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Eight Milwaukee Admirals players and assistant coach Matt Donovan have taken part in the World Juniors. They share their experiences.
Manitoba Moose broadcaster Daniel Fink discusses his team and also compares his favorite road cities with Aaron. Also, Admirals assistant coach Matt Donovan talks about his first month as a coach, not a player.
Former Admirals defenseman Matt Donovan describes what it's like to go from player to assistant coach. The ubiquitous Matt Menzl is the co-host and looks at the Top 3 Stories to follow for the 2024-25 Milwaukee Admirals.
On this episode of the It's All Your Fault podcast, Jeremy K. Gover of AP-Radio visits with new Milwaukee Admirals Assistant Coach Matt Donovan about the following : Why get into coaching so soon after playing?What's the excitement like?What do Milwaukee Admirals fans need to know about you?Can your experience all over the hockey world provide a unique perspective to guys?Gover also touches on the incredibly sad passing of Johnny Gaudreau and Matthew Gaudreau.Follow both of our hosts on Twitter at @ItsGovertime & @emma_lingan and follow our guest at @SquatchDonovan !
For every character there is to love on The Vampire Diaries, there are a few to hate. While the list mostly includes annoying villains, useless supernaturals, and guest stars there are two characters in the main cast that are well known for annoying the fan base. You already know we're talking about Matt Donovan and Elena Gilbert. But is Matt hated because he's boring or because he's a terrible boyfriend to Caroline? Is Elena hated because she's a pick-me or because she switched from Stefan to Damon? In this special episode, we talk about the main reasons why people hate these two and whether we actually hate Matt and Elena.To be included in an upcoming special: Call (470) 205-4958 to leave a voicemail sharing your theories and ask questions for us to discuss in a call-in episode! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
4/26/24: Reps Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais & Pat Duffy on herds, gaggles, budgets & parliaments. U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limon at Smith: ArtBeat w/ the Poetry Center's Matt Donovan & Jen Blackburn. Atty Steven Schwartz: Mass. nursing home residents coming home! Silas Kopf: Riverside Industries' auction tonight!
4/26/24: Reps Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais & Pat Duffy on herds, gaggles, budgets & parliaments. U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limon at Smith: ArtBeat w/ the Poetry Center's Matt Donovan & Jen Blackburn. Atty Steven Schwartz: Mass. nursing home residents coming home! Silas Kopf: Riverside Industries' auction tonight!
4/26/24: Reps Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais & Pat Duffy on herds, gaggles, budgets & parliaments. U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limon at Smith: ArtBeat w/ the Poetry Center's Matt Donovan & Jen Blackburn. Atty Steven Schwartz: Mass. nursing home residents coming home! Silas Kopf: Riverside Industries' auction tonight!
4/26/24: Reps Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais & Pat Duffy on herds, gaggles, budgets & parliaments. U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limon at Smith: ArtBeat w/ the Poetry Center's Matt Donovan & Jen Blackburn. Atty Steven Schwartz: Mass. nursing home residents coming home! Silas Kopf: Riverside Industries' auction tonight!
4/26/24: Reps Mindy Domb, Natalie Blais & Pat Duffy on herds, gaggles, budgets & parliaments. U.S. Poet Laureate Ada Limon at Smith: ArtBeat w/ the Poetry Center's Matt Donovan & Jen Blackburn. Atty Steven Schwartz: Mass. nursing home residents coming home! Silas Kopf: Riverside Industries' auction tonight!
That was Matt Donovan. Matt has had a long and successful career in the Additive Manufacturing sector going back to the early days of the technology. He started his career as a Manufacturing Engineering and he shares his story today on the winding paths he's taken in the world of 3D Printing. Before we get started head over to www.3degreescompany.com and subscribe to the podcast. Remember you can listen to the show anywhere you download your podcasts including Spotify, Apple, Amazon, or Stitcher. Also, if you or your company are looking for materials, qualification, and or general Additive Manufacturing support. Reach out to the team through our website or via email at info@3degreescompany.com
How do we define work and the skills needed to do the work? The way we view and assess skills is often through assessing and appraising someone's output. But the problem is that most organizations aren't capturing the right data and using it to gain insight.According to Matt Donovan—the Chief Learning and Innovation Officer at GP Strategies—Job descriptions and skills in general describe the baseline. They are not what makes someone great at what they do. So how do we define the work and the skills needed to do the work? How can we capture a high-performer's secret sauce? What are they doing that's making it a successful experience versus what's written in the job description?We dive into a fascinating conversation about where we are now, how AI is going to both help and disrupt organizations, and what the future of skills assessment could look like. You will want to hear this episode if you are interested in...Join the RedThread Research Community! [4:18]Learn more about Matt Donovan and GP Strategies [5:03] What is a skills-based organization? [7:20] How Matt approaches scope of work [9:33] Building buy-in in your organization [15:55] Matt's advice for adopting a skills approach [19:11]Capturing the “secret sauce” in an organization [21:28] Taking a change management approach [28:13] The lightning round [30:14] Measuring the work being done [37:10] Data-driven performance management [43:32] How do we begin to bridge the gap? [47:05] Why Matt is passionate about learning [54:40] Resources & People MentionedJoin the RedThread Research Community!The Checklist Manifesto: How to Get Things RightConnect with Matt DonovanConnect on LinkedInConnect With Red Thread ResearchWebsite: Red Thread ResearchOn LinkedInOn FacebookOn TwitterSubscribe to WORKPLACE STORIES
Marketing to the government is very different from a B2B approach. A lot of government-focused companies have strategies in place to crack this code, and have even engaged marketing and PR agencies to help them do it right. Even so, it's too easy to make avoidable errors that can derail your program — and your ability to engage government buyers.To find out how to avoid 5 of the biggest mistakes that government marketers and their agencies can make, we're talking with Matt Donovan, a Merritt Group partner who leads the team focused on government marketing and PR.
Hello everyone! My name is Ladek and my guest for this episode is Matt Donovan, a self-described “slayer” of shiny objects, recovering instructional designer, advocate for the learner, warrior for ruthless relevance… and as his day job, Matt is Chief Learning and Innovation Officer for GP Strategies.In this future looking conversation, Matt and I talk about00:00 › Start6:24 › Strategic—What strategies, processes and tech are really popping in the corporate L&D space recently, and how has GP Strategies responded?18:00 › Innovative—When innovating, at what point do you put an “alpha” out there to start testing, and at what stage do you move to something that is production-ready?24:49 › Transformative—How are L&D and education changing in terms of the infrastructure around learning and learner access? And, how is the infrastructure around us going to change to support more personalized immediate learning opportunities?36:35 › Visionary—What is Matt's vision about Web 3.0 and Artificial Intelligence, and how will they impact what we normally think of the arc of adult continuous learning?44:37 › Transcendent—Matt's opinion about the near future of learning and what we all should be doing to prepare and remain relevant?Listen to AI experts cut through the noise in the AI in Learning Summit.Hundreds of hours of top-notch content: Check out eLearnMagazine.com/ai-in-learning-summit to get your free ticket
Welcome back to another exciting episode of Girls Gone Hallmark! This week, Megan and Wendy dig into "Love in the Great Smoky Mountains: A National Park Romance." But, as always, they're not afraid to give their honest opinions. Does this movie live up to the Hallmark standard of romance and charm, or does it fall short? Your 5-STAR ratings and reviews are so helpful to our podcast. Tell other Hallmark movie fans why they should give Girls Gone Hallmark a listen. Write your review here (hot tip: use your Apple Podcast app to write the review, not a desktop version). About "Love in the Great Smoky Mountains" This is the third movie in the “A National Park Romance” series from Hallmark Channel. It was filmed in the Great Smoky Mountains in Tennessee, as well as Fall Creek Falls State Park and Knoxville, TN. According to the National Park Conservation Association website, the southeastern United States was formerly inhabited by the Cherokee Nation. Their hunting grounds included the mountains and valleys that are now encompassed by the Great Smoky Mountains National Park. Arielle Kebbel plays Haley James. She has 77 prior acting credits, including Hallmark movies "A Bride for Christmas" and "A Brush with Love." She's was also Lindsay (Dean's wife) on Gilmore Girls for 9 episodes, the feature film "John Tucker Must Die" and 3 episodes of "UnREAL." Zach Roerig plays Rob. This appears to be his first Hallmark movie. Other acting credits include his 171 episode run as Matt Donovan on "The Vampire Diaries," 281 episodes on daytime soap "As the World Turns" and 6 episodes as Cash on "Friday Night Lights." This was written by Bruce D. Johnson who has 10 writing credits including Hallmark's "Journey of My Heart" and "Love on the Slopes." Danny J. Boyle served as director. He has 43 previous directing credits including "Nightmare School Moms" and "The Man with My Husband's Face" both from this year. Supporting cast including Danielle Vega as Sky and Kai Braden as Troy Winters. Fan Favorite Fall Hallmark Movie Reviews Get ready to welcome the fall season with your favorite Hallmark movies and Girls Gone Hallmark! This season, we are bringing plethora of fan favorites that you wouldn't want to miss. Stay tuned as we release brand new movie reviews every Tuesday. Make sure to subscribe to our podcast, so you never miss out on any of our exciting reviews. Falling for You - Hallmark Movie Review starring Taylor Cole and Tyler Hynes
In this episode of Your Drone Questions Answered (Episode 21), we delve into the world of mapping and processing crop and plant health using drones. Our guest, Matt Donovan, CEO of Agriculture Intelligence Inc. and Chief Product Officer of AgroView.ai, shares valuable insights and expertise.The question at hand is whether a standard RGB camera on a drone is sufficient for crop and plant health mapping or if an NDVI sensor is needed. Matt explains that while an RGB collection can offer some indications of crop leaf density and greenness, an NDVI analysis typically requires a multispectral collection with a five-band sensor, including RGB, near-infrared, and Red Edge.To ensure the best practices for crop health mapping, it's essential to understand wide-scale data collection and choose the right drone specifications for efficient results. Drones play a vital role in large-scale growing operations, providing accurate data analysis.When it comes to choosing the right drone, it depends on the payload and desired outcomes. Popular US drones with longer range capabilities are available, but payload compatibility is crucial.Don't forget to submit your drone questions on YDQA.io or join the Drone Launch Connect community for more discussions on the exciting world of drones. Stay tuned for more episodes of Your Drone Questions Answered!
