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In this episode of the World Languages Collaborative Podcast with Dr. Mark Linsky, Grant and Mark discuss how teachers can transition from a grammar-driven, knowledge-based classroom to a more acquisition-driven environment while keeping stakeholders apprised of progress. Also, they discuss how student and teacher recognition can motivate learners to improve and stay with language learning and teachers to continue in the profession. One of these strategies is awarding credentials such as the Seal of Biliteracy. For more information and for Mark's contact information, check out the links below! Dr. Mark LinskyProgram Specialist for World Languages & Global Work Initiatives - Georgia Department of EducationMark.Linsky@doe.k12.ga.ushttps://gadoe.org/https://gadoe.org/learning/world-languages-global-initiatives/https://gadoe.org/grants-awards-diploma-seals/seal-of-biliteracy/https://gadoe.org/grants-awards-diploma-seals/international-skills-diploma-seal/For information about the World Languages Collaborative, contact the host Dr. Grant Gearhartggearhart@georgiasouthern.edu
Send us a textJoin Jimmy as he welcomes USA Today bestselling authors Megan Linski and Alicia Rades for an in-depth conversation about their mesmerizing Academy Magical Creatures series. Their discussion uncovers the creative process behind the series' enthralling storyline, memorable characters, and surprising plot reveals. Megan and Alicia share insights into their writing approach, the significance of diverse representation in literature, and their upcoming projects. This episode is a must-listen for fans of fantasy, relatable characters, and stories that keep you on the edge of your seat.Timestamps:00:01:30 - Jimmy's admiration for Megan and Alicia's work00:02:44 - The inspiration behind their captivating story00:05:12 - Introducing Sophia, the protagonist with a unique gift00:07:20 - The secrets to their books' success and character relatability00:14:44 - The art of crafting twists and turns in their writing00:17:33 - Which character resonates with the authors and why00:21:47 - A hint at the challenges ahead in their upcoming books00:23:03 - The extent of their collaborative writing endeavorsAbout The GuestsMegan Linski lives in Michigan. She is the author of more than sixty fantasy and paranormal novels which feature themes of friendship, community, and healthy romantic relationships.I'm Alicia Rades, a young adult and new adult paranormal author from Wisconsin, and I'm so glad you're here! I love connecting with readers online, at in-person events, and through stories.Connect With The GuestsmeganlinskihFree AI Based Chrome productivity blocker defends against websites, keywords, and adult content DeepstashLearn new things every day!PodcasltePodcastle is the easiest way to edit, transcribe, and so much more with AI all in one place!Block PEveryone likes a safer internet thats why I like Block P that makes it safer for everyone!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showFollow, Buy, Subscribe, and Support our Show https://c.f.g.crazyfitnessguy.com/ https://jimmy.crazyfitnessguy.com/ Leave Us A Review https://www.crazyfitnessguy.com/reviews/new/ Subscribe To CrazyFitnessGuy Premium Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2379712/subscribe https://www.crazyfitnessguy.com/support/ Fitness Disclaimer: The Service offers health, fitness and nutritional information and is designed for educational purposes only. You should not rely on this information as a substitute for, nor does it replace, professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you have any concerns or questions about your health, you should always consult with a physician or other health-care professional. Do not disregard, avoid or delay obtaining medical or health related advice from your health-care professional because of something you may have read on the Service. The use of any information provided on the Service is solely at your own risk.
Subscriber-only episodeSend us a textIn this episode, Jimmy welcomes USA Today's best-selling authors, Megan Linski and Alicia Rades. Dive into an engaging conversation about their Academy Magical Creatures series, a collection that has kept Jimmy up late at night due to its addictive storyline and cliffhangers. Discover the secrets behind their compelling characters, the inspiration for their twists and turns, and how they bring their own experiences into their writing. Megan and Alicia share insights on their writing process, the importance of diverse representation in literature, and their plans for future projects. If you're a fan of fantasy, relatable characters, and stories that keep you on the edge of your seat, this episode is a must-listen!00:01:30 " Megan and Alicia are two of my favorite authors of all time00:02:44 " How did you come up with this amazing story00:05:12 " So Sophia is the main character with firepower, and she comes into this world unaware00:07:20 " Why do you think the books have done so well, and why is the characters relatable00:14:44 " How many twists and turns do you put in one book00:17:33 " Which character do you most relate to and why00:21:47 " There will be a price to pay to get to book six00:23:03 " How many books have you guys written together so farAbout The GuestsMegan Linski lives in Michigan. She is the author of more than sixty fantasy and paranormal novels which feature themes of friendship, community, and healthy romantic relationships.I'm Alicia Rades, a young adult and new adult paranormal author from Wisconsin, and I'm so glad you're here! I love connecting with readers online, at in-person events, and through stories.Connect With The Guestsmeganlinski https://www.meganlinski.comaliciaradesauthor https://www.aliciaradesauFree AI Based Chrome productivity blocker defends against websites, keywords, and adult content PodcasltePodcastle is the easiest way to edit, transcribe, and so much more with AI all in one place!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Follow, Buy, Subscribe, and Support our Show https://c.f.g.crazyfitnessguy.com/ https://jimmy.crazyfitnessguy.com/ Leave Us A Review https://www.crazyfitnessguy.com/reviews/new/ Subscribe To CrazyFitnessGuy Premium Podcasthttps://www.buzzsprout.com/2379712/subscribe https://www.crazyfitnessguy.com/support/ Fitness Disclaimer: The Service offers health, fitness and nutritional information and is designed for educational purposes only. You should not rely on this information as a substitute for, nor does it replace, professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. If you have any concerns or questions about your health, you should always consult with a physician or other health-care professional. Do not disregard, avoid or delay obtaining medical or health related advice from your health-care professional because of something you may have read on the Service. The use of any information provided on the Service is solely at your own risk.
Got an opinion? On the iHeartRadio app, tap the red microphone to record & send us your thoughts. Don't have the app? Get it free here ---> https://news.iheart.com/apps/ Follow us: Instagram - wgyradio X - WGYMornings Facebook - 810wgy & WGYMornings
Got an opinion? On the iHeartRadio app, tap the red microphone to record & send us your thoughts. Don't have the app? Get it free here ---> https://news.iheart.com/apps/ Follow us: Instagram - wgyradio X - WGYMornings Facebook - 810wgy & WGYMornings
In this special bonus episode recorded at the 2024 Retrofit Canada Conference in Vancouver, BC co-host of the Passive House Podcast Mary James interviews Andrea Linsky of Alberta Ecotrust.https://albertaecotrust.com/Thank you for listening to the Passive House Podcast! To learn more about Passive House and to stay abreast of our latest programming, visit passivehouseaccelerator.com. And please join us at one of our Passive House Accelerator LIVE! zoom gatherings on Wednesdays.
Episode 12 is Jim Linski. Jim is a Vacation Planner for all Disney Destinations and more for The Curated Travel Collection. Jim has an unusual path into his role as a Travel Advisor. JIm has covered a few newsworthy stories over his decades long journalism career. Oh, did I tell you that Jim is a Disney Fanatic as well. We talk about the Disney verse, offer stories, great tips and why you should use a Travel Advisor. https://www.spreaker.com/episode/episode-12-jim-linsky--60406134
Episode 89: Hiba Khaled & Leadership on the Line: Staying Alive Through the Dangers of Leading by Ronald A. Heifetz & Martin Linsky ABOUT HIBA Dr. Hiba Khaled is a co-founder of Embers, a consulting and coaching firm helping individuals and organizations recover from burnout to achieve healthy high performance. With a background in medicine and leadership training at Harvard under the mentorship of Professors Ron Heifetz and Tim O'Brien, she has dedicated her career to helping individuals and organizations achieve success from a place of health. A survivor of burnout herself, Hiba is on a mission to balance performance with well-being. When she's not busy transforming lives, you can find her out in nature, drinking tea, or diving into a good book. CONVERSATION HIGHLIGHTS What work-life balance really is. What "I'm fully there" means. The power of your Flow state. "What is the ecosystem within you first before you can think about the ecosystem outside of you?" How stress can manifest in us. "Be of service, be of service, be of service." A story showing..."You can make a small difference...you don't have to make a huge change." An example of how being destabilized can be good for you. Doing what you need to do, despite it feeling like a loss to or disappointment by others. Why Hiba doesn't subscribe to using the word "leader." What it means to "exercise leadership." The difference between a technical challenge and an adaptive challenge. Why leadership means asking someone (or a group) to sustain losses. What it means to "manage your hungers." Renegotiating loyalties to ancestors to work toward solutions today. The MAIN QUESTION underlying my conversation with Hiba is, How can we adapt to the outside world and avoid its usual repercussions by instead first doing the deep work internally within ourselves? FIND HIBA Website: emberscc.com LinkedIn: linkedin.com/in/dr-hiba-khaled Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/iamhibakhaled/ Personal Blog: https://feelittohealit.substack.com LinkedIn – Full Podcast Article: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/episode-89-hiba-khaled-leadership-line-staying-alive-john-m--1swnf/?trackingId=8o%2F69dg3T5C15dbdIH9Vwg%3D%3D TIME STAMP 00:00 – The Book Leads – Hiba Khaled 00:49 - Introduction & Bio 01:49 - Who are you today? Can you provide more information about your work? 06:31 - Hiba's work and philosophy on "work-life balance" 19:35 - Planning for one's best work 30:10 - The role of women and men and their relationship to stress 38:53 - How did your path into your career begin, and what did it look like up until now? 48:46 - How does the work you're doing today reconcile to who you were as a child? 51:35 - What does leadership mean to you? 55:16- Can you introduce us to the book we're discussing? 58:31- Hiba's main takeaways from the book 01:02:25 - A breakdown of the book. 01:05:51 - What changed in Hiba after reading the book? 01:12:41 - The power of nuance and the need for another podcast episode to dive into nuance itself. This series has become my Masterclass In Humanity. I'd love for you to join me and see what you take away from these conversations. Learn more about The Book Leads and listen to past episodes: Watch on YouTube Listen on Spotify Listen on Google Podcasts Listen on Apple Podcasts Read About The Book Leads – Blog Post For more great content, subscribe to my newsletter Last Week's Leadership Lessons, if you haven't already!
Casey, Dan and Tyler welcome special guest and lawyer Linsky who joins the guys for legal advice; Tyler tells us about Drake Bell's documentary; the guys talk about law enforcement in America.
Dive deep into the rich tapestry of organics with Todd Linsky on this episode of the Fresh CrEd Podcast. Filmed at the illustrious Organic Produce Summit, Todd peels back the layers of the early organic movement's wild west days, a time bursting with unbridled passion yet sparse in regulations.
