Podcasts about Mai Lan

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Best podcasts about Mai Lan

Latest podcast episodes about Mai Lan

Le Grand Atelier
Le consentement de Ludivine Sagnier

Le Grand Atelier

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2024 56:04


durée : 00:56:04 - Le grand atelier - par : Vincent Josse - Elle est sur scène dans une adaptation du roman de Vanessa Springora, le Consentement. Un spectacle qui questionne les dérives d'une époque et de toute une société. Son invitée est la chanteuse et autrice Mai Lan qui aborde les questions de l'inceste et du rapport au corps dans des livres jeunesse.

Profils
La maison du loup

Profils

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2024 35:16


Des thérapeutes à l'écoute des pédocriminels Ils sont six hommes et femmes. Six thérapeutes : psychiatres, psychologues, sexologues, assistant sociaux, et criminologues. Ils ont entre 30 et 60 ans et toutes les semaines, ils se retrouvent pour parler de leurs patients. Des patients bien particuliers puisqu'il s'agit en grande majorité de pédocriminels. Lors de ces réunions hebdomadaires, les thérapeutes évoquent ensemble leurs cas, le chemin thérapeutique qui se fait ou pas, les difficultés personnelles qu'ils peuvent rencontrer. Ils discutent, échangent, ne sont pas toujours d'accord et rient aussi, contre toute attente. Ces thérapeutes travaillent au sein d'une structure spécialisée dans la prise en charge des auteurs d'infractions à caractère sexuel. Ce centre a été mis en place suite aux manquements révélés par l'affaire Dutroux – une affaire qui a laissé une trace indélébile en Belgique. Désormais, la sanction judiciaire pour les auteurs d'infractions à caractère sexuel s'accompagne d'un suivi thérapeutique sous contrainte. Ce ne sont pas des « Dutroux » qui sont pris en charge dans cet établissement, ceux-là sont plus rares qu'on ne le pense, ce sont des gens de toutes les catégories sociales, de tous les milieux, des adolescents jusqu'aux personnes âgées. Nos six thérapeutes, Marie-Hélène, Jessica, Ludivine, Dorothée, Jean-Marc, Bertrand et Luca ainsi que leurs collègues Dorothée, Gauthier et Justine, se retrouvent dans la maison de Tournai en Wallonie. C'est là qu'ils font leurs consultations ou s'occupent d'une ligne téléphonique anonyme à destination de personnes qui se questionnent sur des comportements sexuels potentiellement inadéquats. C'est aussi là que se tient leur réunion hebdomadaire. Ils sont passionnés par leur métier, par la conviction de sa nécessité, car prendre en charge des auteurs de violences sexuelles, c'est indispensable pour éviter de nouvelles victimes. « En septembre 2021 est sorti Le loup, un livre pour enfants de Mai Lan Chapiron qui évoque l'inceste afin d'en briser le tabou et s'inspire de celui qu'elle a subi. En découvrant le livre, je suis sidérée. Je connais Mai Lan depuis toujours, nous ne sommes pas proches, mais nos familles sont liées depuis trois générations. Et il m'a toujours semblé impossible, inconcevable, inimaginable que dans mon entourage, il puisse y avoir des violences quelconques faites aux enfants. En découvrant le livre je suis aussi impressionnée par la réflexion et la maturité de Mai Lan car elle dit à propos du loup – et donc de son agresseur - que « pour apprendre à être moins sauvage et à ne plus attaquer les gens » lui aussi peut avoir de l'aide. Et je me demande : qui sont ces gens qui soignent les loups ? » Enregistrements : Septembre, octobre 2023 - Mixage : Charlie Marcelet - Illustration : Yasmine Gateau - Production : ARTE Radio

English Academic Vocabulary Booster
1980. 35 Academic Words Reference from "Mai Lan: "Autopilote" "Pumper" | TED Talk"

English Academic Vocabulary Booster

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 18, 2023 30:29


This podcast is a commentary and does not contain any copyrighted material of the reference source. We strongly recommend accessing/buying the reference source at the same time. ■Reference Source https://www.ted.com/talks/mai_lan_autopilote_pumper ■Post on this topic (You can get FREE learning materials!) https://englist.me/35-academic-words-reference-from-mai-lan-autopilote-pumper-ted-talk/ ■Youtube Video https://youtu.be/hB014s_yuME (All Words) https://youtu.be/mwQl06rOZOc (Advanced Words) https://youtu.be/_cWBdryx08w (Quick Look) ■Top Page for Further Materials https://englist.me/ ■SNS (Please follow!)

Musiques du monde
Brain Damage et Vanupié

Musiques du monde

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 17, 2023 48:30


Dub et reggae sont les arbitres des élégances dans ce nouveau numéro de MdM avec 2 invités : Martin Nathan de Brain Damage et Vanupié. Le premier, en sorcier du dub français, fait une relecture de l'album Hebron Gate de Groundation. Le second présente son 3ème album Dreamtime dans la #SessionLive. « … et je ne veux pas un simple album dub ! ». Ainsi s'achevaient les dernières recommandations d'Harrison Stafford à Martin Nathan, après lui avoir confié les enregistrements originaux de l'un des albums reggae les plus envoutants de ces dernières décennies. Il s'agit là de « Hebron Gate », son chef-d'œuvre mais également celui des musiciens extraordinaires qui l'accompagnent alors. Dans l'idée de fêter le 20ème anniversaire de sa parution, le leader charismatique du groupe Groundation propose à Brain Damage de le revisiter entièrement. Il faut surprendre, une simple succession de remixes, de pistes remasterisées ou de déclinaisons dub ne feront pas l'affaire. Bien entendu, les versions originales ne devront pas être seulement brièvement citées et l'ensemble devra être lisible et cohérent. Une seconde naissance. Féru de ce genre d'exercice à contraintes, le producteur français s'y attèle avec la minutie qu'on lui connait et se permet dans un premier temps de disséquer l'objet, d'en extraire et isoler chaque note. Grâce à ce travail colossal, toutes sortes de mouvements sont alors possibles : recompositions, changements d'harmonies, intégrations de chutes d'enregistrements, ajouts d'éléments extérieurs et nouveaux. L'inimitable style des californiens entremêlant le reggae et le jazz se dote ici d'une énergie différente, psychédélique, plus introspective, de prime abord résolument déroutante pour les fans mais rapidement captivante, pour eux comme pour les néophytes. Une réinvention intégrale d'un monument du reggae contemporain pour un album totalement nouveau, et par essence hautement conseillé aux fans de Groundation pour un voyage du type « Alice au pays des merveilles », mais également taillé pour tout amateur de reggae, dub ou autres curiosités.Titres diffusés- Forgiveness Brain Damage- Deaf Ears Brain Damage- Weeping Pirates Groundation- A New Star Brain Damage- Something More Groundation- The Garden Brain Damage.► Album Dreaming from an iron Gate (Baco Music 2023).Puis la #SessionLive reçoit Vanupié pour la sortie du nouvel et 3ème album Dreamtime.Après le succès de son deuxième album Gold sorti en mars 2018, et grâce à son tube planétaire Rockadown, Vanupié est aujourd'hui un artiste que l'on ne présente plus. Baroudeur éclectique à la voix extraterrestre, son énergie résolument positive a su conquérir un public de plus en plus large au fil des concerts et de ses cartons sur les réseaux. Avec plus de 90 Millions de vues sur Youtube pour sa vidéo « Rockadown subway session », Vanupié est aujourd'hui un artiste incontournable en France, et de plus en plus à l'étranger. Vanupié a démarré sa carrière en tant que créatif dans les plus grosses agences de publicité parisiennes. En 2008, il quitte la communication pour se consacrer pleinement à la création. Pendant 10 ans, il écume les salles, les rues, se consacrant pleinement à son premier amour : la musique. Boulimique de travail, ses efforts lui permettent quelques années plus tard d'être plébiscité du grand public et d'être programmé dans les plus grandes salles et les plus beaux festivals de France et d'Europe. Le Bataclan, la Cigale, l'Elysée Montmartre, Solidays, Reggae Sun Ska, Garorock,… ont accueilli Vanupié pour le plus grand plaisir d'un public de fans, chaque jour un peu plus nombreux.En 2015, il rencontre le réalisateur de cinéma François Dupeyron qui utilisera, par la suite, 4 titres de l'Album pour le dernier film de sa vie « Mon âme par toi Guérie », diffusé dans toutes les salles de France. En 2019, le réalisateur Fred Grivois demande à Vanupié une chanson exclusive pour la B.O. de son long métrage « L'intervention ».À 38 ans, (2018) il crée son propre label, Shoestring Records, avec lequel il produit tout ce qu'il invente. Après avoir décidé d'autoproduire sa propre musique, il décide de prendre sous son aile de jeunes talents français. Meylo et Jason Mist sont les deux premiers artistes à signer dans ce tout jeune label parisien. Producteur, compositeur, communiquant, il gère la carrière de ses petits protégés avec passion.En juillet 2020, il sort son premier roman Jav dans lequel il raconte l'expérience d'un jeune homme naïf parachuté dans le monde impitoyable de la justice française, à travers le récit romancé d'une nuit en garde à vue au commissariat de Saint-Ouen (93).En mai 2023, Vanupié sort sur son 3è album Dreamtime. Plusieurs featurings sont attendus sur ce nouvel opus, dont le singjay jamaïcain Panicetla chanteuse Mai Lan.  Titres interprétés au grand studio- Wonder en acoustique (avec Miyoo) Live RFI- Purple Light, extrait de l'album Dreamtime voir le clip - Careless Offender (full band) Live RFI voir le clip. Line Up : Vanupié, guitare, chant ; Miyoo, choeurs ; Jérôme Lavaud, basse ; Jonathan Chambel, batterie et Julien Grenier, claviers.Son : Benoît Letirant, Mathias Taylor.► Album Dreamtime (Daydream 2023).