Matt Donovan speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about his prose poem “Guy with a Gun,” which appeared in The Common's fall issue. Matt talks about the conversation that inspired the poem—an encounter with a Sandy Hook parent that highlights the complex gray area around guns and gun ownership. He also discusses how his poetry collection about the issue of guns in the US evolved from a nonfiction book proposal, his aims in undertaking the project, and his job running The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Matt Donovan is the author of three collections of poetry, and a book of lyric essays. His latest collection, The Dug-Up Gun Museum, came out last year from BOA Editions. He is the recipient of a Whiting Award, a Rome Prize in Literature, a Creative Capital Grant, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Literature. He serves as director of The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Read Matt's poems in The Common here. Read more from Matt here. The Common is a print and online literary magazine publishing stories, essays, and poems that deepen our collective sense of place. On our podcast and in our pages, The Common features established and emerging writers from around the world. Read more and subscribe to the magazine at thecommononline.org, and follow us on Twitter @CommonMag. Emily Everett is managing editor of the magazine and host of the podcast. Her debut novel is forthcoming from Putnam Books. Her stories appear in the Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, Tin House Online, and Mississippi Review. She is a 2022 Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Matt Donovan speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about his prose poem “Guy with a Gun,” which appeared in The Common's fall issue. Matt talks about the conversation that inspired the poem—an encounter with a Sandy Hook parent that highlights the complex gray area around guns and gun ownership. He also discusses how his poetry collection about the issue of guns in the US evolved from a nonfiction book proposal, his aims in undertaking the project, and his job running The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Matt Donovan is the author of three collections of poetry, and a book of lyric essays. His latest collection, The Dug-Up Gun Museum, came out last year from BOA Editions. He is the recipient of a Whiting Award, a Rome Prize in Literature, a Creative Capital Grant, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Literature. He serves as director of The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Read Matt's poems in The Common here. Read more from Matt here. The Common is a print and online literary magazine publishing stories, essays, and poems that deepen our collective sense of place. On our podcast and in our pages, The Common features established and emerging writers from around the world. Read more and subscribe to the magazine at thecommononline.org, and follow us on Twitter @CommonMag. Emily Everett is managing editor of the magazine and host of the podcast. Her debut novel is forthcoming from Putnam Books. Her stories appear in the Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, Tin House Online, and Mississippi Review. She is a 2022 Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/literature
Matt Donovan speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about his prose poem “Guy with a Gun,” which appeared in The Common's fall issue. Matt talks about the conversation that inspired the poem—an encounter with a Sandy Hook parent that highlights the complex gray area around guns and gun ownership. He also discusses how his poetry collection about the issue of guns in the US evolved from a nonfiction book proposal, his aims in undertaking the project, and his job running The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Matt Donovan is the author of three collections of poetry, and a book of lyric essays. His latest collection, The Dug-Up Gun Museum, came out last year from BOA Editions. He is the recipient of a Whiting Award, a Rome Prize in Literature, a Creative Capital Grant, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Literature. He serves as director of The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Read Matt's poems in The Common here. Read more from Matt here. The Common is a print and online literary magazine publishing stories, essays, and poems that deepen our collective sense of place. On our podcast and in our pages, The Common features established and emerging writers from around the world. Read more and subscribe to the magazine at thecommononline.org, and follow us on Twitter @CommonMag. Emily Everett is managing editor of the magazine and host of the podcast. Her debut novel is forthcoming from Putnam Books. Her stories appear in the Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, Tin House Online, and Mississippi Review. She is a 2022 Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/poetry
Matt Donovan speaks to managing editor Emily Everett about his prose poem “Guy with a Gun,” which appeared in The Common's fall issue. Matt talks about the conversation that inspired the poem—an encounter with a Sandy Hook parent that highlights the complex gray area around guns and gun ownership. He also discusses how his poetry collection about the issue of guns in the US evolved from a nonfiction book proposal, his aims in undertaking the project, and his job running The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Matt Donovan is the author of three collections of poetry, and a book of lyric essays. His latest collection, The Dug-Up Gun Museum, came out last year from BOA Editions. He is the recipient of a Whiting Award, a Rome Prize in Literature, a Creative Capital Grant, and a National Endowment for the Arts Fellowship in Literature. He serves as director of The Boutelle-Day Poetry Center at Smith College. Read Matt's poems in The Common here. Read more from Matt here. The Common is a print and online literary magazine publishing stories, essays, and poems that deepen our collective sense of place. On our podcast and in our pages, The Common features established and emerging writers from around the world. Read more and subscribe to the magazine at thecommononline.org, and follow us on Twitter @CommonMag. Emily Everett is managing editor of the magazine and host of the podcast. Her debut novel is forthcoming from Putnam Books. Her stories appear in the Kenyon Review, Electric Literature, Tin House Online, and Mississippi Review. She is a 2022 Massachusetts Cultural Council Fellow. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Matt Donovan joined us to discuss being the first and only NHL player born and raised in Oklahoma, Playing in the NHL, AHL, Swedish Hockey league, and DEL (Germany), Matt is going into his 14th pro season freshly signed with the Chicago Wolves in the AHL. Tune in for some great stories and insight on an incredible career and amazing guy! Huge thanks to Dono for coming on the pod!!
Joined by comic book writer and historian Keith Dallas, Mike and Dan remember Oklahoma-born defenseman Matt Donovan, who endured many high hopes and trade proposals during his short time with the Islanders. Seen as a possible replacement to talented captain Mark Streit, Donovan showed signs of stability and flashes of greatness at both the AHL and NHL levels. But his stunted development during a chaotic time in Islanders history meant he never quite got off the ground the way many hoped. But he was good enough to sit in the press box just in case for a full season and be included in a thousand fan trade proposals, none of which actually came to fruition. Keith tells us about his unique interactions with Donovan as an Islanders season ticket holder, as well as the story of how the hell he came to own a Matt Donovan jersey. Subscribe to our Patreon! Plans start as low as $2 a month and patrons get ad-free episodes of the shows, bonus podcasts, written posts, discounts and much more. Pre-order your Bryan Trottier-Mat Barzal "Then & Now" bobblehead from the fine folks at Foco today. These pieces are limited to just 72, so don't wait. Pre-order today. Visit our friends: Vintage Ice Hockey for t-shirts, hoodies and jerseys with hundreds of classic hockey logos, and our Al Arbour and The Island merch which benefit dementia research. If you spend $50 or more, use the code FOURCUPS to get a free The Island coffee mug or pint glass or an Islanders Anxiety puck. The Pinot Project has a Rosé, a Pinot Grigio and a Wine Enthusiast Best Buy Pinot Noir, all under $15 a bottle. Available at local wine stores and UBS Arena. Visit Lighthousehockey.com for the most up-to-date Islanders news and discussion. Islanders Anxiety podcasts are part of the Fans First Sports Network (@FansFirstSN). Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
In this episode of the podcast, Host Michael Thiel sits down with Matt Donovan, Chief Learning Officer at GP Strategies,... The post Episode #105 | The Future of Corporate Academies appeared first on GP Strategies Corporation.
This week might as well be called The Dumbass Olympics. Almost all the characters make dumb decisions all episode - except, for some reason, Matt Donovan of all people. Katherine and Stefan go on a road trip to “find Damon”, where Stefan gets … distracted. Nadia and Matt tell the world's least believable lie to Caroline and Tyler - and what's worse is Tyler sort of buys it? Enzo and Damon are trapped at a farmhouse by Wes and the travelers, and do not use their time wisely. At the farmhouse, Katherine has a plan to win Stefan and get Damon out of the picture - and it's a bad plan! But the episode actually ends with some smart decisions: a werewolf bite and a realization. Remember to rate, review, and share, brothers! Follow us on Instagram @doppelgangerspodcast! --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/doppelgangerspodcast/support
The queens show why it matters how you wrap it up.Support Breaking Form! Buy Aaron's new book, Stop Lying. And pre-order James's new book, Romantic Comedy, available from Four Way Books in March 2023. Read Robert Hayden's iconic “Those Winter Sundays” here.Read Sharon Olds's “I Go Back to May 1937” hereYou can read Louise Glück's poem “Vita Nova” here. TERF Adrienne Rich's poem “Diving into the Wreck” can be read here. Read Lucille Clifton's “why some people be mad at me sometimes” here. Martha Zweig's poem “Burying the Cat” from Vinegar Bone can be read here. Threa Almontaser's website is https://www.threawrites.com. Read her poem “Hidden Bombs in My Coochie” here.Read Toi Derricotte's poem “On the Turning Up of Unidentified Black Female Corpses” here. If you'd like to read more about “Missing White Woman Syndrome,” here's a great article in the New Yorker where true-crime scholar Jean Murley discusses the history of it.Read Derrick Austin's poem “Taking My Father and Brother to The Frick." You can see Derrick Austin read (with Ashley M. Jones) here.Matt Donovan's poem “Shooting Justin Bieber and bin Laden in the Woods” in the Massachussets Review here. Visit Matt Donovan online at his website at: https://mattdonovanwriting.comRead James Harms's poem “Mexican Christmas” here. Eugenia Leigh's poem “Monsters” from her first book, Blood, Sparrows and Sparrows, can be read here. Her 2nd book, Bianca, is getting rave reviews! Order it now here. And visit Eugenia Leigh online at https://www.eugenialeigh.com
TVD 06x01 | AND WE'RE BACK! Someone looks like Idina Menzel but Brian's not sure who, Matt Donovan's a vampire racist, and Nina Dobrev had an insane time at Comic Con in 2014. Link to the HitFix interview we talk about extensively: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K3eQot05Z1w
We at the Streaming Science project want to know: How is Artificial Intelligence impacting the Agricultural Industry? In this episode, UF AEC masters graduate Savannah Gardner sits down with Matt Donovan, the CEO of UF Innovate Accelerate @ The Hub company Agriculture Intelligence Inc. Matt provides an overview of Agriculture Intelligence and how AI is directly impacting precision agriculture. Through this podcast, I hope you gain insight into Matt's work in this industry, the role of AI in research and agriculture, and an overall sense of how scientists are moving forward to create new and unique solutions to address current global issues.
A new podcast series, “Regions Business Radio Houston", covers financial topics such as banking and lending, mortgages, wealth management, and more, while also introducing you to many of the top executives with Regions Bank in the Houston market. Hosted by John Stacy, Houston Market President with Regions, all episodes of "Regions Business Radio Houston" are […]
A new podcast series, “Regions Business Radio Houston", covers financial topics such as banking and lending, mortgages, wealth management, and more, while also introducing you to many of the top executives with Regions Bank in the Houston market. Hosted by John Stacy, Houston Market President with Regions, all episodes of "Regions Business Radio Houston" are […] The post Building Out the Houston Commercial Banking Team appeared first on Business RadioX ®.