The topic is urgency and anxiety. Our guest is the Reverend Doctor Sarah Calvert, Northern Virginia District Superintendent for the Virginia Conference. Sarah and I were colleagues in the Wesley Theological Seminary Doctor of Ministry Program where both of us also got our Master of Divinity. She also holds degrees from Mary Washington in Virginia and George Mason (Scalia School of Law). Sarah's LinkedIn is HERE and HERE is a bio used at Northern Virginia welcoming. Some links from the Podcast follow: Linsky and Heifetz: Leadership on the Line. Excellent book. We discussed it briefly. Very briefly. Will probably come back to it another day. Paragraph 2553 of our UM Book of Discipline is HERE. This was passed in order in 2019 in order to provide an avenue for churches unhappy with the current wording in our polity the means to leave the UMC. Ironically, the intended user in 2019 is not using the provision, rather, it is by and large the forces that developed the policy. Enneagram is HERE. Other examples exist. Fairly long. Do it when you have a few minutes. Strengths Finder is HERE. There is a cost. Sorry. Franciscan Blessing -- Sarah goes to this blessing at the end of our talk. I indicated I would share it with all ... Please, if you find the show rewarding, get yourself subscribed on your podcast software. I use an app called Overcast but there are many. Look for Mindful Leader Dennis Shaw and you should get a hit. Let me know if you don't. My email is dennis at mantuan dot org ... (bot perplexer). We are on a two week schedule on Mondays. This one was released on August 21st. My next guest is Annie Arnoldy, the Mountain Sky Conference Director of Connectional Ministry.
Beth and Debbie interview Lisa Linsky, a criminal prosecutor and partner at McDermott Law, discussing her journey as a pioneer in LGBTQ+ diversity and inclusion. Lisa shares her challenges, from coming out at work to establishing the first LGBTQ+ committee at a big law firm, ultimately creating a safe and inclusive environment for colleagues and setting a benchmark for other firms. Check out the show notes for this episode on our website. Connect with us: Facebook Twitter LinkedIn
SOCIAL MEDIA follow us on YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCRUWxD1OKGkZW5ETHyrtyJg LOST HYPERSPACE Website. https://lost-hyperspace-a-star-wars.onpodium.com/LOST HYPERSPACE EMAIL: comments and questions at: losthyperspace@gmail.comIf you like what you've heard, please leave us a 5-star rating or review on Spotify, Apple Podcast, Google podcast, which will also help more people discover this Star Wars Podcast. LOST HYPERSPACE MERCH: Official losthyperspace Merch / Streamlabs --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lost-hyperspace/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lost-hyperspace/support
On tonight's Episode we are excited to have Dr Linsky join us in Part 1 of out Resort series... Disney's Value Resorts! So many about But First...Love to hear your answer to this weeks Rope Drop Question...Email us at info@ears4youpodcast.comIf you like what you are hearing please like and subscribe!Find us on Pinterest, Instagram and FB @ears4youpodca
WELEOME BACK TO LOST HYPERSPACE SOCIAL MEDIA follow us on YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCRUWxD1OKGkZW5ETHyrtyJg LOST HYPERSPACE Website. https://lost-hyperspace-a-star-wars.onpodium.com/ LOST HYPERSPACE MERCH: https://losthyperspace.creator-spring.com/listing/lost-hyperspace-merch LOST HYPERSPACE MERCH: Official losthyperspace Merch / Streamlabs LOST HYPERSPACE EMAIL: comments and questions at: losthyperspace@gmail.com If you like what you've heard, please leave us a 5-star rating or review on Spotify, Apple Podcast, Google podcast, which will also help more people discover this Star Wars Podcast. --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lost-hyperspace/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lost-hyperspace/support
BrownTown again invites Hannah Linsky (she/her), vintage stylist, seller, educator, and liver and breather of all things fashion to unpack the politics of dress. In part 2, the friends go macro and discuss fashion within current and historical social movements and its impact on policy and popular culture. From Scottish Resistance to the Black Panthers to Iran's Hijab Protest Movement and everything in between, we understand that dress communicates strong cultural messages. Though often created out of specific contexts, these stylings last generations, travel across cultures, and make us investigate our notions of respectability, autonomy, and mobilization. “If fashion resists power, it is also a compelling form of it,” (Tansy Hoskins). Listen to Episode 85, Part 1! GUEST: Hannah Linsky is a vintage stylist, seller, occasional model and avid collector. She lives and breathes fashion and loves playing dress up almost as much as she loves talking fashion. She is a recent graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she earned her Master's in Art Education. Her work Revolutionary Dress (site, Instagram) centers around examining historical movements through the lens of dress."Past social and political movements provide a basis for conversations about race, class, gender, sexuality, ability and culture, while dress acts as a vehicle to move the conversations from past events to the personal, present and future. Learning about the power of dress in historical movements allows for a wide range of new material to supplement common subjects already covered in educational spaces. It opens up space for discussions about social structures, culture and self-reflection." -RevDress Mentioned in episode:Hoda Katebi's Work -- Instagram, Twitter, Facebook, Websiteon WGN-TV, "You don't sound American"on France's hijab ban and the Iran hijab protests (1, 2)2016: Beyoncé at 2016 Super Bowl and #RememberRekia Action in ChicagoNWA, Los Angeles Raiders, and the Straight Outta LA documentary (1, 2, 3)SoapBox's What's Beef? documentary on neoliberalism, gangsta rap, and NWAMexican RebozoPunk Attitude documentary and Pistol TV Miniseries CREDITS: Intro soundbite from Hoda Katebi on WGN-TV. Audio engineered by Kiera Battles. Episode photo by Hannah Linsky. --Bourbon 'n BrownTownFacebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | PatreonSoapBox Productions and Organizing, 501(c)3Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | Support
On tonight's Episode we chat about how we will need to adapt the Linsky 7 and Rox has an awesome Game!But First...Love to hear your answer to this weeks Rope Drop Question...Email us at info@ears4youpodcast.comIf you like what you are hearing please like and subscribe!Find us on Pinterest, Instagram and FB @ears4youpodca
We have a new guest to welcome to the podcast Milana Linsky. If you like what you've heard, please leave us a 5-star rating or review on Spotify, Apple Podcast, Google podcast, which will also help more people discover this Star Wars Podcast. LEGEND OF FREGI TV SHOW TEASER TRAILER https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xjPgh9EJx5A follow us on YouTube: https://youtube.com/channel/UCRUWxD1OKGkZW5ETHyrtyJg LOST HYPERSPACE Website. https://lost-hyperspace-a-star-wars.onpodium.com/ LOST HYPERSPACE MERCH: https://losthyperspace.creator-spring.com/listing/lost-hyperspace-merch LOST HYPERSPACE MERCH: Official losthyperspace Merch / Streamlabs LOST HYPERSPACE EMAIL: comments and questions at: losthyperspace@gmail.com --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/lost-hyperspace/message
BrownTown invites Hannah Linsky (she/her), vintage stylist, seller, educator, and liver and breather of all things fashion to unpack the politics of dress. The friends use their experiences with clothing and fashion growing up to dissect the often overlooked yet important cultural artifact. As an everyday window into individual and collective beliefs and values, the limitless expression of how we adorn our bodies is a site for discussion around gender and patriarchy; sustainability, labor, and capitalism; and much more. The politics of dress communicate praxis of power and hierarchy yet offer an opportunity for resistance and decolonization. Stay tuned for Part 2! GUESTHannah Linsky is a vintage stylist, seller, occasional model and avid collector. She lives and breathes fashion and loves playing dress up almost as much as she loves talking fashion. She is a recent graduate of the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, where she earned her Master's in Art Education. Her work Revolutionary Dress centers around examining historical movements through the lens of dress.Rev Dress (site, Instagram) looks at the ways dress has been used as a strategic tool of resistance and revolution, across countries, cultures, and communities from the past and today. Dress is an important and often overlooked cultural artifact, a window into so many aspects of human life and behavior. Studying what people wore can help us understand their daily experiences, beliefs, values, social structures and so much more. We can use what we've learned about past people and movements to inform our choices today, and better recognize how our dress can be one tool amongst many in our collective, ongoing fight toward liberation. Mentioned in episode:TRAP House ChicagoShein controversy (1, 2, 3)SoapBox and Demand Justice clothing collaborationsHannah's recs on accounts and people to follow:Hoda Katebi -- fashion, politics, abolition, Chicago/East BayAlokvmenon -- Degendering fashion, queering fashionAja Barber -- Intersectional sustainability and politicsDressing Dykes -- Lesbian fashion historyThe Slow Factory -- Intersectional sustainability and politicsThe Zay Initiative -- The Art of Arab DressClothes Horse Podcast -- The podcast that loves clothes but hates capitalism! CREDITS: Intro soundbite from Alokvmenon and outro music Wu Wear: The Garment Renaissance by the RZA ft. Method Man & Cappadonna. Audio engineered by Kiera Battles. Episode photo by Hannah Linsky. --Bourbon 'n BrownTownFacebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | PatreonSoapBox Productions and Organizing, 501(c)3Facebook | Twitter | Instagram | Site | Linktree | Support
Listen as Todd shares his thoughts on the discussion document on climate smart agriculture presented by the National Organic Standards Board. Todd has a lot to say about this in a short period of time.
Aron Linsky and Nate Slutzky founded a collectable business using NIL and stars of the future. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Eco-Justice and Environmental Justice...What do those terms mean and how they inform our thinking about the question: Justice for Whom? Join us today as we learn more about these terms and talk with conservationist, Rebecca Bolich-Wade, about how communities can use eco-justice, environmental justice, and the community commons to build more inclusive and equitable communities.Full TranscriptRebecca Bolich-Wade Bio:With experience ranging from wildlife research to environmental education, Rebecca is presently utilizing her knowledge to expand Clean Water conservation at Upstate Forever, a conservation organization representing the Upstate of South Carolina. Rebecca holds a Bachelor of Science in Biology from Furman University where she studied conservation biology and philosophy. During her undergraduate studies and following her graduation, Rebecca had opportunities to work in research pertaining to mountain lions, bobcats, Mexican grey wolves, Bolson tortoises, and bats in states ranging from New York to New Mexico. Since the summer of 2020, Rebecca has been in pursuit of her Masters of Natural Science and Environmental Education from Hamline University. During this graduate program, Rebecca has had a keen focus on inclusion and diversity within environmental education and ecojustice. Additional References:Athens Land TrustWelcome to Living Cully : Living CullyHome - Urban Waters Learning Network We mentioned these books in our discussion. You can purchase them from the State of Inclusion Bookstore at bookshop.orgBraiding Sweetgrass, by Robin Wall KimmererThe Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing Your Organization and the World, by Heifetz, Grashow, and Linsky
I'm resharing one of my favorite episodes where I chatted with Prof. Marty Linsky about all things leadership and why we must look at leadership as an activity not a title.
