Podcasts about March 1

Date

  • 22PODCASTS
  • 38EPISODES
  • 28mAVG DURATION
  • 1MONTHLY NEW EPISODE
  • Mar 2, 2021LATEST

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Best podcasts about March 1

Latest podcast episodes about March 1

WACfm
#Zero Discrimination Day

WACfm

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2021 2:30


#March1

Podcast – The Burning Truth
Gretchen Whitmer Sued By Journalist For Hiding Nursing Home Deaths – Monday, March1 – Hour 2

Podcast – The Burning Truth

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 31:42


__ Follow Casey on Facebook, Twitter, & Snapchat @CaseyTheHost__ Hour 2 Pulitzer-winning journalist to sue Michigan Gov. Whitmer over nursing home death data Whitmer’s Cuomo Problem: Nursing Homes Governor Andrew Cuomo Releases Statement Apologizing For Behavior Following Sexual Harassment… The post Gretchen Whitmer Sued By Journalist For Hiding Nursing Home Deaths – Monday, March1 – Hour 2 appeared first on Casey Hendrickson - Radio Talk Show Host.

The Daily Gardener
March 1, 2021 Thirty Irresistible Plants for Butterflies, Catharina Dörrien, Lenore Mulets, Alice and Forsythia, Fearless Gardening by Loree Bohl, and a Little Rose History with Fun Facts

