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Eivind Meland er professor emeritus ved institutt for sammfunsmedisin ved Unveritetet i Bergen, hvor han blant annet har forsket på ungdomshelse og foreldreforemmedgjøring. I tillegg har han mye klinisk erfaring som fastlege, skolelege og helsestasjonslege. I denne episoden snakker vi om viktigheten av å anerkjenne fenomenet foreldrefremmedgjøring også kalt foreldrefiendtliggjøring i hjelpeaparatet. Vi snakker om hva som er kriteriene for at vi kan kalle det foreldrefremmedgjøring, hvordan dette kan spille seg ut i familier og familietjenester, hvilke konsekvenser denne formen for familievold har for folkehelsen og ikke minst hvor skadelig dette er for barna. Meland opplever at det fortsatt er kontroversielt å vise til foreldrefremmedgjøring i familievernpraksis og i rettsvesenet og mener at motstanden er mangelfullt begrunnet.► STØTT SNAKK MED SILJE:Jeg setter enormt stor pris på alle som ønsker å støtte podkasten. Det gjør at jeg kan holde podkasten åpen og tilgjengelig for alle. For å gi donasjoner kan du søke opp “Snakk med Silje” i Vipps eller bruke vippsnummer: 806513► KANALER* Spotify:* YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@SnakkMedSilje* Substack: https://open.substack.com/pub/psykologsilje► SOME* Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/psykologsilje?igsh=MW84MDE0MWplc2FwbA==* TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@psykologsilje?_t=8oc3HBC1r4z&_r=1* Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/psykologsilje* Twitter: https://x.com/Silje_Schevig* LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/silje-schevig-243750101?utm_source=share&utm_campaign=share_via&utm_content=profile&utm_medium=ios_app► KAPITLER00:00 Start01:58 Eivind Melands kompetanse03:32 Familiefaktorer påvirker barns helse05:02 Foreldrefremmedgjøring/foreldrefiendliggjøring14:41 Delt bosted som forebyggende tiltak24:42 Motstand mot begrepet og delt bosted som utgangspunkt i barneloven35:43 Konsekvenser av fremmedgjøring40:04 Feilslutninger og kunnskapsløshet hos hjelpere► REFERANSER:Eivind Melands kompetanse og publikasjoner: https://www4.uib.no/finn-ansatte/Eivind.MelandForeldrefremmedgjøring som helserisiko: https://tidsskriftet.no/2019/03/kronikk/foreldrefremmedgjoring-som-helserisikoFagartikkel i psykologtidsskriftet: https://www.psykologtidsskriftet.no/artikkel/2023as06ae-Foreldrefremmedgjoring This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit psykologsilje.substack.com
I denne episoden forteller dansekunstner Ole Martin Meland om sin vei inn i dansen, hvordan et 18 år langt yrkesliv i ett og samme kompani har formet hans kunstnerskap og hva som interesserer han i sine egne og andres prosjekter. I tillegg forteller han om sitt siste prosjekt – JEG BRAKK, som vises på Dansens Hus 31. januar-02. februar 2025.Dansens Hus Podcast er produsert av formidlingskonsulent ved Dansens Hus, Jonas Øren. Musikken er skapt av Basmo Beats.
Nytt år og ny sesong av Jegerpodden, den 14.sesongen er herved åpnet! Vi har fått med oss den nyvalgte styrelederen i Norges Jeger og Fiskeforbund Ole Martin Meland. Vi bruker først litt tid på å bli kjent med både mannen og jegeren, før tar en runde på viktige saker NJFF jobber med. Hva tenker Ole Martin om det som er på trappene for skytebanene våre? Og hva tenker styrelederen og juristen om forslaget til ny Viltressurslov? Det er noen eksempler på det du kan høre her, og i tillegg blir det naturligvis til både jaktprat og historier.Har du nyttårsforsett om å bli Jegerpodden-Patreon? Da er det bare å klikke seg inn her for ei enkel, rask og trygg registrering: https://www.patreon.com/c/jegerpodden Bli med i Patreon-jaktlaget du også! Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Author and professor Carter Meland joins us to talk about Land as a relative, time as a generative process, and the issue of colonization and human control over nature.
Trude Meland, forfatter av Norsk rigghistorie by Energi24.no
I dagens episode snakker vi med Eivind Meland. Eivind er spesialist i allmennmedisin og professor emeritus ved universitet i bergen. Han har vært universitetslærer og forsker med hovedfokus på forebygging av hjerte- og karsykdom.Dette har åpnet for et perspektiv med motivasjonsarbeid og motivasjonsteori.I klinisk praksis gjennom 43 år har et sterkt fokus vært på psykisk sykdom og psykiske plager både med biologisk behandling, men også med fokus på kognitiv terapi og i de siste 10-15 årene på metakognitiv terapi med aksept og forpliktelsesterapi som fokus.Meland er også engasjert i «fredsarbeid i familier». Han deltar i internasjonalt arbeid for å fremme barns menneskeretter og forebygge destruktive familiekonflikter og fremme gjensidig foreldreskap og delt bosted i vår lovgivning og i lovgivningen internasjonalt. Dette arbeidet har blant annet gitt ham Mannsprisen i 2018, for hans pionerinnsats for å dokumentere og synliggjøre den store positive betydningen av barns fortsatt kontakt og samvær med far etter samlivsbrudd.Vi ville snakke med Eivind om motivasjon, motiverende samtale og selvbestemmelsesteori, og utforske hvordan vi kan bruke denne kunnskapen som grunnlag for å skape positive endringer og større grad av mestring og Mestringstro hos pasienter. Vi er også innom samfunnsmedisin, årets statsbudsjett, lært hjelpeløshet og forskjellen på aksept og resignasjon. REFERANSER: Kronikk av Meland i Tidsskriftet: Motivasjon og SelvbestemmelsePATREON: Fra 2024 spør vi lytterne våre om å bidra til podcasten ved å bli patreons. For prisen av en Oslokaffe i måneden gir du oss muligheten til å fortsette podcasten, samtidig som du skaffer deg selv VIP-billetter til VONDT fellesskapet. Her får du blant annet tilgang på lukket diskusjonsforum, referanselister fra episodene, mulighet til å stille gjestene spørsmål og rabatter på kurs&fagdager. Les mer og bli en patreon i dag på: patreon.com/vondt MUSIKK: Joseph McDade - Mirrors
Creatitive Sports Marketing Radio | Where Business is our Sport
Join us on this podcast episode as we dive into outdoor gyms and the broader gym industry. Our host and guest discuss the latest trends, practices, and innovations shaping the fitness landscape. Whether you're interested in the benefits of outdoor workouts or curious about industry practices, this conversation offers valuable insights and expert perspectives on creating effective and engaging fitness environments. Don't miss out on discovering how these trends transform how we approach fitness and health!Support the Show.Subscribe to our Youtube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCHHOVBghX_ENHwg2QhYUzlQDM us on Instagram at: https://www.instagram.com/creatitive/Connect on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/creatitive/View our Website: https://creatitive.com
Professor Meland: Foreldrefremmedgjøring er omsorgssvikt Vi viser den siste av tre tv-samtaler som Jan-Aage har med Professor dr. med. Eivind Meland i programmet «Hovedstaden med Pastor Torp» der tema er foreldrefremmedgjøring. Professoren og pastoren svinger innom temaet «medisinsk overbehandling», og Meland siterer Benjamin Franklin som sa: «Ingen ting er mer ødeleggende for helsen enn at man blir for opptatt av den!» Eivind Meland fastslår at barn som blir utsatt for foreldrefremmedgjøring har økt risiko for å utvikle psykososiale problemer, og dette vedvarer inn i voksen alder. Det er skadelig for både den psykiske helsen og for den sosiale helsen. Det gjør det vanskelig for parforhold og å leve i relasjoner. Man blir utrygg på egen identitet dersom en forelder fratar deg muligheten til å bli kjent med begge dine opphav. forteller professoren, som kaller dette et «samfunnsmedisinsk problem». Professor Meland understreker at det er noen få foreldre som er farlige for barn, og det må selvfølgelig myndighetsorganer ha fokus på. Men man kan ikke sette på seg skylapper og se på noen former for «volds-anvendelse» mens man lukker øynene for at det finnes også mer subtile former for «vold». Terapeuter skal ikke være så godtroende at de tar for gitt hva én av foreldrene sier, og at en forelder kan bruke mer subtile maktmidler overfor en forelder og overfor et barn. De må høre begge parter. Professor Eivind Meland poengterer at foreldrefremmedgjøring er omsorgssvikt.
Medisinprofessor Eivind Meland: Barn trenger foreldre som er «gode nok» Vi viser den første av tre tv-samtaler som Jan-Aage har med Professor dr. med. Eivind Meland i programmet «Hovedstaden med Pastor Torp» der tema er foreldrefremmedgjøring. Professor Meland er spesialist i allmennmedisin, professor emeritus ved Universitetet i Bergen, individuell veileder for spesialistkandidater i Bergen kommune, gruppeveileder i Legeforeningen og Medlem av Mannsforums forskningutvalg Meland snakker med Jan-Aage om sin lege- og professorgjerning. Men fokuset i denne og de neste to episodene er «foreldrefremmedgjøring». Når skilsmisse inntreffer eller barnevernet griper inn i et hjem, da er det avgjørende at barna får ha et forhold til begge sine foreldre. Foreldre som er «gode nok».
Professor Meland: Tilhørighet til begge foreldre er en menneskerett Vi viser den andre av tre tv-samtaler som Jan-Aage har med Professor dr. med. Eivind Meland i programmet «Hovedstaden med Pastor Torp» der tema er foreldrefremmedgjøring. Professoren forteller pastoren om sin inspirasjon fra buddhismen og Jesus som forbilde, før de går inn på hovedtemaet. Meland mener at i Norge har sakkyndige psykologer fått en innvirkning på rettspleien som er helt uforholdsmessig, ofte på grunnlag av udokumentert metodikk. Det største problemet er at dommerstanden lytter veldig servilt til denne sakkyndigheten, Dommerstanden har abdisert. Norges Høyesterett er fusjonert med denne tenkningen i psykologifaget. Men internasjonalt er denne psykologitenknngen nærmest «gått av moten», forteller professor Meland. I Norge undergraves menneskeretter på dette området ved misbruk av psykologisk teori som ikke står seg empirisk.
In this episode Nat interviews Jason Meland on the struggles of building a business, pivoting a model, and the behind the scenes of low profit. Seasons in business are inevitable and learning how to navigate them is the difference between people who quit vs. evolve into the next iteration. Discover: * Losing 8yrs of building and giving it all away * Pivoting when out of alignment * Finding your purpose * Low profit models and behind the scenes * Defining what success means to you Connect with Jason on FB: https://www.facebook.com/jason.meland Join our FREE Content & Lead Generation Community here: https://bit.ly/3PxLL64 If you're interested in learning how to build a front-end system that turns cold leads into “shut up and take my money clients”, apply here and let's see how we can help: Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/natashastarcheski/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thenatashastorm/
OKS er en kirke for alle mennesker, og spesielt for deg som ikke pleier å gå i kirken. En kirke for folk som deg - Vi ønsker å være et sted der gode vennskap bygges og livet med Gud utvikles! Vi møtes rundt om i landet, finn en avdeling i nærheten av deg på oks.no
Anders Meland jobber til daglig med å forbedre ytelsen til de mange ansatte i Oljefondet. Han har en doktorgrad i idrettspsykologi (PhD) fra Norges idrettshøgskole (2016), i tillegg til befal- og krigsskoleutdanning fra Forsvaret. I dag har Meland ansvar for prosjektutvikling på idrettspsykologisk laboratorium (20%) ved NIH og ansatt som fagkonsulent ved Olympiatoppen (20%), og seniorrådgiver i Norges Bank Pensjonsfond utland (60%). Han har lang erfaring med bruk av oppmerksomhetstrening i en rekke idretter og prestasjonsmiljøer, og jobbet 10 år på Forsvarets flymedisinske institutt innenfor «Human factors». I dette intervjuet gir han mange praktiske tips om hvordan man kan øke egne ytelser. Peter mener dette intervjuet inneholder ekstremt mange innspill man kan ta i bruk selv, i tillegg til den dybde-informasjonen og kunnskapen Meland innehar. Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
“Success is your responsibility and your responsibility alone.” —Jason Meland Becoming the "in demand" expert that others seek out is the holy grail for entrepreneurs, as it allows you to attract a never-ending stream of qualified clients seeking your specific expertise, commanding top dollar while maintaining control of your valuable time. Mastering the art of cultivating this elite status grants entrepreneurs unmatched trust, credibility, and social proof to skyrocket their businesses to new heights. This week, Daniel interviews Jason Meland, the CEO and Founder of In Demand Coach. With 11 years as an entrepreneur and a business coach, Jason teaches coaches and business leaders how to be in demand in their niche, develop high-income skills, overcome limiting mindsets, and persevere to achieve success against all odds. Listen in as Daniel and Jason talk about adopting empowering beliefs instead of limiting beliefs, the correlation between developing high-income skills and becoming "in demand”, why prioritize yourself instead of being a people pleaser, how to ensure that your message and marketing strategies are evolving at the same time, what it means to polarize your thoughts, and practical strategies and mindset shifts to overcome worry and stress. Be Inspired! with Daniel: Website (Makings of a Millionaire Mindset) Website (Daniel Gomez Global) Facebook Facebook Group Twitter Instagram LinkedIn Pinterest YouTube Episode Highlights: 03:22 Shifting From Low Demand to High Demand 08:44 Self-Awareness and Skill Building in Entrepreneurship 11:43 Beliefs, Mindset, and Language 16:17 Personal Growth and Success Through Belief Collection and Community 21:26 Overcoming Fear and Prioritizing Self-Care 28:45 Evolving Marketing Strategies 34:11 Techniques for Overcoming Worry and Stress 44:44 Perseverance and Success Through Failure
In this episode, we will talk about the power of messaging to supercharge your business success with Jason Meland. Join us as we dive into practical conversations on leveraging the art of communication to light up your entrepreneurial journey. Whether you're a seasoned business owner or just starting out, discover how effective messaging can be the game-changer you've been looking for. Tune in for practical tips, real stories, and a roadmap to ignite your business success.Where to find the guest:https://www.indemandcoach.com/5-posts-ebookhttps://www.instagram.com/jasonmeland_/Learn more about www.MyCoachAi.comThis is the official partner of The CreateU Experience podcast. The first-ever platform that consolidates what coaches and businesses need to get more customers. By automating the repetitive tasks, leveraging algorithms, and optimizing communication to better deliver courses, memberships, and 1-on-1 coaching - www.MyCoachAi.com is here to support your growth.that consolidates what coaches and businesses need to get more customers. By automating the repetitive tasks, leveraging algorithms, and optimizing communication to better deliver courses, memberships, and 1-on-1 coaching - www.MyCoachAi.com is here to support your growth.
OKS er en kirke for alle mennesker, og spesielt for deg som ikke pleier å gå i kirken. En kirke for folk som deg - Vi ønsker å være et sted der gode vennskap bygges og livet med Gud utvikles! Vi møtes rundt om i landet, finn en avdeling i nærheten av deg på oks.no
I dag unner vi oss et gjenhør med en av podkastens mest lyttede og omtalte episoder. Der idrettspsykolog, prestasjonsutvikler, Nicolai Tangens første ansettelse i Oljefondet, Olympiatoppens mentaltrener og mannen Rosenborg nylig ansatte for å få prestasjonene på rett kurs: Anders Meland. En episode som gir refleksjoner vi alle som arbeidstaker, arbeidsgiver eller menneske bør ta med oss inn hverdagen. God lytt!
In this episode you will learn the latest 2023 Content Strategies that will help you stand out in a crowded sea. Jason's content strategies are simple, they can triple your revenue in 12 months, and generate consistent lead flow. Jr and Jason will discuss how to effectively position your brand messaging so it attracts and connects with your ideal prospects. They will give you a simple strategy that will drive more leads into your DMs or sales page, and you will get the exact conversion content strategy that Jr and Jason personally use to generate new leads and sales every single day! Your host, Jr Spear, business success coach, has been implementing many of these strategies himself over the years, and he is excited to share with you how Jason has organized it and revolutionized so many businesses around the world. If you are a business owner that wants to STAND OUT online and create content worth creating for your ideal prospects, then THIS is the episode for YOU! Jason Meland is a former firefighter whose career was cut short after a near fatal electrocution accident… After the fire service, he began pursuing a career in the fitness industry where he grew a gym in South Florida to 298 members. During Covid, things took a turn and he launched himself fully into the online fitness coaching space where he grew his business to $80,000 months using organic social media in just under 12 months. He is now the founder & CEO of the In Demand Coach, where he teaches coaches how to monetize their message using conversion-focused content. Jason has been featured on American Ninja Warrior, ABC, Entrepreneur.com and multiple other publications. https://www.indemandcoach.com/2023content Connect with Business Leaders Network www.businessleadersnetworking.com grow@businessleadersnetworking.com
Meet Hallie Meland - our Miami raised, Jonas Brother loving, spunky party girl AND full time event planner for Fun on Weekdays. Did I mention she is also one of my best friends? In this episode we chat about Hallie's experience moving to Austin and working a corporate job before being drawn to the chaos of start-ups. Hallie shares her journey into event planning from her early start of hosting gettys with childhood friends, to becoming the social chair of her sorority & corporate job, her first role as an event coordinator at Blue Norther, to her current position with FOW. Get to know how Hallie was hired and how we manage our friendship and professional relationship. We also chat relationships, buying her home, her can-do attitude, experience with 75-hard and how Hallie continues to live a life fueled by having fun. Sign-up for my NewsletterJoin my Facebook groupThis podcast is sponsored by Macy's. Head over to the below link and explore Jenna's favorite featured items today!
Welcome back to The Fit CFO Show, I'm your host Amanda Hanquist and together with my husband Shawn we created this podcast as a way to help you reach your business's financial goals. We will break down common financial myths and mistakes in business and share with you the tools and knowledge to take your business to the next level. Our hope is that you will become financially equipped for success in your business and in turn help our mission to make this world a healthier place. If you get valuable information out of this podcast, we ask that you please share it with your audience and leave us a review so that we can continue to grow and help health and fitness businesses succeed! Today on the show I'm bringing to you a very special guest, Jason Meland, host of the school of impact podcast. Jason has over a decade of experience in the fitness space. He's built 3 multiple 6-figure fitness businesses, including his own Gym. His main mission now however, is to help online coaches make more money, change more lives and create impact in the world. In this episode we are going to talk all about converting your content into clients, this is an episode you're not going to want to miss. This is the Fit CFO Show! If you liked this episode, subscribe and turn on notifications so you don't miss a beat. We'd love it if you'd share this podcast to your Instagram story, facebook page or any of your other social media platforms so that we can help other health and fitness entrepreneurs out there succeed in business. We so appreciate you listening in and until next time, keep your goals high but each step attainable. Join the: Fit CFO's Financial Blueprint FB Group IG: Fit CFO
Welcome back to The Fit CFO Show, I'm your host Amanda Hanquist and together with my husband Shawn we created this podcast as a way to help you reach your business's financial goals. We will break down common financial myths and mistakes in business and share with you the tools and knowledge to take your business to the next level. Our hope is that you will become financially equipped for success in your business and in turn help our mission to make this world a healthier place. If you get valuable information out of this podcast, we ask that you please share it with your audience and leave us a review so that we can continue to grow and help health and fitness businesses succeed!Today on the show I'm bringing to you a very special guest, Jason Meland, host of the school of impact podcast. Jason has over a decade of experience in the fitness space. He's built 3 multiple 6-figure fitness businesses, including his own Gym. His main mission now however, is to help online coaches make more money, change more lives and create impact in the world. In this episode we are going to talk all about converting your content into clients, this is an episode you're not going to want to miss. This is the Fit CFO Show!If you liked this episode, subscribe and turn on notifications so you don't miss a beat. We'd love it if you'd share this podcast to your Instagram story, facebook page or any of your other social media platforms so that we can help other health and fitness entrepreneurs out there succeed in business. We so appreciate you listening in and until next time, keep your goals high but each step attainable.Join the: Fit CFO's Financial Blueprint FB Group IG: Fit CFO
Bryan Hoskins Phd. PE. Is a professor at Oklahoma State University in the Fire Protection and Safety Engineering Technology program. Topics covered in this episode are myths about evacuation, performance based design, and understanding the intent of codes and standards. Transcript: 00:02.86 firecodetech Well hello Bryan welcome to the firecode Tech podcast. Thanks for coming on the show. Thank you because my pleasure. Awesome. 00:07.56 Bryan Hoskins Thank you guys My pleasure. Glad to be here. 00:13.66 firecodetech Well I always like to get these things started with talking about how you found fire and life safety as a career path. 00:22.41 Bryan Hoskins Well my stories rather interesting I'll give you the short version here because I go on for a long time on this but it's also one I think it's fairly typical in fire protection. Um, and that well there are some people who know about fire protection early on. 00:38.87 Bryan Hoskins I didn't actually discover it until after I was already in college. So I grew up in the San Francisco bay area um and after my junior year. My I have a twin brother so him and I convince our parents to take us on a three week 14 school tour. Um, where we hit schools throughout the entire country. Um that three week tour though was let's say we flew in and out of Nashville and went everywhere from Florida to Massachusetts and through the midwest and everything else. It was a very busy few weeks there. Um. But I know I want to do engineering because I like enjoyed math and science and my senior yearr in high school I had an advanced chemistry elective where well so a prevviewing wifi protection's a good decision. My group everything we did to get to choose their own experiments. Every one of mine groups except for one involves stuff exploding or flames or something else. Another elective I had in high school that I start out and enjoyed was psychology. So what do you do with chemistry fire. And psychology. Well it was obvious then looking back that yes fire protection special life safety was the route I was intended to go but I know I did existed. We happened to stop at the University Of Maryland 01:57.15 firecodetech Are. 02:08.80 firecodetech Wow. 02:11.43 Bryan Hoskins Because my brother was he's the one who actually put Maryland on the list. Um, he really wanted to see it because he was going into aerospace engineering specifically astro there some opportunities there that he didn't that weren't available elsewhere so he put it on the list. 02:27.82 Bryan Hoskins And while we had agreed that neither one of us was going to make the other one decide where they had to go to school. Um, we still end up applying to a lot of the same school so Maryland for me adding it on was something of well this way I mean I did enjoy the campus and if it was something that i. Oh wasn't necessarily a bad one and he really wanted to go there so I put an application but we'd agreed we weren't going to decide based on what the 1 did and then found out about an opportunity I got at Meland that I didn't have anywhere else which was I got accepted in to which I didn't even know this program applied when. Had even applied there but they had what's called the gemstone program which was a 4 year interdisciplinary team research undergraduate team research project in science technology and society and that really appealed to me so it's okay, I'll go to Maryland still no clue that fire protection exists. Um. I also knew I didn't know enough about the engineering field. So I went in undecided engineering and then it oh and I took my time to go and look around at the different majors. Um I know I didn't want to do electrical or computer because that wasn't something that necessarily appealed to me. But. What's the difference mechanical civil aerospace and oh this is fire protectionction 1 let me look at that as well. Um, and as I started to look at it. Some of the big selling points to me. Obviously as I said the okay like fire flames in that chemistry class psychology. 04:01.43 Bryan Hoskins Really fits but 1 of the other big selling points on it to me and this is something that's also true of our program at Osu because Maryland program was founded by an osu alum but when I went to mechanical engineering to talk to them. It was as if I was a number. As I was just sitting there. The advisor said I mean what's the best way to put it later on though I was at an awards banquet a few years later that advisor was hinting out the wordss for mechanical engineering and read off a name and it see well I guess he's not here. She then walked up and so it was such an I mean I had the impression was a number thing and when one of your top students is getting awards you don't even know if they're a male student or a female student and he was the one who is advising everyone. Um. And there was that you're just a number meanwhile with fire protection when I went there I remember meeting with the program head on a Friday afternoon and we had a conversation someone like this one here where it was well let me know what you're interested in. Why were you considering this. Friday afternoon I got there like 4 we talked until about six o'clock so the facts there's a faculty member willing to stay talk to me about the program for a few hours on a Friday afternoon. Um, and there's really that sense of family and community and fire protection which is something that I thought. 05:20.74 firecodetech Wow. 05:36.68 Bryan Hoskins Yes, This is a good fit for me so curriculume lines up then oh the atmosphere lines up and that's how I got into fire protection. So a lot of sort of chances If This hadn't happened that hadn't happened wouldn't be here but I'm very glad that I found it because it is a. Probably the perfect fit for me. 05:55.89 firecodetech Wow, That's awesome means some really neat stuff there in that first just your background piece talking about you know your interests at an early age in chemistry and and fire and then how that like that sense of family and. 06:05.54 Bryan Hoskins With him. 06:12.16 firecodetech In fire and life safety which is something I've always seen people kind of band together because of the just the nature of it and yeah I didn't know that about the okay state being founded by a Maryland lum either that kind of blows my mind because of the tensions between the 2 Oh yeah, yeah. 06:21.28 Bryan Hoskins Me want a way around oh prof Brian who founded the program at Maryland Graduate from Osu. 06:30.64 firecodetech Oh I didn't realize that Wow that's very interesting, Very interesting. Awesome Well to give the listeners a little bit more context Would you speak a little bit about your professional roles and. 06:33.80 Bryan Hoskins Death. 06:50.45 firecodetech Kind of positions that you've held and and how that work has colored your context now as a professor. 06:55.34 Bryan Hoskins Yeah, so in this I'll say 1 thing that I always encourage all of our students do and that's readily offered oh is getting internships so I'll start with some of the internships I had and how that sort of shaped. So my career decisions going forward. So first internship it was right after I had decided I was going to do fire protection because that was my sophomore year summer after Sophomore year I had had 1 fire protection class at that point so not too much in it. But oh. Was going to be home for the summer and wanted to have a meaningful experience and oh from that talk to professor milkke um, at Maryland that spring of the okay I'm going home for this I'm going be home for spring break then home for the summer. Um, I said before I grew up in the San Francisco bay area so the opposite coast of the country and it was so what options do we have out there. Um and he gave me context for 2 different alums that were in the bay area I met with both of them over spring break. Um. And then that led to a job offer from Jensen Hughes or actually at the time it was just cues. Um, because they had some major projects going on that summer where it was smoke control I had never had a smoke control class but they needed someone. 08:26.86 Bryan Hoskins To climb up ladders and make sure dampers had closed um to go through and just do a lot of that type of work which okay, you don't need much in terms of classes and other things to be working on those projects. Um. And because how the schedule went in the month of July I got four days off Sunday the 1st july although that one almost didn't happen and then two of the other sundays um, and each day we were working again at the first job site about 9 am m leaving the last one about midnight one a m. Um, then I had to get home and rinse strike cycle repeat for the entire month. Um, now I was being paid over time for all those extra hours. So it was a very lucrative summer but what I really took away from that 1 um, was just that value of the hands on experience. Because never had smoke control but when I took smoke control later on elderly. Okay, this makes a lot more sense because I've seen it done it and understand what things are and even my class sits today I make sure when talk about smoke control. Okay when we're talking about the special inspector process. Well I was there as the guy was doing it. So here's what people do when they do this rather than as well I read about in a book. Um, but actually having that intimate knowledge there. Um I also while in school um spent a year. Well not quite a year because it was supposed to start. 10:02.91 Bryan Hoskins In the fall of the year when there was the anthrax scare in the capol. So my position got delayed starting a little bit because that same office was dealing with all of that so they couldn't quite take on a student at the start of the semester. Um, but I was working with the congressional office of compliance and that was also a very. Eyeopening experience because dealing with the library of congress buildings dealing with congressional office buildings. There are I mean I got to see an actual halon system while I was there which is something that isn't very common. But there was a lot of understanding of from that sort of hj perspective. How do you do things especially in that environment where there's code compliance but you can't make that building code. Compliant. So how do you have to sort of analyze the hazards and while we weren't doing official performance-based design type of approach. It was that same process of understanding. Okay, what are the hazards what's the intent of the code. How can we make these buildings a situation safe. Enough for oh people to be in the building I was actually the first ever intern that they had hired um and it was a wonderful experience just to see it from that perspective other positions I've had before getting into academia. 11:32.62 Bryan Hoskins Um I spent a year working for Europe um out there San Francisco office doing primarily life safety plan review which again, that's a lot of the okay so how is it that you go about applying things. To the real world. Plus it also helps I think when I have students of well why are you giving us this I had that assigned to me in my first six weeks on the job. You're gonna be graduating soon if they handed it to me. They can hand it to you. So let's get you ready for those things. Um. And again seeing sort of that overall hierarchy of how everything fits together and works together and you have in that office a lot of different trades plus also a lot of the workouts doing with more performance-based design and so really diving into again that sort of. Here's the intent of the code. How can we make sure that our building meets the intent of the code even if we can't quite meet the letter of it. Um, and then the other position I had before oh coming to Osu was working for the national instituteive standards and technology. Nist in the fire research area. Um, and that was a really meaningful experience in that I got to see just when you're trying to look at the problem finding identify. Okay. 13:06.58 Bryan Hoskins Doing research identifying. Okay here's potential issues was it's collecting data here's what the data says um and being able to then bring that back into because National stand technology. It's the department of Commerce and so it's not just doing research for research Sake. It's and now how is this going to be used to help improve things and so that was a big learning experience there as well. 13:34.86 firecodetech So That's awesome. Well I wanted to I see how you know your interests in the commercial more commercial side of things have influenced. So What you research Now. So That's very interesting I like hearing about that. Performance-based design and the different you know real-world application and you know looking back at my time at Osu I can see you know some of the exercises that we did in like you know our life safety class where we're really looking at the building code and functionally going through those. 14:03.64 Bryan Hoskins We. 14:12.16 firecodetech Now I do those every day so I'm very thankful for that background and when I got out into the workforce I could really see how that set okay state grads apart from people who didn't and were just looking at the code for the first time so I just wanted to. 14:25.73 Bryan Hoskins You. 14:29.23 firecodetech You know say thanks for that and then I could see that in your teaching and I and I resonate with that as you're speaking about it now. Um, but yeah. 14:34.87 Bryan Hoskins Us to add on to that I'll just like to add that 1 thing that I've noticed happens. Well a lot in my career is that I try to bring that stuff into the classroom I've had students multiple many times write me like six months after they graduate of. Yeah, when going through your class I didn't understand why you expected us to know all this and do all this at the time thought it was ridiculous again, there's six months in their job. Don't change because it turns out this is what my employer expects so when the students grumble about it. Don't listen to them because what you're doing is a big service to them to help them getting ready for what the career world is rather than just the academic side of things. 15:28.23 firecodetech Yeah, definitely I think that there is a lot of great stuff in the I had you for fire dynamics and the the life safety course and just I mean the fire protection engineering exam is very heavily weighted on that. Fire dynamics. It seems to me and that's a great thing that we could talk about too is your ah recent experience in helping with the sfp prep course but not to get too far off track but it just seems logical in the in the conversation topic. But. 15:52.65 Bryan Hoskins Um. 15:59.45 Bryan Hoskins Yeah. 16:04.34 firecodetech It's all kind of placed together. You know you do it as a practicing engineer or at least a lot of people involved with performance based design do and then it's also in the engineering exam. So all these things kind of dovetail education experience and professional licensure. 16:20.63 Bryan Hoskins Yeah, I'd say it's as so they all dovetail together. Um people sometimes try to think about everything being separate but in reality, everything's always interconnected and woven you can't just focus in on 1 thing. It's always see well this ties into that and here's how everything interconnects and as you mentioned yeah I've been one of the things that I've done professionally is work with the SfPEP exam prep course which is something I very much enjoy because I Think. Talk a little bit more later about all my professional involvement but I think it's very important that oh at least in my position I Realize how much the people before me have done to set it up so where we have the profession that we do. And I think it's very important to give back because I and those again it's more label but part is I Went to back Demo's ability to give back to the profession to have an even bigger impact than I could by just being a consulting engineer for example or. Working in an Hj's office or whatever it is have an opportunity to give back because I realize how much others they've given to me and the P exam prep course is a good example of that because there are many many people who go through that. 17:50.12 Bryan Hoskins Um, and I will say the success rate of students who have taken that course um, who've then gone on to pass pass rates much much higher than the overall pass rate and it's a sizeable percentage of people that are passing or basically taking that course. Because it does get into all the different topics. Um, it's for those students who've been at Osu you've already covered a lot of those topics in your classes and same thing goes to people who might have a degree from Maryland or Wpi or any of the other universities. But. As we all know that's not the majority of people in the field. Most people are there because they've got a degree in something else in those universities while we would love to be having more students. It's getting people to know about it before they come to college or in their first few years 18:33.12 firecodetech Um, yeah. 18:45.90 Bryan Hoskins Um, a lot of people don't discover the field until after they've graduated from college and so for those people who might have been a mechanical engineer by nature who so then they get hired by a firm that oh well, you can do air movement. So here start doing this vent work for a. Smoke control system or okay, you know fluids and pipes here you're gonna be doing sprinklers and so then they learn their one specific area but not all the others and the area I've been teaching though for the P exam Prep courses. Well both on passive Fire protection. Um, which is one that. But even a lot of people who've gone through some of those other programs in Osu don't have a deep knowledge base in um, what? well as to human behavior and have helped with the means of egress one as Well. So very much in just. Teaching people about okay here's what it means and like I do in my classes I tend to focus more on why things are the way they are in the codes and standards or how to approach problems and less on these sort of well here memorize these rules. Um. The reason being is that and I know number of us who have taught for the P Exam prep course we've had this conversation but is the intent of the course when you're teaching something like that just a get ready for the test or is it about. 20:19.70 Bryan Hoskins Giving people the knowledge base they need to be successful in the field and I will sound that one while we are I said very good success rate and give people ready for the exam but there's also a lot of emphasis on not just here here's the question learn how to do these particular skills and then you're done. It's. Really trying to make sure that the people who go through that have a better understanding of what it means to be a fire protection engineer um not just that they can do certain problems because there's other P Exam Prep course is out there that are much more of that you just want to learn how to do problems. They'll do that. Um. 20:47.73 firecodetech Yeah, yeah. 20:56.27 Bryan Hoskins But personally I prefer the approach that sfpe has taken which is why that's the one I'm been working with um which is much more that holistic. Let's tell you what you need to know and in the process you'll get better for the exam. But ultimately I want. People who graduate from Osu that have been in my classes or who take that p exam prep course or any other professional development course that I teach is I want them to be able to go out and be a better professional. Not well I put in my time got the checkbox and so now it's time to move on. 21:34.11 firecodetech Yeah I Know what you mean? Yeah,, That's a good point I like the sentiment of understanding the deeper meaning why and the more I get into my professional career the more I'm impressed by professionals that don't just can't aren't just regurgitating code. You know, but they understand the deeper meaning and the intent and and have the ability to push back when the official is is not asking for something that is not you know with what the intent of the code What is asking and so. Think that's very important the more you get into the profession is to understand why and not just be a code Jockey somebody who just you know is very lawyeristic I mean you have to be but um, you need both. But yeah. 22:22.29 Bryan Hoskins Yeah, yeah, and I'll also add to that one especially at Osu which the reason why there I'm even more stressing why things are the way they are done is I like to point out to students of one. The codes are always changing. Um, if you memorize all you're doing is memorizing numbers or something like that. Well what if you know the say twenty eighteen edition of the Ibc and then you're on the 21 edition of Nfpa one one. What's going on in those 2 but from a life safety standpoint the numbers change maybe well gray areas might shift one way or the other. But what's going on. There is no different love them. We get to the 2033 edit of the code I can guarantee you that there will be major differences from what there are now not necessarily sure what. 23:06.85 firecodetech And. 23:19.16 Bryan Hoskins Those are going to be um, but we know that they're going to change over time and if all that you ever do is memorize. Okay, here's what this one particular section is right now that doesn't give you the flexibility when you're going to the different additions of the code. Plus let's say you get. A project 1 time. That's overseas. Well you have to meet their code but you also have to consider from a life safety standpoint and what's going on there and are you actually meeting the temp because the intent of the codes. That's pretty much stable. We're not seeing Matt change. 1 addition to the next. And so understanding those helps with performance-based design helps when you end up in different jurisdictions. Um, and yeah, ultimately it's gonna make you a better professional if you understand why rather than simply relying on the what. 24:13.52 firecodetech Yeah, that's a good point and you never know you know whether you're going to be working on a department of defense job or a V a job or a fm you know, global criteria job where the criteria is going to shift so dramatically that. 24:23.93 Bryan Hoskins Um, okay. 24:31.51 firecodetech You know if you don't have your fundamentals rock solid Then you're just gonna just be totally unwired in your capability to design or function in that space So is very important and um, but yeah, so let's talk about. 24:40.70 Bryan Hoskins Never. 24:47.77 firecodetech Your role now at Osu and we've alluded to it several times already. But um, ah, you know how you're a professor now and a little bit of background on the program at ok state of course go poke. So I'll always like to um. Promote the program when I get a chance to. 25:06.91 Bryan Hoskins Yeah, so oh Oklahoma State University has the oldest still active fire protection program in the nation. Um, so we've been around a long time longer than any of the others and it was founded. Originally. Um, to well teach some of the basics of fire protection then as study changed and Osha came into existence the program adding the safety con component. Now we have some students who think it's fire protection or safety. Um, but the facts you like to emphasis. It's fire protection and safety. Um a lot of what gets done in the fire protection realm in the safety realm you're doing a lot of the same basic things. Um. And so it's easy to transition from one to the other. They're not 2 distinct things. They're really in both cases you're trying to identify hazards trying to identify mitigation strategies for those hazards and then it just comes down to that specific application that you're applying it to. Um, but I will say the 1 thing that I think osu does better than any of the other programs I am biased here, but it's very much. It's an engineering technology program and engineering technology. What. 26:38.74 firecodetech Um, yeah. 26:41.70 Bryan Hoskins Separates that is it's far more based on the hands on so in our program majority of the classes that are in major have a lab component. So the students get to go actually touch feel experience see. Whaters arere talking about. They're not just reading about it in a book. Um, and I think that's a very valuable skill set to have um, going back to said earlier of learn about smoke control being able to go into buildings and see. Those dampers operating and seeing how the special inspection was going helped me understand that far more than just reading about in a book does um and so I think that's one of the big advantages to the Osu program is that hands on applied. Oh part of the program. And not just pure theory now as far as what I've taught there what I cover. Um, okay I've just said it's not it's fire and safety. That being said I tend to teach classes are a little bit more fire focused because that's. I got my degree. Oh that's also I mean I'm a professional fire protection and I'm a professional licensed fire protection engineer. So yeah, that's my main area but as far as that goes oh my first semester at Osu I was teaching. 28:11.19 Bryan Hoskins Butker design and oh the at the time called structural design for fire and life safety where it covered passive fire protection and nfpa one one basically put the building code passive fire protection nfpa one a one and human behavior all into one course. 28:29.61 firecodetech Our shit. 28:30.65 Bryan Hoskins Um, we have since split that up some because it was about too too many important Concepts all being crammed into one course. Um so I've taught I said taught their own passive life safety Human behavior. 28:49.83 Bryan Hoskins And building code all at once then the next semester added in human factors. Um, which okay, that's not fire protection but it's closely related to a lot of things I do which is looking at human response and emergencies. 29:09.50 Bryan Hoskins Um, and so it ties in very much directly with the research and again life safety side that I've been interested in after that because of some changes in faculty and other changes I taught oh and continue to teach The. So suppression detection course. Um that covers as again as's one as class we put probably too much in at first because it's the only class in the major on fire alarms. The only class in the major that covered special Hazards um and covered the start of Sprinkler systems. 29:46.58 Bryan Hoskins All into one course. Um, now we split off that special Hazards more into an elective which I teach Um, that's also available as a grad course and that suppression detection class has shifted to being still the introduction to sprinkler systems as well as much more on fire alarms. 29:54.25 firecodetech Um. 30:04.61 Bryan Hoskins And just how codes and standards operate and work then I also as you mentioned earlier top fire dynamics for a few years um as just as best fit for who was on faculty at the time be teaching that I've taught oh smoke control. 30:24.36 Bryan Hoskins Um, and oh yeah, so that's pretty much everything on the pe exam prep course except for I haven't yet got fluids because of just other faculty have gotten that one. Um, but I've covered so much of What's on the p exam but I also think it's important. Um for someone who's a professor to have taught that wide range because 1 in order to understand if you can understand you you can teach something you have to understand it. Um, and. Because if you're trying to teach and you don't understand it. It's going to be a failure for everyone at that point. Um and so having that is good plus by having that bread. Of course that I've taught I mean and you might remember this from some of the class but routinely point out. And then in this class here's how this ties together and then in this class. Oh so bringing in those connections which you know best when? okay, very taught that class. So okay, well in that class. You did this here's how that's relevant here because far too often students. Um, which they learn better than this when they get older but students a lot of times view the class that say okay I have to learn this stuff for the test and then I can immediately forget it and never have to know it again. Um, and they don't. 31:57.57 Bryan Hoskins See all those interconnections but the as many of your listeners probably know as you get into a real profession even if oh there's one area that you primarily work in you don't just use the 1 class and that's it. You're having to pull in multiple things all through it. Everything's interconnected and so by teaching all those things it makes it even easier for me to point out to the students directly. Okay, you covered that here. That's how this applies here. So if you need to go back and review what was there this would be a good time to do it. To just tie in this entire experience of learning. Um rather than viewing it as a bunch of separate individual steps. 32:43.64 firecodetech Oh yeah, That's a great point because our profession is notorious for being just widespread I mean mechanical systems electrical systems life safety and you're looking at building construction and paci fire protection and So. You're you the whole profession is based on being a jack of all trades. So. 33:09.42 Bryan Hoskins Yeah, and I will say earlier I'd mentioned how I end up fire protection. The one part I meant to add in there as well is to just echo what you said is one of the other things that that to our conversation with the program had um that drew me in was that. You had to be f like we have to pull in all these different things because just personally I prefer having to okay I can use stuff from Psychology Sociology and human Behavior. So You have to understand that you have to understand the mechanical civil. As but to a lot of other majors where you end up being much more siloed you're not using as many different things and that required breath was something that definitely peeled to me because it was yes, there's more to this field. More opportunities more career paths that are available than in some of the others. 34:09.67 firecodetech That's a great point. Yeah, it's definitely a good career for somebody who likes to be interested in in varied pursuits and very engineering so varied engineering systems because. I Mean there's just so many different things you could look at especially I mean people get into product fire protection and Ul listings and ah fm approvals I mean so you could be looking at fire and lie safety characteristics about anything in the built environment and then also and in the product market as Well. So if you. 34:23.49 Bryan Hoskins Given. 34:39.67 Bryan Hoskins And that's one of the big advantages of yeah and I would say that's also one of the big advantages to the Osu program because it ties in again, both bar protection and safety. We've had many alums that they start out going down one path. 34:42.57 firecodetech If you want variety. It's integrate trade. 34:57.89 Bryan Hoskins And then go down something completely different and then get us something else because of what opportunities come up and just having that Osu degree has opened up doors that a lot of the other people just didn't have available to them because of how special our program is and. All the different things that it touches on it really gives someone many different options for where they want their career to go. 35:27.66 firecodetech There's a great point yet fire protection has awesome career opportunity and I love that point also about that you said about the hands on nature of the experience at Oklahoma state because as a professional you know. Everything looks good on paper and so you can design something and think oh yeah, it looks great. It meets all the code criteria. Well it doesn't fit in the room so you need to think about what does this physically look like and so I think that's a very important distinction to make that. Physical and corporeal manifestation of these fire and life safety features are just as important as their code compliance. But so I wanted to break into a little bit of your expertise in. 36:12.79 Bryan Hoskins Um. 36:21.65 firecodetech Um, evacuation and sort of your research topics. But I know that you have a big interest in these areas and just I was reading some of your technical one of the. Papers or pieces of work that you put out I'm not as well versed in like how to analyze or read literature this produce in Academia but I was trying and doing some research for the show. But I'd love to talk about? um. 37:00.70 firecodetech Just evacuation and what you're researching now and get into your professional expertise. 37:04.22 Bryan Hoskins Okay, so I where I've taught everything but my and as far as again so that ging also I'll touch on that sort of Breadth of knowledge of my senior research project. Was on passive fire protection looking at the effect of missing spray applied material on a steel. Trust my master thesis was on oh characterizing the flow from a foam nozzle. Um, both of those were based on the K which projects are available which projects have funding sure I can do that. Um, but good experiences. But for the Ph D I knew I needed to do something that was going to be what I enjoy because if you're going to torture of yourself to go through that process of getting a Ph D which I've done it and I still think anyone who does it is partially Insane. Um. There's no other real rational explanation there? Um, but going through that I knew it had to be something that I would enjoy because if you're spending that many years that diving that deep on a topic. 38:02.89 firecodetech Um. 38:14.62 Bryan Hoskins If it's not something that you truly have a passion about it's not going to end up Well um, and my passion I knew was in the area of human behavior and fire. Um I said Psychology Oh in high school tying that in. 38:21.00 firecodetech Yeah. 38:31.93 Bryan Hoskins And also life safety. Why am I in this field. Ultimately when I think about it's to help people. Um, it's what I want to do and not that designing a sprinkler system isn't helping people. It is um because you're keeping them safe when there's a fire. But looking at that human aspect and understanding how people behave and respond um is something that was very much of a yes this is something I need to be doing with my career. This is the avenue I want to go down. Um, and so my. Matt for my ph d um I spent a few years going through some stairwell building evacuations. Um, basically going frame by frame tracking what people were doing other people. 39:27.57 Bryan Hoskins Again, going back to the insane part thought that I can sit there day after day going frame by frame getting over 10000 data points collected from this. Um, that's to say they wouldn't have done it themselves but gingling back to that hands on part of it. What I found most valuable about that. Um was going through that I got a much better understanding and feel for what was going on there because if all that you have is numbers k engineers give me numbers. Give me. Oh. Excel or Spss Or Saft or one of those and I can spit out stuff I can get answers. But in the research field. 1 of the things that a lot of us. Well everyone knows is you can get numbers. But. The job of the researcher is to understand what those numbers mean and to put them into practice. Um, and so one of the I mentioned this in my class a lot but with human behavior and fire pretty much everything that we discover and new is not anything that. 40:24.79 firecodetech Are a. 40:41.81 Bryan Hoskins Is ever the Wow How is that true I would never have expected that it's always see Yeah, that's how things are but yet we've been designing not with that for years and I'll get into some examples of that um tuna. Well. 40:47.98 firecodetech Here. 40:57.19 firecodetech Um, and. 41:00.39 Bryan Hoskins First of all I'll talk about this is predates me but 1 of the big myths in human behavior is myth of panic because there was actually for years and years and years was you don't tell people what's going on in a building when there's a fire because they'll start to panic. Panics irrational anti-social behavior. Basically someone starts standing there frozen in fear or shoving other people all the way and so on you can find lots of examples of this in hollywood clips. Um, actually one lab in by safety I play a bunch of clips from Tv and movies showing how. They portray evacuation of fire and then find clips on like Youtube of how it actually responds um in that. What do we see the fire alarm goes off if people get up because that's just a drill I can just ignore this if they get up. They're walking orderly patiently letting other people pass them even when we look at oh case studies of real fires same thing so there was no reason to keep that information from people. But that's what the industry thought was everyone's going to panic. Um. Or there's another example that again predates me. But um, this one's 1 found by Prof Brian that again is not surprising but early code development and requirements were based on everyone would just walk out the building and that's basically's a fluid particle and that's how it would be. 42:37.54 Bryan Hoskins He came up with this Oh when he studied the Runndo Park fire. This revolutionary thing parents will go in after their children if they're left behind and they can't find them oh because parents went back in for their children that burning building or other people went in to rescue friends and other things rather than just the back wing outside and. That was revolutionary at the time but yet no one's also shocked that wait a parent would go after their kid. It's more the wait. Why would anyone think otherwise but that's what the industry did at the time so in my dissertation One of the big findings I had there. Um that has. 43:06.59 firecodetech Um, well. 43:15.64 Bryan Hoskins Changed how oh we approach some things is since I said it's looking at people back wing downstairs when you walk downstairs. You don't go straight make a ninety degree return go across make a ninety degree turn and go down. It's more of an arc a semicircle type shape around the landing I even remember talk to my advisor about this and it see are you sure so then pull up the videos. Yep and when I bring it up in class now I'm yet to find it tune of no no I walk down and make those sharp angles. Okay, well let me phrase it I've then had students when we did things onstairs walk that way simply to prove a point but it doesn't happen in real life and so that's thing a lot of this st in human behavior and fire is just pointing that out. Um, also say 1 thing I've done a number of. Talks and talk about human behavior and fire is mentioned okay, imagine the scenario you are sitting in an airport a major metropolitan airport. One of those hub airports and the fire alarm goes off oh what are you going to do. And then play a video that's on Youtube of a fire at one of the major hub airports and was it show and you can pull this up yourself from multiple different airports multiple different places. Other things was it show. Everyone's sitting there. Oh no, 1 ne's trying to get back through security. 44:49.42 Bryan Hoskins Um, to have to cross back through and every time I've talked to people is that what you expect all but well all, but basically 1 time have I had people say yeah, that's what I expected. The 1 time was talking to a bunch of politicians. And they were shocked that not everyone listened to the directions. Um I guess politicians have a different perspective on things but everyone else is the yeah that doesn't surprise me. That's what I'm used to That's why I expect the announcement comes on and people ignore it. And so that then gets into and I've done research in this area as well. Not just the movement but also looking at how do we effectively get information to people what is needed to get them to go from that just sitting there to actually starting to evacuate and so. How is it that the notification process works getting time back into that human behavior and fire area. 45:52.91 firecodetech Yeah,, That's very interesting I Definitely think Politicians have a different view of reality. But that's ah off topic. Um, that's but ah, another thing I was just thinking about and I didn it to. Provide this before this might be I don't know if you'll have an answer for this but I had a question about like performance based design versus a more prescriptive design and I know that the answer is probably it depends. But. 46:28.50 Bryan Hoskins Nothing. 46:30.60 firecodetech If you could give any insight to which one of these methods have greater allowances for life safety or if there is a break even point in building size or complexity where that might be. 46:49.39 Bryan Hoskins So you're right? The answer is it depends. Um, it's actually it's difficult in that I don't think that there is a specific point of. 46:51.26 firecodetech That's a difficult. 47:02.92 Bryan Hoskins Okay, when you get to this may square foot this many dollar figure. Whatever metric of sort of a cut and dry line. Um, because for example, New Zealand at one point went to everything had to be performance based and that did not work so well. 47:21.98 Bryan Hoskins Um, but everything being prescriptive does not work. Well either. And really if we look at and I talk about this in life safety. So this is not really too far with stretch for a question I so of already know my answer in advance and actually talking about this. Just. Yesterday in class when we look at the prescriptive code. The prescriptive code is in many ways a performance base code and hear me out on this when we look at the prescriptive code. Where do numbers like maximum travel distance come from number of exits come from. Well it's based on golden objectives that could set so nfpa 1 one for example, is anyone not into most fire shall be kept safe long enough to evacuate relocate. Um, or defend in place and so you can see that similarity to okay and you're doing performance space design you have to come up with your goals and objectives and that's very easily one that's going to be there anyone not into with fire shall be kept safe. 48:35.34 Bryan Hoskins And then if we look at the code how they okay theoretically where did numbers like travel distance. Oh come from. Well it's based on a typical building. We'll have this type of fuel loading in it and that's why it's different for chakmancy in part. Um, so here's the expected fuel loading here's the expected ceiling height. Oh therefore the time until the smoke layer descends to where people are at should be about this much time we know the speed people walk at put in a safety factor there. And so with this setup everyone will be out safely before the fire becomes too big now I say theoretical. That's where it comes from because I think most of its numbers actually came from people at a conference room 1 time going. Okay, we need to come up with a number. Okay, that 1 looks good. Let's see there. Um, but. In theory where it comes from its at so like the ockment load factors where do they come from going out studying a building counting the number of people getting the dimensions and adapting it for that. So the prescriptive code. It's very good. For a building that's similar to that assumed building and many of our buildings are because you're dealing with okay seven foot 6 to ten foot ceiling heights not too much different. The commodities in them are gonna be about the same people in them. We can start to come up with those. 49:56.10 firecodetech Um, and. 50:03.47 firecodetech Naning. 50:09.32 Bryan Hoskins Methods to approximate what it's going to be and as far as the having the committee then set what the minimum standard is saves a lot of time and effort because if every project has to be performance based.. That's a significant time investment. Um, for all the stakeholders involved and for a simple 3 story office building where they're building 50 of them in the town type of thing. Why go through each one of those projects and have to do that when the prescriptive code works very well for that. It saves time effort money. So for a simple building that's sort of meeting what that stereotypical building sort of underlying the prescriptive descriptive codes is just do prescriptive but a number of the numbers in the prescriptive code. 51:03.20 firecodetech Um, appreciate that. 51:07.94 Bryan Hoskins And mentioned in class yesterday they're arbitrary what I mean by that is let's say I have 500 people in a room I can have two doors out of there and it's perfectly acceptable by code perfectly safe I put in 1 more person. 51:16.60 firecodetech Um, yeah. 51:25.42 Bryan Hoskins Point two percent change in the occupant load that one person I now have to put in a third exit door have I really changed the safety in that building by changing the augment load by 0.2% that I now have to. Put in a third door. No 501 peoples meet just as safe as five hundred with two exits there's not any study date or anything 500 is round number and that's the number they got picked now I'm not saying that 500 bad number I'm saying it's an arbitrary number and that's the advantage to performance space design on 1 project that I worked on. Um while at europe there was a large casino. Um, that was being proposed to be built and to make it work. 52:05.63 firecodetech Yeah. 52:21.51 Bryan Hoskins They're gonna have to have some like 12 or 13 stairs to meet travel distance requirements scattered throughout that floor. The owner did not like that idea why for security reasons putting in a lot of stair shafts makes dead spaces and security becomes a problem also just the. Um, beyond that they wanted there so you can look across the room and see the person winning way over there. Um, so that way you felt like you could be winning at your table so they wanted that more open area and travel distance is meaningful for a normal building. 52:43.55 firecodetech My kids. 52:58.79 Bryan Hoskins But let's think about against one of those major Las Vegas casino type places you have a huge floor plan. So how long is it going to take the smoke to descend all the way down to where the people are at and the answer was a very long time I went to the fire modeling to. Determine what it was but it was in excess of 20 minutes um and so then if we can get everyone out of there by just putting in I think we had doing so like 4 5 6 stairs at the different outside of the building. It gets the owner what they want. 53:37.15 Bryan Hoskins And we're gonna get everyone out of that building safe if there's a fire I have no doubt about that in my mind. Um, why because that building's not a typical building the wide open floor plan made it different and ultimately what's the goal of the fire protection Community. Keep people safe in the event of a fire. So As long as we can keep people safe in the event of a fire then well that's what matters and so that's what we need to be able to show and so and why prohibit the owner from doing something. If. It's going to be safe to do it and so that's the advantage performance base design when the uniqueness of the architecture or materials being used will still lead to the same level of safety as the base code provides. Then it should be our job as practicing engineers in the field of life safety Fire protection. Um, but to make sure that those building owners can do the things that they want to do can use their buildings the way they want to do but doing it in a safe way. And that's what performance spaces design and allows us to do and so I'm not gonna I say I'm not go set a specific dollar figure or a square footage or anything else. But if the prescriptive code does not meet the owner's desires then the performance based design becomes an option. 55:12.44 Bryan Hoskins To be able to allow them to do what it is. They want to do and if they just want to go prescriptive because that's goingnna be a less expensive option. That's their choice. Um, but if or if they have just set in a more building and the prescriptive code works fine then great. Shown that it's safe enough. But for those unique designs for those buildings where they want to do something a little bit different then that's our job to make it so where they can accomplish their goals but do it in a way that's safe. 55:34.36 firecodetech Um, and. 55:48.11 firecodetech I Appreciate that. That's a perspective on performance based design I don't think I've heard before I don't have as much experience with it. But I appreciate that sentiment In. You know how that discretion call and really understanding the factors of what safety level that the prescriptive code provides and matching that calculated or performance-based design methods is very interesting but. 56:25.41 firecodetech Anyways, well I just want to wrap things up and say thank you for talking Brian I could talk to you for another 2 hours probably you've been just a a walt of knowledge on and we didn't even get to speak about your professional society involvement more and. Your thoughts on the industry and where things are going but I want to be mindful of what you got planned today and maybe we can have you on that in the future again to cover some of those topics. 56:51.17 Bryan Hoskins Absolutely be happy to. It's great talking to and again you bring on a professor I get paid to talk for a living so always enjoy talking about the industry of the field and doing everything we can to help promote it continues to that growth. 57:08.57 firecodetech Definitely well I appreciate it. You make it easy on me which I enjoy of course but alrighty we'll we'll wrap it up. 57:12.10 Bryan Hoskins Thank you.
Denne episoden inneholder et engasjerende foredrag om den kristne apologetikkens hvorfor (berettigelse), hva (innhold) og hvordan(praksis) utfra sentrale bibeltekster. Foredraget ble holdt av Lars Dahle 25. januar 2023 i serien «Bibelkvelder» på Danielsen Ungdomsskole (Frekhaug). Arrangører av denne foredragsserien er Norkirken Nordhordland, Frekhaug Indremisjon og Meland kyrkjelyd. Opptaket er gjort i regi av «Bibelkvelder» og re-publiseres med tillatelse. Lars Dahle er førsteamanuensis i teologi ved NLA Høgskolen Kristiansand og daglig leder for Damaris Norge.
This week on Finding Your Bliss, Life Coach and Bliss Expert Judy Librach is joined by Executive Producer and Series Creator Carolyn Meland! A passionate storyteller with an eye for casting great talent, Carolyn is a Canadian Screen Award, Realscreen, and Banff Rockie nominated Executive producer, writer, and series producer. She has created, produced and directed numerous shows and formats including STYLE BY JURY, the number #1 makeover format in Canada, running for 9 seasons, with a total of 186 episodes, BRIDES OF BEVERLY HILLS (TLC & Corus), CHE*F OFF! (Food), TOTALLY TRACKED DOWN (Reelz), ARRESTING DESIGN (W Network), GREAT CANADIAN HOMES (HGTV), CANADOODADAY (CBC Kids) and she is the Creator and Producer of the hit series WE BOUGHT A FUNERAL HOME for Discovery+ which follows a Toronto family as they take on the quirky renovation of a 100-year-old funeral home. The series debuted on October 1st, 2022, and was consistently among their top five best-rated shows on the Discovery Platform. She is also the Creator and Producer of BOLLYWED, currently in production with CBC - it just premiered on Thursday, January 12th, 2023, at 8 pm. Her animated family feature screenplay musical, Princess UP! is a 2021 Screencraft Finalist. Her other passion projects include her self-funded documentary REBEL DAD, which has been in the works for three years. Carolyn spent 7 years as a producer-writer at CTV both on the flagship current affairs show CANADA AM as well as CBC
Today's show is a live coaching call regarding a topic that has been very relevant to me recently. We are talking about the many nuances of online courses. I hope this episode will be helpful to you and bring new ideas if an online course is on your radar.Our Featured Guest-Kristen Boice, LMFTKristen Boice is a therapist in private practice and a fellow podcaster. She has realized the need among her listeners for an online course. Her podcast, Close the Chapter, is about closing the chapter on certain things in our lives so we can open ourselves up to new opportunities. In today's coaching call, I'll share some lessons I've learned along the way about online courses. We'll talk about the rationale behind creating a live course vs. a pre-recorded one. We will wrap up with a pre-launch strategy to help get buyers for your course before you launch.Pathways To Healing Counseling Kristen BoiceYou'll Learn● Why Kristen started her podcast about two years ago to provide another opportunity for deeper work for her clients● How an online course can help you get more information out to curious people● The options for your course and other services● Why niching down is a big challenge for therapists● How Kristen sees the epidemic of people feeling “not good enough” and being scared to speak up● How a niche can help you offer value and find your sweet spot● How the best courses take people from one place to another● Why Kristen focuses on helping with the hard conversations● How to use phraseology that appeals to people and addresses their need● Step-by-step actions to build your email list and create effective opt-ins● How to create value on the front end of your course by validating your contentToday's Sponsor: Online Course SchoolI know that many of us want to launch a successful online course whether it's to share our message with a larger audience or to diversify our income beyond 1:1 work.Speaking from personal experience, I also know that there are a ton of barriers to getting started: the tech, the mental hurdles, being unsure of whether our course will make money, or even how to market and grow our online course. Online Course School is a live 8-week cohort-based experience where you'll gather with other therapist course creators to create your online course. It includes teaching workshops from Meland the STC team, weekly assignments, and opportunities to work together to get things done. By the end of our time together, you'll have your lessons and modules outlined, know what tech, software, and platform you need to record your online course, a working sales page, and have a concrete growth plan for your online course.We'll be launching our first cohort in Sept 2021 with six members. If this sounds like something you'd love to be a part of, please check out my free A to Z Online Course Guide.The guide will help you learn from my mistakes over the past 6+ years of being an online course creator and lessons I've learned from...
Per i dag finnes det ingen utredning om menns helse, til tross for utfordringer på flere områder. På kvinnehelsesiden har det derimot kommet flere offentlige utredninger. Dermed er det viktig at vi også husker på å snakke om menns helse. Det mener ukens gjest, Eivind Meland, som også er en av forfatterne bak en debattartikkel om temaet i Tidsskriftet. Meland er spesialist i allmennmedisin og professor emeritus ved Universitetet i Bergen.På hvilke områder er det menn i størst grad opplever helseutfordringer? Det får du høre mer om i ukens episode av Stetoskopet.Debattartikkelen «Vi må også snakke om menns helse» er skrevet av Eivind Meland og Dag Furuholmen. Den kan leses i Tidsskriftet nr. 17/2022, og på tidsskriftet.no: https://tidsskriftet.no/2022/11/debatt/vi-ma-ogsa-snakke-om-menns-helse Tilbakemeldinger kan sendes til stetoskopet@tidsskriftet.no. Stetoskopet produseres av Caroline Ulvin Johansson, Are Brean og Julie Didriksen ved Tidsskrift for Den norske legeforening. Ansvarlig redaktør er Are Brean. Jingle og lydteknikk: Håkon Braaten / Moderne media Coverillustrasjon: Stephen Lee
Episode #44: Let's Talk About the R in VR/AR with Alex Meland! Augmented Reality is essential to the XR ecosystem, but one should not underestimate the 'R' in VR/AR. With the rise of immersive technologies integrating into our society, work & daily living, it's an excellent time to have a conversation about what it all means. In this episode, Alex Meland shares his experience, philosophy & passion for the XR space in this in-depth conversation that will leave you wanting more! FULL TRANSCRIPT HERE About Alex Meland: Alex Meland (@ALEX VR) is an American virtual reality industry professional and content creator. Alex co-founded the Between Realities VR Podcast, a talk show with weekly guests from within the world of virtual reality, with partner Harry "Skeeva" Skigis in 2020. Since then, the program has become a hub for the VR community and was nominated for "Social VR Influencer of the Year" in the 2021 VR Awards and "VR Content Creator of the Year" in the 2022 VR Awards. Alex is Strategic Partnership Manager for Contact CI, working in business development for their high-end haptic glove used in training with the U.S. Air Force. He is also an official correspondent for UploadVR.com and writer for VR Trend Magazine. Subscribe to Alex & Skeeva's Youtube Channel to be notified when new episodes go live! Follow Between Realities on Twitter Want to support this podcast? Subscribe, leave a review/rating, share with a friend & consider becoming a monthly supporter of Coffey & Code! Don't forget to checkout the latest eco-conscious Coffey & Code Merch on coffeyandcode.com Thanks for listening! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/coffeyandcode/support
OKS er en kirke for alle mennesker, og spesielt for deg som ikke pleier å gå i kirken. En kirke for folk som deg - Vi ønsker å være et sted der gode vennskap bygges og livet med Gud utvikles! Vi møtes rundt om i landet, finn en avdeling i nærheten av deg på oks.no
The conclusion to Never Give Up on Your Dreams ft. Jason Meland… “It's hard to beat a person who never gives up.” -Babe Ruth Sounds simple enough right, just don't quit. Many of the greatest of all time (GOATs) in their respective sport or career are known to chant this famous mantra. However, when this principle is applied in your life, in all areas of your life, it can have massive impact and ripple into everything that you do. Today's guest on Strong By Design is Jason Meland, a fitness and media coach, who teaches and inspires others to use their story and voice for impact. If creating content on social media and growing a business is of interest to you then this episode is a must listen. Jason teaches: Be seen. Be heard. Be impactful. Host Mike Westerdal and Jason talk about Jason's passion for fitness, his early years as a firefighter/EMT, his American Ninja Warrior skills and how he's changing lives today. "In order to be great, you first have to be good. In order to be good, you first have to be bad. In order to be bad, you first have to try... And a lot of people just do not try."- Jason Meland Time Stamps 00:24 – Welcome to the ‘Strong by Design' podcast 00:50 – The value of having a coach in business and life 05:40 – Jason gives tips on what to look for when hiring a coach 12:37 – Discover the biggest mistakes people make when live selling 19:22 – Jason reveals the key to successful selling 26:09 – The art of planting the seed in sales 28:27 – The power of positioning in marketing 37:28 – Jason on the importance of identifying what you stand for and against 43:22 – What's next for Jason? 45:42 – Jason shares a key takeaway from the episode Resources: Download Your FREE Guide from Jason Connect w/ Jason: Facebook Instagram YouTube Connect w/ CriticalBench: Youtube Facebook Instagram CriticalBench.com StrongByDesignPodcast.com
“It's hard to beat a person who never gives up.” - Babe Ruth Sounds simple enough right, just don't quit. Many of the greatest of all time (GOATs) in their respective sport or career are known to chant this famous mantra. However, when this principle is applied in your life, in all areas of your life, it can have massive impact and ripple into everything that you do. Today's guest on Strong By Design is Jason Meland, a fitness and media coach, who teaches and inspires others to use their story and voice for impact. If creating content on social media and growing a business is of interest to you then this episode is a must listen. Jason teaches: Be seen. Be heard. Be impactful. Host Mike Westerdal and Jason talk about Jason's passion for fitness, his early years as a firefighter/EMT, his American Ninja Warrior skills and how he's changing lives today. "Not taking ‘no' for an answer on something you're passionate about… Rules are meant to be re-written sometimes.” - Jason Meland Time Stamps 01:31 – Welcome to the ‘Strong by Design' podcast 03:43 – Get to know Jason Meland, and how he got into fitness 10:04 – Jason on helping others achieve their health and fitness goals 11:12 – Jason shares his transition from a firefighter to a fitness and media coach 15:25 – The power of not taking ‘no' for an answer 20:56 – Why should you surround yourself with supportive people? 25:45 – Jason on creating growth from hardships 29:48 – Jason on attracting clients and making sales with strategic live videos 36:50 – Jason talks about his ‘American Ninja Warrior' experience 43:31 – The power of being persistent Resources: Download Your FREE Guide from Jason Connect w/ Jason: Facebook Instagram YouTube Connect w/ CriticalBench: Youtube Facebook Instagram CriticalBench.com StrongByDesignPodcast.com
In this episode Natasha interviews Jason Meland, an American Ninja Warrior athlete, a former firefighter, and has been featured in over 20 publications in the last few years as a top ranked gym owner and online fitness coach. He NOW shows other coaches how to get their message SEEN & HEARD by their audience so that they can grow their businesses. They dive deep into SELLING over live video, creating awareness, and how to use organic to blow up your online fitness coaching business. Discover: * How often you should be going LIVE on social media * How to HOOK PEOPLE immediately * How to break down beliefs in your messaging to make sales easier * Easy frameworks to generate more leads through live video Find Jason Meland: Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jason.meland Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/coachjasonmeland Join Jason's Free Facebook Group Here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/liveonlinevideosecrets/ Join our FREE Copywriting Community here: https://www.facebook.com/groups/copywritingforfitpros If you are looking to hire trained Chat Specialist teams to sell your program over chat or book qualified sales calls, apply through our website and setup a call to see if we can help you. Apply here: https://apply.thevirtualassistants.co/start Instagram: @natashastorm_ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/natashastarcheski If you are an online coach or consultant that is looking to organically grow your network on Facebook but don't have the time to manually add, engage, and send messages check out YunaPro. This software was created to help coaches complete all their daily lead generation activities on Facebook in only 28 mins and adheres to all the resections and community guidelines. YunaPro: https://bit.ly/3573BrO
So in this episode, Meland will help you fix this problem, where you are currently getting great engagement but not getting consistent leads and sales from it. Tune in to learn more! “If you're like a startup, and you're just getting things going, you probably have to hustle a little bit more than you probably would like, but that's part of the business. Well, once you get things rolling, you should not have to keep hustling. What you should do instead is have your marketing message, do the hustling for you." Keynotes You're not going to get people to reach out to you. The way that you communicate your actual message in your content is what's going to make the difference. If you want people to reach out to you, you want to connect with the right avatar, Connect with me: Email: jason@goliveonlinemastermind.com Website: www.growmyvisibility.com Instagram: @coachjasonmeland Facebook: Jason Meland - In Demand Coach LinkedIn: Jason Meland
Jason Meland is a former American Ninja Warrior, former gym owner and online fitness coach and now he helps professionals show up on social media and go LIVE in front of their audience. He has been absolutely influential in helping me go from once upon a time group fitness instructor to speaking on stages, radio and now podcast. His health transformation started with being electrocuted in a house fire and he decided he wasn't going to be someone who said they were going to take action and change and never make it happen. Emily Murphy is a weight loss expert and mindset coach that specializes in hormone balance and increasing metabolism with functional nutrition and lifestyle habits. She shares what really matters when it comes to the things you eat, the way you live and what it takes to make lasting changes. You can reach Jason Meland at https://www.growmyvisibility.com/Emily Murphy is a weight loss expert and mindset coach that specializes in hormone balance and increasing metabolism with functional nutrition and lifestyle habits. She shares what really matters when it comes to the things you eat, the way you live and what it takes to make lasting changes. Are you ready to give up dieting, change your mindset and start learning about what your body really needs? She's helped thousands of women navigate the craziness of a world that worships being thin, obsessively promotes dieting and also tells you you should love food and indulge at every occasion.gogetemcoach.comhttps://www.facebook.com/groups/fitnesscoachingforweightloss
Eric and Lindsay Meland are doing amazing things in Hungary! Currently, along with language learning, local ministry, leading Summer interns, and directing Summer camps, they are supporting and mentoring 12 different youth pastors around Hungary, which is one of their favorite things to do. Their goal is to equip these pastors in making committed, passionate disciples of Jesus who will turn around and make more committed, passionate disciples! They share about their journey to the mission field, how they met, and life and ministry in the capital city, Budapest. Eric and Lindsay are eager and so thankful to be working with the young people of Hungary; to see them come to deeply know their heavenly Father and boldly proclaim His incomprehensible love so that their whole country might turn to follow Him. Learn more about Josiah Venture Website: www.josiahventure.com Social Media: @josiahventure Contact: social@josiahventure.com Josiah Venture Prayer Room: pray.josiahventure.com Josiah Venture Prayer Room APP: josiahventure.com/prayer-room-app
Om å bli ansatt som Oljefondets egen ekspert på idrettspsykologi. Om å være Nicolai Tangens første ansettelse og det nære samarbeidet med sjefen. Om hvordan han jobber for å gjøre noen av Norges råeste finanshoder mentalt robuste til å ta risiko for landets framtid. Om vinneroppskriften. Oppskriften som forbedrer både prestasjon og livskvalitet. Om hvordan dette henger sammen. Om den avgjørende hvilen, mellomrommene og tilstedeværelsen. Om veien til Oljefondet. Om oppsiktsvekkende sykkelturer som 10-åring, doktorgrad, trendmetoder som ikke er tilpasset individet, familien som tar han på fersken og balansen i det gode liv. Og mye, mye mer. Lytt og reflektér, folkens. Dette er en annerledes episode vi virkelig tror er verdt tiden.
