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Monday October 28. - Jess is hiding something from her husband - Strangest thing that has been STOLEN from you - Say goodbye to 3G - Do you still use a MELWAYS? - Exam Cram!
Monday October 28. - Jess is hiding something from her husband - Strangest thing that has been STOLEN from you - Say goodbye to 3G - Do you still use a MELWAYS? - Exam Cram!
Join Caroline Wilson and Corrie Perkin from the Sorrento Portsea RSL, recorded on the eve of the inaugural Sorrento Writers Festival on April 26th 2023. This podcast and all of our live events are proudly supported by Red Energy - Awarded Australia's most trusted energy provider by Canstar three times. Isn't it time you switched to Red? Head to www.redenergy.com.au Caro and Corrie are joined by guests Ray Gill and Anna Barry aka Anna from the Op Shop. Ray joins the discussion on the Crikey v Murdoch case and the wider media landscape plus we mark the passing of Barry Humphries and his contribution to Australian cultural live, his legacy and more. Anna also pays tribute to Father Bob McGuire who also passed away recently. In the Cocktail Cabinet for Prince Wine Store, Myles Thompson has recommended Moorooduc Estate – Devil Bend Creek Pinot Noir 2021 Use the promo code MESS at www.princewinestore.com.au or instore for your 10% listener discount. BSF Cleopatra and Frankenstein by Coco Mellors Lessons in Chemistry by Bonnie Garmus Polite Society at the movies (not rated highly!) Geoff Slattery's Pear and Quince Crumble (from Simple Flavours) or see recipe below. Butter Lettuce and macadamia salad Chicken Marbella (recipe HERE) Plus Caro, Corrie and Anna share 3 Things they Love about Sorrento. SORRENTO WRITERS FESTIVAL - visit HERE. Email feedback@dontshootpod.com.au or join us on Instagram or Facebook. This podcast is produced by Corrie Perkin and Caroline Wilson and produced, engineered and edited by Jane Nield for SEN. Geoff Slattery's Pear and Quince Crumble (from Simple Flavours) THE FILLING 3 quinces, peeled, seeded, cut into smallish pieces and tossed in lemon juice 4 pears, peeled etc as for quinces 30–40g white sugar — Taste as you go. You could need more sugar depending on the sweetness of the pears. Don't use brown, as it colours the puree. THE CRUMBLE 1 cup self-raising flour, sifted ½ cup brown sugar — Demerara sugar makes for outstanding results for this dish. It seems to provide just that extra bit of crunch that turns a crumble into seventh heaven. about 100g cold butter, cut into cubes 1 Put the fruit and sugar into a flattish bowl which can go into a microwave. Cover with plastic wrap and cook on high (500 watt) for 20–25 minutes until the fruit is butter-tender and has given off a deal of juice. 2 Toss the lot into a whizzer and process to a fine puree. Taste again. Set aside to cool. 3 Mix the flour and the sugar, and work in the butter piece by piece until the mixture has the consistency and appearance of breadcrumbs. Set aside. You might like to make double, for another crumble the day after you demolish this one. 4 Spread the fruit mix over the bottom of a pie dish, and sprinkle the flour-sugar-butter mix over the top, to a depth of about a centimetre. You can do this if the puree is still hot. 5 Bake in a 200°C oven for 25–30 minutes, until the crumble has browned and has cooked through. Usually the puree will be starting to bubble a little at this point. Don't let it get too aggressive, lest it bursts through the crumble. 6 Serve with vanilla bean ice cream. You can serve with cream, but for a very hot crumble, straight from the oven, you can't beat the temperature variation and texture that come from perfect ice cream. Any combination of quinces and apples and pears; or apples and pears; or rhubarb; or raspberries, blackcurrants or gooseberries in season work well in this crumble. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dial Up Internet, Melways, the Milk Man.. What else wouldn't kids today understand?See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
In this episode of This Must Be the Place Liz and Laura are joined by Monash Urban Planning and Design students Lachlan Burke, Sylvia Tong and Will McIntyre to share perspectives on whether and how urban planning can work across borders. They first talk about MAPS (Monash Association of Planning Students); how they gravitated to studying urban planning (from biology, environmental engineering, development studies and philosophy); and the upcoming MAPS 2019 Festival of Urbanism Commuter Race including how a MELWAY (the iconic street directory) will help with navigating it. (Note: the Festival took place in September 2019). Lachlan and Will then reflect on lessons learned across their planning studies and the international development projects they’ve been involved in, from Midigami (Sri Lanka) to Mongolia. Lachlan discusses two aid projects he’s been part of in Sri Lanka, including post-tsunami housing reconstruction in Midigami - the subject of a presentation by Sri Lankan researcher Dr. Rangajeewa Ratnayake at this year’s Festival of Urbanism. Will shares insights from a lifetime of exposure to cross-cultural and