Screaming in the Cloud
Being Present in the Moment Through Balcony-Hopping with Mai-Lan Tomsen Bukovec

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 21, 2023 25:09


Mai-Lan Tomsen Bukovec, Vice President of Foundational Data Services at AWS, joins Corey on Screaming in the Cloud to discuss her technique for spending time intentionally and prioritizing work-life balance called balcony-hopping. Mai-Lan explains how she created the concept of balcony-hopping and how it has helped her to be a better leader, mother, wife, and boxer. Corey and Mai-Lan discuss how in today's age, attention is a form of currency and why it's so important to be intentional with how and where you spend your attention. Mai-Lan also offers practical insights to anyone seeking to feel more productive, present, and balanced. About Mai-LanMai-Lan Tomsen Bukovec is Vice President, Foundational Data Services (FDS) at Amazon Web Services (AWS) and leads a number of high-scale AWS cloud services that provide storage and streaming of petabytes or exabytes of data and essential building blocks for modern application architecture like queuing and notifications, monitoring, alarming, logging and reliability validation. Mai-Lan's teams include some of AWS' first and largest-scale services like Amazon S3 and Simple Queue Service (SQS) to more recent and fast-growing services like managed open source streaming (Amazon Managed Streaming for Apache Kafka).Prior to joining Amazon, Mai-Lan spent almost 15 years in engineering and product leadership roles at technology companies including Microsoft and early stage startups. She began her technology career after serving in the U.S. Peace Corps in the Mopti region of Africa as a Forestry volunteer after earning her degree from University of California, San Diego.At Amazon, Mai-Lan is an advisor to Asians@Amazon, creator and sponsor of internal leadership development programs for Amazon employees, and is passionate about AWS initiatives and cloud services that maximize human potential everywhere.Mai-Lan has three children and lives in Seattle with her family. When she is not working on Amazon cloud services and spending time with her husband and kids, Mai-Lan trains primarily in boxing with additional practice in the martial art Savate.Links Referenced: LinkedIn post “Live Your Best Life Through Balcony Hopping”: https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/live-your-best-life-through-balcony-hopping-mai-lan-tomsen-bukovec/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mailan/

Screaming in the Cloud
The Infinite Possibilities of Amazon S3 with Kevin Miller

Screaming in the Cloud

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 26, 2022 33:17


About KevinKevin Miller is currently the global General Manager for Amazon Simple Storage Service (S3), an object storage service that offers industry-leading scalability, data availability, security, and performance. Prior to this role, Kevin has had multiple leadership roles within AWS, including as the General Manager for Amazon S3 Glacier, Director of Engineering for AWS Virtual Private Cloud, and engineering leader for AWS Virtual Private Network and AWS Direct Connect. Kevin was also Technical Advisor to the Senior Vice President for AWS Utility Computing. Kevin is a graduate of Carnegie Mellon University with a Bachelor of Science in Computer Science.Links Referenced: snark.cloud/shirt: https://snark.cloud/shirt aws.amazon.com/s3: https://aws.amazon.com/s3 TranscriptAnnouncer: Hello, and welcome to Screaming in the Cloud with your host, Chief Cloud Economist at The Duckbill Group, Corey Quinn. This weekly show features conversations with people doing interesting work in the world of cloud, thoughtful commentary on the state of the technical world, and ridiculous titles for which Corey refuses to apologize. This is Screaming in the Cloud.Corey: This episode is brought to us in part by our friends at Datadog. Datadog is a SaaS monitoring and security platform that enables full-stack observability for modern infrastructure and applications at every scale. Datadog enables teams to see everything: dashboarding, alerting, application performance monitoring, infrastructure monitoring, UX monitoring, security monitoring, dog logos, and log management, in one tightly integrated platform. With 600-plus out-of-the-box integrations with technologies including all major cloud providers, databases, and web servers, Datadog allows you to aggregate all your data into one platform for seamless correlation, allowing teams to troubleshoot and collaborate together in one place, preventing downtime and enhancing performance and reliability. Get started with a free 14-day trial by visiting datadoghq.com/screaminginthecloud, and get a free t-shirt after installing the agent.Corey: Managing shards. Maintenance windows. Overprovisioning. ElastiCache bills. I know, I know. It's a spooky season and you're already shaking. It's time for caching to be simpler. Momento Serverless Cache lets you forget the backend to focus on good code and great user experiences. With true autoscaling and a pay-per-use pricing model, it makes caching easy. No matter your cloud provider, get going for free at gomomento.co/screaming. That's GO M-O-M-E-N-T-O dot co slash screaming.Corey: Welcome to Screaming in the Cloud. I'm Corey Quinn. Right now, as I record this, we have just kicked off our annual charity t-shirt fundraiser. This year's shirt showcases S3 as the eighth wonder of the world. And here to either defend or argue the point—we're not quite sure yet—is Kevin Miller, AWS's vice president and general manager for Amazon S3. Kevin, thank you for agreeing to suffer the slings and arrows that are no doubt going to be interpreted, misinterpreted, et cetera, for the next half hour or so.Kevin: Oh, Corey, thanks for having me. And happy to do that, and really flattered for you to be thinking about S3 in this way. So more than happy to chat with you.Corey: It's absolutely one of those services that is foundational to the cloud. It was the first AWS service that was put into general availability, although the beta folks are going to argue back and forth about no, no, that was SQS instead. I feel like now that Mai-Lan handles both SQS and S3 as part of her portfolio, she is now the final arbiter of that. I'm sure that's an argument for a future day. But it's impossible to imagine cloud without S3.Kevin: I definitely think that's true. It's hard to imagine cloud, actually, with many of our foundational services, including SQS, of course, but we are—yes, we were the first generally available service with S3. And pretty happy with our anniversary being Pi Day, 3/14.Corey: I'm also curious, your own personal trajectory has been not necessarily what folks would expect. You were the general manager of Amazon Glacier, and now you're the general manager and vice president of S3. So, I've got to ask, because there are conflicting reports on this depending upon what angle you look at, are Glacier and S3 the same thing?Kevin: Yes, I was the general manager for S3 Glacier prior to coming over to S3 proper, and the answer is no, they are not the same thing. We certainly have a number of technologies where we're able to use those technologies both on S3 and Glacier, but there are certainly a number of things that are very distinct about Glacier and give us that ability to hit the ultra-low price points that we do for Glacier Deep Archive being as low as $1 per terabyte-month. And so, that definitely—there's a lot of actual ingenuity up and down the stack, from hardware to software, everywhere in between, to really achieve that with Glacier. But then there's other spots where S3 and Glacier have very similar needs, and then, of course, today many customers use Glacier through S3 as a storage class in S3, and so that's a great way to do that. So, there's definitely a lot of shared code, but certainly, when you get into it, there's [unintelligible 00:04:59] to both of them.Corey: I ran a number of obnoxiously detailed financial analyses, and they all came away with, unless you have a very specific very nuanced understanding of your data lifecycle and/or it is less than 30 or 60 days depending upon a variety of different things, the default S3 storage class you should be using for virtually anything is Intelligent Tiering. That is my purely economic analysis of it. Do you agree with that? Disagree with that? And again, I understand that all of these storage classes are like your children, and I am inviting you to tell me which one of them is your favorite, but I'm absolutely prepared to do that.Kevin: Well, we love Intelligent Tiering because it is very simple; customers are able to automatically save money using Intelligent Tiering for data that's not being frequently accessed. And actually, since we launched it a few years ago, we've already saved customers more than $250 million using Intelligent Tiering. So, I would say today, it is our default recommendation in almost every case. I think that the cases where we would recommend another storage class as the primary storage class tend to be specific to the use case where—and particularly for use cases where customers really have a good understanding of the access patterns. And we saw some customers do for their certain dataset, they know that it's going to be heavily accessed for a fixed period of time, or this data is actually for archival, it'll never be accessed, or very rarely if ever access, just maybe in an emergency.And those kinds of use cases, I think actually, customers are probably best to choose one of the specific storage classes where they're, sort of, paying that the lower cost from day one. But again, I would say for the vast majority of cases that we see, the data access patterns are unpredictable and customers like the flexibility of being able to very quickly retrieve the data if they decide they need to use it. But in many cases, they'll save a lot of money as the data is not being accessed, and so, Intelligent Tiering is a great choice for those cases.Corey: I would take it a step further and say that even when customers believe that they are going to be doing a deeper analysis and they have a better understanding of their data flow patterns than Intelligent Tiering would, in practice, I see that they rarely do anything about it. It's one of those things where they're like, “Oh, yeah, we're going to set up our own lifecycle policies real soon now,” whereas, just switch it over to Intelligent Tiering and never think about it again. People's time is worth so much more than the infrastructure they're working on in almost every case. It doesn't seem to make a whole lot of sense unless you have a very intentioned, very urgent reason to go and do that stuff by hand in most cases.Kevin: Yeah, that's right. I think I agree with you, Corey. And certainly, that is the recommendation we lead with customers.Corey: In previous years, our charity t-shirt has focused on other areas of AWS, and one of them was based upon a joke that I've been telling for a while now, which is that the best database in the world is Route 53 and storing TXT records inside of it. I don't know if I ever mentioned this to you or not, but the first iteration of that joke was featuring around S3. The challenge that I had with it is that S3 Select is absolutely a thing where you can query S3 with SQL which I don't see people doing anymore because Athena is the easier, more, shall we say, well-articulated version of all of that. And no, no, that joke doesn't work because it's actually true. You can use S3 as a database. Does that statement fill you with dread? Regret? Am I misunderstanding something? Or are you effectively running a giant subversive database?Kevin: Well, I think that certainly when most customers think about a database, they think about a collection of technology that's applied for given problems, and so I wouldn't count S3 as providing the whole range of functionality that would really make up a database. But I think that certainly a lot of the primitives and S3 Select as a great example of a primitive are available in S3. And we're looking at adding, you know, additional primitives going forward to make it possible to, you know, to build a database around S3. And as you see, other AWS services have done that in many ways. For example, obviously with Amazon Redshift having a lot of capability now to just directly access and use data in S3 and make that a super seamless so that you can then run data warehousing type queries on top of S3 and on top of your other datasets.So, I certainly think it's a great building block. And one other thing I would actually just say that you may not know, Corey, is that one of the things over the last couple of years we've been doing a lot more with S3 is actually working to directly contribute improvements to open-source connector software that uses S3, to make available automatically some of the performance improvements that can be achieved either using both the AWS SDK, and also using things like S3 Select. So, we started with a few of those things with Select; you're going to see more of that coming, most likely. And some of that, again, the idea there as you may not even necessarily know you're using Select, but when we can identify that it will improve performance, we're looking to be able to contribute those kinds of improvements directly—or we are contributing those directly to those open-source packages. So, one thing I would definitely recommend customers and developers do is have a capability of sort of keeping that software up-to-date because although it might seem like those are sort of one-and-done kind of software integrations, there's actually almost continuous improvement now going on, and around things like that capability, and then others we come out with.Corey: What surprised me is just how broadly S3 has been adopted by a wide variety of different clients' software packages out there. Back when I was running production environments in anger, I distinctly remember in one Ubuntu environment, we wound up installing a specific package that was designed to teach apt how to retrieve packages and its updates from S3, which was awesome. I don't see that anymore, just because it seems that it is so easy to do it now, just with the native features that S3 offers, as well as an awful lot of software under the hood has learned to directly recognize S3 as its own thing, and can react accordingly.Kevin: And just do the right thing. Exactly. No, we certainly see a lot of that. So that's, you know—I mean, obviously making that simple for end customers to use and achieve what they're trying to do, that's the whole goal.Corey: It's always odd to me when I'm talking to one of my clients who is looking to understand and optimize their AWS bill to see outliers in either direction when it comes to S3 itself. When they're driving large S3 bills as in a majority of their spend, it's, okay, that is very interesting. Let's dive into that. But almost more interesting to me is when it is effectively not being used at all. When, oh, we're doing everything with EBS volumes or EFS.And again, those are fine services. I don't have any particular problem with them anymore, but the problem I have is that the cloud long ago took what amounts to an economic vote. There's a tax savings for storing data in an object store the way that you—and by extension, most of your competitors—wind up pricing this, versus the idea of on a volume basis where you have to pre-provision things, you don't get any form of durability that extends beyond the availability zone boundary. It just becomes an awful lot of, “Well, you could do it this way. But it gets really expensive really quickly.”It just feels wild to me that there is that level of variance between S3 just sort of raw storage basis, economically, as well as then just the, frankly, ridiculous levels of durability and availability that you offer on top of that. How did you get there? Was the service just mispriced at the beginning? Like oh, we dropped to zero and probably should have put that in there somewhere.Kevin: Well, no, I wouldn't call it mispriced. I think that the S3 came about when we took a—we spent a lot of time looking at the architecture for storage systems, and knowing that we wanted a system that would provide the durability that comes with having three completely independent data centers and the elasticity and capability where, you know, customers don't have to provision the amount of storage they want, they can simply put data and the system keeps growing. And they can also delete data and stop paying for that storage when they're not using it. And so, just all of that investment and sort of looking at that architecture holistically led us down the path to where we are with S3.And we've definitely talked about this. In fact, in Peter's keynote at re:Invent last year, we talked a little bit about how the system is designed under the hood, and one of the thing you realize is that S3 gets a lot of the benefits that we do by just the overall scale. The fact that it is—I think the stat is that at this point more than 10,000 customers have data that's stored on more than a million hard drives in S3. And that's how you get the scale and the capability to do is through massive parallelization. Where customers that are, you know, I would say building more traditional architectures, those are inherently typically much more siloed architectures with a relatively small-scale overall, and it ends up with a lot of resource that's provisioned at small-scale in sort of small chunks with each resource, that you never get to that scale where you can start to take advantage of the some is more than the greater of the parts.And so, I think that's what the recognition was when we started out building S3. And then, of course, we offer that as an API on top of that, where customers can consume whatever they want. That is, I think, where S3, at the scale it operates, is able to do certain things, including on the economics, that are very difficult or even impossible to do at a much smaller scale.Corey: One of the more egregious clown-shoe statements that I hear from time to time has been when people will come to me and say, “We've built a competitor to S3.” And my response is always one of those, “Oh, this should be good.” Because when people say that, they generally tend to be focusing on one or maybe two dimensions that doesn't work for a particular use case as well as it could. “Okay, what was your story around why this should be compared to S3?” “Well, it's an object store. It has full S3 API compatibility.” “Does it really because I have to say, there are times where I'm not entirely convinced that S3 itself has full compatibility with the way that its API has been documented.”And there's an awful lot of magic that goes into this too. “Okay, great. You're running an S3 competitor. Great. How many buildings does it live in?” Like, “Well, we have a problem with the s at the end of that word.” It's, “Okay, great. If it fits on my desk, it is not a viable S3 competitor. If it fits in a single zip code, it is probably not a viable S3 competitor.” Now, can it be an object store? Absolutely. Does it provide a new interface to some existing data someone might have? Sure why not. But I think that, oh, it's S3 compatible, is something that gets tossed around far too lightly by folks who don't really understand what it is that drives S3 and makes it special.Kevin: Yeah, I mean, I would say certainly, there's a number of other implementations of the S3 API, and frankly we're flattered that customers recognize and our competitors and others recognize the simplicity of the API and go about implementing it. But to your point, I think that there's a lot more; it's not just about the API, it's really around everything surrounding S3 from, as you mentioned, the fact that the data in S3 is stored in three independent availability zones, all of which that are separated by kilometers from each