Haverhill High School students in the Early College program at Northern Essex Community College have an opportunity to earn associate degrees for free.Haverhill High School Principal Jason Meland, a recent guest on WHAV's morning program, explains tuition is paid by the Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation. The Newton, Mass.-based foundation awarded a $250,000 grant to launch the Promise Program next year, which allows Early College students to complete degrees they started in high school.“In addition to expanding 9 through 12, our Early College offerings for kids, we're going to be adding a 13th year, so kids who are engaged in Early College as juniors and seniors will have the option, next year, to opt into one more year,” he said.Meland noted, during the additional year, students will be spending 100% of their time as college students on the campus of Northern Essex Community College. It comes with additional support and collaboration between Haverhill High and the College.“And, they'll be able to their associates degree by the end of that 13th year, this year at Haverhill High, which they'll spend technically as college students. What it will do is get them, one year after high school, their associates degree for free,” the principal said.Meland adds the $250,000 grant allows the program to be offered to 30 students next year, and then will be self-sustaining using state funding that Haverhill High School receives.Since 2017, according to its website, the Richard and Susan Smith Family Foundation has invested nearly $10 million in more than half of the pioneering Early Colleges in Massachusetts, including those in Lawrence, Chelsea, Lowell, Lynn, Framingham and Boston.“Students are graduating from high school with thousands of college credits, saving their families millions of dollars and reducing the time it takes to earn their degrees,” the Foundation reports.Support the show (https://whav.net/become-a-whav-member/)
#haptics #bhaptics #metaverse HAPTIC FEEDBACK & ITS ROLE IN THE METAVERSE Alex Meland is a Community Manager at bHaptics, co-host of the Between Realities podcast, crusader for all things virtual reality, and passionate about the world of haptics. bHaptics is a company that specialized in full-body haptic suits. It provides a “sense of touch” to virtual reality more closely than ever before imaginable. The company believes the most elaborate haptic feedback brings gaming, entertainment, and other interactive content to the next level by bringing the most profound emotional connections between the artificial world and users. https://www.bhaptics.com/ https://www.linkedin.com/in/vralexvr http://www.twitter.com/Alex__VR http://www.facebook.com/vralexvr http://www.youtube.com/AlexVR https://www.youtube.com/c/BetweenRealities XROM- Home of Extended Reality Kindly Subscribe/Share Our Audio Podcast Channels Apple: https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/xr-om/id1479853773Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/show/2ZnjHyLLNE2jX6rOoRj5QoGoogle: https://www.google.com/podcasts?feed=aHR0cHM6Ly9hbmNob3IuZm0vcy9jMjg3YWVjL3BvZGNhc3QvcnNz Anchor: https://anchor.fm/s/c287aec/podcast/rss Kindly Subscribe to our Youtube channel www.youtube.com/xrompodcast Music Credit: Adam Avil/Pralay Track Title: Shiv
In this episode, Natasha interviews Jason Meland, an American Ninja Warrior athlete, a former firefighter, and has been featured in over 20 publications in the last few years as a top ranked gym owner and online fitness coach. He NOW shows other coaches how to get their message SEEN & HEARD by their audience so that they can grow their businesses. They dive deep into SELLING over live video, creating awareness, and how to use organic to blow up your online fitness coaching business. Links: IG: natashastorm_ Website: www.thevirtualassistants.co
Olya Meland is a national missionary in her home country of Ukraine. She loves her husband, her country, making disciples and is a new mom. She and her husband, Marc, met while both were serving in Josiah Venture. Marc for four years in Hungary and Olya in Ukraine. Now they serve together in the city of Lviv, Ukraine with their son Enoch. Marc serves in the ministry of EDGE sports, while Olya leads the Fusion ministry. God has put on their hearts a deep burden for the youth of Ukraine. They especially desire to see young people enter healthy local churches through the ministries that God has placed on their hearts. Olya first became acquainted with JV as a camper at an English camp in 2004 near Rivne, Ukraine. In 2013, Olya took a step of faith by joining JV to help start Fusion in Ukraine. Olya and Marc enjoy using english, Fusion, and Edge sports to equip local churches, to reach young people, and to share Jesus with them. Marc and Olya pray that God will use their family to further the gospel in Ukraine. Learn more about Josiah Venture Website: www.josiahventure.com Social Media: @josiahventure Contact: social@josiahventure.com Mission Trips: josiahventure.com/mission-trips Summer Internships: josiahventure.com/summer-internships Josiah Venture Prayer Room: pray.josiahventure.com Josiah Venture Prayer Room APP: josiahventure.com/prayer-room-app
On this week's Roundabout Roundup: Speaking of Halloween decorations (as we were yesterday), Nicole's recommending her cute, kid-friendly Halloween monster inflatable [https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B094J4P7DG/]. Catherine and Terri are both shouting out tasty treats (though Nicole might consider them a trick for their fruit and vegetable content): Cecilia's Farms Dried Bartlett Pears [https://www.ceciliasfarm.com/product/barlett-pears-large-halves/] and parmesan and roasted garlic Harvest Snaps [https://harvestsnaps.com].
On June 21, 2021, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled a shareholder-plaintiff had standing to sue California's Secretary of State. Creighton Meland, a shareholder at OSI Systems, Inc., sued alleging that Senate Bill 826, which was signed into law in 2018, violates the Fourteenth Amendment because it requires corporations to elect a sliding scale quota of women to corporate board member seats. The District Court ruled Meland had no standing because SB 826 governed corporations, not shareholders, and at the time of Meland's suit OSI was in compliance so any controversy was moot.The Ninth Circuit disagreed, allowing Meland's suit to go forward by finding that the practical effect of SB 826 was to govern shareholders and direct them to vote on the basis of gender to avoid the imposition of fines or penalties for noncompliance. The court further held that Meland's suit alleged a direct harm and did not rely on prudential standing since he alleged personal harm rather than injury to the corporate entity.Here to discuss the merits of the underlying law and the likely next steps in the current litigation are Professor Ann Ravel of Berkeley Law, a former Commissioner and Chair at the Federal Election Commission, who helped negotiate a $310 million settlement against Google resulting in the creation of a corporate-level diversity, equity, and inclusion initiative, and Anastasia P. Boden, an attorney in Pacific Legal Foundation's Economic Liberty Project and lead counsel in the Meland v. Weber litigation. Our speakers are joined by moderator Megan Brown, a Partner at Wiley Rein LLP. Featuring:- Anastasia P. Boden, Senior Attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation- Ann Ravel, Lecturer, Berkeley Law and Former Commissioner and Chair, Federal Election Commission- [Moderator] Megan Brown, Partner, Wiley Rein LLPVisit our website – www.RegProject.org – to learn more, view all of our content, and connect with us on social media.
On June 21, 2021, the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit ruled a shareholder-plaintiff had standing to sue California's Secretary of State. Creighton Meland, a shareholder at OSI Systems, Inc., sued alleging that Senate Bill 826, which was signed into law in 2018, violates the Fourteenth Amendment because it requires corporations to elect a sliding scale quota of women to corporate board member seats. The District Court ruled Meland had no standing because SB 826 governed corporations, not shareholders, and at the time of Meland's suit OSI was in compliance so any controversy was moot.The Ninth Circuit disagreed, allowing Meland's suit to go forward by finding that the practical effect of SB 826 was to govern shareholders and direct them to vote on the basis of gender to avoid the imposition of fines or penalties for noncompliance. The court further held that Meland's suit alleged a direct harm and did not rely on prudential standing since he alleged personal harm rather than injury to the corporate entity.Here to discuss the merits of the underlying law and the likely next steps in the current litigation are Professor Ann Ravel of Berkeley Law, a former Commissioner and Chair at the Federal Election Commission, who helped negotiate a $310 million settlement against Google resulting in the creation of a corporate-level diversity, equity, and inclusion initiative, and Anastasia P. Boden, an attorney in Pacific Legal Foundation's Economic Liberty Project and lead counsel in the Meland v. Weber litigation. Our speakers are joined by moderator Megan Brown, a Partner at Wiley Rein. Featuring:-- Ann Ravel, Lecuter, Berkeley Law; Former Commissioner and Char at the Federal Election Commission -- Anastasia P. Boden, Senior Attorney, Pacific Legal Foundation-- Megan L. Brown, Partner, Wiley Rein
Festivalsjefen for Sildajazz tar oss gjennom corona-utfordringer, forteller om konsertformidling og avslører litt om hvordan det er å drive plateselskap.
Hva kjennetegner hudplukkingslidelse, og hva kjennetegner hårnappingslidelse? Hvordan påvirker lidelsene psyken? Hvordan kan disse lidelsene påvirke livsutfoldelsen? Og ikke minst hvordan behandles disse lidelsene, og hva kan man gjøre selv? Med oss i dag har vi psykolog Karete Jacobsen MelandKarete Jacobsen Meland er psykolog og jobber ved Oslo Universitetssykehus, Gaustad. Hunjobber med pasienter som har hudplukkingslidelse, hårnappingslidelse, tics/Tourettessyndrom og OCD. Pasientene med hudplukkings og hårnappingslidelse møter hun engang i uka i forbindelse med gruppeterapi. Da er det bare å trykke på play for å lære mer!
Folkeeventyrene er en utømmelig kilde til forståelse av vår tid. Leseren er som den lille piken som går for å besøke bestemor i skogen og synes hun ser litt merkelig ut. Stemmen og labbene er annerledes. Slik er det også med våre medier og politikere. De anlegger en mine og forstiller seg. Når man hører og ser dem over lang tid, oppdager man at de ikke er det de utgir seg for. Astrid Meland skriver en kommentar i dagens VG om lab.lekkasje-teorien, som ikke lenger er en teori, men kan belegges med fakta. Meland innrømmer at den er mer enn fantasi, men faller likevel ned på at kineserne og WHO har rett. Den mest plausible forklaringen er fortsatt at viruset kommer fra naturen og har spredd seg derfra. Det er det virus pleier å gjøre. Vi har mange flere eksempler på at naturen står bak pandemier, enn at det kommer fra laboratorium. Meland kobler lab.lekkasje-teorien til «høyresiden» og Trump. Da kan hun ikke gi dem rett. Fauci tror fortsatt naturen står bak. Og det han vil, er å finne virusets opphav. Virkelig? Fauci er ute etter å dekke sine spor. Meland tar ham gå fri. Det irriterende med debatten er at den fortsatt preges av skrullinger og folk med andre motiv enn å finne svaret på hvor viruset kom fra. Nobelprisvinnere er tatt i organisert løgn på vegne av kineserne og deres egen kompromitterte forskning. Vitenskapsfolk spammes ned av den ene påstanden tynnere enn den andre. Men det er vanskelig å finne seriøse virologer som mener dette viruset er laget og lekket ut fra en lab. Meland skriver ting som gjør at hun ikke kan være i god tro, hvis man skal ta henne alvorlig. Deres svar er som oftest at dette ikke er et virus som ser ut som et som er skapt i en lab. Det er heller ikke uvanlig at det tar år å finne virusets naturlige opphav. Meland og VG er løpejente for Kina. Det er en ynkelig forestilling. Tusenvis av nordmenn har oppdaget at dette er den første globale forbrytelse hvor vestlige interesser er kompromittert sammen med Kina. Norske medier har frivillig fungert som spindoktorer for Kina. De har slukt bestemor. De er ulven. Var det ikke bare en vill konspirasjonsteori?
