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Brock McGillis joined Alexis Downie to chat in the Kariya studio while in Anaheim for his Shiftmakers Tour. The former hockey player, who gained recognition as the first openly gay men's professional hockey player, spoke about his mission to foster a sense of belonging in sports and how his experiences shaped his career in public speaking.
Gunda is looking forward to his breakfast, but the playful crows, Kariya and Thunti, have other plans. They trick Gunda into chasing them while they sneakily eat his food! When Gunda realizes what happened, he feels hurt and angry. The crows didn't mean to upset him, but now they must figure out how to apologize and make things right.With the wisdom of Goobe the owl and Cookie's kindness, will Gunda forgive his feathery friends? Find out in this fun and thoughtful story.Written and narrated by our guest author Rashmi Gowda.Gunda's voice and cover art is by 7-year-old Yara Roshan.© All Rights Reserved.
Can Japan succeed in the Supply Chain Wars? What are some AI advancements in the non-visual revolution? Should the Japanese government determine what we see in self-driving cars?Show NotesSCIENCEKidney genetically modified for humans transplanted from pig into monkey in Japan 1stRefrigerator maker caters to growing demand to store dead petsSUPPLY CHAIN WARUS expands list of Chinese technology companies under export controlsChina mineral export curbs heighten Japan supply chain fearsUS Space Force launches Tokyo unit to bolster deterrenceJapan to offer defense equipment to four nationsAnduril and OpenAI to collaborate on defense AI to protect U.S. and allied forces from drone attacksSOCIETY 5.0World's first! Wearable AI memory capsule "PLAUD NotePin" equipped with GPT-4o now available for pre-order in JapanAbout the “AI Suitcase”AI-generated website introducing nonexistent tourist spots in Fukuoka Prefecture shut downA 9-hour task was reduced to 7 minutes with the help of search-specific generative AI "Genspark"genspark.aiChina to enhance AI education in primary, secondary schoolsThe challenge of introducing generative AI is lack of literacy. Japan's AI utilization rate is the lowest in the worldNEC develops technology that enables iris recognition even with low-resolution images taken with small facial recognition camerasKyushu's first condominium with all-face recognitionNEC to install face and iris identification on PCsVisionAI raises 50 million yen to help reduce labor in stores with AI camerasAI camera detects dangerous crossings and issues audio and light warnings in Kariya city trialA new transportation service using AI (artificial intelligence) with advance reservation system! It's called "Norassa" and will start in Hirakawa City, Aomori PrefectureSelf-driving car sees dinosaurs... Mixed reality technology in demonstration experiment in Eiheiji, Fukui Prefecture, Japan's first new service
Shirin Muhallinka rayuwarka tare da Michael Kuduson kamar kowanne mako a wannan karon ya yi duba ne kan tsarin noma mai ɗorewa da ke nufin magance matsalar ƙarancin abinci da kuma yadda za a baiwa muhalli kariya.
In this Light the Lamp, we are joined by newly retired sportswriter of 46 years, Eric Duhatschek, in the Kariya studio! Duhatschek details moments throughout his accomplished career including covering the Miracle on Ice, memories of traveling with the Calgary Flames, his 15 years on the Hockey Hall of Fame selection committee and much more.
This episode brings us back to the junior days in Canada with Emer as he welcomes former WHL rival, Zack Boychuk, to the program. They rip through life in the "Western League", playing against each other, Boychuk's internet fame, and continuing his career overseas. Later, Emer talks about the upcoming Rookie tournament in a few weeks, fun themed nights planned for the '24-25 season, and updates around the NHL since we last were in the Kariya studio.
Olá, eu sou Leo Lopes e o POD NOTÍCIAS chega à sua vigésima quinta edição trazendo um resumo de tudo o que aconteceu ao longo da semana no mercado de podcasts no Brasil e no mundo! Hoje é segunda-feira, dia 5 de agosto de 2024! Este episódio conta com o apoio da CONTENT ACADEMY, uma plataforma de cursos online voltada para quem quer trabalhar com criação de conteúdo, onde o mais legal é que os professores são os próprios criadores e os profissionais que trabalham com eles. Então tem curso de True Crime com o Ivan Mizanzuk do Projeto Humanos, tem Webjornalismo independente com o Alvaro e a Ana do Meteoro Brasil, tem Storytelling com o Kenji do Normose, tem curso de Edição de vídeo para Youtube com o Will do Jogatina Maneira, tem também o meu curso Podcast para todos (que tá com uma mega promoção por tempo limitado) e mais um monte de cursos incríveis! Então entra lá no site pra dar uma conferida em contentacademy.com.br! Se você também quiser anunciar a sua marca, produto ou serviço com a gente aqui no Pod Notícias – tanto no podcast como no nosso site –, manda um e-mail pro contato@podnoticias.com.br, que nós vamos ter o maior prazer em conversar com você sobre todas as opções de publicidade. E se você quiser colaborar com a gente com texto, sugestão de pauta ou envio de notícias, também vai ser muito bem-vindo e pode fazer isso através do mesmo e-mail. 1 - Abrindo nossa edição desta semana, a gente vai trazer os dados mais recentes da Magellan AI sobre os anúncios em áudio. Segundo o relatório de benchmarks da empresa, referente ao segundo trimestre de 2024, os investimentos em anúncios de podcast aumentaram cerca de 22% ano a ano, mas a quantidade de anúncios em podcasts aumentou 20%. Ou seja; não só a quantidade de anúncios nos podcasts está crescendo, mas ela também está sendo mais bem paga. A carga média de anúncios foi de 7,2% no segundo trimestre de 2024, um número maior do que os 5,9% no mesmo período de 2023. O que sugere que, para um programa típico de uma hora, cerca de 4,3 minutos são destinados à publicidade. Esse número ainda é um pouco menor do que nas rádios. No relatório da Magellan AI a referência foram alguns programas matinais de rádio da Audacy, NPR e 2GB, nos quais a porcentagem de anúncios fica entre 24% e 27,1% da minutagem total do programa. Ainda assim, 20% de crescimento ano a ano é um número bem expressivo, principalmente considerando que as outras mídias digitais, mesmo que tenham mais investimentos, estão com eles estacionados na mesma porcentagem desde 2020 (que foi o primeiro ano da pandemia). Então tá chegando o ano da publicidade no podcast, só não vê quem não quer! Link 2 - E já que estamos falando em anúncios em podcast, na semana passada o desenvolvedor Micah Engle-Eshleman lançou o Adblock Podcast, que é um novo aplicativo que pula automaticamente todos os anúncios em podcasts e programas de áudio. Ele já está disponível para usuários do iTunes e é um aplicativo contratável por assinatura - pra que os criadores dos podcasts não percam a receita publicitária deles, olha só que legal. Mas como é que isso funciona? Bem, o Adblock detecta e "pula" os anúncios de forma automática, armazenando o áudio no cache, e aí ele destina US$ 0,04 aos podcasters por cada anúncio que é ignorado. Falando assim pode parecer que é pouco, mas a média de pagamentos por impressões no mercado é U$ 0,03, então o valor é mais do que justo pra gerar essa troca. O único plano de assinatura disponível no momento é o Premium, que ignora até 50 anúncios mensais pelo valor de $3,99 - também mensal. Se não for suficiente pro ouvinte, ele ainda pode comprar 100 "skips" extras por $5,99. O bom, é que todos os pulos extras que forem adquiridos, não expiram de um mês pro outro. Então se você comprou 100 e sobrou 20, no mês seguinte você vai ter os 50 pulos mensais + esses 20 que sobraram. Por enquanto, o aplicativo não tem nenhuma outra versão, mas o desenvolvedor disse que já está trabalhando nisso. Link 3 - A AudioUK, uma entidade que representa a indústria de podcasts, rádio e audiolivros no Reino Unido, está tentando criar um lobby pra garantir alguns benefícios fiscais para quem produz podcasts e audiobooks em solo britânico. A iniciativa partiu de um manifesto que foi divulgado no começo desse ano, que busca replicar os incentivos fiscais que já existem pra TV e cinema, principalmente considerando a possibilidade do podcast atrair investimentos internacionais. Com isso, a AudioUK lançou uma pesquisa pra atualizar os dados de um relatório que já foi feito em 2021, para mostrar ao novo governo britânico qual foi o crescimento da indústria, e qual o seu potencial no futuro. A Diretora Administrativa da AudioUK, Chloe Straw, pediu aos produtores de podcast de todos os tamanhos que participem da pesquisa para fortalecer a defesa dessas políticas e impulsionar a indústria de produção de áudio no país. Link AINDA EM NOTÍCIAS DA SEMANA: 4 - A produtora canadense de podcast Pacific Content foi comprada pela start-up britânica Lower Street. A Lower Street, que está no mercado desde 2017, é uma agência de produção de podcasts corporativos completos, e já trabalhou com marcas como Adobe e Pepsico. O valor da negociação não foi divulgado ao público. O que foi divulgado foram as impressões dos envolvidos, e parece que tá todo mundo muito feliz com isso: o Harry Morton, fundador da Lower Street, disse que sempre foi um grande admirador dos podcasts da Pacific Content, e o Steve Pratt da Pacific Content devolveu a gentileza e os elogios dizendo que tá confiante e entusiasmado com a nova fase das empresas. Vários funcionários da Pacific Content vão se juntar à equipe da Lower Street nas próximas semanas - o que não vai ser uma integração muito difícil, porque os 29 funcionários da Lower Street já trabalham de forma remota, então aumenta o time, aumenta o trabalho, mas não aumenta tanto assim a complexidade. Link 5 - A SiriusXM anunciou o lançamento do SiriusXM Podcasts+, um serviço de assinatura independente que vai estar disponível para o Apple Podcasts a partir de hoje, 5 de agosto. O serviço oferece episódios sem anúncios, conteúdos bônus e acesso antecipado a novos episódios de vários programas populares dos Estados Unidos. Por enquanto, a assinatura é exclusiva para o Apple Podcasts, mas já foi anunciado que o serviço vai ser expandido para outras plataformas em breve, além de ficar disponível em mais de 60 países pela taxa de US$6 mensais ou de US$45 por ano. Link 6 - E a empresa de hospedagem de podcasts bCast, sediada em Londres, anunciou na última semana que vai encerrar as suas atividades. O motivo é que a receita gerada atualmente pela plataforma não está sendo suficiente pra cobrir todos os custos de operação. Pra quem não lembra ou não sabe, a bCast é uma empresa que teve uma expansão meteórica em 2020 e 2021, quando vendeu uma penca de serviços "vitalícios" pra produtores menores de podcast. Quando os fundadores perceberam que isso tinha sido um erro, tentaram ajustar o modelo de negócios de várias formas - inclusive voltando atrás no que venderam e tentando cobrar pelos planos vitalícios... O que gerou um auê. Eles foram tão criticados que acabaram voltando atrás até nisso, dizendo que iam procurar reduzir custos de outras fontes. Mas, infelizmente, isso não aconteceu, e eles não viram outra saída além de fechar a empresa. Os usuários do bCast têm até o dia 30 de agosto de 2024 para transferir seus podcasts para uma nova plataforma e redirecionar os seus feeds RSS pra um novo serviço. Boa sorte pra eles. Link E MAIS: 7 - A Acast divulgou o seu relatório financeiro do segundo trimestre de 2024, onde teve um crescimento de 24% nas vendas líquidas - um número que representa mais ou menos 44 milhões de dólares. Esse é o décimo aniversário da Acast como líder de mercado, hospedando mais de 125.000 podcasts e pagando mais de US$ 390 milhões pros seus criadores. A receita média por escuta aumentou 45%, mesmo com uma queda de 15% no total do número de escutas, que ainda é atribuída às mudanças no iOS 17 da Apple. Lembra que o aplicativo não faz mais download automático dos episódios? Então. A Acast também se destacou em uma pesquisa de mercado que mostrou quão alto anda o retorno sobre investimento de publicidade em podcasts. Pra resumir: em termos de mercado, esse foi um ótimo trimestre pra Acast, tanto financeiramente quanto em fortalecimento de marca. Link 8 - Na última semana de julho, o Pocket Casts lançou uma atualização com uma série de melhorias e novos recursos para aprimorar a UX do aplicativo. O destaque foi a criação da ferramenta Clip It & Share It (ou Compartilhamento de Clipes), com a qual os usuários podem criar e compartilhar trechos dos episódios de podcast. Essa função, que era muito solicitada pelos usuários, já está disponível no Web Player e nos aplicativos de desktop, e deve ficar disponível pra Android e iOS em breve. E, por falar no sistema da Apple, o aplicativo agora oferece novos widgets para acesso rápido a podcasts e episódios favoritos no iOS, além de também ter ajustado os limites de velocidade. Agora, o ouvinte pode ouvir com a velocidade de reprodução de até 5x, mas se o ouvinte não for um deficiente auditivo que tá acostumado a ouvir os áudios muito rápido - pra quem isso faria sentido -, pra qualquer outra pessoa isso seria coisa de maluco ou de psicopata. Ouvir em velocidade 5 do créu? Pra quê? Enfim, né, como tem louco pra tudo... Eu pretendo ficar só com o compartilhamento de cliques mesmo, ouvindo em 1x, obrigado. Link 9 - E é claro que aqui no Pod Notícias a gente faz, toda semana, um resumo de tudo que aconteceu de mais importante no mercado de podcasts, mas lá no nosso site sempre tem muito mais conteúdo que vale a pena conferir na íntegra. Na última semana, por exemplo, teve dicas de equipamento, artigo novo publicado pelos nossos colunistas e outras notícias que acabaram não entrando aqui no corte do programa, porque a gente tá noticiando muito e todos os dias. Então não deixa de acessar o nosso site em podnoticias.com.br pra conferir o review que a gente publicou de algumas câmeras da Sony, e também ler o texto: "Não sei entrevistar, então vou virar podcaster", que fala sobre aquela panelinha do podcast que a gente já tá cansado de saber quem é, e que faz umas entrevistas tão ruins que chegam a baixar a régua do jornalismo no podcast. Enfim, tem bastante coisa lá no site pra você. Os links diretos pro site vão estar, como sempre, na descrição desse episódio. Link / Link HOJE NO GIRO SOBRE PESSOAS QUE FAZEM A MÍDIA: 10 - A HBO está produzindo uma minissérie baseada no podcast "Praia dos Ossos" da Rádio Novelo, e já anunciou o elenco que vai participar da produção (e que elenco de peso, hein?). O podcast fala sobre o assassinato da socialite Ângela Diniz em 1976. A Ângela vai ser interpretada pela atriz Marjorie Estiano, enquanto Emilio Dantas vai fazer o papel do Doca Street, que é o ex-namorado e também o assassino da Ângela Diniz. Outros nomes ilustres que vão participar da série são Antônio Fagundes, Renata Gaspar e Thiago Lacerda. Por enquanto, a série não tem data de estreia definida, mas a gente já sabe que ela vai ter 6 episódios. Se você quiser saber mais sobre a produção, o elenco ou o podcast, não deixa de acessar a íntegra da matéria lá no nosso site. Link 11 - E na nossa Caixa de perguntas do Instagram na semana passada, a gente perguntou "se você pudesse participar como convidado de qualquer podcast, qual programa você escolheria e por quê?", e a gente recebeu algumas respostas muito boas e muito criativas, e a gente faz questão de ler aqui as três melhores respostas baseadas na nossa opinião, puramente: Eu queria participar do É Nóia Minha? pra ver se minha cabeça é forte o suficiente pra não sair com novas minhocas que a Camila Fremder falaria. Queria ir e levar o Richard Rasmussen pra Dentro da Cabeça do Vidane, pra descobrir se ele é feliz mesmo ou se é um animal que está em profundo sofrimento. O PodNipoBr no presencial, porque isso significa que eu consegui ir pro Japão. Muito boas respostas, mais uma vez o ouvinte do Pod Notícias tá de parabéns. Agora, pra essa semana, a pergunta é menos filosófica e mais prática: Você usa algum recurso de Inteligência Artificial no seu podcast? Se sim, qual? Como sempre, a caixinha vai ficar aberta nos stories do Instagram do Pod Notícias por apenas 24 horas, então não deixe de acessar lá ainda hoje pra deixar a sua participação, em @pod.noticias. Instagram do Pod Notícias 12 - E na edição de hoje, a primeira edição de Agosto de 2024, a nossa coluna mensal Podcast no Japão está de volta, apresentada pelo nosso querido amigo e colunista Carlinhos Vilaronga - pra quem eu passo a palavra. Diretamente do Japão, fala aí Carlinhos! Carlinhos: Olá Leo e olá ouvintes do Pod Notícias! Voltando aqui para compartilhar com vocês um panorama das atividades da comunidade brasileira de podcasters no Japão. No dia 24 de junho, na primeira edição do Brazilian Day na província de Gunma, a empresa de recursos humanos Kowa realizou uma ação para gerar interação e comunicar acolhimento aos visitantes do evento. A ação incluiu café, pão de queijo e uma mesa de podcast. Eu, particularmente, achei uma ótima escolha. Os episódios serão publicados em parceria com a Nabecast Podcasts & Multimedia. Link No dia 30 de junho, a ONG japonesa Dive.TV realizou, na cidade de Kariya, a Career Expo Sports, uma feira que apresentou possíveis caminhos na carreira do esporte no Japão. Todo o conteúdo foi ministrado em português e teve como público-alvo jovens estudantes brasileiros. O Mochiyori podcast esteve presente no evento e conversou com a fundadora da ONG e os profissionais convidados. Link No dia 2 de julho, a Nihon Web TV, uma iniciativa brasileira de conteúdo independente, anunciou a parceria com o podcast JápodCast, que é apresentado por Leandro Takahashi e Kelvin Nakashima. Macsael Oda, fundador da Nihon Web TV, em mensagem informou que: "O JápodCast entra para a programação da Nihon Web TV com o objetivo de enriquecer ainda mais a grade com conteúdos exclusivos". Fica aí o desejo de sucesso para essa parceria. Link No dia 20 de julho, foi realizada a oitava edição da Feira de Educação. A feira aconteceu na modalidade virtual e é uma iniciativa conjunta dos Consulados-Gerais do Brasil em Tóquio, Hamamatsu e Nagoya. A feira contou com a participação de instituições japonesas e brasileiras, e os apresentadores dos podcasts CastBrothers, Mochiyori e Saidera foram convidados a contribuir moderando painéis que discutiram ensino a distância, intercâmbio internacional e o cotidiano do estudante brasileiro na universidade japonesa. O conteúdo na íntegra pode ser acessado até 20 de agosto no site feiradeeducacao.com. Link / Link E pra encerrar minha participação de hoje, o Coletivo Podosfera Nipo-brasileira anunciou que a Semana Podosfera Nipo-brasileira 2024 será realizada a partir de 21 de outubro, o Dia Nacional do Podcast. O evento celebrará os 20 anos do podcast e contará com entrevistas, painéis e mesas de discussão. Mais informações serão compartilhadas em breve no perfil @podnipobr no Instagram. Instagram Podosfera Nipo-brasileira Obrigado ouvinte pela escuta. Carlinhos Vilaronga, da cidade de Kosai no Japão exclusivo para o Pod Notícias. Abraço a todos. SOBRE LANÇAMENTOS: 13 - Na última terça-feira, dia 30 de julho, foi ao ar o primeiro episódio do podcast Tábula Rasa, apresentado pelo Felipe Ferreira, e que fala sobre tudo o que você precisa saber pra envelhecer com dignidade: anti-etarismo, aposentadoria, recolocação profissional quando você é sênior e muito mais. O Felipe é um aposentado profissional, com muita experiência pra compartilhar sobre esses temas, e nessa primeira temporada vai trazer todas as perguntas que você precisa se fazer pra planejar uma aposentadoria que não seja compulsória. O Tabula Rasa é produzido aqui, pela Rádiofobia Podcast e Multimídia e publicado também pela Rádiofobia Podcast Network, e tem novos episódios publicados às terças-feiras em todas as principais plataformas de áudio. Se você, como eu (que acabei de completar 50 anos), também está pensando no seu plano de aposentadoria, não deixa de conferir. Link 14 - E em comemoração aos 15 anos do portal Tenho Mais Discos Que Amigos!, eles lançaram o TMDQA! Talks, o novo mesacast do portal, apresentado pelo Cesinha Ovalle, Tony, e Rafael Teixeira. No programa, eles vão trazer entrevistas e histórias exclusivas dos artistas convidados de cada episódio. A primeira temporada vai ter seis episódios no total, com nomes como Terno Rei, Rashid, Supercombo e Carol Biazin. Os episódios vão ao ar no Spotify, YouTube e no site do TMDQA!. Link RECOMENDAÇÃO NACIONAL: 15 - E a nossa recomendação nacional dessa semana, vai pra um podcast que desafia os estereótipos e amplia os horizontes no mundo das viagens: é o Viajante Sem Pauta, apresentado pelo nosso amigo e colega Cainã Ito. O programa, que já tem 5 anos de existência e mais de 100 episódios, leva o ouvinte pelos quatro cantos do mundo sem sair do lugar, falando sobre todo tipo de tema que surge na cabeça de um viajante que tá indo pela viagem, e não por pauta. Publicado a cada 15 dias mais ou menos, alguns dos temas que já foram falados no podcast foram: jornadas fotográficas, destinos seguros pra LGBT's, cortes de cabelo quando não se tem um barbeiro fixo, e muito mais. O podcast também tem um clube do livro e um grupo exclusivo com vários benefícios pros ouvintes mais engajados, que fazem o próprio projeto ser uma grande viagem. E vale dizer aqui, ele tá concorrendo ao Prêmio MPB na categoria "Viagem e Lazer". Então, se você ouvir e gostar, vale acessar o site da premiação e deixar o seu voto pra ajudar o Cainã. O Viajante Sem Pauta está disponível em todas as principais plataformas de podcast, então não deixa de conferir e de assinar no seu agregador favorito. Link E assim a gente fecha esta vigésima quinta edição do Pod Notícias. Acesse podnoticias.com.br para ter acesso à íntegra das notícias com todas as fontes e a transcrição completa do episódio, além dos artigos dos nossos colunistas e todos os links relacionados. Acompanhe o Pod Notícias diariamente:- Canal público do Telegram- Instagram- Page do Linkedin Ouça o Pod Notícias nos principais agregadores:- Spotify- Apple Podcasts- Deezer- Amazon Music- PocketCasts O Pod Notícias é uma produção original da Rádiofobia Podcast e Multimídia e publicado pela Rádiofobia Podcast Network, e conta com as colaborações de:- Camila Nogueira - arte- Eduardo Sierra - edição- Lana Távora - pesquisa, pauta e redação final- Leo Lopes - direção geral e apresentação- Thiago Miro - pesquisa- Carlinhos Vilaronga - coluna "O Podcast no Japão" Publicidade:Entre em contato e saiba como anunciar sua marca, produto ou serviço no Pod Notícias.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Recently a new Yazidi association has been founded in Coffs Harbour, its committee members are from all regions that the Yazidi community has been resettled in such as Armidale, Coffs Harbour, Wagga Wagga and Toowoomba. - Sami Şîbo mirovekî Êzîdî ye ku di sala 2018 de wek penaber hat Australia. Cerku hatiye Australya ew di gelek waran de (mecalan) kar kirîye ku yek ji wan alîkariya penaberên ku nûh tên Australya ye. Lê di van çar mehên dawîn ew û hin kesên ji civaka Êzîdî li Australya bi damezrandina maleke Êzîdiyan de mijûl bû. Armanc ji damezrandina komeleyê ew e ku mîrata çandî, erf û adetên civaka Êzîdî li Australya biparêzin, her weha piştgirî û parêzvanî li ser navê kes û malbatên Êzîdî bikin. berêz Şîbo nuha serkê Mala Êzîdiyan li Australya ye.
Serokwezîrê Herêma Kurdistanê Mesrûr Barzanî projeyek ji bo dabînkirina alîkariya aborî ji bo 3000 keç û jinên Êzîdî ragihand. Her weha di naveroka rapora Ehmed Xefûr ji Hewlêrê behs li ser gilîyên bi hezaran kes sebaret bi tundûtûjiya nav malê li Herêma Kurdistanê dibe.
Daga cikin Labarun da shirin ya waiwaya a wannan mako akwai matakin mahukuntan sojin Jamhuriyar Nijar na cirewa hamabararren shugaban ƙasar Bazoum Muhd rigar kariyar, abinda ya bude kofar samun damar gurfanar da shi gaban kotu.A Najeriya kuwa Shugaba Bola Ahmed Tinubu ya ce zai ci gaba da yi wa tattalin arzikin ƙasar garambawul duk kuwa da yadda hakan ke ta'azzara wahlhalun da al'ummar kasar ke sha. Sai Kuma Senegal inda shugaban kasar Basirou Diomaye Faye ya sassauta farashin kayayyakin masarufi don saukaka wa jama'a tsadar rayuwar da suke ciki.Majalisar Ɗinkin Duniya ta sanar da ƙaruwar mutanen da rikici ke tilastawa barin matsugunansu a sassan duniya, adadin da zuwa yanzu ya kai mutum miliyan 120.
After 12 years in the NHL and 11 with the Anaheim Ducks, forward Jakob Silfverberg is officially retiring from the NHL. Silfvy joined Alexis Downie in the Kariya studio to reminisce on his career, including memories from the 2015 and 2017 Ducks playoff runs, playing alongside Andrew Cogliano and Ryan Kesler and how he got so good at the shootout. Silfvy also shares his excitement in returning to Sweden to play for Brynäs IF, his hometown team, and what it was like raising his family here in SoCal.
