Podcasts about meshes

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Best podcasts about meshes

Latest podcast episodes about meshes

You're Missing Out
How the National Film Registry Came to Be (with Congressman Robert Mrazek)

You're Missing Out

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2025 112:27


In this special bonus episode, we sit down with Congressman Robert Mrazek, the man whose legislation led to the creation of the National Film Preservation Board. Without his efforts, the National Film Registry as we know it wouldn't exist.Mrazek shares the inside story of how film preservation became a congressional priority, the cultural battles that shaped the legislation, and why preserving America's cinematic heritage is a matter of national importance. From the first films selected to the political resistance he faced, this conversation is an essential companion to everything we cover on You're Missing Out.If you've ever wondered how movies like Do the Right Thing, The Godfather, or Meshes of the Afternoon ended up in the National Film Registry, this is where it all started.Episode Notes:A conversation with Congressman Robert Mrazek, sponsor of the National Film Preservation Act of 1988Mrazek's legislation created the National Film Preservation Board and the National Film RegistryDiscussion topics include:The political and cultural climate that made film preservation urgentThe origins and goals of the National Film RegistryEarly champions of the legislation in Congress and the film industryThe ongoing importance of preserving culturally, historically, and aesthetically significant filmsReflections on:The evolving definition of American cinematic heritageHow preservation efforts safeguard not just movies, but national memoryThis episode offers essential historical context for our entire podcast Follow the Show:TwitterInstagramWebsite Music by Mike Natale

Enginears
PhysicsX Trained a Foundation AI Physics Model to Design New Airplanes Using 25M Open-Source Meshes! | Enginears Podcast

Enginears

Play Episode Listen Later May 14, 2025 35:48


If you're keen to share your story, please reach out to us!Guest:https://www.linkedin.com/in/jakemulley/https://www.linkedin.com/in/alvaroazabal/https://www.physicsx.ai/careers/Powered by Artifeks!https://www.linkedin.com/company/artifeksrecruitmenthttps://www.artifeks.co.ukhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/agilerecruiterLinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/enginearsioTwitter: https://x.com/EnginearsioAll Podcast Platforms: https://smartlink.ausha.co/enginears00:00 - Enginears Intro.01:30 - Jake & PhysicsX Intro.04:22 - Alvaro Intro.07:06 - Cloud compute challenges Jake is facing.10:02 - Geometry model.11:38 - Challenges building the geometry model.13:19 - Infer and compute challenges.15:07 - The tech demonstrator.18:18 - Classical engineering challenges.20:49 - Is that a common notion in physics design?21:45 - What challenges do you find when engineering for accuracy?24:16 - As the business grows, are you planning for upcoming challenges?26:48 - What makes good training practices and processes?29:04 - Common pitfalls?30:20 - PhysicsX plans over next 12 months.33:14 - Jake, Alvaro & PhysicsX Outro.35:06 - Enginears Outro.Hosted by Ausha. See ausha.co/privacy-policy for more information.

Chillpak Hollywood
Year 18, Episode 51

Chillpak Hollywood

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2025 71:50


Original Release Date: Monday 28 April 2025    Description:   Our last show before our 18th Anniversary is also our last show to be recorded via Skype! It's also an action-packed 72 minutes that boasts the return of “Lawsuit of the Week”, where Dean and Phil get down and dirty discussing the Paramount merger with Skydance, the fate of CBS' long-running “60 Minutes”, DEI initiatives, the FCC and Trump advisor Stephen Miller. Several films get discussed in depth, including Easter Parade, Diary of a Mad Housewife and Meshes of the Afternoon – each of which leads to discussions about husband-wife creative teams. In “Live Event(s) of the Week”, the delightful TCM host Ben Mankiewicz and the super-talented “Medicine Woman” Veronica Osorio both get celebrated. “Celebrity Deaths” this week is a lightning round quiz edition featuring remembrances of a game show host, a child star, a TV cowboy, a Canadian movie director, an Emmy Award-winning dramatic actress who starred in and co-created one of the most legendary dramas of all time, a Tony-winning composer and lyricist, a rock drummer, and a neo-expressionist painter. Finally, Dean discusses the Seth Rogen-starring Apple TV+ series “The Studio”. 

The Morning Roast with Bonta, Kate & Joe
Hour 2: Jimmy Meshes With The Warriors

The Morning Roast with Bonta, Kate & Joe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 27, 2025 50:12


In hour 2, Spadoni and Shasky discuss how Jimmy continues to mesh with the Warriors and it seems to be getting better and better.

Ispilu Beltza
#1280 Abangoardiatik Klasikoetara

Ispilu Beltza

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 24, 2025 25:32


Nosferatu Zikloko beste hiru film ezagutu ditugu Ispilu Beltzan: Together, Meshes of the Afternoon eta Outrage. Horiei buruz hitz egin digu Josemi Beltránek, bera da Donostia Kultura Zinemako zuzendaria.---Hemos conocido otras tres películas del Ciclo Nosferatu en Ispilu Beltza: : Together, Meshes of the Afternoon y Outrage. Sobre ellas nos ha hablado Josemi Beltrán, director de Cine de Donostia Kultura.

Der GameDev Podcast
86 - Kannst du Blut sehen?

Der GameDev Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2025 106:49 Transcription Available


Vero arbeitet an der Uniklinik in Aachen als Spieleentwicklerin und ist dort für Grafik, UI/UX und Game Design verantwortlich. Gemeinsam mit dem Fachpersonal aus medizinischen Bereichen (z.B. Kieferchirurgie) hilft sie bei der Erstellung von interaktiven Lerninhalten, erstellt 3D-Scans von Leichenteilen und optimiert die Meshes für den Echtzeit-Einsatz. Vorher hat sie an der FH Aachen studiert und war dort als HiWi für das VR Lab verantwortlich.

Poptillægget
'The Substance' er sublim selvhadshorror

Poptillægget

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2024 56:33


Bodyhorroren 'The Substance' er en af årets mest omdiskuterede film og vandt prisen for bedste manuskript på Cannes-festivalen i år. I filmen, der nu har fået premiere i Danmark, spiller 61-årige Demi Moore hovedrollen som det fallerede fitnessikon Elizabeth Sparkle, der indgår en pagt med en højteknologisk djævel og lader sig indsprøjte med ‘The Substance' for at forblive ung og relevant. I dette afsnit af ‘Poptillægget' dykker vi ned i filmen og taler om vores kulturs ungdomsforherligelse, Ozempic, feministiske hævntogter og aldrende kvinders muligheder på film. PANEL Esben Weile Kjær, kunstner. Anbefaling: Se klips fra Anna Delveys medvirken i ‘Dancing With The Stars'. Maja Malou Lyse, kunstner. Anbefaling: Lyt til podcasten ‘This Is Not A Beauty Podcast'. Emma Rosenzweig, forfatter og filmskaber. Anbefaling: Se stumfilmen ‘Meshes of the Afternoon' samt dyrk fastelavn som højtid. Vært: Lucia Odoom. Anbefaling: Lyt til Nilüfer Yanya, MØs nye single og Tirzahs cover af ‘This Is How We Walk On The Moon'.  Redaktion: Lucia Odoom og Jonas Bach-Madsen.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

The Brothers Grim Punkcast
Brothers Grim Punkcast #476

The Brothers Grim Punkcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 23, 2024


New single for the times sent in by SoCal solo project punker Saddam Bin Laden and a fresh one from Portland's Carny Cumm. A ton of other new stuff way too good not to play. Hit us up at brothersgrimpunk@gmail.com and download our music on our Bandcamp page... including the new Crickets EP.476 Playlist:Punk Said...I.E. CA MICHAEL JACKSON FOR PRESIDENT 1:13  Saddam Bin Laden 2024 Single Apple Valley When? 2:14 Nothing's Said Endless Slaughter Lancaster Fuck Politics 0:36 Nuke 'Em High Nuke 'Em High Portland Wifes on the Phone 0:52 Carny Cumm 2024 Bandcamp Single Skankin (bkgrd) 3:41 Droppin Bombs Demo Oregon NOISECORE GUERRILLA 0:38 REZERECTED NOISECORE GUERRILLA AU STRIP CLUB BRAWL 1:01 MAGGOT CAVE CHRONICLES OF THE CAVE Lost in Space to the Unknown Powers of Ancient History 0:47 Bimbos No Time For Fun Vol. 10 [NTR 410] Poland Apostazja 1:16 Urbicyd Urbicyd Indonesia Gorosei 1:20 slark GOROSEI Belgium I Saw Them Die 1:13 Wave of Fear Led to the Slaughter Demo TEAR IT DOWN 1:43 DEMONSTRATE DMU-016: DEMONSTRATE - DEMONSTRATION 2024 MESHES 1:21 INVERSION DMU-018:  INVERSION - DEMO 2024 Beach Impediment Speed of the Presses 1:26 Red Cross 1981-1982 No Message Inner City Uprising Sydney WE ARE THE FUCKING PROBLEM 0:58 BACKHAND ANGER SICK Dead And Sodden (bkgrd) 3:11 War Corpse Life After Work? Quebec Rock 'n' Roll Toilet 1:36 Shit Tax Rock 'n' Roll Toilet Saalepower 2 Recs Rational 1:39 MOMMY BOYS s/t L.A. Living Hell 2:05 Death Rites Death Rites Demo 2024 Sac UNC 1:22 Major Peace Second Hand Draino Trench Rats 1:27 Drip Demo 2015Columbine Star Factory 1:23 Ideation Blunt Instrument Demo I Wanna Kill U 1:01 Hated Youth Rejected / How Could Things Get Any Worse? Ban This 1:48 Butt Lynt Butt Lynt Euro-Barge 1:54 The Vandals Hitler Bad, Vandals Good Do Not Reply (bkgrd) 3:20 Stuck I'm Fucking Depressed 0:45 DD Owen March 2019 Tape Club STREET PUNK 0:37 TARGET SCAMMERS TARGET SCAMMERS Drop the Bombs 0:41 Demoralized Demo Riverside bang 1:12 puppyplaytime demo Japan Forgive and Forget 0:55 DISHxRAG 042 PV Effects Of Devastation 1:45 Werfukt WASTED AV Your Band Sucks 1:34 Chongo WASTED AV Soap Farm 1:31 Rupture Soap Farm / Das Waffen SS Slimeball    1:27 Kat Haus Flesh Speed Freak 2:08 Grazia In Poor TasteMind Temp (bkgrd) 3:16 Smirk LPMA Minimum Human 1:59 GREM GREM Demo Other ways to hear BGP:Archive.org#476 on ArchiveApple PodcastsYouTube PodcastsPunk Rock Demonstration - Wednesdays 7 p.m. PSTRipper Radio - Fridays & Saturdays 7 p.m. PSTContact BGP:brothersgrimpunk@gmail.com@Punkbot138 on Instagram@BrosGrimPunk on XMore Music:Bandcamp - Follow us and download our albums: Brothers Grim Punk, Fight Music, and more!YouTube - tons of our punk playlists, from Anarchy to Zombies!