In this episode of "Let's Talk Farm to Fork", we're joined by Matt Donovan, from Food for Change, who we will be talking to about how his Australia-based, Not for Profit, is helping fight national food insecurity through both growing and rescuing local food items.https://foodforchange.org.au/
In the season 3 finale (and maybe the best episode of the entire series), tensions are high. Elena has a brief coma dream before waking up to the nightmare that is her life as a bloodthirsty Ric searches for her. But she still gets to call the shots, and starts wheeling and dealing with the originals to save Klaus. The only person who doesn't let her call the shots is Matt Donovan who drugs her and drives her off Wickery Bridge! But to be fair, she chooses to be on that bridge when she picks Stefan over Damon (let's celebrate, Stelena hive!!) There's a whole lot of death with varying levels of permanence, and when all the drama feels like it's too much, we find out that Meredith gave Elena Damon's blood - and she gasps awake ready to transition! Plus, we talk season 4 predictions and season 3 reflections. Remember to rate, review, and share, brothers! Follow us on Instagram @doppelgangerspodcast! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/doppelgangerspodcast/support
On the latest episode of FNO: InsureTech, Rob talks with CEO Adam Kiefer and COO Matt Donovan, Co-Founders of Talage. Talage is the API quoting platform for commercial insurance whose software helps accelerate growth and leverage technology within the digital insurance ecosystem. They connect all players in commercial insurance, delivering instant quotes from multiple carriers, increasing efficiency for redundant processes, and making digital distribution simple and easy. Rob had the opportunity to talk with Adam and Matt to learn more about Talage, the history behind the company, its long presence in insuretech, venture capital experience, and much more. Learn more about Talage at https://www.talageins.com/.
«Times Square » est une pièce de Clément Koch, un auteur qui sait disséquer les mécanismes de l'art du jeu dramatique. Nous sommes à Manhattan dans un vieux loft new-yorkais. On découvre Matt Donovan, un comédien qui ne sait plus jouer, campé par l'excellent Guillaume de Tonquédec. Il est sollicité par une jeune serveuse, Sara Bump, qui lui demande des leçons particulières, interprétée par Camille Aguilar. Cette relation démarre mal mais une complicité va finir par s'installer entre ces deux êtres. La pièce est drôle mais sait aussi nous émouvoir. «Times Square », une pièce à découvrir jusqu'au 14 mai au Théâtre Montparnasse, 31 rue de la Gaîté dans le 14ème.
The AMPire Diaries Episode 64: The Vampire Diaries - “500 Years of Solitude” (TVD 100) (feat. Jenny Owen Youngs) You didn't ask for this… AMPies, it is time. It has been two years of The AMPire Diaries and 100 episodes of The Vampire Diaries. So you just knew your AMPie queens—aka “The Bad Girls of Podcasting”—had to have on a special guest. That's right, special guest and contest winner, Lil' Jenny Owen Youngs (@jennyowenyoungs). So like we said, this week, your favorite Vampire Diaries rewatch-slash-first-time watch (and mostly spoiler-free) combination podcast is discussing The Vampire Diaries' “500 Years of Solitude” (Season 5, Episode 11—the ONE-HUNDREDTH episode). Which means: - Please ignore everything drunk LaToya said about werewolf rules early on in the episode. - Your AMPie queens are fighting. It also means we're talking: - Smallville ship names. - Those sPoOkY Travelers. - Mermaids the TV series. - Matt Donovan's fuck prowess. - fatherkieran1@gmail.com… again. - A lot of visual bits. - Meryl Streep's daughters. - The best AMPire Diaries bits from over the years. - What Amara doesn't know. - Jenny's thoughts on Rebekah Mikaelson. - Who Jill's favorite TVD character is. “FLASHBACKS TO KATHERINE'S EARLY LIFE” (“500 Years of Solitude”) Whether you're a Vampire Diaries obsessive or newcomer, join along with hosts LaToya Ferguson (@lafergs—Vampire Diaries obsessive), Morgan Lutich (@LorganMutich—Vampire Diaries obsessive), and Jill Defiel (@jiilbobaggins—Vampire Diaries newcomer) on their new podcast journey. Most importantly, get AMPED (and horny) along with them on this journey. Ya gotta get AMPED. Become a patron! https://www.patreon.com/ampdiariespod/ Email us! theampirediariespod@gmail.com Tweet at us! @AMPDiariesPod Instagram... at us! @AMPireDiariesPod Go to our website! http://theampirediariespod.com/ The Official CW Promo for “500 Years of Solitude”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ELBANFUZz0 The Mystic Falls Event of the Week for “500 Years of Solitude”: The death of Katherine Pierce The AMPire Diaries is now available to stream on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and Amazon Podcasts, as well as wherever you get your podcasts. Don't forget to rate (5 STARS, please) and review the podcast. And most importantly, don't forget to get AMPED.
Matt Donovan, senior vice president and partner at the Merritt Group joins host Mark Amtower on this week's Amtower Off Center for a wide ranging discussion on marketing issues facing government contractors.
Today's poem is The Wrong Question More Than Once by Matt Donovan.
In this episode, we have a brilliant guest, Matt Donovan, from South West Dog Skills, join us to talk about his initiative Fling-Less February. He shares, what it is and how you can take part in it.https://www.facebook.com/groups/flinglessfebFlingers, launchers, slingers... whatever you call them, they have their place but did you know constantly flinging a ball on your dog's walks can have the opposite effect to what you may be hoping for.When a dog chases a ball they have a release of adrenaline.This adrenaline can stay in the body for hours after a walk and can make settling difficult. If you use a flinger and ball on every walk your dog may not have a chance for their adrenaline level to return to normal, before it is raised again on the next walk. Leading to them in a constant high state.If you think you need to take your dog out for at least an hour at a time and take a flinger to tire them, think again! This group will provide you with some ideas to help.Fling-less Feb isn't about getting rid of the flinger altogether but it's about creating walks where you are able to engage with your dog more, build your partnership with them and create a more settled and calm dog.Our challenge to you is to halve the amount of flinging walks you do and swap them for some of the ideas below:Sniff walk - Allowing your dog to explore the environment and find treats that have been laid to encourage your dog to sniff. Let them lead you!30in30 - using 30 treats in 30 mins whilst out on a walk to maximise engagement with you.Check-in challenge - have a focus on rewarding your dog every time they choose to look at you whilst you are walking.Training walk - Pick something that either you or your dog would like to work on. This might happen at home to start with before progressing to the park or field.Rest days - Take days off from walking. See what happens if you set up some mental enrichment activities at home.M.A.D for Dogs exists to Make A Difference to dogs' mental and physical well-being by creating positive change in the way they are understood. If you'd like to learn more about Eryn and Rach and what we do at MAD for Dogshttps://madfordogs.co.uk/https://www.facebook.com/madfordogsuk/https://www.facebook.com/groups/madfordogscommunity/If you'd like to learn more about the services Eryn and Rach offer for Pet Dogshttps://believeinmagic.dog/https://www.facebook.com/believeinmagic.doghttps://www.facebook.com/groups/believeinmagic.trainingWe would love to feature some questions from ‘real' people. So, if you'd like to ask something and have it answered within one of the Podcasts you can now leave a voice memo here, if we feature the question we will email you with the episode info. All you need to do is visit this link press the button and record your questions, simple as that. https://telb.ee/j1xze
We are heading straight into a sacrifice it seems .... or are we? In this third to last episode of the season, people are getting in and out of danger left and right! Plus, Damon makes a very logical decision that everyone hates, Stefan and Elena go for a hike in jeans, and Matt Donovan attempts to be useful but once again misses the mark. Remember to rate, review, and share, brothers! Follow us on Instagram @doppelgangerspodcast! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/doppelgangerspodcast/support
In Episode 116, I share some guests clips that did not make the final version of their episode. Sometimes between parts, guests share amazing leadership comments or advice. In this episode, I share outtakes with Enrique Rubio, Peter Popovich, Phyllis Millikan, Tim Brock, and Matt Donovan. 01:14 Part 1: Enrique Rubio and the Disservice to Yourself Enrique talks about one of the hardest things for us to do. 03:11 Part 2: Peter Popovich and the Growth Accelerator Peter distinguishes between the difficulty of changing IQ and the strong possibility of changing EQ. 05:52 Part 3: Phyllis Millikan and Connecting with Teammates and Colleagues Phyllis explains how learning about the people you work with can mitigate language differences. 10:30 Part 4: Tim Brock and Why Leadership Is Crucial Tim describes how two teachers' toxicity damaged a school. He talks about how crucial leadership is. 14:01 Part 5: Matt Donovan and Resolving Dilemmas Matt discusses the balance between extremes and describes how leadership can help. _________________________________ How You Can Support the Show Unlabeled Leadership is a free service for people to learn about leadership. If you want to support the show, you can make a $0.99 donation. Your support reduces production expenses. https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/support No transcript available (future enhancement) Episode links Guest LinkedIn profiles, Enrique Rubio, Peter Popovich, Phyllis Millikan, Tim Brock, and Matt Donovan Episode 077, Enrique Rubio Inspires the Human Resource Profession Episode 006, Peter Popovich and the Pickled Lifelong Journey Episode 026, Peter Popovich Explains Emotional Intelligence Episode 016, Phyllis Millikan and Constructive Attribution Episode 075, Phyllis Millikan Taps into The Wisdom of Teams Episode 012, Tim Brock with Winning Hearts and Clearing Barriers Episode 017, Matt Donovan and A Glance in His Leadership Playbook Background Music You can find all the musical tracks at Envato Elements. 00:00 Theme music: Uplift Corporate Inspire by OlexandrIgnatov 00:55 Corporation by pinkzebra 02:53 Retro Delta Blues by AlexanderRufire 05:34 Spanish Breeze by iCENTURY 10:12 For Explainer Videos by CrazyTunes 13:43 Inspiring Ambient by Dirtyflint 19:48 Fun and Flirty by BrownHouseMedia Lead on! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/support
Isobel is back, and she is determined to be the main character of this show if it kills her! Everyone is working hard to move their plans forward in alliances, but deception abounds. Most are straight up lying, some are leaving out details (like the location of the witch sacrifice), and one is simply not actually on any team. Grace and Stephanie also talk about a ... creative hiding space, reporting the local news, and how dope it is to carry blood in something other than a classic blood bag. And finally, we have an actual reason to hate Matt Donovan! Remember to rate, review, and share brothers! Follow us on instagram @doppelgangerspodcast --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/doppelgangerspodcast/support
Today's interview with Matt Donovan was an empowering one, but also an emotional one. Matt is the founder of a charity called Food For Change that helps to provide food for the hungry. They do that through growing and rescuing food and since they started they have donated more than 135,000 meals and rescued more than 155,000 from going to waste.Matt shares with us the pain that caused him to find his purpose of starting Food For Change with grace, authenticity and true openness, and for that I thank him deeply.I hope you get as much out of this conversation as I did.https://foodforchange.org.au/
He's gone from undrafted to NHLer in three seasons and this week Mathieu Olivier joins us for the Admirals Podcast! We'll talk about his crazy connection with teammate Matt Donovan, his pro hockey player father, coming to Milwaukee and his NHL debut.