Emer and professional skateboarder and OC legend Billy Marks follow-up their epic Ducks skate session with a sit down in Kariya studio where the SoCal kids talk parenting, career in skateboarding and a lifelong love for the Anaheim Ducks.
Miss Wagga Wagga Quest and the Rotary Club of Wagga Wagga Sunrise are two separate charities, but they have much in common by helping the community through their generous work and volunteering in the wider community. - Miss Wagga Wagga Quest û Rotary Club of Wagga Wagga Sunrise du xêrxwaziyên cihêreng in, lê di alîkariya civatê de bi xebata xwe ya dilxwaz û dilxwazî de de pir hevpar in.
It's the 30th anniversary season and no better way to get after it then getting a live tattoo in the Kariya studio! Local artist, tattooer and great friend of the Ducks, Gustavo Jaimes, gives Emer some fresh ink while they discuss all the fun Gus has been part of with the organization this season and beyond (0:34). Later, Emer talks about recent events that make him happy... Hint: it's seeing the Kings lose (7:39). Later, we breakdown fan messages (23:00), his first and maybe worst tattoo (31:35), and a chirp for an old friend with some BAD ink (35:35). Finally, Emer wraps up the show with an explanation on his choice of tattoo (39:50) and what Gus is looking forward to with this Ducks team!
There's a shortage of rheumatologists in Australia. And patients are saying they wish they had more readily available support on how to manage the condition to improve their quality of life. A new resource is hoping to empower patients and care givers on how to better manage the disease. - Li Australya kêmasiya pisporên romatîzmê heye. Nexweş dibêjin ew dixwazin piştgirîyeke bi hêsanî peyda bikin ka mirov çawa rewşê birêvedibe da ku kalîteya jiyana xwe baştir bike. Çavkaniyeke nû hêvî dike ku nexweş û lênerînvanan hêzdar bike ka mirov çawa nexweşiyê baştir birêve bibe.
I Want to Hold Aono-kun so Badly I Could Die on Umi Shiinan kauhua, romantiikkaa, mysteerinratkaisua ja huumoria yhdistelevä kummitustarina, jossa päähenkilön poikaystävä kuoltuaan palaatakaisin haamuna. Ajankohtaisina aiheina puhumme siitä, miten Crunchyroll sulkee mangapalvelunsa kymmenen vuoden jälkeen, Petterin vierailusta Ylen Kulttuuriykkösen Ghibli-jaksossa sekä siitä, miten Japanin uusi verolaki vaikuttaa manga- ja animealan työntekijöihin. Lukujonossa aloitamme lopultakin Natsumi Andon wagashi-teemaisen murhamysteerin Something's Wrong With Us ja luemme Ogeretsu Tanakan Happy of the Endin kakkospokkarin. --- Kommentoi | Bluesky | Mastodon | X | Instagram --- (01:17) – KUULUMISET: PETTERI KÄVI JAPANISSA - Tokyo Banana - Jakso 9, jossa puhuimme British Museumin manganäyttelystä - Petterin ruoka- ja hintaketju Mastodonissa, X:ssä ja Blueskyssä (07:45) – AONO-KUN: ESITTELY - I Want to Hold Aono-kun so Badly I Could Die - Afternoon-lehti (14:16) – AONO-KUN: SARJA YLEISESTI - Paha Aono näyttäytyy Horielle ovikamerassa Kariyana (kuva) - Seksuaalisuus on isossa osassa (kuva) - "Päästä minut sisään" (kuva) - Säännöt ovat tärkeitä kummitustarinoissa (kuva) - Unet ovat epämääräisen ahdistavia (kuva) - Näitä sanoja et saa koskaan sanoa (kuva) - Koomista ilmeilyä (kuva) (26:28) – AONO-KUN: YUURI KARIYA JA RYUUHEI AONO - Romanssi normaalin Aonon kanssa on suloinen… - Salainen suudelma (kuva) - Aono ei pysty riisumaan vaatteitaan (kuva) - Sähkötolppahali (kuva) - …mutta pahan Aonon obsessiivisuus ja pyrkimys alistaa ja hyväksikäyttää on sen kanssa ikävässä kontrastissa (kuva) - Kariya kasvattaa selkärankaa (kuva) - Kariya oppii neuvottelemaan pahan Aonon kanssa, joka loppujen lopuksi on pakkomielteinen Kariyasta (kuva) - Kariya vaatii kaikki suudelmat takaisin (kuva) - Kariya ja Aono varsinaisesti vasta tutustuvat sen jälkeen, kun Aono on jo kuollut (kuva) - Aono (jota Fujimoto ei tässä näe, vaan he keskustelevat kännykän avulla) kokee ristiriitaisia tunteita, kun toisaalta haluaisi Kariyan siirtyvän eteenpäin elämässä, mutta toisaalta kaipaa Kariyaa (kuva) - Aono (Kariyan kehossa) kertoo Fujimotolle, miten koki syyllisyyttä siitä miten Kariya tykkäsi hänestä (kuva) (42:12) – AONO-KUN: FUJIMOTO JA HORIE - Fujimoto on söpö äksy poika (kuva) - Et voi pussailla tyttöjä kehossani, etkä varsinkaan asettaa kättäsi tissin alle! (Aono on Kariyan kehossa) (kuva) - Horie on kauhuleffaharrastaja (kuva) (53:11) – AONO-KUN: TAIDE JA KERRONTA - Häät hautausmaalla (kuva) - Suudelma akvaariossa (kuva) - Eteisen kukkakimppu lisääntyy ja valtaa koko asunnon (kuva) - Riivauksesta vapautumisen hämmennys (kuva) - Land of the Lustrous - Beastars, josta puhuimme jaksossa 13 (01:03:03) – AONO-KUN: KANNET - Sarjan kannet (01:07:41) – AONO-KUN: JULKAISU - Ihan hauska käännös (Aono on Fujimoton kehossa) (kuva) (01:09:30) – AONO-KUN: SPOILERIOSIO - Toisen suojeleminen tälle valehtelemalla on oikeastaan vain itsensä suojelua (kuva) - Jakso 91, jossa puhuimme sarjasta The Girl from the Other Side - Neitsyitä uhrilahjoiksi (kuva) - X-viilto (Aono on Fujimoton kehossa) (kuva) - Skitso isosisko ja välinpitämättömät vanhemmat (kuva) - Aono kommentoi asiaa (kuva) - Takauma menneisyydestä: miksi on nöyryyttävää olla se jota lyödään? (kuva) - Aonon äidillä oli rankkaa (kuva) - Käskikö äiti? (kuva) - Dinosaurus (kuva) - The Song of Saya - Yotsukubi-saman rituaali (kuva) (01:39:24) – AONO-KUN: YHTEENVETO - Higurashi: When They Cry - Pan's Labyrinth - Jakso 31, jossa puhuimme Kasanesta - Afternoon-lehti (01:44:16) – CRUNCHYROLL SULKEE DIGIMANGAPALVELUNSA - Crunchyrollin tiedote mangapalvelun sulkemisesta - Lista sarjoista, jotka palvelussa vielä on - Jakso 41, jossa puhuimme Crunchyroll Mangan HTML5-version päällekääntämisestä - Jakso 52, jossa puhuimme mangapalvelu Azukin perustamisesta - Crunchyrollin uutinen mangapalvelun avaamisesta vuodelta 2013: alun perin mangapalvelu sisältyi hintaan vain kalliimman tilauksen ostaneille - Lucifer and the Biscuit Hammer - Sun-Ken Rock - Spirit Circle - Scum's Wish - Investor Z - Girl May Kill - Joshi Kausei - Inside Mari - Insufficient Direction - Memoirs of Amorous Gentlemen - Kodansha veti sarjansa muista palveluista ja perusti oman palvelunsa - Crunchyrollin uusi mobiilipelitarjooma - Animenstriimauspalvelun striimiboksipalveluitakin on päivitetty tänä kesänä (01:52:18) – YLEN KULTTUURIYKKÖNEN JA GHIBLI - Ylen Kulttuuriykkönen 8.11.2023: Maailman tunnetuin animaattori Hayao Miyazaki sekä Studio Ghiblin uutuusleffa Poika ja haikara - Pekka Lehtosaari - Myy Lohi - Maaretin vierailu Kulttuuriykkösessä 13.7.2023, josta puhuimme Mangakartan jaksossa 87 - Afureko-blogin Äänijälki-podcast - Mamoru Hosoda - Hiromasa Yonebayashi - Petterin uutinen Ghiblin tuotannon sulkemisesta Anime-lehdessä 6/2013 (kuva) - Petterin uutinen Ghiblin tuotannon jatkumisesta Anime-lehdessä 4/2017 (kuva) - Petterin jatkoartikkeli Ghiblin tuotannon jatkumisesta Anime-lehdessä 7/2017 (kuva) - Tuottaja Toshio Suzukilla on alkanut mennä firman rahat ja omat rahat sekaisin - NTV osti Studio Ghiblin ja teki siitä tytäryhtiönsä syyskuussa 2023 - Poika ja haikara (01:59:46) – JAPANIN VEROUUDISTUS - Fullfrontal.moen informatiivinen Twitter-ketju verouudistuksesta - Unseen Japan: Will Voice Actors Quit Over Japan's New Tax Law? - The Japan Times: Freelancers aren't happy with Japan's new invoice system - The Mainichi: 27% of voice actors in Japan may quit due to 'hellish choice' with new invoice system - Ääninäyttelijöiden etujärjestö Voictionin englanniksi tekstitetty animaatiovideo verouudistuksesta (YouTube) (02:08:38) – HAMPAANKOLOSSA: EISNER JA HARVEY 2023 - Jakso 75, jossa puhuimme vuoden 2022 Eisner- ja Harvey- palkinnoista - ANN: Chainsaw Man Manga Wins Best Manga Harvey Award for 3rd Straight Year - ANN: Hayao Miyazaki's Shuna's Journey Wins Eisner Award - ANN: The Will Eisner Comic Industry Awards: A Spotlight on Quality or A Sticker for Sales? (02:14:02) – HAMPAANKOLOSSA: MANGA PLUS MAX - Jakso 91, jossa puhuimme Manga Plus -palvelun uudesta kuukausimaksullisesta tilausmallista - Henri Björnin kommentti X:ssä (ent. Twitter) (02:14:37) – KUULIJAKOMMENTTI: VANITAKSEN KIRJA JA VAMPIIRIT - Jakso 90, jossa puhuimme siitä, miten Vanitaksen kirja -mangan suomennoksessa käytetään sanaa “vampiiri” - Antti Valkaman kommentti X:ssä (ent. Twitter) - Jakso 47, jossa puhuimme sarjasta Black Rose Alice, jossa vampyyrit ovat “verta imeviä puita” (吸血樹, kyuuketsuki) eivätkä “verta imeviä hirviöitä” (吸血鬼, kyuuketsuki) kuten tavallista (02:18:13) – KUULIJAKOMMENTTI: DEVILMAN JA EPÄSOVINNAISUUS - Jakso 89, jossa puhuimme Devilmanista - Jarmon kommentti Mastodonissa - Geekkicastin sarjissilmäys Devilmanista (YouTube) - Jakso 77, jossa puhuimme Chainsaw Manista (02:20:43) – KUULIJAKOMMENTTI: COMICS CODE - Äänijälki-pocastin Cillan kommentti X:ssä (ent. Twitter) - Comics Code Authority - Seduction of the Innocent (02:24:07) – KUULIJAKOMMENTTI: THE GUY SHE WAS INTERESTED IN WASN'T A GUY AT ALL - Jakso 91, jossa puhuimme sarjasta The Guy She Was Interested in Wasn't a Guy at All - Vampirenaomin kommentti X:ssä (ent. Twitter) (02:24:44) – LUKUJONOSSA: SOMETHING'S WRONG WITH US - Something's Wrong With Us - Natsumi Ando - Kitchen Princess - Valssin aika, josta puhuimme jaksossa 58 - Be-Love-lehden lukijakunta on varsin vanhaa - Wagashit, perinteiset japanilaiset makeiset - Seirou Opera, josta puhuimme jaksossa 7 (02:39:21) – LUKUJONOSSA: HAPPY OF THE END 2 - Happy of the End - Jakso 88, jossa puhuimme Ogeretsu Tanakan tuotannosta ja sarjan ykköspokkarista - Sarjan kolmannen ja viimeisen pokkarin kansi (02:50:51) – LOPETUS - Podcast Addict - Pocket Casts
Anaheim Ducks legends, Paul Kariya, Teemu Selanne and Guy Hebert visit the Kariya studio to relive their Mighty memories with host Kent French. The trio discuss the Disney days, Stu Grimson warmup slappers, Teemu's love for eating and much more!
