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Is flipping properties the secret to building wealth? Or is the buy-and-hold strategy the key to long-term success? Mathew Russo thinks he has the answer. A seasoned builder turned property investor, Mat started with renovations and flips, leveraging his construction background to chase big profits. The returns were rewarding, but the 24-hour workdays and constant hustle? Not so much. When their family grew, Mat and his wife knew they had to shift gears. With Dashdot’s help, they adopted a buy-and-hold strategy, securing a property in Bunbury, WA, that gained over $100K in equity within a year. Now, Mat’s growing his portfolio while balancing family dinners, running a business, and keeping his sanity intact. So, if you’ve been wondering whether flipping or holding is the better path to financial freedom, Mat’s hard-earned insights are a must-hear. If you love this episode, email us at podcast@dashdot.com.au, and don’t forget to subscribe, rate, and share this podcast! See you on the inside! In this episode, we cover: 00:00 Coming Up 01:08 Introduction to Matt Russo and Property Strategy 03:04 Building and Renovation Experience 05:06 Comparing Flipping and Buy and Hold Strategies 12:53 Balancing Family and Property Investment 18:06 Adapting to Market Conditions 25:55 Risk Management and Long-Term Goals Connect With Us: Free Rentvesting Calculator (https://dashdot.com.au/rentvesting) Subscribe on Youtube (https://youtu.be/qu3dEr1WRQs) Listen on Spotify (https://open.spotify.com/episode/2DlWgZlAkkugEzGX8Yc9R6?si=207b77636bff4f34) Dashdot Website (https://theinvestorlab.com.au/?p=3923) Ready to work with us directly? (https://dashdot.com.au/discovery) Get your Property Portfolio Growth Plan (https://dashdot.com.au/portfoliogrowthplan) See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this edition of Straight Up 5 With Johnny Petraglia Jr, JP and the boys welcome the 2024 WSOB Scorpion Championship winner Matt Russo to the show!Follow us on Instagram, X, Facebook & TikTok : @straightup5podcastWin a chance to get a brand new bowling ball of your choice from Johnny Petraglia Jr himself! To do so, make a purchase of any amount at manscaped.com and use our exclusive promo code "STRAIGHTUP" at checkout! If that wasn't cool enough, you also get 20% off of your order and FREE SHIPPING! Send us a screenshot of your purchase to straightup5podcast@gmail.com and you will automatically be entered into the drawing to get a FREE brand new bowling ball of your choice from JP Jr himself!SUBSCRIBE TO OUR YOUTUBE CHANNEL!!!Follow the show on X :@straightup5podFollow Johnny Jr :@jpjr07Follow Dr Ocho : @TheDrOchoFollow Rad Rob :@radrobgaming
In 2020, experts at NASA's Chandra X-ray Center began the first ongoing, sustained program to “sonify” astronomical data. The sonification project is led by my guest today, Dr. Kimberly Arcand (Chandra Visualization Scientist) along with her colleagues Dr. Matt Russo (astrophysicist/musician) and Andrew Santaguida (musician/sound engineer) at System Sounds.The sonification of stars, black holes, galaxies and more invite a new way of knowing the cosmos. It is one thing to see a static image of the night sky and an entirely different experience when we hear that same data in an embodied way. As we talk about the sonification of the cosmos, you will see that this is really another way of knowing or connecting to something that we think we know. Meditation is exactly the same - we think we know ourselves, but then we get still and quiet and learn to listen, and suddenly a whole new field of insight and awareness is made available to us.This interview was such a bucket list interview for me. Dr. Arcand - a fellow meditator - helps us to more fully grasp the words of Carl Sagan when he told us we were made of star stuff and the words of Kabir when he wrote that inside the body there are hundreds of millions of stars.Dr. Kimberly Arcand is the Visualization scientist & Emerging tech lead for NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory. Arcand is an award-winning producer and director. She is a leading expert in studying the perception and comprehension of high-energy data visualization across the novice-expert spectrum. As a science data storyteller she combines her background in molecular biology and computer science with her current work in the fields of astronomy and physics.In this episode, Kim and I chat about:What a Science Data Storyteller does and how this relates to our work as meditatorsThe origin of the sonification project at NASAHow data is translated into embodied knowingBlack Holes as cosmic recycling centersWhat happens when a star explodes (hint: the same thing happens to us when we ‘explode'!!)Learning to hear what is unhearableAfter our conversation, I guide a really unique meditation that uses 3 sonifications from Kim and her team to help us map the cosmos inside our bodies. Join me for an exploration of the cosmos - both within and without.Learn more about Dr. Arcand and NASA's sonification project here:https://chandra.si.edu/sound/https://plus.nasa.gov/video/listen-to-the-universe/https://www.kimarcand.comThank you to NASA for the sounds and images in today's episode, to Nick McMahan for the ocean wave field recording as well as the sound design and production of today's episode, and to Brianna Nielsen for production support.Find them here: https://nickmcmahan.com/https://www.instagram.com/brianna_podcastpro/Lastly, be sure to Sign up for my newsletter at https://merylarnett.substack.com/ to access these meditations as stand-alone audio files for your daily practice. Make a donation or learn more about my free offerings and live classes by visiting merylarnett.cominstagram.com/merylarnettyoutube.com/@themindfulminutepodcast#meditatewithmeryl
USM Baseball Player, Matt Russo, talks about some great SMTTT Moments!