Tech AI Radio
MeshAnything – converts 3D representations into efficient 3D meshes

Tech AI Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 21, 2024


Masmorra Cine
Masmorra Cast #91 – Sobre Narrativas Cinematográficas

Masmorra Cine

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024


Angélica Hellish, Marcos Noriega, Douglas Fricke (Podtrash) e Filipe Pereira (Cinealerta) conversam sobre filmes com narrativas interessantes e muitas vezes não convencionais!   ACESSE AS ANOTAÇÕES DO DOUGLAS AQUI: Mencionados: “Napoleon”, de Abel Gance, 1927 / “Vampiros da Meia-Noite” 1927 / "Haxan" de 1922 / “Dollie Daisy in Hearts and Flowers” (Howard H. Moss, 1930) / “O Porco Dançarino” (1907, “Le Cochon Danseur”, Millard Mercury) / “L'Inferno” (1911, Francesco Bertolini / “A Queda da Casa de Usher” (1928. Jean Epstein) / “Three's a Crowd” (“Pai sem Selo”, 1927, Harry Langdon) / Alice no País das Maravilhas (1903) / George Méliès: "L'Éclipse du soleil en pleine lune" (Eclipse do sol na lua cheia) / L'Inumane (The Inhuman Woman), 1924 / “Dream of a Rarebit Fiend” (1906) / “The Red Spectre” (1907) / “The Thieving Hand” (1908) / “Princess Nicotine, or, the Smoke Fairy” (1909) / “Filmstudie” (Hans Richter, 1926) / “The Adventures of Prince Achmed” (“Die Abenteuer des Prinzen Achmed” no original alemão, da diretora Lotte Reiniger, de 1926) / “Braza Dormida” (1928, Brasil, do mineiro Humberto Mauro) / “The Cameraman's Revenge” (1911) / “Goroda i gody” (“Citites and Years”, 1930) / “Aelita” (1924, de Yakov Protazanov) / “O Caso dos 3 Milhões” (1926, direção Yakob Protazanov pela Companhia Mezrhapom-Rus) / “земля” (“Earth”, dir. Aleksander Dovzhenko, 1930) / “Ekstase” (“Ecstasy”, 1933, dir. Gustave Machaty) / “The Adventures of the Little Chinese” (1928) / “China In Flames” (1925) / A Queima do Templo do Lótus Vermelho (“The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple” 1928 e 1931 / “Laogong zhi aiqing” (“Laborer's Love” ou 勞工之愛情, 1922, dir. Zhang Shichuan / “Hong Xia” (Red Heroine, ou 红侠 no original, de 1929) / Entr'acte (1924) René Clair / Ballet Mécanique (1924) / Limite (1931) Mário Peixoto / Meia-Noite Levarei Sua Alma (1962) / Rien que les heures (1926) Alberto Cavalcanti /The Mystery of Picasso (1956) / La Jetée (1962) / Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) / Un Chien Andalou (1929) / The Blood of a Poet (1932) / A Page of Madness (1926) / Drácula: O Diário de Uma Virgem (2002) / Nós Que Aqui Estamos Por Vós Esperamos (1999) e 1,99 O Supermercado Que Vende Palavras (2003) https://masmorracine.wordpress.com/2013/07/14/masmorra-cast-44-trilogia-qatsi-baraka-e-samsara/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR-Ru1_EFFg   APOIE A GENTE, NOSSO PIX apoiomasmorra@gmail.com MEU PROJETO NOVO – TRUE CRIME! https://www.youtube.com/@voltaaomundonocrime⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ JÁ SE INSCREVA E DEIXE SEU LIKE ACESSE CINECLUBE DA MASMORRA: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/6XO2tljzo8XHlFCe3exzCn⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ SeLIVES TODAS AS QUARTAS 21H NO ⁠⁠⁠⁠YOUTUBE⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠TWICH⁠⁠⁠⁠ E ⁠⁠⁠⁠FACEBOOK⁠⁠⁠⁠ Procure e inscreva-se nos aplicativos de PODCAST e também no SPOTIFY, AMAZON MUSIC, APPLE PODCASTS! – Só procurar MASMORRACINE *Nosso e-mail: contato.cinemasmorra@gmail.comSIGA A GENTE NO NOSSO CANAL NA TWITCH @AngelMasmorra ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.twitch.tv/angelmasmorra⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ AJUDE O NOSSO PODCAST A APARECER MAIS NO SPOTIFY DANDO 5 ESTRELAS PARA A GENTE! Procure-nos lá como Cineclube da Masmorra ou como MasmorraCine quiser se inscrever e dar estrelas no podcast lá no Spotify, ⁠clique aqui⁠:  

Masmorracine
Masmorra Cast #91 – Sobre Narrativas Cinematográficas

Masmorracine

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 1, 2024


Angélica Hellish, Marcos Noriega, Douglas Fricke (Podtrash) e Filipe Pereira (Cinealerta) conversam sobre filmes com narrativas interessantes e muitas vezes não convencionais!   ACESSE AS ANOTAÇÕES DO DOUGLAS AQUI: Mencionados: “Napoleon”, de Abel Gance, 1927 / “Vampiros da Meia-Noite” 1927 / "Haxan" de 1922 / “Dollie Daisy in Hearts and Flowers” (Howard H. Moss, 1930) / “O Porco Dançarino” (1907, “Le Cochon Danseur”, Millard Mercury) / “L'Inferno” (1911, Francesco Bertolini / “A Queda da Casa de Usher” (1928. Jean Epstein) / “Three's a Crowd” (“Pai sem Selo”, 1927, Harry Langdon) / Alice no País das Maravilhas (1903) / George Méliès: "L'Éclipse du soleil en pleine lune" (Eclipse do sol na lua cheia) / L'Inumane (The Inhuman Woman), 1924 / “Dream of a Rarebit Fiend” (1906) / “The Red Spectre” (1907) / “The Thieving Hand” (1908) / “Princess Nicotine, or, the Smoke Fairy” (1909) / “Filmstudie” (Hans Richter, 1926) / “The Adventures of Prince Achmed” (“Die Abenteuer des Prinzen Achmed” no original alemão, da diretora Lotte Reiniger, de 1926) / “Braza Dormida” (1928, Brasil, do mineiro Humberto Mauro) / “The Cameraman's Revenge” (1911) / “Goroda i gody” (“Citites and Years”, 1930) / “Aelita” (1924, de Yakov Protazanov) / “O Caso dos 3 Milhões” (1926, direção Yakob Protazanov pela Companhia Mezrhapom-Rus) / “земля” (“Earth”, dir. Aleksander Dovzhenko, 1930) / “Ekstase” (“Ecstasy”, 1933, dir. Gustave Machaty) / “The Adventures of the Little Chinese” (1928) / “China In Flames” (1925) / A Queima do Templo do Lótus Vermelho (“The Burning of the Red Lotus Temple” 1928 e 1931 / “Laogong zhi aiqing” (“Laborer's Love” ou 勞工之愛情, 1922, dir. Zhang Shichuan / “Hong Xia” (Red Heroine, ou 红侠 no original, de 1929) / Entr'acte (1924) René Clair / Ballet Mécanique (1924) / Limite (1931) Mário Peixoto / Meia-Noite Levarei Sua Alma (1962) / Rien que les heures (1926) Alberto Cavalcanti /The Mystery of Picasso (1956) / La Jetée (1962) / Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) / Un Chien Andalou (1929) / The Blood of a Poet (1932) / A Page of Madness (1926) / Drácula: O Diário de Uma Virgem (2002) / Nós Que Aqui Estamos Por Vós Esperamos (1999) e 1,99 O Supermercado Que Vende Palavras (2003) https://masmorracine.wordpress.com/2013/07/14/masmorra-cast-44-trilogia-qatsi-baraka-e-samsara/ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lR-Ru1_EFFg   APOIE A GENTE, NOSSO PIX apoiomasmorra@gmail.com MEU PROJETO NOVO – TRUE CRIME! https://www.youtube.com/@voltaaomundonocrime⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ JÁ SE INSCREVA E DEIXE SEU LIKE ACESSE CINECLUBE DA MASMORRA: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://open.spotify.com/show/6XO2tljzo8XHlFCe3exzCn⁠ ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ SeLIVES TODAS AS QUARTAS 21H NO ⁠⁠⁠⁠YOUTUBE⁠⁠⁠⁠, ⁠⁠⁠⁠TWICH⁠⁠⁠⁠ E ⁠⁠⁠⁠FACEBOOK⁠⁠⁠⁠ Procure e inscreva-se nos aplicativos de PODCAST e também no SPOTIFY, AMAZON MUSIC, APPLE PODCASTS! – Só procurar MASMORRACINE *Nosso e-mail: contato.cinemasmorra@gmail.comSIGA A GENTE NO NOSSO CANAL NA TWITCH @AngelMasmorra ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://www.twitch.tv/angelmasmorra⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ AJUDE O NOSSO PODCAST A APARECER MAIS NO SPOTIFY DANDO 5 ESTRELAS PARA A GENTE! Procure-nos lá como Cineclube da Masmorra ou como MasmorraCine quiser se inscrever e dar estrelas no podcast lá no Spotify, ⁠clique aqui⁠:  

Cloud Masters
Kubecon Europe 2024 Recap: Service meshes, Gateway API, and more

Cloud Masters

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 4, 2024 28:15


Kubernetes specialist Alfred Tommy joins us to recap Kubecon Europe 2024, including Istio Ambient Mesh's sidecarless model vs. LinkerD, security tradeoffs between the two, K8sGPT, and more!