Episode 21 – The Merge: National Security Space and the Future of Air-to-Ground Munitions Episode Summary: Join the Mitchell Institute experts for the third installment of “The Merge.” This is your opportunity to hear from leading experts in the air and space community regarding top issues that are in today's national security debate. This episode introduces Matt Donovan, Mitchell Institute's new lead for its Spacepower Advantage Research Center and explores his take on the challenges and opportunities facing Space Force and Space Command. Mr. Donovan joins Mitchell after serving as the Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, the Under Secretary of the Air Force, and as a staff member on the Senate Armed Services Committee. The Mitchell team also explores new trends that are emerging in the air-to-ground munition realm—a very dynamic field given the return of peer competition. Full Topic Guide This week we introduce a new voice to “The Merge”, Matt Donovan, former Undersecretary of Defense for Personnel and Readiness, and Under Secretary of the Air Force who has joined the Mitchell Institute as the Director of the new Mitchell Institute Spacepower Advantage Research Center (MI-SPARC). Host John “Slick” Baum introduces Mr. Donovan and the members of the roundtable ask Mr. Donovan his take on some of the key issues facing Space Force and Space Command. Mr. Donovan also describes what his top issue priorities for the MI-SPARC issue agenda. The team then discusses a key issue facing the Air Force: developing the next generation of air-to-ground munitions that will meet a broad range of emerging requirements. Many of the Air Force's current air-to-ground munitions are decades' old. They were designed for a problem set that no longer stacks up with the new requirements unfolding in an renewed era of peer competition. Mitchell experts discuss the attributes that will be increasingly important for these new tools. Links: The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies website: https://www.mitchelleaerospacepower.org The Mitchell Institute Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/Mitchell.Institute.Aerospace The Mitchell Institute LinkedIn Page: https://linkedin.com/company/mitchellaerospacepower The Mitchell Institute Twitter: @MitchellStudies The Mitchell Institute Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/themitchellinstituteforaero/ @themitchellinstituteforaero Credits: Host: Lt Col John “Slick” Baum, USAF, ret. Producer: Daniel C. Rice Executive Producer: Douglas Birkey Guest: Lt Gen (ret.) David Deptula, Dean, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies Guest: The Honorable Matt Donovan, Director, The Mitchell Institute Spacepower Advantage Research Center Guest: Douglas Birkey, Executive Director, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies Guest: Col (ret.) Mark “Gonzo” Gunzinger, Director of Future Concepts and Capability Assessments, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies Guest: Maj (ret.) Heather Penney, Senior Fellow, The Mitchell Institute for Aerospace Studies
Matt Donovan, Senior Vice President for Government at Merritt Group joins the show to discuss the importance of developing agency-based marketing programs as part of your GTM strategy. We also discuss tactical steps to begin to building your messaging platform, new digital marketing technologies in the market you can take advantage of today, and best practices in delivering strategic value to your sales leaders.
Too frequently our learning leaders are draining resources on a multitude of external systems that work against the environment they are trying to create. It’s not you, it’s me. In reality, building a larger capability map to design and weave both internal and external systems to work together in tandem is how a true ecosystem should function. There is no “I” in team with the #futureofwork and collaboration is key in a blended learning environment. Let me ask you this. Is your organization’s learning ecosystem self-sustaining? Have you identified the components of your ecosystem and are there ways restructuring would provide nourishment to those wilting components? Are you MAXIMIZING your learners collaborative experience? In this episode, Matt Donovon with GP Strategies Corporation helps us to answer these questions by demystifying the learning ecosystem and provides the tools to combine learning ecosystem components to create an XL blended smoothie learning experience with whipped cream on top. Yum --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/learningtechtalks/support
On Wednesday episodes, I share leadership beliefs and unlabel terminology. I invite guests to share their expertise about small or big acts of leadership. In Episode 17, Matt Donovan talks about how we can rethink conflict. He envisions how we can transform leadership similarly to how we have shifted to being customer-centric or learner-centric. He cautions us to find a balance between checking-in virtually and doing the work. 00:00 Prologue: The Future Looks Bright! Matt's GP Strategies title is fitting: Chief Learning & Innovation Officer. Whether because of his role or just because of who he is, Matt is thinking decades ahead into the future about talent development. Since I've known Matt, I've seen him astound listeners with stories of how organizations are transforming how their workforce learns. I also know Matt as a mentor for emerging professionals. Like most guests, his stewardship is extraordinary! 01:32 Part 1: A Lesson from Martial Arts Practicing martial arts requires physical and mental discipline. Like leadership, each martial art has underlying principles. While you can learn a martial art without understanding the principles, you won't become proficient. Matt explains a lesson he learned from his father about applying Aikido to engaging conflicting viewpoints. 07:17 Part 2: How should Leadership Shift? To rise from good to great in product development, you need to shift from product-centric to customer-centric. In the talent-development field, the equivalent shift is from topic-centric (or content-centric) to learner-centric. With leadership, Matt believes we need to make a similar shift. 16:35 Part 3: Virtual Collaboration Overload Matt talks about interacting and working with people virtually. When meeting, we need to figure out the balance between checking in with people and doing the work with them. Matt introduces us to Rob Cross' concept, Collaboration Overload. _________________________________ How You Can Support the Show Unlabeled Leadership is a free service for people to learn about leadership. If you want to support the show, you can make a $0.99 donation. Your support reduces production expenses. https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/support No transcript available (future enhancement) Episode links Matt's LinkedIn Profile Matt's bio GP Strategies What is Agile? The Agile Manifesto(this site might be easier to read the manifesto) In HBR, Rob Cross, Reb Rebele, and Adam Grant: Collaborative Overload Gary DePaul website Background Music You can find all the musical tracks at Envato Elements. 00:00 Theme music: Inspiring Uplifting Corporate by mixer_drummer 01:12 Happy Vlogger by pinkzebra 07:02 Jazz by gilv 09:51 Climbing Higher Up by jhunger 16:17 Upbeat Retro Hipster by pinkzebra 25:36 Fun and Flirty by BrownHouseMedia Lead on! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/unlabeled-leadership/support
This week we welcome Matt Donovan to the show. Matt is a professional hockey player and the first Oklahoman to be drafted to the NHL. Like most hockey players, he's played all over the world including a World Junior's tournament where he took home the gold medal representing the United States. We talk about Oklahoma, hockey culture, the importance of a day to day mindset, as well as giving back through his Squatch Hockey company. We hope you enjoy this week's show! Insta: @squatchdonovan & @squatchhockeyco Weekly Boost Pod Store: https://shop.spreadshirt.com/weeklyboostpodcastshop/ --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/weeklyboost/support
The AMPire Diaries Episode 31: “Break On Through” | “The Murder of One” Happy New Year, AMPies: We are back, BABY! New Year, new us? Nah, not really. But we do have a new episode of The AMPire Diaries for you and a new Patreon. You know you love it. Especially since we're discussing “Break On Through” (Season 3, Episode 17) and “The Murder of One” (Season 3, Episode 18). Here is what we're talking to kick off 2021: - The lack of crows in “The Murder of One.” - Finn's great taste in women. - Morgan's Michael Chasin impression. - Herbs, herbs, all type of herbs. - THE TREES. - Love. - The Chad and Dana of this podcast. - Alaric's manifesto. - The key to Jeremy's haircuts. - The Torkelsons. - The Mikaelsons and product placement. - Bonnie/Klaus. - Swallowing pills. - Matt Donovan's seduction style. - Justin Theroux in Charlie's Angels: Full Throttle. (Oh yes, we do impressions.) - SAGE. SAGE. SAGE. - A lot of other stuff that just sounds like nonsense written out. This is the first episode we did over Zoom. There were some kinks, audio-wise (as it was the first and last we recorded over Zoom), but in case you wanted to hear us reacting to things you can't see: Well, this episode has that! It also has LaToya almost spoiling something huge, which is just good old-fashioned AMPire DIaries for you. “FAMILY HISTORIES” (“Break On Through”) “SAVIOR OF THE CURSED AND THE DAMNED” (“The Murder of One”) The more AMPED logline this time around? Um… “SAVIOR OF THE CURSED AND THE DAMNED” is just doing so much. “The Murder of One” definitely wins here. Whether you're a Vampire Diaries obsessive or newcomer, join along with hosts LaToya Ferguson (@lafergs—Vampire Diaries obsessive), Morgan Lutich (@LorganMutich—Vampire Diaries obsessive), and Jill Defiel (@jiilbobaggins—Vampire Diaries newcomer) on their new podcast journey. Most importantly, get AMPED (and horny) along with them on this journey. Ya gotta get AMPED. Become a patron! https://www.patreon.com/ampdiariespod Email us! theampirediariespod@gmail.com Tweet at us! @AMPDiariesPod Instagram... at us! @AMPireDiariesPod Go to our website! http://theampirediariespod.com/ The Official CW Promo for “Break On Through”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d-4G2zxmBA8 The Mystic Falls Event of the Week for “Break On Through”: The Wickery Bridge Restoration. The Official CW Promo for “The Murder of One”: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TlS43by_5k The Mystic Falls Event of the Week for “The Murder of One”: Off to kill an Original... The AMPire Diaries is now available to stream on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, and Amazon Podcasts, as well as wherever you get your podcasts. Don't forget to rate (5 STARS, please) and review the podcast. And most importantly, don't forget to get AMPED.
