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Finding a parking place has been a struggle as long as there have been motor vehicles. That's especially true in big cities, at sporting events, entertainment venues, airports, and anywhere else that must accommodate large numbers of drivers. This week on the pod, OmniQ's John Whiteman walks us through the technology that's simplifying parking for drivers, garage/lot owners, and operators. How has AI changed parking technology? What hardware opportunities can VARs find with parking solutions? What are the benefits and recurring revenue? It's the episode that just wants to get to the big game on time! #VARValue - Where should VARs interested in parking opportunities begin? Who should they speak to, how would OmniQ fit into the process, and what do they gain by working with you? TEConnecting with us: John W - Elon Musk by Walter Isaacson Dean - Nuclear fusion enters "new era" John - Hangover free beer Talk to us! X/Twitter - @TEConnectPod Email - TEConnect@bluestarinc.com Submit your topic ideas - https://www.bluestarinc.com/us-en/landing-pages/podcast-topics.html Follow BlueStar on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/blue-star/ Subscribe to the BlueStar Nation Newsletter - https://nation.bluestarinc.com/#subscribe Sponsored by: Elo Outdoor Open Frame
Polar bears are no one's prey. Except for climate change itself. John Whiteman says that our human fate is tied up in polar bears' fate. And: Birds have an unusual predator. Windows. Karen Powers says that an $8 pack of window decals could be life saving. Plus: How Todd Tupper knew he had to return to community colleges to teach zoology before he'd even gotten his PhD.
Intel Open Source Evangelist, Katherine Druckman, speaks with Intel open source security experts John Whiteman and John Andersen about threat modeling. Threat modeling should be step one in any security conversation, so please join us as we jump down the rabbit hole! Guests: John Andersen lives life with curiosity. His current focus is around leveraging threat model and architecture information to facilitate automated context aware decentralized gamification / continuous improvement of the security lifecycle / posture of open source projects. John L. Whiteman is a security researcher for Intel Corporation and a part-time adjunct cybersecurity instructor at the University of Portland in Oregon. He taught the UC Berkeley's Extension Cybersecurity Bootcamp. John was also a technical editor and proofreader for the latest (ISC)2 CCSP Official Study and Exam Guides published by Sybex/Wiley. He holds a MSCS from Georgia Institute of Technology, BSCS from Portland State University, and a BA in Asian Studies from the University of Maryland University College Global Campus in Japan. He has multiple security certifications including CISSP and CCSP. He is a U.S. Navy veteran who honorably served as a surface sonar technician and shipboard instructor. You can hear him host the OWASP PDX security podcast. He grows wasabi and brews kombucha for world peace.
The keys to conserving large mammals, such as bears, often lie in better understanding their ecophysiology. Armed with knowledge about the animals' energy needs, conservationists can encourage actions that better preserve populations and ensure that their habitats will be able to sustain them both now and as the climate continues to rapidly change. In this episode of BioScience Talks, we're joined by Dr. John Whiteman of Old Dominion University, who describes efforts to characterize metabolisms among large mammals from India to the Arctic—and the ways that this work fuels the broader scientific endeavor. Read Dr. Whiteman's 2019 BioScience article. Read more about polar bear diets (and body temperatures). Wildlife SOS Free the Bears Subscribe on iTunes. Subscribe on Stitcher. Catch up with us on Twitter. Photograph: Mike Lockhart.
Why Waite Innovate kicks off season 2 and episode 46 by heading to the mountains; Mountain Spirit Distilling’s Dan Paquin and John Whiteman join the program to discuss their business, the process of turning grain into spirits, as well as what’s next for this dynamic duo.
This Week on the Jawn:Rashanda brings us Khloe Kardashian's manifesto on love from Instagram. American Idol is over and John Whiteman won! La'Porsha was robbed. Photoshopping is still a problem and Kerry Washington could not recognize herself on the cover of AdWeek.No Shame: Why are black women harshly shamed for wearing make up?Check It: It is time to try honesty. Bee's challenging us all to be honest with ourselves. The Throwback Jam: Rashanda reminds us how much we loved TLC's "Unpretty"Giggle. Cackle. Roar!Britney Giggles at 2 Dope Girls Bee Cackles at the Rogue One trailerRashanda Roars for yogi Jessamyn Stanley
On the season finale of Food Talk with Mike Colameco, it's a 4/20 celebration (mostly), featuring Cheri Sicard, an LA-based cookbook author and frequent High Times edibles columnist, John Whiteman of Wana Edibles in Colorado, baker Peggy Moore of Love's Oven in Colorado, and Bill Samuels, Jr., Chairman Emeritus of Maker's Mark. Also sitting in is mystery guest co-host "Henry" aka Daniel Sklaar of Fine and Raw chocolates.
