Podcasts about Los Altos

  • 332PODCASTS
  • 520EPISODES
  • 34mAVG DURATION
  • 5WEEKLY NEW EPISODES
  • May 21, 2025LATEST

POPULARITY

20172018201920202021202220232024


Best podcasts about Los Altos

Latest podcast episodes about Los Altos

UBS On-Air: LatAm access
Volatilidad y Family Offices: ¿Cómo se están protegiendo los altos patrimonios?

UBS On-Air: LatAm access

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2025 10:42


En un contexto de volatilidad global, el papel de las Family Offices es clave. En este episodio, Alberto Rojas analiza, con la colaboración de Maximilian Kunkel, CIO de Global Family and Institutional Wealth en UBS, cómo estas oficinas de gestión de grandes patrimonios navegan la incertidumbre generada por aranceles, conflictos y tensiones geopolíticas.

Cosa Pública 2.0
Cosa Pública 2.0 - Vi. 16 May 2025

Cosa Pública 2.0

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2025


Cosa Pública 2.0 - Vi. 16 May 2025 1. Desaparecidos 2. Héctor Flores, colectivo Luz de Esperanza 3.Madre buscadora de Los Altos de Jalisco 4. Guerra informal - México-EEUU Conducción y producción por: Rubén Martín: https://x.com/rmartinmar Jesús Estrada: https://x.com/jestradax Asistencia de producción y realización: Alejandro Coronado: https://x.com/SoyelCoronado Operador de audio: Emanuel Candelas Comenzamos @CosaPublica2 con @rmartinmar y @jestradax https://t.co/k7hNOuiEmE— Radio Universidad de Guadalajara (@RadioUdeG) May 16, 2025 Comenzamos @CosaPublica2 con @rmartinmar y @jestradax pic.twitter.com/s0BSA7yMKc— Radio Universidad de Guadalajara (@RadioUdeG) May 16, 2025

Bay Area Real Estate Insights | Tech Realtor Spencer Hsu
Bay Area Real Estate Market Update (May 15, 2020) - Spencer Hsu Tech Realtor Bay Area

Bay Area Real Estate Insights | Tech Realtor Spencer Hsu

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 12:38


Looking to move closer to your tech job at Google, Apple, Meta, or Nvidia?This new video breaks down the BEST neighborhoods in the Bay Area for couples and families working in Big Tech — whether your budget is under $2M or over $4M.Using an interactive map, Spencer shows how to align your commute, school quality, and home type — so you can make the smartest move without wasting time or energy.

PLAZA PÚBLICA
PLAZA PÚBLICA T06C166 Los altos níveles de polvo en suspension afecta directamente enfermos crónicos y cardiovasculares (02/05/2025)

PLAZA PÚBLICA

Play Episode Listen Later May 2, 2025 12:57


La intromisión de polvo sahariano ha puesto en rojo todos los medidores de calidad del aire de toda la Región. Solo se salva el Altiplano, que tiene niveles regulares. Esta masa de aire sahariano no es de los más notables pero está afectando de manera intensa al Levante, hasta el sur de Francia. Esta intrusión de polvo africano se suma a la contaminación con origen humano, la que sí se puede controlar. Por eso, Pedro Jiménez catedrático de Física de la Tierra en la Universidad de Murcia, consideraba en el programa El Mirador de Onda Regional que habría que tratar de rebajar las particulas contaminantes controlables para que las no controlables, las de origen natural, no sean tan dañinas. En este caso, aunque no es de las más intensas que ha sufrido la Región, su concentración está provocando una calidad del aire muy mala.La buena noticia es que en principio parece que mañana se empezará a dispersar. Mientras la situación es altamente desfavorable. Una mala calidad del aire que afecta a los enfermos crónicos, sobre todo a las personas con problemas respiratorios. Pero si alguien está pasandolo mal son los alérgicos, que se encuentran en un momento de especial sensibilidad por el polen y que, sumado a la contaminación, están sufriendo con crudeza las consecuencias. Pedro Menchón es neumólogo, nos aconseja que se retome el uso de la máscarilla especielamente en los enfermos crónicos y evitar salir a la calle.

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy
441: David, Rhonda and Matt Answer Your Questions about Relationships, Dating, and Religion