BEST LOVED FILMS
E36-E40: Meshes of the Afternoon, Ritual in Transfigured Time, The Potted Psalm, The Cage, Fireworks

BEST LOVED FILMS

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 19, 2024 47:38


Paul's Security Weekly
Making Service Meshes Work for People - Idit Levine - ASW #267

Paul's Security Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 77:40


Service meshes create the opportunity to make security a team sport. They can improve observability and service identity. Turning monoliths into micro services sounds appealing, but maybe not every monolith needs to be broken up. We'll also talk about the maturity and design choices that go into service meshes and when a monolith should just remain a monolith. Segment Resources: https://www.solo.io/blog/kubernetes-security-cloud-native-applications/ https://www.solo.io/blog/apis-data-breach-zero-trust/ https://www.solo.io/blog/api-gateways-productivity-resilience-security-cloud-applications/ In the news, Nagios gets a review from NCC Group, hackers hack some anti-fixing code to fix trains in Poland, abusing OAuth post-compromise, 5Ghoul flaws in 5G networks, MITRE teases a new threat model for embedded systems, a conversation on vuln scoring systems, and more! Visit https://securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secweekly/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-267

Paul's Security Weekly TV
Making Service Meshes Work for People - Idit Levine - ASW #267

Paul's Security Weekly TV

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 37:30


Service meshes create the opportunity to make security a team sport. They can improve observability and service identity. Turning monoliths into micro services sounds appealing, but maybe not every monolith needs to be broken up. We'll also talk about the maturity and design choices that go into service meshes and when a monolith should just remain a monolith. Segment Resources: https://www.solo.io/blog/kubernetes-security-cloud-native-applications/ https://www.solo.io/blog/apis-data-breach-zero-trust/ https://www.solo.io/blog/api-gateways-productivity-resilience-security-cloud-applications/ Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-267

Application Security Weekly (Audio)
Making Service Meshes Work for People - Idit Levine - ASW #267

Application Security Weekly (Audio)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 77:40


Service meshes create the opportunity to make security a team sport. They can improve observability and service identity. Turning monoliths into micro services sounds appealing, but maybe not every monolith needs to be broken up. We'll also talk about the maturity and design choices that go into service meshes and when a monolith should just remain a monolith. Segment Resources: https://www.solo.io/blog/kubernetes-security-cloud-native-applications/ https://www.solo.io/blog/apis-data-breach-zero-trust/ https://www.solo.io/blog/api-gateways-productivity-resilience-security-cloud-applications/ In the news, Nagios gets a review from NCC Group, hackers hack some anti-fixing code to fix trains in Poland, abusing OAuth post-compromise, 5Ghoul flaws in 5G networks, MITRE teases a new threat model for embedded systems, a conversation on vuln scoring systems, and more! Visit https://securityweekly.com/asw for all the latest episodes! Follow us on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/secweekly/ Like us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/secweekly Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-267

Application Security Weekly (Video)
Making Service Meshes Work for People - Idit Levine - ASW #267

Application Security Weekly (Video)

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 19, 2023 37:30


Service meshes create the opportunity to make security a team sport. They can improve observability and service identity. Turning monoliths into micro services sounds appealing, but maybe not every monolith needs to be broken up. We'll also talk about the maturity and design choices that go into service meshes and when a monolith should just remain a monolith. Segment Resources: https://www.solo.io/blog/kubernetes-security-cloud-native-applications/ https://www.solo.io/blog/apis-data-breach-zero-trust/ https://www.solo.io/blog/api-gateways-productivity-resilience-security-cloud-applications/ Show Notes: https://securityweekly.com/asw-267

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Nextdata is building data meshes for the enterprise

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 4:12


The concept of a data mesh has been around for a few years.

L.I.S.A. WISSENSCHAFTSPORTAL GERDA HENKEL STIFTUNG
L.I.S.A. - Martin Langner | Maße, Muster, Modelle. Klassische Archäologie als Digitale Bild- und Objektwissenschaft

L.I.S.A. WISSENSCHAFTSPORTAL GERDA HENKEL STIFTUNG

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 10, 2023 20:12


Das Festsymposium führte Forschende aus dem Gebiet der Klassischen Archäologie, der Historischen Bauforschung, den Digital Humanities und der Landschaftsarchäologie online zusammen, um gemeinsam die Zukunftsperspektiven der Klassischen Archäologie als eines Faches, das sich gegenwärtig mehr denn je in einem transitorischen Zustand befindet zu bespreche MARTIN LANGNER (Göttingen) sprach in seinem Beitrag „Maße, Muster, Modelle. Klassische Archäologie als Digitale Bild- und Objektwissenschaft“ über die Möglichkeiten und Aufgaben der Digitalen Analyse von Bildern und Objekten sowie deren Prämissen. Nachholbedarf sieht Langner bei der dreidimensionalen Dokumentation von archäologischen Artefakten auf verschiedenen Ebenen. Als Problemfelder hervorgehoben wurden etwa die objektgemäße Erfassung in hinreichender Qualität, Anzahl und nachvollziehbarer Dokumentation sowie das Fehlen etablierter Standards der Primärdatenerfassung. Letzteres ist gegenwärtig sowohl auf dem Feld scannerbedingter Unterschiede, in der Qualitätssicherung von Meshes und Texturen als auch beim Prozess der Formalisierung von Forschungsfragen, d.h. bei der Formanalyse, festzustellen. Fragestellungen, welche dank digitalen Analyseverfahren ("deviation analysis, composition analysis" etc.) neu bzw. differenzierter behandelt werden können, reichen von sammlungsgeschichtlichen Aspekten etwa zur Rekonstruktion von Gipsabgussformen, über Fingerabdruckforschung an antiken Lämpchen bis hin zu digitalen Malerzuweisungen bei figürlich verzierten attischen Vasen. Zukünftige methodische Forschungsfelder der digitalen Bild- und Objektwissenschaft sieht Langner u. a. in der Weiterentwicklung der Bildmustererkennung, der Erforschung von datengesteuerten Formabstraktionen sowie in der Kombination von "distant viewing" und "close viewing". Den Originalbeitrag und mehr finden Sie bitte hier: https://lisa.gerda-henkel-stiftung.de/transit_klassischearchaeologie_langner

The Asianometry Podcast
Running Neural Networks on Meshes of Light

The Asianometry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 13:42


I want to thank Alex Sludds of MIT for his help on this video: https://alexsludds.github.io/

The Asianometry Podcast
Running Neural Networks on Meshes of Light

The Asianometry Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2023 13:42


I want to thank Alex Sludds of MIT for his help on this video: https://alexsludds.github.io/

De Nederlandse Kubernetes Podcast
#20 Networking met Service Meshes

De Nederlandse Kubernetes Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 18, 2023 35:58


In deze aflevering bespreken we networking in Kubernetes door middel van Service Meshes met Ep Heijting van Solo.io. We hebben het over het verschil tussen API Management en API Gateways, gaan in op de tool Istio en bespreken uitgebreid het gebruik van Service Meshes.Shownotes:Istio in Action (boek voor gebruik van Istio)

What a Picture
27. Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) - Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid

What a Picture

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 12, 2023 33:04


In this episode of What a Picture, Bryan and Hannah take a quick nap before discussing Meshes of the Afternoon, the 1943 movie directed by Maya Deren and Alexander Hammid that ranks #16 on Sight and Sound's 2022 Greatest Films of All Time Critics' Poll. Music is "Phaser" by Static in Verona.

Scene and Heard

Subscriber-only episodeCamp counselors Jackie and Greg dig into six short films from avant-garde filmmaker Maya Deren. The films discussed include: Meshes of the Afternoon (1943); At Land (1944); A Study in Choreography for Camera (1945); Ritual in Transfigured Time (1946); Meditation on Violence (1949); and The Very Eye of Night (1958).The monthly "S'mores" series is an offshoot from our main series, where Jackie and Greg explore films from the fringes of cinema, encompassing underground, experimental, cult, camp, genre, horror, and B-movies. "S'mores" episodes are unlocked by becoming either a Patron or Friend of the Show (see below). These episodes are released on the last Tuesday of each month.Check us out on Instagram: instagram.com/sceneandheardpodCheck us out at our official website: sceneandheardpod.comJoin our weekly film club: instagram.com/arroyofilmclubJP Instagram/Twitter: jacpostajGK Instagram: gkleinschmidtPhotography: Matt AraquistainMusic: Andrew CoxGet in touch at hello@sceneandheardpod.comSupport the show on Patreon: patreon.com/SceneandHeardPodorSubscribe just to get access to our bonus episodes: buzzsprout.com/1905508/subscribe

Silver Screen Video
Episode 177: An Andalusian Dog/Meshes of the Afternoon/Zero for Conduct

Silver Screen Video

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 26, 2023 66:31


In this episode we talk about three classic short films: An Andalusian Dog, Meshes of the Afternoon, and Zero for Conduct. Let us know what you guys think. Link is below for all our social media. https://linktr.ee/silverscreenvideo Thanks for stopping by. Feel free to email at silverscreenvideopodcast@gmail.com with any comments or thoughts. Also be sure to follow us on Instagram @silverscreenvideopodcast or Twitter @SilverVideo --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/silverscreenvideo/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/silverscreenvideo/support

Twin Peaks Cinema
S8E1 - Lost Highway (Long Road Home #1)