Tubo de ensaio edição de 22 de abril - Zé o Linsky
Spiritual practices are tools that help us deepen and enrich our spiritual lives. As we prepare for Lent, Boston Avenue is offering a six-part ‘Experiencing Lent' series, looking at six different practices that might nourish your faith life. We'll be exploring these practices on our podcast, in addition to offering live classes over these practices (visit our website or social media to learn more). In this episode, Philip and Caitlin are joined by Melanie Linsky and Carol Maus to discuss contemplative prayer.
Our Dad has been bringing up the topic of carbon credits a lot over the past year. Like us, you're probably wondering “What the heck is a carbon credit?” so we asked our friend Dan Linsky of ClimeCo to break it down for us. “Dan has been involved in the carbon and renewable energy industries since 2003. At ClimeCo, he serves as the Vice President of Voluntary Markets and Leader of the Transaction Team. Dan oversees all voluntary carbon sales, coordinates strategies, and manages ClimeCo's carbon offset inventories for this growing market.” The thing we're most excited about with Carbon Credits is the ability to get a leg up on the competition in your bids. If you have a clear way of showing owners that you'll offset the emissions produced over the life of the project you're going to turn some heads. ClimeCo's Website Dan's LinkedIn Thanks for listening! Please be sure to leave a rating or review and follow us on our social accounts! SUBSCRIBE! Like us on LinkedIn! Like us on Facebook! Follow us on Instagram! Eddie's LinkedIn Tyler's LinkedIn
What does it mean to be a practicing SPIRITUAL PSYCHIC? How do INTUITIVES, empaths, mediums and healers experience their PSYCHIC GIFTS? Sara talks to our VISIONARY PSYCHICS about their experience of the MYSTIC REALMS. Learn at www.sarawiseman.com/visionary-psychics.html
Before 70 Over 70 goes on hiatus, Max sits down again with the person who inspired the show, his dad Marty, to talk about what he has learned from these conversations and what he hopes will stick with listeners. Thank you to the more than 70 people over 70 who helped make this show possible: Alice Waters, André De Shields, Anna Fisher, Dr. Anthony Fauci, Arlene Heyman, Arthur Russell, Austin Sarat, Barney Frank, Bertha Riley, Dr. Bessel Van Der Kolk, Betty Goedhart, Beverly Glenn-Copeland, Bob Iger, Carolyn Doelling, Dan Rather, Darryl Cox, David Crosby, Deanna Gobio, Diana Nyad, Diane Meier, Diedre Wolownick, Dionne Warwick, Dolores Huerta, Donalda MacGeachy, Evelyn Griesse, George Pettigrew, Gloria Allen, Greg O'Brien, Sister Helen Prejean, Howard Kakita, Jackie Batson, James Hong, Jim Clyburn, Father Joe Carey, Dr. Joycelyn Elders, Judith Light, Konai Helu Thaman, Krishnamurthy, Dr. Laverene Wimberly, Liliana Weisbek, Lillian Faderman, Lilly Ledbetter, Lucia DeRespinis, Lois Lowry, Lynn Staley, Madeleine Albright, Maira Kalman, Marty Linsky, Mavis Staples, Michio Kaku, Miriam Moss, Nikki Giovanni, Norman Lear, Paul Price, Paula Weinstein, Peter Leighton, Phyllis Irwin, Raffi, Renata Adler, Russell Banks, Sandy Levin, Scott Kalin, Shirley Ross, Sid Moss, Sjanna Leighton, Steven Berman, Susan Lucci, Timothy Fullam, Tom Locke, Travis Mayes, Twiggy, William Locke Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Ben Linsky is an officer in the Boston Police Department. He specifically works in the street outreach program where he is involved in the harm reduction program. With so much attention on mental health these days, Benny is on the front lines and offers unique perspective on how more and more of police work crosses into social work. Benny has used his background in psychology to better assist this vulnerable population. His journey to the police force is a unique one that we think you'll enjoy. IN THIS EPISODE WE LEARN: -The most stressful kinds of mental illness to deal with -How Benny was a pioneer in the crisis clinician program -Teaching other officers about mental health -Coaching people through Boston's Street Outreach Team -wilderness therapy to street therapy -What is minimum manning -How NOT to shine your shoes -The experience of an older cadet in the police academy -How to take a breath We hope you enjoy! If you found this useful, please subscribe to the channel, write us a review or give us a rating. You can subscribe to the podcast on iTunes, Spotify, and Amazon Music. If you have Amazon music, search "The Teaching and Coaching Podcast." IG: @teachingandcoachingpodcast Facebook: Erick Kainen LinkedIn: Erick Kainen
En la entrevista de hoy tendremos a la educadora y emprendedora, Linsky Y. Arribas Cruz. Oriunda de Aibonito, PR y establecida en la ciudad de Hampton, VA, Linsky siempre ha tenido un deseo nato de ayudar a los que le rodean mientras busca ser la mejor versión de sí misma en el proceso. Esas cualidades la llevaron a estudiar en la Universidad de Puerto Rico en Cayey un bachillerato en educación con concentración en inglés y sub-concentración en educación física. Esa pasión por la expresión y el movimiento corporal la llevó a participar en el programa de baile de salsa de la Escuela de Bellas Artes de Cayey, PR bajo la dirección del Dr. Stacey Lopez y en el ballet Brumas de Borikén. Recientemente, Linsky es profesora en la Hampton Roads International Montessori School en Hampton, VAEn esta edición especial hablamos de su historia, su ética de trabajo y de cualidades como la curiosidad, la exploración y de evitar la búsqueda de la perfección y sustituirla con el aprendizaje continuo y la búsqueda del mejor ser humano posible.https://www.instagram.com/tromborican/https://www.facebook.com/tromboricanhttps://www.tromborican.com
Fr. Gary Linsky is the rector of St. Peter's Basilica in Columbia, SC.
Before our first episode, Max sits down with the person over 70 who knows him best — his dad. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JfZm0tPUxjESite: https://codingcat.dev/podcast/1-15-whats-up-with-svelteDetailsShawn or perhaps more popularly known as, Swyx, is a frequent writer and speaker best known for the Learn in Public movement and recently published The Coding Career Handbook with more advice for engineers going from Junior to Senior. He has worked for Netlify and AWS and is also the co-host of the Svelte Radio podcast.Questions Where are you living these days? What is Svelte and how is it different from other frontend "frameworks"? The website Svelte.dev explains a lot about why I love Svelte. It says, write less code in languages you already know, compiles the framework away to a tiny vanilla JS bundle, and easy out of the box reactive state management. All of this sounds fantastic, so why are companies still choosing the other big 3 frameworks. Is there anything Svelte missing? a. https://www.swyx.io/svelte-sites-react-apps/ I saw you have a course on egghead on Design Systems with React and Typescript in Storybook. Do you think Svelte would be a good choice when building a design system since it is so close to base HTML? Built in animations and actions out of the box are 2 things that really make Svelte stand out for me. Can you explain more about what actions are and how you use them in Svelte? a. https://github.com/sw-yx/svelte-actions The Svelte docs are really nice, but when it comes to video tutorials there isn't much out there. Where would you tell people to go that wanted to get started learning Svelte and would you ever think about creating a course for Svelte? We've all heard the rumors that SvelteKit is coming soon and I know you don't work on that specifically. But, with this new solution coming out that will supposedly handle static site generation and server side rendering, do you know if Sapper is going away or what is happening there? Additional Links Mentioned https://sveltesociety.dev/ https://github.com/sw-yx/svelte-actions https://svelte.dev/ https://svelte.dev/examples#actions https://www.svelteradio.com/ https://egghead.io/courses/getting-started-with-svelte-3-05a8541a https://frontendmasters.com/courses/svelte/ https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCZSr5B0l07JXK2FIeWA0-jw https://sveltesummit.com/ https://podrocket.logrocket.com/swyx https://svelte.dev/blog/whats-the-deal-with-sveltekit Purrfect PicksThese are fun picks of the week. Maybe something you bought online, a great show you are currently watching, or that last book that you thought was amazing.Shawn WangThreejs JourneyBrittney Postma https://www.swyx.io/svelte-sites-react-apps/ Draggable Kanban App with Svelte - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mcaYol_XFk4&t=1529s Alex Patterson https://undraw.co/ https://github.com/sw-yx/spark-joy/blob/master/README.md#illustrations TranscriptAlex Patterson: [00:00:00] Welcome back. Perfect peeps to perfect ad dev today on the show we have Shawn Wang also known as Swyx. Hey Shawn, how's it going? swyx: [00:00:11] Hey, thanks for having me. Yeah, happy to be here.Alex Patterson: [00:00:15] Thanks. Thanks for coming on. A little bit about Shawn, or perhaps popular known as Swyx is a frequent writer and speaker best known for the learning public movement. And recently published the coding career handbook with more advice for engineers going from junior to senior, he has worked for Netlify AWS and is also the co-host of felt radio podcasts. That was quite a bit of stuff.swyx: [00:00:39] Yeah. Is that too long of a bio? I've been thinking about cutting it down?Alex Patterson: [00:00:42] I don't think so. I think it's perfect. Honestly, I really like busy. Brittney Postma: [00:00:47] That's really cool. We like swyx: [00:00:48] all the content. Okay. Making up for lost time. I was a career changer, so from 2011 to 2017, I was finance. And now I'm trying to make up for it.Alex Patterson: [00:00:59] I think you're doing a great job. You've probably leaped over a lot of us. So I probably varied deleted as I always tend to do, because I'm just so excited about the guests. Usually not as much, well equally as the sidle and subjects. So, today we're talking about what's up with felt. And possibly some things there.Brittany will probably lead a lot of this conversation today. Folks, you probably hear too much from me, but Brittany loves fell. And so, I'm going to let her take charge on this one quite a bit. The only things that I want to know before we dive in is felt where are you these days? Are you at home or where are you? swyx: [00:01:32] Not for those watching on video. This is clearly not daylight. It is 3:00 AM my time in Singapore. And basically this is where I was born and raised and where my family lives. Normally I live in New York but. You know exactly a year ago, I fled New York because I wasn't sure if the healthcare system could take me if I got COVID.So I came back to the only place I knew, which is here. And I've been here. It was supposed to be like, I actually packed for like two months and I left all my stuff in my apartment and I was like, it's a short trip. It's fine. And now I'm still here. Repeatedly. It's Brittney Postma: [00:02:06] crazy. That's exactly how we all felt like it's going to be over in a couple months.Like, let's just do this for now and then no, we're still here a year later that you got to go back to the family. swyx: [00:02:19] I've lived through this I've lived through SARS which actually shut down schools here in Asia for a while. And I think Americans don't know how it is. So maybe, I do think that you ha you don't take it as seriously if you haven't been exposed to it.But like everyone everyone of us in Asia knew exactly what to do. And we just did, follow the playbook. But it was over in two, three months. It wasn't like, We were scared. I was scared for my baby sister. I was like, what well did you just get born into? But it was fine. And and I thought this would be the same way and it wasn't.So there we go. Well, I'm Alex Patterson: [00:02:49] even more happy to have you on the show now that I know exactly what time zone you're in, it's crazy early or late defending. So thanks again. I don't know what hours you're keeping these days, so, swyx: [00:03:00] really appreciate it. I call it the reverse nine to five. So we wake up or start work at 9:00 PM and at 5:00 AM.And it turns out that it's not too bad, like as long as like the house is quiet, which it is, then you have to focus on your work and you'll eat dinner with your family. And that's fine. Yeah, Alex Patterson: [00:03:17] that's crazy. Well, awesome. Well, yeah, not to drive too far away from it. I'm glad you're you were able to get home and healthy and we're super excited to talk about smelled.So I hope you're. I hope you're ready to talk about it too. Yeah. I Brittney Postma: [00:03:30] am extremely excited to be talking about like, I, this is my favorite framework, library, whatever you want to call it. Right. Like compiler, but what do you. Thanks spelt is. And how is it different from those other front end frameworks that are out there?swyx: [00:03:48] Well, I'd be interested in your take since you're also, the resident expert. Brittney Postma: [00:03:53] I don't know if I would consider myself an expert, but yeah. I mean, I know spelt is a compiler, so I think of it as a framework because it's structures or code, right? So it's something that structures your code and that you can write some form of markup in it's like an HTML super set.So that's kind of how I view it as a framework that compiles away. Yeah, swyx: [00:04:16] my, my experience, I came from, I started with view and then I moved to react. And then I found svelte. And so I view that I view this progression in frameworks as just ways different ways in which to write user interfaces on the web.And to me it's felt is the simplest by far that I ever tried, it is a full sort of batteries included. It is a joy to to write. And the docs are really easy to explore. And the community is very nice and welcoming and small, which it seems