Feeling Good Podcast | TEAM-CBT - The New Mood Therapy

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 42:17


Ask David My friend won't say thank you! Dating Anxiety Religion vs. Psychotherapy We want to remind you about an awesome virtual workshop on habits and addictions that Dr. Jill Levitt and David will be presenting on March 28, 2025 We will feature powerful new paradoxical techniques that will blow your socks off. It will be from 8:30 to 4:30 and you will earn 7 CE credits while having fun and learning how to heal yourself AND you patients. Check it out! It's less than two weeks away, some check it out while you still have time! You'' LOVE it and LEARN a LOT! Registration and More Information Here! As is so often the case, the answers to these questions that appear in the show notes were email replies to the person before the show. To get the full discussion, make sure you listen to the actual podcast, as the answers often evolve in unexpected ways when the “experts” hash it out! Today's episode is chock full of personal stories (some racy), expert Five Secrets advice and demonstration,  philosophical / spiritual discussion, and secrets of successful (and racy) dating. 1. Brittany asks: What can I do say to a friend who does not say “thank you” when I pay for our meal or drive a long distance just to see them? 2. Jaydipe asks: How can I get over my anxiety around attractive women? 3. Ali asks: Can religious beliefs cause or intensify feelings of anxiety? (David will talk about the synergies between TEAM CBT and spirituality in all religions. He will also mention the potential antagonisms.)   1. Brittany asks: What can I do say to a friend who does not say “thank you” when I pay for our meal or drive a long distance just to see them. Hello David and Rhonda, I have a friend who typically does not say thank you to me when I pay for a meal out or drive us a long distance. I am someone who always says thank you even if the other person just bought us $10 worth of fast food or gave a short ride. I find myself feeling resentful towards my friend for not saying anything when I pay and drive us around all day. It makes me feel like they don't appreciate it. At the same time, talking about it and sharing my feelings would then feel like I'm asking them to say it, and then it would not feel authentic. I have said something about it in the past, and they were like I'm sorry, thank you. But it didn't mean much at that point. Is this one of those annoying traits I just learn to accept? Thank you, Brittany David's reply Well, you could just use a gentle I Feel statement, which might be paradoxically stronger, but combined with Stroking. Like this, "Jennie, you know I think the world of you, and greatly enjoy our times together, but when I pay for lunch, or drive a distance to hang out with you, you rarely ever say "thank you," and then I feel hurt and unappreciated." Something like that combines Stroking with I Feel and might be effective. But I always rate myself on what I do, or say, and not so much on how the other person reacts. You could, perhaps, also ask if they are upset with you about something that they've had trouble expressing to you. Best, david 2. Jaydipe asks: How can I get over my anxiety around attractive women? Hi David Many thanks for the podcast I'm struggling with social anxiety and talking to attractive women and I've watched all the podcasts relating to it. I think deep down I have a shame around finding women attractive, so I find it difficult to express interest in them. I find that I can talk to them easily during activities like climbing or co workers, but even on dates with women I can't seem to take things forwards playfully like you'd expect on a date. I'm too serious and I think that turns people off. I feel like I'm under the spotlight and I have to impress them otherwise they won't like me. I know this isn't true and I've been trying to get myself to do exposure therapy by asking girls for their numbers and being rejected so it helps with that. Also, I struggle with societal expectations, I hear women say that they don't want to be approached or talked to or anything so I just end up avoiding them because I don't want to annoy them, but it holds me back from getting the sex and relationships I want Any help much appreciated Thanks, Jaydipe David's Reply I have included your excellent question on an upcoming Ask David. In the meantime, have you read my book on dating, Intimate Connections? Best, david PS Should I use your first name, or a fake first name? 3. Ali asks: Can religious beliefs cause or intensify feelings of anxiety? Dear Dr. Burns, After reading your books, I've started to recognize that many of my anxious beliefs seem to have a religious background. For example, in the Bible, there's a verse from John 5:14: “Later Jesus found him at the temple and said to him, ‘See, you are well again. Stop sinning or something worse may happen to you.'” Here's where I struggle: I want to live my life freely, which includes things like being with different girls before marriage (something I already do). But according to religion, this is considered adultery and a sin. Another verse that weighs heavily on me is from Matthew 5:27-29: “You have heard that it was said, ‘You shall not commit adultery.' But I tell you that anyone who looks at a woman lustfully has already committed adultery with her in his heart. If your right eye causes you to stumble, gouge it out and throw it away. It is better for you to lose one part of your body than for your whole body to be thrown into hell.” I often find myself looking at beautiful women on the street, which Christianity teaches is sinful, and this sometimes leads to feelings of guilt. I wonder: do I need to leave religion altogether to break free from these negative, self-critical thoughts? I also have other related thoughts that seem to link my faith with the good things happening in my life. For instance: My life is going well right now. My parents are alive, my brother is getting married, I'm healthy, and I've been fortunate in many ways. I've had incredible experiences, like participating in two Erasmus+ exchange programs in Poland and Lithuania during university, volunteering in Latvia for a year, and even having my New Zealand visa approved in a highly competitive process (only 100 spots for 85 million people, and the application closed in 5 minutes!). I often think that these blessings are because I believe in Jesus, follow the Bible, and try to live as a good person who avoids sin and doesn't deceive others. But then these anxious thoughts arise: I should always be thankful or pray, or else my life will fall apart. If I leave religion, something bad might happen—my parents could fall ill or pass away, and it would all feel like my fault for turning away from Jesus. Without faith, I'd lose my good fortune(luck), my appearance, and my opportunities. Wherever I apply to would be rejected, then I would understand that it was Jesus in the first place doing all of these things in my life, not me or vice versa! I'd find a terrible job, terrible working environment, terrible mutual relationships. Then everything would be my fault and I'd tell myself I should have believed in him in the first place but now I deserve everything that happens to me! These thoughts are overwhelming, and I'd love to hear your perspective on how to approach and challenge them. Thank you so much for your time and the invaluable insights you share in your work. Warm regards, Ali David's reply Hi Ali, Sorry you are struggling with so many restrictions, judgments, and inhibitions! I can imagine it triggers anxiety, guilt, inadequacy, resentment, discouragement, and more. You can let me know! If you want, I can include this as an Ask David question on a podcast, with your first name, or a fake first name. Let me know if this works for you. Also, what religion are you? I know that many religions around the world can be very fundamentalistic and super strict in their teachings. My own religious upbringing had a touch of rigidity, too. Best, david Ali's response to David Hello again, Actually, my family comes from the Christian (Orthodox-Armenian) minority in Turkey, where I was born and raised. So, I am an Orthodox Christian. You're absolutely right that I struggle with many restrictions and judgments. I'd love for you to include this as an "Ask David" question on a podcast since I haven't seen any episode (and I've listened to most of your recent podcasts, including number 408: Do You Believe in God? Does God Exist?) that addresses this topic. By the way, I already use an alias, so "Ali" is a fake name, but you're welcome to use it in your podcast! Here's a quick DML (Daily Mood Log) to clarify what I'm dealing with: The Upsetting Event: Doing my daily half-hour Bible reading before bed and coming across certain verses. Emotions: Sad: 60% Anxious/Worried: 70% Inadequate: 60% Guilty/Bad: 90% Abandoned: 70% Pessimistic/Discouraged: 80% Stuck: 75% Angry/Resentful: 75% Tricked/Duped: 80% Although I don't consider myself a devout Christian, over the past few years, I've started reading the Bible—the Old and New Testaments. Initially, I read them in my native language, but now I read in English to fully understand the content. Growing up in the church, I believed everything the priest taught. However, encountering some events and stories that seem illogical to me has made me question my beliefs. I often feel tricked and wonder if I've truly believed in all this. At the same time, I feel anxious and worried, as if questioning or criticizing my religion is a betrayal of God. Please let me know if you need any additional information. Ali David's reply Thanks, Ali, this is super. I was also raised in a somewhat strict Christian (Lutheran) home, and as a child had plans to become a minister, like my dad. In college, I learned critical thinking, and began to question some of what I was taught when I was growing up. For example, there seemed to be a bit of a bias against Jews, and my dad said they had to convert to Christianity to be  ”saved” and, I guess, avoid going to hell after they died. That didn't sound right at all, not loving, as Christ taught, who was himself a Jew, but hostile and judgmental. And I had good friends who were Jewish, so it felt offensive. Same with people who were gay. A strong bias that this was somehow “bad” and sinful, or something like that. Christianity, in the sense of the Catholic church, was really created by people a couple hundred years after Christ died, and they were reflecting their own human biases when they wrote the new testament and translated the old testaments. For better or worse, I am personally not afraid to disagree with much of what is in the Bible, and interpret it, not literally, but as a series of stories trying to communicate important spiritual truths, but these truths get quite distorted when people began focusing on literal truths, rather than “seeing” the message. Literal translations of religion risk missing the spiritual meaning and truth. This is especially true of the orthodox movement within any religion. This tendency toward being literal, rigid, and judgmental may be a partially inherited, genetic trait. Regardless, to me, it is offensive and ugly, and definitely not religious, but quite the opposite. In the early days, lots of religious cults emerged, and they all had their own special leaders. If your leader couldn't walk on water, that guru was considered inferior. So, it was fashionable to say that your spiritual guru could “walk on water.” What does that really mean? To me, it means that this person is pretty special, and much kinder and more loving than most others, and can perhaps convey some spiritual truths to us. But actual walking on water is a magic trick best left to television and stage magicians. This is my thinking only, and I do not wish to impose my thinking and beliefs on you or on anybody! I had tremendous respect and admiration for a Catholic nun, Sister Shela Flynn, who worked at my clinic in Philadelphia because she wanted to learn how to do CBT. She was humble and wonderful, and once shared with me that she also thought the stories in the bible were primarily metaphors, just stories trying to convey this or that idea about love, humility, and so forth. Not literally true stories you “had to” believe to be a “good Christian.” An, in addition, using my philosophy and CBT training, there is really no such “thing” as a “good Christian.” Positive and negative labels can be useful but can also be hurtful and destructive. Will stop babbling, and feel free to reject or ignore some or everything I am saying! But on an emotional level, I feel hurt, and angry about the literal “rules-based” versions of religion. Because I see, all over the world, atrocities being committed to a massive degree in the name of this or that “religion.” I am most comfortable with Buddhism, but even then, many people take it literally, make up rules, and so forth, just like other religions or spiritual “paths.” For some reason, people love to make up rules and then try to force others to conform to their beliefs and rules. This is due, in large part, to arrogance, and the desire to feel “special” and “superior” to others. These are not, to my way of thinking, spiritual qualities, but quite the opposite. Finally, I do not mention religion in my therapy, which is 100% secular, and based on research and on scientific research on how people actually change. But at the moment of recovery, which often happens in a flash, rather suddenly, the patient often “sees” something of a spiritual nature which they had not seen or grasped before. I have never seen anyone lose their religious beliefs because of effective therapy, but quite the opposite. In fact, what we might call “recovery from depression” (or some other problem) sometimes looks an awful lot like what the religious mystics from all religions have called “enlightenment.” So, that's the sermon my dad would have perhaps wanted me to preach from a pulpit! I guess this is my pulpit, and you are in my congregation! And this Sunday morning here in Los Altos, so that's the end of today's sermon! Best, david Contact information You can sign up for the David and Jill workshop on healthier habits here: cbt-workshop.com

Humor en la Cadena SER
Todo por la Radio | Los altos hornos

Humor en la Cadena SER

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 44:51


TodoPorLaRadio con Toni Martínez, Especialistas Secundarios, El Mundo Today, Mario Panadero, Pilar de Francisco y Sheila Blanco

La Ventana
Todo por la Radio | Los altos hornos

La Ventana

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 44:51


TodoPorLaRadio con Toni Martínez, Especialistas Secundarios, El Mundo Today, Mario Panadero, Pilar de Francisco y Sheila Blanco

Todo por la radio
Todo por la Radio | Los altos hornos

Todo por la radio

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2025 44:51


TodoPorLaRadio con Toni Martínez, Especialistas Secundarios, El Mundo Today, Mario Panadero, Pilar de Francisco y Sheila Blanco

SER Lanzarote
Susana Pérez: "El turista peninsular se sigue resistiendo a venir en Semana Santa por los altos precios de las tarifas"

SER Lanzarote

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 20, 2025 21:32


Susana Pérez: "El turista peninsular se sigue resistiendo a venir en Semana Santa por los altos precios de las tarifas"

Bay Area Real Estate Insights | Tech Realtor Spencer Hsu
9 Things You Need to Know before Moving to the Bay Area

Bay Area Real Estate Insights | Tech Realtor Spencer Hsu

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 6:53


Thinking about moving to the Bay Area or just curious about what it's like to live in one of the most dynamic regions in the world? This video is your ultimate A-to-Z guide to living in the Bay Area, covering everything you need to know before making the move!