You've probably heard that if you scream in space, no one will hear a thing. Space is a vacuum, so sound waves don't have anything to bounce off of. But that doesn't necessarily mean that space is silent. A team of researchers are taking data from a variety of telescopes and assigning them sounds, creating song-length sonifications of beloved space structures like black holes, nebulas, galaxies, and beyond. The album, called “Universal Harmonies” aims to bring galaxies to life and allow more people, such as those who are blind and low-vision, to engage with outer space.Guest host Flora Lichtman talks with two of the scientists behind “Universal Harmonies,” Dr. Kimberly Arcand, visualization scientist at NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, and Dr. Matt Russo, astrophysicist and musician at the University of Toronto.Visit our website to listen to a selection of the ethereal sonifications of “Universal Harmonies.”Universe of Art is hosted and produced by D. Peterschmidt, who also wrote the music. Our show art was illustrated by Abelle Hayford. The original segment featured in this episode was produced by Science Friday producer Rasha Aridi. Support for Science Friday's science and arts coverage comes from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation. Do you have an idea for a future episode of Universe of Art? Send us an email or a voice memo to universe@sciencefriday.com.Read this episode's transcript here.
Meet The Blind Birder Reimagining Accessibility In The Outdoors For many blind and low vision people, accessing outdoor spaces like parks can be challenging. Trails are often unsafe or difficult to navigate, signs don't usually have Braille, guides generally aren't trained to help disabled visitors, and so on. But nature recordist Juan Pablo Culasso, based in Bogata, Colombia, is changing that. He's designed a system of fully accessible trails in the cloud forests of southwest Colombia that are specifically tailored to help visually disabled people connect with nature. The trails are the first of their kind in the Americas, and Culasso drew on his own experiences as a blind person and a professional birder to design the system. He talks with Maddie Sofia about how he designed the trail system and takes listeners on an adventure through the cloud forest he works in. Listen To Ethereal Sounds Derived From Space You've probably heard that if you scream in space, no one will hear a thing. Space is a vacuum, so sound waves don't have anything to bounce off of. But that doesn't necessarily mean that space is silent. A team of researchers are taking data from a variety of telescopes and assigning them sounds, creating song-length sonifications of beloved space structures like black holes, nebulas, galaxies, and beyond. The album, called “Universal Harmonies” aims to bring galaxies to life and allow more people, such as those who are blind and low-vision, to engage with outer space. Guest host Flora Lichtman talks with two of the scientists behind “Universal Harmonies,” Dr. Kimberly Arcand, visualization scientist at NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, and Dr. Matt Russo, astrophysicist and musician at the University of Toronto. Listen to a selection of the ethereal sonifications of “Universal Harmonies.” Why You Should Thank Your Local Wasp It's late in the summer, meaning any outdoor gathering with food and drink has a good chance of being visited by a pesky, buzzing wasp. But don't reach for that rolled-up newspaper or can of bug spray. The wasps in your world play an important role that's often overlooked. Far beyond the social hornets and yellowjackets people think about when they picture a wasp, the wasp world includes thousands of species. Some are parasitic, injecting their eggs into unwilling prey. Others hunt, either paralyzing prey for their young to feed on, or by bringing bits of meat back to a nest for their young. Some are strictly vegetarian, and live on pollen. Some are needed for the pollination of figs and certain species of orchids. Dr. Seirian Sumner, a behavioral biologist at University College London, says that if people understood the services provided by wasps the same way that they understand the need for bees, they might be more willing to overlook an occasional wasp annoyance—and might even be thankful for the wasps in their lives. In her book, "Endless Forms: The Secret World of Wasps," Sumner makes the case for wasps as nature's pest control agents, as important pollinators that should be celebrated. And the pesky yellowjacket at your picnic? It's probably being driven by a late-summer shift in functions within the nest, in which many of the workers die off and are replaced by sexual brood. Earlier in the year, worker wasps can bring bits of meat to the developing young, which reward them with sugary secretions. But later in the season, that food source dries up—so visiting wasps are probably searching for a bit of sugar just to get by. “Watch the wasp, see what she wants at your picnic,” Sumner advises. “Is she going for sugar, or is she going for some meat? Whatever you can work out that she wants, give her a little bit of it. Make a little wasp offering.” Sumner joins SciFri producer Charles Bergquist to talk about wasps, and make a case for why you should be thankful for the wasps in your neighborhood. To stay updated on all-things-science, sign up for Science Friday's newsletters. Transcripts for each segment will be available the week after the show airs on sciencefriday.com.