Anaheim Ducks head coach Greg Cronin joined Alexis Downie in the Kariya studio for the first time to share an in-depth look at his life journey. From growing up in a working class family in Boston, to traveling to a sheep farm in New Zealand and now bringing 36 years of coaching experience to Anaheim. Cronin opens up about the obstacles and challenges he's faced while shedding light on the lessons he's carried with him in each chapter of life.
If you're out travelling or exploring in Australia and encounter injured or ill wildlife, knowing how best to help will ensure the animals get the required care. - Eger hûn li Australya geştê dikin e û rastî lawirên kovî yên birîndar yan jî nixweş dibin, zanebûna ka dê baştirîn alîkarîya ji bo lawir were pêşkêş girînge.
Kanav started at Jump Trading Group as an intern helping build the early trading platform for the group's crypto efforts in 2016. After Kanav was hired full-time, he worked as a quantitative researcher/developer and then as director of strategic initiatives and digital assets. We talk about his upbringing in India, what kinds of Legos he had as a kid, and his early love of video games.This episode originally aired in January 2023.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Ek Bagecha Payd Ghan Kariya, ਏਕੁ ਬਗੀਚਾ ਪੇਡ ਘਨ ਕਰਿਆ (Sri Guru Granth Sahib Page 385 Sabad 1005)
Hello my dear friends and welcome to another edition of the Club Room. I'm happy that you're with me! We're gonna have these great artists on the show for today: Kariya, Toto Chiavetta, Eddie Fowlkes, Diego Infnazon in a Dense & Pika Mix, Eats Everything in a Mark Broom Remix, Long Island Sound in a […] Subscribe to listen to Techno music, Tech House music, Deep House, Acid Techno, and Minimal Techno for FREE.
Hello my dear friends and welcome to another edition of the Club Room. I'm happy that you're with me! We're gonna have these great artists on the show for today: Kariya, Toto Chiavetta, Eddie Fowlkes, Diego Infnazon in a Dense & Pika Mix, Eats Everything in a Mark Broom Remix, Long Island Sound in a Cromby Mix, Bizarre Inc in an Al Scott Remix, Ackermann, Marco Faraone & Flug, Inner City and Carlotta & Calussa. Enjoy and bye bye meine Lieben! Tracklist Kariya / Let Me Love you for Tonight Toto Chiavetta / Homme Libre Eddie Fowlkes / Forever Diego Infazon / Thank you for my Children (Dense & Pika Mix) Eats Everything / Pump (Mark Broom Remix) Long Island Sound / Power (Cromby Mix) Bizarre Inc / Playing With Knives (Al Scott Remix) Ackermann / Dat Bang Shit - Jackin Trax - Don Rimini - Detroit Version Marco Faraone & Flug / Dirty Funk Inner City / Big Fun Carlota & Calussa / Fell N Luv
Accidents and sudden illness can strike anywhere. First aid training can make all the difference, from treating an injury at a critical time to saving a life. In Australia, there are various options for first aid training according to your needs and budget. - Pir kes qet ne li bendê ne ku bersivê bidin rewşeke awarte, heya ku mecbûr nebin. Dane nîşan didin ku hejmara kesên ku li Australya perwerdehiya alîkariya yekem wate first aid wergirtine ji bûyerên birînên ku bersiveke lezgîn hewce dike pir kêmtir e. Ji ber vê yekê, çêtirîn awa ji bo rahênana perwerdeyê çi ye?
Di raporta Ehmed Xefûr ji Hewlêrê de behs li ser alîkariya xelkê Herêma Kurdistanê bo mexdûrên erdhejîna li Sûriyê û Tirkiyê çêbûyî dibe. Kampînên ji bo berhevkirina betanîyan, xwarin û vexwarinê, cilûberg û pere hatin komkirin û alikarî gîhandin ew kesên hewcedar yên li Tirkiyê ù Sûriyê.
On the sixth of February, a strong earthquake struck northwestern Syria and Turkeye, killing thousands of people and destroying homes. Humanitarian aid from many countries reaches Turkeye, but unfortunately, very little aid reaches Syria, especially the Kurdish regions. The town of Jindires and the village of Shiyeh, which are close to Afrin, are damaged, and the town of Jindires is almost completely destroyed. Mihemed Hemkochar is from that region he tells us about the latest situation regarding getting humanitarian aid. - Di 6î Şubatê de erdhejîneke bi hêz li bakur-rojavayî Sûriyê û Tirkiyê xist, ku bi hezaran kes jiyana xwe ji dest dan, birîndar bûn û mal hilweşiyan. Alîkariya mirovî ji gelek welatan dighêje Tirkiyê lê mixabin pirr kêm alîkarî dighêje bakur-rojhilatî Sûriyê bi taybetî deverên Kurdan. Ziyaneke mezin gihîşt bajarokê Cindirêsê û gundiyê Şîyê ku nêzikî Efrînê ne, hema hema bajarok bi tevahî hiweşiya ye. Em derbarê ka çi alîkariya mirovî gihîştiye wî bajarokî bi berêz Mihemed Hemkoçer re biaxafin.
Since its beginnings as a skunkworks intern project in late 2015, Jump Crypto has developed a multifaceted crypto strategy that spans proprietary trading, venture investing, and infrastructure development. Although Jump had some exposure to FTX, the firm says it remains well capitalized. In this episode of The Scoop, Jump Crypto President Kanav Kariya reflects on lessons learned during 2022 and analyzes the current state of the industry's capital markets. According to Kariya, many crypto market participants struggled with proper collateral management over the course of last year: "The perceived maturity of a lot of the participants in the market was clearly way out of line with what the reality was — the quality of the collateral was astonishing across the board." Going forward, Kariya envisions deep-pocketed institutions from traditional finance entering the market instead of crypto-native startups. As he explains: "When it comes to institutional lending and prime brokerage, that feels like an opportunity for a much better capitalized player to step into the market at this point — it's not a startup opportunity in my mind." Disclaimer: Beginning in 2021, Michael McCaffrey, the former CEO and majority owner of The Block, took a series of loans from former FTX and Alameda founder Sam Bankman-Fried. McCaffrey resigned from the company in December 2022 after failing to disclose those transactions. This episode is brought to you by our sponsors Circle, Railgun, Flare Network, NordVPN About Circle Circle is a global financial technology company helping money move at internet speed. Our mission is to raise global economic prosperity through the frictionless exchange of value. Visit Circle.com to learn more. About Railgun RAILGUN is a private DeFi solution on Ethereum, BSC, Arbitrum, and Polygon. Shield any ERC-20 token and any NFT into a Private Balance and let RAILGUN's Zero-Knowledge cryptography encrypt your address, balance, and transaction history. You can also bring privacy to your project with RAILGUN SDK and be sure to check out RAILGUN with partner project Railway Wallet, also available on iOS and Android. Visit Railgun.org to find out more. About Flare Flare is an EVM-based Layer 1 blockchain designed to allow developers to build applications that can use data from other blockchains and the internet. By providing decentralized access to a wide variety of high integrity data from other blockchains and the internet, Flare enables new use cases and monetisation models. Build better and connect everything at Flare.Network About NordVPN NordVPN is essential for keeping crypto transactions secure, hiding your IP address and protecting your devices from hackers and data theft. Get premium cyber-security on up to 6 devices for the price of a cup of coffee a month. Get your exclusive NordVPN Deal and try it risk-free now with a 30-day money-back guarantee: Visit https://nordvpn.com/thescoop
Kanav started at Jump Trading Group as an intern helping build the early trading platform for the group's crypto efforts in 2016. After Kanav was hired full-time, he worked as a quantitative researcher/developer and then as director of strategic initiatives and digital assets. We talk about his upbringing in India, what kinds of Legos he had as a kid, and his early love of video games. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Alcohol plays a central role in many people's social lives in Australia. But people with alcohol use disorders drink to excess, endangering both themselves and possibly others. We'll explore how to identify if a loved one has developed alcohol dependence and how to help them. - Alkehol di jiyana civakî ya gelek kesan de li Australya roleke bingehîn dilîze. Lê kesên alkeholê zêde bi kar tînin, hem xwe û hem jî yên din dikin rewşeke metirsiyê. Em ê binêrin ka hezkiriyên we çawa tûşî vexwarina alkehola zêde dibin û çawa alîkariya wan bikin.
NHL Hall of Famers, Teemu Selänne and Paul Kariya, join broadcaster Kent French in the first edition of From Mighty 'Til now. Selänne and Kariya share some of their favorite stories as they look back on their playing career and discuss their unbreakable friendship.
The FTX Podcast - Builders and Innovators in the Cryptocurrency Industry
Welcome to episode 115 of the FTX Podcast with special guests Hendrik Hofstadt & Kanav Kariya with your host Tristan Yver!Kanav is President of Jump Crypto, the crypto arm of Jump Trading Group; home to builders, partners and traders working towards the next frontier in crypto infrastructure.Hendrik co-founded and served as CEO for Certus One, a blockchain infrastructure company, which was acquired by Jump Crypto in 2021. Certus One is the premier validator for distributed ledger technology (DLT). Hendrik currently serves as a Director of the Wormhole Foundation; with a mission to bridge communication between different public blockchains utilizing the Wormhole protocol. Thank you Hendrick & Kanav for your time, energy and insight!
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese has announced one-off disaster payments for eligible New South Wales residents affected by the latest floods disaster. Affected residents will be able to receive the emergency payments immediately. - Serokwezîr Anthony Albanese ji bo niştecîhên New South Wales yên bijarte ku ji karesata liheya vê dawiyê bandor li wan bûye, diravdayîna bo carekê hat ragihand. Niştecîhên bandordar ji roja Pêncşemê 7 Tîrmehê de dikarin dravan werbigirin.
Bi hatina Hefteya Penaberan em bi Sorgul Miho re derbarê ku ew ji alîyê Encûmena Penaberan ya Australya de bû ye Balyoza Encûmenê ye diaxafin. Sorgul di Tîrmeha sala 2018an de bi malbata xwe re di bin vîzeya mirovahî ya penaberiyê de hat Australya. Ew û malbata xwe spasdarên hukumeta Australya ne ku nuha li Toowoomba Queensland niştecêbûne.
The New South Wales Government has announced a $28 million funding boost for the state's multicultural communities. The money is to pay for initiatives including language and translation services, festivals and cultural events, and also the establishment of a new Religious Communities Advisory Council. The Government says the package is in response to the critical role multicultural and faith communities have played during the COVID-19 pandemic. - Hukumeta New South Wales ji bo civakên pirçand e li wîlayetê $28 million zêdekirina aborî ragihand. Pere ji bo destpêşxeriyên ku di nav wan de xizmetên ziman û wergerê, festîval û bûyerên çandî, û herweha avakirina Encumena Şêwirmendiya Civakên Olî ya nû tê dayîn. Hukumet dibêje alîkarî bersivek e li ser rola girîng ya civakên pirçand û olî ku di dema pandemiya COVID-19 de lîstine.
-- . Nûçeyên giring yên Swêdê. îro 10.06.2022 ji vê podkasta beê kurdî yê Radyoya Swêdê. Derhîner: Nishtman IrandoustPêkêkar: Sidki Hirorî
The FTX Podcast - Builders and Innovators in the Cryptocurrency Industry
Welcome to episode 110 of the FTX Podcast: Bahamas edition with special guest Kanav Kariya and your host Tristan Yver! Jump Crypto is the crypto arm of the Jump Trading Group. They are builders, partners and traders working towards the next frontier in crypto infrastructure to help shape the future of the industry. Thank you for your time, energy & insight Kanav!