other, and the resilience, the automatic failover, and the ability to withstand an unlikely impact to one of those facilities, as well as the scalability, and you know, the fact that we put a lot of time and effort into making sure that the service continues scaling with our customers need. And so, I think there's a lot more that goes into what is S3. And oftentimes just in a straight-up comparison, it's sort of purely based on just the APIs and generally a small set of APIs, in addition to those intangibles around—or not intangibles, but all of the ‘-ilities,' right, the elasticity and the durability, and so forth that I just talked about. In addition to all that also, you know, certainly what we're seeing for customers is as they get into the petabyte and tens of petabytes, hundreds of petabytes scale, their need for the services that we provide to manage that storage, whether it's lifecycle and replication, or things like our batch operations to help update and to maintain all the storage, those become really essential to customers wrapping their arms around it, as well as visibility, things like Storage Lens to understand, what storage do I have? Who's using it? How is it being used?And those are all things that we provide to help customers manage at scale. And certainly, you know, oftentimes when I see claims around S3 compatibility, a lot of those advanced features are nowhere to be seen.Corey: I also want to call out that a few years ago, Mai-Lan got on stage and talked about how, to my recollection, you folks have effectively rebuilt S3 under the hood into I think it was 235 distinct microservices at the time. There will not be a quiz on numbers later, I'm assuming. But what was wild to me about that is having done that for services that are orders of magnitude less complex, it absolutely is like changing the engine on a car without ever slowing down on the highway. Customers didn't know that any of this was happening until she got on stage and announced it. That is wild to me. I would have said before this happened that there was no way that would have been possible except it clearly was. I have to ask, how did you do that in the broad sense?Kevin: Well, it's true. A lot of the underlying infrastructure that's been part of S3, both hardware and software is, you know, you wouldn't—if someone from S3 in 2006 came and looked at the system today, they would probably be very disoriented in terms of understanding what was there because so much of it has changed. To answer your question, the long and short of it is a lot of testing. In fact, a lot of novel testing most recently, particularly with the use of formal logic and what we call automated reasoning. It's also something we've talked a fair bit about in re:Invent.And that is essentially where you prove the correctness of certain algorithms. And we've used that to spot some very interesting, the one-in-a-trillion type cases that S3 scale happens regularly, that you have to be ready for and you have to know how the system reacts, even in all those cases. I mean, I think one of our engineers did some calculations that, you know, the number of potential states for S3, sort of, exceeds the number of atoms in the universe or something so crazy. But yet, using methods like automated reasoning, we can test that state space, we can understand what the system will do, and have a lot of confidence as we begin to swap, you know, pieces of the system.And of course, nothing in S3 scale happens instantly. It's all, you know, I would say that for a typical engineering effort within S3, there's a certain amount of effort, obviously, in making the change or in preparing the new software, writing the new software and testing it, but there's almost an equal amount of time that goes into, okay, and what is the process for migrating from System A to System B, and that happens over a timescale of months, if not years, in some cases. And so, there's just a lot of diligence that goes into not just the new systems, but also the process of, you know, literally, how do I swap that engine on the system. So, you know, it's a lot of really hard working engineers that spent a lot of time working through these details every day.Corey: I still view S3 through the lens of it is one of the easiest ways in the world to wind up building a static web server because you basically stuff the website files into a bucket and then you check a box. So, it feels on some level though, that it is about as accurate as saying that S3 is a database. It can be used or misused or pressed into service in a whole bunch of different use cases. What have you seen from customers that has, I guess, taught you something you didn't expect to learn about your own service?Kevin: Oh, I'd say we have those [laugh]  meetings pretty regularly when customers build their workloads and have unique patterns to it, whether it's the type of data they're retrieving and the access pattern on the data. You know, for example, some customers will make heavy use of our ability to do [ranged gets 00:22:47] on files and [unintelligible 00:22:48] objects. And that's pretty good capability, but that can be one where that's very much dependent on the type of file, right, certain files have structure, as far as you know, a header or footer, and that data is being accessed in a certain order. Oftentimes, those may also be multi-part objects, and so making use of the multi-part features to upload different chunks of a file in parallel. And you know, also certainly when customers get into things like our batch operations capability where they can literally write a Lambda function and do what they want, you know, we've seen some pretty interesting use cases where customers are running large-scale operations across, you know, billions, sometimes tens of billions of objects, and this can be pretty interesting as far as what they're able to do with them.So, for something is sort of what you might—you know, as simple and basics, in some sense, of GET and PUT API, just all the capability around it ends up being pretty interesting as far as how customers apply it and the different workloads they run on it.Corey: So, if you squint hard enough, what I'm hearing you tell me is that I can view all of this as, “Oh, yeah. S3 is also compute.” And it feels like that as a fast-track to getting a question wrong on one of the certification exams. But I have to ask, from your point of view, is S3 storage? And whether it's yes or no, what gets you excited about the space that it's in?Kevin: Yeah well, I would say S3 is not compute, but we have some great compute services that are very well integrated with S3, which excites me as well as we have things like S3 Object Lambda, where we actually handle that integration with Lambda. So, you're writing Lambda functions, we're executing them on the GET path. And so, that's a pretty exciting feature for me. But you know, to sort of take a step back, what excites me is I think that customers around the world, in every industry, are really starting to recognize the value of data and data at large scale. You know, I think that actually many customers in the world have terabytes or more of data that sort of flows through their fingers every day that they don't even realize.And so, as customers realize what data they have, and they can capture and then start to analyze and make ultimately make better business decisions that really help drive their top line or help them reduce costs, improve costs on whether it's manufacturing or, you know, other things that they're doing. That's what really excites me is seeing those customers take the raw capability and then apply it to really just to transform how they not just how their business works, but even how they think about the business. Because in many cases, transformation is not just a technical transformation, it's people and cultural transformation inside these organizations. And that's pretty cool to see as it unfolds.Corey: One of the more interesting things that I've seen customers misunderstand, on some level, has been a number of S3 releases that focus around, “Oh, this is for your data lake.” And I've asked customers about that. “So, what's your data lake strategy?” “Well, we don't have one of those.” “You have, like, eight petabytes and climbing in S3? What do you call that?” It's like, “Oh, yeah, that's just a bunch of buckets we dump things into. Some are logs of our assets and the rest.” It's—Kevin: Right.Corey: Yeah, it feels like no one thinks of themselves as having anything remotely resembling a structured place for all of the data that accumulates at a company.Kevin: Mm-hm.Corey: There is an evolution of people learning that oh, yeah, this is in fact, what it is that we're doing, and this thing that they're talking about does apply to us. But it almost feels like a customer communication challenge, just because, I don't know about you, but with my legacy AWS account, I have dozens of buckets in there that I don't remember what the heck they're for. Fortunately, you folks don't charge by the bucket, so I can smile, nod, remain blissfully ignorant, but it does make me wonder from time to time.Kevin: Yeah, no, I think that what you hear there is actually pretty consistent with what the reality is for a lot of customers, which is in distributed organizations, I think that's bound to happen, you have different teams that are working to solve problems, and they are collecting data to analyze, they're creating result datasets and they're storing those datasets. And then, of course, priorities can shift, and you know, and there's not necessarily the day-to-day management around data that we might think would be expected. I feel [we 00:26:56] sort of drew an architecture on a whiteboard. And so, I think that's the reality we are in. And we will be in, largely forever.I mean, I think that at a smaller-scale, that's been happening for years. So, I think that, one, I think that there's a lot of capability just being in the cloud. At the very least, you can now start to wrap your arms around it, right, where used to be that it wasn't even possible to understand what all that data was because there's no way to centrally inventory it well. In AWS with S3, with inventory reports, you can get a list of all your storage and we are going to continue to add capability to help customers get their arms around what they have, first off; understand how it's being used—that's where things like Storage Lens really play a big role in understanding exactly what data is being accessed and not. We're definitely listening to customers carefully around this, and I think when you think about broader data management story, I think that's a place that we're spending a lot of time thinking right now about how do we help customers get their arms around it, make sure that they know what's the categorization of certain data, do I have some PII lurking here that I need to be very mindful of?And then how do I get to a world where I'm—you know, I won't say that it's ever going to look like the perfect whiteboard picture you might draw on the wall. I don't think that's really ever achievable, but I think certainly getting to a point where customers have a real solid understanding of what data they have and that the right controls are in place around all that data, yeah, I think that's directionally where I see us heading.Corey: As you look around how far the service has come, it feels like, on some level, that there were some, I guess, I don't want to say missteps, but things that you learned as you went along. Like, back when the service was in beta, for example, there was no per-request charge. To my understanding that was changed, in part because people were trying to use it as a file system, and wow, that suddenly caused a tremendous amount of load on some of the underlying systems. You originally launched with a BitTorrent endpoint as an option so that people could download through peer-to-peer approaches for large datasets and turned out that wasn't really the way the internet evolved, either. And I'm curious, if you were to have to somehow build this off from scratch, are there any other significant changes you would make in how the service was presented to customers in how people talked about it in the early days? Effectively given a mulligan, what would you do differently?Kevin: Well, I don't know, Corey, I mean, just given where it's grown to in macro terms, you know, I definitely would be worried taking a mulligan, you know, that I [laugh] would change the sort of the overarching trajectory. Certainly, I think there's a few features here and there where, for whatever reason, it was exciting at the time and really spoke to what customers at the time were thinking, but over time, you know, sort of quickly those needs move to something a little bit different. And, you know, like you said things like the BitTorrent support is one where, at some level, it seems like a great technical architecture for the internet, but certainly not something that we've seen dominate in the way things are done. Instead, you know, we've largely kind of have a world where there's a lot of caching layers, but it still ends up being largely client-server kind of connections. So, I don't think I would do a—I certainly wouldn't do a mulligan on any of the major functionality, and I think, you know, there's a few things in the details where obviously, we've learned what really works in the end. I think we learned that we wanted bucket names to really strictly conform to rules for DNS encoding. So, that was the change that was made at some point. And we would tweak that, but no major changes, certainly.Corey: One subject of some debate while we were designing this year's charity t-shirt—which, incidentally, if you're listening to this, you can pick up for yourself at snark.cloud/shirt—was the is S3 itself dependent upon S3? Because we know that every other service out there is as well, but it is interesting to come up with an idea of, “Oh, yeah. We're going to launch a whole new isolated region of S3 without S3 to lean on.” That feels like it's an almost impossible bootstrapping problem.Kevin: Well, S3 is not dependent on S3 to come up, and it's certainly a critical dependency tree that we look at and we track and make sure that we'd like to have an acyclic graph as we look at dependencies.Corey: That is such a sophisticated way to say what I learned the hard way when I was significantly younger and working in production environments: don't put the DNS servers needed to boot the hypervisor into VMs that require a working hypervisor. It's one of those oh, yeah, in hindsight, that makes perfect sense, but you learn it right after that knowledge really would have been useful.Kevin: Yeah, absolutely. And one of the terms we use for that, as well as is the idea of static stability, or that's one of the techniques that can really help with isolating a dependency is what we call static stability. We actually have an article about that in the Amazon Builder Library, which there's actually a bunch of really good articles in there from very experienced operations-focused engineers in AWS. So, static stability is one of those key techniques, but other techniques—I mean, just pure minimization of dependencies is one. And so, we were very, very thoughtful about that, particularly for that core layer.I mean, you know, when you talk about S3 with 200-plus microservices, or 235-plus microservices, I would say not all of those services are critical for every single request. Certainly, a small subset of those are required for every request, and then other services actually help manage and scale the kind of that inner core of services. And so, we look at dependencies on a service by service basis to really make sure that inner core is as minimized as possible. And then the outer layers can start to take some dependencies once you have that basic functionality up.Corey: I really want to thank you for being as generous with your time as you have been. If people want to learn more about you and about S3 itself, where should they go—after buying a t-shirt, of course.Kevin: Well, certainly buy the t-shirt. First, I love the t-shirts and the charity that you work with to do that. Obviously, for S3, it's aws.amazon.com/s3. And you can actually learn more about me. I have some YouTube videos, so you can search for me on YouTube and kind of get a sense of myself.Corey: We will put links to that into the show notes, of course. Thank you so much for being so generous with your time. I appreciate it.Kevin: Absolutely. Yeah. Glad to spend some time. Thanks for the questions, Corey.Corey: Kevin Miller, vice president and general manager for Amazon S3. I'm Cloud Economist Corey Quinn and this is Screaming in the Cloud. If you've enjoyed this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice, whereas if you've hated this podcast, please leave a five-star review on your podcast platform of choice along with an angry, ignorant comment talking about how your S3 compatible service is going to blow everyone's socks off when it fails.Corey: If your AWS bill keeps rising and your blood pressure is doing the same, then you need The Duckbill Group. We help companies fix their AWS bill by making it smaller and less horrifying. The Duckbill Group works for you, not AWS. We tailor recommendations to your business and we get to the point. Visit duckbillgroup.com to get started.Announcer: This has been a HumblePod production. Stay humble.

Sách Nói Chất Lượng Cao
Sách nói Đời Con Gái - Bà Tùng Long (Bản FULL tại Voiz FM) - Nghe trọn bộ Sách nói tại Voiz FM (voiz.vn/download)

Sách Nói Chất Lượng Cao

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 12, 2022 53:32


Mười hai tuổi, Xuân Lan bắt đầu nhận thấy mình không được yêu thương như các anh chị em khác trong nhà. Mẹ Xuân Lan, bà Phương, dường như ghét bỏ nó. Chỉ có cha và chị Mai Lan, người chị đã đi tu, con riêng của bà Phương với chồng trước, là thương con bé. Những buồn tủi, nghi ngờ trong Xuân Lan lớn lên cùng với sự bất hòa, hục hặc trong gia đình, để rồi khi tất cả bùng nổ đã hé lộ bí mật đầy trái ngang, tội lỗi về sự ra đời của con bé. Đời con gái chỉ cần được yêu thương, nhưng yêu thương cũng chính là nguồn cơn bất hạnh… Tải ứng dụng để nghe trọn bộ Sách nói : voiz.vn/download

nh lan xu nghe long b mai lan
VOV - Sự kiện và Bàn luận
VOV - Dòng chảy sự kiện: Mở bay quốc tế - cơ hội phục hồi kinh tế du lịch

VOV - Sự kiện và Bàn luận

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 31, 2021 25:33


- Ngày 1/1/2022, đường bay quốc tế mở trở lại là thông tin được nhiều người mong đợi, nhất là dịp Tết đến, Xuân về. Trong điều kiện vừa phòng chống dịch bệnh hiệu quả, vừa kết nối các chuyến bay thương mại quốc tế thường lệ kết nối giao thương giữa Việt Nam và các nước trên thế giới, chúng ta cần chuẩn bị như thế nào để mở bay quốc tế đảm bảo an toàn và đặc biệt là đón bà con kiều bào về nước, khách quốc tế du lịch tại Việt Nam trong năm mới 2022? Cùng bàn luận nội dung này với khách mời là bà Dương Mai Lan, TGĐ Công ty cổ phần lữ hành và sự kiện Thuận An – Ascend Travel And Media. Chủ đề : Bay quốc tế, Phục hồi kinh tế --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/vov1sukien/support

Histoires de Darons
Inceste : Mai Lan veut prévenir les enfants grâce à son livre Le Loup

Histoires de Darons

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 5, 2021 48:38


Découvrez Le Loup, le projet jeunesse de la chanteuse Mai Lan (@thisismailan), qui souhaite prévenir les enfants à propos des dangers de l'inceste. D'où lui vient cette idée ? Mai Lan prend un moment au micro d'Histoires de Darons dans ce numéro hors-série.

Une semaine en France
Briser le tabou de l'inceste avec un livre jeunesse : "Le Loup" par Mai Lan Chapiron

Une semaine en France

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 3:52


durée : 00:03:52 - Les bonnes ondes - par : Sandrine Oudin - Un livre pour briser le tabou de l'inceste est dans les Bonnes Ondes de Sandrine Oudin. Sa particularité, c'est qu'il s'adresse aux enfants tout petits, dès la maternelle. "Le Loup" est signé de Mai Lan Chapiron (édition La Martinière).

Les bonnes ondes
Briser le tabou de l'inceste avec un livre jeunesse : "Le Loup" par Mai Lan Chapiron

Les bonnes ondes

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 15, 2021 3:52


durée : 00:03:52 - Les bonnes ondes - par : Sandrine Oudin - Un livre pour briser le tabou de l'inceste est dans les Bonnes Ondes de Sandrine Oudin. Sa particularité, c'est qu'il s'adresse aux enfants tout petits, dès la maternelle. "Le Loup" est signé de Mai Lan Chapiron (édition La Martinière).

Pas son genre
Mai Lan Chapiron chasse le loup

Pas son genre

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 8, 2021 54:32


durée : 00:54:32 - Unique en son genre - par : Giulia Foïs - Contre l'inceste, le Loup est le projet artistique complet de Mai Lan Chapiron : un livre, une chanson, et une vidéo pour les enfants de 3 à 9 ans.

Race to Academia
Race to Academia: Introduction

Race to Academia

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 13:56


In this week's episode, meet your co-hosts Joe Fulton and Mai-Lan Johnston! Joe and Mai-Lan give an introduction to themselves and to what Race to Academia will be about. This podcast is brought to you by UTGSU's Race and Ethnicity Caucus' Executive Team. The music was created by Kristine Keon, and the artwork was created by Karen Fang and Ke'Shana Danvers. Thank you to the rest of the Executive Team, Elaine Cagulada, Danica Chaharlangi, Mariam Karim, and Sylvia Vong for all your support!

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews
Podcast #73: Mai-Lan Tomsen Bukovec, AWS

StorageReview.com - Storage Reviews

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2020


AWS may not have built the cloud, but they’ve driven more cloud adoption than… The post Podcast #73: Mai-Lan Tomsen Bukovec, AWS appeared first on StorageReview.com.

aws mai lan
Trạm Radio
Radio #94: Thái Kim Lan - Thư gửi con

Trạm Radio

Play Episode Listen Later May 21, 2020 23:13


Cuốn sách “Thư gửi con” tập hợp những lá thư và tùy bút (bằng tiếng Đức và tiếng Việt) đầy xúc động mà Giáo sư, Tiến sĩ Thái Kim Lan dành cho con gái Mai Lan. Một em bé Việt Nam sinh ra ở Đức nhưng được nằm trong cái nôi tre thuần Việt, được bú mẹ hàng giờ thay vì phải ngậm nắm vú cao su vô cảm, được bố ôm ấp, được mẹ hát ru... Em bé ấy không chỉ nói “sõi” tiếng Việt mà còn nói “đặc sệt” giọng Huế - một điều hiếm thấy trong gia đình người Việt ở nước ngoài. Mai Lan – tên em bé - lớn lên giữa hai ngôn ngữ mà không hề gặp rào cản về trí tuệ, là vì từ khi mới sinh ra cho đến lúc hai tuổi, em đã được nuôi dưỡng bằng tình thương trìu mến, bao dung và sự thận trọng về dinh dưỡng, hình thành nên bản ngã với khả năng vượt giới hạn và trải nghiệm tự do. Đối với mẹ của em bé – Giáo sư, Tiến sĩ Thái Kim Lan – “điều quan trọng nhất cho một đứa bé, ngoài dinh dưỡng là cuộc đối thoại không ngừng”. Tất cả những câu chuyện diễn ra trong cuộc sống hàng ngày, từ vẻ đẹp của chiếc lá vàng rụng trước sân hay bóng trăng rọi trên tường, người mẹ đều cùng con quan sát, khám phá và cảm nhận. Đó là lý do ra đời của cuốn sách “Thư gửi con”, cuốn sách tập hợp những lá thư và tùy bút (bằng tiếng Đức và tiếng Việt) mà Giáo sư, Tiến sĩ Thái Kim Lan dành cho con gái Mai Lan. Đó là câu chuyện “truyền thông” mà một người mẹ rất hiểu về thai giáo và Phật pháp đã áp dụng để nuôi con khôn lớn. “Thư gửi con” - nếu đọc từ đầu chí cuối thì giống hệt như những dòng tự truyện được viết ra từ trái tim và… cái bụng của một người mẹ tuyệt vời. Thoáng qua thì tưởng chừng như chẳng có gì nơi một khoảng không nhẹ tênh và trong suốt. Lời tiếng ấy, nao lòng ấy, bày tỏ ấy thì đâu đâu cũng có từ nguồn thương mỗi người mẹ gửi cho con. (Theo VietnamNet) Được sự đồng ý NXB Phụ Nữ, Trạm Radio xin gửi tới các bạn thính giả những câu văn mượt mà qua các bức thư mà Giáo sư Thái Kim Lan gửi cho con trong cuốn sách "Thư gửi con" do NXB Phụ Nữ phát hành. #trạmradio #radiovănhọc #tháikimlan __________ Để cam kết với bạn nghe đài dự án Trạm Radio sẽ chạy đường dài, chúng tôi cần sự ủng hộ của quý bạn để duy trì những dịch vụ phải trả phí. Mọi tấm lòng đều vô cùng trân quý đối với ban biên tập, và tạo động lực cho chúng tôi tiếp tục sản xuất và trau chuốt nội dung hấp dẫn hơn nữa. Mọi đóng góp cho Trạm Radio xin gửi về: Nguyen Ha Trang STK 19034705725015 Ngân hàng Techcombank. Chi nhánh Hà Nội.

NoCo FM Network
CVTW 060: How To Catfish A Nazi

NoCo FM Network

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2019 59:12


TONIGHT on a celebratory episode of Corbin vs The World, we learn the proper method to catfish domestic terrorists into jail before doing harm to society. Can the FBI move their van outside my house now? Why is Fall Out Boy feeling FOMO from the MCR Reunion? Should we call the Ghostbusters on CGI James Dean? Find out at 6 MT on a new episode of Corbin vs The World! Featuring tunes by MAI LAN, Plume Varia, Dogs Die In Hot Cars, and more! Hosted by Corbin David Albaugh. Produced by Chris Lanphear for NoCo FM. Hear more great podcasts at https://noco.fm (https://noco.fm/) Special thanks to Treemotel for our theme song, "Alien Trill" https://treemotel.bandcamp.com (https://treemotel.bandcamp.com/) Follow Corbin and CVTW: https://www.corbinvstheworld.com (https://www.corbinvstheworld.com/) https://www.facebook.com/corbinvstheworld (https://www.facebook.com/corbinvstheworld) https://instagram.com/corbinvstheworld (https://instagram.com/corbinvstheworld) Follow NoCo FM: https://twitter.com/nocofm (https://twitter.com/nocofm) https://instagram.com/nocofm (https://instagram.com/nocofm) https://www.facebook.com/nocofm (https://www.facebook.com/nocofm) Support this podcast

Corbin vs. The World
CVTW 060: How To Catfish A Nazi

Corbin vs. The World

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 9, 2019 59:12


TONIGHT on a celebratory episode of Corbin vs The World, we learn the proper method to catfish domestic terrorists into jail before doing harm to society. Can the FBI move their van outside my house now? Why is Fall Out Boy feeling FOMO from the MCR Reunion? Should we call the Ghostbusters on CGI James Dean? Find out at 6 MT on a new episode of Corbin vs The World! Featuring tunes by MAI LAN, Plume Varia, Dogs Die In Hot Cars, and more! Hosted by Corbin David Albaugh. Produced by Chris Lanphear for NoCo FM. Hear more great podcasts at https://noco.fm/ (https://noco.fm) Special thanks to Treemotel for our theme song, "Alien Trill" https://treemotel.bandcamp.com/ (https://treemotel.bandcamp.com) Follow Corbin and CVTW: https://www.corbinvstheworld.com/ (https://www.corbinvstheworld.com) https://www.facebook.com/corbinvstheworld (https://www.facebook.com/corbinvstheworld) https://instagram.com/corbinvstheworld (https://instagram.com/corbinvstheworld) Follow NoCo FM: https://twitter.com/nocofm (https://twitter.com/nocofm) https://instagram.com/nocofm (https://instagram.com/nocofm) https://www.facebook.com/nocofm (https://www.facebook.com/nocofm) Support this podcast