The Daily Gardener

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2021 24:10


Today we celebrate the first woman to describe Fungi ("funj-eye") using the Linnaean system of classification. We'll also learn about a little-known prolific nature and floral writer from the 1800s. We hear a little recollection by a garden writer who received an armload of Forsythia from a friend named Alice, just when she needed it most. We Grow That Garden Library™ with a book that encourages you to garden confidently - putting anxieties and fear behind you and creating the space of your dreams. And then we’ll wrap things up with the roots of roses - they’re deeper than you think.   Subscribe Apple | Google | Spotify | Stitcher | iHeart To listen to the show while you're at home, just ask Alexa or Google to “Play the latest episode of The Daily Gardener Podcast.” And she will. It's just that easy.   The Daily Gardener Friday Newsletter Sign up for the FREE Friday Newsletter featuring: A personal update from me Garden-related items for your calendar The Grow That Garden Library™ featured books for the week Gardener gift ideas Garden-inspired recipes Exclusive updates regarding the show Plus, each week, one lucky subscriber wins a book from the Grow That Garden Library™ bookshelf.   Gardener Greetings Send your garden pics, stories, birthday wishes, and so forth to Jennifer@theDailyGardener.org   Curated News 30 Unique Plants That Attract Butterflies | Tree Hugger | Meghan Holmes   Facebook Group If you'd like to check out my curated news articles and original blog posts for yourself, you're in luck. I share all of it with the Listener Community in the Free Facebook Group - The Daily Gardener Community. So, there’s no need to take notes or search for links. The next time you're on Facebook, search for Daily Gardener Community, where you’d search for a friend... and request to join. I'd love to meet you in the group.   Important Events March 1, 1717 Today is the birthday of the German artist, children's book author, translator, editor, and pioneering female botanist Catharina Helena Dörrien (“Durr-ee-in”). Catharina was born into an intellectual family in Hildesheim, a community Southeast of Hannover. Her father, Ranier, believed that while beauty fades, ignorance can be a lifelong affliction. And so, Rainier made sure that his daughter Catharina was educated. After the death of her parents and her brother, Catharina sought work as a governess nearly 200 miles away in the town of Dillenburg. Catharina worked for the Erath (“AIR-rit”) family - Anton was an attorney and scholar, and Sophie was a childhood friend to Catharina. Catharina could not have found a more like-minded household to her own family than the Eraths. Like her own parents, Anton and Sophie wanted both their sons and their daughters to be educated. Ultimately, the Eraths would become Catharina’s second family. As a teacher, Catharina turned to nature to teach about all subjects and life as well. Realizing there were few resources for teaching women or children, Catharina wrote her own textbooks, which were heavily focused on botany and the natural world. It was rare enough that Catharina was teaching children and women about the natural world; it was nearly miraculous that she could research and write her own instructional guides. As the Erath children grew, Catharina was able to focus on her botanical work. Anton helped Catharina gain membership to the Botanical Society of Florence - something unheard of for women of her time. Catharina would go on to be a member of the Berlin Society of Friends of Nature Research and the Regensburg Botanical Society. During Catharina’s time, Dillenburg was part of the Orange-Nassau principality, and she gradually came to the idea of creating a Flora for Orange-Nassau. Using her spare time to travel throughout the region, Catharina visited most areas at least twice to capture plant life in different seasons. During the winter months, Catharina dedicated her focus on the smallest plants: lichen, mosses, and fungi ("funj-eye"). In 1777, Catharina published her 496-page flora, which used the Linnaean system to organize and name each specimen. Catharina’s flora was remarkable for the 1700s - not only for using the Linnaean system and for the inclusion of new plants and plant names but also for the sheer fact that it was the work of a woman. Catharine became the first woman to name two new fungi ("funj-eye") during the 1700s. During her fieldwork, Catharina created over 1,400 illustrations of local flora and fauna. Yet, these masterpieces never made it into her flora. Instead, Catharina’s botanical art became an heirloom that was passed down through the generations of the Erath family. In 1875 a few pieces of Catharina’s work were shown at an exhibition. However, fifteen years later, a large collection of paintings by a man named Johann Philipp Sandberger was bought by the Museum of Wiesbaden. Johann was a dear friend of Anton Erath’s, and today, his work is considered to be copies of Catharine's original watercolor masterpieces. And yet, Sandberger’s pieces are precious because they give us a glimpse of Catharine’s breadth and depth of talent. Without Sandberger, all would be lost because the bulk of Catharine’s work has been lost to time. The curator Friedrich von Heinbeck once said that the precision of Catharine’s brush strokes was like that of an embroiderer who stitched with only the finest of thread. From a historical standpoint, Catharina became an invaluable part of Dillenburg's history when she created drawings and drafts of the destruction of Dillenburg Castle. It seems her interests extended beyond botany to the world around her. Catharina was a true Renaissance woman. Following in the fifty-year-old footsteps of botanical artists like Maria Sibylla Merian and Elizabeth Blackwell, Catharine managed to distinguish herself not only by her exquisite botanical art but also by her botanical work and in the naming two plants - two little lichens, she named major Doerrieni (“Durr-ee-en-ee”) and minor Doerrieni. Over the past three decades, Catharine’s life story has been rediscovered. In 2000, Regina Viereck wrote a biography of Catharina called "Zwar sind es weibliche Hände: Die Botanikerin und Pädagogin Catharina” Helena Dörrien (1717-1795) or "They are the hands of a woman” - the botanist and educator Catharina Helena Dörrien. And in 2018, Catharina’s story became the subject of an elaborate musical by Ingrid Kretz and debuted in Dillenburg; it was called Catharina Dörrien - A Life Between Love and War.   