interdisciplinary development projects, including those that formed his father’s work for the Asian Development Bank. It was while working on green infrastructure projects in Mongolia that Will first became interested in the broader scale and context of urban planning -“I realised you need to know how the city works in order to be able to implement anything”. The episode reflects on the challenge of development projects maintaining long-lasting outcomes. For example, new elevated housing built outside of tsunami buffer zones suffer longer-term from water pressure issues. Wells dug without adequate hydrological analysis (or evaluation) suffer from repeated contamination and collapse. Across the examples run questions of accountability and evaluation, and the need for greater community ownership (versus issues of donor fatigue). And the borders of communication and translation, broadly understood – how to bridge planning words and knowledge across languages and cultures, and across disciplinary boundaries. “There are different ways of doing things that we’ve never considered, and you’ve never considered, but let’s work together to discover those”. Mentioned in this episode: • TED video about public spaces that was Sylvia’s motivation to study Urban Planning: https://www.ted.com/talks/amanda_burden_how_public_spaces_make_cities_work/transcript?language=en • Engineers Without Borders and human-centred design: https://www.ewb.org.au/blog/implementing-a-human-centered-approach • Planning Institute of Australia members and academic subscribers can access this paper by Ian Woodcock documenting a local example of interdisciplinary and human-centred planning for railway station design: Woodcock, I. (2015) The design speculation and action research assemblage: ‘transit for all’ and the transformation of Melbourne's passenger rail system, Australian Planner 53(1), 15-27, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07293682.2015.1135818 • Festival of Urbanism- Donor-driven Tsunami Housing in Sri Lanka: Resident Outcomes and Experiences: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/9/2/donor-driven-tsunami-housing-in-sri-lanka-resident-outcomes-and-experiences • Festival of Urbanism- Quick MAPS: Monash Association of Planning Students Commuter Race: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/7/29/quick-maps-monash-association-of-planning-students-commuter-race .
Catch up with today's show here on the full podcast!Dave O'Neil is in for Browny!Sophie Monk calls in from Fiji to talk Love Island; Tony Martin gets his DVD back; Darren McMullan is revealed as the Prawn; you offer us your tidbits, and; Dave is Mr Melways! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
In this episode of This Must Be the Place Liz and Laura are joined by Monash Urban Planning and Design students Lachlan Burke, Sylvia Tong and Will McIntyre to share perspectives on whether and how urban planning can work across borders. They first talk about MAPS (Monash Association of Planning Students); how they gravitated to studying urban planning (from biology, environmental engineering, development studies and philosophy); and the upcoming MAPS 2019 Festival of Urbanism Commuter Race including how a MELWAY (the iconic street directory) will help with navigating it. Lachlan and Will then reflect on lessons learned across their planning studies and the international development projects they've been involved in, from Midigami (Sri Lanka) to Mongolia. Lachlan discusses two aid projects he's been part of in Sri Lanka, including post-tsunami housing reconstruction in Midigami - the subject of a presentation by Sri Lankan researcher Dr. Rangajeewa Ratnayake at this year's Festival of Urbanism. Will shares insights from a lifetime of exposure to cross-cultural and interdisciplinary development projects, including those that formed his father's work for the Asian Development Bank. It was while working on green infrastructure projects in Mongolia that Will first became interested in the broader scale and context of urban planning -“I realised you need to know how the city works in order to be able to implement anything”. The episode reflects on the challenge of development projects maintaining long-lasting outcomes. For example, new elevated housing built outside of tsunami buffer zones suffer longer-term from water pressure issues. Wells dug without adequate hydrological analysis (or evaluation) suffer from repeated contamination and collapse. Across the examples run questions of accountability and evaluation, and the need for greater community ownership (versus issues of donor fatigue). And the borders of communication and translation, broadly understood – how to bridge planning words and knowledge across languages and cultures, and across disciplinary boundaries. “There are different ways of doing things that we've never considered, and you've never considered, but let's work together to discover those”. Mentioned in this episode: • TED video about public spaces that was Sylvia's motivation to study Urban Planning: https://www.ted.com/talks/amanda_burden_how_public_spaces_make_cities_work/transcript?language=en • Engineers Without