What role is religion playing in the 2016 presidential campaign? How is this similar to or different from previous elections? What does the future of religion and politics hold—either in elections or in day-to-day political life? These are a few of the questions that will be discussed in the Center's next Alternative Visions event, taking place in the Old Main Carson Ballroom on the ASU Tempe campus at 4:30pm on Thursday October 20, 2016. The event will feature a panel discussion on religion and politics in the context of the presidential election. Moderated by Center Director Linell Cady, the panel will include Edward E. Curtis IV from Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis, Robert P. Jones from the Public Religion Research Institute, and Laura R. Olson from Clemson University. The Religion and Conflict: Alternative Visions speaker series brings nationally and internationally recognized experts such as Michael Ignatieff, Karen Armstrong, Andrew Bacevich, David Eagleman, and Reza Aslan to campus to address the sources and dynamics of conflict and strategies for its resolution. The series is supported by a grant from philanthropist John Whiteman.
John Whiteman of Wana Brands joins us to discuss the Wana story. He takes us through his personal history and how he found himself in the cannabis space. John discusses the early days of the medical market in Colorado and the various products Wana tested before settling in on the current product assortment. The conversation happened a few weeks back and John brings up polling in Nevada…which works out well as Andrew Jolley of NV returns to give us an update on where we are with that ballot initiative as the opposition gets underway.
"The age of humanitarian intervention to protect civilians is not over, because civilians keep dying."–Michael Ignatieff, 2014 Michael Ignatieff is an outspoken public intellectual and a prolific writer on political philosophy, international affairs and conflicts caused by ethnic and religious strife. A politician and a scholar, he has applied his unique perspective to the study of war, religion, ethnicity and politics. His writings have addressed conflict in many countries including Northern Ireland, Rwanda, Kosovo, Serbia, Yugoslavia, Iraq and Afghanistan. Between 2006 and 2011, he served as a Member of Parliament in Canada and then as Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and Leader of the Official Opposition. He is a member of the Queen’s Privy Council for Canada and holds eleven honorary degrees. Ignatieff is the author of seventeen books including Virtual War, winner of the Orwell Prize in 2001, and The Lesser Evil: Political Ethics in an Age of Terror (2005). Other major titles are The Needs of Strangers (1984), Scar Tissue (1992), Isaiah Berlin (1998), The Rights Revolution (2000), Human Rights as Politics and Idolatry (2001), and Fire and Ashes: Success and Failure in Politics (2013). He is the Edward R. Murrow Professor of Practice at Harvard’s John F. Kennedy School of Government, and also serves as Centennial Chair at the Carnegie Council on Ethics and International Affairs in New York. This lecture is supported by a grant from John Whiteman and is part of the series Religion and Conflict: Alternative Visions at the Center for the Study of Religion and Conflict at ASU.
Listen to the latest edition of THE KISS ROOM, originally broadcast on Friday, September 11 from 3-5 PM via MontcoRadio.com! Matt Porter is joined in THE KISS ROOM by new KISS tribute band ALMOST HUMAN, featuring Mike Yorty, Chris Hartman, John Whiteman, and Warren Leichter Bobby Dreher Anthony De Lucia Jr (ALIVE! ’75) Chris Giordano […]
How does an accomplished neuroscientist and bestselling writer of fiction view issues of religion and conflict? Dr. David Eagleman, author of "Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain" and "SUM" presents a fresh take on these topics based on his award-winning research into the workings of the human mind. In a style all his own, Eagleman weaves science, philosophy, and art to address the existential questions that have galvanized thinkers for centuries. Eagleman directs the Laboratory for Perception and Action at the Baylor College of Medicine, where he also directs the Initiative on Neuroscience and Law. He is best known for his work on time perception, synesthesia, brain plasticity, and neurolaw. He is a Guggenheim Fellow, a winner of the McGovern Award for Excellence in Biomedical Communication, a Next Generation Texas Fellow, Vice-Chair on the World Economic Forum's Global Agenda Council on Neuroscience & Behavior, a research fellow in the Institute for Ethics and Emerging Technologies, Chief Scientific Advisor for the Mind Science Foundation, and a board member of The Long Now Foundation. He was named Science Educator of the Year by the Society for Neuroscience, and was featured as a Brightest Idea Guy on the cover of Italy's Style magazine. He has been profiled on the Colbert Report, NOVA Science Now, the New Yorker, and CNN's Next List. He appears regularly on radio and television to discuss literature and science, and he is the writer and host of the upcoming 6-hour PBS series, The Brain. Selected publications: > Incognito: The Secret Lives of the Brain (2012) > SUM: 40 Tales of the Afterlives (2010) This lecture is supported by a grant from John Whiteman and is part of the Religion and Conflict: Alternative Visions lecture series. The series brings to ASU nationally and internationally recognized writers, scholars, and policy experts concerned with the dynamics of religion and conflict and strategies for resolution.
Engage your power to be happy. John Whiteman is the author of '9 Days to Feel Fantastic' and 'The Way'. He offers his '9 Elements Quiz' as a tool to assess what areas to address to reclaim balance and how his wife's visit to a healer gave him a whole new perspective on life.