Twin Peaks Cinema

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2023 53:12


Episode Notes Please rate, review, and/or subscribe on Apple Podcasts to help promote this show... You can explore both public and patron episodes of this podcast here: https://www.lostinthemovies.com/p/twin-peaks-cinema.html UPDATE: 5 days after uploading, I added a feedback section that begins at 32:40 The comparison of Lost Highway and the "Evelyn Marsh saga" storyline now begins at 37:04 OTHER LINKS Juliette Lewis on corvette (video clip from Natural Born Killers) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mXxTpMM8tjU My Patreon Twin Peaks Cinema episode on Angel Face https://www.patreon.com/posts/51739417 MY OTHER WORK ON LOST HIGHWAY Listen to a Patreon audio archive of all my previous work/mentions: https://www.patreon.com/posts/31637615 sampled in the podcast - my video essay David Lynch & Mary Sweeney: Dream Souls https://vimeo.com/430539967 featured prominently in my video essay Meshes of Lynch https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zCUX4GIv-WI soundtrack featured in Dark Dreams on the Radio (preview of my Twin Peaks video essay) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DsX7y3vKNjY My first review (written) http://www.lostinthemovies.com/2008/09/lost-highway.html Essay comparing Lost Highway to Jacques Rivette's Duelle https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2015/12/lost-highway-duelle-lynchrivette-5.html In a complete survey of Lynch's filmography up to 2014 w/ review https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2014/06/the-eye-of-duck-david-lynch.html & in an essay https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2014/06/its-strange-world-david-lynch.html More on Lynch: https://www.lostinthemovies.com/p/twin-peaks-david-lynch.html (including Lost Highway mentions not listed above) MY OTHER WORK ON TWIN PEAKS https://www.lostinthemovies.com/p/twin-peaks.html MY RECENT PODCASTS Lost in the Movies - The Power of Nightmares https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/the-power-of-nightmares-lost-in-movies.html Twin Peaks Conversations w/ Andrew Grevas, publisher of 25 Years Later https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/twin-peaks-conversations-20-w-25-years.html free on Patreon: Episode 100 PUBLIC bonus - The Final Archives (40s/30s/silent) https://www.patreon.com/posts/episode-100-40s-79607678 FOLLOW MY NEW TWIN PEAKS CHARACTER SERIES (written entries)... ( = notes on an old entry) Ronette Pulaski (#61) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/link-to-ronette-pulaski-twin-peaks.html / Charlie (#60) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/charlie-twin-peaks-character-series-60.html / Sonny Jim Jones (#59) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/sonny-jim-jones-twin-peaks-character.html / Jean Renault, Mayor Dwayne Milford & Lana Budding Milford (#58 - 56) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/links-to-jean-renault-mayor-dwayne.html / Carrie Page (#55) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/carrie-page-twin-peaks-character-series.html / Candie (as well as Sandie and Mandie (#54) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/candie-as-well-as-sandie-and-mandie.html / Phillip Gerard (#53) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/03/link-to-phillip-gerard-twin-peaks.html / Eileen Hayward (#52) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/eileen-hayward-twin-peaks-character.html / Bill Hastings (#51) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/bill-hastings-twin-peaks-character.html / Anthony Sinclair (#50) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/anthony-sinclair-twin-peaks-character.html / John Justice Wheeler & Harold Smith (#49 & 48) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/links-to-john-justice-wheeler-harold.html / Richard Horne (#47) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/richard-horne-twin-peaks-character.html / *Evelyn Marsh (#46) https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/link-to-evelyn-marsh-twin-peaks.html + jump ahead at least a month as a patron https://www.patreon.com/Lostinthemovies/posts?filters%5Btag%5D=twin%20peaks%20characters This episode's home page on my site https://www.lostinthemovies.com/2023/04/lost-highway-as-twin-peaks-cinema-24.html

Shinypodden
Filmskolan: The Hitch-hiker

Shinypodden

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 17, 2023 125:41


Henke och Måns tillsammans med gästen Carl snackar om Ida Lupinos film noir "The Hitch-hiker" från 1953. Till detta ger Carl och Henke Måns tips om fem bra film noir-filmer vardera som bör ses som grundutbildning inom genren. Dessutom snackar vi om fyra kortfilmer och två tv-serie avsnitt! Kortfilmer: - Night Mail (Harry Watt, 1936) - The City (Ralph Steiner, 1939) - Meshes of the Afternoon (Maya Deren, 1943) - The Wonder Ring (Stan Brakhage, 1955) TV-serieavsnitt: - Revenge från Alfred Hitchcock Presents (1955, S01E01) - The Masks från The Twilight Zone (1964, S05E25) Henkes tips på Film noir: - Laura (Otto Preminger, 1944) - Gilda (Charles Vidor, 1946) - Shadow of a Doubt (Alfred Hitchcock, 1943) - Sunset Blvd (Billy Wilder, 1950) - The Big Sleep (Howard Hawks, 1946) Carls tips på Film Noir: - Out of the Past (Jacques Tourneur, 1947) - The Killers (Robert Siodmak, 1946) -The Third Man (Carol Reed, 1949) - Too Late For Tears (Byron Haskins, 1949) - This Gun For Hire (Frank Tuttle, 1942) Kommentera avsnittet på Henkes filmblogg: Fripps Filmrevyer.

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed
Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 27:54


In today's Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, we explore the concept of a service mesh and why you might want to run one in a Kubernetes cluster. While there are many service meshes to choose from we focus on Linkerd. Linkerd is available under an Apache 2.0 license and hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed
Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 27:54


In today's Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, we explore the concept of a service mesh and why you might want to run one in a Kubernetes cluster. While there are many service meshes to choose from we focus on Linkerd. Linkerd is available under an Apache 2.0 license and hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). The post Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd appeared first on Packet Pushers.

Packet Pushers - Fat Pipe
Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Fat Pipe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 27:54


In today's Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, we explore the concept of a service mesh and why you might want to run one in a Kubernetes cluster. While there are many service meshes to choose from we focus on Linkerd. Linkerd is available under an Apache 2.0 license and hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). The post Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd appeared first on Packet Pushers.

Packet Pushers - Fat Pipe
Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Fat Pipe

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 27:54


In today's Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, we explore the concept of a service mesh and why you might want to run one in a Kubernetes cluster. While there are many service meshes to choose from we focus on Linkerd. Linkerd is available under an Apache 2.0 license and hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).

Kubernetes Unpacked
Kubernetes Unpacked 019: Understanding Service Meshes And Linkerd

Kubernetes Unpacked

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 16, 2023 27:54


In today's Kubernetes Unpacked podcast, we explore the concept of a service mesh and why you might want to run one in a Kubernetes cluster. While there are many service meshes to choose from we focus on Linkerd. Linkerd is available under an Apache 2.0 license and hosted by the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF).

Vintage Sand
Vintage Sand Episode 43: Thoughts on the "Sight and Sound" 2022 Poll

Vintage Sand

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 10, 2022 74:34


It is indeed the episode a decade in the making! Here, in Episode 43, Team Vintage Sand puts in its collective two cents on the newly released Sight and Sound decennial poll of the greatest films of all time. It is a list referred to by no less an authority than Roger Ebert as “the best damned film list of them all.” But this time, was it a “woke” poll, reflecting more our need for political correctness than a genuine and deep understanding of film history, as old-timers like Paul Schrader proclaimed? Or was it about damn time that the old white men gave up at least some of the strangle hold they've had on the poll since its inception in 1952, as many younger critics proclaimed? Does this new list signify that the battle lines have been drawn irrevocably between older and younger film people? As always, the truth is never that simple. Team Vintage Sand tries to approach the poll by avoiding either extreme, oversimplified position, reaching, as ever, for the complex and embracing the gray. Does Akerman's "Jeanne Dielman" deserve its new place atop the rankings? Probably not, but it surely is a much better film than its position in the mid-30's for the 2012 edition of the poll suggested. And if the poll is so politically correct, why are there no films by the Mexican New Wavers here? Along these same lines, 16 of the 22 directors who have multiple entries on the list are white men; four of the remaining six are Asian men. Yes, there are no films by Howard Hawks or Roman Polanski. No Buñuel. No Lean. No Altman. No Demy, or Melville, or Resnais. No Sternberg or Stroheim. No Huston. No Malick. No Tarantino. No Anderson, be it Wes or P.T. No Coen Brothers. No Linklater. No Spielberg, for goodness' sake! No silent films in the Top 10, and all the silent films that are still there from 2012, with the exception of "City Lights", plummeted to the nether reaches of the list. (If anyone tells me that there are 20 films greater than "The Passion of Joan of Arc", it's ON!) And yet… …there's "Do The Right Thing" entering the list at #24. FINALLY. And there's Burnett's brilliant "Killer of Sheep". And Dash's "Daughters of the Dust". Maybe now someone will give her some money to make a second film, three full decades after she released a Top 100 masterpiece. And there, brand spanking new, are Jordan Peele and Barry Jenkins. And there's Agnes Varda's extraordinary "Cleo from 5 to 7" entering the list in the top 15. And my historical experimental film crush Maya Deren is finally here as well for her extraordinary and endlessly influential "Meshes of the Afternoon". And Claire Denis in the Top 10. And Jane Campion, Barbara Loden(!), Celine Sciamma and the aforementioned Julie Dash. If it took some “woke” (whatever that means) younger critics to put these artists in their rightful places in the pantheon, we'll take it. Ultimately, we recognize the silly waste of energy in trying to compare, say, "Jeanne Dielman" with "Tokyo Story" with "In the Mood for Love" with "Man with a Movie Camera". For us, this poll has one purpose only, and it's the same purpose that guides what we do at Vintage Sand: it opens doors. It takes us out of our comfort zone as viewers, and reminds us that there are vast aspects of film history about which we know little or nothing. So look carefully at Sight and Sound 2022 through this lens, check off the films you haven't seen yet or not in a long time anyway, and track them down. We'll bring the popcorn!

Laying The Points
Laying the Points 2.0 Episode 5 - The Slowest of all Meshes

Laying The Points

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 29, 2022 40:37


After a fun weekend on Long Island we reflect on the times we had and some of the bets we placed, including getting bailed out by pass interference calls and getting screwed by a one in a million kick. We then dive into some of the games we like this weekend including a heated debate on whether the Bengals or the Broncos are bigger frauds. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/layingthepointspod/support

Christmas Movies Actually
Episode 65: Santa Baby 2: Christmas Maybe

Christmas Movies Actually

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 88:44


Collin and Kerry pay tribute to the late, great Paul Sorvino as they dissect the ABC Family Classic, inexplicably titled "Santa Baby 2: Christmas Maybe," without having seen the MIA original. Is this Jenny McCarthy's finest work? Why is her character named Mary Class instead of Mary Claus? Why hasn't "Back To the Beach" achieved greater cult status? All these questions, plus the Book segment and a look at what's new in physical media on the Blu-ray Gift Exchange. "We Just Say Book" featured titles: "Who Framed Roger Rabbit?" (1988) "A Brighter Summer Day (1991) "Meshes of the Afternoon" (1943) Blu-ray Gift Exchange featured titles: "Hotel Du Nord" (Criterion) "Dog Soldiers" (Shout Factory) "Back To the Beach" (Paramount)

You're Missing Out
Meshes of the Afternoon (1943) w/ Dr. Sabina Stent

You're Missing Out

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2022 94:30


“Myth is the facts of the mind made manifest in a fiction of matter.” Dr. Sabina Stent joins us to discuss one of the most influential surrealist films, and the radical creative figures who both made and championed it, in particular Maya Deren. We'll talk horror imagery, avant garde art, and Beavis and Butthead.Watch Meshes of the Afternoon here for freeWatch Un Chien Andalou (referenced heavily in the episode) here for freeNext week:Raging Bull w/ Richard Newby (rent it here)Hosts:Michael NataleTwitterInstagramLetterboxd Tom LorenzoTwitterInstagramLetterboxd Producer:Kyle LamparTwitterInstagram Guest:Dr. Sabina StentTwitterLinktree Follow the Show:TwitterInstagramWebsite Music by Mike Natale

You're Missing Out
The River (1938) w/ Dr. Robert J. Snyder

You're Missing Out

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 4, 2022 88:52


"Beautiful! Stirring! Dramatic!" Just who was Pare Lorentz? What does it mean to be "FDR's Filmmaker"? And how did government film with a covertly conservationist bent end up alongside The Godfather and Raging Bull in the second class of Registry inductees? Our guest, Dr. Robert J. Snyder, joins us to answer those questions and more. We'll talk Lorentz's career, what it's like writing an essay for the National Film Registry, and even touch on our favorite cuss words.Watch The River here for freeNext week:Meshes of the Afternoon w/ Dr. Sabina Stent (watch it here for free)Hosts:Michael NataleTwitterInstagramLetterboxd Tom LorenzoTwitterInstagramLetterboxd Producer:Kyle LamparTwitterInstagram Guest:Dr. Robert J. SnyderDr. Snyder's National Film Registry EssayCrohn's and Colitis Foundation Pare Lorentz Center Follow the Show:TwitterInstagramWebsite Music by Mike Natale

The NFTYQ Show - NFT Podcast
#51 Eric Faust - Will YouTube and Twitch add NFTs?, Building Dropper on Hedera, How Esports Meshes w/Web3

The NFTYQ Show - NFT Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 13, 2022 63:35


NFTYQ sits down w/ Eric Faust, founder of Dropper, to discuss what Esports and Streamers entering NFTs will look in 2022-23, tools for Streamers to easily create NFTs, building on Hedera Hashgraph, and much more!  Guest - https://twitter.com/ehfaust https://twitter.com/DropperNFT 0:00 Intro 1:40 Similarities between 2018-17 Bear Market to Now? 6:06 The Fourth Turning and Cycles of Human Evolution 10:04 Eric's Background and Selling Gaming Items in the 2000s 14:22 Esports Organizations Today 22:20 How YouTube and Twitch add NFTs 24:25 Why are AAA Games going to adopt NFT Games and Battle Royale 26:07 Getting Kicked Out of TwitchCon EU 29:48 Founding Dropper NFT Platform and Overview 36:05 Offering Streaming NFTs 37:06 Why They Chose Hedera Hashgraph? 44:56 Current Play to Earn Ecosystem  49:11 Do All Games Need NFTs? 54:35 $DROPP Token  58:46 Dropper Timeline