Borders and human-centred design: https://www.ewb.org.au/blog/implementing-a-human-centered-approach • Planning Institute of Australia members and academic subscribers can access this paper by Ian Woodcock documenting a local example of interdisciplinary and human-centred planning for railway station design: Woodcock, I. (2015) The design speculation and action research assemblage: ‘transit for all' and the transformation of Melbourne's passenger rail system, Australian Planner 53(1), 15-27, https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07293682.2015.1135818 • Festival of Urbanism- Donor-driven Tsunami Housing in Sri Lanka: Resident Outcomes and Experiences: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/9/2/donor-driven-tsunami-housing-in-sri-lanka-resident-outcomes-and-experiences • Festival of Urbanism- Quick MAPS: Monash Association of Planning Students Commuter Race: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/7/29/quick-maps-monash-association-of-planning-students-commuter-race . Anyone can register to take part in the Quick MAPS race to 3 landmark pubs in Melbourne's CBD ,with only a MELWAY (or other non-phone map) for navigation. Saturday 7 September. • If you sign up for the MAPS Festival of Urbanism Race you can get 25% off the Melway 2020 edition! Liz's life circa early 2000s was confined largely to page 29.
In this episode of This Must Be the Place Liz and Laura are joined by Monash Urban Planning and Design students Lachlan Burke, Sylvia Tong and Will McIntyre to share perspectives on whether and how urban planning can work across borders. They first talk about MAPS (Monash Association of Planning Students); how they gravitated to studying urban planning (from biology, environmental engineering, development studies and philosophy); and the upcoming MAPS 2019 Festival of Urbanism Commuter Race including how a MELWAY (the iconic street directory) will help with navigating it. Lachlan and Will then reflect on lessons learned across their planning studies and the international development projects they’ve been involved in, from Midigami (Sri Lanka) to Mongolia. Lachlan discusses two aid projects he’s been part of in Sri Lanka, including post-tsunami housing reconstruction in Midigami - the subject of a presentation by Sri Lankan researcher Dr. Rangajeewa Ratnayake at this year’s Festival of Urbanism. Will shares insights from a lifetime of exposure to cross-cultural and interdisciplinary development projects, including those that formed his father’s work for the Asian Development Bank. It was while working on green infrastructure projects in Mongolia that Will first became interested in the broader scale and context of urban planning -“I realised you need to know how the city works in order to be able to implement anything”. The episode reflects on the challenge of development projects maintaining long-lasting outcomes. For example, new elevated housing built outside of tsunami buffer zones suffer longer-term from water pressure issues. Wells dug without adequate hydrological analysis (or evaluation) suffer from repeated contamination and collapse. Across the examples run questions of accountability and evaluation, and the need for greater community ownership (versus issues of donor fatigue). And the borders of communication and translation, broadly understood – how to bridge planning words and knowledge across languages and cultures, and across disciplinary boundaries. “There are different ways of doing things that we’ve never considered, and you’ve never considered, but let’s work together to discover those”. Mentioned in this episode: • TED video about public spaces that was Sylvia’s motivation to study Urban Planning: http://www.ted.com/talks/amanda_burden_how_public_spaces_make_cities_work/transcript?language=en • Engineers Without Borders and human-centred design: http://www.ewb.org.au/blog/implementing-a-human-centered-approach • Planning Institute of Australia members and academic subscribers can access this paper by Ian Woodcock documenting a local example of interdisciplinary and human-centred planning for railway station design: Woodcock, I. (2015) The design speculation and action research assemblage: ‘transit for all’ and the transformation of Melbourne's passenger rail system, Australian Planner 53(1), 15-27, http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/07293682.2015.1135818 • Festival of Urbanism- Donor-driven Tsunami Housing in Sri Lanka: Resident Outcomes and Experiences: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/9/2/donor-driven-tsunami-housing-in-sri-lanka-resident-outcomes-and-experiences • Festival of Urbanism- Quick MAPS: Monash Association of Planning Students Commuter Race: http://www.festivalofurbanism.com/2019/2019/7/29/quick-maps-monash-association-of-planning-students-commuter-race . Anyone can register to take part in the Quick MAPS race to 3 landmark pubs in Melbourne’s CBD ,with only a MELWAY (or other non-phone map) for navigation. Saturday 7 September. • If you sign up for the MAPS Festival of Urbanism Race you can get 25% off the Melway 2020 edition! Liz’s life circa early 2000s was confined largely to page 29.