What happens if you pair artificial intelligence with drones? Among other things you make life easier for tree growers, who can now count, measure, and more efficiently take care of their crop. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis and Matt Donovan are the developers of Agroview, a Florida startup invention and a 2020 Cade Prize finalist. They explain using basic drone images, Agroview’s AI and data fusion method provides very accurate information on thousands of acres in hours for what normally takes agricultural producers weeks. TRANSCRIPT: Intro: 0:01 Inventors and their inventions. Welcome to Radio Cade the podcast from the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention in Gainesville, Florida. The museum is named after James Robert Cade, who invented Gatorade in 1965. My name is Richard Miles. We’ll introduce you to inventors and the things that motivate them, we’ll learn about their personal stories, how their inventions work and how their ideas get from the laboratory to the marketplace. Richard Miles: 0:38 Spying on trees, what are they doing out there? It turns out if you pair a drone with artificial intelligence, you’ll find out all their secrets. I’m your host, of Radio Cade. Today my guests are Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis and Matt Donovan of Agroview, a 2020 Cade Prize finalist. Welcome to the show, gentlemen. Matt Donovan: 0:54 Thank you, Richard. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 0:56 Thank you for having us. Richard Miles: 0:57 So first of all, I have to confess that I’m a sucker for any topic that has the word drone in it. My wife got me a little drone a few years ago and I have to become highly proficient and wasting lots of my time taking pictures pretty much of nothing, but they’re pictures from a thousand feet. So it’s cool. Right? I’m guessing you all have to be slightly more productive with your time and the technology. So why don’t we start Yiannis, if you could describe for us what the core product of Agroview is, which as I understand it marries drones with artificial intelligence to take lots of pictures of trees. So why don’t we just start out? Why trees? What are those pictures tell you? And more importantly, what does it tell the person growing trees who presumably is going to buy this product? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 1:34 Yeah, that’s a really good question. First of all, let me start from the beginning of Agroview, so there’s some tools, Agroview is a cloud-based application. So actually it’s like a software that analyze and visualize the images from drones, but also for ground based sensing system . So why do we developed Agroview for tree crops and vegetables is because we identify that there’s same gap. There are not so mainly tools and solutions for specialty crops, like tree crops and vegetables, regarding on drones. And then the main idea here is to convert the data that we collect the information to some kind of practical information, useful information that the growers , the managers can use. There are samples for row crops like wheat, soy , bean , cotton , but very limited solutions that are available for specialty crops. That’s why we developed Agroview. And again, the main goal is to convert data. For example, the images that we collect from drones to information, to something that we can really use. Richard Miles: 2:41 So the real secret sauce here is the AI, right? Because obviously drones have been around a while. UAVs have been around and under development getting rapidly better since the nineties. And I’ve heard about all these potential applications, including agriculture. It never thought exactly how’s that going to work? So Matt is this sort of the first time, or you are the first company to actually take the idea of using AI algorithms. You have these images, which we’ve been able to get for a long time. And actually as Yiannis said, do something practical with them. Matt Donovan: 3:11 Well, I think as Yiannis mentioned in some of the more popular crop or more attended crops like corn or wheat, there’ve been utilizations of this, but in the specialty crop market, like citrus almonds, like specialty tree, fruit crops, not so much. And that lack of attention of providing AI tools is really the gap that Yiannis mentioned before. So while we’re not the first to try it, I think in the specialty crop market, we’re the first to really prove that what the Agroview platform does. Yiannis and his team have actually gone through the large scale commercial test. It’s not a lab specific, it’s not a controlled environment and they’ve published openly the results that Agroview achieves. And that’s something that’s novel and unique about the Agroview platform is that it’s really gone through the scientific rigor that a lot of products will make claims that often they can’t prove. So in that respect, we look at it as the first platform. That’s proven the ability to take data from a drone, but also to take data from ground sensing systems and then have the AI sort of crunch everything together. And as Yiannis said to take multiple layers of data, but then produce a valuable piece of information, which the grower can then use to take action on and ultimately starts to get into the business impact that information then turns into actionable intelligence as it were. And hence our agriculture intelligence, the name of the company had come about is to have Agroview, create actionable intelligence that makes a business impact, but something else that’s a grander vision of Yiannis is to start making impacts to the ecosystems that are around the growing environment and the environment in a longer view and in a more grand scale to create sustainability in those growing regions. Richard Miles: 5:07 So one thing that impressed me when I watched the video of Agroview and the product that you have in the market is just merely knowing how many trees say citrus trees. For example, you have, it’s a valuable piece of information to get, I guess, crop insurance for a number of different reasons. And to note where your gaps are, where you might have a row of trees aren’t doing well, but Agroview does more than that, right? I mean, it doesn’t just count trees and say, okay, you’re missing four trees or three trees there. There, there are other things that you capture about the health of the crop itself or that how the plant is doing that, I guess, affects decisions on fertilizing or whatever. So Yiannis, how does that work? You mentioned ground sensors as well in order for this to work to its maximum capability, you’re pairing a UAV with cameras and are you also then deploying an array of ground sensors so you can capture other data like how tall the crop is or how it is, is that how it works? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 5:58 So with the dome , we can collect a lot of information, as you said, we can count crops, plants, which is very important and we can detect gaps, income gaps, and also develop a stress index. And we can also estimate plant nutrient concentration, which is very important for a precision fertilizer application. Matt Donovan: 6:20 And that’s using the UAV imagery, Richard. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 6:23 Yeah, the UAV spectrum of data, which we really collect from my multi-spectral camera imaging. So doing that, you develop these maps, that they have different zones with different colors and these maps can be applicable or they can be used by precision and variable rate fertilizers. And that means there’s a variability in the field. So you don’t need to apply the same chemicals. The same inputs in general, it can be anything else can be water to the crops, but you applied based on the need. And this is where the savings comes. And this is how we can also try to reduce any negative environmental impacts . So we apply in this case, fertilizers as needed to the specific areas. We can even go down to the climate level. This is what we do with drone images, but on the same time we can analyze data collected from, for example, sprayers and fertilizers that we are developing new smart technologies, sprayers, and fertilizers that at the same time that they spray, they collect data that we convert back into information and example can be, we can also detect and count trees , but also assess the health that can be connected with the data collected from drones and all this information can be used also for yield prediction, which is a very important task for logistic purposes. Matt Donovan: 7:47 So the drone imagery is an input into Agroview. The application map is an output from Agroview into the field for sprayers. But when the sprayers are spraying, we equip smart sprayers with additional data collection items that then become inputs that creates a richer and more detailed set of inputs for the agroview system to assess, which makes it much smarter. And the amount of data that we start to look at as inputs coming into Agroview that the artificial intelligence algorithm is dealing with starts to be massive. But that’s the whole point. Precision agriculture is making that impact of taking those individual units of data, whether they come from a drone or they come from collecting from the sprayer, which is a nice dual use, right? It’s an output from Agroview, but we also utilize it as a smart opportunity for us to collect more information, to then provide additional details for the AI to assess. And it creates a richer set of information moving forward, and it builds and builds and builds. It goes from 2D in the air to 3D on the ground. And the collection of that data over time gives us a 40 view over the course of time that really sets Agroview apart. Richard Miles: 8:58 So that’s really kind of the beauty of AI, right? It’s not like you have a bunch of smart coders. They write a great program and then it has to be constantly updated by smart coders. The AI kind of gets smarter on its own just because you’re getting this massive inputs of different types of data. And you’re combining your interests solution. Matt Donovan: 9:13 Terrific point. It’s almost a fully automated platform in that sense. Richard Miles: 9:18 Several months ago, I talked to the president of the National 4H Council and she was telling me the history of agricultural technology goes way back to really Abraham Lincoln, who founded that land grant college system. And as a requirement, it made the sharing of agricultural technology widespread. And one of the great results of that is that farmers have generally always been early adopters of technology because they recognize the value right away because it affects their costs. It affects their ability to successfully harvest crops. And so on, Matt maybe you can take this, what sort of reaction have you gotten from? I’m sorry, I just got to use the pun from farmers outstanding in their field. Are they reacting to this like, Oh, this is great or do they still have questions or a little bit of skepticism or their cost issues involved is just an intense capital investment Say in Agroview or similar technologies, or what kind of feedback are you getting from them? Matt Donovan: 10:11 Well, the farmers are certainly looking for the proof they are adopters, but as a customer persona, if you will, they’re very much proof in hand. And certainly be honest, works directly with a lot of growers who have seen the Agroview system. And it can give you some feedback. I think from a market perspective, they’re looking for proof. They will adopt the Agroview system itself is in keeping with a lot of the way that their products are priced on a per acre basis. So we’ve adopted kind of the norm of what they follow with pricing to try to show them that value. So far, there’s a little bit of wanting to calibrate what Agroview is able to produce using UAV imagery or ground collected data with what they already know. The beauty of the system, actually in that large scale, scientifically proven test was a commercial plot and it was ground truth by Yiannis and the team, the published paper that was done took into account the ground reality often referred to as ground truthing methods to compare it to what the UAV collected images were. So what we’re finding is if the growers give us the chance, we can show them that the data that’s collected via the drone alone is very comparable to the information they see on the ground and in the palm of their hand, as it were lots of work to go, but that’s what we’ve seen so far. And the good news is the algorithm is very accurate with regards to that. So I think what they they’re seeing out of the Agroview system pairs up nicely with this sort of healthy skepticism of should I adopt and get these promised c osts savings. And the reality is, is very positive results, but also with a pinch of making sure that they are putting money into an advanced technology, that’s going to be as good as what they can see and feel on the ground. They’re very intuitive. The data element is actually something that I think really is an added element for them b ecause growers are extraordinarily intuitive about what’s going on in their fields. But that data element I believe is, is the gap that we’re really filling in the market. Richard Miles: 12:23 So that’s a really good point, Matt, and give me a feel for what in best case scenario, if a grower adopts the technology uses it correctly, there are no malfunctions, what are the potential cost savings to them? And I guess as a corollary of that question, what’s the next best alternative, because as you said, growers have highly intuitive sense of how their crops are doing, what would prevent a skeptical grower from saying like, look, this looks really cool and snazzy, but you know, honestly I can get my truck and in an hour drive around my fields and get the same info. What are the magnitude of cost savings? Obviously that would take a lot of time driving around and doing it in person. What is your value proposition in a best case scenario, Matt Donovan: 13:01 Let me break it into sort of three components. One is , is that these tree counts are critically important for a lot of decisions that they will make. But tree count is also a regulatory requirement in order for a