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SpaceWatch.Global is pleased to present: The Space Café Podcast #77: Matt Russo, Astrophysicist and Sound Wizard, the Surprising Appeal of Sounds from Space. Episode 077 features a special guest: Dr. Matt RussoIn this fascinating episode of the Space Cafe Podcast, host Markus Mooslechner is joined by Dr. Matt Russo, an astrophysicist, and musician, to discuss the connection between space and music. They delve into Dr. Russo's journey from a musician to an astrophysicist, the sound of gravitational waves, and the idea of life beyond Earth. The conversation also covers the importance of interdisciplinary collaborations and the role of music in understanding the universe.Memorable Quotes:"I think the connections between science and music are really just the human mind wanting to understand and perceive the universe." – Dr. Matt Russo"Gravitational waves are very similar to sound waves, but they're not waves of pressure, they're waves of stretching and squeezing space itself." – Dr. Matt Russo "Most astronomers that I've talked to, at least including myself, think it'd be absurd if we were alone." – Dr. Matt RussoShareable Bites:System Sounds, a project by Dr. Matt Russo, translates data from the universe into music to make astronomy more accessible and engaging for people.The discovery of gravitational waves opened up a new way to explore the universe by observing how these waves stretch and squeeze space itself.Copernican principles teach us that we are not in a special place or time in the universe, suggesting that life beyond Earth is likely, given the vastness of space and the number of planets discovered.Sources and Links:Dr. Matt Russo's project, System Sounds: https://www.system-sounds.com/LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory): https://www.ligo.caltech.edu/Book: "The Righteous Mind" by Jonathan Haidt: https://www.amazon.com/Righteous-Mind-Divided-Politics-Religion/dp/0307455777Song: "Little Wing" by Jimi Hendrix: https://open.spotify.com/track/3q8HGZpIuOjgI9UI2Q1iRyThe Space Cafe Podcast brings our signature brand of engaging and relevant content from across the global space economy to you via an exciting new format. Together with award-winning Executive Producer Markus Mooslechner (Terra Mater Factual Studios), our fortnightly podcast features guests that matter.Each episode includes a review of important topics, as well as guest appearances and deep commentary from expert panelists from across the space sector.SPOTIFY: Space Cafe Podcast Guest TunesYou can find us on Spotify and Apple Podcast!Please visit us at SpaceWatch.Global, subscribe to our newsletters. Follow us on LinkedIn and Twitter!