March 1, 1877 Today is the birthday of the children’s author, volunteer, poet, and teacher Lenore Elizabeth Mulets. Born Nora Mulertz in Kansas, Lenore’s mother died when she was just ten years old. Raised by her uncle’s family, Lenore left for Chicago’s Wheaton College to become a teacher. She found a position in Malden, Massachusetts, and then served as a YMCA canteen worker during WWI in Germany and France. I pieced together Lenore’s life story by reading the letters she sent to her sister Mildred during her time in Europe. Mildred shared the letters with the local Wellington Kanas newspaper. In addition to teaching, Lenore was a marvelous children’s author. Her books were always charming and uplifting. Her titles include Stories of Birds, Flower Stories, Insect Stories, Tree Stories, and Stories of Trees, just to name a few. In the preface to Flower Stories, Lenore wrote, “When the flowers of the field and garden lift their bright faces to you, can you call them by name and greet them as old acquaintances? Or, having passed them a hundred times, are they still strangers to you? In this little book of "Flower Stories," only our very familiar friends have been planted. About them have been woven our favorite poems, songs, and stories.” Regarding the seeds, Lenore wrote, A wonderful thing is a seed;  The one thing deathless forever;  Forever old and forever new;  Utterly faithful and utterly true –  Fickle and faithless never.  Plant lilies and lilies will bloom; Plant roses and roses will grow; Plant hate and hate to life will spring; Plant love and love to you will bring The fruit of the seed you sow. And long before Twitter, in her book Stories of Birds, Lenore wrote: Such a twittering and fluttering there was when this news came.   Unearthed Words My first winter in this country was long and bitterly cold, and I was desperate for spring, which I then was used to seeing appear far earlier. One day a new friend brought me an armful of Forsythia branches still covered with half-melted snow — sensing my homesickness, she had denuded one of her bushes for me. I had nowhere cold and bright in the apartment in which we were living, so that Forsythia had to be put in a hot, unlighted hall. But this particular present came to me late in the season and at a time when Forsythia will flower even when forced under intolerable conditions. And when it last in this strange country, something came to life through my efforts. I began to feel that here was truly home. Now each year, as the Forsythia flowers again for me indoors, I remember that incident as the turning point in my feelings about this country, and I recall with deep affection the sensitivity of that friend. — Thalassa Cruso, British-American gardener, writer, TV presenter and ''the Julia Child of Horticulture”, To Everything There is a Season, Alice and Forsythia   Grow That Garden Library Fearless Gardening by Loree Bohl This book came out in January of 2021, and the subtitle is Be Bold, Break the Rules, and Grow What You Love. In this book, the woman behind the website, The Danger Garden, teaches us how to live on the edge and in the beds of our Gardens without fear or anxiety. Loree lives to “inspire people to look at plants differently and see their gardens through new eyes—to treat gardening as an adventure, to embrace the freedom to explore a new type of plant, and then to plant it just because they want to.” The roots of horticulture in academia have provided a framework of do’s and don’ts cloaked within a fortress of botanical nomenclature and complex terminology. It’s no wonder gardeners feel anxious. As Loree says, “Why not surround yourself with plants you love? Who cares if they’re not supposed to be planted together, might eventually crowd each other, or aren’t everyone’s cup of tea? It’s your garden and you should love it; you should be having fun. Remember, there's always room for one more plant…” This book is 256 pages of gardening without a rulebook or guilt or all the should’s and oughta’s from a woman who made her garden her own way through courageous experimentation, zone-pushing, an artistic eye, and an adventurous spirit. You can get a copy of Fearless Gardening by Loree Bohl and support the show using the Amazon Link in today's Show Notes for around $18   Today’s Botanic Spark Reviving the little botanic spark in your heart March 1, 1979  On this day, The Call-Leader out of Elwood, Indiana, published an article called The Roots Of Roses Go Back Many Years. “If you were to trace the ancestry of today's rose, you'd have enough "begats" to fill a book, maybe two!  In fact, a fossilized rose found at Crooked River, Oregon, some years ago established that this particular species grew on our continent 35 million years ago.  And some paleobotanists believe the rose dates back to the Cretaceous Age 70 million years ago. This would make the rose older than any known civilization ... and a forerunner of the Garden of Eden.  Since 1979 has been designated "The Year of the Rose," perhaps a little rose history is in order, says John A. Wott, Purdue University extension home environment horticulturist.  Briefly, all of our roses came from species. Cross-species gave us a new hybrid type of rose, and crossing of types provided another new type.  Rosa gallica, the Adam of roses native to the western hemisphere, crossed with Rosa moschata begat the Autumn Damask;  Rosa gallica, crossed with Rosa canina, begat the Alba, and crossed with Rosa Phoenicia begat the Damask.  The Damask, crossed with Alba, begat centifolia, and on and on... All of these western hemisphere crosses yielded roses with an annual flowering, except for the Autumn Damask.  In the late 1700s, botanists discovered everblooming roses growing in the gardens of the sub-tropics in China. Because of their tea-like fragrance, they became known as Tea Roses.  When these tea roses were crossed with descendants of the gallica, the first result was the bourbon. And bourbon, crossed with a tea, produced hybrid perpetual.  Hybrid perpetual, crossed back to tea, begat hybrid tea, and... Now for some interesting facts about roses:  Did you know no rose species are native to any land areas south of the equator?  Did you know the name rose appears in no fewer than 4,000 published songs?  Did you know the rose is the official state flower of New York, Iowa, Georgia, and North Dakota?  Did you know that in all polls ever taken to determine the most popular flower, the rose is the overwhelming favorite?  Did you know the rose has been sniffed by royalty for centuries?  We owe much to Empress Josephine of France for our modern-day roses… [It was Josephine who] assembled the leading hybridizers of her time and sponsored their experiments to develop new strains and varieties.”   Thanks for listening to The Daily Gardener. And remember: "For a happy, healthy life, garden every day."