Radio Bilbao
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

Radio Bilbao

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

Radio Eibar
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

Radio Eibar

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

Cadena SER Euskadi
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

Cadena SER Euskadi

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

Radio San Sebastián
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

Radio San Sebastián

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

Radio Irun
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

Radio Irun

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

SER Vitoria
El Puente de Bizkaia, los altos hornos o La Encartada, en este SER Viajeros descubrimos los tesoros de nuestro turismo industrial (14/03/2025)

SER Vitoria

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 14, 2025 10:00


Hacemos turismo a través de las ondas: grandes viajes, escapadas de fin de semana, hoteles y alojamientos singulares, experiencias gastronómicas y enológicas, rutas verdes…Conoce Euskadi y el resto del mundo.

Platicando con calma
Lo extraordinario está en lo diario: entre los altos y bajos de la vida

Platicando con calma

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 13, 2025 23:45


En este episodio, platicamos sobre cómo encontrar la magia en lo simple, en lo diario, en esos espacios entre los altos y bajos. Porque, al final, es ahí donde realmente vivimos. ✨En la vida, tendemos a pensar que son los momentos de grandes éxitos o los momentos más difíciles,  lo que define nuestra historia. Pero la verdad es que la vida no sucede en esos extremos, sino en los pequeños momentos cotidianos que a veces pasamos por alto.Amo saber lo que mueven los episodios en ti… mándame un mensaje por IG en @mujerconcalma o déjame tus preguntas o comentarios aquí abajo. Por acá puedes ver talleres y cursos disponibles online y presenciales. Y si eres mega fan del podcast o resuena demasiado todo lo que digo, te recomiendo ampliamente unirte a la Comunidad con calma y vernos en vivo cada semana con contenido increíble. Y por supuesto..., nos vemos todas las semanas con una dosis de espiritualidad con los pies en tierra, para que conectes con el gozo y experimentes tu vida llena de éxito y plenitud.

Comunicados Conferencia Episcopal de Guatemala + Diócesis de Escuintla

Monseñor Víctor Hugo Palma, recientemente nombrado Arzobispo de Los Altos, se dirige a la Diócesis de Escuintla, de la que fuera obispo por un poco más de 23 años. Con emotivas palabras, …

El Despelote podcast
Los altos precios de los huevos - Con Rocky, Burbu y Giga #ElDespelote #LaNueva94

El Despelote podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 19, 2025 2:59


Comunicados Conferencia Episcopal de Guatemala + Diócesis de Escuintla

El día 10 de diciembre de 2024, la Santa Sede anuncia oficialmente, el traslado de Monseñor Víctor Hugo Palma Paúl, obispo de Escuintla, hacia la Arquidiócesis de Los Altos, en …

Choses à Savoir
Pourquoi Steve Jobs n'a pas inventé Apple dans un garage ?

Choses à Savoir

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 6, 2025 2:05


L'image du garage comme berceau d'Apple est un mythe largement répandu. On imagine souvent Steve Jobs et Steve Wozniak, deux jeunes génies bidouillant des circuits électroniques dans un modeste garage californien, donnant naissance à l'une des plus grandes entreprises technologiques du monde. En réalité, la création d'Apple ne s'est pas déroulée de cette façon.D'où vient le mythe du garage ?L'histoire du garage provient du fait que Steve Jobs et Steve Wozniak ont effectivement utilisé le garage des parents de Jobs, à Los Altos, mais pas pour concevoir les premiers ordinateurs d'Apple. Comme l'a expliqué Steve Wozniak lui-même, « Le garage, c'était un mythe. Nous n'avons rien conçu, rien fabriqué, rien vendu dans ce garage. C'était juste un bon endroit pour traîner. »L'idée d'Apple et le développement du premier ordinateur, l'Apple I, sont en réalité nés ailleurs :- Wozniak a conçu le premier prototype sur du papier et a fabriqué l'Apple I chez lui, en dehors du garage.- Jobs a trouvé les premiers financements et clients, notamment Paul Terrell, propriétaire du magasin Byte Shop, qui a commandé 50 unités.- Les premiers ordinateurs ont été assemblés dans un petit local industriel de Cupertino, bien plus adapté que le garage des Jobs.Pourquoi ce mythe persiste-t-il ?Le récit du garage correspond parfaitement au rêve américain : l'idée qu'une grande entreprise peut naître dans un lieu modeste, grâce au travail acharné et au génie de ses fondateurs. Ce mythe est aussi renforcé par d'autres success stories similaires, comme celle de Hewlett-Packard, qui, elle, a bien commencé dans un garage.De plus, Steve Jobs lui-même a parfois entretenu cette légende, sachant qu'elle rendait l'histoire d'Apple plus inspirante et accessible.L'importance réelle du garageMême si Apple n'a pas été inventée dans ce garage, il a quand même eu un rôle symbolique. C'était un lieu de rencontre, un espace où Jobs et Wozniak pouvaient rêver, discuter et planifier leurs ambitions. Mais la véritable naissance d'Apple s'est faite grâce aux compétences de Wozniak, à la vision de Jobs et aux premiers investisseurs, bien au-delà des murs d'un simple garage.Ainsi, Apple n'est pas née d'un garage, mais d'un mélange d'ingéniosité, de persévérance et d'opportunités saisies au bon moment. Hébergé par Acast. Visitez acast.com/privacy pour plus d'informations.

El Ritmo de la Mañana
Los altos impuestos de los tickets de República Dominicana

El Ritmo de la Mañana

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2025 10:40


El Mañanero de La Mega
Los personas de baja estatura viven mas que los altos: Verdad, mentira o chisme.

El Mañanero de La Mega

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2025 8:32


Es la Mañana de Federico
Federico a las 7: Ridículo de los altos cargos de Hacienda ante la juez Biedma

Es la Mañana de Federico

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 16, 2025 32:07


Federico analiza la comparecencia de los altos cargos de Hacienda por el caso del hermano de Pedro Sánchez con informes sin firma ni membrete. Federico Jiménez Losantos analiza la comparecencia de los altos cargos de Hacienda en el juzgado de Badajoz. Ninguno de los tres pudo explicar por qué los informes que hicieron sobre Azagra, hermano de Pedro Sánchez, no tenía membrete y firma.

Noticentro
Hoy se presenta el Plan México

Noticentro

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2025 1:14


Se mantendrá el frío en el noroeste, norte y noreste del paísDenuncian que la violencia persiste en la región de Los Altos de ChiapasEEUU asegura que un alto el fuego en Gaza está "muy cerca"Más información en nuestro Podcast

Yanghaiying
Tourist at home - Los Altos community center

Yanghaiying

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2025 16:31


The Brand Called You
Elaine MacDonald on Harnessing Knowledge for Social Impact | Knowledge Impact Network"

The Brand Called You

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 41:01


Welcome to another episode of TBCY! In this enlightening episode from our "Leaders Who Care" series, we have the honor of hosting Elaine MacDonald from the Knowledge Impact Network. Broadcasting from her home in Los Altos, California, Elaine shares her fascinating journey from her roots in New York, as a child of Chinese immigrants, to becoming a prominent figure in leveraging knowledge for social good.

Es la Mañana de Federico
Prensa económica: Los altos funcionarios, en pie de guerra: "No hay motivos económicos para acabar con Muface"

Es la Mañana de Federico

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2024 3:42


FEDECA (altos funcionarios A1) concluye en un informe que el Estado se ahorra 600 millones de euros al año respecto a la Seguridad Social.