Kanav Kariya (President, Jump Crypto) joins the Solana Podcast to discuss his optimism for the future and the many areas in which Jump Crypto is innovating in the crypto and blockchain space. Austin Federa (Head of Communications, Solana Labs) guest hosts. 00:49 - What is Jump?03:07 - The path to operationalizing crypto06:00 - Optimism for Crypto10:49 - Discovering and Building in Crypto with Jump14:24 - Personal Journey at Jump16:43 - What's being built at Jump?17:55 - Reasons to want to build19:39 - What does Pyth offer?22:22 - Criticism about conflict of interest26:30 - How Web 3.0 facilitates resource coordination28:46 - Data contributors benefiting from onchain data31:01 - Token Plans for Pyth31:46 - Message bridging34:48 - Wormhole, stable coins and asset tokens37:36 - Time synchronization for cross-chain dApps39:14 - State storage on wormhole for dApps40:21 - Is Wormhole layer 0?41:14 - Wrapped NFTs44:13 - Jump's position towards NFTs48:36 - Exciting things in the ecosystem49:43 - Custom silicon / FPGAs53:22 - A parallel execution model? DISCLAIMERThe content herein is provided for educational, informational, and entertainment purposes only, without any express or implied warranty of any kind, including warranties of accuracy, completeness, or fitness for any particular purpose. Those who appear in the content may have a financial interest in any projects referenced, and any content herein is not intended to be and does not constitute financial advice, investment advice, trading advice, or any other advice. This content is intended to be general in nature and is not specific to you, the user or anyone else. You should not make any decision, financial, investment, trading or otherwise, based on any of the information presented without undertaking independent due diligence and consultation with a professional advisor. Austin (00:10):Welcome to another episode of The Solana Podcast. I am Austin Federa, sitting in for Anatoly again this week. Today we've got a pretty special episode I think. I'm really looking forward to this conversation. I think it's been a long time coming with a few false starts. Today we have Kanav Kariya president of Jump Crypto, or do we just say Jump at this point?Kanav (00:32):Yeah, Jump Crypto is good.Austin (00:34):President of Jump Crypto, which maybe this time last year very few people knew existed, very few people knew what you guys were doing, what you were building, what your role in the ecosystem has been. So yeah, I guess let's just go ahead and Jump right into it. What is Jump Crypto and how did it come about?Kanav (00:51):Yeah, thanks for having me on Austin. So for context for the audience that aren't very familiar with us, Jump is historically a prop trading firm founded over 20 years ago in the pits at the CME. Today one of the largest quantitative trading firms in the world. And we started a crypto division over seven years ago. It started as an intern project at the University of Illinois, where we were running a miner in a closet and building some trading infrastructure.And today we've got over 150 people on the crypto team doing a lot of different things. So the way I like to describe our business is spitting it into three primary pillars. One is prop trading, which is exactly what we do on the other side of the house, we build trading intelligence and we scale it. The second piece is building and that's the piece that I hope we'll get to talk a lot more about on this call and it's closest to my heart and closest to the heart of the team.And that's in building pieces of infrastructure, really streets and sanitation for the space and a couple of the marquee projects that we've really focused a lot of our efforts on have been Wormhole and Pyth. And of course, along the journey, we've aligned ourselves with a lot of the major ecosystems in the place, including Solana, Terra and a whole number of others in building a lot of different things across those platforms.The third bucket is venture, I like to call ourselves accidental VCs in that we found opportunities to add value, or we had requests come in to work with partners over the last six years in various different capacities. And we found that we could be meaningful in those contexts and work with people that were solving problems for us. And that has now grown into the venture division that's deploying across the space.Austin (02:31):I want to get into a lot of the work that Jump is doing as core code contributors and supporters of projects in the ecosystem. But I kind of want to start a little bit with that journey. I would say that the transition from prop trading equities and commodities to prop trading crypto, that feels pretty organic. And there's a number of firms in the space that have also made that transition. Albeit you guys seem to have made it sooner than a lot of other firms in the industry. What was that process like of going from deciding that you wanted to add crypto to actually operationalizing that? And then we'll get into some of the journey to actually becoming builders.Kanav (03:07):The project started as an intern project at this thing called Jump Labs. There was a research lab at the University of Illinois and was meant to work on cool stuff with the university on working on fun problems. So alongside the crypto stuff we were doing when I was an intern, there was a VR project working with professors at the university to abstract away trading screens. And there was work on some interesting machine learning and networking problems.And the group has grown out of that. And of course matured out of these things, but we've definitely strongly retained that ethos. Now I want to caveat this by saying we definitely didn't have oppressions in being infrastructure builders. When we started the project in the lab that many years ago. It's been a very organic and natural process for us. And it's hard to make the instant leap from prop trading to what we're doing today, but it's easy to reason through the steps along the way.As one of the earliest large trading firms in the space, we had a lot of requests from institutional liquidity exchanges, OTC platforms, and importantly projects that were looking to solve trading and liquidity related problems. And those conversations gave way to us exploring a lot of DeFi projects and a lot of L1 platform projects that shared a lot of the problems they were thinking through on complex financial system design or programming in resource consumer environments, which are very natural and germane to a quantitative trading firm. And those conversations led to jamming about foreign ideas to implementing governance proposals, to maybe starting to write a little bit of code in them. And then all the way into committing over 50, 70 engineers that we have today in building through the space. And that process involves a few different steps. One, it involves the willingness for the institution at large to be mentally long the space. It requires a recognition and frankly a little bit of a taste of the upside.It requires flexibility, which of course, prop trading firms just generally naturally just have to have. And then everything else you can just learn along the way, right? We've done a lot of things wrong. We've stumbled over ourselves a hundred times, but you've got to keep digging shots on asymmetric upside and with all the resources that we've had at the firm I think we've been able to make some good ones.Austin (05:20):Going back to you last year, Jump Crypto had sort of a moment where it decided it wanted to make itself public. You wrote a blog post that was laying out. I wouldn't quite call it a thesis, but laying out an idea of how you view the space and the role that something like Jump could play within it. One of the things I was struck by going back and rereading this is your level of optimism in this post, right? Which is something that you don't see from many financial trading firms. You see them seeing opportunities to make lots of money. You see them making lots of money. They're very profitable endeavors, but you usually don't see optimism contained within it. Where'd that come from?Kanav (06:01):That's a pretty good question. So quant firms today are basically research and development firms, right? So the people that build trading systems, that build the intelligence behind trading systems are generally of quantitative background. They generally have PhDs in either statistics, machine learning, physics, those kinds of endeavors. And the people building the platforms are low latency high performance systems engineers that there are different optimizations across every level of the stack to build robust, scalable, fast infrastructure.The environment down to the lab five years ago was about exploring this space. It was like, what does this space mean? Right. And it wasn't about, okay, how are we going to make X billion dollars kind of getting into this endeavor? It was about exploring it. And I think it attracted that kind of people and it occurred that kind of environment.And the leadership that stays since then has kind of embodied that. And just personally I'm a raging optimist, I believe in technology, I believe in the future, I believe in building towards something bigger. And thankfully I think the firm has shared those ideas and I hope I've been able to shape a lot of the culture and behaving that passion.Austin (07:10):Where do you think that optimism in yourself comes from? There's a lot of things you could have gone into coming out of school. What about both, something, an organization like Jump, which is undoubtedly a great place to go work. But you stay there for a while now, you've worked your way up, you're now in charge of the crypto division. Where does that sense of optimism in you come from and what makes Jump the right place for that?Kanav (07:33):I feel something for Jump because they had a cool internship program and they had a lab on site and they were working on really fun problems in a well resourced environment, that just made it fun and attractive. And after I had the opportunity to intern there for eight to 10 months, I kind of got a sense for the possibilities that existed. And this is the flexibility that the whole space had. And it was like, you come in, you get to make a lot of bets, you get a lot of resources. And if you make good bets, you get more resources and then you get more resources. This is the only place I've ever worked. I think it would be rather unique to have that kind setup. And again, no, I wouldn't say it was a passion moment to come in to Jump and know that I would be able to build suites and sanitation for crypto. But I knew I would get to do a lot of really cool stuff, work on fun problems with smart people. And where does optimism come from?Austin (08:25):Yeah. I mean, you look at a space like this. It's been through boom and bust. There's tons of amazing projects being built in the space that end up going nowhere. And especially from the vantage point of a trading firm, right? One of the secret sauce of a trading firm is it can make money in an up marketing, it can make money in a down market, right. And that is the advantage of a professional trading operation versus a more passive trading operation. But again, like those are not usually characteristics that breed optimism. Those are usually characteristics that bleed margins, where you're optimizing 1%, 2%, 3% here. So you can compound that over a year and it will make a marginal difference. But again, that's not usually an optimistic space, that's a very functional space to work in.Kanav (09:10):Yeah, it is. And traditionally I don't think it lends itself to naturally just exactly this. Jump culture has kind of always been a little bit unique. So Jump also has a number of other kind of divisions that work on non-high frequency trading stuff. Historically, since about 2011 or 2012, had a VBC arm called Jump Capital that invests in growing technologies in this space. They've had some cool endeavors in the biospace working on automation there in healthcare.And so the founders have generally been optimist. They definitely believe in the future. They've been able to take shots at things that are going on. And even if it's not naturally germane to the trading business in and of itself, the culture itself lends itself to being able to do something like this, which is a really awesome combination of knowing how to monetize, but then also knowing how to build. Yeah, it's been an absolute pleasure to be able to soak in from that environment.Austin (10:04):Let's look at the building for a bit. I think it's pretty open secret at this point that Jump are core contributors to Wormhole and Pyth, you've been very heavily involved in that process. Take me back to some of the early days there where you are internal to Jump, and you're saying like, "Hey, we need to do more than just trade and invest in this space. I think we can actually build." And especially you're talking about this from the perspective of sanitation and roads and the very base level infrastructure. Crypto's been around for a long time. I think most people coming into the space in that time horizon wouldn't have necessarily looked at and said like, "Oh, there's very base level features that are missing from this ecosystem." What was that both discovery process like, and then the process of convincing everyone internally that this was worth dedicating resources to?Kanav (10:50):Yeah, the discovery process was very organic. We had a lot of inbound from people looking to solve trading and liquidity problems because a lot of people in the space, even though we were quite kind of new of our trading presence, and as one of the early trading firms that really was trying to make bigger pushes in the space. When you get to talk to awesome founders every day about all the problems that they have and get to build relationships with them, you start to uncover a lot more of the problem space that exists, start to internalize a lot of it.And once you've got the opportunity to sit in that for a little bit, and I'm sure you see this today. We are much later on than we were when we made a lot of those big switches, but there's still a lot of opportunity, right? When we were kind of ideating on the origins of Pyth, the conversation we had was, look, our whole thesis at Jump Crypto is to be as long aligned with the space as possible, right? We're trying to get the maximum exposure we can on the space that we think is going to be explosive. And we're trying to ideate this ways which we put that quote unquote trade on, right? The best way to put a long trade on in a growing space, and the best mode to value capture is value creation. There's definitely a lot of inefficiencies created by hyper growth, right? And there's room to capture those inefficiencies. But those are small in magnitude relative to the absolute value creation at play.And then there's a value creation capture correlation that you think about there. So if you think about it in that lens and you know that you want to be big contributors to the space and just aim to create a lot of value to both, then you start thinking about what the opportunities are within your realm to be able to engage in that capacity.Austin (12:27):But at some point there's a meeting, or you have a boss who you report to, and you have to go down and sit down in front of him or her and say, "Hey, I want to spend a lot of money to hire a lot of engineers to do something that's going to be totally public and totally open source at a firm that historically likes to stay out of the news."Kanav (12:46):It was a few meetings.Austin (12:46):Yeah, I'm sure.Kanav (12:46):And it's kind of baby steps along the way, or big steps along the way that compound into a complete shift and a big switch of that nature. We had this summit, we called the August summit a few years ago. And we went down to an offsite location and we talked about what being in this space means for us and how we differentiate. And I remember we showed up with these sheets that we went around and distributed to people. We were like, this is the toolkit that we have. This is the opportunity set in the space.And everyone kind of had their own, things went on, but that was one of the approaches that I've taken. And if we believe this is where the space is going, this is the opportunity set that we can tackle. And these are the levels that we have to pull, right? And then you socialize that and you try to convince them people that there is opportunity to be had here and you get buy-in to take a first little step. And once you get the buy-in to take a first little step, and you kind of really show the big medics of differentiation in a native space, you get the buying for the next step.And then suddenly it's the entire [inaudible 00:13:47]. You get the whole kitchen sink thrown behind you, and then you are kind of propelling to this part that you want to be at. And that's the whole thesis of Jump everywhere. You take bets with asymmetric upside and we throw the kitchen sink at things that are working. And a lot of the stuff that we were doing started working.Austin (14:02):How is that journey for you personally, going from an intern involved in a few projects now to the Jump Crypto teams over a hundred at this point?Kanav (14:11):Yeah. We've got over 150 now, hard to keep track.Austin (14:14):Wow. Yeah. From a leadership role, and from your own perspective, how has that transition been? What parts of it were easier for you? What parts were harder than you were anticipating? Scaling yourself is often much harder than scaling a company.Kanav (14:28):Without a doubt, yeah. I started in the team as an intern like you pointed out, working on software problems. I came back to the team a year later in a formal full-time capacity, working on quant problems, which was to do with predicting crypto markets, building alpha and kind of scaling that piece. And the early conversations with projects where we were trying to solve liquidity problems was an area that I got really, really interested in. And I just kind of went about trying to build that a little bit further.Over time that led to a transition from engineering and quantitative work to more conversational business development work, just having spent years across all those functions and natively knowing how to live them has been the biggest tool that I've been able to build in the toolbox. Now that doesn't teach you how to manage a hundred people, that doesn't teach you how to propagate culture. It doesn't teach you how to scale hiring strategy. Doesn't teach you how to value the troops when things are low.I definitely want to make a claim that there are many who are close to a finished product, rather than trying to be good at everything, good at every one thing, we always try to be excellent at a few things. And then by force just propel everything forward. I'd say some of the biggest lessons I've learned, the biggest mistakes we've made, definitely been in the shape of trying to shove square bags in a round hole. Where in a trading environment it's like the only people you have on your team are engineers and quants. They're just smart people that can solve any shape of technical problem you throw them at. When you move that towards sales and marketing and product and everything else, that all kind of falls apart.Kanav (16:05):And you need people that are able to natively live within specific sub domains across those functions. And that's something that we've been trying to scale in. I spend basically all my time hiring and trying to focus on making sure our zero to one projects have a lot of momentum. But yeah, it's been an awesome journey. And of course I have support from a company that's grown to a 1500 people as the largest quant trading firm in the world and so lots of guidance and help along the way.Austin (16:33):Let's talk a little bit about that work you guys are doing and actually building. So if I understand correctly, the two projects that you are mostly core contributors to is Pyth and Wormhole. Is there anything else that you'd put into that category of engagement?Kanav (16:46):That's the highest level of engagement for sure. We do a lot of things across the big ecosystems of course. We can talk all of what we're doing with Solana. We're always trying to get deeper. We built an NFD project on the Metaplex landscape after their investment as an intern project. That was a real fun one. We've been core contributors to some of the projects that are coming out on the data landscape today. We've worked on a lot of the mechanism design that goes on, on the other one. And there's a few other projects, but the highest levels of engagement have definitely been with Wormhole and Pyth.Austin (17:18):Looking at over that landscape, Pyth high frequency Oracle. But again, Oracles, they've existed for a long time. There's a number of name brand ones that got their start on the ecosystem in the 2017 range. Lots of people have had ideas about Oracles over the years, some of them have worked, some of them haven't. Similar to Wormhole, bridges have existed for a long time. Bridges are actually the basis of how any L2 works, right? Both of these are hardly new ideas I would say. What about looking at the landscape gave you guys the confidence to say, not only there's a need for something different, but we can help build something different and better.Kanav (17:57):Again, just like 100% organic. In that August summit, we were looking at some of the biggest things we could do. And a big problem that everyone kind of kept voicing to us is that they don't have access to equities data. They don't have access to fast data so that they don't have to have things like clawback mechanisms and all these different things that LPs don't get direct on every turn, right?The fundamental thing with financial oracles is that they're used to settle risk transfer. They're used to set a price at which two parties exchange value. And if that price is latent or slow or not accurate, one side gets left folding the bag. Now, DeFi, the way protocols are constructed, the side that gets left holding the bag is either the LP that's contributing to the protocol or the protocol stakers or a key stakeholder in building the ecosystem.And the takers are able to take all that value. If you are going to build something that's going to house all of OTC, if we're building something like synthetics for example, and your protocol stakers are taking the other side of every trade that happens on S-Oil or SSNP, you need to make sure that's the right price. Otherwise you're just going to get up the way down to zero. When we were ideating on what the biggest ways we could contribute is let's contribute our data. And the first idea was in let's start, let's go and figure out how we bring together a network of people to build an Oracle.It was how do we contribute our data, right? And we browsed through the category of solutions. We had all the conversations. We spoke to dozens of investors and builders in the space. And there wasn't an easy way to slot in high fidelity financial data, into existing Oracle solutions. And so we spoke with some of the founding partners of the Pyth program and came to consensus that there was an opportunity here. And that led to the first step and we just kept building sets.Austin (19:39):In your mind, what is it that Pyth offers that other Oracle solutions don't offer?Kanav (19:46):Pyth is a very hyper specialized tool for high fidelity financial data, specifically financial data for settlement of risk transfer, right? If you think about the way the market data landscape looks today, it's different across asset classes, but there is a class of people that have access to high fidelity, streaming price data that they can legally distribute and make available to a protocol, create like an Oracle program.One you need access to very fast financial data, which is hard to get and even harder to have a legal right to distribute. You want to make sure that the people who are publishing the prices are the real owners of the data so that you can set incentives for the data to be accurate, right? If you are staking the value of a third party aggregator, their third party aggregator has no skin in the game. That's one of the other kind of fundamental things that you have to think about.And third, you need to acknowledge the fact that a price is not absolute. A price for Bitcoin has about 20 liquid trading venues that are distributed across the globe that can often be fractured, that can often have all kinds of different idiosyncrasies. And that being able to accurately determine the price on most relevant venues and build a dispersion is really important. If you think about kind of all those things together, you want very fast access. You want a broad range of access of independent sources, not reporting from the same source.You want very high liveness and uptime of course, and you want kind of good legal clarity that that price can continue to be distributed because you don't want the application to suddenly get turned off when the regulator says, "What's going on?" And those are the kind of key things that Pyth has really focused on very heavily to build that piece of infrastructure and Solana was the perfect opportunity. Before Solana there wasn't a way to create a high fidelity fast Oracle. There just wasn't a need for it and there wasn't a platform for it, right. And so all those things just came together.Austin (21:49):One of the criticisms that you'll hear about Pyth is that because of its structured model here, where the people providing data are permissioned at this point and are also like firms that are professionalized trading operations themselves, that there is an inherent kind of conflict of interest in that system. With any system in blockchain, you have to assume everyone is trying to cheat, everyone is trying to extract the most value possible. How have you gone about setting up incentives to make sure that the users of Pyth and the contributors to Pyth are not at odds with one another?Kanav (22:27):Yeah. I think you made a totally fine point there in that we are building for byzantine systems, right? And so that's the kind of incentive design you've got to keep in place. I'll frankly say I think that claim is a little bit ludicrous for a few different reasons. Once you peel back the onion just a little bit, and I'll talk through some of the reasons why.Austin (22:43):Let's peel back the onion.Kanav (22:44):One, you've got to first understand that the amount of value that can be created in actually pulling something like Pyth off successfully is dramatic. And the forms that are building this are now incentive aligned to make that happen. But two, this is an open sourced protocol, it is decentralized, and you can look at exactly what the inputs are, how they're being aggregated and what their resort in price output is.Three most importantly, there are about 50 financial firms that are submitting independent price data to this article to construct final outputs. And these financial trading firms aren't friendly with each other. This is the very first time that a group of highly adversarial trading firms, banks, exchanges, and ODC players across the entire space have come together and said, "Let's go build a piece of infrastructure." And one, I think that needs to be celebrated a lot, it's a huge win.But two, the trading firm, there are 50 global financial trading firms contributing their proprietary prices directly to Solana on the Pyth program today. We have realized that these 50 comprise of between 60% to 80% of global asset class volumes at this point, given the network of participants that have aggregated around this protocol. When you are that big of market share that you're covering that kind of breadth, the participants in the protocol themselves are on the other side of each other's trades almost by definition. And so who's manipulating the price against who? Let's kind of just start there.The system of incentives that set up in this taking protocol, you can read through this on the Pyth white paper has some really intelligent aggregation algorithms that put all this data together, that identify the quality of each of these independent data publishers that then sets out a mechanism to aggressively punish providers that don't have good prices. And good prices can mean I published a malicious bad price. It can mean I have slow prices. It can mean I published, I had a bug, it can mean anything.The incentive design mechanism is meant to reward data providers that are not honest, but that have great data. And that's a fundamental difference in how system designs, we're not kind of rewarding agreement, we're rewarding prediction. And so you are rewarded for correctly predicting the price that would come up rather than for rewarding agreement between parties, and which can both have different kind of models and can both work in different ways.But there is almost no possibility for one collusion across these landscapes, given the composition of the people in the network. And the incentive structure again is obviously explicitly set up to discourage that. Third, all these forms are heavily, heavily regulated. I spoke about 20 years of its reputation and a giant, giant business behind kind of making a lot of this happen. And we're definitely incentive aligned to make this thing as successful as it can possibly be.Austin (25:39):The Web 2.0 world and the rise of FinTech apps has largely taught people that organizations that claim to be on their side often aren't. There's very legitimate reasons from a market making perspective that during the game stock run up and squeeze, users of Robinhood and other FinTech applications, their trading was turned off. Now, there's a bunch of really good backroom reasons for why that might have happened. But the effect is what matters to the retail trader, which is that they were using a platform that they thought gave them equal access to a market, that platform did not provide them equal and neutral access to a market.I think when people look at something like Pyth, it wouldn't be crazy to say that, well, the same incentives that made us think that Robinhood was on our side, could also be applied to Pyth. What is different about the Web 3.0 space and the construction of something like Pyth in your view that makes that not something someone should worry about.Kanav (26:37):Web 3.0 is fundamentally any means of resource coordination, and it facilitates that by, one, facilitating the export of trust. And the export of trust is actually one of the big reasons why the whole Robinhood debacle went on, right. They basically ran out of margin requirements in order to continue to clear trades on one side, since it was so directional.And there is this massive web of intermediaries that set up all throughout traditional finance for the express purpose of establishing trust as the FCM, the DCM, the clearinghouse, all the other three letter acronyms. And all of them exist to make sure that when a match occurs on any platform that actually settles into a financial trade.In crypto the match is the execution. And that's facilitated by the fact that you can export all the trust of executing a piece of code onto Solana, onto Ethereum, onto the blockchain itself. And that's unlocked this completely new means of resource coordination, which makes things like Pyth possible. It means that you can explicitly lay out a system of incentives in a closed loop fashion. And regardless of who's uploading the code, or who's proposing designs or architecting any of this, everybody is independently participating according to the incentives laid out very plainly by the program itself.And that means DRW and Jane Street don't have to trust Jump when they decide to publish prices to pay. That means they look at the program that's running on Solana that they can read. They look at Solana's trust model and decided they can or don't trust Solana as a platform. And then contribute to the platform that then self executes and lives on its own terms. And the fact that we can allow different kinds of state to compose in a trustless fashion is the entire revolution Web 3.0, that's basically what the whole space has been building for the last 10 years. And that's what makes Pyth possible, it simply was not possible before.Austin (28:32):What does something like Jump or Jane Street or anyone who's a data contributor to Pyth, what do they get out of it? What is their incentive apart from any rewards that might be generated from contributing data. How are they then going back and using this on chain data in their own operations?Kanav (28:51):There's a few elements. And so one, it is fundamentally a two sided marketplace, right? It has data publishers and it has data consumers. And the other interesting thing like Uber did for taxi cabs, where it created a marketplace where cars could now come online, created this marketplace where data that was once latent came online.Jump is publishing its own trades to the Pyth network. That is IP that it has the legal rights over, has only just been a cost center so far, and now has the opportunity to get monetized. And that's the same for all of the trading firms that sit in the network. It's a lot of people to turn cost centers into potential elements in the marketplace and that bootstraps the supply. The consumers of the data obviously are paying for this extremely created highly robust set of data inputs that then get aggregated. And that creates kind of flows in one direction. And then like your regular two sided marketplace, it accrues value, right?All the data publishers today in Pyth have some sort of stake of asset interest in the thing succeeding. And there is a set of incentives that then rewards them for the correct participation going on with fees, rewards, all those kinds of things. And all that is in gross detail laid out in the white paper and we can go over some of that. But the off chain applications and some of this stuff is also quite interesting, right?So if you look at kind of back office systems around the world at forms like Jump, you don't need microsecond level access to financial data, but you need that for your trading engines because otherwise you're playing at a disadvantage related to the field. But in order to make sure that your clearing prices have happened correctly in order to make charts in order to do something like a trading view, in order to get on the Bloomberg terminal or to be on a ticker somewhere, all these applications