FlowNews24
1 March - On this Day incl. Birthdays for @RealRonHoward, @JustinBieber, @KeshaRose & @LeighRMatthews

FlowNews24

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2021 2:43


On the FlowFM Morning Flow, Court reflects on historical events such as the first ever FM radio station and colour TV in Australia, Australia's first COVID-19 death and birthdays for Justin Bieber, Ke$ha, Aussie Indy car driver Will Power turns 40, Gerard Healy turns 60, Leigh Matthews, director Ron Howard, Roger Daltry and more. Read more at FlowNews24.com.au :- https://www.flownews24.com.au/article/1-march-on-this-day-in-history-remixed-on-the-breaky-flow

PodcastONA
Episode 87 – The Fate of the Industry and the Sale of the Century! (Season 7 Finale)

PodcastONA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 173:44


2020 just couldn’t end without one more major bombshell announcement, now, could it? After weeks and weeks of rumor-milling and speculation, it finally happened: the sale of Crunchyroll to Sony and Funimation, in an effort to start curbing off the massive debt building up within the big blue Death Star known as AT&T, will cause a seismic shift in the anime industry across the globe, but what will that exactly entail? Nobody really knows right now. It will be a long process from transaction to finalization, and all we can do it sit back and keep tabs of the transition, as it happens, as we head into the new year with – hopefully – a better year in sight. But it’s not all doom and gloom here, as we have some rather *interesting* Netflix shows coming down the pipeline, some big moves coming in for the new hotness that is Chainsaw Man, and a pretty meaty Discotek Day event to recap – complete with why a certain show’s lost English dub MUST be found and preserved. For the good of humanity. Thanks for listening to this silly dog-and-pony anime podcast throughout this rather tough year. Let’s work together to make 2021 better for everyone. 8:17 – WarnerMedia/AT&T sells Crunchyroll to Sony and Funimation39:55 – something about Broly sounds a little different now47:00 – big things happening for Chainsaw Man56:26 – Disney has a Star Wars anime project coming in 20211:01:14 – Netflix is getting weird with their live-action projects (Winx, Sonic, YYH)1:10:20 – Kuroko’s Basketball hits Netflix on January 151:13:44 – Toonami schedule updates for December1:19:26 – Mamoru Hosoda’s latest film announced1:21:14 – Kotonoha from School Days is becoming a V-Tuber1:23:38 – Earwig and the Witch preliminary dub cast revealed1:28:30 – The Legend of Hei film acquired by Shout Factory1:31:50 – sidebar: disappointment in CD Projekt Red1:34:00 – On-Gaku: Our Sound Blu-ray available in March1:35:10 – Attack on Titan S2 vinyl available in February1:36:52 – Happy-Go-Lucky Days now on HiDive1:38:01 – Sentai March home video releases1:48:35 – Viz February home video releases1:51:12 – Funimation March home video releases2:00:56 – Discotek Day panel announcements additional audio from:WCW (WWE)Last Week TonightDragonball Super: Broly“Every Night” – To Live & Die in L.A.KodochaGrimm’s Fairy Tale ClassicsProject A-koMedabotsNinja RobotsLupin the 3rd Apple Podcasts – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcastona/id1348141210?mt=2Google Play – https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Iji4s3v2zmahjgokqsmevbojno4Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/2JZLO3LfoeHepomejTw4TPiHeartRadio – https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-podcastona-43099114/TuneIn – https://tunein.com/podcasts/Podcasts/PodcastONA-p1249922/Stitcher – https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/podcastona/ Where to find us:Alex – @AuraOfAzureAndrew – @MangaMan9000, youtube.com/DubTalkJet – @Divinenega, animationinfinity.comDuelist – @HeartofSword75, youtube.com/DuelistGStephanie – @LilacAnimeRevue, youtube.com/DubTalk As always, check out surrealresolution.com for more content, and follow @SurrealReso for more updates on the show, our continued news posts, reviews, and our fellow podcasts.

PodcastONA
Episode 87 – The Fate of the Industry and the Sale of the Century! (Season 7 Finale)

PodcastONA

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2020 173:44


2020 just couldn’t end without one more major bombshell announcement, now, could it? After weeks and weeks of rumor-milling and speculation, it finally happened: the sale of Crunchyroll to Sony and Funimation, in an effort to start curbing off the massive debt building up within the big blue Death Star known as AT&T, will cause a seismic shift in the anime industry across the globe, but what will that exactly entail? Nobody really knows right now. It will be a long process from transaction to finalization, and all we can do it sit back and keep tabs of the transition, as it happens, as we head into the new year with – hopefully – a better year in sight. But it’s not all doom and gloom here, as we have some rather *interesting* Netflix shows coming down the pipeline, some big moves coming in for the new hotness that is Chainsaw Man, and a pretty meaty Discotek Day event to recap – complete with why a certain show’s lost English dub MUST be found and preserved. For the good of humanity. Thanks for listening to this silly dog-and-pony anime podcast throughout this rather tough year. Let’s work together to make 2021 better for everyone. 8:17 – WarnerMedia/AT&T sells Crunchyroll to Sony and Funimation39:55 – something about Broly sounds a little different now47:00 – big things happening for Chainsaw Man56:26 – Disney has a Star Wars anime project coming in 20211:01:14 – Netflix is getting weird with their live-action projects (Winx, Sonic, YYH)1:10:20 – Kuroko’s Basketball hits Netflix on January 151:13:44 – Toonami schedule updates for December1:19:26 – Mamoru Hosoda’s latest film announced1:21:14 – Kotonoha from School Days is becoming a V-Tuber1:23:38 – Earwig and the Witch preliminary dub cast revealed1:28:30 – The Legend of Hei film acquired by Shout Factory1:31:50 – sidebar: disappointment in CD Projekt Red1:34:00 – On-Gaku: Our Sound Blu-ray available in March1:35:10 – Attack on Titan S2 vinyl available in February1:36:52 – Happy-Go-Lucky Days now on HiDive1:38:01 – Sentai March home video releases1:48:35 – Viz February home video releases1:51:12 – Funimation March home video releases2:00:56 – Discotek Day panel announcements additional audio from:WCW (WWE)Last Week TonightDragonball Super: Broly“Every Night” – To Live & Die in L.A.KodochaGrimm’s Fairy Tale ClassicsProject A-koMedabotsNinja RobotsLupin the 3rd Apple Podcasts – https://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/podcastona/id1348141210?mt=2Google Play – https://play.google.com/music/listen#/ps/Iji4s3v2zmahjgokqsmevbojno4Spotify – https://open.spotify.com/show/2JZLO3LfoeHepomejTw4TPiHeartRadio – https://www.iheart.com/podcast/256-podcastona-43099114/TuneIn – https://tunein.com/podcasts/Podcasts/PodcastONA-p1249922/Stitcher – https://www.stitcher.com/podcast/podcastona/ Where to find us:Alex – @AuraOfAzureAndrew – @MangaMan9000, youtube.com/DubTalkJet – @Divinenega, animationinfinity.comDuelist – @HeartofSword75, youtube.com/DuelistGStephanie – @LilacAnimeRevue,  youtube.com/DubTalk As always, check out surrealresolution.com for more content, and follow @SurrealReso for more updates on the show, our continued news posts, reviews, and our fellow podcasts.