The Bledsoe Show
The Patterns Running Your Life with Mike & Max

The Bledsoe Show

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 20, 2022 71:06


00:00.00 mikebledsoe I Think yeah I did one of those um inner Tube River Lazy River thing never done it before been Whitewater raft and canoeing always in Rivers never did the I'm not can hardly do shit as I let the water take me. 00:00.00 Max Shank Sounds good to me. 00:08.26 Max Shank The Lazy river. 00:37.76 Max Shank Aha. 00:39.42 mikebledsoe Yeah, so it took a friend organizing it with a bunch of people who I actually like to spend time with to get me to do nothing on a river and I got out there I got out there and it was. Ah, there was a crowd it was it was like bumper boats for 4 hours in this river it's in Austin yeah south of off and Marcos and when we got there, we're like holy shit's busy and the people working there go oh hasn't gotten busy yet. So. 01:28.44 Max Shank This is in Austin. Well yeah. 01:58.72 mikebledsoe Anyways, yeah, that was ah that was my weekend that and barbecue and laughing with friends. 02:05.46 Max Shank Lazy River is exciting. 02:17.38 Max Shank I'll tell you what makes me laugh is your story about you having some very close friends give you permission to just float in a River it sounds ah like this joke about um, meditation and yoga. It's like. 02:45.76 mikebledsoe Ah. 02:51.56 Max Shank People in None world countries need someone from a None world country to remind them that it's okay to do nothing for 20 minutes it's like you get permission to do nothing for 20 minutes with meditation class or yoga or something like that. It's like. 03:07.20 mikebledsoe Yeah. 03:27.88 Max Shank You just do nothing. 03:28.88 mikebledsoe Yeah, we had a friend of her for dinner on Friday night and we talked about that which was you know talking about you know oh I got a meditation practice and I got a visualization practice and I got qi gong and it's like all these practices and talked about just. The value of not you know, getting trapped in the in the practices and the value of just sitting on the side of a lake and staring at the water and doing absolutely nothing and not worried about your posture or anything like that in just that space. 04:36.56 Max Shank Well, it's like not concerning yourself with the outcome right? Like you don't you don't care if you have produced more widgets or harvested more grains right. 04:44.40 mikebledsoe You know. 05:04.32 mikebledsoe Yeah, it's kind of like play. 05:09.82 Max Shank And that's what we're doing. That's that's like how we judge if if we're good in a lot of relationships because that's where we gain our judgments from is these relationships that we've had so we say it's good to do this. It's bad to do that and. What's interesting is how few people can balance out both and I'm speaking from my own experience as well. It's like None or the other typically and figuring out how to rive the natural cycles which is a wave. 06:11.80 mikebledsoe Yeah. 06:26.68 Max Shank Um, is super valuable. Skill no wind to float in the Lazy River and you know when it's time to climb up the mountain or dig out the gold mine or ah till the field you you go get that shit done with total focus and it. Kind of goes back to what we talked about with the the Jungle cats and the lions and predators of various kinds. It's like they they basically are in rest mode rest and recovery and form bonds with the family or focused. They're not.. They're not hurrying typically right? There's a difference between being hurried and being focused and that's what I try to do sometimes I even get it Sometimes I do it where I'm I'm just focused or relaxed and if I'm relaxed I'm. 07:42.62 mikebledsoe Yeah. 08:20.22 Max Shank I'm letting my focus diffuse into a soft glow like a lantern that you could look directly at it doesn't hurt your eyes or you can focus down like a laser pointer or a laser cutter and you can actually slice through metal with it so being able to. Lazy River or Whitewater Raft. You know that sort of thing or lantern versus laser. 09:10.70 mikebledsoe Yeah, um I think back in my early days of all a not not understanding the value of the space of doing nothing and just playing with no outcome and and how much benefit that gives me on the day. Ah. When I do want to focus the ability to do so is there and I like we were saying about the the lantern and or the laser yesterday is a good example that is I did float on Saturday but yesterday my fiance. 10:02.80 Max Shank Earth. 10:20.94 mikebledsoe So I got says I I need a lot I got a lot of work to do and I said you know what I got a lot of work to do too because I've got a summit coming up and you know there's a I've got a long list and I've got a couple podcast episodes to record this week so there's some things I need to prep for but I'm not gonna. You know it's Sunday and I know that I've got I'm working till next Sunday I don't have a day off between now I'm next Sunday and I'm going to take it easy I probably was more productive and enjoyed my work more without worrying about how much I got done that day. 11:33.44 Max Shank I mean. 11:36.74 mikebledsoe And yeah, it's I find that especially when I was younger a lot of time spent a lot of times spent chugging coffee and overstimulating myself for the purpose of thinking that was going to help me do something better. 11:56.46 Max Shank Totally power through baby well and you'll be more good as judged by all of your peers. It's all the program that's been installed and if everything is sacrificed for the outcome. 12:21.24 mikebledsoe Right here. 12:33.34 Max Shank The extreme example is someone who's going to blow themselves up because the programming was so effective That's crazy so being able to draw boundaries is really what it comes back to is can you draw a boundary for space for yourself. 12:44.32 mikebledsoe No no. 13:12.84 Max Shank And I actually remember a conversation I had with a member at my gym once and I watched this person transform over a period of time I learned about how their work and their life goes and things like that and they were you know real high performer Worker. And her her biggest challenge was to set clear boundaries for herself to do things that were for her I mean she was give give give essentially I'll I'll get all the work done and then just pile some more on and then I'll get that done too and. 14:03.52 mikebledsoe A. 14:29.96 Max Shank Always the last priority and I remember she was asking if she could drop the the personal training from her membership and just do the classes and I said look ah personal train do classes. Whatever you want to do but make an appointment for yourself every week. That you never miss Basically like you have to keep that as a priority and that's one of the reasons that personal training works is because the person is heavily invested to show up at the given time and once that billing and scheduling is all dialed in. 15:11.62 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 15:44.54 Max Shank It makes it very easy to show up every time but if it's ah, a group membership and no one really is going to follow up if you aren't coming in there. It's a totally different Thing. So I think it comes back to drawing boundaries. Between those times where you are allowed or allowing yourself to do nothing. 16:27.50 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, my None task on Monday mornings is to schedule out my rejuvenating activities for the rest of the week when am I going to work out when am I going to go song a cold plunge when am I going to hang out with my friends. 16:46.86 Max Shank He. 17:06.56 mikebledsoe All that scheduled out None thing Monday morning before I even look at what I need to do for work that week and yeah it for me it. It requires that level of of commitment to self in order to follow through on that stuff. 17:13.81 Max Shank Oh. 17:35.76 Max Shank Oh draw boundaries. That's why relationships don't work right? Well, that's why relationships go South is ah, people didn't draw boundaries quick enough. Basically. 17:41.36 mikebledsoe But most people never do it. Yeah, didn't yeah, they just don't even consider the boundaries in the None place. Yeah, you know? Yeah, they're not even aware usually like the the boundary most people. 18:12.96 Max Shank Right. 18:20.32 mikebledsoe Discovered that the boundary even exists when they get mad like ah, a boundary getting crossed it it triggers anger and then a lot of times the the right? the right person to be angry at yourself. But. 18:41.28 Max Shank Um, it's internalized like right. 18:55.16 mikebledsoe It's projected out and blamed on someone else when you know my big thing is anytime I get angry with somebody else I check in with myself to say you know what boundary was crossed and did I communicate that boundary and most of the time I didn't and then I got. 19:13.96 Max Shank Yeah, yeah. 19:32.70 mikebledsoe Check out in myself. But then I go have the conversation about where my boundary is with that person and you know it's always things usually clear up after that. 19:38.68 Max Shank Um, yeah, yeah, um I would I would agree I think people um often don't check their boundaries. Quick enough and hold true to those lines and it makes it very difficult. Ah, and it's kind of an ah accumulating Burden I think even and you don't really know how much you. 20:16.74 mikebledsoe Now just. 20:40.72 mikebledsoe Yeah. 20:51.56 Max Shank Like resentment and blame you can start hanging onto just just because 100% your responsibility you should have drawn boundaries. That's why anytime like what you're saying oh I'm mad at this person. It's like well that's silly because. Whatever happened happened and that was possible from from back when you started that relationship right? That's that's fine. Whatever just ah, try to learn from it and this back to the thing about being focused versus hurried or. 21:32.56 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 22:05.72 Max Shank Whatever there's a big difference between just putting all your focus onto something and being emotionally charged up about it. 22:17.40 mikebledsoe Yeah, so we want to talk about today. Yeah I think we've done boundaries before. 22:25.10 Max Shank What do I want to talk about I want to talk about the well. Okay, last week we talked about stuff basically which was cool. We talked about stuff. Making stuff. 23:01.80 mikebledsoe I Only remember what what stuff will we talk about. 23:10.30 Max Shank Um, we were talking about how come on you we were yeah but you're supposed to treasure mine forever. Whatever I say I'm sure you have like a separate diary just for the conversations that you and I have. 23:24.26 mikebledsoe I've had a lot of thoughts between last week and right now and it gets cluttered. Oh. 23:50.24 Max Shank I mean I know like everyone can tell that you get really excited throwing a word the round throwing around the word fiance now. So I know you got a lot on your mind. You're you're going to be this new person. You're going to be like oh well, you know now that I'm married. 24:08.94 mikebledsoe M. 24:24.28 Max Shank And it's going to be just like last week when you said well now that I'm you know a little older a little wiser I think it's just going to play in to that that guru status that you've developed because now you'll be older wiser married get some kids going and then your avatar. Will be complete so you can you know really have some authority on these messages for the men who listen to us significantly long that we shouldn't even see the neck on that tank top. It should go down at least ten more inches gandalph style. 25:12.22 mikebledsoe Yeah I need ah I need a longer beard too. 25:30.18 mikebledsoe Now see what Ashley says about that. 25:39.66 Max Shank No, we were talking about making stuff though last week like the the value of making stuff physically with your hands and there's and there's a lot of truth that is discovered when you do that because there and it kind of ties so I would tie back. 25:49.84 mikebledsoe Oh oh yeah. 26:04.98 mikebledsoe Yeah. 26:18.26 Max Shank We talked about last week into the so that was the matter or the stuff and maybe we could go into the pattern of things so we could talk a little bit about vibration and rhythm and frequency if if you wanted to It's kind of a. Challenging topic to really follow, but it's um, the reason it reminded me is father's day. It was father's day and you know the word father comes from the word ah pattern and the word mother comes from the word matter. So there's. 27:10.80 mikebledsoe Um. 27:28.20 mikebledsoe Yeah, why say we go with that. Let's go with that. Yeah I'm I'm down to tackle the pattern conversation that sounds good. 27:31.68 Max Shank Matter and pattern so it seems like a nice logical transition. 27:53.38 Max Shank Yeah, so let's say we try to break it down into ah patterns of human beings which is kind of like programs of human beings. So we have that which is I would say that's the most practical level. Is the patterns of humans. Ah we also have ah Dna is a pattern and another synonym for pattern is code. 28:57.40 mikebledsoe I think. 28:59.20 Max Shank So you have Dna you got computer programming you got programming human beings. You got the different ah frequencies and wavelengths of things as it relates to the materials we make. 29:28.84 mikebledsoe Yeah I think it's gonna be a fun topic Actually the more the more you're talking I'm thinking and yeah, this will be a full. 29:43.46 Max Shank Um, you could argue that matter and Pattern are the only topics that we could discuss. 29:56.40 mikebledsoe I think so yeah, everything falls under those 2 categories. That's right. 30:06.70 Max Shank Stuff and not stuff like okay here here's ah, an interesting example right? We have all these forces which is the way we describe. Okay, all right? No, we're Okay, we're we're kicked. 30:23.88 mikebledsoe Hang on hang on. Let's kick the show off and then get into it. Yeah I think I think we're set are we clicked I wrote the date on the top of the page. Um. 30:41.42 Max Shank Okay, you took some notes. 30:55.12 Max Shank I have this I have this fantasy in my mind when I see you looking down and writing something that it's like oh these like excellent notes are like a mind map or something like that or maybe a checklist of things to cover. Really you've just written your name in the date in the corner. 31:23.40 mikebledsoe Um, no half the time It's the date I'm practicing spelling my name. Yeah. 31:38.76 Max Shank Okay, so we'll talk about Pattern for in honor of father's day. 31:47.70 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah I said I say ah why don't you go ahead and do the intro and then we'll talk about the the membership site and then you can go into your explanation for. Father and pattern How about that and then we'll just go from there. 32:31.50 Max Shank And the membership site just so I'm clear is in the beginning of the show I put my camera to expose the nipples and then when the public show starts I tilt it back up. So the nipples are ah not visible is that. 33:03.86 mikebledsoe You got it. You got it? yeah. 33:09.94 Max Shank Is that right? I'm a simple man I like a simple plan. My nips are only free to me but not to you. 33:27.22 mikebledsoe All right? You want to kick off the intro today. All right? yep. 33:32.94 Max Shank Yeah let's do it already. Ah None 2 None welcome back to Monday mornings with max and Mike Today we're gonna. Follow up what we talked about last week last week was a heck of a fun conversation about stuff matter substance working with your hands a little bit about manufacturing. It was a crazy excellent conversation. Go check it out Today. We're gonna talk about the other side. The pattern. I think it's very cool that the words mother and father are actually derived from matter and pattern and so that's what we're gonna talk about today. We're gonna talk about how pattern is present in your Dna your cell phone behaviors of human beings. And much much more and welcome welcome again. Mike thanks for sitting down with me I'm very excited and a little intimidated to tackle this topic today. 