Description: In this fascinating episode of the Space Cafe Podcast, host Markus Mooslechner is joined by Dr. Matt Russo, an astrophysicist and musician, to discuss the connection between space and music. They delve into Dr. Russo's journey from a musician to an astrophysicist, the sound of gravitational waves, and the idea of life beyond Earth. The conversation also covers the importance of interdisciplinary collaborations and the role of music in understanding the universe.Memorable Quotes:"I think the connections between science and music are really just the human mind wanting to understand and perceive the universe." – Dr. Matt Russo"Gravitational waves are very similar to sound waves, but they're not waves of pressure, they're waves of stretching and squeezing space itself." – Dr. Matt Russo "Most astronomers that I've talked to, at least including myself, think it'd be absurd if we were alone." – Dr. Matt RussoShareable Bites:System Sounds, a project by Dr. Matt Russo, translates data from the universe into music to make astronomy more accessible and engaging for people.The discovery of gravitational waves opened up a new way to explore the universe by observing how these waves stretch and squeeze space itself.Copernican principles teach us that we are not in a special place or time in the universe, suggesting that life beyond Earth is likely, given the vastness of space and the number of planets discovered.Sources and Links:Dr. Matt Russo's project, System Sounds: https://www.system-sounds.com/LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory): https://www.ligo.caltech.edu/Book: "The Righteous Mind" by Jonathan Haidt: https://www.amazon.com/Righteous-Mind-Divided-Politics-Religion/dp/0307455777Song: "Little Wing" by Jimi Hendrix: https://open.spotify.com/track/3q8HGZpIuOjgI9UI2Q1iRyHashtags: #SpaceCafePodcast #DrMattRusso #astrophysics #music #gravitationalwaves #spaceexploration #scienceandart #SystemSounds #lifebeyondEarth #interdisciplinarycollaboration Host: Markus MooslechnerGuest: Matt RussoPublisher: Torsten Kriening SpaceWatch.Global GmbHMessedamm 2314055 BerlinGermany○ Website: www.spacewatch.global○ Email: podcast@spacewatch.global○ Exclusive distribution Partner: Bookwire - www.bookwire.de Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The Latest IPCC Report Is Full Of Warnings—And Hope It's that time of year: another IPCC report has hit the presses. These reports from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change are like a check up—to let us know how we're doing on the climate front and what Earth's future is projected to look like. And to no one's surprise, this year's report is full of warnings. But also, it has a lot of room for hope. Maggie Koerth, senior science writer at FiveThirtyEight, joins guest host Charles Bergquist to talk more about the report and other science news of the week. They chat about a 3D printed rocket that didn't quite make it to space, the mysterious Oumuamua space object, the rise of dangerous fungal infections in the U.S., why researchers are so excited about figuring out Beethoven's cause of death, and—of course—new research about octopuses' brain waves. An Underwater Volcano Off The Oregon Coast Sheds Light On Eruptions A thick blue-white haze envelops the Research Vessel Thompson as it floats 250 miles off the Oregon coast. Akel Kevis-Stirling's orange life vest and blue hardhat are vivid pops of color in the fog. “You guys ready to go?” he calls into his radio. The person on the other end crackles an affirmative. “Copy that,” he says and looks up across the rear deck of the research ship. “Alright, straps!” The crew of the ROV Jason jumps into action, removing the straps that secure the cube-shaped submarine to the deck. The remotely-operated sub, with a base the size of a queen mattress, is loaded with scientific instruments it will carry down to the seafloor. Kevis-Stirling gets final permission from the Thompson's bridge for the launch. “Ok, here we go. Jason coming up and over the side,” he calls. “Take it away Tito!” The crane operator, Tito Callasius, lifts the submarine and swings it over the side of the ship into the water. A plume of fine bubbles rises through the waves as Jason starts its mile-long descent to the Axial Seamount, a deep-sea volcano that's erupted three times in the past 25 years. Read the rest at sciencefriday.com. March Mammal Madness Wants To Hear You Roar When mid-March rolls around, your news online—and maybe your conversations with friends and colleagues—can sometimes get taken over by discussions about the tournament. From debating your bracket selections to conversations about last night's matchup, or celebrating big upsets and debating whether this is finally the year the bat-eared fox goes all the way, it can feel all-consuming. March Mammal Madness is an exercise in science communication involving a 64-animal bracket and nightly simulated combat matchups between animals—where the outcomes are determined by chance and specific species traits found in the scientific literature. This is the 10th year of the tournament, which this month has some 650,000 students around the world predicting battle outcomes on the road to the Elite Trait, the Final Roar, and the championship match. Dr. Katie Hinde, a biological anthropologist in the School of Human Evolution and Social Change at Arizona State University, and ringleader of March Mammal Madness, joins SciFri's Charles Bergquist to talk about the keys to success in the tournament. Want to participate yourself? It's not too late—you can find the tournament bracket and more information about March Mammal Madness on the ASU Libraries site. Listen To The Ethereal Sounds Of Space You've probably heard that if you scream in space, no one will hear a thing. Space is a vacuum, so sound waves don't have anything to bounce off of. But that doesn't necessarily mean that space is silent. A team of researchers are taking data from a variety of telescopes and assigning them sounds, creating song-length sonifications of beloved space structures like black holes, nebulas, galaxies, and beyond. The album, called “Universal Harmonies” aims to bring galaxies to life and allow more people, such as those who are blind and low-vision, to engage with outer space. Guest host Flora Lichtman talks with two of the scientists behind “Universal Harmonies,” Dr. Kimberly Arcand, visualization scientist at NASA's Chandra X-ray Observatory, and Dr. Matt Russo, astrophysicist and musician at the University of Toronto.
Chelsea Miya is a Postdoctoral Fellow with the SpokenWeb research team at the University of Alberta. Her research and teaching interests include critical code studies, nineteenth-century American literature, and the digital humanities. She has held research positions with the Kule Research Institute (Kias), the Canadian Writing Research Collaboratory (CWRC), and the Orlando Project. She co-edited the anthology Right Research: Modelling Sustainable Research Practices in the Anthropocene (Open Book Publishers 2021), and her article “Student-Driven Digital Learning: A Call to Action” appears in People, Practice, Power: Digital Humanities outside the Center (MIT Press 2021).Guests:Tunde Adegbola is a Research Scientist, Consulting Engineer and Culture Activist. As Executive Director of African Languages Technology Initiative (Alt-i), Ibadan, Nigeria, he leads a team of researchers in appropriating human language technologies for African languages. In this regard, Alt-i partnered with Microsoft to localise Microsoft Windows and Office Suite for Hausa, Igbo and Yoruba. A Chevening Scholar, Honorary Fellow of the Linguistics Association of Nigerian (LAN), former Council Member of the West African Linguistics Society (WALS), former board member of West Africa Democracy Radio (Dakar, Senegal) and recipient of various academic and professional awards, he has published many papers and journal articles in local and international scientific journals in the area of Human Language Technology (HLT).Oana Avasilichioaei's practice interweaves various areas, including poetry, translation, photographic and moving image, sound, and performance. Oana often explores various means of translating between these areas, bringing aspects of one area into another as a way of putting pressure on the very meaning, conventions, structures, and genres of these fields. Some ideas she engages with include language as trace and resistance, polyglot and polyphonic poetics, phonotopes (intermediary spaces between words, sound and image), and transformation. Oana regularly performs her work and gives talks/presentations on poetics and translation in Canada, USA, Mexico and Europe.Matt Russo is an astrophysicist, musician, and sonification specialist who teaches physics at the University of Toronto. After completing degrees in jazz guitar and astrophysics he began to merge his two passions by founding the sci-art outreach project SYSTEM Sounds. His work has been featured in the New York Times and he frequently collaborates with NASA to make astronomy more accessible to the visually impaired. He is also a scientific consultant, having worked on Netflix's Umbrella Academy. Matt's TED Talk "What does the universe sound like? A Musical Tour" has been viewed almost 2 million times.Peter Olálékan Adédòkun is a master of the Yoruba Batá “talking” drum as well as a drum maker and trainer, performer, and gospel artist. You can follow his work on Instagram: @lekan_drums_intl, @adedokun_peter_olalekan, @drumsvoice_of_Jesus, @iluyoruba_yorubadrums; and Twitter: @Drumsvoicej, @lekanadedokun1
He was on the other side of one of the most talked about events in bowling in a long time and because of that, we forgot to talk about what he was able to accomplish before the eruption from Sean Rash. Matt Russo is the reigning PBA Rookie of the Year, has won multiple collegiate titles in both individual and team events. He's a 6-time member of Team USA and has won multiple gold medals in international competition. Simply put, he's got game, but even better than that is how he handles it. PBA Article by Nolan Hughes: https://www.pba.com/2021/august/matter-when-not-if-matt-russo-captures-first-career-pba-title There's no doubt that expectations are high for Matt because of all that he has accomplished in his short PBA career thus far, and his season almost couldn't have started any better, running all the way from the 4 seed to the title match in the PBA Players Midwest Region final. This is the first time Matt has made an appearance to talk about everything that happened during that show, what his mindset was during the turmoil, and how he's going to use that experience to grow both on and off the lanes. Thank you again Matt. You were a great guest and I am so happy to have had this talk with you. Best of luck at the US Open and for the rest of the season. And don't forget, your best life, is a Ten Pin Life... Ten Pin Life exists to tell the story of what it takes to live a life in bowling and to grow the love for the sport. If you want to learn more about the people, skills and equipment it takes to make ten pin bowling the greatest game there is, Ten Pin Life is for you. Thank you so much for your interest, now get out there and bowl! Follow our social media! Facebook: www.facebook.com/tenpinlife Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/tenpinlife/ TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@tenpinlife? Twitter: www.twitter.com/tenpinlife Thumbnail Image credit: https://bit.ly/3rcDDLG
Matt Russo is an astrophysicist, musician and sonification specialist. He teaches physics at the University of Toronto and has toured schools with sonifications that bring parts of the universe to life. He founded the sci-art project SYSTEM sounds, through which he works with NASA to sonify data collected in and about the cosmos. In this episode of Research Comms Matt Russo talks about what sonification is, the skills required to create sonifications, his work engaging students with data about the universe through sonification, and the musical solar systems that Pythagoras and Kepler were looking for.