Daily Easy Spanish
Israel toma una zona desmilitarizada desde 1974 en los Altos del Golán tras la caída del gobierno de Al Assad en Siria

Daily Easy Spanish

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 15:41


"No permitiremos que ninguna fuerza hostil se establezca en nuestra frontera", advirtió este domingo el primer ministro israelí, Benjamín Netanyahu.

Daily Easy Spanish
Por qué son tan importantes para Israel los Altos del Golán, donde sus tropas tomaron una zona desmilitarizada que separaba al país de Siria desde 1974

Daily Easy Spanish

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 9, 2024 23:05


Su situación estratégica, tierras fértiles y con agua, lo hacen un lugar importante en la zona.

SoCo Chat
Capitulo 49- Susan Gorin reflexiona sobre los altos - y algunos bajos - de sus 12 años en la Junta de Supervisores

SoCo Chat

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 33:53


La Supervisora cuenta con personal bilingüe en su oficina que hoy nos acompaña para recopilar la carrera de la Supervisora Gorin y lo que compartió en su entrevista. Demos la bienvenida a Zaira Enriquez representante de campo y Lupe Alvarez asistente administrativa ambas del equipo del primer distrito.

Ana Francisca Vega
Rubén Aguilar presenta un crudo análisis sobre el Ejército y los altos mandos en su nuevo libro

Ana Francisca Vega

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 15:57


En colaboración con Ana Francisca Vega, para MVS Noticias, Rubén Aguilar presentó su libro “Tensiones en el ejército; diálogo con altos mandos".See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

旅行熱炒店
米國放大鏡-16 堪薩斯:最「中間」的一州,世界航空首都威奇托,Garmin、Coleman、Pizza Hut的發源地 (ep.205)

旅行熱炒店

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2024 19:30


【堪薩斯州 Kansas】 位於美國本土州的中心點,距離太平洋和大西洋都超~級遠,直接座落在龍捲風走廊上,造就了知名文學作品《綠野仙蹤》(The Wizard of Oz)裡桃樂絲被龍捲風吹走的設定。最大城威奇托(Wichita)雖然不大,卻是世界航空首都威奇塔,不只波音客機機身在此製造,連哈里遜福特(Harrison Ford)都定期來修飛機,也是戶外品牌Coleman以及連鎖比薩店Pizza Hut發跡之地,好吃的料理多是越南人或黎巴嫩人開的。走出威奇托,這個州裡還有全國唯一可以參觀的地下鹽礦、艾森豪總統的長眠之處、連瑞典國王都來朝聖的小瑞典,以及GPS品牌Garmin的總部。 【10/26 旅行熱炒店實體演講活動:加利福尼亞的另一面】 旅行熱炒店的首場海外實體活動來囉!歡迎人在舊金山灣區的各位呼朋引伴來參加~ 身為一位「邊緣系旅人」,在加利福尼亞的過去三年,主廚Jerome總是在尋找Golden State的不同風貌,特別是那些大家認為「很無聊、什麼都沒有」的角落。這場講座將帶著您走進這些地方:Oakland的非裔美國人社區、Stockton的亞裔農夫市集、Salinas Valley裡被遺忘的西班牙傳教所、San Jose的小葡萄牙與越南城、散落於偏僻角落的早期華人遺跡,讓您更認識身邊人事物背後的故事,並且獲得一些週末出遊小旅行的靈感。

旅行熱炒店
米國放大鏡-15 緬因:美國超過85%的龍蝦都來自這裡!岬角、港灣、森林、山丘間的海岸公路旅行 (ep.204)

旅行熱炒店

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 18, 2024 23:10


【緬因 Maine】 以龍蝦聞名,生產全美國85%的龍蝦,年產值達10億美元。擁有5,600公里的海岸線,與海共生是日常。在美國50州裡有兩個「之最」:非西語裔白人比例最高的州(近90%),與都市化程度最低的州之一(38.6%)。三面被加拿大環繞,靠近邊界一帶能見到雙語標示。從南部海岸一路到加拿大邊界,從平直海灘、深邃海灣、陡峭山嶺到濱海小鎮,這裡給人的感覺是歲月靜好,與世無爭,如同那覆蓋70,000平方公里、人跡罕至的廣闊森林一般。 【10/26 旅行熱炒店實體演講活動:加利福尼亞的另一面】 旅行熱炒店的首場海外實體活動來囉!歡迎人在舊金山灣區的各位呼朋引伴來參加~ 身為一位「邊緣系旅人」,在加利福尼亞的過去三年,主廚Jerome總是在尋找Golden State的不同風貌,特別是那些大家認為「很無聊、什麼都沒有」的角落。這場講座將帶著您走進這些地方:Oakland的非裔美國人社區、Stockton的亞裔農夫市集、Salinas Valley裡被遺忘的西班牙傳教所、San Jose的小葡萄牙與越南城、散落於偏僻角落的早期華人遺跡,讓您更認識身邊人事物背後的故事,並且獲得一些週末出遊小旅行的靈感。

旅行熱炒店
米國放大鏡-14 肯塔基:生日快樂歌的誕生地,世界賽馬首都,肯德基原來是從加油站起家? (ep.203)

旅行熱炒店

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2024 22:50


【肯塔基州 Kentucky】被炸雞耽誤的蛋塔店,原來其實是一家不起眼的路邊加油站?肯塔基是肯德基發跡之地,然而國際上同樣有名的是它的賽馬。當地盛產的藍草不只養活了健壯的馬匹,還孕育了超接地氣的藍草音樂,而且同一片土地上還誕生了知名的波旁威士忌。不過來到肯塔基州的最大城路易維爾,外地人永遠都搞不懂該怎麼念,但卻懂得唱來自這座城市的生日快樂歌,或者收到經過這裡轉運的UPS包裹。最後也別忘了世界最大洞穴系統猛瑪洞,拜訪肯塔基時千萬不可錯過! 【10/26 旅行熱炒店實體演講活動:加利福尼亞的另一面】 旅行熱炒店的首場海外實體活動來囉!歡迎人在舊金山灣區的各位呼朋引伴來參加~ 身為一位「邊緣系旅人」,在加利福尼亞的過去三年,主廚Jerome總是在尋找Golden State的不同風貌,特別是那些大家認為「很無聊、什麼都沒有」的角落。這場講座將帶著您走進這些地方:Oakland的非裔美國人社區、Stockton的亞裔農夫市集、Salinas Valley裡被遺忘的西班牙傳教所、San Jose的小葡萄牙與越南城、散落於偏僻角落的早期華人遺跡,讓您更認識身邊人事物背後的故事,並且獲得一些週末出遊小旅行的靈感。

旅行熱炒店
米國放大鏡-13 愛荷華:玉米糧倉,2500萬頭豬,隱藏版草原上的小屋,國際作家集散地 (ep.202)

旅行熱炒店

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 12, 2024 27:55


【愛荷華州 Iowa】種玉米、種黃豆、養豬,是美國民眾對愛荷華的基本印象,但其實農業只佔了該州GDP的11%。低廉的物價與稅率優惠吸引企業移入,使首府第蒙成為新的保險業首都。來自德國的敬虔派教徒,在Amana Colonies創造出人民公社般的生活方式。除了這些,愛荷華在文學方面扮演重要角色,國際寫作計畫將各國的傑出作家帶到這裡,《草原上的小屋》系列也有個書裡沒寫的小屋在這裡,美國最知名油彩畫「美國哥德式」也誕生在這裡,電影《夢幻成真》、《麥迪遜之橋》的場景也都在這裡! 【10/26 旅行熱炒店實體演講活動:加利福尼亞的另一面】 旅行熱炒店的首場海外實體活動來囉!歡迎人在舊金山灣區的各位呼朋引伴來參加~ 身為一位「邊緣系旅人」,在加利福尼亞的過去三年,主廚Jerome總是在尋找Golden State的不同風貌,特別是那些大家認為「很無聊、什麼都沒有」的角落。這場講座將帶著您走進這些地方:Oakland的非裔美國人社區、Stockton的亞裔農夫市集、Salinas Valley裡被遺忘的西班牙傳教所、San Jose的小葡萄牙與越南城、散落於偏僻角落的早期華人遺跡,讓您更認識身邊人事物背後的故事,並且獲得一些週末出遊小旅行的靈感。

旅行熱炒店
米國放大鏡-12 印第安納(沒有瓊斯):Indy 500 賽車重鎮,建築迷心目中的麥加,為什麼美國喜歡把大學開在農田裡? (ep.201)