like a surprising thing to want a small community, but having been in the large community like reacts, I was a moderator of the.Reacts, separated where there was over 200,000 people. Large communities have their problems too. And sometimes small is beautiful. And I think that's a lot of the philosophy has felt, like the basic hello world should not. Come with like, 120 kilobytes of uncompressed JavaScript.And unfortunately that's what you get with some of the heavier frameworks. And you that just doesn't matter for things. So Svelte like its name. It's a compiler framework compiler first. So unlike viewer reacts where you can just drop things in with a script tag, it's felt you do have to run a build step.But. With that one compromise you get a lot of mileage out of that build step including things like first-class animations, first-class styling support which react doesn't have. So I enjoy that. And of course the output bundle is as small as possible. Sometimes an order of magnitude smaller than what you get with react or view.And that's just because it's adopts a fundamentally different approach. I don't necessarily think one is better than the other. I just observe my mood, like, okay. So I think there's a S I still advise. Beginning developers to go learn reacts because that's where the biggest job market is.Okay. But once you're pretty secure and like your front end knowledge and your like your choice of tech stack, doesn't dictate your economic value. Then you should explore two tools that just make you happy and more productive. And for me, that's felt. Brittney Postma: [00:06:15] Yeah. You mentioned a couple of things that are actually some of my favorite things about spelt the developer experience.I feel like it is so fun to write. Like it is just simple and I almost feel like I know job market isn't quite there yet, but it's probably one of the easiest for developers to jump into right out of the gate. Once, you know, HTML, CSS and Java script, you can write spelt. It gets just that simple. So that's one of the things that I really love about it.And if the job market catches up, like, do you think that might be one of the things that we get to where they can learn that first? swyx: [00:06:51] Yeah, absolutely. So, we, we say things like the job market isn't there is it's not zero and it's growing every day. Apple is actively hiring for salt developers.And so as Ikea I think something like American airlines is also using there's a bunch of, so I helped to run this fall society community, which is kind of like the official community as felt. And we just keep a list of who's using salt and production and it's very long list. Yeah.And Brittney Postma: [00:07:16] there's felt jobs, right? It's swyx: [00:07:18] full jobs. Yep. Yep. Schneider electric, there's, household names and then there's less household names, but still very important, big companies that use felt. And I, I just. W at what point, how many, w is there a number at which we're happy or does it have to be a number one in order for people to be happy?Like we can get jobs using salts like that. That's not in doubt. Brittney Postma: [00:07:37] I think that it's easy for people to jump in. Would you agree with that? Like where people could just jump in and learn it right after learning HTML, CSS and JavaScript. swyx: [00:07:47] Yeah, no, absolutely. Yeah. In fact, like, I think the progression from HTML is probably the simplest compared to the other two frameworks, because it is a HTML super set, like you just said, Brittney Postma: [00:07:57] Yeah.And those sugar syntax that we get with smell, I feel like are so much, I don't want to say better, but with react. And JSX like, there's so many of those nuances that you have to do, like class name and you have to do whatever your attribute is equal to. And then you have to put the JavaScript in there and we can just do those shorthand.Syntax is in spelled that are so nice. swyx: [00:08:21] Yeah. There's good and bad in the sense that it does add learning curve to the framework and reacts intentionally for better or worse is on the other side of that. Spectrum, but for things that we do multiple times a day, every day, it's nice to have a shorthand.Brittney Postma: [00:08:38] That's really nice. And you mentioned one of those other things that are my favorites is the built-in animations with spell are just outstanding and it's so nice. Especially if you're building a static site, like you can do page transitions easily. You can bring in like a little. Fade in animation, whatever you want.And it's just, it comes out of the box and you get that easily. Also actions are another thing that's felt provides you. And can you explain more about what actions are and how you used them and spell swyx: [00:09:06] it? Yeah, I haven't tried explaining this. So this will be a challenge. Actions are basically life cycles or side effects of components that mounts on the Dom.So you can instructs felt too. Run some code when something mounts, when something changes data and when something on mounts and that can be anything from measuring where the screen, where the most position is, there's a trick to triggering like a keyboard shortcut registration.There's lots of use cases for actions. In fact we are, we actually starting to collect some of these. I have a felt actions, repo am I GitHub where I am proposing a couple of, I think, six of them so far. For example, you can change a button, like one of the problems with web apps and buttons in general is that if you bind something to click that works fine on a desktop, but then it doesn't translate very well to a mobile.And for example, if you want to have something long press like that, that works on the long press you have to, it there's no event for that in, in I'm mobile. So you have to code it up yourself. So as felt action, how helps to give you reusable pieces of code that you can just say, all right, once this thing is mounted, let's add this additional listener with this preset amount of logic.And that's an action that you can just say, like on long press do this other thing or on, keyboard, shortcut, trigger this other function. And these are just very convenient ways to attach. Individual pieces of logic and sometimes reusable logic to the Dom elements that you work with.Are they all events they can generate events or they can sort of trigger based on events. So, so yeah that's how I think about it. And it's basically, you can map it to the react concepts of use ref and use effects together. You just don't have to write as much because use revenues effects are a little bit lower level.And they give you more power, but they also give you more rope to hang yourself with. And actions are pretty straight forward. You just attach it to them and use them as there is. You're supposed to use them. Yeah. Brittney Postma: [00:11:03] And you said a little bit in there, how we have the on colon.And use colon that we can use those with inside of the HTML super set. So there's like that little shorthand that you can use your action with. Alex Patterson: [00:11:16] I'd almost like to do I love what you guys are talking about, but I'd love to tie a visual to some of it. So I jumped out to the field site and some of what you're talking about, I'm like, I wonder what this looks like.And they actually have some, like, felt examples out here for. swyx: [00:11:33] Hits at a draggable action. There's one there. I love it because I needed it and I just went to dogs and grabbed it and I was done. I didn't have, I did the same thing. Brittney Postma: [00:11:42] I just did it and had to go to the same one. swyx: [00:11:46] Do you see it? I Alex Patterson: [00:11:47] don't say it.I don't know how I'm missing it though. swyx: [00:11:51] Actually it's actually, you just missed it. Alex Patterson: [00:11:53] I see animations. There we swyx: [00:11:55] go. Actions. Yeah, use directive. Okay. Is this the one with the drag? Yeah. Yeah, this is the one. Okay. That's so wild. Yeah. So, so these actions, the use the, the panel vote dot JS, that's the action.And go look up, look at the code, right? It's, it's basically some like low-level mouse, smooth code, right? Which you write once, but essentially once you've written this function, you can go back to your main app. And then look at where Panama is used. So scroll down to use panel down there, right?So you just attach it on and that generates three events that you hook into. So, on pen, start on pen move and on pen end. So these are ways to extend the platform, right? These are not natural, dumb, specific events that are generated by your browser. These are things where you synthetically create out of out of applying their use panel action.And so now you have just event handlers, which you can use to do whatever. And here we were just. Implementing drag and drop just like that. Alex Patterson: [00:12:51] Has it on felt like expert, I've written a couple of like little things to tie and firestorm, but when you actually write this and then you go through that build step, like you're talking about, and then beginning, this actually becomes just straight JavaScript, HTML on the other side, right?swyx: [00:13:05] Yeah. Yeah. Just dominance functions. There's no intermediate library, which makes it very spelt. So I like the name. Brittney Postma: [00:13:11] Exactly. It fits right in. Alex Patterson: [00:13:13] Yeah. So for anyone that hasn't checked out, it's, Felia here's the main site. It kind of walks you through just different areas for write less code and you can dive into why that's the case.And it just has these great little snippets of how to start taking in data. So curious, like using name with data Yeah it's pretty simple. And you almost think you're writing which you are basically writing JavaScript most of the time. So it's pretty, pretty awesome. swyx: [00:13:40] And Brittney Postma: [00:13:40] I, Ms. Swyx said earlier, like the docs are really nice.They're really helpful. swyx: [00:13:45] Yeah there's something about single page docs and having an embedded ripple where people can experiment and play. It's a very nice community norm to the point where the first conference, the first fall conference that we organized I was like, Hey, we need a timer.So I just like made a really crappy timer in this fall rapport. And then people just took that rebel and they cloned it. And then just add started adding like wacky animations and SBGs and all that. And it was just like a really fun and remixed cultural type of thing that. Could not have happened in the other frameworks, just because the other frameworks take so much setup and you have to fight over libraries and stuff like that.Spelt is, designed by rich Harris at the New York times. And it's really, you can really tell that it's just like, I, it's one, it's a tool set for someone to be productive without having to make too many choices. And it's very much loved by the data journalists type of people who make interactive graphics and like drop in.Sites and components even though it's capable of making full apps I'm just saying like, that's what hooks people from the start, which is how easy it is to get started. Brittney Postma: [00:14:43] Yeah, that touches a little bit on the article that you wrote. Right. Felt for sites, react for apps.swyx: [00:14:47] That's a controversial one. Cause I got haters from both sides. Brittney Postma: [00:14:51] Oh, I liked it. I think you can write apps was felt, but I mean, it just wasn't there at the time of writing the article, right? swyx: [00:14:59] No, it was, I'm just saying like, you care about different things at different scales and I think.In JavaScript. And in programming in general, we try too hard to make one tool fit all skills. And we should be more respectful of the fact that tools that are made to extends from the smallest thing all the way to the biggest thing we'd like to make claims like that. But you typically are not using the best tool for the job when you do that.And so it kind of shows and, and that's why, I wanted to make the case essentially for react people, to try svelte. And first of all, people to not be so obsessive about salt, owning everything because your nerves are not there yet. And there's no point pretending Brittney Postma: [00:15:34] That is very true.And I feel like we need to use the right tool for the job like that. That's what you're saying there. And swyx: [00:15:40] I do have a blog post. So it's a nuance thing. It's still new ones. I do have a blog post called in defense of hammers, which is this idea that if you have a hammer, then everything was like a nail, right?It's like, it's a criticism of this person who has one tool and is like, use that tool to solve everything. And you know what? That's actually pretty great. Like if, if you have, you can just learn one tool and solve everything. That's awesome. That's good for you, like, cause what's the alternative, like learning a thousand tools.That's also a lot of overhead. Right. So I think people are a little bit too lazy when they say use the right tool for the job. I mean, I just used it. So, I'm not exempt from this. It's a nuance thing. So maybe use two tools to do two different jobs. And just identify, that when you're working at small scale and working in large scale, these jobs are different.They're not, they may not nominally be the same thing. Cause you're kind of working on the same substrate, which is the web, but at different scales, then different things start to matter. And so, so my example for why continue to use react was for example, react native, which is the most advanced sort of cross that forum JavaScript framework port, or whatever you call it, like SaaS native insomnia script exists.Brittney Postma: [00:16:47] Yeah. What is felt native? Like I've heard of it, but I've never worked in it. Have you ever worked in spelt swyx: [00:16:52] native? No, I have not. So, but