As we continue to navigate a global pandemic, the security of medical devices and hospitals is especially pertinent. Camille explores this timely topic in the latest episode of What That Means; she is joined by three well-versed guests to dig in - Matt Russo, who is Senior Director of Product Security at Medtronic, a major medical device manufacturer, as well as Priya Upendra, who is Senior Director of Customer Success at Asimily, a medical device cybersecurity risk management company, and Stephanie Domas, who's Director of Security Communications in Intel's Product Assurance Division. Tune in for the full scoop. They cover: - The various kinds of medical devices you might expect to find in any given setting, whether in a hospital, the home, or anywhere in between - How security is evolving as biology and technology become more and more deeply linked - The threats that come with increased automation and connectivity in a medical setting - What sorts of regulations governments are developing as it becomes impossible not to integrate cybersecurity with healthcare - How vulnerabilities are thought about and addressed as devices are developed and maintained - How an increasing trend towards telehealth and remote physician monitoring is impacted by cybersecurity threats ... and more! Check it out! The views and opinions expressed are those of the guests and author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position of Intel Corporation. Here are some key take-aways: - While most people think about medical devices in a hospital setting, there are many other places one might find them, whether in outside clinics, the home, or even inside the body as implants. - A big challenge hospitals and medical providers face is the potential for a creative hacker to exploit these highly connected devices. - You cannot have a safe medical device if it's not also a secure medical device. - Because there's no prescriptive approach to security, the guidelines are frequently changing and evolving on the journey to maturity. - Addressing threats needs to be a highly coordinated and holistic effort between manufacturers, healthcare providers, regulatory bodies and security researchers. Some interesting quotes from today's episode: “We've seen a lot of those devices become much more technology enabled over time as we start to think about different types of therapies that those products are providing, whether that's diagnostic, just trying to monitor something, or trying to improve a patient's condition that be managing someone's pain, infusing a drug into their body that they need to get better, or even regulating their heart rate.” “Now we have a set of hardware and software components that go into building a medical device. And what that's doing is taking in a lot of the physiological data at the patient's bedside, and then making it available in a very seamless manner to the provider to make decisions about diagnosis, treatment, and also monitoring the patient's condition and well being.” “Hospitals have the challenge where we have all this interconnectivity, but we don't have the right infrastructure or the right security controls to make sure that there are no backdoors into those legacy systems or those proprietary systems from a creative hacker.” “What we've seen over the last several years is evolution and the acceptance that security is innately intertwined with safety, that you cannot have a safe medical device if you do not also have a reasonably secure medical device.” “What you've seen is this evolving guidance where they're really trying to lead the industry through that risk based decision process without stifling creativity.” “What we supporters of medical devices need to do is also coordinate better with manufacturers, with regulatory bodies, with security researchers, and then make sure that we're managing risks in a very holistic manner now.” “Even if a manufacturer puts out a patch very promptly, if hospitals can't apply the patch in an equally prompt manner, we still have a fleet of unprotected medical devices.”
This week we catch up with the latest winner on the PBA Tour Matt Russo. We discuss his win in Jonesboro and look ahead to the the next event in Coldwater Ohio. Russo also discusses his time bowling in college and has advice for high school kids. We also discuss what he learned in 2020.
Brooklyn Rob and Big Mike discuss on this episode Matt Russo's career first title, If the purple hammer should be illegal, Lefties dominate in Jonesboro, Jillian Martin's record breaking PWBA win, PB3 winning 4 straight PBA 50 regional and national titles, Bowlers Journal snub of TD on their All American Team, and worst of the week!
2133 Encore of 1844 Sounds of the Stars (Aug. 11, 2021) Show Notes Last week we talked about creating tactile representations of the universe. This week hosts Nancy and Peter Torpey talk with Greg Salvesen, a post-doctoral fellow at UCSB, and Matt Russo, a professor of astronomy at Seneca College about using sonification to transform … Continue reading 2133 Encore of 1844 Sounds of the Stars (Aug. 11, 2021) →
Randy Seedorff is our guest on this episode. Randy has been writing and performing for over 30 years, with his interest in music starting at the young age of 11 when his mother gave him his first guitar. But it was during his teens that he met singer, songwriter, guitarist and good friend Bill Abernathy. They frequently appeared at local venues in the Kansas City Area playing Americana and folk covers as well as co-written original tunes. That friendship and collaboration continues today. Randy founded the group Soul Purpose in 2010. They released their studio album Rearview Mirror, produced by Larry Gann and Matt Russo, of Awestruck Studios, in 2014. Randy released his 7 track EP, Elevate, in 2017. The first two releases from that project reached number 1 on Christian Radio Charts. Their new EP, Begin Again, is scheduled for release in Jan 2021.Randy serves as pastor of worship and discipleship at Trinity Church of the Nazarene in Independence, MO. Soul Purpose plays frequently at churches, festivals and other events, bringing the love of God, through the vehicle of music to as many people as possible.Visit Randy at https://randyseedorff.com
Brooklyn Rob and Big Mike welcome onto the show PBA rookie and USBC natioanl amatuer champion Matt Russo onto the show. The guys also talk some super bowl odds and prop bets with PJ Haggerty the sweep the rack resident oddsmaker. We also do reviews of the Oklahoma City show and a preview of the Jonesboro PBA telecast Saturday afternoon.
