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Prof. Leslie Wilcox, Professor at London School of Economics, talks to Peter Warren about the problem with digitalisation, and the importance of balancing cost-efficiency and cyber resilience. This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional legal, financial or insurance advice. We are not responsible for any losses, damages, or liabilities that may arise from the use of this podcast. The content and views expressed are those of the host and guests.
Hear Peter Warren discuss insights from Prof. Leslie Wilcox, Professor at London School of Economics; Lord Francis Maude, former Minister of State for Trade and Investment; Prof Keith Martin, Director of the EPSRC Centre for Doctoral Training in Cyber Security for the Everyday; Prof. Neil Barrett, former advisor of cybercrime to then Home Labour Secretary ,Jack Straw; Martin Borrett, IBM Security's UK Technical Director; David Chavez, Cyber Insurance Product Manager and Tushar Nandwana, Risk Control Technology Segment Manager at Intact Insurance Specialty Solutions, and Dr Constance Dierickx, Founder and President of CD Consulting Group.This podcast is for informational purposes only and is not intended to replace professional legal, financial or insurance advice. We are not responsible for any losses, damages, or liabilities that may arise from the use of this podcast. The content and views expressed are those of the host and guests.
Sermon by Leslie Wilcox GBS Commencement Address 1978
There are certain vital doctrines taught in the word of God which have such close relation to the teaching of Holiness that holiness cannot be understood thoroughly unless these other doctrines are taken into consideration. Each of these related doctrines shows the reasons why an experience of Holiness or of entire sanctification is a necessity for the Christian. For the next few broadcasts we will be dealing with why holiness is necessary. "Be Ye Holy" by Leslie Wilcox used for outline #Holiness #Revival #preaching #streetpreaching #GodsResistance #Christianity #Christian #Jesus #Methodist #methodism #holinessmovement #SalvationArmy #JohnWesley #LeonardRavenhill #prayer https://www.facebook.com/GodsResistance https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX7Dgy8MVVQU36yvqiGj23g/featured?view_as=public Https://www.gab.com/godsresistance https://tv.gab.com/channel/godsresistance https://www.godsresistance.com Email: gods.resistance@gmail.com Phone: (570)362-7782 Mailing: Erik Samborski or God's Resistance P. O. Box 4408 Wyoming, PA 18644
If I just pray and receive Jesus or make a "decision" then I'm alright. I mean, I don't really have to try and change my life altogether because God knows its really hard and I'm just human, right? I mean, when He says, "Be ye holy" He must mean something other than me actually being holy, right? "Be Ye Holy" by Leslie Wilcox used for outline #Holiness #Revival #preaching #streetpreaching #GodsResistance #Christianity #Christian #Jesus #Methodist #methodism #holinessmovement #SalvationArmy #JohnWesley #LeonardRavenhill #prayer https://www.facebook.com/GodsResistance https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCX7Dgy8MVVQU36yvqiGj23g/featured?view_as=public Https://www.gab.com/godsresistance https://tv.gab.com/channel/godsresistance https://www.godsresistance.com Email: gods.resistance@gmail.com Phone: (570)362-7782 Mailing: Erik Samborski or God's Resistance P. O. Box 4408 Wyoming, PA 18644
She has that sweet, familiar voice; that heart-warming twinkle in her eye; and a penchant for ending every broadcast with “a hui ho,” or “until we meet again.” This week, the ‘Muthaship’ celebrates one of Hawaii’s first female anchors: Leslie Wilcox. After 48 years as a journalist and nearly 14 as the successful chief executive of PBS Hawaii, Wilcox is leaving Hawaii to care for a sick family member in San Antonio, Texas. In this week’s episode, Wilcox shares stories about how she overcame the challenges of working in a male-dominated news industry at the young age of 18 and how her career path in journalism unexpectedly opened the door to her next job as the head of a public television station. As she prepares for a new life in a new town, please join Steph, Brooke and Noli ― who grew up watching the local news icon ― in sending a warm ‘mahalo’ to Leslie Wilcox for enriching Hawaii with her many stories, her passion for community service, and her legacy of original programs, including ‘Hiki No’ and ‘Long Story Short’. Aloha, Leslie!