旅行熱炒店

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 9, 2024 25:15


【印第安納州 Indiana】和印第安納瓊斯無關,名叫印第安那但完全沒有原住民保留地。乍看是農業大州,卻有過差點超越底特律的汽車工業,與過去的全世界第一大煉鋼廠。很幸運的擁有兩座具國際知名度的公立高等學府,首府印第安納波里斯是三大汽車賽事之一Indy 500每年舉辦的地點,往東南一點的哥倫布匯集了多位普立茲克獎建築大師的作品,這個州也許沒我們以為的那麼平凡。 【10/26 旅行熱炒店實體演講活動:加利福尼亞的另一面】 旅行熱炒店的首場海外實體活動來囉!歡迎人在舊金山灣區的各位呼朋引伴來參加~ 身為一位「邊緣系旅人」,在加利福尼亞的過去三年,主廚Jerome總是在尋找Golden State的不同風貌,特別是那些大家認為「很無聊、什麼都沒有」的角落。這場講座將帶著您走進這些地方:Oakland的非裔美國人社區、Stockton的亞裔農夫市集、Salinas Valley裡被遺忘的西班牙傳教所、San Jose的小葡萄牙與越南城、散落於偏僻角落的早期華人遺跡,讓您更認識身邊人事物背後的故事,並且獲得一些週末出遊小旅行的靈感。

Learn Skin with Dr. Raja and Dr. Hadar
Episode 202: Transforming Your Medical Health and Doctor Experience

Learn Skin with Dr. Raja and Dr. Hadar

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 12, 2024 26:26


How can you make the medical experience easier for your patients? We've got a few answers. This week, we're joined by Dr. William Eaglstein as he looks at how to empower patients, recognize the limits of the medical profession, and embrace the placebo effect. Each Thursday, join Dr. Raja and Dr. Hadar, board-certified dermatologists, as they share the latest evidence-based research in integrative dermatology. For access to CE/CME courses, become a member at LearnSkin.com.   William Eaglstein, MD, originally from Missouri, is the former chairman of dermatology at the Universities of Pittsburgh and Miami. He has served as a Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Health Policy Fellow in Washington, DC, chaired advisory panels for both the FDA and NIH, and held the position of Vice President at Stiefel, a GSK company. His contributions to wound healing have earned him Lifetime Achievement Awards from the Union of Wound Healing Societies and the Wound Healing Society, along with an Honorary Membership in the American Academy of Dermatology and a Citation of Merit from the University of Missouri. Dr. Eaglstein currently resides in Los Altos, California, with his wife, Janet, where he remains active in wound healing, drug development, regulatory affairs, contemporary art, and bicycling.

Catholic Women Preach
September 3, 2024: "The Feast of Saint Phoebe" with Rose Lue

Catholic Women Preach

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 2, 2024 8:37


Preaching for the Feast of St. Phoebe, Rose Lue offers a reflection on the Holy Spirit's invitation to rethink women's participation Church leadership and ministry: "Knowing about Phoebe, the role she played in the early church, and Paul's recognition of her, however, affirms my call and gives me hope! Hope that one day women like me who are answering the call to serve can also be recognized and be instituted as servant leaders. Hope that one day we may receive the sacramental grace the church offers." Rose Lue is a community organizer, justice advocate, and spiritual companion. An Advanced Lay Leader in the Diocese of San Jose, California, having completed 7 years of formation along with the candidates for permanent diaconate, Rose currently leads the mental health ministry at her parish and serves on the diocesan committee for Catholic Campaign for Human Development. She is also an immigrant from the Philippines, wife, mother to three, and an active long-time member of St. Simon Parish in Los Altos, California. Visit www.catholicwomenpreach.org/preaching/09032024 to learn more about Rose, to read her preaching text, and for more preaching from Catholic women.

NPR's Book of the Day
Jon M. Chu's memoir 'Viewfinder' traces his journey to making movies

NPR's Book of the Day

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2024 9:22


Before he was the director behind films like Crazy Rich Asians, In the Heights and Wicked, Jon M. Chu was a teenager in Los Altos, California, playing around with a camera and working at his parents' Chinese restaurant. That's the journey behind his new memoir, Viewfinder. And in today's episode, he speaks with another kid from Los Altos – NPR's Ailsa Chang – about how his parents' attitude towards assimilation shaped his upbringing and how they ended up supporting his dreams of making movies. To listen to Book of the Day sponsor-free and support NPR's book coverage, sign up for Book of the Day+ at plus.npr.org/bookofthedayLearn more about sponsor message choices: podcastchoices.com/adchoicesNPR Privacy Policy

Championship Vision
Episode 353: Coach Doc Scheppler (Head Girls Basketball Coach at Pinewood HS in Los Altos Hills, CA) Part 1: "The Masters of Coaching" Series

Championship Vision

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2024 83:34


Doc Scheppler attended San Francisco State University and received his B.A. and M.A. degrees in Physical Education, and a Single Subject Teaching Credential, Physical Education. As a youngster growing up, he developed an intense passion for sports. In high school, because of the positive influence of great coaches, he decided to teach and coach. After earning his degrees and credential in 1978, he began a career coaching sports at Burlingame High School and working at several athletic clubs designing fitness programs. He came to Pinewood School in 1995 on the recommendation of one of his former players at Burlingame High School, and “it has been a wonderful twenty years teaching Physical Education and coaching girls basketball.” Doc and his wife have two children and three wonderful grandchildren. Married to Patricia 2 children Kacey and Kyle 3 grandchildren Teagan Conway anj Declan Boys h s coach 17 years Girls h s coach 29 years 27 league 14 section 10 NorCal 6 State championships Basketball Skills Development Coach since 1986-All ages! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/kevin-furtado/support

The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria
BOP en Español 10: Los altos y bajos al establecer el análisis de conducta en Guatemala con Jessie Arroyave

The Behavioral Observations Podcast with Matt Cicoria

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 2, 2024 83:37


En este episodio tenemos la oportunidad de conocer la trayectoria de Jessie Arroyave, la primera BCBA de Guatemala. Jessie publicó un artículo en la revista Behavior Analysis in Practice, en el que habla de los altos y bajos al tratar de dar los primeros pasos para el establecimiento del análisis de conducta en Guatemala. Ella decidió tomar el camino difícil de regresar a su país después de formarse en Estados Unidos a pesar de los múltiples obstáculos. ¿Qué estamos haciendo para apoyar a profesionales como Jessie? Lo que sé es que con nuestra ayuda o sin ella, su compromiso y dedicación están intactos. Tenemos mucho que aprender de su ejemplo. The ups and downs of establishing behavior analysis in Guatemala with Jessie Arroyave In this episode we have the opportunity to learn about the career of Jessie Arroyave, the first BCBA in Guatemala. Jessie published an article in the journal Behavior Analysis in Practice, in which she talks about the ups and downs of trying to take the first steps toward establishing behavior analysis in Guatemala. She decided to take the difficult path of returning to her country after training in the United States despite multiple obstacles. What are we doing to support professionals like Jessie? What I know is that with or without our help, her commitment and dedication are intact. We have much to learn from her example.

La Torre del Cuervo
Warhammer 40k "Malcador, el Sigilita" y los Altos Señores de Terra.

La Torre del Cuervo

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 1, 2024 77:34


Arrancamos motores y os traemos un nuevo formato de programa en el que indagaremos en los anales de la historia más Grimdark y oscura de este Universo siempre en Guerra. Llega a nuestra Torre nada más y nada menos que Malcador, El Sigilita y los Altos Señores de Terra. Agradecer a nuestros Patreon nuestros cuervos de la tormenta su ayuda incondicional y a nuestro tendero de confianza, Lopez, de Multiversewar el apoyo a esta thunderhawk tan destartalada… www.multiversowar.com No dejéis de pasaros por nuestra pág web www.latorredelcuervo.com en la que encontraréis artículos con novedades del hobby, muchas reseñas de novelas, las más grimdark y menciones a eventos que puede te estes perdiendo en tu propia ciudad y que no sabes ni que los tienes al lado…todo esto en nuestra página web www.latorredelcuervo.com Lo dicho hermanos y hermanas de Deliverance!! Gracias a todos los cuervos de la tormenta por participar en este programa, en especial: A Jaime por su Eisenhorn, a Rosa por su Beta Bequin, a Dani Dominguez por ese narrador misterioso y al mismísimo Jimbur, la Voz del Emperador!! Visítanos en nuestra Web: www.latorredelcuervo.com Apóyanos y entra en nuestro PATREON: https://patreon.com/latorredelcuervo Síguenos en: Facebook: La Torre del Cuervo Twitter: @LaTorredelCuervo Instagram: El_Corintio La Torre del Cuervo Youtube: Canal La Torre del Cuervo Esperamos tus comentarios!!!! info@latorredelcuervo.com

What's The Matter With Me? Podcast
Territorial Expansion

What's The Matter With Me? Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 19, 2024 32:46 Transcription Available


Low Anxiety, Going Places In this episode, I give a shoutout to Kevin for Montana info, share insights from Andrew Pulrang's Disability Thinking, and discuss prepping Dax Pierson interview questions. I also talk about my kids' haircuts, our neighborhood, music, therapy, hospital visits, and my recent solo trips and poetry publications. Shout Outs Shout outs to Kevin. thanks for the info about Montana. Kevin does comic book reviews on his YouTube channel Under The Cowl Of MS. Disability Thinking Now reading Andrew Pulrang's Disability Thinking Substack. I've always been partial to the combination of disability with thinking, the guy's been on another level for a long time. Writing Dax Pierson interview questions. I have been lagging, trying to be recovered fully before doing the interview. I think it may be time to move forward. I'll Gladly Pay Tomorrow For A Haircut Today After months of hair drama, i took my kids to Supercuts and John's long hair was over in a moment. He was happy. With his new haircut, he's ready for summer. I'm glad that our neighborhood is a protected cul-de-sac. It means the kids can play outside with the other kids in the neighborhood and there's hardly any car traffic. New Music: Magic Fig, "Magic Fig" Magic Fig. San Francisco psych band. I heard it reviewed at the KFJC staff meeting and I ordered it from the group's bandcamp page. Cool new record – local band – insane amount of styles – dreamlike hooks – psychedelic SF – full sonic fireworks, Silver Current Label – over the top – combo Sid Barrett mixed with HR Puff n' Stuff KFJC Music Notes 6/5/24 24-Hour yogurt is smoother than 8-hour yogurt, go figure. I went to the Express Care at the Eden Valley Medical Center bc my ear was feeling blocked, like it had somebody's thumb stuck in it. They prescribed Flonase and something else, and they've been making it easier to breathe through the machine My anxiety is low, put fast away, like it's in the past. My talk therapist thinks it may be due to the EMDR therapy that we've been doing. Excursions I drove the kids to Foothill College where we went to KFJC and we hung out with Jack Tar and Good Karma before having snack on the quad, and then we drove to Hayward. In Hayward, we went to Burger King, a place the kids wanted to go badly after seeing the commercial a million times. Territorial Expansion The next day, I went to Oakland on my own. I've learned how to strap the wheelchair onto my car by myself. On Father's Day, I took the kids to Berkeley. We went to Amoeba Music, Moe's Books, Games of Berkeley, and had slices of pizza for lunch. My new expanded base of operations includes Oakland, Berkeley and Los Altos. Acceptances My ears were burning, my vibe was strong. Three poems were accepted for publication in two different journals. After a long gap, they were accepted in the same day by editors working half a world apart. It'll be my first time publishing my work in another country, and also my first time reprinting a poem. Stay tuned, you'll be the first to know..

Broadway with AJ and Sarah
Young Frankenstein at Los Altos Stage Company!

Broadway with AJ and Sarah

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2024 54:01


This week, we saw this hilarious musical at a theater Sarah and I have yet to visit! Needless to say we will be back, but definitely check out this show running until June 23rd in Los Altos! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/broadwaywithajandsarah/message

Manufacturing Happy Hour
186: How Bringing Clean Water to Africa Led to Digitizing the Electronics Industry with Andrew Scheuermann, Co-Founder and CEO of Arch Systems

Manufacturing Happy Hour

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2024 56:01


As new technologies emerge, so do new solutions and new possibilities. The electronics manufacturing world is going through a digital revolution right now, and companies like Arch Systems are at the pinnacle of it. We welcomed Andrew Scheuermann, Co-Founder and CEO of Arch Systems, to the show to hear about the brilliant backstory behind the company. Before Arch Systems became a thing, Andrew and his Co-Founder were on a mission to solve the problem of broken wells in a number of African countries. Funding new wells is one thing, but without maintenance, they often fail. Using new technology and data insights, this project spiraled into a larger solution that became what Arch Systems is today.We hear Andrew's story and his thoughts on balancing non-profit and for-profit ventures to help each other, what the early days of the startup were like, and how technology is paving the way for faster and more effective solutions in electronics manufacturing. In this episode, find out:What Arch Systems does and how it started with a clear missionWhy Andrew decided to start working with water wells in some African countriesAndrew explains what the problem was with the wells and how it all came down to maintenanceHow Andrew and his co-founder came up with a solutionThe challenges of using a solution across so many sitesHow Andrew balanced the for-profit and non-profit aspects of his projectHow electronics manufacturing became a focus The early days of finding product-market fit and struggling as an early startupHow leveraging data in Arch Systems could benefit manufacturing companiesThe challenges of handling so much data How the right data can help you make predictive maintenance decisionsHow automation can help to fill the gaps in a workforce Enjoying the show? Please leave us a review here. Even one sentence helps. It's feedback from Manufacturing All-Stars like you that keeps us going!Tweetable Quotes:“If you can solve somebody's problem, it doesn't matter how different or similar you think you are, you can be the best team in the world.”“All machines break. It's not a question of if, it's just when. And the more you use it, the more it's going to break. There might have been a defect, it might break earlier, it might just be based on usage. And so they would break, but the problem was painfully simple, there was no maintenance.”“What's stuck with me is just being about the people and their problem. Not what you think it is, but what they think it is.”Links & mentions:Arch Systems, building expert data solutions that objectively observe and optimize manufacturing processes, driving decision intelligence for electronics manufacturers WellDone International, a non-profit organization working to improve global access to clean water and other basic services essential to human health, productivity, and well-beingAmandine Lounge, serving a range of international cocktails in Los Altos, CAMake sure to visit http://manufacturinghappyhour.com for detailed show notes and a full list of resources mentioned in this episode....