grower like a citrus grove, for example, to get crop insurance through the USDA, they have to do an inventory. And so right now the current method of trying to count trees is a couple of dudes jump in a truck, an old dusty truck, probably with no air conditioning and a couple of clickers like handheld clickers. And they drive up and down each of the rows, clicking on the right, clicking on the left. Now, as far as that process or method is used, it’s extraordinarily error prone, a hot summer in Florida to try to keep your concentration in a hot humid orange grove in Florida in the middle of the summer is not an easy task. Um , and it’s also very carbon heavy, which gets into the environmental impact. But from a practical perspective, a thousand acres of survey manually costs $15,000 and takes four to six weeks from the Agroview perspective we’re in and out of that same thousand acres in two or three days, no truck touches any of the inner parts of the grove. So it’s carbon neutral and the information is so much more accurate. So just on the tree count alone, we have proven 99 plus percent accuracy. So just on the practical side of getting insurance and account, that piece of it is there. Of course, the health statistics, the height of the tree, the canopy, the stress, and the overall health of the tree goes towards a much richer mosaic of information for the grower there. And then the decision between the tree count and the health qualifications, if you will starts to factor in what they’re considering potential yield, but the tree count and its accuracy becomes so important to any formula that they’re using. It’s a highly weighted variable. I mean, plug in the wrong tree count and into whatever estimating formula that they’re using, whatever method that they might be using tree count can throw off what they may think is coming at harvest by a lot, one degree off now means way off in the future. The nutrient analysis, probably the biggest impact. And that’s something that on a qualified costs, the Agroview system is going to just absolutely make something that’s 90%, less than cost . I mean, it’s massive savings. And the methodology for us to do nutrient analysis is so comprehensive because it accounts for the whole field, which right now they utilize a very expensive lengthy time process to collect leaf samples, send it off to the laboratory. Again, us flying for a thousand acres in two days is what takes weeks and weeks in tens of thousands of dollars just to render the information that the Agroview system can produce within 48 to 72 hours. Richard Miles: 15:58 Wow. That’s quite impressive. Yiannis, are there any technical limitations in terms of other types of applications that this could be used for? Like for instance, right now you’re going after specialty crops like citrus trees, for instance, could this be used for cattle? For instance, I had a guest on a couple of weeks ago talking about the next generation of beyond visual line of sight UAV that can travel much farther distances and could a Texas cattle rancher who has a gazillion acres and thousands of heads of cattle could eventually this sort of technology be used for them to keep track of the cattle and the health of the cattle and so on, or is this really limited to stationary crop ? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 16:37 Yeah, that’s a really good question before I answer this and let me emphasize a little bit with tree count. And I just want to make clear here that this is very important especially for Florida because of citrus greening growers got to remove a lot of the trees. That’s why they don’t really know how many trees they have in specific blocks before it was easier that you put it that way. You know that you have maybe 10 acres, you planted 160, let’s say the record. So you can estimate. But now with the greening, citrus greening, you might have 50% of them may be gaps. So there’ll be trees that they h ad to remote, right? So this is also another potential. You need to know how many gaps you have. You need to know if you want to r eplant, so how many trees you need to go order from a nursery. So that’s why tree detection is our first task, different AI models. I t’s not just a simple AI. I usually say that has different levels of intelligence. So going back to your question, y ou a re totally right. What we try to do with, w ith other crops like tomatoes, s quash, watermelon, w e even try to detect diseases. At the early stage, early disease development stage, which is the most critical. So to detect t he disease with no visual symptoms on very small symptoms, this is the critical step. I know a lot of growers spray proactively just to be sure that there will be no infection, but sometimes a re infections. T here a re diseases. So if you detect that, t he early stages can save a lot of money. You can control, you take the best management tactics, and then you can control the disease. Before that spreads throughout the field that can save you a lot of money. We’ve seen examples t hat a d isease can totally d estroyed the entire crop. So now about the cattle, we can do something similar, like how we develop AI based models to detect diseases in crops. We can do something similar with lifestock, using drones, using g round-based sensing systems. We can, first of all, identify individual animal and then collect some information. And actually we have a different project that we develop wearable devices, smart devices, to collect information from individual animal. It can be a horse, it can be cattle. So connected that with, as you said, d rone i maging, it can really help and you can develop a fully automated system. Again, like Agroview that analyze o f the data because the beauty actually comes from there. We can collect huge amount of data, but what you really do, the data is important part, r ight? In this case, if you have r eminds o f like hundreds of thousands of images, this is the big data issue, right? That’s why you need big data analytics. That’s why you need AI. It’s very difficult for t he human brain to understand and analyze big data. But using AI, you can simplify and automate this process and you can have the critical information at the end, let’s say t hat t his i s detection o r something like that in almost in real time or in mer real time. And this is the goal right now. This is where w e’re going. W e a re not going to stay only for, let’s say crops, but we’re developing similar technologies for livestock in general. Richard Miles: 20:04 That’s really fascinating. I mean, as you said, the problem no longer really is the ability to collect data. We have all sorts of ways we can collect data. It’s what do you do with the data and the masses of data that you’re going to get and turn that into something very useful. I’m glad to hear that you are looking at livestock, just one story of the world we live in. Now we have a goofy little cat who just would disappear all the time. So we finally got him a pet tracker, right way too big for him it is made for a dog. It looks kind of ridiculous, but it turns out when we went live with this, the first time we got it, it was hilarious. Cause our son was in the Navy out in Guam and our daughter was in Hawaii, working in a hotel out there. And the night it went live, we all were watching from around the world. What’s this cat going to do was going about 11 or 12 miles a day. I mean, just all over place. And we could see where he was in the neighborhood. And so I’m sure you’re going to go after more than just the cat market. Cattle is much more lucrative than house cats, but you know, I had to step back and go. This is amazing that people scattered around the world can all look at where this little house cat is going. And imagine now what you can do with information wearables, for livestock and collecting obviously much more than just your location, all sorts of metrics on their health and so on. Matt Donovan: 21:12 Well, it really points to the name Agroview really comes from all of the precision agriculture you need in one view. So like you and your family watching your cat would be akin to whether it’s a grower or a livestock operation, to be able to see that information in one view, that is what the Agroview system is. As Yiannis said, trying to crunch through all that data and then present it in the case of most of this, which is kind of a map driven view, a map driven interface that you can get those stats 11 miles a day, that your cat was going. Probably might’ve been accompanied by a little map if it had it, if all of its little travels. So again, it’s simplifying massive data into a very understandable view that can be seen by not just you and your four family members, but it could be multiple team members of the farm operation. All of them can have access to it the same way that you don’t have to be in the same place, but that data is provided in one view, the Agroview as it were. Richard Miles: 22:14 So one of the things we find really interesting on Radio Cade is I always like to kind of know a little bit about the background of the inventors and entrepreneurs that we talk to because they’ve all have very interesting paths to the invention or the business. So Yiannis, let’s start with you. You’re currently an assistant professor at the University of Florida Institute of Food and Agricultural. Sciences, otherwise known as IFAS, but you’re originally from Greece and you move to the United States about 10 years ago. You know , I’m just curious, what were your first impressions of the United States and just want to turn around and go home. And then after that, how did you make your way to studying agriculture? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 22:45 Okay. Moving to the US in 2010, I was at the Washington State University. So I had an opportunity to join a team, a really good team, as a postdoc research associate. And I think beginning and need some time to readjust that it was a totally different lifestyle, but I love it. And I liked the team and we work also developing precision ag technologies and they like the culture here and the connection between the universities and the industry where you really enjoy to develop technology . So applied research and develop new technologies that someone in really use. So after that, I moved to California, was the assistant and associate professor at the Engineering Department at the Cal State system. In 2017, I moved at the University of Florida at them Agriculture and Biological Engineering Department as an assistant professor. And then here in all these three States, I work with specialty crops. So tree crops and vegetables. Yeah . I really love my job. I think we have a lot of opportunities to develop new smart technologies and especially utilizing AI. So overall I’m super happy here. I enjoy my job and I love it. So no complaints at all. Richard Miles: 24:04 And Yiannis did this run in the family where your parents involved in agriculture at all in any capacity? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 24:10 Yeah, my grandparents, for example, they were farmers. My father was not a farmer, but he also likes to grow grapes, make wine. So I grew up in a small family . I always liked also engineering. Let’s say I like to build stuff and this two came together. So that’s why ag engineering. Richard Miles: 24:31 So it sounds like from an early age, you kind of had a fascination with the idea of growing things and studying that, or was there a particular moment that you remember in school that you’re like, wow, this is really cool. I want to know more about this. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 24:42 I would say that it was mostly building or developing things. I remember even when I was like five, seven, ten, any project that I had to build something, it was like really something that I enjoy . So starting from there, then I like mathematics programming. That makes it very easy for me to follow this path. And of course, as I grew up, I knew about agriculture. It’s very important. We need food, we cannot live without food. So. Richard Miles: 25:10 We can’t live without wine ether Yiannis, Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 25:13 Thats true, especially the Greeks. Richard Miles: 25:15 So Matt let’s turn to you. You come from a different background. You’re currently the CEO of Agricultural Intelligence, which is a company that is taking Agroview to market. And you come mostly from a business background, but tell us about your path. Where were you born and raised and how did you get into the business arena? Matt Donovan: 25:29 Well, I’m a native Floridian. I was born in South Florida. I was raised in the West Palm beach area. I lived there for the majority of my young life and after I got married and had a job opportunity, I moved to Gainesville, Florida where I reside today. I had grown up in a small business. My father ran a small business. So as much as growing wine or grapes and attending to crops, might’ve come somewhat through Yiannis background, mine was more of a growing up in a family that ran a business. I went to the standard things. I graduated college, started working in the corporate world and got married and found a place to live here in Gainesville, Florida. So I’m a native Floridian and got involved in various corporate work. And after a decent career doing that, I , I started my own management consulting company. And after I was doing a management consulting engagement, I came up with an idea for a piece of software. And so I wrote the piece of software myself, and it became a part of the telecommunications area. And I ran that company for 15 years and I am now lacking the coding skills required, but thankfully folks like Yiannis are much more talented in those areas. So that’s my side of bringing some healthy background as an entrepreneur and the corporate work that I’ve got to try to lead the business side of Agriculture Intelligence and bring Agroview to market. Richard Miles: 26:52 It sounds like a great partnership that you have going and perfect segue to talk about where you are now as a company, you’ve made a lot of progress. It seems like in the last year, in addition to becoming a Cade Prize finalist, you were