Podcast appearances and mentions of lee congdon

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Best podcasts about lee congdon

Latest podcast episodes about lee congdon

Musically Speaking with Chuong Nguyen
Episode 311 - Second Interview with Lee Congdon (Professor of History Emeritus - James Madison University)

Musically Speaking with Chuong Nguyen

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2024 66:27


Originally Recorded October 24th, 2023 About Professor Lee Congdon: http://leaches.net/congdon/ Check out Professor Congdon's book on Hungarian Intellectuals in the Interwar Period, titled Exile and Social Thought: Hungarian Intellectuals in Germany and Austria, 1919-1933: https://press.princeton.edu/books/hardcover/9780691636863/exile-and-social-thought This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit musicallyspeaking.substack.com

Musically Speaking with Chuong Nguyen
Episode 145 - Interview with Lee Congdon (Professor of History Emeritus - James Madison University)

Musically Speaking with Chuong Nguyen

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2023 53:56


Originally Recorded March 24th, 2023 About Professor Congdon: http://leaches.net/congdon/ Check out his latest book, George Kennan for Our Time: https://www.amazon.com/George-Kennan-Our-Time-People/dp/1501765183 Get full access to Unlicensed Philosophy with Chuong Nguyen at musicallyspeaking.substack.com/subscribe

Interviews: Tech and Business
Lee Congdon, CIO, Red Hat

Interviews: Tech and Business

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2015 46:51


How can a CIO reconcile the demands between technical proficiency and business responsiveness? In this episode, Lee Congdon, CIO of Red Hat Software, shares ideas for balancing infrastructure and innovation in a dynamic and transformational environment.

Dave & Gunnar Show
RH Summit 2014: James Kirkland, King of Things

Dave & Gunnar Show

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2014 52:03


Dave chats with James Kirkland, Red Hat’s undisputed Internet of Things expert, with a cameo from Jan Mark Holzer. Canadians pronounce RHEL wrong. The Chatsworth train collision got Positive Train Control started. They’re using AMQP. Injury, death! Canadians pronounce routers wrong. Why REST isn’t the only answer. How messaging works in electrical grids (this is where Gunnar gets jealous he wasn’t on the line) Most smart meters use MQTT. Yes, we support it. Bosch Connected World 2014 Snowden jokes! Robot freight trucks. They’re coming, and they’re uninsurable. Lee Congdon kicked us out of the room. Docker + IoT: using containers to deliver applications to a standardized, embedded platform. and don’t forget better app density in SWAP environments Personal privacy and aggregate privacy as two different things “Enterprization” of the control tier, getting professionalized and formally supported by an IT-like organization Look for ARM64 on there, with containers ARM64 on Fedora Ob Raspberry Pi mention Configuration Drift New AMQ Release: AMQP, HA without shared storage Devnation: it was great. How to Learn in Your Sleep James’ advice for the road, and for life: wants you to cultivate your Zen nature. Also, don’t be afraid to ask if you need something. App Choices Get TripIt Pro. CamScanner. Dave suggest leaving a Google Hangout with your whole family open, so you can update your family on what’s going on. Everybody’s child is in FRC, which is not an isolationist movement. ENDORSED: Minecraft Mods for kids

New Books in Sports
Lee Congdon, “Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and Remembrance of Things Past” (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011)

New Books in Sports

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2011 55:49


“Isn’t it funny?” once mused Buck O’Neil, the sage of Negro League baseball. “Everybody remembers going to their first baseball game with their father. They might not remember going to their first day of school, . . . or their first Thanksgiving dinner. But they always remember going to the... Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books in American Studies
Lee Congdon, “Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and Remembrance of Things Past” (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011)

New Books in American Studies

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2011 55:49


“Isn’t it funny?” once mused Buck O’Neil, the sage of Negro League baseball. “Everybody remembers going to their first baseball game with their father. They might not remember going to their first day of school, . . . or their first Thanksgiving dinner. But they always remember going to the baseball game with their father.” O’Neil’s observation applies to me (the game was between the Twins and Angels, at Met Stadium in 1977), as it does to Lee Congdon (a game at Wrigley Field in 1948). The starting point of Lee’s book is this understanding of the important place that baseball holds in the memories of its fans. Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and the Remembrance of Things Past (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011) is filled with recollections of wins and losses, of moments comic and tragic, from all eras of baseball history. As Lee explains, these remembered visits to the ballpark or great plays seen on television point to larger questions of the ways that memory shapes us and the ways that we understand larger periods of history. As a scholar of European intellectual history, Congdon takes a somewhat different approach to baseball, and names like Ricoeur, Kundera, and even Nietzsche figure into our conversation. Certainly, this is a baseball book, and Lee revisits many of the well-known and lesser-known moments and characters of baseball history. But it also a more philosophical, personal reflection on how Americans view the nation’s pastime and the nation’s past. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

New Books Network
Lee Congdon, “Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and Remembrance of Things Past” (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011)

New Books Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 5, 2011 55:49


“Isn’t it funny?” once mused Buck O’Neil, the sage of Negro League baseball. “Everybody remembers going to their first baseball game with their father. They might not remember going to their first day of school, . . . or their first Thanksgiving dinner. But they always remember going to the baseball game with their father.” O’Neil’s observation applies to me (the game was between the Twins and Angels, at Met Stadium in 1977), as it does to Lee Congdon (a game at Wrigley Field in 1948). The starting point of Lee’s book is this understanding of the important place that baseball holds in the memories of its fans. Baseball and Memory: Winning, Losing, and the Remembrance of Things Past (St. Augustine’s Press, 2011) is filled with recollections of wins and losses, of moments comic and tragic, from all eras of baseball history. As Lee explains, these remembered visits to the ballpark or great plays seen on television point to larger questions of the ways that memory shapes us and the ways that we understand larger periods of history. As a scholar of European intellectual history, Congdon takes a somewhat different approach to baseball, and names like Ricoeur, Kundera, and even Nietzsche figure into our conversation. Certainly, this is a baseball book, and Lee revisits many of the well-known and lesser-known moments and characters of baseball history. But it also a more philosophical, personal reflection on how Americans view the nation’s pastime and the nation’s past. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices