Podcasts about materials

Substance or mixture of substances that constitutes an object

  • 5,029PODCASTS
  • 10,975EPISODES
  • 36mAVG DURATION
  • 2DAILY NEW EPISODES
  • Feb 4, 2026LATEST

POPULARITY

20192020202120222023202420252026

Categories




Best podcasts about materials

Show all podcasts related to materials

Latest podcast episodes about materials

PBS NewsHour - Segments
News Wrap: Georgia election officials seek return of materials taken during FBI raid

PBS NewsHour - Segments

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 6:25


In our news wrap Wednesday, the Supreme Court is allowing California to use its newly drawn congressional map, Fulton County officials are challenging the FBI's seizure of ballots and documents related to the 2020 election, Israeli strikes killed at least 21 people in Gaza, Ukrainian and Russian officials held talks in Abu Dhabi, and fallout continues from the recent release of Epstein files. PBS News is supported by - https://www.pbs.org/newshour/about/funders. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy

HVAC Know It All Podcast
The Financial Systems for Trades Business Owners to Build the Right Foundation with April Sackfield

HVAC Know It All Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 25:14


In this episode of the HVAC Know It All Business Edition Podcast, co-hosts Gary McCreadie and Furman Haynes of WorkHero discuss the essential but often overlooked side of running an HVAC business's financials with  April Sackfield, Director of Operations at NumberConstruct and Fiscal Management Group, who brings a wealth of knowledge on business finance and systems tailored for service-based companies. The focus is on empowering technicians and small business owners with the tools and understanding they need to successfully transition from the field into entrepreneurship. April supports HVAC business owners in optimizing their operations for profitability and growth. Her practical advice is drawn from real-world experiences and deep industry insight.   Expect to Learn - How aspiring HVAC business owners can prepare financially before launching their company. - The pros and cons of "rage quitting" versus planned business exits. - The importance of field service management (FSM) software and how it supports accurate job costing. - Common mistakes with accounting software like QuickBooks and how to avoid them. - Strategies for setting up flat rate pricing systems that reflect actual job complexity and labor costs. Episode Breakdown with Timestamps  [00:00:00] – Introduction [00:00:55] – Preparing to Start an HVAC Business [00:02:58] – "Rage Quitting" vs. Strategic Business Exit [00:06:51] – Tools and Software for Job Costing [00:10:01] – Flat Rate Pricing vs. Time and Materials [00:15:14] – Managing Job Data and Technician Tracking [00:18:30] – Common FSM and Accounting Software Pitfalls [00:21:04] – Personnel & Bookkeeping Best Practices [00:23:38] – The Role of Automation & AI in Accounting   Follow Gary McCreadie: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/gary-mccreadie-38217a77/  Website: https://www.hvacknowitall.com  Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/HVAC-Know-It-All-2/61569643061429/     Follow  April Sackfield on:  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/aprilsackfield/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/april.sackfield/?hl=en Follow NumberConstruct on: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/people/NumberConstruct/61560939563809/# Website: https://numbercon.com/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/numbercon  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/number.con/?hl=en Follow Fiscal Management Group on: Website: https://www.fiscalaccounting.ca/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/fiscalmanagementgroup/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/fiscalmanagement/   Follow Furman Haynes on:  LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/furmanhaynes/  WorkHero: https://www.linkedin.com/company/workherohvac/  Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/hvacknowitall1/   

The Short Box: A Comic Book Podcast
Doug Wagner is locked and loaded: An interview about 12-Gauge Comics, Narco, and the Materials Universe

The Short Box: A Comic Book Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 60:00 Transcription Available


Doug Wagner (writer of PLASTIC, PLUSH, VINYL) joins the show to discuss writing dark comedy horror comics like I Was A Fashion School Serial Killer, and the latest addition to his Image Comics Materials-Universe: Narco, the story of a narcoleptic man attempting to solve the grisly murder of his neighbor. Doug also elaborates on his time working at Malibu Comics, his favorite Alfred Hitchcock movies, starting 12-Gauge Comics and writing the black & white anthology series: The Ride, and shares stories about working with Brian Stelfreeze and Cully Hamner Watch the unedited video version of this episode: HERELINKS: Buy Short Box merch like hats & shirts: HEREJoin our Patreon Community, and get access to bonus episodes, free comics, and other rewards! Try a FREE 7-day trial: HERETake your comic shopping experience to the limit, by shopping online at Gotham City Limit!The Schiller Kessler Group  We read Fan Mail, send us some! Check out Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Battle Nexus, the raddest TMNT event of the decade!  Buy your tickets for Collective Con 2026, Northeast Florida's largest pop culture convention: HERE Proudly sponsored by Gotham City Limit!Proudly sponsored by Collective Con!Proudly sponsored by IDW Comics!Disclaimer: This post contains affiliate links. If you make a purchase, I may receive a commission at no extra cost to you.Support the showREACH OUT!

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News
Mercury's Hidden Activity and Titan's Dragonfly: Exploring Volatile Streaks and Robotic Rotocopters

SpaceTime with Stuart Gary | Astronomy, Space & Science News

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 19:22 Transcription Available


SpaceTime with Stuart Gary Gary - Series 29 Episode 15In this episode of SpaceTime, we uncover intriguing discoveries about Mercury's geological activity, NASA's innovative Dragonfly mission to Titan, and the environmental impacts of rocket fuel pollution.Mercury's Surprising StreaksA new study reveals bright streaks, or lineae, on Mercury's surface, suggesting the planet is not as geologically inactive as previously thought. Researchers from the University of Bern utilized machine learning to analyze over 100,000 images from NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, discovering that these streaks are likely caused by the outgassing of volatile materials from beneath Mercury's crust. This finding indicates ongoing geological processes and will be further explored by the BepiColombo mission, set to reach Mercury later this year.NASA's Dragonfly Mission to TitanNASA is developing the Dragonfly, a car-sized rotocopter designed to explore Saturn's moon Titan, which features methane and ethane lakes. Scheduled for launch in 2028, Dragonfly will utilize Titan's dense atmosphere to fly to various locations, examining environments that may harbor organic materials essential for life. The mission builds on the success of the Ingenuity rotocopter on Mars, with extensive testing underway to ensure optimal performance in Titan's unique conditions.Rocket Fuel Pollution and the Ozone LayerA recent study highlights the damaging effects of burning rocket fuels, such as kerosene, on Earth's ozone layer. The report indicates that the rapid growth of the rocket launch industry is exacerbating this issue, particularly affecting regions like Antarctica and parts of Australia. Researchers are calling for restrictions on the use of these fuels to mitigate environmental harm.www.spacetimewithstuartgary.com✍️ Episode ReferencesNature Communications, Earth and EnvironmentClimate and Atmospheric ScienceBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/spacetime-your-guide-to-space-astronomy--2458531/support.(00:00:00) Streaks on the surface of Mercury suggesting it's not quite dead yet(00:11:13) Burning rocket fuel damages Earth's ozone layer, study finds(00:12:28) A new study claims cyber attacks can spark intense social media discussions(00:14:53) Apple bans anti woke Holly Valent song from iTunes in Australia(00:16:39) Apple has now had hypertension notifications authorized by the TGN(00:18:04) Space Time is available every Monday, Wednesday and Friday through bitesz. com

Everything About Hydrogen - an inspiratia podcast
Breakthrough Materials for Hydrogen Storage with Dr. Jehan Kanga, Founder and CEO of Rux Energy

Everything About Hydrogen - an inspiratia podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 48:36


Dr. Kanga shares what it's like emerging as a cornerstone, next-generation technology in the current investment climate, how the hydrogen industry may evolve (especially when breakthrough value-chain technologies dovetail into the ecosystem and deliver step-function cost savings), and how new emerging markets like India seek to leapfrog the rest of the world.About Dr. Jehan Kanga:As well as Founder and CEO of Rux Energy, Jehan is a multi-award winning scientist. Previously, Jehan was an emerging clean tech leader at KPMG Australia, completed a PhD in Chemistry at the University of Sydney, and has been listed as 40 Under 40 Most Influential Asian Australians in 2019 by Asialink, and was awarded India Australia Business Council Young Professional of the Year 2021. Jehan is a recognised thought leader, presenting at major hydrogen conferences and events in Australia, USA, UK, Singapore, Europe and UAE.Rux Energy:An Australian advanced materials startup delivering breakthrough efficiency gains for dispatchable hydrogen storage, Rux enables step change efficiencies for heavy mobility, maritime, rail, road, energy distribution networks, and heavy industry.Rux is commercialising their breakthrough nanoporous MOF materials, which stands for Metal Organic Frameworks, a new field of advanced material for which the Nobel Prize was awarded in 2025. Rux is focused on industrial gas storage, in particular safer, more energy efficient, high volumetric density and lower cost hydrogen storage - a key part of the sector's value chain.Rux has won a number of major international awards for their novel approach, including the prestigious CMA CGM Startup Award 2025 fo Safe & Compliant Transportation of Hazardous Goods, and the Australian Technologies Competition 2025 which recognised their innovative green & circular manufacturing and Safe & Sustainable by Design approach. Rux is about to launch its first commercial systems for construction, mining, maritime and bulk last-mile distribution, supported by large-cap industrials including Joint Development Projects with Bureau Veritas and R&D collaborations with Serco UK, the largest operator of British-flagged vessels.—Links:Rux Energy - www.ruxenergy.com CMA-CGM Startup Awards 2025 - https://ruxenergy.com/rux-energy-wins-at-the-cma-cgm-startup-awards-2025-in-marseille-france/

Convo By Design
WestEdge Wednesday Part Five | 641 | Inspired by Nature: Exterior Spaces Built to Last

Convo By Design

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 4, 2026 63:22


The panel explored the intersection of natural and man-made materials in landscape design, highlighting the balance between aesthetic, sustainability, and functional concerns. Participants discussed how interior and landscape designers borrow nature to create cohesive environments, including outdoor “rooms” and hardscape features softened with plantings. Material selection — stone, metal, glass, composite decking, and synthetic turf — was debated, with attention to local sourcing, durability, environmental impact, and client expectations. The panel also emphasized the sensory experience of landscapes, touching on sight, sound, smell, and taste, and how design can evoke memory and emotion. Sustainability, fire safety, maintenance, and longevity were recurring themes, particularly in the adoption of synthetic materials that mimic natural ones while reducing environmental or upkeep costs. Borrowed landscape: Using surrounding natural colors and textures to inform material choices in hardscape design. Softening hardscape: Plantings and layered design to maintain depth without overwhelming the property. Context-appropriate material selection: Stone, metal, glass, gravel, and concrete chosen according to environment, use, and climate. Trend toward natural imperfection: Broken edges, less precision, biophilic design responding to a highly digital, precise world. Sustainability tensions: Balancing natural and synthetic materials for longevity, cost, and environmental impact. Synthetic decking and recycled composites: TimberTech and similar products for durability, low maintenance, and fire safety. Artificial turf considerations: High-use areas, water savings, lifespan, recycling challenges. Sensory-driven design: Sight, sound, smell, and taste incorporated into landscapes for holistic human experiences. Childhood memory and emotional recall: Design that evokes personal sensory memory for users. Fire and climate constraints: Materials must meet modern safety and insurance standards.

The John Batchelor Show
S8 Ep413: Guest: David Albright. Albright warns of "loose nukes" and dangerous materials in Iran, urging planning for a "day after" scenario to secure nuclear assets during potential regime instability.

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 13:31


Guest: David Albright. Albright warns of "loose nukes" and dangerous materials in Iran, urging planning for a "day after" scenario to secure nuclear assets during potential regime instability.1957 NUKE AIR TO AIR GENIE ROCKET TEST

The John Batchelor Show
S8 Ep413: Guest: David Albright. Albright emphasizes the need for a coalition-led inspection and removal regime to secure Iranian nuclear materials and protect scientists if the government collapses.

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 3, 2026 6:08


Guest: David Albright. Albright emphasizes the need for a coalition-led inspection and removal regime to secure Iranian nuclear materials and protect scientists if the government collapses.1951 LAS VEGAS

The John Batchelor Show
S8 Ep398: Sean McMeekin describes how the Soviets utilized Lend-Lease to acquire industrial secrets and nuclear materials, often facilitated by Harry Hopkins whom McMeekin views as a devoted Soviet agent of influence, while Stalin delayed Operation Bagrat

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 1, 2026 9:26


Sean McMeekin describes how the Soviets utilized Lend-Lease to acquire industrial secrets and nuclear materials, often facilitated by Harry Hopkins whom McMeekin views as a devoted Soviet agent of influence, while Stalin delayed Operation Bagration to let Western Allies absorb German strength.1945 RED ARMY

Jason Scott Talks His Way Out of It
The Scarecrow Video Episode

Jason Scott Talks His Way Out of It

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 30, 2026 13:21


The Scarecrow Video Episode: Visiting Seattle, Walking into Scarecrow Video, My Own Mind, The Shelves, The Subjects, The Uniqueness, A Short History, The Scarecrow Video of Internet Archive, Bang, Disgust-o-Meter, Harvard Square Basements, Textfiles and Materials, The Inevitable Jumble.My experience visiting Seattle's legendary Scarecrow video: https://scarecrowvideo.org/

The Color Authority™
S7E01 Sense of Place with Reyes Ríos + Larraín Arquitectos

The Color Authority™

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2026 53:50 Transcription Available


This first episode of 2026 of The Color Authority podcast features an in-depth conversation with Salvador Reyes and Josefina Larrain of the Mérida-based studio Reyes Rios + Larrain Arquitectos. The discussion centres on the studio's philosophy of "living heritage," where they restore historic Yucatecan haciendas and manor houses not as static monuments, but as functional, contemporary spaces that preserve ancestral knowledge and memory.Design Studio based in Mérida, Yucatán, Mexico, founded by architect Salvador Reyes Ríos and Josefina Larraín Lagos. Since 2001, they have equally devoted themselves to contemporary architectural design and restoration of old haciendas, manor houses, buildings, and heritage sites, adapting them for new, compatible uses. A local and modern sensibility, combined with a comprehensive approach to architecture, interior design, furniture, landscaping, and construction coordination, characterizes their new buildings and restoration/reuse projects. Other contributions to Mexican architecture include the revival and reinterpretation of local materials and techniques, such as Chukum-based mortar and structural concrete blended with red earth known as kancab. Reyes Ríos + Larraín are also recognized for creating an original architectural language that has shaped the contemporary identity of Yucatán's built environment, as well as the ongoing experimentation with local materials and processes. Their work has been featured in specialized books and magazines across the United States, Europe, Asia and Latin America, earning both national acclaim and international visibility. The book Place, Matter, and Belonging, published in two editions by Arquine in 2017, is the first monograph dedicated to their body of work. The studio is currently designing projects in Mexico, United States and Dominican Republic.Support the showThank you for listening! Follow us through our website or social media!https://www.thecolorauthority.com/podcasthttps://www.instagram.com/the_color_authority_/https://www.linkedin.com/company/78120219/admin/

Declutter Your Chaos
338 | What to do about paper | Reference materials

Declutter Your Chaos

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2026 32:51


The 4 Categories of What to Keep as Reference 1. Identity & Legal Documents that establish who you are: Birth certificate Passport Social Security card Marriage or divorce records Name change documents These are foundational and worth keeping accessible. 2. Financial & Tax Documents tied to money and compliance: Last 7 years of tax returns Current-year financial records Property deeds or titles Insurance policies Older financial paperwork is rarely needed beyond this window. 3. Medical Documents that support continuity of care: Vaccination records Major diagnoses or procedures Current insurance information Stacks of old printouts are usually unnecessary. 4. Home Documents related to the home you live in now: Warranties for items you still own Manuals you actually reference Major repair or renovation records If it doesn't support your current home, it likely doesn't need to stay.   Hey guys, In this episode, we focus on the Organize step — the point where mental clutter turns into structure. Organizing isn't about making things look neat. It's about deciding where something belongs so your brain doesn't have to keep track of it. Using principles from Getting Things Done, we walk through the core organizing categories and how each one reduces stress when used correctly.   If you want to go deeper and have support decluttering your home consistently, the year-long program is open. You can find all the details at declutteryourchaos.com.   ✨Come home to yourself. ✨ Head to Cozy Earth and use my code DECLUTTER for 20% off and experience the softest sheets you can find: https://cozyearth.com/ Office Series: What's Coming Next Ep. 339 — Cords and Tech How to identify mystery cords and old tech (including AI help) and release what no longer supports you. Ep. 340 — Office Supplies and Computer Gear Reducing duplicates, containing supplies, and creating a setup that actually supports your work. Ep. 341 — Overview of Getting Things Done by David Allen (for declutttering) If this episode helped you, please leave a review or share it with someone who needs it. Looking forward to seeing your progress in the free Facebook group.  To join click below... https://www.facebook.com/groups/declutteryourchaos/ Download my free decluttering planner here: https://declutteryourchaos.com/decluttering-planner Let's connect:

Declutter Your Chaos - Minimalism, Decluttering, Home Organization
338 | Office Series - What to do about paper | Reference materials

Declutter Your Chaos - Minimalism, Decluttering, Home Organization

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 25, 2026 32:51


The 4 Categories of What to Keep as Reference 1. Identity & Legal Documents that establish who you are: Birth certificate Passport Social Security card Marriage or divorce records Name change documents These are foundational and worth keeping accessible. 2. Financial & Tax Documents tied to money and compliance: Last 7 years of tax returns Current-year financial records Property deeds or titles Insurance policies Older financial paperwork is rarely needed beyond this window. 3. Medical Documents that support continuity of care: Vaccination records Major diagnoses or procedures Current insurance information Stacks of old printouts are usually unnecessary. 4. Home Documents related to the home you live in now: Warranties for items you still own Manuals you actually reference Major repair or renovation records If it doesn't support your current home, it likely doesn't need to stay.     If you want to go deeper and have support decluttering your home consistently, the year-long program is open. You can find all the details at declutteryourchaos.com. ✨Come home to yourself. ✨ Head to Cozy Earth and use my code DECLUTTER for 20% off and experience the softest sheets you can find: https://cozyearth.com/ Office Series: What's Coming Next Ep. 339 — Cords and Tech How to identify mystery cords and old tech (including AI help) and release what no longer supports you. Ep. 340 — Office Supplies and Computer Gear Reducing duplicates, containing supplies, and creating a setup that actually supports your work. Ep. 341 — Overview of Getting Things Done by David Allen (for declutttering) If this episode helped you, please leave a review or share it with someone who needs it. Looking forward to seeing your progress in the free Facebook group.  To join click below... https://www.facebook.com/groups/declutteryourchaos/ Download my free decluttering planner here: https://declutteryourchaos.com/decluttering-planner Let's connect:

The City Club of Cleveland Podcast
America 250: Native American Nations and the Making of the United States

The City Club of Cleveland Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 60:00


Throughout 2026, and in partnership with the America 250-Ohio Commission, the City Club will commemorate the 250th anniversary of the United States by exploring all the ways that Ohio has contributed to U.S. history for 250+ years. In January, our state will recognize the unique contributions of Ohio's firsts and originals.rnrnSince day one, and throughout the entirety of our country's formation, Native Americans served as defining threads - and participants - in U.S. politics. Article 1, Section 8 (also known as the "Indian Commerce Clause") in the U.S. Constitution establishes a unique federal-tribal relationship, acknowledging tribal sovereignty and self-governance. Today, it serves as the backbone for federal Indian law, which spans hundreds of years, impacting both tribal and non-tribal communities. What are the landmark moments in history that influenced the trajectory of our nation, particularly in the Great Lakes region? And how are modern Native Nations influencing the growth of the United States today?rnrnMatthew L.M. Fletcher is a leading tribal law expert, and is the Harry Burns Hutchins Collegiate Professor of Law and Professor of American Culture at the University of Michigan. He teaches and writes in the areas of federal Indian law, American Indian tribal law, Anishinaabe legal and political philosophy, constitutional law, federal courts, and legal ethics. He sits as the chief justice of the Grand Traverse Band of Ottawa and Chippewa Indians, the Pokagon Band of Potawatomi Indians, and the Poarch Band of Creek Indians; as well as an appellate judge for many other tribal nations. Fletcher also co-authored the sixth, seventh, and eighth editions of Cases and Materials on Federal Indian Law and three editions of American Indian Tribal Law, the only casebook for law students on tribal law.

Taiwan This Week
Classified defense materials and free milk

Taiwan This Week

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 23, 2026 50:42


We talk a briefing to lawmakers on weapons procurement plans, Taiwan's trade negotiating team meeting the press and more. -- Hosting provided by SoundOn

Macro Voices
MacroVoices #516 Craig Tindale: Critical Materials, A Strategic Analysis

Macro Voices

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 66:23


MacroVoices Erik Townsend & Patrick Ceresna welcome, Craig Tindale. They'll discuss why China is holding all the cards, and how those cards were served them, not only on a “silver platter”, but on a platter made from silver mined elsewhere but refined in China. https://bit.ly/3LZRwKf    

Federal Tech Podcast: Listen and learn how successful companies get federal contracts
Ep. 296 Securing the Federal Software Supply Chain: Why SBOMs aren't enough

Federal Tech Podcast: Listen and learn how successful companies get federal contracts

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 22, 2026 19:53


One of the biggest trends in software development over the past 10 years is the shift from writing code to "assembling" code from off-the-shelf components. During today's interview with Javed Hasan from Lineaje, we learned that 70% of that pre-assembled code is open source. In other words, an anonymous person in some countries modified software instructions. This casual approach may be fine for small businesses, but an organization like the federal government must be highly cautious. Hasan describes how his company was one of the first to work with the federal government to set standards for this existing code. These initial efforts began ten years ago and resulted in Executive Order #14028, which requires a Software Bill of Materials for any organization selling to the federal government. This initiative expanded in 2021-2022 when NIST published related guidelines. These efforts are a good start. However, federal leaders must evaluate SBOM technology from many perspectives. For example, how to incorporate this mandate into air-gapped networks, legacy COTS, or even in a classified environment. System administrators also need to know if they are exposed. Further, every organization has a varying definition of what "deep software transparency" is. Hassan also discusses Lineage's innovative approach to creating "Gold open source" software, ensuring it is free of malware and vulnerabilities. If you are interested in seeing a demonstration of how Lineaje can help with software forensics, there is an event at the Carahsoft office in Reston, Virginia, on January 30 = = Connect to John Gilroy on LinkedIn   https://www.linkedin.com/in/john-gilroy/ Want to listen to other episodes? www.Federaltechpodcast.com  

Essential Ingredients Podcast
083: Clean Water, Wrong Bottle: Upgrade to Lab-Grade Hydration with Hardy Steinmann

Essential Ingredients Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2026 35:20


"The idea came suddenly one day. I was traveling and had this little Japanese perfume spray in my hand, It's actually aluminum and the inside glass, very little. And I said to myself, that's the concept of bottle I'm going to do. Glass.. Honesty." —Hardy Steinman   We drink water every day, yet most of us never question the container. We accept strange smells, plastic taste, and constant replacement as normal. This conversation challenges that mindset and asks us to slow down and rethink what daily hydration is doing to our bodies and the environment. Listen in as Hardy Steinmann shares the personal journey behind building Okapa, a hydration vessel designed with lab-grade glass, precision engineering, and a belief that fewer, better objects can improve health and reduce waste. Press play to explore a different way of thinking about hydration and long-term wellness: Why hydration quality matters as much as quantity The hidden issues with plastic and standard glass bottles How material porosity affects taste, smell, and bacteria The engineering behind shock absorption and durability Longevity versus throwaway consumer culture Environmental responsibility through better design Why investing in one well-made product changes daily habits   Meet Hardy:  Hardy Steinmann is the founder of Okapa, a company renowned for its innovative and meticulously engineered water bottles designed to promote health, hygiene, and sustainability. With over eight years of research and development and a background that spans leading and rebuilding companies around the world, Hardy is committed to using only the highest-quality materials and advanced engineering techniques. Drawing inspiration from his international experiences—including time spent in Papua New Guinea—he brings a unique perspective to product design, ensuring that Okapa bottles set a new standard for performance, longevity, and environmental responsibility. Hardy's dedication to transparency, consumer education, and less-is-more philosophy positions Okapa as both a leader in its field and a catalyst for positive change in how people approach health and hydration.   Website LinkedIn Instagram TikTok Pinterest   Connect with NextGen Purpose: Website Facebook Instagram LinkedIn YouTube   Episode Highlights: 00:51 The Problem with Traditional Water Bottles: Plastic & Steel Issues 03:00 The Science of Glass: 07:31 Health Impact: Comparing Glass, Plastic, and Hygiene in Hydration 12:00 Iconic Design and the Eight-Material Engineering Challenge 18:02 "Swiss Watch" Precision: Over-Engineering for Perfect Hydration 21:00 Minimalism vs. Consumption: Bottles Built to Last 28:47 Engineering Details: Handle, Materials, and Replacement Parts 31:41 Health Market Potential: From Lab-Grade Glass to Medical Collaboration  

Syndication Made Easy with Vinney (Smile) Chopra
How AI Cut Construction Time in Half | The Vinney and Beau Show [SHORTS]

Syndication Made Easy with Vinney (Smile) Chopra

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2026 2:07


AI isn't the future. It's already rebuilding the world around us.   On The Vinney And Beau Show, Vinney Chopra and Beau Eckstein dive into how artificial intelligence is no longer theoretical—it's physical, operational, and reshaping entire industries. Vinney shares firsthand insights from conversations with top innovators and partners who are using AI-driven factories to build homes and hotels at speeds that would've sounded impossible just a few years ago.   Entire buildings are now pre-cut by robots, shipped to job sites, and assembled in a fraction of the time. Materials are stronger, lighter, and more precise. What once took months now takes days. And the ripple effect? Massive savings in time, labor, and interest costs—while improving quality and consistency.   What you'll learn in this episode:

Nice Games Club
Nice Games Jam: "Time Traveler Estate Sale" [Nice Replay]

Nice Games Club

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2026


#384Time Traveler Estate SaleNice Games Jam2025.04.10Roles reverse as Dale joins Stephen and Lydia for a Nice Game Jam prompted by Mark. The results are an antiques-fueled jaunt through time, and an unexpected win for Stephen.Costcodle - Zak Kermitz, CostcodleTimeline Inventions - Zygomatic, ZygomaticHypodermic Needles - Sawbones: A Marital Tour of Misguided Medicine, Maximum FunPrompt"Come up with a game where the winner is the player who gets (or gets closest to) a certain amount of points, but that amount changes from round to round. Hard mode variant: the players don't always know what the amount is."Game typeTabletop gamePlayer count2-8MaterialsSet of item cards from various years10 chips for each playerSet of years/eventsTimerSetupPlace 8 item cards on the table easily accessible for all players. Pick a random year/event. Set timer for 1 minute.RulesStart the timer to start the roundWhile the timer runs, players place chips on items to bid on themWhen the timer runs out, the player with the most chips on an item gets that item. In a tie, no one gets an item and it gets added to the pool during the next roundItems that are earned get their times revealed, player closest to the chosen year/event winsPlay repeats for three rounds, player with the most round wins wins the game

eLEXYfy: The Place For Fashion
When Materials Become Climate Solutions with Pure.Tech

eLEXYfy: The Place For Fashion

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 15, 2026 31:37


In this episode, I sit down with Pure.Tech, a materials technology company taking a fundamentally different approach to air quality and sustainability, by changing the materials themselves.Pure.Tech develops nature-inspired technology that can be embedded directly into everyday materials such as paints, paper, textiles, and polymers. Once integrated, these materials actively neutralize harmful air pollutants over time, without requiring electricity, filters, maintenance, or behavioral change.Instead of treating sustainability as an add-on, Pure.Tech builds it into the foundation of products and spaces, turning surfaces and materials into continuous, passive contributors to cleaner air. This approach has the potential to help industries reduce emissions at scale, improve indoor and outdoor air quality, and rethink how sustainability shows up in design, manufacturing, and infrastructure.We dive into how this technology works, where it's already being applied, and what it could mean for the future of fashion, materials, and climate innovation. If you're curious about how sustainability can be embedded into the things we already use every day, this conversation offers a glimpse into what's next.

Money Tree Investing
2026 Predictions... This is What Will Outperform in 2026

Money Tree Investing

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 50:49


Today we have your 2026 predictions. We also cover the volatile 2025 year-end and share the extreme moves in precious metals and global geopolitical shocks as a case study for how investors should think: not politically or emotionally, but by watching price action and sector reactions. Low holiday liquidity amplified market swings, but that real signals came from how energy, materials, small caps, and international markets responded. We also think that despite macro unease, debt overhangs, and geopolitical reshuffling, the data still point to a broadly bullish environment, with diversification, attention to relative performance, and humility toward market signals being far more important than predictions. We discuss... Precious metals led early-year performance, with platinum, silver, and gold behaving very differently despite being in the same sector. Investors should respond to global events by asking how markets interpret them, not by reacting to political narratives. The U.S. seizure of Venezuela's president is a geopolitical shock with significant implications for energy markets and global power dynamics. Oil service and infrastructure companies briefly surged as markets discounted future Venezuelan production, though sustainability remains uncertain. China is a key indirect loser due to rising effective energy costs and margin pressure in its low-margin industrial economy. Geopolitical moves are increasingly overt, signaling a reshuffling of the global financial and political order. Have caution because investor intuition is often wrong, and there are historical examples where markets moved opposite of popular expectations. Price action was repeatedly emphasized as the best indicator of what informed capital is actually doing. Early 2026 performance showed leadership from small caps, microcaps, and value stocks rather than mega-cap technology. Materials, industrials, and energy outperformed in the first week, while tech, utilities, and communications lagged. The "Magnificent 7" were noted as early underperformers, challenging the assumption that they always lead markets. Defense stocks strengthened following signals of increased U.S. military spending. Healthcare and other previously beaten-down sectors were flagged as areas worth watching. Be caution against passive overreliance on the S&P 500 due to concentration risk and historical periods of long underperformance. While risks are elevated, market signals remain broadly bullish and investors should stay adaptive rather than predictive. Today's Panelists: Kirk Chisholm | Innovative Wealth Douglas Heagren | Mergent College Advisors Follow on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/moneytreepodcast Follow LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/money-tree-investing-podcast Follow on Twitter/X: https://x.com/MTIPodcast For more information, visit the show notes at https://moneytreepodcast.com/https://moneytreepodcast.com/2026-predictions-781 

MRKT Matrix
What Metals, Materials & Value Stocks Are Whispering About Market Sentiment

MRKT Matrix

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 37:13


SUBSCRIBE to our newsletter: http://riskreversal.substack.com/ Guy Adami & Liz Thomas break down the top market headlines and bring you stock market trade ideas for Wednesday, January 14th. FactSet's John Butters drops by 'IRL' to deliver his latest Earnings Insight report. -- Learn more about FactSet: https://www.factset.com/lp/mrkt-callSign up for our emailsFollow us on Twitter @MRKTCallFollow @GuyAdami on TwitterFollow @CarterBWorth on TwitterFollow us on Instagram @RiskReversalMediaLike us on Facebook @RiskReversalWatch all of our videos on YouTube Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

C.O.B. Tuesday
"Our Founding Fathers Didn't Think Politics Would Be A Profession" Featuring Governor Kevin Stitt, OK

C.O.B. Tuesday

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 40:51


Today we were thrilled to welcome Governor Kevin Stitt of Oklahoma. Governor Stitt was first elected in 2018 and re-elected in 2022. Before entering politics, he was a successful entrepreneur. His company, Gateway, grew into a nationwide mortgage company and, through a merger, became Gateway First Bank, now one of Oklahoma's ten largest banks. In 2018, he received more votes than any gubernatorial candidate in Oklahoma history in his first bid for elected office. As Governor, he has prioritized delivering more value for taxpayers, and his fiscally conservative approach has helped Oklahoma build its largest savings balance in state history. Governor Stitt also serves as Chair of the National Governors Association, which was founded in 1908 to advance bipartisan dialogue, policy innovation, and information-sharing among the nation's governors. It was an honor to host the Governor for an insightful conversation on permitting reform, power affordability, and the policy bottlenecks shaping the U.S. energy and infrastructure buildout. In our conversation, we explore why states, through the bipartisan work of the National Governors Association, are central to unlocking U.S. competitiveness and fixing bottlenecks that Washington has struggled to address. Governor Stitt lays out a practical, pro-business, free-market philosophy to build more of everything, remove obstacles, and let innovation and capital do the work, shaped by his background as a business leader turned governor. We discuss Oklahoma's behind-the-meter power policy that allows large users to self-supply, the broader affordability and power price debate, and the need to better educate the public on where electricity comes from. We dig into what's broken in today's policy framework, including the lack of a single accountable federal regulator, and how short-term politics and pendulum swings can stall long-term, common-sense reforms. We also touch on the added complexity of tribal sovereignty and federal involvement in energy infrastructure development. As mentioned, the National Governors Association's permitting proposal, “NGA Letter on Energy Permitting Priorities” (published in October 2025) is linked here. We greatly enjoyed the discussion and appreciate Governor Stitt for his time. Mike Bradley noted the 10-year bond yield (~4.18%) has traded sideways to start the year. December CPI printed in line with expectations, with PPI due tomorrow. If economic reports continue to print in line, bond yields will likely remain rangebound until the January 28 FOMC meeting. On the oil market front, WTI is up ~$3.50/bbl (~$61/bbl) this year despite 2026 surplus concerns. Oil markets have quickly shifted from 1H26 oversupply and Venezuelan oil production increases to rising Iran-related risk, with the potential for a sharper spike if tensions escalate, especially given that institutional investors are currently bearish (Goldman Sachs Oil Sentiment survey) and very short oil contract “financial” length. In equities, the S&P 500 is up ~2% YTD with the biggest sector winners being cyclicals (Energy, Industrials, and Materials). Materials is the best performing S&P sector this year (up ~7%) due to growing optimism that global GDP growth will be headed higher in 2026. The Russell 2000 is up ~6%, which is far outpacing the S&P 500 & Big AI/Tech stocks, and could be an early sign that market breadth is widening. Energy is up ~5% this year with Oil Services up ~12%, Refiners up ~8% and U.S. Oil Majors up ~6% on hopes that they'll all be beneficiaries of future Venezuelan infrastructure investment and a quick redirection of heavy oil barrels to Gulf Coast refiners. He closed with takeaways from the Goldman Sachs Energy, Clean Tech & Utilities Conference last week including a real sense of optimism despite investors still being most

Climate 21
Decarbonising Concrete With Carbon-Neutral Materials

Climate 21

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 14, 2026 38:59 Transcription Available


Send me a message8% of global emissions come from the material we barely talk about.Concrete. Cement. The literal foundations of modern life, and one of the hardest climate problems we face.In this episode, I'm joined by Ana Luisa Vaz, VP of Product at Paebbl, to unpack why construction is such a stubborn emissions hotspot, and what it would take to genuinely change that.Ana explains why cement emits CO₂ by design, not by accident. Half its emissions come from chemistry, not fuel. You can electrify kilns and still be stuck with the carbon. That's why Paebbl is taking a different path: using accelerated mineralisation to turn captured CO₂ into a cement substitute, permanently locking carbon into concrete itself.We dig into what “permanence” really means in carbon removal, why performance matters more than good intentions, and how conservative industries like construction can adopt new materials without compromising safety. You'll hear how Paebbl can already replace up to 30% of cement today, why cost curves matter more than green premiums, and how digital tools, sensors, and models are accelerating learning in an industry that usually moves at a glacial pace.We also explore the role of policy, public procurement, and cities, the uncomfortable changes the sector needs to unlearn, and whether carbon-negative construction is a realistic goal this century, or just another climate promise that collapses under scrutiny.This is a conversation about climate tech that lives in the physical world. Hard to abate. Harder to ignore.

Halftime Report
The Return of Volatility? 1/13/26

Halftime Report

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 13, 2026 44:24


Scott Wapner and the Investment Committee debate whether we should expect more volatility in the market as stocks trade at record highs. Plus, the Committee shares their latest portfolio moves. And later, Josh Brown spotlights Materials in his "Best Stocks in the Market." Investment Committee Disclosures Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

TD Ameritrade Network
Vance Howard Expecting a Strong 2026, Likes NVMI, Financials, Materials

TD Ameritrade Network

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 12, 2026 6:35


Vance Howard expects 2026 to be a good year, saying the odds of being down are “very minimal.” The market is “too strong” to worry much about the headlines around Fed Chair Powell, he says, but highlights a dovish new Fed Chair in May. He expects two rate cuts this year. Vance anticipates a lot of opportunities for investors across sectors as the market broadens. His picks now include Nova (NVMI), the financial sector ETF (XLF), and the materials sector ETF (XLB).======== Schwab Network ========Empowering every investor and trader, every market day. Subscribe to the Market Minute newsletter - https://schwabnetwork.com/subscribeDownload the iOS app - https://apps.apple.com/us/app/schwab-network/id1460719185Download the Amazon Fire Tv App - https://www.amazon.com/TD-Ameritrade-Network/dp/B07KRD76C7Watch on Sling - https://watch.sling.com/1/asset/191928615bd8d47686f94682aefaa007/watchWatch on Vizio - https://www.vizio.com/en/watchfreeplus-exploreWatch on DistroTV - https://www.distro.tv/live/schwab-network/Follow us on X – https://twitter.com/schwabnetworkFollow us on Facebook – https://www.facebook.com/schwabnetworkFollow us on LinkedIn - https://www.linkedin.com/company/schwab-network/ About Schwab Network - https://schwabnetwork.com/about

Cheap Home Grow - Learn How To Grow Cannabis Indoors Podcast
Growing with my Fellow Growers #345: Is Sun grown better? evaluating claims of research article

Cheap Home Grow - Learn How To Grow Cannabis Indoors Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 6, 2026 124:17


https://www.mdpi.com/1420-3049/28/2/833?utm_source=chatgpt.com#Materials_and_MethodsLink to article we discuss at the start of the show, titled "Comparison of the Cannabinoid and Terpene Profiles in Commercial Cannabis from Natural and Artificial Cultivation"This week host @Jackgreenstalk (aka @Jack_Greenstalk on X/instagram backup account) [or contact via email: JackGreenstalk47@gmail.com] is joined by panel with @spartangrown on instagram or X f.k.a. Twitter at https://x.com/grown43626 or email spartangrown@gmail.com for contacting spartan outside social media, any alternate profiles on other social medias using spartan's name, and photos are not actually spartan grown be aware, and and @TheAmericanOne on youtube aka @theamericanone_with_achenes on instagram who's amy aces can be found at amyaces.com .... This week we missed Rust Brandon of @fulcrop.sciences / fulcrop.ceo regained @Rust.Brandon instagram page, and products can be found at bokashiearthworks.com, and @NoahtheeGrowa on instagram, Matthew Gates aka @SynchAngel on instagram and twitter @Zenthanol on youtube who offers IPM direct chat for $1 a month on patreon.com/zenthanol , @drmjcoco from cocoforcannabis.com as well as youtube where he tests and reviews grow lights and has grow tutorials and @drmjcoco on instagram and @ATG Acres Aaron The Grower aka @atgacres his products can be found at atgacres.com view his instagram to find out details about drops!

natural comparison fellow claims evaluating rust materials growers cannabinoids ipm research article sun grown matthew gates jackgreenstalk
Startup Project
How AI Is Unlocking Materials We've Never Been Able to Build | Radical AI

Startup Project

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 4, 2026 38:21


Discover how Radical AI is revolutionizing material science using self-driving labs.About the episode:Nataraj hosts Joseph Krause, CEO of Radical AI, to explore how they're speeding up material R&D by combining AI, engineering, and robotics. Joseph shares his journey from material science to venture capital, highlighting Radical AI's mission to create a self-driving lab that autonomously designs tests and discovers new materials. The episode dives into Radical AI's materials flywheel concept, their open-source engine, and how they're attracting funding to drive innovation in material science. Discover how Radical AI is set to revolutionize industries from aerospace to energy with cutting-edge material discovery.What you'll learnUnderstand the traditional challenges hindering the commercialization of new materials and how Radical AI is overcoming them.Discover the materials flywheel concept and how it accelerates the speed of material discovery.Learn about the types of customers who are seeking new materials and the diverse applications across various industries.Explore the role of AI in simulating and experimenting with materials, and the importance of experimental validation.Understand the types of AI models Radical AI uses, including machine learning, generative AI, and computer vision.Identify Radical AI's hiring strategy to build an interdisciplinary team across machine learning, software engineering, robotics, and material science.Comprehend the importance of experimental data in materials science and how self-driving labs capture and utilize this data.Learn about Radical AI's stepwise approach to focus on customer-driven problems and enabling technologies.About the Guest and Host:Guest Name: Joseph Krause, Co-founder and CEO of Radical AI, aiming to revolutionize material science with AI, engineering, and robotics.Connect with Guest: → LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/josephfkrause→ Website: https://www.radical-ai.com/Nataraj: Host of the Startup Project podcast, Senior PM at Azure & Investor. → LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/natarajsindam/  → Substack: ⁠https://startupproject.substack.com/⁠In this episode, we cover   (00:01) Introduction to Radical AI and Joseph Krause(01:15) Joseph's diverse background and how it led to Radical AI(05:01) Traditional ways preventing commercialization of new materials (09:06) Radical AI's product: novel materials for aerospace, defense, and energy(11:36) Customers seeking new materials and the advantage of speed in the materials flywheel(13:39) Challenges in digital research and the importance of physical experimentation(16:18) How Radical AI picks directions for new material discovery(23:48) The AI part of Radical AI: hiring and AI models used(27:13) Predicting crystal structures with AI(31:57) Why New York is the best place for Radical AI(33:37) Joseph's best AI use case for personal research(37:35) Material research happening at AppleDon't forget to subscribe and leave us a review/comment on YouTube Apple Spotify or wherever you listen to podcasts.#RadicalAI #AI #MaterialScience #Robotics #DeepTech #Innovation #VentureCapital #Aerospace #Defense #Energy #NewMaterials #SelfDrivingLabs #MachineLearning #GenerativeAI #OpenSource #Podcast #Startup #Technology #Research #NVIDIA

@BEERISAC: CPS/ICS Security Podcast Playlist
2026 ICS Security Predictions: What's Next for Critical Infrastructure

@BEERISAC: CPS/ICS Security Podcast Playlist

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2026 31:41


Podcast: Exploited: The Cyber Truth Episode: 2026 ICS Security Predictions: What's Next for Critical InfrastructurePub date: 2025-12-30Get Podcast Transcript →powered by Listen411 - fast audio-to-text and summarizationAs industrial control systems become more connected, more Linux-based, and more exposed to IT-style threats, 2026 is shaping up to be a turning point for ICS security. In this end-of-year predictions episode of Exploited: The Cyber Truth, host Paul Ducklin is joined by RunSafe Security Founder & CEO Joseph M. Saunders and CTO Shane Fry to discuss what will define ICS and critical infrastructure security in 2026. The episode explores a bold prediction: We will see a major ICS breach originating from a web application vulnerability running directly on an embedded control device. As full Linux operating systems, Node.js apps, and web servers increasingly appear inside OT equipment, long-standing IT vulnerabilities are colliding with systems that are difficult—or impossible—to patch. Joe and Shane dig into why detection-only strategies fall short in constrained, long-lived devices, and why secure by design engineering, memory safety, and runtime protections are becoming essential. They also discuss the importance of accurate, build-time Software Bills of Materials, especially as regulations like the EU Cyber Resilience Act push manufacturers toward transparency, accountability, and provable supply-chain visibility. Together, they cover: Why ICS exploitation is shifting from theoretical to operationalHow web app and RCE vulnerabilities are creeping into OT devicesThe limits of detection-only security strategiesWhy memory safety and runtime protections reduce exploitable riskHow build-time SBOMs improve vulnerability tracking and trustThe podcast and artwork embedded on this page are from RunSafe Security, which is the property of its owner and not affiliated with or endorsed by Listen Notes, Inc.

Y.I.E.L.D. Today With Dallin Candland
God Has ALL the Materials You Need to Grow - #687

Y.I.E.L.D. Today With Dallin Candland

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 21:42


Support the show

Life-Changing Science: The BioBuilder Podcast
Don't Panic - This Is the Hitchhiker's Guide to BioBuilder

Life-Changing Science: The BioBuilder Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 30, 2025 70:54 Transcription Available


A year-end reunion with artists, educators, and students shows how curiosity becomes practice, projects, and careers across bioart, education technology, diagnostics, and materials science. We share real tools, honest challenges, and clear next steps for learning and building.• Bioart as living practice and display challenges• Automation shaping creative and scientific workflows• At-home and classroom biotech kits scaling access• Simulators and free curricula overcoming logistics• Bioplastics, biomanufacturing, and practical AI modules• Student paths into labs, diagnostics, and publishing• Double majors and interdisciplinary momentum• Moving from competitions to peer-reviewed research• AI's risks and value in authentic learning• Materials science pivots from first principlesIf you're listening to this and you're a student wondering if you belong in science, you do. If you're a teacher wondering if this work matters, it does. Keep asking questions, keep building, keep being curious.Learn more about BioBuilder's programs for students, educators, and industry professionals here

Let's Talk Creation
Episode 127: Todd & Paul visit Paleolithic Dolní Věstonice!

Let's Talk Creation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 54:44


Todd and Paul wrap up their big Czech Adventure with a visit to the Stone Age! Long ago, the southern Czech villages of Pavlov and Dolní Věstonice were home to mammoth hunters, and they left abundant evidence of their dwellings, prey, and even culture. Over the past century, Czech archaeologists have been excavating those sites, and Paul and Todd are going to get the whole scoop as they wander the countryside where these ancient hunters lived. What does this site mean for creationists? Find out in this latest episode!Materials for this EpisodeThe archaeological trail that Paul and Todd hiked, including maps!https://www.archeoparkpavlov.cz/en/archaeological-trail-dolni-vestonice-pavlov/t1328Archaeopark Pavlov:https://www.archeoparkpavlov.cz/Learn about the Black Venus of Vestonice:https://venuse100.cz/See more Dolni-Vestonice exhibits at the Anthropos Pavilion in Brno:https://www.mzm.cz/en/anthropos-pavilionA technical paper about the pathology of the central individual in the Triple Burial:https://www.academia.edu/32312902/The_Upper_Paleolithic_triple_burial_of_Doln_V_stonice_Pathology_and_funerary_behaviorBuy the book on Dolni-Vestonice by Jiri Svoboda:https://amzn.to/3Y8jMgmEpisodes mentioned in this episodePlaylist of Paleoanthropology Episodeshttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOzn-NecEi8EQEPL-CsmVZRo--osOXXFf

Clear & Concise Daf Yomi
73 [12.27] Kitzur Shulchan Aruch Yomi 36:27-37:9 [Tevilas Keilim. Beracha. Materials. Children]

Clear & Concise Daf Yomi

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 29, 2025 8:05


73 [12.27] Kitzur Shulchan Aruch Yomi 36:27-37:9 [Tevilas Keilim. Beracha. Materials. Children]

The Grading Podcast
128 - (Replay)Visionary Leadership: Culture Change through Asking Questions - A 10-Year Journey to Building-Wide Grading Reform

The Grading Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2025 50:30 Transcription Available


Happy Holidays! We're taking the week off from recording, so enjoy this replay about visionary leadership!!In this episode, Sharona and Boz interview Doug Wilson, principal of Avondale High School in Michigan, about his advice on implementing building-wide grading reform. This discussion touches on ways of being a visionary leader, how to move towards culture change around grades, and advice to administrators (and teachers!) on how to question our practices with an eye towards improving kids' learning. Join us for this fascinating conversation to move forward with grading reform.LinksPlease note - any books linked here are likely Amazon Associates links. Clicking on them and purchasing through them helps support the show. Thanks for your support!Materials from Doug Wilson supporting Grading Reform (Google Folder Link)Building Thinking Classrooms, by Peter LiljedahlResourcesThe Center for Grading Reform - seeking to advance education in the United States by supporting effective grading reform at all levels through conferences, educational workshops, professional development, research and scholarship, influencing public policy, and community building.The Grading Conference - an annual, online conference exploring Alternative Grading in Higher Education & K-12.Some great resources to educate yourself about Alternative Grading:The Grading for Growth BlogThe Grading ConferenceThe Intentional Academia BlogRecommended Books on Alternative Grading:Grading for Growth, by Robert Talbert and David ClarkSpecifications Grading, by Linda Nilsen

RBC's Markets in Motion
Our Year Ahead US Sector Outlook – Seeking Out Value

RBC's Markets in Motion

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 5:17 Transcription Available


The big things you need to know:First, we are upgrading S&P 500 Health Care to overweight from market weight.Second, we are upgrading S&P 500 Communication Services to overweight from market weight.Third, our other S&P 500 recommendations are unchanged. We remain overweight Financials and Materials, underweight Consumer Discretionary, and market weight all other sectors. Among our market weights, we have a preference for sectors that look attractively valued on our quant analysis (Consumer Staples, Energy, REITs) over those that look expensive (Utilities, Tech, and Industrials) which have been the early beneficiaries of the AI trade.We also close with a quick thought on the biggest macro takeaways from our 4Q25 global analyst outlook survey.

Power Supply
Beyond the Scanner: Mastering Annual Inventory in Critical Access

Power Supply

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 22, 2025 33:51


What if you could improve inventory accuracy without scanners, fancy tech, or extra staff—just smart cycle counts and creative teamwork? On this Season 16 finale of Power Supply, we're joined by Kimberly Alexander, Director of Materials and Purchasing at Huggins Hospital, for a look at how critical access hospitals can master annual inventory with limited resources. From managing unlocked storerooms on the honor system to coordinating manual cycle counts with lean teams and spreadsheets, Kimberly shows how limited resources don't have to mean limited results. She also addresses the unique challenges of critical access: weekend coverage gaps, seasonal demand swings, and wearing multiple hats across purchasing, receiving, and delivery. Whether you're preparing for annual inventory in your critical access hospital or wondering how to do more with less, this conversation delivers real lessons from someone making it work! Once you complete the interview, jump on over to the link below to take a short quiz and download your CEC certificate for 0.5 CECs! – https://www.flexiquiz.com/SC/N/ps16-08 #PowerSupply #Podcast #AHRMM #HealthcareSupplyChain #SupplyChain #Inventory #CriticalAccess #AnnualInventory #Lean

Discover Lafayette
Andre Michot – Michot Accordions

Discover Lafayette

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2025


Andre Michot, a driving force behind Louisiana's cultural soundscape and a founding member of the Grammy-winning Lost Bayou Ramblers, joins Discover Lafayette to discuss Michot Accordions. Widely known for pushing Cajun music forward while remaining deeply rooted in tradition, Andre's influence extends well beyond the stage. He is also the proprietor and craftsman behind Michot Accordions, where he builds, restores, and customizes traditional Cajun accordions entirely by hand—creating instruments that don't just make music, but carry culture. We sat down with Andre right before Christmas 2025, inspired in part by a recent Acadiana Profile article highlighting local craftsmen who help preserve the region's musical heritage. Andre reflected on the shrinking number of Cajun accordion builders, noting that while there are now “maybe 10 or 12 accordion builders in South Louisiana,” there were once “30 or more in the 70s and 80s.” A Family Steeped in Music Andre's musical roots run deep. He grew up surrounded by Cajun music through his father and uncles, who started playing together as Les Frères Michot, an all-brothers Cajun band, in 1986. The individual musicians have played with each other and with numerous other groups since then. Although accordion music was always present in his home, Andre didn't begin playing the instrument himself until age 24. Before that, he filled in on guitar with his family's band in the mid-to-late 1980s. “That's what I play with Lost Bayou Ramblers,” Andre shared, explaining that he learned accordion by borrowing instruments from his father, uncles, and anyone else who would lend him one. In 1998, Andre and his brother Louis formed Lost Bayou Ramblers, with Louis playing fiddle at the same time Andre took up accordion. Learning the Craft Andre's path to accordion building began through curiosity and mentorship. A pivotal moment came when his friend Ray Abshire encouraged him to learn tuning from Randy Falcon, a respected accordion builder known for a sound associated with Cajun music from the 1930s through the 1970s. “There's probably no playbook,” Andre explained. “It's mostly done by ear.” While machines help with precision, tuning ultimately depends on feel: air pressure, reed response, and how notes interact when played together. Andre described the Cajun accordion as “quite a feat of engineering,” with “a hundred little metal reeds” held in place by beeswax. Unlike guitars, which rely on resonance, the accordion produces sound through air compression, making it both mechanical and deeply physical to play. Inside a Cajun Accordion Technically known as a melodeon, the Cajun accordion features ten buttons on the melody side and two bass buttons for rhythm. Pressing a single button opens air channels to four sets of reeds across different octaves, producing layered sound from one note. The bellows, expanding and contracting, drive both airflow and rhythm. “It's very physical,” Andre said. “When I started, I would get halfway through a song and be out of breath.” He later realized he had been breathing in and out with the bellows themselves. Cajun accordions are diatonic, meaning each button produces different notes depending on whether the bellows are pushed or pulled. This design creates the distinctive rhythmic pulse central to Cajun music. From Repair to Building Andre's transition from tuning and repair to full instrument building came when Randy Falcon offered to teach him how to build rather than sell him an accordion. With a background in carpentry and furniture-making, Andre found the process both challenging and deeply satisfying. After building his first accordion, word spread, especially as audiences learned of his craft through Lost Bayou Ramblers’ performances. Orders followed from family, fellow musicians, and fans. “That gives the accordion its soul,” Andre said of the delicate reed work. “That part has got to be right.” Materials, Sound, and Customization Most accordion components can be sourced locally, including wood, often cypress, sometimes supplied by customers themselves. Certain parts come from Italy, where Andre says, “80 to 90% of the accordions and accordion parts in the world” are produced, particularly reeds and bellows, which require a highly specialized manufacturing process. Andre customizes each instrument based on how a musician plays. He listens to recordings, watches hand positioning of the artist, and considers tonal preferences. Differences in reed materials, zinc versus aluminum plates, steel reeds, block shaping, and tuning style, all can dramatically affect sound. “It helps playing the accordion in addition to building them,” he said. “It's nice to be able to put those two together.” The Joy of Completion Building an accordion takes Andre an estimated 80 to 100 hours, from cutting raw wood to final tuning. As he approaches the final stages, installing reeds, buttons, and bellows, he describes entering a kind of creative frenzy. “I can't wait to hear how it sounds,” he said. “I've built over 50 accordions now, and I still feel that way.” Properly made, an accordion can last decades. Andre plays an instrument that is over 100 years old, including one built in the early 1900s that passed through the hands of Ray Abshire and family members before reaching him. Preserving Cajun Culture Andre sees his work as cultural preservation. By continuing the tuning methods and building styles passed down by mentors like Randy Falcon, he maintains a sound closely tied to a specific era of Cajun music. “You can play a Cajun accordion built and tuned here,” he explained, “and it's going to sound and feel different than one built elsewhere.” That sense of lineage—of sound shaped by place—is central to his work. Music That Never Stops Andre described music as a constant presence. “I'm constantly waking up with songs in my head,” he said, sometimes humming melodies into his I-phone voice memos late at night and sending them to Louis, his brother and fellow band mate. Lost Bayou Ramblers' sound reflects not only traditional Cajun influences but also blues, rock, and other genres the band members grew up playing. Lost Bayou Ramblers recently performed at Moncus Park's Christmas event, with upcoming shows at The Blue Moon (December 26) and The Broadside in New Orleans (December 27). The band is also beginning work on a new studio album, following several recent live recordings, including their collaboration with the Louisiana Philharmonic Orchestra. For a more thorough history on the accordion’s history in South Louisiana, visit Lafayette Travel at https://www.lafayettetravel.com/blog/stories/post/cajun-creole-instruments-accordion/ Visit https://www.michotaccordions.com/ for more information on Andre Michot’s offerings.

Learn Japanese | JapanesePod101.com (Video)
Top Japanese Words & Review #19 - Learning Materials and Tools

Learn Japanese | JapanesePod101.com (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2025 4:34


learn essential Japanese vocabulary related to learning materials and tools

MJ Morning Show on Q105
MJ Morning Show, Thurs., 12/18/25: Clarification Of Enhanced License Plate Law, We Took Calls

MJ Morning Show on Q105

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2025 186:21


On today's MJ Morning Show:Recap: MJ Morning Show Christmas Party at Village InnCryptocurrencyMorons in the newsSomeone stole at 40 ft. inflatable SantaWin a sportswear firmFentanyl storyIs Michelle pregnant?MJ was craving carbsGifts... Materials vs experiences, Gen Z's... presence or presentsChristmas coronaryBodycam released of arrest at Tampa International Airport of a flight attendantEnhanced license plate law... We took callsHidden Valley Ranch recallChristmas songs that may be stressful for your dogTrue or false: Most adults agree that giving cash as a gift is acceptableChurch nativity scene gone wrongGary Busey imitates geesePorn Hub security breachPlea deal for woman who pooped as a road rage actOscars leaving ABC in a few yearsDiddy may have a hit out on 50 Cent, who claims to have lots of video of DiddyWhich celeb has a 'Brunson Fracture'Miley Cyrus story on Jimmy Kimmel's showJane's Addiction calls it quitsSee Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.

Influencer Confidential
How to SELL Yourself as a Creator or Influencer #277

Influencer Confidential

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 18, 2025 12:39 Transcription Available


Are you scared of “selling yourself” as a creator? If the word sales makes you cringe, hesitate, or want to run the other way…this episode is going to change your mind (in the best way).Because here's the truth: If you want to land paid brand deals, charge your worth, and run your creator business like a business… you HAVE to learn how to sell yourself. Not in a pushy way but in a confident, strategic, business-owner way. And I'm going to show you exactly how in this episode.

Verdict with Ted Cruz
FBI STOPS Anti-American Islamists from Bombing Los Angeles plus Biden DOJ ADMITTED No Probable Cause for Mar-a-lago Raid

Verdict with Ted Cruz

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2025 33:50 Transcription Available


1. Foiled Terror Attack in Los Angeles Incident: FBI arrested five suspects allegedly planning coordinated New Year’s Eve bombings in Los Angeles. Group: Identified as the Turtle Island Liberation Front, described as a radical pro-Palestinian, anti-American extremist group. Details: Planned attacks using improvised explosive devices (IEDs) at five locations. Four suspects arrested in Lucerne Valley while testing bomb components; a fifth arrested in New Orleans. Materials included potassium nitrate, PVC pipes, sulfur powder, and charcoal. Ideology: Anti-U.S., pro-Palestinian, anti-law enforcement; Instagram posts included “Death to America” and “Free Palestine.” 2. DOJ and FBI Emails on Mar-a-Lago Raid Revelation: Internal FBI emails show agents doubted probable cause for the August 2022 raid on Trump’s residence. Concerns: Evidence was “single source, uncorroborated, and possibly outdated.” FBI suggested less intrusive alternatives, like negotiating with Trump’s attorneys. DOJ officials allegedly dismissed optics concerns, saying they “didn’t give a damn.” Implications: The raid was politically motivated, intended to damage Trump’s chances of reelection. 3. Housing, Immigration, and Economic Policy Housing Crisis: Attributes skyrocketing rents and home prices to Biden-era immigration policies, citing a HUD report linking immigration to housing demand. Trump’s Deportation Policy: Claims mass deportations have lowered rents by 1.1% year-over-year and 5.2% since 2022. Economic Measures: Highlights upcoming tax reforms for 2026: No tax on tips. No tax on overtime. No tax on Social Security for seniors. Please Hit Subscribe to this podcast Right Now. Also Please Subscribe to the 47 Morning Update with Ben Ferguson and The Ben Ferguson Show Podcast Wherever You get You're Podcasts. And don't forget to follow the show on Social Media so you never miss a moment! Thanks for Listening YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@VerdictwithTedCruz/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/verdictwithtedcruz X: https://x.com/tedcruz X: https://x.com/benfergusonshowYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@VerdictwithTedCruzSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The John Batchelor Show
S8 Ep203: PREVIEW: Alan Tonelson discusses how China dominates the processing of rare earth minerals, creating a stranglehold on materials vital for US defense and automotive sectors. Although China currently has the United States "over a major barre

The John Batchelor Show

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2025 1:29


PREVIEW: Alan Tonelson discusses how China dominates the processing of rare earth minerals, creating a stranglehold on materials vital for US defense and automotive sectors. Although China currently has the United States "over a major barrel" regarding these essential magnets, Tonelson doubts this strategic advantage will last indefinitely.

Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio
Lew Oliver: How Traditional Neighborhood Development & Walkability Intersect

Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2025 29:05


Communities that endure rarely happen by accident. They are shaped by intentional design and a deep understanding of place. Lew Oliver, founder and principal of Lew Oliver, Inc., joins Host Carol Morgan on the Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio podcast to share his perspective on traditional neighborhood development and the long-term value of thoughtful planning. What does “timeless” really mean in today's housing market? For Oliver, timeless design is not rooted in architectural trends or short-term market appeal. Instead, it is a disciplined approach that places the town — not the individual building — at the center of every decision. A truly timeless place accommodates a wide range of people, lifestyles and life stages while maintaining coherence and character over generations. Oliver often looks to older, storied cities around the world for inspiration. Oliver said, “The things that made these iconic towns were that the buildings were absolutely stunning and well designed and executed, and they shaped the entire community in ways that just single houses could never do.” That philosophy extends beyond massing and layout to the finer points of design. Oliver emphasizes the importance of architectural detailing that feels generous and intentional, with buildings that contribute to the public realm rather than retreat from it. In well-designed towns, staircases, porches and facades extend into streets and plazas, reinforcing a sense of shared space and civic life. Materials also play a critical role in achieving longevity. Local materials are often preferred because they weather gracefully over time, gaining character rather than appearing dated as styles change. Timeless places resist easy categorization because they are grounded in enduring principles rather than fleeting tastes. What is traditional neighborhood development? At the heart of Oliver's work is traditional neighborhood development (TND), a planning approach that prioritizes people, relationships and daily experience over traffic counts and lot yield. “Traditional neighborhood development means that the placement and the detailing of the buildings support creating great places and great streets that prioritize the pedestrian over the car.” That shift in priority has cascading effects on how communities are planned and built. Elements such as rear-loaded alleys, narrower streets, front-facing porches and carefully proportioned setbacks serve as essential tools for creating social streetscapes, allowing homes and buildings to engage the sidewalk directly. In contrast, auto-centric environments often place buildings behind parking lots and wide roadways, making meaningful interaction nearly impossible. In those settings, scale is dictated by speed and vehicle movement rather than human perception, frequently resulting in isolation despite physical proximity. Walkable streets and well-defined public spaces naturally encourage casual encounters — neighbors meeting on a porch, residents stopping to talk on a sidewalk or people lingering in shared green spaces. Oliver describes these everyday interactions as foundational to building trust, belonging and community resilience. Tune into the full episode for deeper insight into timeless placemaking, traditional neighborhood development and why human-scale design continues to resonate. Learn more about Lew Oliver and his work at www.lewoliverinc.com. About Lew Oliver, Inc. Lew Oliver, Inc. is an Atlanta-area design and master planning firm that creates thoughtful, human-centered communities and building plans rooted in principles of New Urbanism. The company specializes in whole town solutions, architectural products and developer services that integrate walkability, contextual design and environmental responsiveness. Its work emphasizes authentic design and harmonious proportions that enhance quality of life. Podcast Thanks Thank you to Denim Marketing for sponsoring Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio. Known as a trendsetter, Denim Marketing has been blogging since 2006 and podcasting since 2011. Contact them when you need quality, original content for social media, public relations, blogging, email marketing and promotions. A comfortable fit for companies of all shapes and sizes, Denim Marketing understands marketing strategies are not one-size-fits-all. The agency works with your company to create a perfectly tailored marketing strategy that will suit your needs and niche. Try Denim Marketing on for size by calling 770-383-3360 or by visiting www.DenimMarketing.com. About Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio, presented by Denim Marketing, highlights the movers and shakers in the Atlanta real estate industry – the home builders, developers, Realtors and suppliers working to provide the American dream for Atlantans. For more information on how you can be featured as a guest, contact Denim Marketing at 770-383-3360 or fill out the Atlanta Real Estate Forum contact form. Subscribe to the Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio podcast on iTunes, and if you like this week's show, be sure to rate it. Atlanta Real Estate Forum Radio was recently honored on FeedSpot's Top 100 Atlanta Podcasts, ranking 16th overall and number one out of all ranked real estate podcasts. The post Lew Oliver: How Traditional Neighborhood Development & Walkability Intersect appeared first on Atlanta Real Estate Forum.

Daf Yomi: Babble on Talmud
The Launderability of Leather (Zevachim 94)

Daf Yomi: Babble on Talmud

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2025 49:58


Daf Yomi Zevachim 94Episode 2174Babble on Talmud with Sruli RappsJoin the chat: https://chat.whatsapp.com/LMbsU3a5f4Y3b61DxFRsqfMERCH: https://www.etsy.com/shop/BabbleOnTalmudSefaria: https://www.sefaria.org.il/Zevachim.94a?lang=heEmail: sruli@babbleontalmud.comInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/babble_on_talmudFacebook: https://www.facebook.com/p/Babble-on-Talmud-100080258961218/#dafyomi #talmud00:00 Intro01:20 Materials that require washing for chatas blood15:20 Fit to be vs actually being meqabel tumah23:24 The launderability of leather46:31 Conclusion

The Balance, by Dr. Catlin Tucker
Strengthening Tier 1 Instruction Through Flexible Use of High-Quality Instructional Materials

The Balance, by Dr. Catlin Tucker

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2025 30:37


High-quality instructional materials are designed to strengthen Tier 1 instruction, but what happens when fidelity turns into rigidity? In this episode, I explore how HQIM can function as a strong foundation rather than a script teachers are expected to follow. I unpack when whole-group instruction makes sense, when small-group instruction is more effective, and how data can guide those decisions. Using a reimagined HQIM lesson as an example, I share how flexible structures like station rotation can create space for differentiation, formative feedback, and student agency. Click here to check out SchoolAI!   Episode Resources Using High-Quality Instructional Materials Flexibly to Strengthen Tier 1 Instruction Resource: Design with HQIM: Guiding Questions for Instructional Coaches & Teachers

Let's Talk Creation
Episode 126: Todd and Paul Talk Selam!! Another hominin like Lucy?

Let's Talk Creation

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 15, 2025 60:12


Lucy may be the most famous Australopithecus fossil, but Selam is much better preserved. Researchers discovered this fossil in 2000 just across the river from where Lucy was found, and the recent exhibit at the Czech National Museum in Prague included this fossil as well as Lucy. In this episode, Paul and Todd review all the details from this skeleton, including a part that is completely unique in Australopithecus discoveries. What's the creationist angle on all this? You'll have to tune in to find out!Materials for this EpisodeWood, Todd Charles and Brummel, P. S. (2023) "Hominin Baraminology Reconsidered with Postcranial Characters," Proceedings of the International Conference on Creationism: Vol. 9, Article 28.DOI: 10.15385/jpicc.2023.9.1.15Available at: https://digitalcommons.cedarville.edu/icc_proceedings/vol9/iss1/28Does Lucy Prove Evolution? (Todd's Blog)https://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2025/01/does-lucy-prove-evolution.htmlPaul and Todd's Czech Anthropology Adventurehttps://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2025/10/paul-and-todds-czech-anthropology.htmleLucy - an evolutionary resource with scans of some of her boneshttps://elucy.org/National Museum of the Czech Republichttps://www.nm.cz/Episodes mentioned in this episodePlaylist of Paleoanthropology Episodeshttps://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PLOzn-NecEi8EQEPL-CsmVZRo--osOXXFf

Jordan Is My Lawyer
December 11, 2025: Courts Order Release of Epstein Grand Jury Materials, $12 Billion Aid Package for Farmers, Changes to National Park Free Entrance Days, Social Media Vetting for Tourists, and More.

Jordan Is My Lawyer

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 30:20


SUBSCRIBE TO JORDAN'S FREE NEWSLETTER. PEACE TALKS: Want Jordan's advice on how to navigate relationships amid the polarizing political climate? ⁠SUBMIT YOUR DILEMMA HERE⁠. Email me Jordan GOOD NEWS story: jordan@unbiasednetwork.com Get the facts, without the spin. UNBIASED offers a clear, impartial recap of US news, including politics, elections, legal news, and more. Hosted by lawyer Jordan Berman, each episode provides a recap of current political events plus breakdowns of complex concepts—like constitutional rights, recent Supreme Court rulings, and new legislation—in an easy-to-understand way. No personal opinions, just the facts you need to stay informed on the daily news that matters. If you miss how journalism used to be, you're in the right place. In today's episode: Trump Introduces $12B Aid Package for Farmers; Here's Why and What It's Intended to Help With (2:16) Multiple Federal Judges Order Unsealing of Secret Grand Jury Materials from Epstein and Maxwell Prosecutions (9:12) Ex-FBI Agents Sue Patel, Bondi, and DOJ After They Were Fired for Kneeling During 2020 Protest (~17:14) Quick Hitters: Fed Cuts Rates, CBP Proposes Social Media Vetting for Tourists, State Department Changes Official Font, Trump Administration Opens Applications for New Gold Card, Mamdani Sparks Debate After Appointing Convict Turned Social Justice Activist, MyPillow CEO Mike Lindell Announces Governor Run (~20:48) Rumor Has It: Did Trump Remove MLK Day and Juneteenth from List National Park Free Admission Days? (~24:18) Critical Thinking Segment (~27:49) SUBSCRIBE TO JORDAN'S FREE NEWSLETTER. Watch this episode on YouTube. Follow Jordan on Instagram and TikTok. All sources for this episode can be found here.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

Dental A Team w/ Kiera Dent and Dr. Mark Costes
This Is the Holy Grail of Dentistry

Dental A Team w/ Kiera Dent and Dr. Mark Costes

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 11, 2025 16:25


Dr. Pia Lieb returns for a second part on the podcast. In this episode, she talks about being obsessed with your craft, and why that extra 10% for patients will take you miles. Episode resources: Subscribe to The Dental A-Team podcast Schedule a Practice Assessment Leave us a review Transcript: Kiera Dent (00:10) I love that you, ⁓ I think this is probably what's made you really great. I don't know. I've heard a lot about you. But I think what you do is you make sure that the patients are obsessed with the results and not that Dr. Pia is obsessed. Like you're obsessed with the craftsmanship of what you've done.   You're really talented at that. But like hearing that you let people walk out and go try these on and what is it going to be like before you do it? That to me says that you are so obsessed about the outcome and the result for the patient. And then your job is to make sure you have the most excellent craftsmanship, the best product, the best techniques, the best method to get them the outcome they want. And I think hearing that, I'm just so proud of you. And I'm so grateful to hear that there are clinicians in our industry that   are obsessed about that rather than the reverse. Because I think some people are obsessed about maybe the dollar, maybe about doing these types of cases, but they're not the best at it, or this is what I think that they should look like. You really want to make sure that that patient is like a walking raving fan of you before you even do the work on them. And that I think is very special about you.   Dr Pia (01:17) Thanks, but you know, I like to say that, you know, like, the thing that people don't understand is I'm technically the Hermes of dentistry because I, it takes a long time to make a Birkin, right? It's all made by hand. So are the veneers, hence why it's so hard to get one. But look, I   Kiera Dent (01:39) Mm-hmm.   Dr Pia (01:42) 22 years old and it still looks brand new because it's the quality of the craftsmanship you know and I tell all my patients you should get anywhere between 20 and 25 years out of the mirror okay this whole nonsense of five years and ten years that's because they want to redo the case and for you to pay them again if you're doing good quality work the only reason they should be replaced is because you have recession due to old age   Kiera Dent (01:55) Wow.   Mm-hmm.   Wow. And you don't have any issues with these super, super thin ones popping off.   Dr Pia (02:17) No, because okay, let me let me explain to you. Let me explain to you physics. Okay. Okay, do you know why they pop off?   Kiera Dent (02:19) Let's talk about this. I'm so, cause a lot of people haven't popped off and it's so scary. So I'm like, let's talk about this.   You know, this is why I'm asking you. Cause I don't like, feel my guess is that they were not bonded on correctly. And that's my guess. Okay. I'm ready.   Dr Pia (02:28) Okay.   No, it's, two things. There's two things. That's   one, but that's the second one. Right. But let me explain to you. Do you remember when you were in high school and we went to, ⁓   Kiera Dent (02:37) Okay.   Dr Pia (02:43) ⁓ chemistry and we had the microscope with the two glass slabs and we were looking for amoebas and all that stuff. Okay, remember how we were all a painting that you know what and we all tried to pry those two glass slabs apart and it never worked? Well that's the same principle with veneers. The thinner they are the stronger they are.   Kiera Dent (02:51) Yep.   Yeah   Fascinating.   Dr Pia (03:06) Okay   and I'll tell you why because teeth you know because you're in the business so teeth we all have ligaments right the teeth are hard it's a hard structure the bone is a hard structure so we have the dental ligaments right they're horizontal they're transversal so those are like the shock absorbers that hold the tooth inside the bone socket. Now   Kiera Dent (03:12) Mm-hmm. Right.   Mm-hmm.   Mm-hmm.   Dr Pia (03:30) when you're speaking and when you're eating those teeth move microns not visible to the eye but your teeth have mobility just like trees have mobility in the wind right we don't see the trees move unless it's a hundred mile an hour winds but if you have a five mile an hour wind you don't see that tree moving right but it does move   Kiera Dent (03:44) Mm-hmm.   Right.   Mm-hmm. Mm-hmm.   Dr Pia (03:56) So   when you're doing these 3D print and you're filing like the turkey teeth where you have the little pegs left and the ratio of tooth to porcelain is 50-50 or you're having 60-40 or 70-30 that 3D printed porcelain does not flex.   Kiera Dent (04:05) Yep.   Makes sense.   Mm-hmm.   Dr Pia (04:23) but your tooth does. So that's the number one issue why they pop off. The thicker they are, the easier they'll pop off. And the number two reason is the dentist has no idea about occlusion. Because if you have a premature contact or you have lateral excursions or a protrusive, you're going to pop those off like there's no tomorrow.   Kiera Dent (04:23) True.   Interesting.   Mm-hmm. Yeah. Yes.   Totally. Yeah.   Dr Pia (04:51) So these are   the basic principles. If you don't know occlusion, you shouldn't be doing dentistry. I'm talking about GPs or it's the holy grail of this profession. Occlusion, occlusion, occlusion.   Kiera Dent (05:03) And I will tell you as a patient who has the most obnoxious bite, ⁓ there are dentists who do no occlusion and there are dentists who don't because my bite you adjust one teeny tiny little micron and the whole bite gets thrown off and they're like, no care, it should be fine. And I'm like, I can always tell if you're just doing blue paper and you're having me bite chew all around, I know you don't understand occlusion because I'm like, you're never going to get it. I'm going to be, you're dancing all the way around. Like from the patient who has sat there,   four hours upon hours and had to find other dentists because the dentist who thought they could do it truly can't do it. And this isn't me being a jerk. This is me being the patient who has to suffer through a dentist who doesn't understand occlusion. Like what you just said as a patient, ⁓ and like there's some, know, you can have it like completely off and like, yeah, it feels great. And then you have patients like myself that teeny, teeny, teeny tiny. I can feel it. You can't even find it. And I'm like, no, it's off. My bite is not, my teeth are not coming together.   Dr Pia (05:59) You always know, the patient always knows. They're always right.   Kiera Dent (06:02) always. And please don't have me laying back.   Please don't have me lay back. Let me sit up. Let me lay back. Let me tell you on both of them, because it's always different. And they're like, no, it's good. And I'm like, it's not. You're not sitting in my mouth.   Dr Pia (06:09) Yeah!   Because   you most probably have long centric, right? So you have one occlusion when your head is back and you have a different occlusion when your head is forward. Now, if that's the case, you need to check both.   Kiera Dent (06:18) Mm-hmm.   Absolutely.   Correct. Thank you. Preach, please, for the patients like myself. These are the pieces. And I don't disagree because when I have seen dentists and they're not checking that and the patients are constantly popping off, I'm like, just maybe check to see how those teeth are hitting in all directions because they will pop.   Dr Pia (06:43) ⁓ but let   me interrupt you for one thing. The other thing that's an issue, okay, if they do it and you're anesthetized, you're not going to get a good read. You always have to call the patient back the next day and check the occlusion again in all the positions when they're not anesthetized because I will guarantee you on my career that it will be off.   Kiera Dent (06:53) ⁓ no, never.   Yep. Yep.   Always. And they're like, no, you can bite when you're numb. And I'm like, I don't even know how I'm biting. I have no clue. I know I'm biting differently. Preach. These are the things and the conversations that I've said. And having somebody like yourself who's so good at this. I mean, you guys, has a referral-based practice. Like people are flying in to see her. I can see why, because how you speak about this is so different. And I think today, one, I hope people are inspired of things to do, things to not do.   different ways to do this. I also love the risk that you took. I love the growth. I love the determination of self of I will be the best. You have the passion. You've got the grit. You've got the tenacity. I have doctors who are great surgeons that are truly incredible at this. I've got doctors that are amazing at occlusion. I've got doctors that are amazing at fillings. There's a doctor and one of his patients said like, have the smoothest fillings in all the land. And he's like, that's really weird. I had him fix a filling that chipped.   And I'm not going to lie, he has the smoothest fillings in all the land. Like I've never felt a feeling as smooth as this man did for me.   Dr Pia (08:12) That's because he polished it afterwards.   99% don't polish them. You know, I had a colleague, checked, he did a, we put a crown in and I'm like, Joe, can we polish it? He goes, no, you're good to go. I'm like, no, I'm not. He's like, but I polished it. I'm like, okay, there is a porcelain polishing kit that you've got to go red, blue, white.   Kiera Dent (08:18) I was shocked.   Hahaha   Dr Pia (08:40) and the white has to be on low rpms and you have to make sure that it's shiny and polished and he's like i don't have the patience for that go do it yourself in the office and i did   Kiera Dent (08:52) But I think like that even I feel like dentistry you It to me what I'm hearing is a lot of dentists. It sounds like go 90 % of the way But it's like that extra 10 % is what really in my opinion makes a lot of difference for patients It's doing the polishing. It's doing the small finesse like you you're working in such a small space anyway Why not make it absolutely perfect and dr. P? think you really inspired me to even look at myself in my life of where's that extra 10 % that I could really just make a dazzle Where could I really make it shine?   It's not, it doesn't take a lot of time, but it does take intentionality. So as we wrap today, this has been such a fascinating podcast and I've absolutely loved it. And I just appreciate your time. I want you to wrap with, you can do do's, don'ts or a mix of the in between. What should people who are doing cosmetic dentistry from your perspective as truly one of the most expert people I've ever met do in cosmetic dentistry or don't or you're welcome to do a mixture as just a quick wrap rattle of things that you've seen in your career.   Dr Pia (09:48) Before   we do that, want to talk to you, I think that we should do this again because I want to talk to you about DSOs and private practice.   Kiera Dent (09:56) Mm, yeah.   That is very fascinating. This is heavy on my mind of all different topics currently in the landscape, which I don't disagree with you.   Dr Pia (10:08) Yeah, that's things are things are changing and not for the better.   Kiera Dent (10:12) They are.   Yeah, absolutely. That will be it.   Dr Pia (10:17) Because I'm a dinosaur   now. I mean, there's very few of us that do handmade work anymore. So getting back to your question. Look, I   Kiera Dent (10:22) I don't disagree.   Dr Pia (10:30) cosmetic dentistry you have to be very very very passionate about it and and the key is to leave your ego at the door and try to be the best version of yourself and that means take every course if you're a young dentist or still in dental school take every course that you can take you know look on Instagram and find the people that do the handmade work like myself and you know there's a handful of   that do it and ceramist as well and find the good beautiful work and reach out to everyone like you know everybody can reach out to me you know and ask me like hi how do I do this or how you know how should I go about doing that the thing is you have to be passionate if you're do and what I've told every student of mine in 18 years you're not doing this for the money the money will come you have to do this because you love doing it   Kiera Dent (11:31) I don't disagree. think, on that note, Dr. Pia, what is the best way for people to follow you? Because I love that you said this and I tell people all the time, the world has shifted. We are in 2025. I'm going to choose a plastic surgeon, a cosmetic dentist, a surgeon based on their Instagram. I'm gonna go look at their photos. I'm gonna go look at their work. We don't live in a world where we are isolated just to our own state anymore. Like people fly across the country to go get the best work done. So.   Dr Pia (11:56) yeah, mean Instagram,   I get internationals from Instagram. I've gotten Kazakhstan, I've gotten the UK, I've gotten the French, I've gotten so many and they're all Instagram. And I'm like, okay. I'm just Dr. P, I spelled out the D-O-C-T-O-R. P-I-A, my first name.   Kiera Dent (12:06) How cool is that? So what is your Instagram handle? So people can follow and kind of see what you do.   Dr. Pia,   and I think if you want to see someone, I know you said you're a dinosaur in this, but as we've been chatting, I'm like, this is the doctor that I would fly across the country to go to. This is the one that I would go see. She knows what she's talking about. She's got the finesse, she's got the passion. She's willing to do one veneer. She's the person I'm going to trust to do work on my mouth. And it's how does she get seen? How does she get known? How does she do this? Guys, these are the legends. These are the people. These are people that have just like done what you're wanting to do.   Follow her and also, I don't know if you have heard at the beginning of the podcast, it sounds like Dr. Pia, you're passionate about helping any person who this is their dream become the best in the industry. And that to me is why she...   Dr Pia (12:51) for sure. For sure. Just DM me if you have any questions.   That's the whole like Instagram is the new portal of learning.   Kiera Dent (13:01) Mm-hmm.   Dr Pia (13:04) Just ask questions. mean, it's none of us were born knowing how to do veneers. We all had to learn it at some point. And as long as your ego is at the door and you're willing to learn and be the best version of yourself, then you're great. You're great. But if you think you know it all, I'm still learning. And I've been doing this for decades. I'm still learning. I want to be up to date and things are changing. Materials are changing. There's so many things.   Kiera Dent (13:13) Right.   Dr Pia (13:34) Styles are changing. Thank God the Hollywood smile is dying. Finally. This took about 16 years, but thank God it's dying now. It's going back to natural   Kiera Dent (13:34) Yeah.   No. Right.   which Dr. Pia, people didn't get to hear this. I heard this pre-show. You came on, we were just chatting and you said, I love my career. I love what I do. And to hear that you've been doing it this long and can still say that you love that. That's what my hope and wishes for so many doctors out there is that, and like, yes, we will get you back on the podcast to talk about DSO private practice because I think so many people are like get in, get out real quick. And I think that you are just such a great example of loving your craft, loving what you do.   committing to be the expert and look, you've had this long of a career and you're still obsessed with what you do. And I just want to honor you and say thank you and thank you for inspiring dentists today on the podcast.   Dr Pia (14:24) Well, thanks for having me. And look, the young generation, the new graduates that are out there, I think we need to tell them the do's and don'ts of DSO.   Kiera Dent (14:36) Absolutely. So that's a wrap for today with Dr. Pia. We'll have her back on talking about DSOs and new grads and the, I think the perspectives, because right now it's a world of a lot of noise and to find wisdom through that noise is paramount. So Dr. Pia, thanks for being on. Thanks for sharing your cosmetic knowledge. Yeah, I did too. And for all of you listening, I hope you commit to being the best at your craft, to getting hungry. There's a great quote. I'm a BYU football fan ⁓ and their coach says, be hungry.   Dr Pia (14:51) It was a pleasure, I loved it!   Kiera Dent (15:05) Stay hungry, stay humble. And I think that that's what Dr. Pia has done. And I hope all of you commit to that. And as always, thanks for listening and I'll catch you next time on the Dental A Team podcast.  

The Documentary Podcast
Steel from shipwrecks

The Documentary Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2025 26:29


In recent years component parts of historic shipwrecks have started to disappear, with reports of mysterious vessels and scavengers floating around. This phenomenon has been reported in Indonesia, Australia, and the Netherlands. One theory is that the target for plunderers is pre-atomic steel, i.e any steel produced before the nuclear testing era, and therefore free of radioactive particles. Its purer material composition makes it essential in the manufacturing of specialist scientific tools such as MRI machines, and as such is highly valuable. Shipwrecks - oftentimes war graves - are one of the few remaining sources for this material. Materials scientist Anna Ploszajski investigates a murky picture of illegal plundering across the globe.