35:20.58 mikebledsoe Well said. 35:41.48 mikebledsoe Ah sorry I can make a bunch of bullshit up. Ah so for for those of you who who love this show. 35:51.98 Max Shank I Don't like it for the record folks I don't like when he does that. 36:04.22 mikebledsoe Ah, but for um, all we we decide to open up the membership site and we're gonna be posting exclusive content. There's a conversation that always happens previous to this show today's show we had 16 minutes and 55 seconds of content. Of us figuring out what we were going to talk about. But of course we can't help ourselves from delivering gold at every moment. So if you yep, None nipples on the preshow. So do that one. 36:53.52 Max Shank There were also 2 nipples on the pre-show in case that matters I don't know why why should people do that one like what are they going to get out of that. Are they going to get some more interaction with us. 37:17.16 mikebledsoe 1 maybe it's exclusive content for now we're going to see where it goes. Yeah well I had a guy. 37:25.32 Max Shank Just exclusive content I Think yeah, we should see what people want though also because I could see ah I could see something really cool forming out of this So I just want to serve our our customers The best way I can. 37:54.20 mikebledsoe Yeah I had a guy ah on Instagram Atx window tent and clean. He sent me message it and said he would donate for more podcasts with me and you so um, what I want to do is we're gonna set it up. It's not set up. As of today. But if you're listening to this what I'm Goingnna do is I'm going to create a link on the http://bloodsoio.com. So if you go to there. There's going to be a place where you can sign up for this and it's gonna be pay what you want so it's donation based anywhere between a dollar and $5000000 ah. 38:58.12 Max Shank Love it. 39:09.36 mikebledsoe And we'll set up a we'll make it a monthly subscription and as long as you're. 39:13.16 Max Shank Are we sponsored by Austin Tint and window by the way atx tint and window. 39:23.34 mikebledsoe You know we may mention him more depending on the size of his donation or her donation I'm not sure if it's a man or woman. So I the this. 39:49.66 Max Shank So wait. So wait, you're telling me they can pay what they want and we don't even really know what they're going to get yet. We know they're going to get exclusive content. There's no question. You're going to hear words there that you won't hear anywhere else but there might be even more than that is what you're saying So it's like. 40:14.90 mikebledsoe Yep. 40:24.34 mikebledsoe Well well part of this yeah part part part of this. Well the thing is the people that are going to donate to the show. They're going to contribute funds to make sure that this show keeps happening because you know what it takes a couple hours out of max and I week 40:29.48 Max Shank Ah, bonus price Mystery box That's incredible. 41:02.62 mikebledsoe And you know we got to keep the lights on and all that. But ah yeah, so the people. 41:09.12 Max Shank Well you vote with your dollars too I'm I'm a big fan of that. So if you like really want more of something then you know that's that's the only way you can really influence it I say that in your whole life too. You know, buy what you like. 41:36.94 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, spend money where you want things to improve So Ah so for one if you enjoy the show and you just want to Contribute. It's a great way to do it. You're also going to get exclusive content And. Ah, you are going to have the loudest voice out of everyone who has an opinion about what we should be doing So We're more likely to listen to those who are donating the most amount of money So That's all that's all on that So we'll get that set up I've got a summit coming up this weekend. So. 42:35.80 Max Shank Very exciting. 42:48.40 mikebledsoe My team is completely distracted with things that they think is important so that I can do the show. But. 42:59.82 Max Shank It must have taken a lot of ah instruction to organize all those people together for a summit. He segwayed perfectly because someone has to orchestrate. 43:15.70 mikebledsoe Instruction. Um, yeah, yeah, there's a ah lot of direction. 43:37.32 Max Shank Someone has to orchestrate the code for getting that job done and if you think about the Pattern. So the bread. The the dough is the stuff. The recipe is the pattern. The sperm is the pattern. The egg is the stuff. Matter mother Pattern father. So It sounds like you are the father of this event because you have determined the structure of its organization. 44:36.70 mikebledsoe Yeah, we create this structure and then I brought in a lot of speakers who are going to contribute so they they bring a lot of stuff and I organize it and I time it I announce it I create a container. 44:55.22 Max Shank Right. 45:10.16 Max Shank Oh. 45:13.70 mikebledsoe So it's a container of time so it starts at a certain time ends at a certain time we we do have a frequency of of time in between so this speaker starts here ends there. There's also a consideration for what type of content is gonna presented it. Be presented in what order to make the most sense so that we can stare step people through a series of understanding. So while I also have no idea what the speakers are going to say like I I know their topic but I and I know they're good because almost all of them been in the industry for twenty plus years 46:09.48 Max Shank Right? right. 46:27.00 mikebledsoe So I know it's going to be good I Just don't know what exactly that content's going to be and that's actually a lot of fun for me. 46:40.28 Max Shank And that's the that's the practical side of patterns. That's the most practical side of patterns because most of our interactions are with people or or with stuff but usually with people I would say unless you're just specifically with materials and. 47:04.92 mikebledsoe Um, yeah art. 47:18.36 Max Shank That's what teaching is it's basically ah, it's like the least substantial thing there is is pure instruction because there's no stuff being transferred. There's only code. Being transferred.. There's only the pattern that is being sent to another person. 48:07.80 mikebledsoe Yeah. 48:13.64 Max Shank But that's what drives people and the bible is a program. The constitution is a program these are patterns. These are these have their own ah force and vibration to them right. 48:44.12 mikebledsoe What I'm glad you bring that up. 48:49.16 Max Shank When it comes to the way that humans interact and behave and you take that plus it's like that plus Dna those are the None intersecting patterns that sort of weave together and you could I don't know I think the nature versus nurture argument is the wrong. Perspective I think it's nature and nurture and it's all the same kind of. 49:33.32 mikebledsoe Yeah, and and everything you were just saying right there and we look at the patterns that have had the longest staying power. So like we talk about the bible or christianity. It's a pattern that has had really long staying power a lot of other religions have fallen by the wayside. 50:07.36 Max Shank Relative to other human religions. It's had incredible staying power. 50:11.88 mikebledsoe And yeah, yeah, now the the patterns you talk about nature versus nurture. But what I one of the things that I've found to be ah, really powerful is studying the patterns of nature and then either mimicking that. 50:37.32 Max Shank Then oh. 50:50.84 mikebledsoe Or if we're going to be working with nature which we always are is how do we harness that if you try to create a structure that is not in alignment with nature. You're going to be. You're going to lose that battle and so there is and I think it creates some. 50:55.86 Max Shank I will know. 51:30.56 mikebledsoe Difficulty so one of the ways I like to think about patterns and frequencies and I think about frequencies specifically and I like to start at the macro and work our way down to the micro and then when we do that I think people really start getting an understanding of how the universe works. And this was pointed out to me by a guy named Daniel Schmackenberger he explained it to me and I go huh that act that that's in person in person. He explained it to me. 52:18.34 Max Shank Um, did he explain it to you in person. What an interesting character that guy is I've listened to a few of his things and he's a very interesting cat. But. 52:39.16 mikebledsoe He used to live down the street from us and I probably had a sit down with him every three months when I was living in Socal and we jammed and the guy. The guy is one of the most intelligent people I've ever met. Um, but ah, we were talking about seasons and cycles and. 52:54.60 Max Shank Um, about that. Yeah. 53:18.70 mikebledsoe And lunar and solar and we look at the yeah we look at the pattern and we look at the patterns of nature. We look at patterns of the universe and the the None one the one that's easiest for us to all be aware of is probably the lunar cycle. So. 53:24.66 Max Shank There's a pattern. 53:53.90 mikebledsoe Or the 4 seasons. Um, these are both cycles the 4 seasons all happen in an annual basis. It gets hot it cools off. It gets really cold. It gets warm. It gets hot. It does that ah to. 54:16.72 Max Shank So like the days and the moons. Ah, and the years are easy are like easy to notice. Outwardly. 54:35.80 mikebledsoe They're easy to notice and so you have the lunar There's you know about thirteen lunar cycles in a year. Um some may ah some do argue that the fact that we have twelve months in the year and we have 13 lunar cycles is actually fighting nature a little bit. And we might be better off if we had a little bit different system. But this thing is pretty ingrained the gregorian calendar. Ah we have the lunar cycles which are which are monthly and then inside of that they're really the the weekly cycle Monday through Sunday is. 55:21.94 Max Shank Oh man. Yeah, we. 55:46.18 mikebledsoe I don't really see anything demonstrated in nature that seems like to me a very human construct to divide up those 28 ish days ah between lunar cycles and we want to like look all the way back through history. Yeah into weeks. 56:10.26 Max Shank into into weeks um I don't know what the origin of the week is actually is kind of an interesting question. 56:21.98 mikebledsoe And days are obvious the the daily cycle the sun comes up the sun goes down and I have no idea I mean somebody Dm me let me know and the. 56:52.54 Max Shank We're just we're gonna trust your dude. Okay, this is why you are not in charge of the fucking research department I'll wait for the None direct message on Instagram to give me the answer and then I just get a fucking go with that you you lunatic speaking of moon. 57:09.48 mikebledsoe Ah, no I need a starting point I need a. 57:23.70 Max Shank That's where the luna lunatic comes from fucking lunatic. Yeah, so just Dm your effect that's like slightly less reliable than Wikipedia. 57:26.78 mikebledsoe I. Well no I want to I want to I want the people in the audience to participate in the process of us finding information. They said it to me I'll I'll still verify it I'll look it up but I I'm gonna let someone initiate. So um. 57:59.74 Max Shank Ah I'm just kidding I Love Wikipedia. Okay, so we have ah we have years we have moons so we have solar year we have moons. Let's forget about weeks. Let's go straight to heartbeats from there so we got year. 58:13.68 mikebledsoe So about. 58:34.60 mikebledsoe That's ah, that's where I was. That's where we're going is That's exactly what I've written down. Actually we're on the same page but it gets down to you get up and go to sleep. You have a Circadian rhythm you have a hormonal. 58:38.74 Max Shank Moon day heartbeat. 58:58.98 mikebledsoe Ah, rhythm throughout the day based on the sun coming up sun going down moon coming out all these things and then yeah it it comes down to heartbeat brain waves brainwave frequencies and so yeah. 59:22.96 Max Shank Which is a lot faster because hertz is the way we measure frequency and hurts is calculated in cycles per second. So if something is it and I think we have the ability to hear things between oh gosh. Ah. 1 d-ish hurts to None something around there so we have a pretty big. There's ah, there's a great thing um to visualize the spectrum of frequencies but just remember that hurts is in cycles per second so your heart. Ah. 01:00:11.98 mikebledsoe I should know that. 01:00:40.80 Max Shank It beats once every second so cycles per second would be like 1 basically right. 01:00:42.30 mikebledsoe Once a second. Yeah. 01:00:56.26 mikebledsoe You know? Yeah, so we have all these different frequencies and None of the one of the ways reasons I like to think about frequencies in this way is because it allows. Me to see more clearly how I'm connected to the entire universe it. It reduces the amount of separation that I'm perceiving and whole with it. Yeah and I'm tuned into it once I learned this I I got a lot better about going down with the sun and coming up with the sun and. 01:01:33.92 Max Shank You feel more whole with it. You feel more part of it. 01:01:55.64 Max Shank Oh. 01:02:01.20 mikebledsoe My health improved and all sorts of things. So I like that the idea of talking about the micro macro to the micro and the pattern is always present. There's nothing that we can observe that doesn't have it and it's not participating. 01:02:33.60 Max Shank Yeah, there's a great little chart if you type in em spectrum into Google images you can find ah a really nice little visual aid I think it's really important. 01:03:02.92 mikebledsoe Em spectrum. 01:03:06.66 Max Shank Yeah, just type in em spectrum into Google and hit images and that'll show you ah you know on the 1 hand when you have ah something like the visible light spectrum and then. 01:03:43.36 mikebledsoe E. 01:03:43.60 Max Shank You go beyond above it. You have ultraviolet spectrum and then you have infrared so below what we can see and there's all this stuff happening and the way to tie it all together and simplify it in my mind is to say that vision. 01:04:00.80 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:04:21.86 Max Shank Doesn't show you everything. That's there. It just shows you? What's important and there but there's so much stuff vibrating everywhere and everything's got its own um frequency to it and that goes all the way down like. Most watches are set with a quartz crystal actually because it vibrates at a certain frequency and I think ah the way an atomic clock works is with something like caesium. 01:05:19.48 mikebledsoe Everyone's cell phone has a quartz crystal in it. 01:05:40.34 Max Shank And so you think here's this this like bunch of stuff like a crystal but it's got this frequency that it's emitting from it all the time. 01:06:01.68 mikebledsoe Man I spent hours talking about crystals on Saturday night with some friends. The I think we might open up a crystal shop here in Austin the next the next business venture. You think it'll be good I think we could we could pull. 01:06:27.60 Max Shank I Think if you focus on it. It will be I think if you focus on it. It'll be awesome and if you ah, don't try that hard then it depends on who you partnered with. 01:06:46.98 mikebledsoe All right? Yeah I'm I'm looking for solid partners for crystal shop here in Austin Texas. 01:06:55.54 Max Shank I Like talking about crystals too but not with people who only know the esoteric side of Crystals I need someone to like bridge the gap between the physics and the more esoteric kind of philosophical Astro astrology because. 01:07:14.66 mikebledsoe Boy Yeah I have a friend. 01:07:35.28 Max Shank I'm I'm hip with it and I I like to know what's really going on in there. 