Understorey
Understorey: UnSustainable ANZUS? Part 2~UXO

Understorey

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 27, 2019


The Australian Department of Defence has a webpage all about UXO - unexploded ordinance. But it’s about UXO in Australia. The page says nothing about lethal Australian unexploded ordnance left behind in other countries we've been at war with. Not Vietnam or Afghanistan or Iraq. All of these wars are closely linked to our engagement with ANZUS, but without any enduring sense of responsibility for the damage caused to civilians by our involvement. The environmental and public health issue of UXO, just like Agent Orange, reminds us that wars can remain lethal for generations after the conflict has apparently concluded. In Vietnam UXO is still taking lives and limbs more than forty years later. In Laos, worst hit by the USA's illegal bombing war in the 1960s, there remains an ongoing need for de-mining. But the relatively small amount the USA has been offering may have just become a bargaining chip in the United States' and Australia's attempt to slow down the signing of the Treaty on the Prohibition of Nuclear Weapons. Understorey speaks to American Quaker Lady Borton and ICAN board member Tilman Ruff. (Collage: Project Renew, Mai Lan, Gergyl [CC BY-SA 3.0]

Mixtapes
Bon Entendeur : "pour Paris", Romy, January 2014

Mixtapes

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2019 54:47


Mani Deïz - Bohemian Life Fakear - Yougotdablues Kacem Wapalek - Fleur Sauvage Com’Art - Vous Aimez Bien Les Gens Ft Emile & Reda Kazy Lambist - Notorious Detour Racyne - Espoir NAP! - Miami Umami - Sunny Godford - Tragic Soul Sébastier Léger - L’oreiller (Joachim Pastor Remix) HVOB - Dogs (Olivier Koletzki Remix) Shirley Bassey - If You Go Away (Rebeat Remix) Bowski - White Russian Hird - Keep You Kimi (Plej Remix) SuGar - Faithful Cee-Roo - Give It Up Mr. Troy - Expansions Racyne - Unforgettable ParadiseFM - La Ballade de Jim Oxmo Puccino - La Danse Couchée feat. Mai Lan

bon entendeur mai lan mani de
TED Talks Music
"Autopilote" / "Pumper" | Mai Lan

TED Talks Music

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2019 9:08


Singing in French and English, Mai Lan brings her cool charisma to the TED stage in a performance of her songs "Autopilote" and "Pumper."

Les Nouveaux Artisans
Yann Kubacki & Arnaud Rocca, d’étudiants aux Gobelins à la création de Too Soon : "Développer sa créativité"

Les Nouveaux Artisans

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 27, 2018 67:22


Bienvenu(e)s chèr(e)s auditeurs/auditrices dans ce nouvel épisode du podcast "Les Nouveaux Artisans" !Je suis ravis de vous partager ma conversation avec Yann Kubacki et Arnaud Rocca qui ont créé le collectif Too Soon avec Nicolas Loureiro et Hugo Maury. J'ai souhaité que ces deux trublions du web participent au podcast "Les Nouveaux Artisans" car je trouve que leurs projets, notamment le site psychédélique Pumper de l'artiste Mai Lan, sont très inspirants.Pendant notre échange, ils sont revenus sur leurs études à l'école Les Gobelins ainsi que sur leurs parcours au lendemain de leur remise de diplôme. Au fil de notre conversation, ils ont également partagé leur vision du développement web et du processus créatif. Musique, vidéos et créativité se mêlent dans cet épisode remplit, selon moi, d'enseignements.Si vous êtes bien attentifs, vous aurez la chance d'entendre des astuces et des conseils dissimulés dans l'épisode. J'espère que cet épisode inspira et vous donnera la force de mener à bien vos projets digitaux, et plus si affinité...Bonne écoute !Vous pouvez retrouver Yann et Arnaud sur leurs Twitter respectifs :Yann : https://twitter.com/MrYannochArnaud : https://twitter.com/ArnaudRoccaEt vous pouvez suivre Too Soon :Site Too Soon : http://bbox.nomad/html/home.html?randid=1216738002Twitter Too Soon : https://twitter.com/toosoonparis Voir Acast.com/privacy pour les informations sur la vie privée et l'opt-out.

Parlons Forme : Se sentir bien dans son corps et dans sa tête
021. Comment améliorer son estime de soi avec Mai-Lan Ripoche

Parlons Forme : Se sentir bien dans son corps et dans sa tête

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 17, 2018 47:44


Au cours de cette conversation, Mai-Lan Ripoche nous donne des pistes et des conseils pratiques pour améliorer notre estime personnelle afin de mieux s’accepter et de progresser plus facilement vers l’atteinte de nos objectifs. ✪ Notes et retranscription écrite : https://extraforme.fr/21 ✪ Formation offerte "3 Erreurs qui Bloquent votre Perte de poids" : https://extraforme.fr/cadeau ✪ Découvrez la méthode Demain Plus Mince : https://demainplusmince.com

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale - Socialisme sauvage & Noise Festival 2018 // 03.04

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2018


On parle souvent de "grève sauvage". Mais savez-vous ce qu'est le socialisme sauvage ? C'est par cette expression exhumée que Charles Reeve, notre invité de ce soir, désigne les groupes qui ont tenté l'auto-organisation, la démocratie directe, souvent au détriment du soutien du mouvement plus grand qui les avait vus naître. Et c'est aussi le titre de l'ouvrage de Charles Reeve, essayiste, qui publie aux Editions L'Échappée un retour historique et analytique sur ces mouvements qui ont concrétisé des idées politiques. En bref, le socialisme sauvage désigne le conflit classique entre les leaders d'un parti ou d'un mouvement, qui pensent détenir le savoir nécessaire à l'action politique et la base, qui suit ses propres revendications et constitue des groupes d'action autonomes. Au programme, démocratie directe, auto-organisation, révolution ... Pourquoi parler d'auto-émancipation plutôt que d'émancipation ? Comment penser l'union entre étudiants ouvriers ? Promis, même si tout cela peut paraître bien théorique, Charles Reeve, vous donne plein d'exemples pour comprendre ces luttes parfois méconnues, de Nuit Debout, aux communs, en passant par mai 68 ! "L'émancipation pour moi ça fait partie du courant des professionnels du savoir. Je considère nous vivons une période transitoire, où l'auto-émancipation prend de plus en plus d'importance dans les luttes et dans le désir des citoyens de changer le monde."  En deuxième partie d'émission, la Matinale reçoit Camille Bonazzi et Ilan Mouyal, tous deux organisateurs de l'édition 2018 du Noise Festival ! Pour la 5ème édition, le festival a vu grand : une programmation musicale éclectique (Mai Lan, 13 Block, FAIRE ...), des conférences (par exemple sur l'entreprenariat des diasporas), une masterclass, un concours de rap et poésie ... le tout dispatché entre Saint-Denis, Villejuif et Paris entre le 4 et le 7 avril prochain. Alors, quels sont les bruits de la ville que le festival vous donnera à entendre cette année ? Toutes les infos du programme à retrouver sur le site de Noise !   Côté reportages, Adel nous permet d'en savoir un peu plus sur les manifestations qui ont fait plus de 15 morts à Gaza en fin de semaine dernière.  Présentation : Lucas Chateau / Co-interviews : Nina Beltram et Lili Douard / Chroniques : Adel Ittel / Web : Nina Beltram / Réalisation : Antonin Simard / Coordination : Nina Beltram et Elsa Landard

La Matinale de 19h
La Matinale – Socialisme sauvage et Noise Festival 2018 // 03.04