we did just interview a guy in SWAT radio. And be coming up, it'll be coming out in a couple of weeks, but yeah, it uses native script, which is a way to generate mobile apps, from JavaScript.It, I don't know what the trade-offs are between native script's approach and react native's approach. And I mean, I will I'll figure that out when I get there. I just haven't needed it yet because I'm, cause I'm only web. Brittney Postma: [00:17:14] Same. Yeah, exactly. And yet you touched a little bit on how nice the docs are, but when it comes to video tutorials, there's not really a lot out there right now.Where would you tell people to go that wanted to get started with spelt? And would you ever consider creating a course was felt possibly. swyx: [00:17:30] Ah there are plenty of people who've made courses actually. There are some courses on AK dyo. I think Tomas Lacombe from Poland has made some videos there.Rich Harris, the creator has taught himself has done a full workshop on front end masters. Both of these are paid sites but they're. Pretty worth it. In my opinion, there are free tutorials on YouTube. So probably the free code camp channel has a couple of hours or more of a good spell tutorial.And I also know some people are making salt tutorials on their own. So Scott Selinsky from level of tutorials in syntax that FM has a full course together with like a it's a full stack it's felt core. So it has like authentication and stuff involved in Yeah. Yeah. It's on his YouTube and it's very high quality cause he's a professional video course creator.And there's also a channel called spelt mastery, which which also goes into some of that. And Lee tan, who's also Singaporean. But also one of those core maintainers goes into the core code, has felt and explains how it works on his YouTube channel. So there are a bunch of different. And these are just the ones I know of right there, there are plenty of other things.Like we accumulated a lot of them on this false society, YouTube channel basically any anyone who's a society member. It's free. Just some it can, you can send in, send it in and we just want to make this more accessible to people who want to learn. But there's also as felt Russia as well, India, SWAT, Brazil, there, they all got stuff going on.Brittney Postma: [00:18:47] It's so the community is just like expanding like swyx: [00:18:50] crazy Japan. Hey cool. Cause like, I started as felt society essentially on a whim because I was like, so the story of what was happening is I'm friends with rich Harris just cause we were both in New York and we hang out a bit and and the first felt meetup was going to happen in London.And I was like, I heard about that and I was like, Hey, we have to create her in New York. But the first meetup is in London, we got to beat them. Right. So, and so, so within one week I just announced that, Hey, where we're holding a meetup, I don't have a location. I don't have a place. I don't have attendee lists.I don't have speakers. But we're just going to make this happen because we gotta be first. So it didn't a week. I got a place at a Microsoft building. Someone volunteered 50 developers and three speakers for the first fall society meetup. No, that's Rootstrap Holy smoke. Yeah. It was fun.I mean, Twitter is great. And, I've been involved in the New York tech scene for three years, so it wasn't exactly like, from scratch, but it's a lot of friends and it's really a nice community. So simultaneously we had on the same day, October, first of 2019 we had foster Sadie's Stockholm.So also the, of London is false society. New York. And we continued like that for a few months until COVID hit. So then we all went online and we just decided to merge. And now the three of us are the hosts of the swell radio podcasts, and we have organized two conferences together and we're going to do a third next month.Yeah. Brittney Postma: [00:20:09] It's spelled comp next month. Is that what you just swyx: [00:20:11] said? Yes, faults summit, because we like. Brittney Postma: [00:20:15] All the other conferences swyx: [00:20:17] out there, but like, it starts with an S right. So you got to go with it.I really want to start. So view had a view of Vixens for a while, which is kind of like the female organization. So Jen Lopers on that, right? Jen Looper. Yeah. Well, they've really renamed themselves to front end foxes, so they kept the alliteration. But I want to, I was thinking about like salt sisters is that's what someone suggested.I don't know. But it's still looking for a. Champion of that weak link, Brittany, Brittney Postma: [00:20:49] I'm taking on so much. I don't know about taking on more than right now, but yeah, that sounds great. Yeah. All right. I know we diverged a little bit. Let's get back on topic. Alex Patterson: [00:21:01] I really appreciate it. I'm trying to keep up with all the mentions and all the HTML links are so getting Brittney Postma: [00:21:08] all those notes in the show notes.We actually had Scott to Linsky on last week. And you mentioned his felt course, and he has an animating spelt course too, that I really loved. I actually perfect picked it last week and it's a really good course too. But I saw you have a course on egghead IO on design systems with react and TypeScript in storybook.Do you think spelt would be a good choice for building a design system since it's so close to that base? HTML that we talked about? swyx: [00:21:34] Oh, this is an interesting question. I think it would be good, but it would not be the only choice. And I would not be upset if people chose something else, because I mean, ultimately. Ultimately what choice of technology you choose for your company. And it really depends on your team and what they know well, and if you just randomly force a new framework on them without consultation, like that's not going to go over very well. So I prioritize the health of the team over anything on technology.So as much as I like to fault it's just I'll do a go with whatever the team that wants to do. So, you gotta be a team player. But I will say that, so it's felt is a better base for a design system than react is mainly because a react design system is going to require you to use react in your main app.Whereas felt it can actually build this web components which you can use in any app. Brittney Postma: [00:22:18] Yeah. And that's what I was wondering is if it's more dynamic in a way, because you can get that base HTML and Java script, and then you can. Move it into whatever you need it to be. swyx: [00:22:28] Yeah. I don't know if I'll call that dynamic, but it's more portable.Yeah. Brittney Postma: [00:22:33] Affordable. That's a good word. swyx: [00:22:35] Yeah. I will also say like, any design system needs styling in react does not have styling. So.Like you just have to solve a lot more problems with starting from a base of react. And some people love that. And then some people don't need to spend their time doing that. Brittney Postma: [00:22:48] Do you like storybook for using design systems swyx: [00:22:52] in react? I think it's. Okay. I think it's I it's born in. Okay. That's good. I'm friends with Dom in the, the team over there.My problem with them is it's slow. So we use storybook in production, not production, but like professionally to develop. Netlify like the, the netlify.com. App and site, we have an entire design system sort of spelled out in storybook that things takes up something like 30 seconds to load. Because it's so slow.I don't know what it is inside of storybook. It could be Webpack, it could be the initialization inside the storybooks internals. It's just slow. And it's getting slower. The more we add to it. So it's gotta be. Faster. I've given them a lot of crap in public about it. So they're aware and they're working on it.And to be fair, to be really clear. I don't know. I'm not saying that I could do a better job. I'm just saying, I think we don't, I don't think this is the final state of things. I think that can be better. And and so, yeah, I secretly wants to build a better story book myself, but I think there's.Laurie you bet Alex Patterson: [00:23:56] on pod rocket. Caleb Mozhan the creator of Alpine JS talking about how he was showing off some things to the storybook folks. And it was so much faster. They're kind of blown away. So I'd be interested to see all these little permeation. Yeah. Brittney Postma: [00:24:14] Shawn was on pod rocket swyx: [00:24:16] today. I am I, well, I recorded it a couple of months ago, but yes, it's released today.Swyx yeah. 68. Yeah, exactly. No they're really cool. And I mean, I just, I. Obviously I've benefited from the blog posts. And I liked that they're branching onto podcasts. And I was very excited that to learn that they were launching a podcast. In fact I heard about it from an unrelated, like non-developer podcasts because those, the founder was on there.He just like casually mentioned it and they searched it up. They hadn't even announced it yet. And I was the first to ever tweet about it. So I kind of got the scoop and then they was just like, okay, well you want to come on Brittney Postma: [00:24:52] and log rockets a little bit into everything and everywhere. It's crazy. How like, guilty about it.Yeah. Related. Yeah. swyx: [00:24:59] Yeah. I mean, th that's a little bit of content marketing and sometimes it's annoying sometimes, but I think they're generally on the good side. So give them a pass on that one. I think they talked Alex Patterson: [00:25:08] about that. Trying not to be annoying part when coder was on.swyx: [00:25:11] Yeah. And you have to, like, if you're not annoying someone, you probably not doing it enough, so that's one perspective because yeah. The alternative is that you never blog and no surprise nobody's ever heard of you. Right. So, I F I feel both sides and I think sometimes it's a tough line to draw and everyone Johns at different ways.So that's my take on that. So Alex Patterson: [00:25:30] This might be a question maybe for Brittany, because I think we brought it up with you. Swyx but maybe both of, and I just have no clue. I'm so confused. Between what's happening with Sapper and felt it. Can you guys explain to me, like what essentially is happening in that world?swyx: [00:25:48] Ready you to take a crack, Brittney Postma: [00:25:52] get into that, like where's the future of spelt going? Like, what is it and is separate, dead. Like, we've heard all these like little key frames or keywords going on. So, I would like your take, like what do you think is happening and is separate going away or what is going on swyx: [00:26:08] there?Yeah. I don't have any sort of inside information, but essentially what happened was last. Conference last fall summit recharge is actually made it, made the announcement that SAPRA would never be reaching 1.0 meaning it will never be considered production ready. He considered the existing foundations, to like he wanted to do a rewrite from scratch using the new tools that.He enjoys, which is he has build and the different foundation for routing and stuff like that. So he eventually announced full kit, which is essentially sappers spiritual successor. There are a lot of companies, including rich rich, his own internal tooling that used Sapper.So there's a natural question of like, what am I, are you just leaving me high and dry? And the answer is no, because everyone who's making salt kit. Has production separate apps and and they're going to ensure a good migration path. So it's full kit is fundamentally rearchitected from like, kind of a next yes.Inspired next. Yes. Like as of like next year's version eight or nine it was like, He was originally architected as like a node server app. Right. You run a server, you run in it in node JS and it would serve requests. Now it's fun to me, fundamentally rearchitected to be a serverless solution.So you would able to be, to split up serving your pages from different serverless functions. And some of them could be static. Some of them could be dynamic. And it's very much in the line of the new. This generation of meta frameworks like remix in the react world. And I think that's a fundamentally good architectural design to make.And also it needs to be faster in, in sort of data generation. Like I, when I had my blog on Sapper, I ran into this so much so that I had to build a separate overlay to make the page generation a lot faster. And so, so there was a, there's a lot that goes into this technical decision-making but it is very exciting because it means that.The server side rendering story in salt is no longer a separate project. Now when you MPM installs felt you actually get a CLI that generates an, an app for you that also does server-side rendering and can be deployed on a number of different platforms. They're going to have multiple adapters to CloudFlare, to AWS, to Netlify, to whatever.And that's a much simpler story for me. It's gonna annoy some people that people get annoyed by change, but that's what's going on. So Sephora is not fully dead. It's not fully alive. It's just going to have a successor. At the time we thought it would be out by like the end of 2020. It is now March, 2021.And but we think there'll be a public beta pretty soon. So, that's all I know, I, it'll come out when it comes up, but I think that it's felt philosophy has always been towards. Unified tooling that is simple and fast. Everyone in the community, has, it's a benefit of being a second framework.Everyone knows what they want when they, when it comes to salt and it's its speed, its simplicity. And and I think SAP focus is going to deliver on that. Brittney Postma: [00:29:03] Yeah, as in the community are just waiting. Cause retires, keep saying Alpha's coming soon and we're like, Oh, is it ready? And I've tried it a couple of times.It does still seem a little bit buggy. And I just saw that they moved from snowpack to Veit. You know