Python Bytes
#199 Big news for a very small Python runtime

Python Bytes

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 17, 2020 29:28


Sponsored by us! Support our work through: Our courses at Talk Python Training Python Testing with pytest Michael #1: micropython updated via Matt Trentini v1.13 is packed with features and bugfixes including solid asyncio support and tasty BLE improvements. Heck, we've even got the walrus operator. a new implementation of the uasyncio module which aims to be more compatible with CPython's asyncio module. The main change is to use a Task object for each coroutine, allowing more flexibility to queue tasks in various places, eg the main run loop, tasks waiting on events, locks or other tasks. It no longer requires pre-allocating a fixed queue size for the main run loop. Most code in this repository is now auto-formatted using uncrustify for C code and Black for Python code. BlueKitchen BTstack bindings have been added for the ubluetooth module, as an optional alternative to the NimBLE stack. The unix port can now be built with BLE support using these bindings Other Bluetooth additions include: new events for service/characteristic/ descriptor discovery complete; new events for read done and indicate acknowledgement; and support for active scanning in BLE.gap_scan(). PEP 526 has been (Walrus) There has been an important bug fix when importing ARM machine code from an .mpy file: the system now correctly tracks the executable memory allocated to the machine code so this memory is not reclaimed by the garbage collector. For testing, a multi-instance test runner has been added (see tests/run-multitests.py) which allows running a synchronised test across two or more MicroPython targets. There are breaking changes First release since Dec 19, 2019 Brian #2: respx: A utility for mocking out the Python HTTPX library When using requests, you can mock it with responses. When using httpx, mock with respx. Quick start: import httpx import respx @respx.mock def test_something(): request = respx.post("https://foo.bar/baz/", status_code=201) response = httpx.post("https://foo.bar/baz/") assert request.called assert response.status_code == 201 Documentation includes examples of using respx with both pytest and unittest, including how to set up mocked_api fixtures for pytest. There’s call statistics you can assert on. Ability to raise exceptions, return non-200 status codes, set custom return content. Content can be generated in a callback method. JSON content can be returned Tons of nice options to help test your httpx based application. Michael #3: GetPy - A Vectorized Python Dict/Set The goal of GetPy is to provide the highest performance python dict/set that integrates into the python scientific ecosystem. GetPy is a thin binding to the Parallel Hashmap (https://github.com/greg7mdp/parallel-hashmap.git) which is the current state of the art unordered map/set with minimal memory overhead and fast runtime speed. The binding layer is supported by PyBind11 (https://github.com/pybind/pybind11.git) The gp.Dict and gp.Set objects are designed to maintain a similar interface to the corresponding standard python objects. Simple example: - import getpy as gp key_type = np.dtype('u8') value_type = np.dtype('u8') keys = np.random.randint(1, 1000, size=10**2, dtype=key_type) values = np.random.randint(1, 1000, size=10**2, dtype=value_type) gp_dict = gp.Dict(key_type, value_type) gp_dict[keys] = values Brian #4: isort and black now play nice together easily Contributed by John Hagen isort “sorts your imports, so you don’t have to” black reformats all of your code to a consistent code style, including import statements There is a config page on black documentation that shows how to set isort to be compatible with black. It also shows how to make flake8 and pylint play nice with black, but they are less complicated. Now, however, with isort 5 introduction of built in profiles, you can just use isort --``profile black . and the profile sets everything for you. There’s a profile page for isort that describes all that it does. Other profiles include: django, pycharm, google, open_stack, plone, attrs, hug And as always, you can configure your own with config files. Michael #5: Scientists rename human genes to stop Microsoft Excel from misreading them as dates Via Chris Moffitt There are tens of thousands of genes in the human genome Each gene is given a name and alphanumeric code, known as a symbol, which scientists use to coordinate research. Over the past year or so, some 27 human genes have been renamed, all because Microsoft Excel kept misreading their symbols as dates. Excel is regularly used by scientists to track their work and even conduct clinical trials. But its default settings were designed with more mundane applications in mind, so when a user inputs a gene’s alphanumeric symbol into a spreadsheet, like MARCH1 — short for “Membrane Associated Ring-CH-Type Finger 1” — Excel converts that into a date: 1-Mar. One study from 2016 examined genetic data shared alongside 3,597 published papers and found that roughly one-fifth had been affected by Excel errors. See 12 of the Biggest Spreadsheet Fails in History for more examples: https://blogs.oracle.com/smb/10-of-the-costliest-spreadsheet-boo-boos-in-history The scientific body in charge of standardizing the names of genes, the HUGO Gene Nomenclature Committee, published new guidelines for gene naming. From now on human genes and the proteins they expressed will be named with one eye on Excel’s auto-formatting. Check out the Excel to Python course and webcast to escape this. Brian #6: Never Run ‘python’ In Your Downloads Folder by Glyph This is really a nice, short tutorial on how sys.path is populated, why you should care, and why you need to make sure it’s only trusted locations. “downloads” is definitely not trusted. So never, ever, ever run python from the downloads directory, even with python -m something, as that adds the download dir to the include path. Example includes a demonstration of malicious js code that downloads a fake pip.py to your downloads folder, so when you call python -m pip install ./legit_package.whl you get the fake pip. Further examples show how you need to be vigilant to check your dot files for weird PYTHONPATH extensions and additions. Extras: Michael: We recently passed 5,000,000 downloads of the audio files over at Python Bytes and are the 130th most popular tech podcast in the world. Thank you everyone! Got a new LinkSys WiFi 6 mesh router, and wow, highly recommended. Joke Are you a real programmer? Check with XKCD to find out.