La Matinale de 19h

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2018


On parle souvent de "grève sauvage". Mais savez-vous ce qu'est le socialisme sauvage ? C'est par cette expression exhumée que Charles Reeve, notre invité de ce soir, désigne les groupes qui ont tenté l'auto-organisation, la démocratie directe, souvent au détriment du soutien du mouvement plus grand qui les avait vus naître. Et c'est aussi le titre de l'ouvrage de Charles Reeve, essayiste, qui publie aux Editions L'Échappée un retour historique et analytique sur ces mouvements qui ont concrétisé des idées politiques. En bref, le socialisme sauvage désigne le conflit classique entre les leaders d'un parti ou d'un mouvement, qui pensent détenir le savoir nécessaire à l'action politique et la base, qui suit ses propres revendications et constitue des groupes d'action autonomes. Au programme, démocratie directe, auto-organisation, révolution ... Pourquoi parler d'auto-émancipation plutôt que d'émancipation ? Comment penser l'union entre étudiants ouvriers ? Promis, même si tout cela peut paraître bien théorique, Charles Reeve, vous donne plein d'exemples pour comprendre ces luttes parfois méconnues, de Nuit Debout, aux communs, en passant par mai 68 ! "L'émancipation pour moi ça fait partie du courant des professionnels du savoir. Je considère nous vivons une période transitoire, où l'auto-émancipation prend de plus en plus d'importance dans les luttes et dans le désir des citoyens de changer le monde."    En deuxième partie d'émission, la Matinale reçoit Camille Bonazzi et Ilan Mouyal, tous deux organisateurs de l'édition 2018 du Noise Festival ! Pour la 5ème édition, le festival a vu grand : une programmation musicale éclectique (Mai Lan, 13 Block, FAIRE ...), des conférences (par exemple sur l'entreprenariat des diasporas), une masterclass, un concours de rap et poésie ... le tout dispatché entre Saint-Denis, Villejuif et Paris entre le 4 et le 7 avril prochain. Alors, quels sont les bruits de la ville que le festival vous donnera à entendre cette année ? Toutes les infos du programme à retrouver sur le site de Noise !   Côté reportages, Adel nous permet d'en savoir un peu plus sur les manifestations qui ont fait plus de 15 morts à Gaza en fin de semaine dernière.  Présentation : Lucas Chateau / Co-interviews : Nina Beltram et Lili Douard / Chroniques : Adel Ittel / Web : Nina Beltram / Réalisation : Antonin Simard / Coordination : Nina Beltram et Elsa Landard

Tout Foutre On Air
Tout Foutre On Air reçoit Mai Lan et Blondino // 22.03.17

Tout Foutre On Air

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 24, 2017 93:06


Ce mercredi 22 mars à 21h00, Tout Foutre On Air reçoit Mai Lan qui viendra nous parler de son EP "Vampire" sorti le 08 mars puis Blondino pour son album "Jamais sans la nuit" sorti le 24 février 2017. Au programme : des bonnes ondes et du live en direct de Radio Campus Paris!Mai Lan - EP VampireAprès un premier album en 2012, notamment remarqué pour son titre "Easy" et des concerts partout dans le monde qui l'ont amenée jusqu'à la scène de Coachella en 2016, la multi-talentueuse Mai Lan nous revient avec "Vampire" (Cinq7). Un EP de cinq titres qui sonne comme un manifeste electro-pop. On retrouve son passé de styliste dans la construction même très contemporaine de ses morceaux aux identités très marquées, un peu à la manière d'une collection. Une approche rythmique et harmonique hyper contemporaine et réussie sur la voix ("Pas d'amour"), un efficacité très dansante tout au long du disque ("Vampire", "Nail polish"), sans perdre de sa capacité à envouter à faible tempo, dans l'épure ("Haze"). De cette multitude de facettes, on ne perd jamais le fil grâce à approche sonore soignée de bout en bout et qui annonce un très beau nouvel album de Mail Lan à venir! [embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3BbAGEdAiY[/embed]Blondino - nouvel album Jamais sans la nuitVoilà plus de deux ans qu'on suivait Blondino, ses compositions cotonneuses et son timbre immédiatement reconnaissable... On est très heureux de la recevoir enfin à l'occasion de la sortie de son premier album "Jamais sans la nuit" (Tomboy). Onze morceaux originaux, chantés en français, et qui ne trahissent jamais la promesse du titre. Une atmosphère vaporeuse, et poétique, telle que seules en offrent les pérégrinations insomniaques. Et puis cette émotion à fleur de peau, jamais mièvre, portée par l'omniprésence d'une voix délicatement voilée. L'écoute est immersive dès le premier titre. Si le terme de "concept album" a été galvaudé, la cohérence sonore, narrative et sensorielle qui émane du disque est bien réelle. Et rend ce premier album de Blondino, progressivement addictif. Comme un songe poudré.[embed]https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cXoVLrJ4EGE[/embed] ***C'est Tout Foutre On Air avec Mai Lan et Blondino !C'est ce mercredi 22 mars de 21:00 à 22:30 avec de la découverte, de l'interview et deux sessions live !C'est en live sur le 93.9FM en région parisienne et partout dans l'univers en streaming juste ici !

Earth-2.net Presents...
Dread Media - Episode 382

Earth-2.net Presents...

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2014 76:46


Christmas time is here. Time for mayhem and fear. This week, Desmond and Darryll explore family. And we all know the chainsaw is family, in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Devil Dinosaur Jr. talks about religious tradition in the delightful holiday romp Sheitan. Desmond comes back to give a special address about giving, specifically one serial killer helping police find others in Nailbiter from Image Comics. There's also some festive music for you as well: "Because I'm Santa" by The Dollyrots, "Strange Things Happen" by Stewart Copeland, "Gentiment Je T'immole" by Mai Lan, "Kill City" by Iggy Poop and James Williamson, and "Silent Night, Deadly Night (acoustic)" by The Browns. Get in on the SNDN Blu-ray giveaway contest, and have some Happy Holidays! Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Visit www.stayscary.wordpress.com and www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com.

Dread Media
Dread Media - Episode 382

Dread Media

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2014 76:46


Christmas time is here. Time for mayhem and fear. This week, Desmond and Darryll explore family. And we all know the chainsaw is family, in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Devil Dinosaur Jr. talks about religious tradition in the delightful holiday romp Sheitan. Desmond comes back to give a special address about giving, specifically one serial killer helping police find others in Nailbiter from Image Comics. There's also some festive music for you as well: "Because I'm Santa" by The Dollyrots, "Strange Things Happen" by Stewart Copeland, "Gentiment Je T'immole" by Mai Lan, "Kill City" by Iggy Poop and James Williamson, and "Silent Night, Deadly Night (acoustic)" by The Browns. Get in on the SNDN Blu-ray giveaway contest, and have some Happy Holidays! Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Visit www.stayscary.wordpress.com and www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com.

Dread Media
Dread Media - Episode 382

Dread Media

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2014 76:46


Christmas time is here. Time for mayhem and fear. This week, Desmond and Darryll explore family. And we all know the chainsaw is family, in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Devil Dinosaur Jr. talks about religious tradition in the delightful holiday romp Sheitan. Desmond comes back to give a special address about giving, specifically one serial killer helping police find others in Nailbiter from Image Comics. There's also some festive music for you as well: "Because I'm Santa" by The Dollyrots, "Strange Things Happen" by Stewart Copeland, "Gentiment Je T'immole" by Mai Lan, "Kill City" by Iggy Poop and James Williamson, and "Silent Night, Deadly Night (acoustic)" by The Browns. Get in on the SNDN Blu-ray giveaway contest, and have some Happy Holidays! Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Visit www.stayscary.wordpress.com and www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com.

Earth-2.net Presents...
Dread Media - Episode 382

Earth-2.net Presents...

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2014 76:46


Christmas time is here. Time for mayhem and fear. This week, Desmond and Darryll explore family. And we all know the chainsaw is family, in The Texas Chainsaw Massacre 2. Devil Dinosaur Jr. talks about religious tradition in the delightful holiday romp Sheitan. Desmond comes back to give a special address about giving, specifically one serial killer helping police find others in Nailbiter from Image Comics. There's also some festive music for you as well: "Because I'm Santa" by The Dollyrots, "Strange Things Happen" by Stewart Copeland, "Gentiment Je T'immole" by Mai Lan, "Kill City" by Iggy Poop and James Williamson, and "Silent Night, Deadly Night (acoustic)" by The Browns. Get in on the SNDN Blu-ray giveaway contest, and have some Happy Holidays! Send feedback to: feedback@dreadmedia.net, or 206.203.1213. Follow @DevilDinosaurJr and @dreadmedia on Twitter! Join the Facebook group! Visit www.stayscary.wordpress.com and www.dreadmedia.bandcamp.com.

Medizinische Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 14/19
Die Wirkung von Simvastatin auf die Leukozyten- und Thrombozyten-Endothelzell-Interaktion bei Antigen-induzierter Arthritis der Maus in vivo

Medizinische Fakultät - Digitale Hochschulschriften der LMU - Teil 14/19

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2012


Thu, 26 Jul 2012 12:00:00 +0100 https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/14749/ https://edoc.ub.uni-muenchen.de/14749/1/Dao_Trong_Mai_Lan.pdf Dao Trong, Mai Lan