Bible.  In Episode 1 they discuss the Bible teaches life begins by consider Genesis 2, Exodus 21:22 (misquoted as Exodus 20 in the episode), and Ezekiel 37.  They also consider the end of life for Christ and Abraham.   The team also discusses limitations of other potential answers to the question in Jeremiah 1 and Psalm 139, as well as the limitations of Leviticus 12 for this purpose.

Next Level eCommerce
How I Sold My eCommerce Business (With Details) And What To Think About If You're Considering Selling - Jim Barton

Next Level eCommerce

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 7, 2020 68:07


#015 - Guest Jim Barton and Host Isaac Smith discuss what it was like to sell Isaac's eCommerce store. They get into the details, and the emotional journey that it was.Jim (Isaac's long time mastermind buddy) is a Seller Advisor with Empire Flippers, the online business broker that Isaac sold his business through. He and Isaac go through everything you need to be thinking about if you're considering selling your business.Jim also talks about what attracted him to the apprentice model, after having been his own boss for a couple of years.This is a can't-miss episode, so just click play to listen!Links:Drop Ship LifestyleHow to Fail at Almost Everything and Still Win Big by Scott AdamsEmpire FlippersEmpire Flippers Valuation ToolJim's article about 3rd Party Fulfillment (3PL)Jim on InstagramSchedule a call with Jim