St. Paul - Borchers Podcast
Children's Sermon, March 1

St. Paul - Borchers Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 5, 2020 4:29


Spring Mountain Bible Church

Join us as Drew Fajen continues our series in the Book of Daniel with “Daniel 2”

Victory Church NOLA
March 1, 2020 Sunday Morning

Victory Church NOLA

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2020 35:15


Victory Church

Holy Trinity Parish
March 1, 2020 - Chaplain Raymond Walker III

Holy Trinity Parish

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2020 15:45


Sermons from Holy Trinity Parish in Decatur, Ga.

The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago
Sunday, March 1, 2020 Worship

The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 75:49


Sunday, March 1, 9:30/11:00 Worship. Permission to Podcast the music in this service obtained from OneLicense.net.

The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago
Sunday, March 1, 2020 Sermon

The Fourth Presbyterian Church of Chicago

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 18:52


Shannon J. Kershner, preaching

Christian Life Community Church - online
March 1, 2020 | Reject Passivity: Obedience is Key - Audio

Christian Life Community Church - online

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 24:35


Christian Life Community Church - online podcast

Vintage 242
March 1, 2020 - Audio

Vintage 242

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 40:01


This week we will take a next step in looking at "the wall" we discussed last Sunday. When we face these moments of hardship and difficulty that rattle our faith, there are steps we can take towards breakthrough if we live aware of what is going on in our lives. This Sunday we will talk about this awareness as well as a few of the practical steps we must take to make it through the wall.

New Hope Fellowship
Sunday, March 1, 2020 - No Strings Attached - WK4 - The battle Plan for Purity Part 2

New Hope Fellowship

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 45:21


Sunday, March 1, 2020 - No Strings Attached - WK4 - The battle Plan for Purity Part 2

Countryside Christian Church
March 1, 2020 - Audio

Countryside Christian Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 33:58


"Everybody Has Their Own Prayer"

Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church
March 1, 2020 pm Andrew Barshinger

Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 26:22


Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church

Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church
March 1, 2020 am Dick Ellis

Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 23:42


Faith Orthodox Presbyterian Church

Vintage 242
March 1, 2020 - Audio

Vintage 242

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2020 40:01


This week we will take a next step in looking at "the wall" we discussed last Sunday. When we face these moments of hardship and difficulty that rattle our faith, there are steps we can take towards breakthrough if we live aware of what is going on in our lives. This Sunday we will talk about this awareness as well as a few of the practical steps we must take to make it through the wall.

Bellwether Church Sermon Recordings
Broken and Healed, Week 1, "The Cruciform Life"

Bellwether Church Sermon Recordings

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 29, 2020 35:33


1 Corinthians 1, Dr. John Hugh Tate - Lead Pastor

All Saints Episcopal Church
The Rev. Tim Black - Ash Wednesday, March 1, 2017

All Saints Episcopal Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2017 16:40


All Saints’ Episcopal Church, Atlanta is a vibrant, progressive community that welcomes all – wherever they may be on their spiritual journey. We are called to know, to love, and to serve God and our neighbors. In all that we do, we honor All Saints’ abiding commitment for justice and peace for all people in Atlanta and across the world. Visit us online at https://allsaintsatlanta.org

All Saints Episcopal Church
The Rev. Tim Black - Ash Wednesday, March 1, 2017

All Saints Episcopal Church

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 3, 2017 16:40


Sermons from All Saints' Episcopal Church - Atlanta

St. Francis Episcopal Church Podcast
March 1, 2015 Lent 2 Sermon

St. Francis Episcopal Church Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2015 12:58


Sermon audio from the 11 a.m. service at St. Francis Episcopal Church in Houston, TX on 3-1-15

North Scottsdale Christian
March 1, Prayer and the Armor of God Part 2 - Audio

North Scottsdale Christian

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2015 51:28


North Scottsdale Christian

Victory Church NOLA
March 1, 2015

Victory Church NOLA

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2015 37:51


Victory Church

Simply Economics
SE 11: Fed Tops Sequestration

Simply Economics

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2013 12:47


Sequestration kicked in Friday, March 1, but the economy is still showing signs of life. The Fed is taking action to keep the recovery--such as it is--in motion despite the latest fiscal impasse. What does it all mean for traders and investors?

Simply Economics
SE 11: Fed Tops Sequestration

Simply Economics

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 4, 2013 12:47


Sequestration kicked in Friday, March 1, but the economy is still showing signs of life. The Fed is taking action to keep the recovery--such as it is--in motion despite the latest fiscal impasse. What does it all mean for traders and investors?

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Recap of the Blue Jackets game vs. the Vancouver Canucks on March 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Steve Mason Shootout Save on Mikael Samuelsson – Mar. 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2011 0:21


Steve Mason stops Samuelson with a left pad save in the sixth round of the shootout

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Antoine Vermette Shootout Goal vs Vancouver Canucks - Mar. 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2011 0:20


Antoine Vermette sneaks the puck past Luongo to give the Jackets a 2-1 lead in the shootout

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Rick Nash Shootout Goal vs Vancouver Canucks - Mar. 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2011 0:28


Rick Nash scores on the backhand giving the Jackets a 1-0 lead in the shootout

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Steve Mason Save in Overtime – Mar. 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2011 0:08


Steve Mason keeps the Jackets hopes of two points alive with a stop in the overtime period

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Steve Mason Save on Keith Ballard – Mar. 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 2, 2011 0:08


Steve Mason keeps the game tied with a big save in the third period

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast
Drive To The Net - March 1, 2011

Blue Jackets Cast: Columbus Official Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 1, 2011 4:27


What do you think Scottie Upshall and Sami Lepisto are going to add for the Blue Jackets down the stretch?