what V is or how that's different from snowpack and what the difference of that is. swyx: [00:29:20] Yeah. And these are like, for anyone who's listening these are all new names that popped up in the last year, right?Like if you're out of the loop, it's okay. Like, you're it's a full-time job keeping on top of all of these things. But I can explain it so. The whole goal, the whole innovation, I guess, that's taken place. And this is a broader thesis I called the third age of JavaScript going on is that we are replacing sort of legacy assumptions and, and just going all in, on sort of integrated bundling and IES modules.So. Veit and snowpack are both solutions where they serve a dev experience. That's entirely based on IES modules which are, native JavaScript, important exports. This is different from what you may be used to in web pack roll. Roll-up where the import and export will be transferred to some kind of internal module representation, where they would stitch things together for you to bundle it up.Which means that when you fire up a dev development mode to, run your apps on your, on your laptop it would have to build the entire app in order to serve your first page. Whereas with Veet or S or snowpack they would only just have to serve exactly the components that you requested in the current path.And that scales, because it becomes linear time. Like, the number of pages, the number of components that you have It goes from linear time to constant time, which is just the number of components that you are requesting. So you can have a massive site and your lo your startup time would be exactly the same as something that's that's much smaller.And also because you're basing it on a different base. So both feet in snowpack use IES build, which is a Webpack replacement from. Ironically a side project of the CTO of Figma Evan Wallace, cause he doesn't have enough to do. He made a new bundle that this thing is built and go rather than in JavaScript and it optimizes the hot paths.So, it actually builds a hundred times and this is not an exaggeration. Exaggeration a hundred times faster than Webpack. And whenever you have order of magnitude changes in your development skills like that, you just unlock new levels of play and, and experimentation that you could not have before in your development.So, that's why we basically have to burn everything down because there's just a new foundation coming around in JavaScript. And. Brittney Postma: [00:31:26] Yeah. And like those architectural changes that you were talking about, I feel like next JS just really like exploded in the last year. We're actually rebuilding our coding cat.dev site in next JS now.And with Sapper kind of going away and spelt kit taking over that, those adapters that you were talking about, they have like a static adapter and I think it's a node adapter. Is that right? Do you know, if we're going to be able to do that, like next JS thing where it's on a per page basis or is it going to be like where the whole app is?One way, swyx: [00:31:56] I think there's, I think probably just gonna be a third kind of adapter where you serve it from serverless. I don't actually, I haven't actually seen it and I'm not on the team that maintains it, so I can't promise it, but that was the original vision that I was told. So, That's as much as I can tell, because he's very bought into the serverless environment.So I don't see any and any future in which he doesn't provide a service adapter. Brittney Postma: [00:32:17] Yeah. I mean, the only thing that I have in it is just I've played with it a couple of times. And like I said, I mean, it was kind of buggy. Like I couldn't refresh in the browser and things and I wanted it to do things that it just wasn't doing it and it wasn't there, but I'm really excited for the future of spell and how it's growing.So, yeah. swyx: [00:32:36] In a sense, like, I wish that it's felt had a bit more backing to it, because the reason next year has, has had such success is because there's a company behind it and it's very incentivized to market it and to invest in its development and all that good stuff. Right? Like that's actually open source working at its best.Here it's just like a loose connection of volunteers who like chip in on the weekends. So. That's why we don't have like firm's schedules and like even our conferences, when we put them together, it kind of buggy something, we had downtime and there's, it's just a, it's a mess. It's a community effort.It's charming getting Brittney Postma: [00:33:09] that passion though. Like companies like put just the marketing and just the money into it, and we're getting the passion of the developers because that's what they want and that's what they need to see. So that's one of the nice things about that. swyx: [00:33:22] Yeah, a little bit challenged.Cause like, as it grows clearly the community deserves better than like, it's like, like a fly by night volunteer sort of sometimes you're there. Sometimes you're not effort. Like Vue has figured it out. They, they have the, they do have the funding and they have a good organization and it's felt, I don't think it's there yet.There there's, there's starting to be some kind of some measure of governance. In fact, my, probably my number one wish first of all, is just more open and regular committed governance to the project. And and you don't think about these things when you choose technologies when you're just starting out as a dev, but then the more you rely on these things and you see that you're downstream of the human principles and organizations behind the code, then you're like, Oh, okay.I start to really care.Alex Patterson: [00:34:03] So without knowing, obviously I'm not in the community, as far as you guys are I feel like you've touched on every part of it.You've talked about spell versus fell kid and the production side. The only. Like I would be curious just to leave off with, and I think we touched on it a little bit as like a new developer coming in, like a junior, like just leaving college or a bootcamp or whatever to, to takes felt. And we kind of said, maybe don't learn felt for your next job, but definitely, check it out and learn it for your side project or like your blog or something like that.Is that still pretty accurate? swyx: [00:34:36] Yeah, I think so. In, in the same way that react, represents what's in production today, but there's a new generation of tech coming. I think that's felt could be that that future, that glimpse of the future, you definitely want to stay informed of like, what is possible, even if you don't use it every day.You shouldn't know. What is exciting, what excites the people who are focused on the future? To me, that is swell. That is yes, bill. That is Veet. This whole generation of tooling is, is going to be. A huge differentiator for the next 10 years in, in JavaScript. So yeah, if you're just, if you just graduated from bootcamp, go get that job, no, I'm not gonna stand in your way.But you should know that you deserve better tooling. And also your, the tools that you use for your side projects should not be the same thing as the tools that you use for work, because there are different scales and Yeah. I mean, you should start choosing the things that make you happy and more productive.Yeah. That's Alex Patterson: [00:35:29] well said. I think that we'll probably leave it there because that's a great ending to this podcast. And then the last thing that we always love to do is a fun part of the pod and we called our perfect picks. So Swyx we, we have your perfect pick. Let me bring it up real swyx: [00:35:46] quick here.Oh, yeah. Oh, it's gonna work so great on the visuals. So this is 3g S journey. It's by Bruno Simon whose personal site actually went viral a couple of years ago, because it's all built in web geo and it's like this, you start as this little race car and you drive it around in three JS. And it's just such a gorgeous sight.Move your mouse around and look at it, responds. And it basically shows you how to get involved in three JS in a very approachable and French way. He keeps up a lot of French speakers when they only speak English. They know that they have a very heavy accent that makes them a little bit hard to understand.So they just very apologetic about it. And I watched this video and I'm like, dude, like you already apologize. It's fine. Just say it's gorgeous. It's one of those things where like, at some point, if you do enough with development you're tired of moving boxes around on the screen. It's kind of how I put it and we should look into some of these more interactive and imaginative experiences.And they're not so far away. I, I'm still, I'm still learning it. I'm just thinking like, there's more to life than just, yeah. Moving boxes around and I think. You have to do the, pay your dues to like learning this stuff to recognize opportunities where you can just like sneak it in to a project.And it just has the little pop that makes people, enjoy your work a little bit more. Like you can see it's very tasteful that you don't, it's possible to go overbearing with 3d, but it's very tasteful and I just love it. Yeah. Alex Patterson: [00:37:04] Fantastic. We use three JS all the time, but it's more just for like graphing and stuff because we're getting paid for it.We don't have fun stuff to do. That's awesome. Very cool. Brittany, you are up next. Brittney Postma: [00:37:17] Yeah. My first pick is the spelt for sites react for apps, blog posts that Shawn actually wrote that we spoke a little bit on earlier. It's a really good blog post that kind of breaks down. Like what's the difference between a website and a web app.And why does it matter? And. Kind of what he just touched on with like building what you love, like in a language that you like to write. So getting the fundamentals there and then building what you need for the job and what makes you happy? I thought it was a really good post. swyx: [00:37:49] That's awesome. Thank you.And this side is villain spelt and it's open source. So you can check out the code. Yeah, sure. Brittney Postma: [00:37:54] Swyx the IO. Alex Patterson: [00:37:55] And all the links should be on our blog posts. So. swyx: [00:37:59] Check it out. Yeah. I tend to ramble a lot in my blog post. Brittney Postma: [00:38:02] My second perfect pick is a little bit of, kind of a shameless plug a little bit because I was on Kobiashi Maru last week and I built a draggable Kanban app with spelt and.I'm not an expert by any means. And I stumbled through a lot of that and didn't actually even get to implement the draggable part, but there is a link to the get hub repo in there, and we'll link it in our show notes as well. But yeah, it was super fun. And you kind of learn how to persist local storage with a spelt store in that.So definitely check that out. Alex Patterson: [00:38:33] Sweet. Very cool. And then my last pick, I use it every day and I was struggling to come up with a pick today. So I'm like, why wouldn't I pick it? Aandra if, if you don't use it, we use it all the time. Especially in our kind of our cover images and stuff like that. Fantastic work.I'm totally dropping the name. What's her name? Hang on. I shouldn't give her props. There we go Catarina limpid Sunni. That's why I can never remember it. I had to look at it swyx: [00:39:03] now. She does amazing work. Alex Patterson: [00:39:04] Yeah. Yeah, absolutely amazing artists. And it's all downloadable, all free to use. Using Algolia to search, she can set our famous, or at least to me, five, five, 1186 purple Brittney Postma: [00:39:19] color.Oh, you even know the hex swyx: [00:39:21] value. Alex Patterson: [00:39:22] I got to know the hex of a coding cat and you can search through and when you click it on, the cool part is you can download the SVG or PNG the SVG. You can drop directly in Figma and off to the races you go. So, yeah, it's super cool. And you can break it apart. So like I delete stuff out of there all the time just to use the rest of the SVG.So I swyx: [00:39:41] love it. I dropped a link in our notion for more resources, like on draw. So I collect these in a repo that I call a spark joy for basically like all the design resources that always reach for, you should have them ready. And so I dropped it in a notion more places which you can find Andrae is right up there at the top, but there's humans, there's black illustrations Vic TZ, there's just a lot of really great design resources and we should make it easier to access.So this is my attempt. I'm I'm Alex Patterson: [00:40:10] bookmarking all the ones like this directly. I used to have a, an API one like this, there, a gate to like all the open swyx: [00:40:17] API APIs scroll all the way down. All the way at the bottom. Yeah. It's just like demo APIs. Cause some of them make you sign up. So I don't like that.So I actually I'd make the, actually I record the actually free ones. No next there's another one all the way down at the bottom. Yep. There we go. Alex Patterson: [00:40:33] Very cool. Brittney Postma: [00:40:34] Mark. KPI's. Yep. swyx: [00:40:37] Yeah. Nice. Cause I, I used to do a lot of demos from my previous jobs.Alex Patterson: [00:40:40] I think we're running up on time. So I just wanted to say, thanks again. Swyx for jumping on. I know it's a crazy time where you're at right now, so I really appreciate it. swyx: [00:40:50] No, I appreciate the opportunity to talk about spelt. I'm always down to spread the word, spread the gospel, come join the community.We're pretty active with discord and on Twitter and on YouTube. And then we are holding spot summit in April and it's free. And you just Go to SWAT summit.com I think to drop your email. Brittney Postma: [00:41:08] Awesome. Thank you so much. Alex Patterson: [00:41:10] Appreciate it. So, yeah. Thanks again. swyx: [00:41:13] Take care of me. All right. Brittney Postma: [00:41:14] See you later.