The History of Computing

TiVo is a computer. To understand the history, let's hop in our trusty time machine. It's 1997. England gives Hong Kong back to China, after 156 years of British rule. The Mars Pathfinder touches down on Mars. The OJ Simpson trials are behind us, but the civil suit begins. Lonely Scottish scientists clone a sheep and name it Dolly. The first Harry Potter book is published. Titanic is released. Tony Blair is elected the Prime Minister of Great Britain. Hanson sang Mmmm Bop. And Pokemon is released. No not Pokemon Go, but Pokemon. The world was changing. The Notorious BIG was gunned down not far from where I was living at the time. Blackstreet released No Diggity. Third Eye Blind led a Semi-Charmed life and poppy grunge killed grunge grunge. And television. Holy buckets. Friends, Seinfeld, X Files, ER, Buff and the Vampire Slayer, Frasier, King of the Hill, Dharma and Greg, South Park, The Simpsons, Stargate, Home Improvement, Daria, Law and Order, Oz, Roseanne, The View, The Drew Carey Show, Family Matters, Power Rangers, JAG, Tenacious D, Lois and Clark, Spawn. Mosaic the first web browser, was released, Sergey Brin and Larry Page registered a weird domain name called Google because BackRub just seemed kinda' weird. Facebook, craigslist, and Netflix were also purchased. Bill Gates became the richest business nerd in the world. DVDs were released. The hair was big. But commercials were about to become a thing of the past. So were cords. 802.11, also known as Wi-Fi, became a standard. Microsoft bought WebTV, but something else was about to happen that would forever change the way we watched television. We'd been watching television for roughly the same way for about 70 years. Since January 13th in 1928, when the General Electric factory in Schenectady, New York broadcast as WGY Television, using call letters W2XB. That was for experiments, but they launched W2XBS a little later, now known as WNBC. They just showed a Felix the Cat spinning around on a turntable for 2 hours a day to test stuff. A lot of testing around different markets were happening and The Queen's Messenger would be the first drama broadcast on television in LA later that year. But it wasn't until 1935 that the BBC started airing regular content and the late 1930s that regular programming started in the US, spreading slowly throughout the world, with Japan being one of the last countries to get a regular broadcast in 1953. So for the next several decades a love affair began with humans and their televisions. Color came to prime time in 1972, after the price of color TVs introduced over the couple of decades before started to come down in price. Entire industries sprang up around the television, or at least migrated from newspapers and radio to television. Moon landings, football, baseball, the news, game shows. Since that 1972 introduction of color tv, the microcomputer revolution had come. Computers were getting smaller. Hard drive capacity was growing. I could stroll down to the local Fry's and buy a Western Digital, IBM Deskstar, Seagate Barracuda, an HP Kitty Hawk, or even a 10,000 RPM Cheetah. But the cheaper drives had come down enough for mass distribution. And so it was when Time Warner, a major US cable company at the time, decided to test a digital video system. They tapped Silicon Graphics alumni Jim Barton and Mike Ramsay to look into a set top box, or network appliance, or something. After initial testing, Time Warner didn't think it was quite the right time to build nation-wide. They'd spent $100 million dollars testing the service in Orlando. So the pair struck out on their own. Silicon Valley was abuzz about set top boxes, now that the web was getting big, dialup was getting easy, and PCs were pretty common fare. Steve Perlman's WebTV got bought by Microsoft for nearly half a billion dollars. Which became MSN TV and played the foundation for the Xbox hardware. I remember well that the prevailing logic of the time was that the set top box was the next big thing. The lagerts would join the Internet revolution. Grandma and Grandpa would go online. So Ramsay and Barton got a check for $3M from VC firms to further develop their idea. They founded a company called Teleworld and started running public trials of a new device that came out of their research, called TiVo. The set top box would go beyond television and be a hub for home networking, managing refrigerators, thermostats, manage your television, order a grocery delivery, and even bring the RFC for an internet coffee pot to life! But they were a little before their time on some of this. After some time, they narrowed the focus to a television receiver that could record content. The VC firms were so excited they ponied up another $300 million dollars to take the product to market. Investors even asked how long it would take the TV networks to shut them down. Disruption was afoot. When Ramsay and Barton approached Apple, Claris and Lucas Arts veteran Randy Komisar, he suggested they look at charging for a monthly service. But he, as with the rest of Silicon Valley, bought their big idea, especially since Komisar had sat on the board of WebTV. TiVo would need to raise a lot of money to ink deals with the big content providers of the time. They couldn't alienate the networks. No one knew, but the revolution in cutting the cord was on the way. Inking deals with those providers would prove to be much more expensive than building the boxes. They set about raising capital. They inked deals with Sony, Philips, Philips, and announced a release of the first TiVo at the Consumer Electronics Show in January of 1999. They'd built an outstanding executive team. They'd done their work. And on March 31st, 1999, a Blue Moon, they released the Series 1 for about $500 and with a $9.95 monthly subscription fee. The device would use a modem to download tv show listings, which would later be replaced with an Ethernet, then Wi-Fi option. The Series1, like Apple devices at the time, would sport a PowerPC processor. Although this one was a 403GCX that only clocked in at 54 MHz - but cheap enough for an embedded system like this. It also came with 32 MB of RaM, a 13 to 60 gig IDE/ATA drive, and would convert analog signal into MPEG-2, storing from 14 to 60 hours of television programming. Back then, you could use the RCA cables or S-Video. They would go public later that year, raising 88 million dollars and nearly doubling in value overnight. By 2000 TiVo was in 150,000 homes and burning through cash far faster than they were making it. It was a huge idea and if big ideas take time to percolate, huge ideas take a lot of time. And a lot of lawsuits. In order to support the new hoarder mentality they were creating, The Series2 would come along in 2002 and would come with up to a 250 gig drive, USB ports, CPUs from 166 to 266 MHz, from 32 to 64 megs of RAM, and the MPEG encoder got moved off to the Broadcom BCM704x chips. In 2006, the Series 3 would introduce HD support, add HDMI, 10/100 Ethernet, and support drives of 2 terabytes with 128 megs of RAM. Ramsay left the company in 2007 to go work at Venture Partners. Barton, the CTO, would leave in 2012. Their big idea had been realized. They weren't needed any more. Ramsay and Barton would found streaming service Qplay, but that wouldn't make it over two years. By then, TiVo had become a verb. Series4 brought us to over a thousand hours of television and supported bluetooth, custom apps, and sport a Broadcom 400 MHZ dual core chip. But it was 2010. Popular DVD subscription service Netflix had been streaming and now had an app that could run on the Series 4. So did Rhapsody, Hulu, and YouTube. The race was on for streaming content. TiVo was still aiming for bigger, faster, cheaper set top boxes. But people were consuming content differently. TiVo gave apps, but Apple TV, Roku, Amazon, and other vendors were now in the same market for a fraction of the cost and without a subscription. By 2016 TiVo was acquired by Rovi for 1.1 Billion dollars and as is often the case in these kinds of scenarios seems listless. Direction… Unknown. After such a disruptive start, I can't imagine any innovation will ever recapture that spirit from the turn of the millennia. And so in December of 2019 (the month I'm recording this episode), after months trying to split TiVo into two companies so they could be sold separately TiVo scrapped that idea and merged with Xperi. I find that we don't talk about Tivo much any more. That doesn't mean they've gone anywhere, just that the model has shifted over the years. According to TechCrunch “TiVo CEO David Shull noted also that Xperi's annual licensing business includes over 100 million connected TV units, and relationships with content providers, CE manufacturers, and automotive OEMs, which now benefit from TiVo's technology.” TiVo was a true disruptor. Along with Virtual CEO Randy Komisar, they sold Silicon Valley on Monthly Recurring Revenue as a key performance indicator. They survived the .com bubble and even thrived in it. They made television interactive. They didn't cut our cords, but they expanded our minds so we could cut them. They introduced the idea of responsibly selling customer data as a revenue stream to help keep those fees in check. And in so doing, they let manufacturers micro market goods and services. They revolutionized the way we consume content. Something we should all be thankful for. So next time you're binging a show from one of your favorite providers, just think about the fact that you might have to spend time with your family or friends if it weren't for TiVo. You owe them a huge thanks.