Stay updated with the next Haptics Club events! Haptics Club with Alex Meland, community manager of bHaptics. We will talk about haptics in VR gaming, haptics trend, and the future of haptics. From the Haptics Club: Eric Vezzoli, Manuel Sainsily, Ashley Huffman, Gijs den Butter, Sarah Alkibsy, and Irina Tripapina
Det er ikke utenkelig at vaksinepass kan åpne for større arrangement under Sildajazzen. Det sier Sildajazz-sjef Andreas R. Meland.
Jason Meland is a former fire-fighter who faced a serious series of events that almost turned fatal. He now helps others #Beseen and #Beheard while BEING IMPACTFUL through live video. Jason is passionate about helping others attract ready to buy clients with simple live videos. In this episode we unpack his story, his process, and his simple and clear to execute strategy to get more clients. Connect with Jason: https://www.facebook.com/jason.meland https://www.instagram.com/coachjasonmeland Let's Connect: https://www.instagram.com/jr.spear/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/jr.spear.3 JOIN NOW ==> CREED COMMUNITY (Free Resources for all those part of our community...): https://www.facebook.com/groups/creedconsultingcommunity If you enjoyed this episode please subscribe, give a 5 star review, and share. I appreciate the support and look forward to serving you further in the future. Semper Fi.
Oral Arguments for the Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Creighton Meland v. Alex Padilla
We speak to Joey about pop songs and screaming. Outro music: Course correct by uuskhy https://uuskhy.bandcamp.com/ https://www.weareiverson.com/ https://emilybluemusic.com/
Et gledesbudskap om en fullkommen frelse | Martin Meland by OKS
4:00 Jason Meland transformation 7:30 Daily Resolve Show deets 8:30 how to enjoy favorite weekend foods without sabotage 13:13 How to prepare for success 18:45 Do you need to log/ track foods? 22:45 3 pillars of stubborn belly fat 27:00 recap bomb drops. Wrote these down! Find Jason on FB https://www.facebook.com/jason.meland www.aprilmeracle.com
1:45 progress tracking 3:00 mindset control 6:35 finding inner peace 10:00 emotional eating alternative 13:30 attracting your success 17:00 tools to change negative self image 23:00 recap of Jason’s tips 25:15 Eating more to lose weight 35:00 final weight loss tips Find Jason https://www.facebook.com/jason.meland www.aprilmeracle.com
Nå er det bare noen dager igjen til Sildajazzen, 5. - 8. august. Vi har snakket med festivalsjef Andreas R. Meland.
In this episode, I hang out with Alex Meland on a rooftop. We had a great talk! We talked about the podcast he co-hosts, Between Realities, and reflect on numerous topics: social etiquette in VR, meaning and VR, haptic feedback, e-sports, and the use of VR in floatation tanks.
- Vi skal strekke oss langt og jeg er sikker på at vi skal få til noe bra i år også. Det sier festivalsjef Andreas R. Meland.
Hvordan kan vi lage smarte småsamfunn? Og hvilke muligheter ligger i algene vi har langs vår langstrakte kyst? I denne episoden av #LØRN snakker Silvija med med Daglig leder Algenettverk Nord AS (ANN), Heidi Meland, om at vi kan se til Kina og hvordan de gjør produksjon, men ikke nødvendigvis som en inspirasjon.— Vi er nødt til å endre strategien og vi må forstå at vi er en del av verden, forteller hun i episoden. Dette LØRNER du:AlgerGründerskapLokalsamfunn Viktigheten av kollektivisme Anbefalt litteraturUtopia for realister av Rutger Bregman Denne episoden er laget i samarbeid med Bodø 2024 See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Chef Maynard Meland talks with Kristal about his new restaurant "Maynards" and its place as Kitsap's new culinary destination.
Visste du at det finnes legemidler i vannet vårt og hvorfor burde “alle” vaske bilen i et godkjent vaskeanlegg? Hvilke uforutsette konsekvenser oppstår av tunnelvask ?I denne episoden får du et innblikk inn i virkeligheten til 2 av forskerne hos Norsk institutt for vannforskning (NIVA). NIVA er økonomisk samarbeidspartner i denne episoden. Vi møter Merete Grung som er forsker hos NIVA. Hun har jobbet både i kjemisk avdeling og i seksjon for økotoksikologi og risikovurdering før hun begynte på seksjon for miljøgifter ferskvann. Siden 2010 er hun medlem i Vitenskapskomitéen for mattrygghet. Grung innehar en professor II stilling i toksikologi ved Institutt for biovitenskap ved Universitetet i Oslo.I tillegg til Merete har vi en annen meget spennende gjest denne gangen som heter Sondre Meland. Han er senior forsker hos NIVA og er ferskvannsbiolog (Cand. Scient.) og økotoksikolog (PhD) fra Norges miljø og biovitenskapelige universitet (NMBU) med faglig spesialisering innen fiske- og bunndyrøkologi, samt miljøkjemi og toksikologiske effekter hos fisk. Han har siden 2012 vært ansatt som førsteamanuensis II på NMBU ved Fakultet for miljøvitenskap og naturforvaltning. Stillingen er faglig relatert til urban forurensning med hovedfokus på miljøeffekter i vann fra bygging og drifting av vegnettet.Vi er innom:Fare for alt levende liv i vannFluorstoffer i klærMikroorganismer som bryter ned stofferLegemidler i vannetInnlevering av legemidlerTunnelvaskevann der uforutsette arter etablerer segSnø dumping i vannDenne episoden er produsert og gitt ut med støtte fra SpareBank 1 Østlandet See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Den store flyttedagen - Martin Meland by OKS
Pga en datamaskin med seriøse humørsvingninger ble det litt teknisk krøll eller ca 30 minutter. Lyden derfra og ut plages med moderat til seriøs hikke, men jeg håper dere klarer å få noe ut av det likevel. (sinna/oppgittfjes) #komikerikketekniker Dagens gjest er Kevin Vågenes, og det var en utrolig fascinerende prat. Var så heldig å få være med i "Julegøy" med Kevin, og det ble en vanvittig suksess. Skulle være 4 show og endte på 51 - vi prater uansett mest om oppvekst, hvordan han kom seg inn i showbusiness på egen hånd, L.A., Espen Eckbo, Kollektivet og selvfølgelig Céline Dion. Kevin vant like etter 2 av 3 priser under Humorprisen og er for tiden Norges hotteste komiker. Forståelig. Et vanvittig talent, utrolig fin fyr og bare en herlig kis å henge med en time å prate om humor, showbiz og Meland. Christoffer på Instagram Christoffer på Facebook https://www.mainstream.as/
-”Genom Gröna korset tillvaratar vi medarbetarnas bästa idéer och smarta lösningar” säger Åsa Meland, utvecklingschef på Kungälvs sjukhus. Avsnittet handlar om Kungälvsmodellen av Gröna korset, ett kors för patientsäkerheten och ett för arbetsmiljön. Små-missar inom patientsäkerheten och stress som arbetsmiljöproblem identifieras i korsen och tillsammans har medarbetarna fokus på förbättringsåtgärder. Genom Solrosen blir det även fokus på det som gått bra. -"Gör det varje dag, ge det lite tid och det kommer gå jättebra sen" tipsar Anna-Karin och Emma som arbetar på avdelning 8 på Kungälvs sjukhus. Gröna korset kan enkelt beskrivas som ett plus-format rutmönster på ett papper bestående av månadens alla dagar. Vid dagens slut får dagens ruta en viss färg beroende på hur dagen har upplevts av personalen. Mer detaljer får du om du lyssnar. På Södra Älvsborgs Sjukhus (SÄS) hemsida kan du läsa om verktyget Gröna korset.
In this episode, Jason Meland gives us insight into his journey as a business owner and delves into some of the mistakes he made early on in his entrepreneurship career + much more! Follow me: instagram.com/alexalbarran_
Åsa Meland, utvecklingschef vid en av Sveriges främsta sjukhus, erfaren konsult och flerfaldig författare, delar med sig av sina främsta tips för en hållbar förändring. Vi samtalar kring att organisera arbetet utifrån kundnyttan och minimera eneriläckaget på jobbet. Att undvik att föra in något nytt och istället göra det vi gör på ett annat sätt. Följ med när jag möter Åsa i ett prestigelöst samtal med fokus. // Jan B
C'est après un tumultueux déménagement d'un des membres de l'équipe que nous nous retrouvons, avec chaleur et fatigue, sur un hors série dédiée au rock progressif avec Genesis ! De Peter Gabriel à Phil Collins (avec cheveux, avec beubar, sans cheveux), c'est l'occasion en pas moins 2h de sérieux plus ou moins retenu, de retracer la discographie de ce groupe. 10 titres ou presque, voici notre sélection : Trespass : White montain. Nursery crime : the fountain of salmacis. Selling England by the Pound : Dancing with the Moonlit Knight. The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway : The Lamia. A Trick of the Tail : Entangled. Wind and Wuthering : Eleventh earl of mar. And Then There Were Three : Many too Many. Duke : Duchess. Invisible Touch : Land of Confusion. We Can't Dance : Since I Lost You. Avec les coups de coeurs personnel (et de la parité des minorités) : barberouss : I Can't Dance Fox : Mama Hygie : In too Deep Bonus de la parité live : No Son of Mine Les clips :I can't danceJesus He knows meLand of confusion Bonus :Peter Gabriel. Phil collins avec la barbe et des CHEVEUX.
Minst halvparten av de viktige beslutningene våre slår feil. Vi velger for raskt eller for tilfeldig. Vi baserer oss på for mye, for lite eller gal informasjon. Vi vegrer oss og venter. Eller vi lar være. Flere tiår med forskning har vist at det finnes mange feller i tankeprosessene våre som hindrer gode beslutninger. I boken "En god beslutning" gir psykolog og offiser Nils Tore Meland gir oss syv praktiske grep for å ta bedre valg. I denne bokpraten samtaler han med Ingunn Lindborg.
Mindfulness gir deg råskapen og styrken som skal til for å ha muligheten til å stå støtt i kaotiske eller ubehagelige situasjoner. Mindfulness gir deg kjennskap til hvem du er bak tankene og følelsene, og gir deg dermed et rom i stillhet der du kan føle det fullstendig trygg. Mindfulness gir deg muligheten til å basere valgene dine på noe mer enn bare impulser, lyst, ønsker, frykt eller tro. Mindfulness er oppmerksomt nærvær, eller som forfatteren sier: du er bevisst til stede uten å dømme. I denne podcasten samtaler Anders Meland med Kristine Kleppo om Stillhetens råskap - Mindfulness for å prestere på topp.
*400MRD=100MRD Torgeir Micaelsen (Ap) og Jan Tore Sanner (H) om regjeringens økonomiske handlingsrom. Større enn de påstår, sier Høyre. Mindre enn de sier, mener Ap. *Mer inntekter, mye mer utgifter? Meland-ordfører Nils Marton Aadland (H) mener handlingsrommet var større under Bondevik II. Lars Peder Brekk (Sp) sier kommunene aldri har hatt det bedre. Programleder: Lars Nehru Sand
Martin Meland taler 02.09.2012
Martin Meland taler 02.09.2012