Marty Linsky co-author of "Leading the Line" and former adjunct lecturer in Harvard University joins his former student William Corless (Adaptive Leadership) on the workplace podcast. This episode promises to deliver for struggling leaders as Marty talks about radical uncertainty. The challenge leaders face around the expectations of having to know the answer. Many learnings are shared on: How to communicate in chaos uncertainty, deep empathy, presence and vulnerability, relentless optimism coupled with brutal realism, generosity and forgiveness and how to bring your A game through an experimental approach.
Inspired Attorney: Lisa A. Linsky Practice Areas: Complex Commercial and Trust and Estate Litigation; Sexual Assault and Misconduct Investigations and Litigation; and Civil Rights Litigation. Partner at McDermott Will & Emery In Part 2 of our conversation, we delve further into the topics of balance creation and stress management. Lisa gives us insight as to how she, in the beginning of her career, learned how deal with the mental stresses related to the family violence work that she did so that she could compassionately and tenaciously represent her clients. Lisa further reveals how uncertainty actually is a good thing, and gives examples of how her career has been benefited by her following her intuition. We close out our conversation with additional useful advice for attorneys at all levels, along with Lisa's hopes for the future of the practice of law. _ Seeking further strategic guidance?
Inspired Attorney: Lisa A. Linsky Practice Areas: Complex Commercial and Trust and Estate Litigation; Sexual Assault and Misconduct Investigations and Litigation; and Civil Rights Litigation. Partner at McDermott Will & Emery In Part 1 of our conversation, Lisa tells us about how she made her decision to become a lawyer, which is not what you might think! She further reflects on her career as a prosecutor handling intense cases of domestic violence, child abuse and sex crimes investigations and prosecutions. We talk about Lisa's transition to Big Law civil practice after a 16+ career in public service, along with Lisa's creation of a ground-breaking and award-winning diversity and inclusion program at McDermott that reached outside the Firm to the broader legal and LGBT communities. Lastly, Lisa offers some practical advice to lawyers at all stages of their careers on how to attain balance, resilience and joy from our work as lawyers. _ Seeking further strategic guidance?
In these turbulent times, there is a need for a different kind of leadership. - In the last episode, I introduced you to the Adaptive Leadership Model. This specific leadership style asks leaders to frequently take a step back from the stage and to reflect on the complexity of the adaptive challenges ahead. Leaders need to assess and distinguish between the technical and adaptive nature of a problem. To become an adaptive leader, you need to familiarise yourself with a sophisticated set of management skills and techniques such as dealing with distress, providing a supportive environment, giving direction, and focusing, encouraging, and empowering the people within your organisation. With other words, leadership does not mean to rule over the people but to get them mobilised solving together today's challenges in organisations and society. Today, I will continue with an explanation of the fundamental Adaptive Leadership principles and the adaptive work itself. Thereafter, we need to assess the strengths and weaknesses of this leadership model. Eventually, this two-part series about Adaptive Leadership will end with an outlook and few implications for social work organisations.For more information visit my blog: profmanagement.de Thank you for listening. If you liked this episode please leave a review on the iTunes / Apple Podcasts website. If you've got any thoughts on this episode, or if you've got an idea about new podcast topics or question you'd like us to discuss, send an audio file or voice note to hi@profmanagement.de. For any non-audio comments, drop a tweet or DM to @profmanagement on Twitter or Instagram, please.ReferencesHeifetz, R., Grashow, A., & Linsky, M. (2009). The Practice of Adaptive Leadership: Tools and Tactics for Changing your Organization and the World. Boston, Mass: Harvard Business Press.Northouse, P.G. (2017). Leadership: Theory and Practice. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage.
Season seven was our most downloaded season EVER! Thank you all so much for listening and sharing. Please enjoy this fan-favorite from season six, while Laura and Scott continue to record brand-new episodes for season eight of The Only One In The Room. To mark the occasion of our one-year anniversary this past April, we asked YOU, our listeners, to submit your fabulous Only One stories with the objective of having that winner come on the show and share their story. We thought we might get four or five submissions, and had no idea how many of you would submit your stories for consideration. Can I just say that we were completely blown away by the response?! So blown away in fact, that we’ve decided to make this the start of a new series for us, called The Only One In The Room, Sunday Edition. But today, we are over the moon to bring you our winner! The story that took our collective breath away. As soon as Scott and I read Patti’s story we looked at each other, because there was no doubt that author, performer, public speaker and Cantor, Patti Linsky was our contest winner. Instagram: @pattilinsky Patti Linksy on Facebook Be sure not to miss our weekly full episodes on Tuesdays and Scott Talks now released on Wednesdays by subscribing to the show wherever you listen to podcasts. Join our Only One In The Room Facebook Group if you'd like to ask a question of any of our upcoming guests for this series. Also visit the website www.theonlyonepod.com for the latest from our host Laura Cathcart Robbins like featured articles and more. We love hearing from you in the comments on iTunes and while you're there don't forget to rate us, subscribe and share the show! All of us at The Only One In The Room wish you safety and wellness during this challenging time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
I spoke with Sarah Babb about organisational change. We covered the key types of change organisations face, success factors for change initiatives, change frameworks including Theory U and the Cynefin framework for managing complexity, linking strategy with change management and futures thinking and leadership development for effective change. Sarah designs and leads innovative and impactful learning and change processes for leaders, teams, entrepreneurs, and organisations seeking to create the new world we all want to live in. Sarah is passionate about enabling futures thinking capacities in executive programmes, coaching circles, and change processes. Over twenty years she has led many exciting programmes: from leading scenarios projects, to national skills programmes, to leading culture change, to leadership development. Trained with global experts in Theory U, Cynefin and Waysfinder, Transformative Scenarios amongst other techniques. Sarah is a Professional Associate at GIBS and Part-time faculty at USB and USB Exec Ed. Her qualifications include: BA (Industrial Psychology & Industrial Sociology), PDM (HR), MBA (cum laude, GIBS), PhD (Leadership Identity Development, submit 2020). For more see Sarah's website: www.laminar.co.za Further reading: Berger, J. G. (2019). Unlocking leadership mindtraps: How to thrive in complexity. David, S. A. (2016). Emotional agility: Get unstuck, embrace change, and thrive in work and life. Heifetz, R. A., Grashow, A., & Linsky, M. (2009). The practice of adaptive leadership: Tools and tactics for changing your organization and the world. Boston, Mass: Harvard Business Press. Kegan, R., Lahey, L. L., Miller, M. L., Fleming, A., & Helsing, D. (2016). An everyone culture: Becoming a deliberately developmental organization. Uhl-Bien, M., Marion, R., & McKelvey, B. (2007). Complexity leadership theory: Shifting leadership from the industrial age to the knowledge era. The leadership quarterly, 18(4), 298-318. Further resources: Theory U: https://www.presencing.org/aboutus/theory-u Cynefin framework: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_waoADNcaBU
On this week's episode of #DWYCFTP, I break down carbon offsets with Dan Linsky, the Vice President of Voluntary Markets and Leader of the Transaction Team at ClimeCo. You may be wondering what carbon offsets have to do with the holidays? Well, according to the EPA, in 2018, 28% of all greenhouse gas emissions in the United States came from transportation (cars, trucks, ships, trains, and planes). And in non-COVID times, we'd all be thinking about our holiday travels right about now. Despite being immersed in the sustainability world, carbon offsets are something that have always been a bit of a mystery to me. Turns out, they are much simpler and much more attainable than I thought. As part of my ongoing mission to do what I can for the people, this episode dives into what carbon offsets are, how individuals and corporations can purchase them, and how to ensure that they are aligned with your values. A huge thank you to Dan & ClimeCo for not only shedding some light on this topic but also for graciously offsetting my footprint for 2020! And in case you're curious, I used the conservation.org calculator to discover that my personal footprint was 11.56 tons this year. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dwycftp/support
- first 60 days are very important for retention - how to optimize for space, for your coach schedule, for your equipment, and for maximum capacity --> this leads to increasing profit margin up to 55% - how to have an evergreen onboarding system allowing you to onboard new members every day without using an onramp / foundations program - how to onboard 30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80+ new members in less than 30 days with no overwhelm
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To mark the occasion of our one-year anniversary this past April, we asked YOU, our listeners, to submit your fabulous Only One stories with the objective of having that winner come on the show and share their story. We thought we might get four or five submissions, and had no idea how many of you would submit your stories for consideration. Can I just say that we were completely blown away by the response?! So blown away in fact, that we’ve decided to make this the start of a new series for us, called The Only One In The Room, Sunday Edition. But today, we are over the moon to bring you our winner! The story that took our collective breath away. As soon as Scott and I read Patti’s story we looked at each other, because there was no doubt that author, performer, public speaker and Cantor, Patti Linsky was our contest winner. Instagram: @pattilinsky Patti Linksy on Facebook Be sure not to miss our weekly full episodes on Tuesdays and Scott Talks now released on Wednesdays by subscribing to the show wherever you listen to podcasts. Join our Only One In The Room Facebook Group if you'd like to ask a question of any of our upcoming guests for this series. Also visit the website www.theonlyonepod.com for the latest from our host Laura Cathcart Robbins like featured articles and more. We love hearing from you in the comments on iTunes and while you're there don't forget to rate us, subscribe and share the show! All of us at The Only One In The Room wish you safety and wellness during this challenging time. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this Starlifter episode 141, Jeff makes a mess with his caulk, Chrissy gets rear ended by Donnie, Chris is sick of sanding, and Hamsa cites Milspec 17.24. Really, we have Hamsa on as a guest host while Mental is away and we go waaaaay down the rabbit hole on human factors and systems engineering, which means how to setup your race car in a way that makes it easier to drive and lets the driver put their energy and attention where it matters. Hamsa’s Reference MaterialsThe Design of Everyday ThingsFlaw of AveragesThe end of averageThe end of average 2DoD Design Criteria StandardEnd of the RR/Bentley V8Good drill bits cheapMoot Point Cheap ThermocoupleHamsa shows you how to make masksLucky Dawg Sim Racing Champcar IracingTrack Night America!E1R YouTubeE1R BingoLucky Dog Racing24 Hours of LeMonsChampcarWorld Racing LeagueAmerican Endurance RacingLeMons Rally
The story behind the loss and regaining of one of the best pinball events in the world. Russell is the man who took it upon himself to not let this event go away. This is his story and the resounding success that the 10th iteration of this event brought to us all.