How They Made their Millions
071: TiVo - From a tiny scrappy startup to a billion dollar startup

How They Made their Millions

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2019 31:12


Mike Ramsay and Jim Barton had a Home automation idea, which didn't work out. They switched to another idea and TiVo was born. Giant media companies tried to stop them, yet they came out successful and sold it for $1+ billion. Let's see how they did it.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (18-16 Violence)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 20, 2018 12:34


Jim Barton, Esq. and Rev. Abigail Conley review one of the most conflicted topics in Scripture: Violence.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-15 Kavanaugh)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 6, 2018 15:10


 Rev. Abby Conley and amateur theologian Jim Barton share their dismay and frustration over the Kavanaugh appointment.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-14 Law: What's It Good For?)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 22, 2018 12:00


Amatuer theologian and professional lawyer Jim Barton discusses the value of the Law wtih Reverend Abigail Conley.  They explore loving the law found in Scripture without succumbing to the sin dogmatism.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-13 Testing God)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 15, 2018 11:42


Rev. Abby Conley and amateur theologian Jim Barton discuss the propriety of testing God in the context of Scripture and in modern experience.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-12 On Civility)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2018 8:01


Amateur theologian Jim Barton and Reverend Abigail Conley explore the notions of civility and respectability politics as applied to the oppressed and a certain middle-eastern philosopher who like to turn tables, hold marches, and eventually got himself executed by the state.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-11 Images of Satan)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 8, 2018 12:16


Reverend Abigail Conley and amateur theologian Jim Barton look into the images of Satan as a follow on to our review of the models of God. (Jim, btw, is so important he gets phone calls in the middle of podcast recordings.  See if you can find the splice in the middle!) 

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-8 Women in the Bible)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2018 14:02


Amateur theologeon Jim Barton and Rev. Abigail Conley talk about the presence of women in the Bible, including those who are important for reasons other than who they married or gave birth to.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-7 The Divinity of Christ)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later May 6, 2018 11:22


Rev. Abigail Conley and amateur theologian Jim Barton discuss what the Bible says about the divinity of Christ, and why that matters to them as liberal Christians.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-6 Atonement)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2018 16:10


Reverend Abigail Conley and Jim Barton, Esq. put their big brains to work on the complex topic of atonement.  

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Blood Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-5 Gun Violence Activism)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2018 10:22


Amateur theologian Jim Barton and Reverend Abigail Conley discuss encouraging developments associated with high school students showing leadership that compels President Trump to action.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-2 Family Values)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2018 12:28


Reverend Abby Conley and amateur theologian Jim Barton explore the competing points of few find in the Bible on the topic of traditional family values.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Bloody Mary Bible Brunch (Ep. 18-1 New Year)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2018 8:30


Amateur theologian Jim Barton and Reverend Abby Conley discuss how they plan to tackle current events episodes in 2018.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Thorns & Thistles

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2017 23:24


Sermon deliverd by Jim Barton at Community Christian Church in Tempe Arizona on September 10, 2017.  The sermon addresses the relationship between Christians and God's gift of Land, exploring sinfulness as to misuse of the land, and exploitation of marginalized brothers using the expulsion from the Garden and the murder of Abel as the key text.  "Listen! Your brother's blood cries out to me from the ground."

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Sermon delivered by Jim Barton to Mesa First Christian Church on Father's Day 2017.  The Sermon addresses how a Christian of privilege can avoid damnation.

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch
Evolution Sunday Sermon (Anthropocene)

Bloody Mary Bible Brunch

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2016 20:38


Amateur theologian Jim Barton tries his hand at preaching.  The message discusses the interplay between faith and reason--religion and science.