Dave O’Neil co-hosts.Karl Stefanovic gets questioned; Sigrid Thornton is an icon and she’s definitely not Sigourney Weaver; we asked an expert if your Facebook is listening to you; the home viewer quiz was weird; Dave played Mr Melways; Titus O’Reily dropped by in his Jaguar drinking Scotch; and it’s Friday, so time for the cheat sheet! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Dave O’Neil co-hosts.Chrissie reads a letter from Soup Cans that got published in Your Say; David Campbell drops by to give us the lowdown on Lizzie from Married At First Sight’s Today Extra debacle; Dave O’Neil is ‘Mr Melways’; Deano’s Pitch delivered us ‘cat or baby’; we learned about Dave O’Neil’s future thanks to his C-Pap machine; and we had the best Friday ever! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 17. A True Aussie Icon featuring Reason. It’s an honour and a privilege to be joined by Reason for the second instalment of Beers, Beats & The Biz in 2019. We’ve spoken in the past on the famed Formula cassette, but one of Reason’s appearances on the tape sums this episode up, “check ya history books we’re on the first few pages..” Reason is an icon of the culture and it was an honour for us to reacquaint and learn so much more about the man’s career. This episode begins in Singapore where Re currently lives and moves quickly into Melbourne hip hop folklore, from the graff and gangs through to his early career with NME, Intense Quality and the importance of the AKA Brothers, DJ Krisy and Sydney city’s Def Wish Cast. Re’s first solo release, Solid was also the debut album for Obese Records, we talk about the early days at Obese, it’s great success in the years that would follow and the immense legacy it’s given us. We talk individual songs like Melways with Bias B, Now We’re Somewhere with Terrafirma, Fatter Too with Lazy and Pegz, we talk Reography, One Step Ahead and the vast network of artists Re has collaborated with including The Hoods, Briggs, Hunter, Pegs, Tornts and The Hospice. At nearly 3 hours this is our biggest episode yet, the above can barely scratch the surface of this conversation, always articulate, Re speaks on everything with authority and passion. Thank you to Reason. Like, rate, comment, subscribe and stay tuned to Beers, Beats & The Biz. https://www.patreon.com/BeersBeatsTheBiz Brought To You By The Beers Beats & The Biz Team Jake Biz Travis Broi Insideus
A 1985 American science fiction film starring Michael J. Fox as teenager Marty McFly, who accidentally travels back in time to 1955. Also Interview with James Blunt, The Voice: Politician Edition, Lachie's Poem, Technology Killed the Melways, Nice but inccorect gestures, Lachie's Joke.
Luke Kasperczyk is a surveyor at Taylors in Melbourne, and his career as a surveyor began when he was a child reading the Melways over breakfast. Luke shares about how... The post Chapter 14: Luke Kasperczyk appeared first on GlobalX Terrain.