Sermon by Leslie Wilcox 1979 Dayton IHC
今回のポッドキャストでは、ハワイのPBSのCEO、元ニュースアンカーのレスリー・ウィルコックスさんと語り合った、思いやりを持ったコミュニケーション方法について「あなたのペースで」というストーリーを私の本『ハワイからの贈り物」から抜粋して朗読します。初対面で誰かと話すときのエチケット、そしてどんなバックグラウンドの人に対しても、深い思いやりを持って接することについて、皆さんと一緒に考えてみたいと思っています。On this episode of podcast, I'd like to share a story inspired by our conversation with Leslie Wilcox, a former news anchor and now a CEO of PBS Hawaii. How can we inquire with compassion? Let's learn to be a better listener and not bombard people with too many personal questions right off the bat... communication with compassion is the key to better world :) --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/sachipodcast/support
Like what you see? Please give generously. http://www.thinktechhawaii.com Beyond Public Broadcasting. We talk with Leslie about her very successful TV career and being a great leader for PBS Hawaii. The host for this episode is Rusty Komori. The guest for this episode is Leslie Wilcox.
Meet Tom Vendetti, a Maui-based psychologist and filmmaker who has turned a series of unexpected life twists into two intertwined careers. He shares how his unlikely journey has unfolded, all driven by his quest for happiness. Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox is a production of PBS Hawai‘i. Visit the Long Story Short website at: […]
There is nothing that can beat eating fresh food from the garden. It seems every meal around here has fresh basil lettuce from the garden and little cherry tomatoes. Today, I was at my favorite olive oil store and they sell this little gizmo called the Zip Slicer. You load it up with your cherry tomatoes or grapes, and then you slice them all in one quick motion. It's fantastic if you eat tomatoes and grapes a lot. It cuts down on the prep time and I think around here we've been eating Caprese salad about three times a week. So there you go. Check it out: the Zip Slicer. Brevities #OTD It was on this day in 1757 that the botanist John Bartram wrote a letter to Philip Miller. Miller was the chief Gardner at the Chelsea Physic Garden from 1722 until his death. He corresponded with botanists from all over the world, including John Bartram. Miller even trained William Forsyth after whom Forsythia is named. When Bartram wrote to Miller he shared some of his personal preferences as a gardener. First, he shared his desire for variety in the garden. He said, "One or two is enough for me of a sort." Later in the letter, he shared his dislike for plants that weren't hardy in Pennsylvania. He wrote to Miller saying, "I don't greatly like tender plants that won't bear our severe winters but perhaps annual plants that would perfect their seed with you without the help of a hotbed in the spring will do with us in the open ground." #OTD It was on this day in 1803 that President Thomas Jefferson sent a formal letter to his private secretary and aide, Meriwether Lewis. Lewis was a captain in the first United States infantry. Jefferson wrote him to request that he might lead an expedition of the Missouri River. Jefferson never mentioned botany in the letter, but he clearly was thinking about it; and Lewis knew it. As he was preparing for his trip, Lewis connected with Benjamin Smith Barton. Barton had written the first American textbook on botany and he gave Lewis a little crash course on the subject. #OTD It was on this day in 1861 that Sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins was born. In the 1700s, Dr. James Lind had made it known that eating limes would cure a sailors scurvy. Hopkins work call these substances accessory food factors. Today, we know them as vitamins. #OTD And it is on this day in 1892 that Benjamin Lincoln Robinson was appointed the curator of the Asa Gray Herbarium at Harvard. When Robinson took over, both the herbarium and the library were in dire straits. Robinson was instrumental in acquiring funds and extending the growth of the herbarium in library. Today, the Gray Herbarium and library are still housed at Harvard at 22 Divinity Ave. #OTD And It was on this day hundred years ago that Isabella Abbott was born. She was the first native Hawaiian woman to earn a PhD in science. Abbott became known as the "First Lady of Limu" or seaweed. When she was a little girl, she spent hours gathering seaweed for her mother to cook in traditional Hawaiian foods. I found a video online of an interview that Leslie Wilcox did with Abbott back in 2008. When Wilcox asked Abbott about her love of studying seaweed, she said, "There are so few of us [compared to] the thousands of people work on flowering plants. Flowering plants mostly have the same kind of life history so they become kind of boring; they make pretty flowers and make nice smells, they taste good - many of them. But, they're not like seaweeds. With every one you pick up, it does go through life a different way ... It's a game, it's a game I bet with myself the whole whole time from the time I cut it on the outside I say oh I think this might be in such-and-such a family, or something like that, and by the time I get to some magnification on the microscope... Oh No. 100% wrong. So let's begin again." You can watch the video of the interview with Isabella Abbott in the Facebook Group for the Show: The Daily Gardener Community Unearthed Words Green Summer No farther than my fingertips, No weightier than a rose, The