This episode I was joined by Lucy the founder of Blue Ceiling Dance in Toronto to discuss her science inspired dance shows and Matt who lectures in astrophysics and does science-art-music outreach. They spoke about the intersections of science and art, their motivations and their latest projects, specifically the Blue Ceiling show they collaborated on titled 8 minutes and 17 seconds. Follow them on both on social media at @lucybluedance and @astromattrusso or visit www.astromattrusso.com, www.system-sounds.com and www.blueceilingdance.com. Featuring music by The Freak Motif
Matt Russo has managed to combine his two passions, astrophysics and music, into a career. A physics lecturer at the University of Toronto by trade, Matt has developed a system of turning planetary motions into music, System Sounds. We discuss Matt’s early struggle between the arty and scientist sides of his personality and how he combines them both in his teaching. We learn about the Trappist-1 system that changed Matt’s life: a series of seven Earth-like planets arranged in a system that seems so perfect it might just be an alien experiment (and they sound like a radiohead song in Matt’s system). Since we have an astrophysicist in, we also nerd out over one of the defining scientific moments of this decade: the first image of a black hole that was published earlier this year, and the stories behind that historic moment. Plus, we take another look at yet another wild idea Elon Musk is brewing: Starlink. And Pietro asks Matt other big questions. Like what his favourite planet is.This episode was recorded and produced by David Angell at Giant Sound Toronto.Listen to the Sound of the Solar System Matt’s been creating.And buy tickets to his planetarium show, Our Musical Universe, in Toronto.Watch Matt’s TEDx Talk.Follow Matt on twitter.Follow Creative Machines on twitter and instagram.
Show Notes: Matt’s bands (1:30): Tiny Danza and RVNNERS Being singularly focused versus pursuing multiple curiosities. Tim Ferriss blog on one way to think about this: Push vs. Pull Processes Sonification (9:03) TEDx talk University of Toronto (10:12) Matt’s interaction with the six-year old fan of his work (11:00) Matt discusses acting almost unconsciously during his TEDx talk because of his preparation - this might be similar to a ‘flow state’ (discussed by Dr. Csikszentmihalyi on the TED stage) (13:30) Course on astronomical sonification (16:30) Idea of education being built on ‘really clear scaffolding’ (18:40) Antidisciplinary and Joi Ito (20:45) Sara Mazrouei and dating craters on the moon and listening to their impacts (24:15) Matt on Twitter (@astromattrusso) (26:30) The age of data (28:10) Looking to what’s next vs. living in the now (32:00) Derek Sivers “if it’s not a HELL yes, then it’s a no” (34:55) Books: Planet Hunters (36:50) Astrophysics for People in a Hurry (37:00) Music of the Spheres (37:20) Figuring (37:45) Breakfast of Champions (39:00) Nerding out about taking notes (41:00) Where to find Matt online: Planetarium shows: System sounds Matt’s websiteMatt’s Five-cut Fridays and my Spotify account with all Five-Cut Friday playlists If you like this podcast, then share it with someone you think you will love it, too
Featuring: HotNow + Baskin Robbins, Caliburger + NEC, S4M launches Pass-To-Store, Neoway teams with SafeGraph, Kroger partners with Pinterest. Special guest: Matt Russo of Gimbal
Featuring: HotNow + Baskin Robbins, Caliburger + NEC, S4M launches Pass-To-Store, Neoway teams with SafeGraph, Kroger partners with Pinterest. Special guest: Matt Russo of Gimbal
Matt Russo shares his experience composing the music of the stars and planets. Daniel Stone shares the story of David Fairchild, the food explorer responsible for bringing us many of the fruits and vegetables we love today. John Branch talks about his experience with the Wright family, a rodeo and ranching family struggling to hang on to tradition in the changing West.