Sermons from Grace Cathedral
The Very Rev. Dr. Malcolm Clemens Young

Sermons from Grace Cathedral

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2024 17:42


Jesus prayed, “I speak these things in the world so that they may have my joy made complete in themselves” (Jn. 17). Acts 1:15-17, 21-26 Psalm 1 1 John 5:9-13 John 17:6-19 Friendship According to Aristotle and Jesus 1. “We seek one mystery, God, with another mystery, ourselves. We are mysterious to ourselves because God's mystery is in us.” [i] Gary Wills wrote these words about the impossibility of fully comprehending God. Still, we can draw closer to the Holy One. I am grateful for friends who help me see our Father in new ways. This week my friend Norwood Pratt sent me an article which begins with a poem by Li Bai (701-762). According to legend he died in the year 762 drunkenly trying to embrace the moon's reflection in the Yangtze River. Li Bai writes, “The birds have vanished from the sky. / Now the last cloud drains away // We sit together, the mountain and me, / until only the mountain remains.” [ii] For me this expresses the feeling of unity with God that comes to me in prayer. This poet was one of many inspirations for a modern Chinese American poet named Li-Young Lee (1957-). Lee's father immigrated to the United States and served as a Presbyterian pastor at an all-white church in western Pennsylvania. Lee feels fascinated by infinity and eternity. He writes this poem about the “Ultimate Being, Tao or God” as the beloved one, the darling. Each of us in the uniqueness of our nature and experience has a different experience of holiness. He writes, “My friend and I are in love with the same woman… I'd write a song about her.  I wish I could sing. I'd sing about her. / I wish I could write a poem. / Every line would be about her. / Instead, I listen to my friend speak / about this woman we both love, / and I think of all the ways she is unlike / anything he says about her and unlike / everything else in the world.” [iii] These two poets write about something that cannot easily be expressed, our deepest desire to be united with God. Jesus also speaks about this in the Gospel of John, in his last instructions to the disciples and then in his passionate prayer for them, and for us. In his last words Jesus describes the mystery of God and our existence using a surprising metaphor. At the center of all things lies our experience of friendship. On Mother's Day when we celebrate the sacrifices associated with love I want to think more with you about friendship and God. To understand the uniqueness of Jesus' teaching, it helps to see how another great historical thinker understood this subject. 2. Long before Jesus' birth the Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 BC) studied at Plato's school in Athens (from the age of 17 to 37). After this Aristotle became the tutor of Alexander the Great and founded a prominent library that he used as the basis for his thought. Scholars estimate that about a third of what Aristotle wrote has survived. He had a huge effect on the western understanding of nature. He also especially influenced the thirteenth century theologian Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) and therefore modern Roman Catholic approaches to Christian thought. For Aristotle God is eternal, non-material, unchanging and perfect. He famously describes God as the unmoved mover existing outside of the world and setting it into motion. Because everything seeks divine perfection this God is responsible for all change that continues to happen in the universe. We experience a world of particular things but God knows the universal ideas behind them (or before them). For Aristotle God is pure thought, eternally contemplating himself. God is the telos, the goal or end of all things. [iv] Aristotle begins his book Nicomachean Ethics by observing that “Happiness… is the End at which all actions aim.” [v] Everything we do ultimately can be traced back to our desire for happiness and the purpose of Aristotle's book is to help the reader to attain this goal. Happiness comes from having particular virtues, that is habitual ways of acting and seeking pleasure. These include: courage, temperance, generosity, patience. In our interactions with others we use social virtues including: amiability, sincerity, wit. Justice is the overarching virtue that encompasses all the others. Aristotle writes that there are three kinds of friendships. The first is based on usefulness, the second on pleasure. Because these are based on superficial qualities they generally do not last long. The final and best form of friendship for him is based on strength of character. These friends do not love each other for what they can gain but because they admire each other's character. Aristotle believes that this almost always this happens between equals although sometimes one sees it in the relation between fathers and sons (I take this to mean between parents and children). Famous for describing human beings as the political animal, Aristotle points out that we can only accomplish great things through cooperation. Institutions and every human group rely on friendly feelings to be effective. Friendship is key to what makes human beings effective, and for that matter, human. Finally, Aristotle believes that although each person should be self-sufficient, friendship is important for a good life. 3. The Greek word for Gospel, that particular form of literature which tells the story of Jesus, is euangelion. We might forget that this word means good news until we get a sense for the far more radical picture of God and friendship that Jesus teaches. For me, one of the defining and unique features of Christianity as a religion comes from Jesus' insistence that our relation to God is like a child to a loving father. Jesus teaches us to pray, “Our Father who art in heaven.” Jesus clarifies this picture of God in his story of the Prodigal Son who goes away and squanders his wealth in a kind of first century Las Vegas. In the son's destitution he returns home and as he crests the hill, his father “filled with compassion,” hikes up his robes and runs to hug and kiss him. Jesus does not just use words but physical gestures to show what a friend is. In today's gospel Jesus washes his friends' feet before eats his last meal with them. The King James Version says, “there was leaning on Jesus' bosom one of his disciples, whom Jesus loved” (Jn. 13:23). [vi] Imagine Jesus, in the actual embrace of his beloved friend, telling us who God is. Jesus explicitly says I do not call you servants but friends (Jn. 15). A servant does not know what the master is doing but a friend does. And you know that the greatest commandment is to love one another. Later in prayer he begs God to protect us from the world, “so that [we] may have [his] joy made complete in [ourselves]” (Jn. 17). 4. Gregory of Nyssa (c. 332-395) was born ten years after the First Council of Nicaea and attended the First Council of Constantinople. He writes about how so many ordinary people were arguing about doctrine, “If in this city you ask anyone for change, he will discuss with you whether the Son was begotten or unbegotten. If you ask about the quality of the bread you will receive the answer, “The father is the greater and the Son is lesser.' If you suggest a bath is desirable you will be told, ‘There was nothing before the Son was created.'” [vii] Gregory with his friends Basil and Gregory Nazianzus wondered what description of Jesus would lead to faith rather than just argument. [viii] Gregory of Nyssa came to believe that the image of God is only fully displayed when every human person is included. [ix] In his final book Life of Moses Gregory responds to a letter from a younger friend who seeks counsel on “the perfect life.” [x] Gregory writes that Moses exemplifies this more than all others because Moses is a friend to God. True perfection is not bargaining with, pleading, tricking, manipulating, fearing God. It is not avoiding a wicked life out of fear of punishment. It is not to do good because we hope for some reward, as if we are cashing in on the virtuous life through a business contract. Gregory closes with these words to his young admirer, “we regard falling from God's friendship as the only dreadful thing… and we consider becoming God's friend the only thing worthy of honor and desire. This… is the perfection of life. As your understanding is lifted up to what is magnificent and divine, whatever you may find… will certainly be for the common benefit in Christ Jesus.” [xi] On Thursday night I was speaking to Paul Fromberg the Rector of St. Gregory's church about this and he mentioned a sophisticated woman who became a Christian in his church. In short she moved from Aristotle's view of friendship among superior equals to Jesus' view. She said, “Because I go to church I can have real affection for people who annoy the shit out of me. My affection is no longer just based on affinity.” [xii] 5. I have been thoroughly transformed by Jesus' idea of friendship. My life has become full of Jesus' friends, full of people who I never would have met had I followed Aristotle's advice. Together we know that in Christ unity does not have to mean uniformity. Before I close let me tell you about one person who I met at Christ Church in Los Altos. Even by the time I met her Alice Larse was only a few years away from being a great-grandmother. She and her husband George had grown up together in Washington State. He had been an engineer and she nursed him through his death from Alzheimer's disease. Some of my favorite memories come from the frequent summer pool parties she would have for our youth groups. She must have been in her sixties when she started a “Alice's Stick Cookies Company.” Heidi and I saw them in a store last week!   At Christ Church we had a rotating homeless shelter and there were several times when Alice, as a widow living by herself, had various guests stay at her house. When the church was divided about whether or not to start a school she quickly volunteered to serve as senior warden. She was not sentimental. She was thoroughly practical. She was humble. She got things done… but with a great sense of humor.   There was no outward indication that she was really a saint. I missed her funeral two weeks ago because of responsibilities here. I never really had the chance to say goodbye but I know that one day we will be together in God. Grace Cathedral has hundreds of saints just like her who I have learned to love in a similar way.   Ram Dass was a dear friend of our former Dean Alan Jones. He used to say, “The name of the game we are in is called ‘Being at one with the Beloved.' [xiii] The Medieval mystic Julian of Norwich writes that God possesses, “a love-longing to have us all together, wholly in himself for his delight; for we are not now wholly in him as we shall be…” She says that you and I are Jesus' joy and bliss. [xiv]   We seek one mystery, God, with another mystery, ourselves. We are mysterious to ourselves because God's mystery is in us.” [xv] In a world where friendship can seem to be only for utility or pleasure I pray that like Jesus, you will be blessed with many friends, that you find perfection of life and even become friends with God. [i] Gary Wills, Saint Augustine (NY: Viking, 1999) xii. [ii] Li Bai, “Zazen on Ching-t'ing Mountain,” tr. Sam Hamill, Crossing the Yellow River: Three Hundred Poems from the Chinese, (Rochester, NY: BOA Editions, 2000). About 1000 poems attributed to Li still exist. https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48711/zazen-on-ching-ting-mountain [iii] Ed Simon, “There's Nothing in the World Smaller than the Universe: In The Invention of the Darling, Li-Young Lee presents divinity as spirit and matter, profound and quotidian, sacred and profane,” Poetry Foundation. This article quotes, “The Invention of the Darling.”  https://www.poetryfoundation.org/articles/162572/theres-nothing-in-the-world-smaller-than-the-universe [iv] More from the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: “Aristotle made God passively responsible for change in the world in the sense that all things seek divine perfection. God imbues all things with order and purpose, both of which can be discovered and point to his (or its) divine existence. From those contingent things we come to know universals, whereas God knows universals prior to their existence in things. God, the highest being (though not a loving being), engages in perfect contemplation of the most worthy object, which is himself. He is thus unaware of the world and cares nothing for it, being an unmoved mover. God as pure form is wholly immaterial, and as perfect he is unchanging since he cannot become more perfect. This perfect and immutable God is therefore the apex of being and knowledge. God must be eternal. That is because time is eternal, and since there can be no time without change, change must be eternal. And for change to be eternal the cause of change-the unmoved mover-must also be eternal. To be eternal God must also be immaterial since only immaterial things are immune from change. Additionally, as an immaterial being, God is not extended in space.” https://iep.utm.edu/god-west/ [v] Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, trans. H. Rackham, Loeb Classical Library vol. XIX (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1975) 30-1. [vi] h™n aÓnakei÷menoß ei–ß e˙k tw◊n maqhtw◊n aujtouv e˙n twˆ◊ ko/lpwˆ touv ∆Ihsouv, o§n hjga¿pa oJ ∆Ihsouvß (John 13:23). I don't understand why the NRSV translation translate this as “next to him” I think that Herman Waetjen regards “in Jesus' bosom” as correct. Herman Waetjen, The Gospel of the Beloved Disciple: A Work in Two Editions (NY: T&T Clark, 2005) 334. [vii] Margaret Ruth Miles, The Word Made Flesh: A History of Christian Thought (Malden, MA: Blackwell Publishing, 2005), 105. [viii] Ibid., 108. [ix] From Jesse Hake, “An Intro to Saint Gregory of Nyssa and his Last Work: The Life of Moses,” 28 July 2022: https://www.theophaneia.org/an-intro-to-saint-gregory-of-nyssa-and-his-last-work-the-life-of-moses/ “For example, Gregory says that the image of God is only fully displayed when every human person is included, so that the reference in Genesis to making humanity in God's image is actually a reference to all of humanity as one body (which is ultimately the body of Jesus Christ that is also revealed at the end of time): In the Divine foreknowledge and power all humanity is included in the first creation. …The entire plenitude of humanity was included by the God of all, by His power of foreknowledge, as it were in one body, and …this is what the text teaches us which says, God created man, in the image of God created He him. For the image …extends equally to all the race. …The Image of God, which we behold in universal humanity, had its consummation then. …He saw, Who knows all things even before they be, comprehending them in His knowledge, how great in number humanity will be in the sum of its individuals. …For when …the full complement of human nature has reached the limit of the pre-determined measure, because there is no longer anything to be made up in the way of increase to the number of souls, [Paul] teaches us that the change in existing things will take place in an instant of time. [And Paul gives to] that limit of time which has no parts or extension the names of a moment and the twinkling of an eye (1 Corinthians 15:51-52).” [x] Gregory of Nyssa, The Life of Moses trans. Abraham J. Malherbe and Everett Ferguson, “Preface” by John Myendorff (NY: Paulist Press, 1978) 29. [xi] Ibid., 137. [xii] Paul Fromberg conversation at One Market, Thursday 9 May 2024. [xiii] Alan Jones, Living the Truth (Boston, MA: Cowley Publications, 2000) 53. [xiv] Quoted in Isaac S. Villegas, “Christian Theology is a Love Story,” The Christian Century, 25 April 2018. https://www.christiancentury.org/lectionary/may-13-easter-7b-john-17-6-19?code=kHQx7M4MqgBLOUfbwRkc&utm_source=Christian+Century+Newsletter&utm_campaign=1ccba0cb63-EMAIL_CAMPAIGN_SCP_2024-05-06&utm_medium=email&utm_term=0_-31c915c0b7-%5BLIST_EMAIL_ID%5D [xv] Gary Wills, Saint Augustine (NY: Viking, 1999) xii.