How does the internet work? hmm...this says it all really - "How does the internet work?" (Stanford University) What is iPhone Personal Hotspot? (Apple) What is a wifi dongle? (Telstra) What is a computer network? (Wikipedia) How computers talk to each other - Communications protocols (Wikipedia) Communications protocol definition (Webopedia) Network protocol definition (About.com) Egyptian heiroglyphs (Wikipedia) Sumerian language (Ancient History Encyclopedia) Ancient languages that haven't been figured out (mental_floss) How to speak like a Russian spy (TV Tropes) What is computer handshaking? (Wikipedia) Handshaking definition (Webopedia) A dial up modem handshaking (YouTube) A fax machine handshaking (YouTube) ADSL definition (Webopedia) ADSL doesn't use voice telephone call frequencies, it's like a quiet handshake (Wikipedia) Myspace (Wikipedia) The OSI model's 7 layers of networking (Wikipedia) The OSI model's 7 layers of networking (Webopedia) Packet definition (Webopedia) Network packet (Wikipedia) How the internet sends packets & stuff - Internet protocol suite (Wikipedia) TCP/IP definition (Webopedia) How to make French onion soup (BBC goodfood) Different ways to cut carrots (the Kitchn) DARPA & the invention of the internet (DARPA) History of the internet (Wikipedia) How to make a string & cup telephone (Science Kids) ISP definition (Webopedia) What is an Internet Service Provider? (Wikipedia) There are a few very big 'Tier 1' ISPs who control the most internet (Wikipedia) The main 'highways' - The internet backbone (Wikipedia) The internet map "Beautiful, intriguing and illegal ways to map the internet" (Wired) Melways maps Which way should we go on the internet? - Routing (Wikipedia) A visualisation of routing paths (Wikipedia) The submarine cable map (TeleGeography) "10 facts about the internet's undersea cables" (mental_floss) Trans-Pacific internet cables - Southern Cross Cables (Wikipedia) Trans-Atlantic internet cables (Wikipedia) List of international submarine communications cables (Wikipedia) "The internet's undersea world" (The Guardian) How a ship lays fibre optic cables (YouTube) Data travels at pretty much the speed of light through a fibre optic cable (Extreme Tech) The Mariana Trench (Wikipedia) "The worldwide internet backbone map" (Tianjin University of Technology) "Georgian woman cuts off web access to whole of Armenia" (The Guardian) "Ship's anchor accidentally slices internet cable cutting off access in six African countries" (Daily Mail Australia) What is a web server? (Wikipedia) A photo of the world's first web server (Wikipedia) What is a content delivery network? (Wikipedia) "Apple Building Out Their Own CDN To Deliver Content To Consumers" (StreamingMediaBlog) "Apple's CDN Now Live: Has Paid Deals With ISPs, Massive Capacity In Place" (StreamingMediaBlog) What is a cache? (Wikipedia) What is time to live? (Wikipedia) What are point-to-point telecommunications? (Wikipedia) DouglasAdams.com The Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy (Wikipedia) Sub-Etha Communications from the Hitchhiker's Guide (Wikipedia) The internet was once called ARPANET (Wikipedia) What is an Ethernet cable? (About.com) Cables are usually made out of copper or glass - Physical media (Wikipedia) "Why is fibre optic technology 'faster' than copper?" (ABC) One way people found stuff on the early web - The Gopher protocol (Wikipedia) The internet is an 'INTERconnected computer NETwork' (Wikipedia) The World Wide Web is what we 'see' on the internet (Wikipedia) History of the graphical user interface (Wikipedia) Pictures of what screens used to look like (Nathan's Toasty Technology page) The first ever web page! (CERN) The man who invented the World Wide Web and hyperlinks (Wikipedia) What is a hyperlink? (Wikipedia) What is FTP? (Wikipedia) "The web is dead. Long live the internet" (Wired) "Is the Web Dying? It Doesn't Look That Way" (The New York Times) What is Chrome? (Google) What is Safari? (Apple) Responsive web design means content adapts to any device (Wikipedia) App making software products (TopTen reviews) What are Apple Developer tools? (Apple) What is an app? (Wikipedia) Skype is more than 10 years old (Skype) Mark Elliot Zuckerberg (Wikipedia) What was Hotmail Messenger? (YouTube) Skype Instant Messenger explained by a guy in a grey t-shirt (YouTube) Did people REALLY used to chat to each other in the olden days? (LinkedIn) HumphreyBogart.com Cheeky review? (If we may be so bold) It'd be amazing if you gave us a short review...it'll make us easier to find in iTunes: Click here for instructions. You're the best! We owe you a free hug and/or a glass of wine from our cellar