Matt Russo, co-founder of SYSTEM sounds, educator, musician, and astrophysicist joins us to verbally demonstrate how the rhythm of the cosmos can be converted into music. He states that there is a connection between astronomy and music. Following, Dr. Jeanette Lawler, physics professor at Brigham Young University, joins us to discuss what it is like to be the director of the BYU Planetarium.
1844 Sounds of the Stars (Oct. 31, 2018) Show Notes Last week we talked about creating tactile representations of the universe. This week hosts Nancy and Peter Torpey talk with Greg Salvesen, a post-doctoral fellow at UCSB, and Matt Russo, a professor of astronomy at Seneca College about using sonification to transform astronomical data into … Continue reading 1844 Sounds of the Stars (Oct. 31, 2018) →
Is outer space really the silent and lifeless place it's often depicted to be? Perhaps not. Astrophysicist and musician Matt Russo takes us on a journey through the cosmos, revealing the hidden rhythms and harmonies of planetary orbits. The universe is full of music, he says -- we just need to learn how to hear it. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
L'espace intersidéral est-il vraiment cet endroit silencieux et sans vie tel qu'on le dépeint ? Peut-être pas. L'astrophysicien et musicien Matt Russo nous entraîne dans un voyage à travers le cosmos. Il nous dévoile les rythmes secrets et les harmonies des orbites planétaires. L'univers est entièrement musical, nous affirme-t-il. Nous avons simplement besoin d'apprendre comment l'écouter.
¿Es realmente el espacio exterior un lugar silencioso y sin vida, como a menudo se ha descrito? Tal vez no. El astrofísico y músico Matt Russo nos lleva a un viaje a través del cosmos, revelando los ritmos y armonías ocultas en las órbitas planetarias. El Universo está lleno de música, dice, solo debemos aprender a escucharlo.
O espaço sideral é realmente o lugar silencioso e sem vida como geralmente é retratado? Talvez não. O astrofísico e músico Matt Russo nos leva em uma jornada pelo cosmos, revelando os ritmos e harmonias ocultos das órbitas planetárias. O universo está repleto de música, ele diz, só precisamos aprender a escutá-la.
우주는 으레 묘사되는 바와 같이 침묵 어리고 생기 없는 곳일까요? 아닐 수도 있습니다. 천체물리학자이자 음악가인 맷 루소와 함께 우주 속을 여행하며 숨겨졌던 천체의 리듬과 화음을 들어보세요. 우주는 알고 보면 음악으로 가득 찬 곳입니다. 그가 말하길 -- 우리는 그저 듣는 방법만 배우면 되지요.
Is outer space really the silent and lifeless place it's often depicted to be? Perhaps not. Astrophysicist and musician Matt Russo takes us on a journey through the cosmos, revealing the hidden rhythms and harmonies of planetary orbits. The universe is full of music, he says -- we just need to learn how to hear it.
This week we catch up with Webber International’s Matt Russo. Matt shares how he get his start bowling two-handed and why he chose Webber. Russo talks about his time on Team USA and how his acting has helped his bowling game. Please check out all of our previous interviews and share with a […]
What's going on Bowling Addicts!!! I am back for once again another GREAT Episode tomorrow Night of "The 7-10 Split" Podcast from 7-9 p.m. eastern time The PBA is taking a month off before starting back up in April, but don't you worry, I am STILL HERE giving you all of the insiders information of the world of Bowling. Episode 8 will be Jam Packed with 3 INTERVIEWS!!! - Joining me at 7:15 p.m. eastern will be one of the best colliegete bowler this season!!! Mr. Matt Russo will call in to talk about his college bowling experience. Will we see him ever see him on the PBA tour in the near future? I will for sure ask that question! - Have you ever been to the International Bowling Museum & Hall of Fame in Arrington, Texas? I have been several times and its a showcase of where bowling was and where it is heading! The curator/Program Manager of this amazing building will be joining me at 7:45 p.m. eastern to give us a insight on this Museum that you will just hear RIGHT HERE on The 7-10 Split Podcast! She is the one and only Jessica Bell. - Every Bowler has had several Role Models!! One of my All-Time favorite will be joining at 8:15 p.m. eastern time to talk about his Legendary bowling carrer!! He has the most PBA Career Titles in history!! He is the one-and-only, Walter Ray Williams Jr. Make sure to call in with questions for our guest at 657-383-0267
We welcome Matt Russo and Zach Sanfilippo to talk about Star Wars, video blogging, and the new Batman v Superman: Dawn of Justice trailer.
Matt Russo states that there are still career opportunities in a down economy. His message is that there is still a need for financial services professionals, and Northwestern Mutual is looking for candidates interested in developing their careers.