Dangerous Speech
Ep 167 Stuart Parker

Dangerous Speech

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2024 74:03


I spoke with Stuart Parker about being exiled from the left, how the left has adopted extreme ideologies of race and gender, the alliance between the far left and Islam, and his writing and work Follow me: @Dangerousspeach
 Follow Stuart: @stuartlosaltos You can find his collected essays here: https://amazon.ca/dp/B0CW189T6X?binding=paperback&ref=dbs_dp_rwt_sb_pc_tpbk… Get more information on his writing here: https://dimensionfold.com/authors/stuart-parker/ Check out his blog: https://stuartparker.ca Subscribe to his Substack: https://stuartparkersblog.substack.com And check out his work with Los Altos and their courses: https://losaltos.ca

How I Built My Small Business
Amy Lai - How do you start a franchise? Boba Beginnings to 45+ Franchise TEASPOON Locations in five years

How I Built My Small Business

Play Episode Play 19 sec Highlight Listen Later Apr 23, 2024 39:39 Transcription Available


Amy is the co-founder and CEO of Teaspoon, a nationwide boba chain that opened its first store in Los Altos, california, in 2016 and started franchising two years later. Since then, the brand has expanded to 45 Teaspoon boba shops nationwide and counting. Her business has been featured in Style Magazine, Restaurant Magazine, Chef's Warehouse and more. Subscribe on Apple Podcast , Spotify or other major streaming platforms.If you have a comment, a question you wish I'd asked, an idea for an episode or want to say hi, I'd love to hear from you! For inquiring guests, please keep in mind that this podcast is for the benefit of listeners and I am not interested in any “puff pieces.” Thank you for understanding!Feel free to send me a message through my website, or through LinkedIn.A diary of episodes are posted on Instagram atHow I Built My Small Business.

Igniting Imagination: Leadership Ministry
Facing Reality, Claiming Leadership in the Church Today

Igniting Imagination: Leadership Ministry

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2024 39:49


Have you enjoyed Season 10 of our Igniting Imagination Podcast as much as we have?! We started with Margaret Wheatley and we are ending the season with two remarkable innovative leaders, who also happen to be part of our leadership learning and innovation team, Rev. Kathi McShane and Derrick Scott, III. If you haven't been listening, this conversation can guide you toward the episodes that most speak to you – it's a great place to start! If you've been listening along the way, we hope you'll find it helpful to pull on the threads that name the realities we are facing today and how we claim our leadership in the midst. It's not an easy season, but I'm convinced we have an opportunity to lead in new ways that get us a bit closer to the world that God imagines. In this conversation, you'll hear:Leading in a time of polarization.The importance of naming and understanding ambiguous loss.More responses to Wheatley's “addicted to hope”.Derrick Scott, III is the associate director of learning and innovation for Wesleyan Impact Partners. Derrick has been leading ministry in the collegiate and young adult context for over 20 years.In addition to his work with Wesleyan Impact Partners, Derrick currently serves as the creative producer of Studio Wesley, a ministry that's exploring how to serve college-aged young adults in the digital space. He is also the co-lay leader of the Florida Conference of the UMC. He is passionate about empowering a new generation of leaders and laborers who will live as disciples of Jesus Christ to transform the world.He has an undergraduate degree in history, is a Cicerone Certified Beer Server, and is a textbook introvert. He loves eating sushi, flying on Delta, and pouring craft beer. He lives in Jacksonville, Florida with his Chihuahua-mix dog Winston and Bengal cat Julian. Most importantly, he hates mayonnaise.Rev. Kathleen McShane is the director of learning and innovation for Wesleyan Impact Partners. Kathi retired from active ministry as an ordained Elder in the California-Nevada Conference of the United Methodist Church in 2022. She led four congregations and served for eight years as the vice president for Institutional Advancement at Pacific School of Religion. Before attending seminary and beginning her life in ministry, she was a civil litigator, practicing law in the San Francisco Bay Area.In her final appointment in Los Altos, California, Kathi co-founded the Changemaker Initiative, which is a small national movement of churches committed to empowering lay people to become compassion-driven changemakers like Jesus. That work has led her toward multiple projects that are re-imagining leadership for the church of the future. She is the co-author, with Rabbi Elan Babchuck, of Picking Up the Pieces: Leadership after Empire.Kathi lives on a vineyard on the Central Coast of California.To view videos of podcast episodes, please go to the Igniting Imagination YouTube.Subscribe to our Learning and Innovation emails here. We send emails about each episode and include additional related resources related to the episode's topic. We know your inbox is inundated these days, we aim to send you content that is inspiring, innovative, and impactful for your life and ministry.If you enjoy the podcast, would you please consider leaving a short review on