are now easily facilitated by subscribing to something like Pyth, that's living on an open kind of blockchain area. And so a lot of the off-chain use cases are getting more and more interesting I think over time. The fundamental value is in creating the pricing source for on chain data. And this is kind of like an awesome thing that just falls out of it.Austin (30:56):That's a really interesting way of thinking about both the incentive alignments and the rule that the data providers versus the data consumers play in the market. Are there any token plans for Pyth?Kanav (31:07):Yes, there is a token plan for Pyth. You can read all about it on the white paper, no comments on timing or anything of that at this point. And that's going to be a networking governance decision, but I'm sure in the near future.Austin (31:16):Transitioning over to Wormhole, which is the other project that Jump is heavily involved in as a core contributor of the code. When people look at wormhole, I think it's very easy to look at it and say, asset bridge, multi chain, cool, fundamentally utility. The first thing I noticed when we were talking about this and looking through it is this whole component of allowing different smart contracts on different blockchains to communicate with each other. I think most people understand how asset bridging works. Can you talk a little bit about this whole concept of message bridging?Kanav (31:51):Yeah. And this also kind of goes back to your question on, how do you decide that there's an opportunity here when bridging is something that people have talked about for a while? When we were kind of ideating with everybody else on kind the Pyth's team and the network on how Pyth goes across chain. Hendrick and team were building Wormhole as Solana Eths token bridge on the hackathon project at [inaudible 00:32:17].And I called Hendrick and I asked him, "Look, is there a way to generalize this thing so that we can get Pyth messages across?" We're building this Oracle thing on the best, fast, scalable censorship resistant message bus we can, but we want to get it to all the other ones that operate on a slightly different resolution. And through the course of that conversation, we came to a conclusion that enabling generic message bosses to allow this cross chain composability in a much more high dimensional fashion than just the token bridge word was a massive opportunity set that had to be filled.And so when we launched last August as a completely generic message bus. And what that means is that any piece of state that is created or lives on a blockchain can be included as a message that then gets communicated to any other blockchain environment. And so if you think about Oracles, you think about a governance board, right? Uniswap passes a governance board on Ethereum, produces workloads on a lot of different chains. The outcome of that governance board has to, in a secure, reliable fashion, be communicated to all the other geographies that Uniswap lives on. That needs to be encoded as a message.And so Wormhole has outpost contracts on every chain that is deployed, it is deployed over eight chains today. The outpost contract just listens for a message that is sent to that contract and the Wormhole network of guardians attests to that arbitrary binary block. That block can then be picked up, relayed to any other blockchain environment, verified that is coming attested from the homeowner network and then decode to do anything arbitrary and interesting. And so generic message process have really exploded over the last year. We've seen so many awesome applications being built on it. And I think we're just kind of scratching the surface, right? There's a lot to do here.Austin (34:04):When I think about messaging, I think about how a lot of the models right now for cross chain communication of assets are a little tedious and maybe have more risk inherent to them than are necessarily required. A very centralized example, USDC, right? You can go to FTX and you can withdraw USDC as an ERC-20, as an SPL token or across several different networks. And what's happening there largely is because the mint authority to that is centrally controlled. They're able to issue new, quote unquote new USDC natively on each layer that USDC is supported on. Do you see the capability of developers using something like Wormhole to make that possible for fully decentralized, both stable coins and just asset tokens?Not only possible, but already widely adopted in the Wormhole X asset framework, right? There's over four and a half billion of assets in the token bridge today. And the word token bridge kind of has meant a lot of different things to people at different points in time, right? The old token bridges were bidirectional, state sponsored bridges that sovereign ecosystems would run to communicate to Ethereum, to get liquidity in as soon as possible.And then if you send that across a different bridge, then you would have like a double wrapped and triple wrapped implementation and just an absolute UX nightmare. When you use something like Wormhole's X asset framework, you retain complete path independence as you move assets across the ecosystem. Once you're registered as an X asset, let's take USD as an example, there's a couple billion dollars of USD on the bridge today. It flows throughout the ecosystem using Wormhole on the back end, Terra bridge money, uses one more on the back end to expose one of many front ends to users.When USD flows from Terra over to Ethereum or to Solana to Polygon and then to Avalanche, it retains the same representation on Avalanche that USD flowing from Terra to Avalanche directly or through any other part in the ecosystem would retain. It's a truly cross chain native asset. It doesn't fracture liquidity, it fungus seamlessly, and it allows a lot of cool composition.If you look at something, now like the result in second order effects of this, it's this theme that we've been calling X Dapps, right? So cross chained apps. And we've seen kind of the first marquee deployment of one of these apps in the form of X anchor, which is deployed on the Avalanche chain now, right?And X anchor is just a light set of endpoints that's deployed on Avalanche. And all that does is it lets you kind of hit some functions that then really assets and/or messages bundled or separately or back to the Terra blockchain and then trigger state transitions on the Terra site. Anchor contracts don't need to be deployed to every chain. You don't need to replicate state everywhere, you don't need to stay synchronized continuously. But you allow for outposts and communications and different chains to then communicate back to the home chain using messages and assets. And now the USD that's in the X asset standard can be deployed to X anchors everywhere. And it's a much faster, much more robust getting strategy that has far less communication over.Austin (37:07):Let's dig into just a little bit on like a technical level too. When you're talking about X Dapps or cross chain Dapps that are communicating via Wormhole, you're inherently talking about fractured state across multiple L1s or L2, it's unavoidable when you're ... anything cross chain is inherently working under a fractured state model. How fast does that time synchronization need to be for developers to actually deploy something like an AMM or a club across chain and actually maintain price parody and appropriate liquidity between them.Kanav (37:42):Yeah, I'm glad you brought this up. There's a few different programming models for how cross chain Dapps works, right? One is you try to state synchronize as aggressively as possible. You keep sending messages back and forth. You have allowances, risk limits, tolerances that allow your apps to communicate. And the other is this X Dapps framework where state only lives on one chain and you allow people from other chains to then interact with it.Now, of course that also comes with its own downsides, right? If you look at something like a club and you're trying to trigger a cross chain swap using the club from another chain, you are inherently incurring the latency of the two blockchain transactions and the finality assumptions that you want to kind of work with that. The more stateful your application becomes, obviously the more latency and risk constraints everything through. With something like a lending protocol or like a cross chain anchor, things like that. They are less stateful than something like an order book, but order book is probably the most stateful you can get right in the spectrum of applications.And so any cross chain swap design inherently has to have some additional liquidity back then, that's like fundamental, right? You can ask people to take risk on your behalf. You can have the protocol take risk on your behalf, but that risk exists. There's a lot of ways to program around it and create better user experiences, but fundamentally that's a real problem and somebody has to be compensated with that risk.Austin (38:56):For the X Dapp framework, are you looking to actually be able to offload compute to the wormhole level there? Or is it really just ... The natural extension of this seems to be that eventually there's some sort of state storage on Wormhole that Dapps are able to actually access and leverage with some functionally side chain compute resourcing. Are you guys thinking about that as well?Kanav (39:19):Yeah. The fundamental cross chain thesis is that there are going to be independent, specialized compute environments that attack their own communities, their own audiences and their own apps. And Wormhole is away for folks to leverage state that results from these autogenous environments and compute the solutions on these environments to compose.And you can cut that in a million different ways. You can leverage Solana as a state execution machine. You can leverage Terra as your stable coin asset layer and you can represent this third thing as a NFT thing, or you can bundle them all in. But the Wormhole vision itself right now with all the genetic message capabilities that are out there, in the near term roadmap doesn't need to build an execution layer of its own. It can naturally extend to it. I think you're definitely kind of pointing to something that's relevant.But I don't know if that's the lowest hanging fruit given the capacities that exist in current blockchain compute environment. The vision of course is to make people, Web 3.0 users rather than blockchain users or L1 users. You basically want to deploy resources to the most relevant execution environment with the right community, that's creating the right apps and then expose that to at a higher order to consumers.Austin (40:24):Would you describe Wormhole as layer zero?Kanav (40:28):I'm rather old school, I think of layer zeros as networking protocols and internet backbones and things like that. I think it is maybe a useful analogy for kind of blockchain audiences given how we've very economically can't use the word L1, so I don't have an allergic reaction to it, but it's not my first word of choice.Austin (40:46):What would your first word of choice be?Kanav (40:49):Interoperability protocol. I'm not that creative.Austin (40:51):Yeah. Wormhole is also supporting wrapped NFTs, which is kind of an interesting concept. I think most people don't think of NFTs as something that's been bridged and quite frankly, the numbers on Wormhole on bridge NFTs are quite low compared to the success as an asset bridge or a messaging bridge. What was the original idea of using wrapped NFTs? And why do you think it hasn't caught on as much yet?Kanav (41:20):I think cross chain NFTs as a story are just beginning to play out. So there's about 16, 1700 on the NFT bridge itself. And again, NFTs are also cross chain fungible and composable across environments. They are also part of the X asset framework. And so X assets can mean anything. It can be in rebasing assets like STE, it can be in NFTs. It can be in fungible assets. It can mean anything else, right?The NFT story started to play out as a result of new other ones trying to access marketplaces that supported one or the other chain, right? And so you get to access as new audiences, you get to create experiences with different communities. You get to access different user bases, but we're seeing the experiences get a lot richer. So you see something like [inaudible 00:42:00] come out recently, they got featured on Bloomberg for new cross chain staking program where they have in game elements that kind of change based on cross chain NFT staking that are different experiences with different communities. And much like the asset bridge has that kind of globalization and cross pollination of commercial kind of elements. Cross chain NFTs are globalization kind of culture. And incorporating a lot of those elements across games that live on Solana, that live on Terra, that live on other environments and just creating those kind of richer experiences.And so we're seeing people make NFTs on one chain, come to Solana, fractionalize them, trade them, put them back in, move them over to OpenSea on Ethereum. There's all kind of interesting use case patterns. And so it's definitely been less aggressively adopted than the explosive token bridge or the other generic message applications. But there are still 16, 7,000 NFTs, there are a lot of teams using it for cool and innovative stuff that we just kind of keep up out of the wood works every some time.Austin (43:02):Do you think that's social? Do you think that's technological? Do you think that's just like the ecosystem hasn't matured enough? I think I'm surprised how much ... well, I guess surprises maybe the wrong term. People have a lot of emotional attachment to an NFT, in the same way they don't have an emotional attachment to a Bitcoin. They may have emotional attachment to the concept of a Bitcoin, but I would be upset if I lost my particular Degen ape, even if I got a different one for the exact same value. Do you think that factors in at all to how people view the concept of wrapping an NFT, that it somehow weakens the authenticity?Kanav (43:39):I think for a lot of purists, it does. I think it was just so worthy, right. For the most part, people aren't even going to realize, the large end of this consumers like buying these things, an NBA top shot or air, or any of these other platforms, it's something on the app for them. And eventually it's going to be extracted away as we draw to Eth, we draw to Solana, we draw to wallet, connect wallet, and it's going to be kind of as simple as that. And so we're always going to have purist stakes, but I think that's going to remain within our little chamber here.Austin (44:05):For Jump Crypto in general, how do you view NFTs? There are obviously firms now that are dabbling and market making and NFTs. Is that something that you've looked at and if not, what was the decision not to enter that space yet?Kanav (44:19):It just doesn't take a lot. We are looking at trading opportunities. You are looking about margins, you're looking about what predictive offer you can have, like what the edge you can have on a traders and then how many times you can apply that edge, right? It's just as simple as that. And even if you can get a 30% margin on something that trades a hundred million like week one, I mean, [inaudible 00:44:40] now.But if you have a low volume asset class, even if it has slightly higher edge, and it is harder to predict and more dimensional, this is on a good researching decision. So as that volume changes, we will continue to stay on top of it. And I don't know if these are trading tens of billions of dollars every day, and have really interesting datasets, I'm sure we'll be trading them.Austin (45:00):If the market hundred X in size, you wouldn't be opposed to it, it's just the sizing opportunity issue right now.Kanav (45:08):[inaudible 00:45:08] you can't be the richest man. It's about identifying if there's opportunity and executing all native there is.Austin (45:14):Looking at wormhole, one of the things I do want to touch on is the wormhole hack and exploit that happened a little while ago. It was one of the larger bridge hacks at the time. It was eclipsed a few weeks later by an even larger hack of another bridge, also targeting stolen Eth in this process. I'm sure that activities and projects that Jump has been involved in have had larger losses of money or similar volumes of money just based on the area you operate in. But this is one that inherently to the nature of Web 3.0 is very public. How is that like internally knowing that your core contributors to a project that suffered this kind of exploit, and also that failure is now a public failure, as opposed to maybe where it would've been a private failure beforeKanav (45:56):Building is hard, building in the open is even harder. And building in a decentralized open space where there's a large network of participants, consumers, affected people, the stakes we're playing in, right? That's the stakes that every DeFi application, that every L1 at every bridge and that everything in Web 3.0 that aims to do something meaningful inherently adopts and has to learn to deal with.The hack was big punch in the gut, obviously a big financial loss as well. The fundamental