one of the outstanding entries that we had this year. You’ve gotten a number of other awards and recognitions. Where are you as a company right now? And what are your next steps? So for instance, how many employees do you have and are you raising money or give us a snapshot of where you are in the life cycle of Agricultural Intelligence and Agroview as a product. Matt Donovan: 27:20 Yeah. As a product were kind of that pre-revenue just starting to accumulate some sales. As I mentioned before, the growers are still vetting and calibrating the technology and trying to adopt that we’re competing for several larger contracts, which will be good for growth. The natural revenue growth, we are seeking funding still officially. There’s a small team of four that are mostly oriented around moving the product forward and sales. So it’s a relatively small team, but we’re looking to rapidly grow over the next year. So any healthy investors that want to do a proven product, we’re out here to have a conversation with. Richard Miles: 27:57 Well, I can tell you one story you probably will enjoy. It was about probably a little over 10 years ago, a company similar to yours, they’re in the software space, but in healthcare for employees in the same building you’re in right now, Matt in the innovation hub, they’ve done very, very well. And they’re getting ready to have a very successful exit to very, very soon. So I’ve seen it happen. It can be done for sure. Along those lines. I’d like to ask both of you, you’ve got enough experience under your belts now in taking this idea, as far as you have, you’re not done yet. You’re still in the middle of the journey, but it’s the legions of other researchers and entrepreneurs out there. What sort of advice would you dispense at this point to them? Like for instance, are there any mistakes that you’ve made that you think, you know, I wish somebody had told me about this, or why didn’t somebody warn me about this particular obstacle that I might encounter? So Yiannis, why don’t we start with you? Any regrets or any wisdom or advice you would dispense to maybe someone about a decade behind you wanting to do the same thing? Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 28:53 Sure . I had another startup at Washington State University. We had a really good idea and actually the growers tried to motivate us, to commercialize the technology that we developed and offer it as a service to the grower. There’s something similar happened with Agroview the mistake was that we thought two of us actually, that we can also run the company. We have our, day jobs that as a professor or researchers. And we thought that, okay, maybe at the same time we can build and run the company, it was a huge mistake. We didn’t have the time. Sometimes we didn’t even have the time to answer the calls or emails. This time I was like, no, I’m not going to make this mistake. I need to find a great guy who ran a really good company and good CEO. And I was very lucky to meet with Matt. So I think, yeah, that was one of the mistakes. I will never forget. We cannot do everything. So we need to identify what our skills, what our capabilities and then partner with others, Richard Miles: 29:50 It’s a valuable mistake and a valuable lesson to learn. And it’s actually occurs more often than you would think. Researchers thinking like, well, how hard can it be to take this idea to market? Cause it’s a great idea. And almost invariable . It is a great idea, but that getting it to market and getting it capitalized and so on is, is tough road. And uh , a lot of people don’t make it. Matt, how about you? You’re in the business world by definition to sort of they’re winners or losers or ups and downs. Tell us a little bit about what lessons you learned. Matt Donovan: 30:17 I think the list of mistakes that I’ve made is so much greater than, than that. I would just actually focus on something. When I was in the corporate world, I was lucky to have someone who mentored me and of the various lessons as sort of a younger business person, was something that my mentor said was contribute every day. Find a way to make a contribution sometimes it’s to yourself. But if you’re contributing, you’re often making something actionable. That’s tied to someone else’s goals. And often you don’t realize it when you’re younger, contributing to other’s goals are actually the most important thing you can do to achieving the overall goals and ultimately any organization, any products, every company is comprised of people, the actions they take. And those two things are normally something that every single day you need to contribute to. So I sort of took that on as a life lesson that I believe helped me maybe avoid more mistakes than I would have made otherwise. And occasionally I look for those nice days where making that contribution every single day and the discipline of trying to contribute to every day kind of adds up over time. And the old saying is it’s a marathon, not a sprint. And making a contribution is, are literally each step you take in that marathon. So make a contribution every day, some way, find a way to make a contribution and keep going. That’s the essence of it. Richard Miles: 31:57 That’s great advice. Yiannis and Matt, you guys are doing great. I want to congratulate you again for the success you’ve had so far. You do have a great idea. I do think that you will succeed because I think you’ve done a lot of thinking about this and where the need is and how this is going to be used. So I look forward to having you back on your show after you’ve had your half billion dollar exit or whatever, whatever that can be. How about when you do your IPO, right? We’ll have you back on the show and you can tell us some more lessons, but I want to thank you both for your time and wish you the best . Matt Donovan: 32:24 Thank you. Richard. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis: 32:25 Thank you Richard. Outro: 32:28 Radio Cade is produced by the Cade Museum for Creativity and Invention located in Gainesville Florida. Richard Miles is the podcast host and Ellie Thom coordinates inventor interviews, podcasts are recorded at Heartwood Soundstage, and edited and mixed by Bob McPeak . The Radio Cade theme song was produced and performed by Tracy Collins and features violinist Jacob Lawson.
What happens if you pair artificial intelligence with drones? Among other things you make life easier for tree growers, who can now count, measure, and more efficiently take care of their crop. Dr. Yiannis Ampatzidis and Matt Donovan are the developers of Agroview, a Florida startup invention and a 2020 Cade Prize finalist. They explain that smarter AI-equipped drones, which can scan large areas in hours, may dramatically help other agricultural producers who currently spend weeks to assess thousands of acres.
The Chief Learning Officer role is one of the leadership roles that are most closely-linked to curiosity. With 25 years of experience in leading teams to create innovative solutions in corporate learning through modern learning strategy, Matt Donovan is indubitably the best person for that role at GP Strategies. Matt spoke at the Novartis’ Curiosity Month about the intersection between the shift in the role of the learner and how technology plays a role in it. Joining Dr. Diane Hamilton in this conversation, he shares some of his insights and ongoing efforts in the creation of this disruptive force in corporate education. Corporate education is constantly on the move. Matt’s work is perhaps one of the best efforts out there to keep education relevant in the constantly-changing learning environment.Love the show? Subscribe, rate, review, and share!Here’s How »Join the Take The Lead community today:DrDianeHamilton.comDr. Diane Hamilton FacebookDr. Diane Hamilton TwitterDr. Diane Hamilton LinkedInDr. Diane Hamilton YouTubeDr. Diane Hamilton Instagram
Matt Donovan Senior Vice Present and Chief Learning and Innovation Officer Matt Donovan at GP Strategies is a recognized name in learning, bringing more than 25 years of experience crafting learner-centric solutions and leading high-impact development teams. Not only has he received a large assortment of industry awards, including being named one of Training Magazine's Top 10 International Trainers under 40, his articles are regularly published and presented at a variety of national and international conferences. In his current role, Donovan has collaboratively implemented and grown GP Strategies’ Innovation Kitchen. You will often find him presenting at global industry conferences or writing articles for industry-specific publications Alex Tremble Alex D. Tremble (aka The Federal Career Coach) is an award-winning speaker, author, and leadership expert who has over 10 years of experience coaching and advising some of our nation’s most senior level government leaders. Alex began his career managing three government-wide senior leadership development programs, and quickly went on to establish GPS Leadership Solutions LLC., while publishing two bestselling books ("Reaching Senior Leadership: 10 Growth Strategies Every Government Leader Should Know” and “The GPS Guide to Success”) geared towards helping government leaders gain influence and attain career success. Alex is a Leadership Center for Excellence 40 under 40 honoree. Alex is passionate and committed to helping our nation’s government leaders reach their highest potential; personally, and professionally. Alex received his Bachelor's degree in sociology and psychology from William Penn University and his Master's degree in industrial and organizational psychology from the University of Baltimore
When organizations curate learning experiences they tend to lean towards aggregating content. Matt Donovan, Chief Learning and Innovation Officer and Cara Halter, Director, Digital Learning Strategy and Solutions, join the podcast to help listeners go beyond off the shelf content… Read more › The post Episode #37 | Content Curation: The Three Layers of Relevance appeared first on GP Strategies.
We’re bringing in funky fresh new Tuesday energy! Elena is a train conductor. We talk a surprising amount of Shakespeare! Matt Donovan is a sugar baby? Yeehaw! New episode every Tuesday and Friday! Follow us on twitter @AfterbitePod
Nick and Lisa interview with Food For Change Founder Matt Donovan to find out his charity is helping Australians struggling with food insecurity.Find out more about Food For Change here: https://www.foodforchange.org.au/Follow Nick Bell and Lisa Teh on LinkedIn for more business content:https://www.linkedin.com/in/nickbellentrepreneur/https://www.linkedin.com/in/lisateh/Check out the Lick YouTube Channel here: https://www.youtube.com/c/lisniclearning/
Damon drags himself. Brian is the new grim reaper. Matt Donovan is safe for work. Bee’s jumping on and off trains. Jeremy binged it. Jokes! Follow us on twitter: @AfterbitePod
In episode 13 we talk with Ads defenseman Matt Donovan about growing up Oklahoma, winning the World Junior Title, and having his mom babysit for a current teammate back 20 years ago.
Meet Matt Donovan, 19-year eLearning veteran who’s now Vice President at GP Strategies Corporation and who’s an all-round expert in everything from e-Learning to performance improvement, experiential learning events and Instructional Design (ID), and usability. As someone who has personally led the production of more than 400 custom online courses for Fortune 500 companies in everything from sales to ethics, Matt is perfectly placed to give us a view from 30,000 feet on all things L&D, and in our verbal journey we go from his decision to not pursue his original career of teacher to a day job that encompasses leading a team of no less than 1400 learning professionals; the (disruptive) forces at work on the ID community; aka ‘the app-ification’ of the learning industry; the central place of empathy - What are you trying to achieve with all this? What it’s like to be a ‘recovering’ Instructional Designer, and the six Design mindset ‘shifts’ that we should look to encourage; what the example of the Microsoft Hackathon can mean for us all; why Waterfall can still make a contribution to the GP Strategies’ ‘Innovation Kitchen,’ and what it’s trying to do.
The Air Force has a new digital strategy focused on building a robust IT infrastructure and enhancing its data architecture. It's also going to need to change the way it uses its cyber airmen. Federal News Network's Scott Maucione took a trip to Montgomery, Alabama, with the Air Force Acting Secretary Matt Donovan and Vice Chief of Staff Stephen Wilson. On Thursday, Federal Drive with Tom Temin heard their discussion about how warfare is going more digital. During the plane ride they also talked about what they need from cyber airmen and how the new strategy will affect all airmen.
In this episode we interview Matt Donovan co-founder and director of Food for Change, a not-for-profit organisation with a mission to alleviate food insecurity in Australia. According to stats on the website, 1 in 10 Australians seek food relief annually and over ¼ of these are turned away. Food for change grows fresh food, rescues small scale food not currently catered for, and supports established local relief agencies to deliver more food to those in need.
As learners become more digitally connected, organizations need to support training programs that meet learners where they are, during moments of need. In this podcast interview on corporate digital learning, Matt Donovan, Vice President of Digital Learning Strategies and Solutions,… Read more › The post Episode #6 | Digital Learning: Embracing Change and Innovation appeared first on GP Strategies.
Talking Squatchin' and Hockey with The Admiral's Matt Donovan by 102.9 The Hog
Boosting sales through online marketing & referral networks, plus tips for getting things done. Learn how Matt Donovan and Adam Kiefer, founding partners of Talage, an insurance company specializing in small businesses, use referral networks and online marketing to drive sales, and how these strategies can be applied successfully to merchant sales. Plus, James offers tips for making the best use of office time, and Patti explores recent changes to the card brand's charge back rules.