essence of green summer slips Into a waiting pose. The tilted bowl of heaven Has spilled its blue and gold Among the vines and grasses Where autumn is foretold. Skylarks trill the melody, Crickets cry it over; Summer hides her mystery In fields of hay and clover. Alice Mackenzie Swaim Today's book recommendation: The Hillier Manual of Trees & Shrubs by John Hillier This book is considered a classic in horticultural literature. The best part about it remains all of the notes that were compiled by members of the Hillier family. Among all of them, they had an amazing amount of direct experience growing plants and assessing their performance in different regions. Over 10,500 plants representing more than 650 genera are described in detail, making it an indispensable guide for any keen gardener or botanist. Today's Garden Chore Don't forget to pinch back some of your perennials; this is also known as the Chelsea Chop. The simple technique helps control plant height and delay bloom. You can use the Chelsea Chop on a number of herbaceous perennials in your garden. Plants like mums, lysimachia, helenium, aster, sedum, and so forth. Something Sweet Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart It was on this day in 1831 that the botanist and founding member of the Torrey Botanical Club, Coe Finch Austin, was born. He was a noted expert on the mosses and liverworts of North America. To give you an idea of his fearlessness while he was collecting plants, here's a little story I read across: Coe was visiting his brother in New York and he decided he wanted to climb High Tor. Austin climbed the mountain; stopping along the way to add specimens to his shoulder bag. When he reached the top, Austin surprised his brother and handed him the specimens with instructions to meet him at the base of the mountain. His brother realize that this meant Austin was going to descend along the most dangerous face of the mountain. He tried to stop him, but Austin did not relent. His brother waited for him at the meeting place on the base. After a while, and without a sound, his brother suddenly appeared. He came bearing specimens and had a huge smile on his face. Thanks for listening to the daily gardener, and remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."
Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox - PBS Hawaii » Podcast Feed
In this special Father’s Day compilation, we celebrate dads and the life lessons they’ve passed along to their children. You’ll hear stories of how fathers and father figures influenced business adviser Pono Shim, comedian Augie T, entertainer Melveen Leed, champion spear-fisher Kimi Werner and community advocate Kamuela Enos. Long Story Short with Leslie Wilcox is […]
We have Evan peters and Leslie Wilcox returning for a part two. With the help of Mike S we dig into our past. Check out Evan's artwork and business below. Evan's artwork here: https://evanalexander.artstation.com/ Video version: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiPlCDGJByA&t=1577s
Evan peters rejoins us with his wife Leslie Wilcox. Leslie tells us about her days of being a model in New York. Check out Evan's artwork and business below. Evan's artwork here: https://evanalexander.artstation.com/ Video version: https://youtu.be/zRzbsDWa5PA
In our Valentine's Day would you rather special we are joined by Mike Sharma and Bobby Kilday with Leslie Wilcox as judge. Video version: https://youtu.be/gJFXXFIsFdU
Recorded at the Nordic RPA & AI Summit in Stockholm, London School of Economics Professor Leslie Wilcox joins us and shares that through an early career in IT consultancy in the 1970's, he and his clients learned a lot about getting IT into the business- so much so that he simply sees the onset of Robotic Process Automation and Cognitive Automation as simply a follow-on from each wave after wave of technology that global corporate business has been through. He feels that the transition process will be longer and more challenging than people think which is why he's focused his most recent book on Risk Mitigation in RPA & AI.
Larry Lindsey Kimura of Hawaiʻi Island was just a child when he began to sense that the Hawaiian language his grandmother spoke fluently was on the verge of extinction. Ever since, he has committed his life to the preservation and perpetuation of the language, as a teacher and developer of innovative programs, including Pūnana Leo, the Hawaiian language preschools. Original airdate: 31.Mei.2016
A melting pot. A bento box. Chop suey. Wontons with chips.Hawaii is such an assortment of races, ethnicities, and cultures that it’s hard to pick just one way to describe its unique mix. So what can it teach the rest of America about how different people can all live together? At the Kaka‘ako Agora in Honolulu, a panel moderated by Leslie Wilcox of PBS Hawaii took on this question at a Zócalo/Smithsonian "What It Means to Be American" event in partnership with the Daniel K. Inouye Institute. The speakers were Marketing executive Guy Kawasaki, Maya Soetoro-Ng of the University of Hawaii College of Education, vice president at the Harry and Jeanette Weinberg Foundation Corbett Kalama, and actor and director Daniel Dae Kim.
Leslie Wilcox - President and Chief Executive Officer of PBS Hawaii The post LESLIE WILCOX appeared first on Greater Good Radio - Leaders Inspiring Leaders.