nature of smart contracts is that the code and code can have bugs. And this exploit was kind of deep, deep, deep down in the stack, in kind of like Solana instruction verification account check that was missing. The auditors listed our team that has independently been one of the biggest bug bounty finders in the space missed, and code based at the opportunity to be out in the wide for seven months, kind of had unchecked.The day of the hack, of course really, really rough. Jump is not used to being a public institution. So this was like you said, a very public kind of fallout in nature. I can't possibly have been prouder of the way the team reacted to this incident. We kind identified it within short course of it happening. We pulled the meeting room together, identified the bug, fixed up a batch, managed to coordinate the guardian network to bring it up, bring it down, announce our intent to refill the gaping 320 million hole within an hour of the incident being reported on, and brought the bridge back up within 18 hours to end to end.Building bridges and building cross chain is very, very hard. And that's where the reward for it, building it right, is even harder. You don't even make 320 million decisions very lightly, and this should hopefully signify you how much conviction and faith we have in the code base in bringing it back up in 18 hours. It should tell you about where we think this whole space is going and where Wormhole is going and where interoperability is going and what a core piece of infrastructure in that realm would mean.Security continues to be extremely, extremely top of mind. We have a 10 million bug bounty. We have an internal red team that's basically thinking about breaking Wormhole and our key projects every day. We have multiple audit from [inaudible 00:48:12] with lots of audits going on, pretty intense security review practices, all of which can be found publicly online. And I'm incredibly confident that Wormhole has come out more stronger from this incident. The team has come out kicking and that we're building one of the best and most trusted inter op solutions out there.Austin (48:32):Looking across the ecosystem, let's say over the next 12 to 18 months, what are you personally most excited for and what keeps you up at night? What do you still have worry around?Kanav (48:44):I'm looking forward to a whole bunch of things. So definitely very excited about all the advancements that we are seeing in the succinct proof and zero knowledge space. That stuff is just awesome, it's magic. And I'm just so excited to see all the things that's going to unlock for us. There's a lot of interesting problems in the hardware acceleration space that need to be made to make that possible. There's a lot of problems algorithmically that are kind of being uncovered there. And I think hopefully this conversation has lent on that we have a big infrastructure mindset. When I say streets and sanitation, that's kind of what we think about every day. That's what we're looking forward to. And on what we can build to and contribute to that.Austin (49:19):You said something I got to get a little more info. You said specific hardware to accelerate certain kinds of applications. The only place we've really seen this so far across the entire crypto landscape is ASICs for Bitcoin mining. You see GPU mining optimization, but again, nowadays I wouldn't necessarily even call GPU specialized hardware. It's really commodity hardware at this point that's just deployed for a specific application. When you're looking at the space, where are you seeing actually custom silicon or FPGAs becoming something that it makes sense to deploy?Kanav (49:50):Yeah, I mean, definitely for zero knowledge provers, right? So like two verification times have compressed a lot to the point where it's pretty feasible on most blockchain environments today. But proving itself is still super, super resource intensive. That's where there's a lot of simple math operations that can be encoded into Silicon and into FPGAs or ASICs to speed up the process significantly. And that's where we are seeing a lot of adopt. There's already a lot of people working on this on hardware acceleration using FPGAs, maybe even ASICs on zero knowledge provers.It's a little bit of like it's tough to say when the right time is because there's new changes like algorithmically coming out all the time with the new advances in new papers. And so when you spend a whole bunch of time just optimizing Fast Fourier transforms. And then the next paper makes Fast Fourier transforms not relevant. It's tough to make a decision on when the right time is, but I know there's a lot of work already going on into it. And it's a space that we are very familiar with and that we are also excited about. And mostly, mostly positive stuff on the regulatory side.Kanav (50:56):As of recently I think there's a lot of good faith engagement from regulators around the world on setting frameworks and policies for how kind of all this stuff gets put into place. Outside of maybe China we haven't seen anything very aggressively or handed on cutting off innovation. We even saw India now finally starting to open up. And so I feel more optimistic about the regulatory landscape than I did 12 months ago. We need a new influx of builders to keep coming and building cool experience and leveraging this technology where we're seeing that happen. We need capital being continued to commit to this space where we're seeing that happen.Austin (51:35):The inverse of that question, what are you most concerned about on a macro level for the space still?Kanav (51:39):Asset pricing is of course highly dependent on macro environment and that is unrelated to crypto, right? And there's just like, it's its own thing. And so we'll see price movements on a different time scale. And if you see a very sustained global macro depressed environment, then we're going to see less capital, less builders and less momentum in the space. And I think that's probably the biggest overhang we have today.Austin (52:03):In the long run we're all dead.Kanav (52:05):In the wrong run we're all dead. That's right, so let's keep building.Austin (52:09):Yes. One kind of last question here, I think if you rerun the clock maybe three or four years, the prevailing wisdom in this space was not that traditional financial institutions were going to expand their vision and embrace blockchain and we'd call it Web 3.0 at the end of the day. And you'd have Twitter profile pictures of NFTs, you'd have Jump Trading building software that's open source for a decentralized environment. And we really have seen that that is what was originally pitched as a forked parallel path of economic development.Austin (52:42):It's a little bit more twisty curvy than we thought it was going to be. And there's a lot more integration with traditional companies. As crypto has a thesis about it, that it's moving more consumer, right? Across the spectrum you see more normies getting into crypto in one way or another. Does the existing market of specifically the United States and Europe where you see very few competitors within an ecosystem.Austin (53:07):There's basically only two phone companies. There's basically only three cell phone companies. There's basically only four internet provider companies. Across the spectrum you see very non-competitive markets. When you look at the consumer landscape in the United States, do you imagine that we're going to see similar patterns rolling out there as we saw in the financial industry, or we really are going to go back to that idea of a parallel execution model?Kanav (53:30):Yeah. I'll strongly state that I don't hold a heretical view of this kind of being a completely forked off parallel path that has no relevance to anything that we do today. I think it's an amazing technological invasion that gives us tools to coordinate resources in an untrusted environment. And that's unlocking a lot of magic.Kanav (53:49):But that again bleeds in with the rest of the real world, which is also big and has its own dramatic pieces of innovation and with a whole bunch of other stuff going on. I think one of the most exciting things has been kind of the global equalizer that crypto can serve to be. Yesterday we saw Polygon come out with an integration with Stripe. And these are three kids from India that had no early supporting or backing that kind of boosted the network on their own and are now competing on a very, very competitive landscape with people from every single part of the world that are very well resourced, competent teams.Kanav (54:23):We see [Inaudible] coming from Korea. We see teams from Australia and New Zealand over the [inaudible 00:54:28] guys. We see people from Berlin and the US and everybody competing on the same, not only the similar consumer markets, but also on the same capital markets. And there are network effects that accrue, but not cannibalistic network effects that accrue. That makes me very excited about where the space is going overall. When we talk about integration points itself, it's going to largely depend on [inaudible 00:54:52], right? And that's like an unsatisfactory answer.Kanav (54:55):But if you're talking about financial markets, crypto is already integrated heavily into the financial markets with 15 excellent international venues that are competing, so we already have a fractured environment. That is before the [inaudible 00:55:08], the NASDAQ, the CME groups have made their moves in the space. And they're clearly not going to be monopolies in crypto, obviously, right?Kanav (55:16):If you look at something like a telco and interactions with like cell networks still remains to be seen, whether like decentralized constructions of those kinds of things can be competitive. I mean, building telcos and stuff has such strong network effects and so many economies of scale. And it's unclear whether a Web 3.0 means of accruing that value to a decentralized organization has the ability to accrue the similar kind of network effects and so remains to be seen. But I'm excited to see it play out.Austin (55:43):I always enjoy getting to pick your brain about where these technologies are going and the intersection of a very traditional financial world with this new global system that we've all been building. But thank you so much for joining us for spending some time digging into this stuff.Kanav (56:00):Thanks a lot for having me on Austin. This was super fun and as always, love chatting, so yeah, we'll see you again soon.Austin (56:04):Thanks.
Today on the Ether we have episode 1 of the Ship Show with Kanav Kariya of Jump Crypto and Do Kwon of Terra Money. Recorded on March 1st 2022. Make sure to check out our sponsors, Orbital Command, Luart, Talis, and WeFund! We appreciate their support.
On this episode of TQR, we break down our Top 5 songs by the band Nickelback (selected by fans over Green Day and Billy Talent), more Nickelback, and some guys named Neidermayer and Kariya said some things about our new GM. Presented by Draft Kings - Use Promo Code THPN at sign-up for exclusive offers at https://tinyurl.com/ycu263ks It's hard to believe we're going into Season 3 of TQR! New episodes will be available on Thursdays and Mondays on your favourite podcast streaming platform. Presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Every Team, Every Where. TQR will also be live streaming full episodes on Wednesday nights at 7pm PT, on Twitter, Youtube, and Twitch @QuackReportPod, and on Facebook @HockeyPodNet. Tune in to get live discussion and engage with us in real-time. Finally, be sure to subscribe to TQR on YouTube for clips of your favourite segments throughout the week! Check out all our socials here: https://linktr.ee/quackreportpod For more hockey content, check out the other shows on The Hockey Podcast Network, where you'll find a podcast for each of the NHL's 31 teams. Also, you can find other shows, including ones hosted by former NHL players. On Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @HockeyPodNet and The Quack Report can be found on Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok @QuackReportPod. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
On this episode of TQR, we break down our Top 5 songs by the band Nickelback (selected by fans over Green Day and Billy Talent), more Nickelback, and some guys named Neidermayer and Kariya said some things about our new GM. Presented by Draft Kings - Use Promo Code THPN at sign-up for exclusive offers at https://tinyurl.com/ycu263ks It's hard to believe we're going into Season 3 of TQR! New episodes will be available on Thursdays and Mondays on your favourite podcast streaming platform. Presented by The Hockey Podcast Network. Every Team, Every Where. TQR will also be live streaming full episodes on Wednesday nights at 7pm PT, on Twitter, Youtube, and Twitch @QuackReportPod, and on Facebook @HockeyPodNet. Tune in to get live discussion and engage with us in real-time. Finally, be sure to subscribe to TQR on YouTube for clips of your favourite segments throughout the week! Check out all our socials here: https://linktr.ee/quackreportpod For more hockey content, check out the other shows on The Hockey Podcast Network, where you'll find a podcast for each of the NHL's 31 teams. Also, you can find other shows, including ones hosted by former NHL players. On Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram @HockeyPodNet and The Quack Report can be found on Twitter, Instagram, and TikTok @QuackReportPod.
Tune in this week as J-Treb talks with Rapper Keeko Kariya about his new EP ‘Feel 2wo', going Kanye's Donda listening party, and more!
Australia's legal system can be confusing for common people, and professional help may be necessary to navigate it. But with lawyers charging hundreds of dollars in hourly fees, not everyone can afford to pursue justice. However, you may be able to access free help through legal aid. - Sîstema dadrêsî (qanûnî) ya Australya dikare ji bo raya giştî tevlihev be, û dibe ku hewce bi alîkariya pisporî hebe. Lê parêzer bi sedan dolar heqê dema xwe werdigirin, her kes nikare li dû edaletê bimeşe. Lê, dibe ku we maf hebe ku hûn alîkariya yasayî ya belaş werbigirin.
Temporary visa holders and asylum seekers who aren't eligible for government payments can access emergency financial assistance if they are experiencing hardship during the current COVID-19 lockdown. Temporary visa holders were left out of the federal government's JobKeeper program in 2020. This year, the COVID Disaster payments are available to some eligible temporary visa holders who have lost income due to health orders. - Xwediyên vîzeya demkî û penaxwazên ku ne-mafdarên peredana hukumetê ne dikarin alîkariya aborî ya awarte di encama girtinên COVID-19 de werbigirin. Kesên ku vîzeya demkiye li derveyî bernameya JobKeeper ya hukumeta federal ku sala par 2020 de bêpar man, îsal, peredanên Karesata COVID ji hin kesên xwedan vîzeyên demkî yên bijartî re heye ku di encama fermanên tenduristiyê de dahat wenda kirin e alîkarî heye.
This week's guest is a powersports industry legend and longtime professional moto-journalist and photographer Mark “Kato” Kariya. Mark has covered hundreds of races throughout his career for nearly every U.S. offroad racing series and has contributed to top offroad media outlets Cycle News, Dirt Bike, and Dirt Rider. Learn more about Mark's start in the industry and how he's been able to carve out a niche profession as a freelance moto-journalist and photographer. Enjoying The Dirt Buzz? Please consider becoming a Patron by following the "Support the show" link below. Your support will help with monthly hosting and recording software subscriptions. As always, thanks for listening! Get out and enjoy life on two wheels, listen to great music, be kind to each other, and Keep the Buzz Rolling. Follow Dirt Buzz https://www.dirtbuzz.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/dirtbuzz/Buzz Media Content Marketing Services Content Creation, Writing, and Marketing Services – We Know Powersports!Support the show (https://www.patreon.com/dirtbuzz)
You Belong, the charity organisation and people from around the world are getting on their bikes this World Refugee week, 13 - 20 June and taking up the challenge to bike 80kms in 8 days to raise money and awareness for the 80 million forcibly displaced people around the Globe. - Rêxistina You Belong ya xêrxwaziyê û mirovên ji çar aliyên cîhanê dê di Hefteya Cîhanî ya Penaberan, 13 - 20 Hezîranê li pisiklêtên xwe siwar bin û di nav 8 rojan de 80km bajon da ku alîkariya diravîn bo 80 mîlyon penaberên li tevahiya cîhanê berhev bikin. Em bi damezrênerê rêxistina You Belong Tîm Bekston li ser Hefteya Cîhanî ya Penaberan derbarê çalakiyên wan diaxafin.
In Australia, thousands of domestic violence survivors can't afford lawyers' fees. In most cases of domestic and family violence, men are perpetrators, women and children are victims. Women who leave abusive relationships face considerable barriers to accessing justice. - Li Australiya bi hezaran rizgarbûyên tundûtujiya malbatî nikarin nirxê parêzer bidin. Di piraniya bûyerên tundûtujiya nav malê de û malbatê de mêr sûcdar in, jin û zarok mexdûr in. Jinên ku dev ji têkiliyên destdirêjkar berdidin rastî astengiyên gihîştina dadmendiyê dibin.