Matt Donovan, Sr. Associate AD for Development at University of Indianapolis, visits with @TaiMBrown to discuss creating a successful culture for development in an athletics department. Donovan, 24 years into his tenure with UIndy, gives insight on what it takes to be successful when working in fundraising. He emphasizes that potential donors should know why they are important to the process. Donovan also speaks to the importance of the entire department asking themselves, "Are we doing the best we can do?"
We kick it off talking about the exciting game between the Preds and Avs then get into another discussion on Nashville's powerplay. Milwaukee Admirals leading point-getter, defenseman Matt Donovan then joined the program to talk about the season so far, being a veteran on the team, representing USA hockey and his love for Sasquatch. Hannah Stuart of The Score then joined us to talk all things NHL prospects and what the NWHL All Star Game coming to Nashville means for hockey. We close it up with a fun game of "How much of a dumpster fire is [insert team?" Plus, we answer questions on weirdest arena food, Kevin Fiala and more.
The Air Force is the second military service to restructure its chief information officer’s role by moving it to a higher level in the organization. The service named Undersecretary Matt Donovan as its new CIO to go along with his current role as the chief management officer. And while there is more to finalize around the Air Force’s restructuring efforts, Bill Marion, the Air Force’s deputy CIO, said the work continues to modernize its network and systems. Hear more on Ask the CIO with host Jason Miller.
For the premiere of season 3, Harry and Daniel are joined by a special guest, comedian Matt Donovan. Besides examining what's new in Deadwood and what is on the horizon, they also discuss the Cornish language, the Star Wars prequels, and whether or not Cy is the worst person on the show.
I Newspodden tar vi upp några av de hetaste snackisarna från den senaste veckans nyhetsbevakning i Jönköping. I premiäravsnittet pratar Tobias Karlsson, Adam Jönsson och Emma Bratt om öppettiderna på krogen i Jönköping och HV71:s lagbygge inför kommande säsong. Dessutom berättar vi om några rykande färska inslag på sajten och en spännande återkomst! I podden nämns bland annat: Johan Hult, Jon Espeset, HV71, Otto Ekevi, André Petersson, Cityspanaren, Jönköpings kommun, Mikko Lehtonen, Kent Ly, Sten Norinder, Frölunda, Matt Donovan, HV-Snack, Larmcentralen och Simon Önerud. Musik: www.bensound.com
♫ I see a bad moon rising / I see Uncle Mason on the way / I see crossbows a-firing / I see Matt Donovan acting like a shitbag again today / Don't go round the old Lockwood ruins tonight / It's bound to take your life / There's a bad moon on the rise ♫
The buzz: Crystal ball for 2017. If #1 on your business wish list is to know what 2017 holds for your company, your industry and the world, we've got insightful predictions from more than 75 thought leaders about the technologies, strategies, and trends that can help you grow and compete in 2017 and beyond. Pour a cup of Joe, Earl, or Dom, and join us for SAP Game-Changers Radio 2017 Predictions – Part 5 live. Hear our complete 5-part special on-demand at Coffee Break with Game-Changers Radio. Featured guests: Larry Stolle, SAP; Marisa Kopec, SiriusDecisions; Sheila McGovern, IBM; Tamara Schenk, Miller Heiman Group; Dave Duggal, EnterpriseWeb; Maria Haggen, SAP; Elvia Novak, Deloitte; Christopher Carter, Approyo; Carlos A. Russell, Ternium; Vic Briccardi, RTS Consulting; Rich Seltz, SAP; Matt Donovan, GP Strategies Learning Solutions; Sherryanne Meyer, ASUG; Sathish Gajaraju, Sensify; Ken Redler, cSubs; Padman Ramankutty, Intrigo. Happy new year from SAP Game-Changers Radio!
The buzz: Crystal ball for 2017. If #1 on your business wish list is to know what 2017 holds for your company, your industry and the world, we've got insightful predictions from more than 75 thought leaders about the technologies, strategies, and trends that can help you grow and compete in 2017 and beyond. Pour a cup of Joe, Earl, or Dom, and join us for SAP Game-Changers Radio 2017 Predictions – Part 5 live. Hear our complete 5-part special on-demand at Coffee Break with Game-Changers Radio. Featured guests: Larry Stolle, SAP; Marisa Kopec, SiriusDecisions; Sheila McGovern, IBM; Tamara Schenk, Miller Heiman Group; Dave Duggal, EnterpriseWeb; Maria Haggen, SAP; Elvia Novak, Deloitte; Christopher Carter, Approyo; Carlos A. Russell, Ternium; Vic Briccardi, RTS Consulting; Rich Seltz, SAP; Matt Donovan, GP Strategies Learning Solutions; Sherryanne Meyer, ASUG; Sathish Gajaraju, Sensify; Ken Redler, cSubs; Padman Ramankutty, Intrigo. Happy new year from SAP Game-Changers Radio!
Join Meghan Lamontagne, Rachael Roland, Malynda Hale, and Jessica Hickam every week, live and on demand, for review and conversation about each new episode of The Vampire Diaries. Tweet in questions or comments to the hosts all week using the hashtag #TVDAS Don't forget to follow us on Twitter @theStreamtv and the after show hosts: @MegLamontagne@RachaelRoland@JHickam@MalyndaHale theStream.tv Fan Show Network presents The Vampire Diaries After Show. Tune in each week, live or on demand, for review and conversation about the hit CW television series. At the helm of the television series are creators Kevin Williamson (Stalker, The Following) and Julie Plec (The Tomorrow People). Based on the book series by L. J. Smith (Night World Series), The Vampire Diaries debuted on CW, September 2009, and focuses on Mystic Falls, Virginia, a fictional small town haunted by supernatural beings. The main protagonist of the series, Elena Gilbert (Nina Dobrev), is a young human girl who's family is one of the founding families of Mystic Falls and who falls in love with vampire Stefan Salvatore (Paul Wesley). She begins to be drawn into the supernatural world as a result of their relationship. As the series progresses, Elena finds herself drawn to Stefan's brother, Damon Salvatore (Ian Somerhalder), resulting in a love triangle spanning throughout seasons. The series was so successful that a spin-off series, The Originals, debuted in 2013. The Originals follows the lives of a family of vampires: Niklaus Mikaelson (Joseph Morgan), Elijah Mikaelson (Daniel Gillies), and Rebekah Mikaelson (Claire Holt). Both shows have been linked to each other, and Nina Dobrev, star of the TVD, has made multiple cameos on The Originals. The Vampire Diaries stars Nina Dobrev (Degrassi) as Elena Gilbert, Paul Wesley (Everwood) as Stefan Salvatore, Ian Somerhalder (Lost) as Damon Salvatore, Steven R. McQueen (Piranha 3D) as Jeremy Gilbert, Kat Graham (17 Again) as Bonnie Bennett,Candice Accola (Dead Girl) as Caroline Forbes, Zach Roerig (Friday Night Lights) as Matt Donovan, and Matthew Davis (Pearl Harbor) as Alaric Saltzman. Don't miss out on the new season every Thursday night on the CW. If you're a fan of the show then tune in each week for the live after show. SUBSCRIBE TO theStream.tvhttp://www.youtube.com/subscription_center?add_user=thestreamtv LIKE US ON FACEBOOKhttp://www.thestream.tv/facebook FOLLOW US ON TWITTERhttp://www.twitter.com/thestreamtv
Hosted by Ken Napzok, the producer of the popular Schmoes Know Podcast, The Napzok Files is a show about life, the universe, and everything. (Douglas Adams would agree.) Each episode Ken welcomes the important, cool, and fancy people in his life onto the airwaves to explore, explain, and exclaim the interesting and entertaining. On this bonus episode, Ken once again riles up his two hometown compadres, Ken's former K-Bear 95 morning show co-host Matt Donovan, and professional kite flyer Jeff Moody. Like The Napzok Files on Facebook, subscribe, rate and review on iTunes, and enjoy & share! On Twitter: Ken Napzok (@KenNapzok) Matt Donovan (@themattydx) Jeff Moody (@Monfufu13) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-napzok-files/support
Hosted by Ken Napzok, the producer of the popular Schmoes Know Podcast, The Napzok Files is a show about life, the universe, and everything. (Douglas Adams would agree.) Each episode Ken welcomes the important, cool, and fancy people in his life onto the airwaves to explore, explain, and exclaim the interesting and entertaining. On this bonus episode, Ken riles up his two hometown compadres, Ken's former K-Bear 95 morning show co-host Matt Donovan, and professional kite flyer Jeff Moody. Like The Napzok Files on Facebook, subscribe, rate and review on iTunes, and enjoy & share! On Twitter: Ken Napzok (@Kozpan) Matt Donovan (@themattydx) Jeff Moody (@Monfufu13) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-napzok-files/support
Hosted by Ken Napzok, the producer of the popular Schmoes Know Podcast, The Napzok Files is a show about life, the universe, and everything. (Douglas Adams would agree.) Each episode Ken welcomes the important, cool, and fancy people in his life onto the airwaves to explore, explain, and exclaim the interesting and entertaining. On this episode, Ken continues his road trip home and spends some quality time with his former K-Bear 95 morning show partner Matt Donovan. The old duo talks about starting their broadcast careers at 18, squandering a great chance, and trying to find Matt a wife. Like The Napzok Files on Facebook, subscribe, rate and review on iTunes, and enjoy & share! On Twitter: Ken Napzok (@KenNapzok) Matt Donovan (@themattydx) Jeff Moody (@Monfufu13) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-napzok-files/support
Hosted by Ken Napzok, the producer of the popular Schmoes Know Podcast, The Napzok Files is a show about life, the universe, and everything. (Douglas Adams would agree.) Each episode Ken welcomes the important, cool, and fancy people in his life onto the airwaves to explore, explain, and exclaim the interesting and entertaining. On this episode, Ken travels to his home town of Arroyo Grande, California to catch up with his former radio partner Matt Donovan and their long time running mate Jeff Moody. They talk about peaking early, growing up and growing bored in God's Country, and why one of their favorite High School teachers once told them they would turn out better than the popular kids. Plus, why did Jeff's feet end up bloody in Las Vegas/ Like The Napzok Files on Facebook, subscribe, rate and review on iTunes, and enjoy & share! On Twitter: Ken Napzok (@KenNapzok) Matt Donovan (@themattydx) Jeff Moody (@Monfufu13) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/the-napzok-files/support