It's true! We're taking the leap and moving in together. God help us. The Boyfriend has never lived with a girlfriend and Leanne has been married and divorced twice. Will this work? Help! Email info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce FB @lafterdivorce , Tweet at @lifelafterdivorce ,IG @life_lafter-divorce
Stress much? We do! Especially during a divorce or break up of any sort - relationship, job change, or even a move to a new place. That's why we called in the Doctor. Dr. Patrica May is a licensed Chiropractor state of California and specializes in functional medicine. She is an experienced practitioner of both Acupressure Relief Technique and Neurofeedback. Dr. May gives us even more reason to trust our gut when we think something's amiss. As she points out, our gut is our 2nd brain and how we feed it affects everything. Download and get ready to feel better. More details at http://www.docmay.net/ or email drpmay@att.net and schedule a free consult. Email info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce FB @lafterdivorce , Tweet at @lifelafterdivorce ,IG @life_lafter-divorce
Leanne and The Boyfriend ask the big question, "Are you ready to divorce?" Don't jump in the pool unless you're prepared to swim! Where are you in this process? Are you ready to make this decision? We have a checklist for you to help determine if you're truly ready. Get out your pen and paper and take some notes. And good news...The Boyfriend is feeling better! Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram @life_lafter-divorce
We all have our limits when it comes to what we will and will not tolerate in a relationship. Some things may be acceptable for one or two dates but could become a deal breaker for a long-term relationship. Other deal breakers may not be so black and white and leave us room to wonder. What are your deal breakers?Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram @life_lafter-divorce
Patti Linsky had been the Cantor at Temple Ahavat Shalom for over 24 years when a life-threatening condition derailed her plans and dreams for the future. Following a lengthy recuperation, Patti realized that a consequence of her surgery, which nearly took her life, was that her singing voice had been compromised and she would no longer be able to perform her duties as Cantor. In 2010, retired from her position.She was forced to look within, "If I am not a Cantor, then who am I?" With that question, she embarked on her spiritual quest, searching for her next chapter. Patti actively chose to be open to every possibility. In doing so, she enrolled in a Woman's Empowerment Course in which she was asked to write a bucket list. One of the ten items stood out and hit a resonant chord -- she wanted to perform a one- woman show so that she could tell her story. This creation, she felt, would feed her soul, give her an opportunity not only to explore her own path and find strength and vision, but also empower others to believe that they are "enough."Being "enough" is pinnacle to Patti's spiritual awakening. In 1996, Patti was in an automobile accident resulting in severe back and neck injuries. Soon after, she underwent surgery for a hernia -- her doctor accidentally cut a nerve in her leg. Following was a decade of descent into painkillers and alcohol in an effort to mask her physical and emotional pain. In 2007, Patti entered, and remains, in recovery -- "It was the first time in years that I felt authentic, the first time I experienced realfeelings."Altar EGO is the creative, energetic, spiritual child of Patti's extraordinary journey. This is a story of Patti's passion for music and religious commitment. It is also a story of battling addictions, self-worth, recovery and ultimately redemption. As a singer/songwriter, Altar EGO is told through her verypersonal compositions and stories peppered with her unique humor, wisdom and zest for life.In addition to Patti's one woman show, she remains active in the Jewish community as a freelance Cantor officiating at services, Lifecycle events, performing in concerts, recording in the studio and as visiting Artist-in-Residence.http://www.pattilinsky.com/
Who knew there were so many interesting facts about divorce? This week Leanne and The Boyfriend share a cornucopia of crazy divorce information. Things we would never even thought of, things we probably don't even need to know, and some funny experiences that people have had. Hmmmm. If you have a fun divorce fact, Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram
Love it or hate it, Valentine's Day is here! Leanne and The Boyfriend share their war stories and a very special list of Valentine's do's and don'ts. We would love to hear about your best and worst V-days. Share your V-day experiences with Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram
Going through a divorce AND have a teenager? Then you want to meet Julie Smith, licensed psychotherapist, award-winning author and featured TEDx speaker, and expert in the study of human behavior, specifically adolescent behavior. She has created pioneering workshops and courses such as What to Do When and SpeakTeen to help parents and professionals connect with teens while also dispelling the myths of adolescent (mis)behavior. Julie, a single parent, not only works with kids, she lives with her own three teens as well. Website: http://juliesmith.com Facebook: ItsJulieSmith, Twitter:@itsjuliesmith, LinkedIn: itsjuliesmith, and Instagram: @itsjuliesmith, Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram
What a year it's been! We've learned so much from our listeners - from cheating and depression to thriving and entrepreneurship. Join us as we reflect on the episodes of 2017 with Mom-nonymous. Mom-nonymous is our 77 year-old blogger who's been married for 56 years. She shares her thoughts on some of her favorite episodes of year. Be sure to check her out on our website at https://lifelafterdivorce.com/. Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram.
This podcast outlines the history and major advances in cardiopulmonary bypass.
So you've had relationships and nothing has been working out? What lessons have you learned from each of them? What makes a relationship successful? Is it even possible after divorce? Sometimes it doesn't feel that way. So many questions! Our guests Tory & Andrea Chiappelli, a married couple with three previous marriages between them, share the secrets to their relationship success. You can reach them on Facebook https://www.facebook.com/tory.chiappelli, Twitter https://mobile.twitter.com/tory_chiappelli, and LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrea-chiappelli-83a1383. Email Leanne & The Boyfriend at info@lifelafterdivorce or message us at Life Lafter Divorce on Facebook, @lafterdivorce on Twitter, or @lifelafterdivorce on Instagram.
The GOAL Podcast - Official Podcast of Gun Owners' Action League
We started discussing H.3081, An Act Establishing Extreme Risk Protective Orders on Episode 17, "bad legislation and legal weed". Since that time, the legislation has gained momentum in the halls of the State House, so we wanted to revisit it and point out the many issues presented by this bill. For more info, you can also see our blog, here. If you would like to donate to our Dog Days Fundraiser, please click here. Thank you everyone for listening and supporting GOAL!
Get to know your hosts Leanne and "The Boyfriend", introduced by Suzy Hardy co-host of the Food Heals Podcast.
Felicia Linsky (Award-Winning Celebrity Makeup Artist) - Website: imdb.com/name/nm0513155
Felicia Linsky (Award-Winning Celebrity Makeup Artist) - Website: imdb.com/name/nm0513155
Twitter's Vine, Google buys Jet.com, TMobile. Podcasting, Max Linsky, Pineapple Street Media, Calendar Watch, Amazon's Grocery Stores. Let's learn something about our own businesses through these blogging, social media, and tech news.
Hi, Ella with the Show Notes for Episode 3. In this episode I get to chat with Leanne Linsky....comedian, actress and fast rising star. The critics have this to say to say about Leanne: “…Linsky has the comedic chops to join the ranks of Fey and Rudner." ~ DC Metro Theatre Arts "Ms. Linsky’s surge upward appears to be a foregone conclusion.” ~ Sneakers & Ale.com “…the next wave of comedic genius right in our backyards.” ~ Examiner.com From her resume, Leanne lists the following skill set: 'Stand up comedy, improv, hosting, handgun familiarity, swimming, weight training, yoga, bike riding, jogging, golf, bowling, hiking, kickboxing, aerobics, and licensed driver (manual/automatic).' I had the privilege of chatting with this talented individual and finding out about her path to LA and what makes her tick, her motivations and drive. Subscribe, rate and review Take Fountain at iTunes, audioBoom, Stictcher, Pocketcasts, Podcast Addict or any good podcatcher app. Stream episodes from www.bitesz.com (mobile friendly) Email : hello@bitesz.com For more, follow Take Fountain on Facebook, twitter and Google+: Facebook: www.facebook.com/ejtakesfountain twitter: @ejtakesfountain Google+: https://plus.google.com/u/2/collection/42ugaB #Hollywood #inspiration #LeanneLinsky #podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Today, Ashleigh speaks with Beth Linsky & Dale Ila-Riggs about berries.
Legal Talk Network Host Adriana Linares and Producer Laurence Colletti interview the director of the Commission on Immigration, Meredith Linsky, and Managing Attorney at ProBAR Children's Project Meghan Johnson at the 2015 ABA Midyear Meeting. Together, they discuss the influx of unaccompanied minors coming to the United States from violent conditions in Central American countries. Lindsky explains that the ABA Commission on Immigration focuses on finding, training, and placing immigration lawyers where they are most needed. Johnson describes how ProBAR Children's Project works to educate the children, many of whom are seeking refugee status, and all of whom are subjected to horrible conditions. Both encourage any interested lawyers to sign up for their programs.