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Kelly Hills Unmanned Systems is launching an FAA test site for agricultural unmanned aerial spraying applications.
In this episode, host Wil Fulton is joined by Scott Keyes (founder of Scott's Cheap Flights and author of Take More Vacations) to discuss the recent disruptions in the airline industry, and how you can prepare for your next flight by learning how to deal with sudden cancellations, schedule changes, and more. We're also joined by Dr. Calvin Sun, an ER doctor living in New York City who also runs the travel group Monsoon Diaries, who speaks on how he plans international trips while keeping COVID restrictions in mind. Finally, we talk with bioethicist Kelly Hills of Rogue Bioethics, on the moral issues of traveling during a pandemic. Learn more about your ad-choices at https://www.iheartpodcastnetwork.com
Long before any of us knew what Covid meant, or why anyone would want to be socially distant, Kate Thornton was joined by two of the hosts of Girls No Filter, Jess Wright and Kelly Hills. It was a simpler time... Enjoy!We're taking a two-week break after this episode, but will be back with The Nolans on July 3rd. See you soon, QTs. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Andrew invites Kelly Hills, a 22-year practicing Buddhist, to partake in this very special episode where we talk about the accuracy of both the religious tenets of Buddhism as well as the Siddhartha story featured in Little Buddha.Follow Kelly on TwitterVisit us on Twitter or on our Website for more episodes.
These days, all you need to do is fill a tube with spit and mail it off to find out all about your ancestors, and even about your risks for certain diseases. Loads of DNA sequencing and typing companies exist to tell you all about yourself. But how accurate are they? And how safe is that information? We'll speak with science writer Tina Hesman Saey about her big project sending off her spit to more companies than she can count. For science, of course. Then, we'll take out ethical concerns to bioethicist Kelly Hills, to talk about the potential pitfalls...
Kelly Hills talks to Madhusudan Katti about reconciliation ecology: managing urban ecosystems for biodiversity; which includes managing the impact of droughts. Read Dr. Katti on water management in cities in the American West, and on global urban biodiversity:Water and the City: A Dispatch From an American Frontier Town http://www.thenatureofcities.com/2013/02/10/water-and-the-city-an-american-frontier-tale/Biodiversity can flourish on an urban planethttps://theconversation.com/biodiversity-can-flourish-on-an-urban-planet-18723
Kelly Hills talks to Madhusudan Katti about reconciliation ecology: managing urban ecosystems for biodiversity; which includes managing the impact of droughts. Read Dr. Katti on water management in cities in the American West, and on global urban biodiversity:Water and the City: A Dispatch From an American Frontier Town http://www.thenatureofcities.com/2013/02/10/water-and-the-city-an-american-frontier-tale/Biodiversity can flourish on an urban planethttps://theconversation.com/biodiversity-can-flourish-on-an-urban-planet-18723
Kelly talks with Dr. Kaberi Kar Gupta, Principal Scientist of the Urban Slender Loris Project, where citizens and scientists learn about this small nocturnal primate found only in Sri Lanka and Southern India in order to figure out how urban coexistance might be possible. Slender lorises are arboreal and therefore require continuous forest canopy. This continuity is created by either large trees that are close to each other in old forests or by the climbing vines in forests where the understory is undisturbed. Their preferred diet is mostly insects and fruit.
Kelly talks with Dr. Kaberi Kar Gupta, Principal Scientist of the Urban Slender Loris Project, where citizens and scientists learn about this small nocturnal primate found only in Sri Lanka and Southern India in order to figure out how urban coexistance might be possible. Slender lorises are arboreal and therefore require continuous forest canopy. This continuity is created by either large trees that are close to each other in old forests or by the climbing vines in forests where the understory is undisturbed. Their preferred diet is mostly insects and fruit.