01:07:44.98 mikebledsoe Well, both sides are really nice I What are my buddies he used to be in the crystal business and and he can talk about how the crystal in your phone works and tie that into more of the esoteric as well and so he can He spans the whole thing I'm gonna have him on the show. 01:07:54.82 Max Shank You gotta work them together. 01:08:12.20 Max Shank Right. 01:08:21.88 mikebledsoe Here in the next month or so and I don't know if we'll talk about Crystals because he's an expert in other things as well. But maybe we'll cover that for everybody. 01:08:28.34 Max Shank Yeah I have a friend actually who I have a friend who his whole ah career. Basically right now is studying crystals so his his equipment that he has available in the lab is so tight that he can actually fire a neutron beam. To see really really tiny crystals of proteins to make for pharmaceuticals so his whole job is like trial and error. Let's let's throw some fucking heat and some of this over here and he's basically in a laboratory and then firing a little beam. Neutrons to look at the shapes to see if they're going to be able to bind or unite ah with other molecules in the body. It's it's really fascinating and you look at how all of those different interactions are things usually have a charge like positive or negative. And they often will also have a ah conforming shape and you can take that all the way down. It's it's easy to get lost with how many branches that you can take this down in terms of the energy transformation because that's really all we're doing is we're taking. Energy and we're transforming it into some other type of energy. That's really what family is about. You're taking energy from outside and then you're adding it to the family fungus is doing that we're doing that Orca are doing that. Basically you're trying to assimilate more energy and grow. Size of your empire ants fungus us and yeah and ah different creatures do it in different ways like ah in the life of a mycelium fungus that's slowly branching out a myceoleal network. 01:11:46.14 mikebledsoe Simulate organize create a structure with that energy divert that energy. 01:12:18.34 Max Shank They don't really budget time for ah like deviance and pleasure and vacations and things like that and we we do. We have all this crazy stuff Beyond grow the family but that's the that's the prevailing pattern because. 01:12:43.68 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:12:56.64 Max Shank If you don't have that then that branch of the family tree cuts itself. So you you almost have it's why religions kind of follow the same thing Thou Shalt have no other gods before me because this has to be the foundation of your pattern of your programming. 01:13:02.14 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:13:33.34 Max Shank Right? You can't like just pick and choose oh hey like you know you hindus. That's pretty cool but I like steak So I'm not going to go with this crew and you Christians are great but I want to eat pigs or you know whatever they don't like that doesn't it doesn't have the same um unity. It doesn't have the same. 01:13:55.80 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:14:11.50 Max Shank Ah, resonance and harmony of the the the vibration there isn't it interesting that they also sing every Sunday that that's a big thing is singing together. We got to get back to that though. 01:14:18.66 mikebledsoe Yeah I. Yeah, yeah I notice having interacted heavily with the new age spiritual Community and I I've never really considered myself new age. But the. The new age Spiritual Community is interesting because it does feel like a lot of the people in that community are adopting they're picking and choosing. They're cherry picking things from different religions and then creating their own little thing but it really does lack a foundation that I. 01:15:30.88 Max Shank E. 01:15:46.62 mikebledsoe I Think that the that community it feels very wishy-washy feels very too flowy to there's there's some people in in this community that are very popular and when they post things and when they talk about things. Sounds very flowery. But I don't know exactly what they mean and I don't think they know what they mean either. 01:16:36.34 Max Shank Oh you mean like a flower like that thing that is designed to attract I'm not surprised.. The only thing we can possibly get is people being little flowers. There's no way. We you? you can't rise above the noise unless you make yourself into a pretty flower like you know you could tell people the truth is like look um there there are a lot of tools out there that we can use and you don't really know what the. 01:17:13.68 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:17:46.26 Max Shank Potential benefit and potential cost of those tools is you? You don't really know how those tools can be used. You don't know the pattern or the code of how to put those tools to the best use and that's also what coaching and instruction is it's how to get the most out of those tools. So. The recipe for bread the recipe for making ah semiconductors and computers and automobiles. Ah what is that without the instructions. It's just stuff without the the instructions to put it all together. It's just stuff. Dna same thing. It actually determines where the protein is going to go where the collagen is going to get laid down. It's insane ah to try to like differentiate those 2 things because. 01:19:38.32 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:19:43.90 Max Shank What is the stuff without the the movement of the stuff. What I mean there's there's nothing. That's perfectly still is kind of ah a weird ah trip to think about and I think a lot of that um can be described by like. Atomic structures as we understand it like the density of the packing of the atomic nuclei and the lattice work that they take ah see this. We're like way too far outside of my understanding but basically things are packed much tighter. When they are more denser so you have a ah gal you have ah an air compressor. You can compress the air and actually shove more into that same space and then as you get harder and harder Materials. There's less and less give that you can shove into that same space. 01:21:03.28 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:21:35.60 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:21:40.20 Max Shank And that's also why in order to have a faraday cage which doesn't let ah electromagnetic radiation in it has to be made out of metal. It can't be made out of wood because it can get through because wood is less dent like how crazy is that when you think about it because the wood is still solid. 01:22:17.42 mikebledsoe Yep. 01:22:18.96 Max Shank But the reason you need it to be metal is because of the closeness of the lattice of those atoms. So. There's actually less space than usual and then with air with wood with metal. Tungsten Plutonium All that other stuff it's because it's more and more tightly packed and that's that's also um, how nature patterns itself pretty much if you look at a tree and a set of lungs. It starts out with a big pipe. And then it splits and splits and splits into little branches and ah leaves and branches branches little capillaries alviolles and things like that. So you're trying to maximize the ah surface area right? It's like giving yourself more. 01:23:59.14 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:24:07.72 Max Shank Ah, relationships with the environment. 01:24:10.60 mikebledsoe But that Pattern works best with the planet Earth for the exchange of of air of Oxygen carbon dioxide. Whatever it is whatever the exchange of these molecules are and when you're talking about Oxygen Carbon dioxide. It's no. A mystery why the lungs in the tree look very similar. It's just a shit works. Um, yeah. 01:24:57.56 Max Shank Gas exchange happening all the time and that's a pattern that's a relationship between those 2 inhale exhale without algae and trees. We'd all be dead. 01:25:22.40 mikebledsoe Very true. The I want to break this down and into and a 4 different quadrants. So I'm I'm a big fan I've I've talked about before of Ken Wilbur's a call map a qal so if you Google a cap a q a l space. Map then you'll get an idea of what I'm you'll get a visual of what I'm talking about here and so it's ah the upper quadrant is the individual the lower half of the quadrant is the collective. The left side of the quadrant is the interior or the inside and the. Right side of the quadrant is the exterior. So if we go to the upper left hand quadrant what we're looking at is the interior self. So if we want to look at I really like talking about this map because it allows us to break down a topic as big as something like patterns into something that. We can look at and step by step and talk about it so to really simplify what's happening in the upper left hand quadrant which is the interior of self I really think about that as like thoughts and feelings your thoughts and your feelings. It's your internal world and there's patterns there. And so we have emotional patterns we have thought patterns and we have psychoemotional patterns where the thoughts and emotions have a pattern between the 2 of them. You have an emotion then there's a pattern of making meaning of what that emotion means and then. That can cycle cycle cycle so we have psycho emotional patterns that we need to be aware of and the certain certain things trigger those different patterns and it could be something like father's day something could get someone thinks about father's day and. The pattern may be celebration feeling really good make it mean call your dad that day. So I like to think about no. 01:29:30.90 Max Shank I'm sure that's everybody's pattern. 01:29:45.30 Max Shank Ah. 01:29:45.32 mikebledsoe But but the ah but I like look what do what? you think about the Psycho emotional patterns. What have you noticed and learned about that. 01:30:06.18 Max Shank So I think of it in a pretty simple way as people repeat what gives them a predictable result. Not even what gives them? ah an excellent result just a predictable one. So that's basically what a pattern is is. 01:30:31.70 mikebledsoe M. 01:30:43.56 mikebledsoe And people people do seek predictability. There's ah, there's a lot of people. They do ah a lot of. 01:30:43.86 Max Shank There's predictability to it. So it's why people prefer people prefer the ah ah familiar pain to the unknown. 01:31:07.52 mikebledsoe Yeah I've worked with a lot of people who they they came to me and there's something in their life. That's not working I mean that's that's really the the job of a coach is we work with people who they want something to be different in their life and. They want to change it and usually it's the the individual is trying to change something externally in order to create a different internal experience and a lot of times what we got to do. 01:32:12.00 Max Shank Which can work. 01:32:18.00 mikebledsoe Which can work but which does work which we can get into because we can talk about Environmental patterns. Ah. 01:32:25.22 Max Shank Because a pattern is a relationship with your environment. There's a relationship within yourself which is kind of what you're talking about. But you're never in a vacuum. You know you take someone out of their existing environment and you put them into a different one and suddenly all their aches and pains go away. 01:32:43.90 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:33:03.12 Max Shank Worked with this guy joint pain everywhere everything hurts ah instead of being in Boston at home. He goes down to Florida on vacation none of his shit hurts and it's like well why do you think that is like you have to explore what it is about that environment that you're that you have unresolved. 01:33:39.90 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah. 01:33:41.46 Max Shank That your body is like essentially crying out because your ah pain is basically your brain saying ah not like this. That's all just not like this.. It's not ah, it's not. Ah, like bad.. It's not Shameful. It's not good. Sometimes it's incorrect where where you feel it isn't necessarily where the resolution is going to be Found. It's just a nonspecific signal that says not like this if you do it a different way. Maybe so. 01:34:36.18 mikebledsoe Right? just. 01:34:52.28 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, yeah, so people at that spot on it pain is just ah, always talk about pain as a teacher. It's it's trying to teach you something and most people just sit in the pain because it is ah familiar. 01:34:54.20 Max Shank But not like this. 01:35:24.30 Max Shank Um, familiar I. 01:35:31.88 mikebledsoe And people feel safe even in when it's painful. They'd rather feel if they feel safe in pain. They'll take that over you know the uncertainty and freedom and the a lot of times people want. You know who have been focused on changing something in their external environment even that they're not even really willing to make too many external environment changes because of what's happening internally of what that might mean for them and so yeah chicken of the egg. Yeah, and so if. 01:36:21.98 Max Shank Um, that's a chicken or the egg type of situation too. Um. 01:36:37.40 mikebledsoe If you've been beating your head on 1 way of making change and changing a pattern you may want to look at something else. So if you've been trying to change something environmentally or you've been trying to change your physical body and it's not working. Maybe you need to look at the internal body or you need to look at your relationships with people instead of just the environment. 01:37:11.94 Max Shank And some people thrive on incremental change and some people thrive on radical change and is different for everybody you know, ah a lot of a lot of times where you make a leap forward in what you might call progress. 01:37:14.92 mikebledsoe And so. 01:37:32.18 mikebledsoe That's that's very true. 01:37:48.16 Max Shank Because you took a giant leap toward a different environment or a different ah day-to-day Pattern It can be incremental or it can be radical. 01:38:02.56 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, so a lot of times these these internal patterns if we can shift those there might be ah emotions that we're making mean something with our thoughts and then that keeps us from maybe moving from Boston to Florida. 01:38:39.32 Max Shank Right. 01:38:41.28 mikebledsoe You know I I remember coaching one woman at this point and she she did not want to be working her job. She's like I do not like my job I want to get out of my industry I don't want to do this at all. But I'm not good at anything else. That was the story that she had. She had this internal story of yeah, that's the pattern. Yeah, and so it once we got to a point where she and she made really good money is is. 01:39:20.92 Max Shank That's the pattern. That's some software. Yeah. 01:39:40.84 Max Shank M. 01:39:47.70 mikebledsoe We had to really sit down and and break down is it worth the you know is it worth possibly a lifestyle change downward which by the way is one of the people just don't do it once they hit a certain level of lifestyle coming back down that is incredibly difficult. Um, if you're used to living off $200000 a year and now I'm gonna ask you to live off $100000 a year people I I would I would have a very hard time with it people freak out wouldn't they just don't know how to do it. It's pretty much stuck there. But um. 01:40:54.24 Max Shank Tell you? what though they would figure it out if they had to and I can I can guarantee that you know what I love speaking of patterns. So a prison that's that's a series of matter and patterns woven together to keep people inside. 01:41:03.80 mikebledsoe They would fake Always do always do. 01:41:29.12 mikebledsoe Um, yeah. 01:41:33.60 Max Shank Designed by allegedly pretty smart people and guys still escape. So prison is full of the criminals who got caught so arguably the dumbest of the criminals because a smart criminal is still outside of the Jail That's what prisons do. 01:42:01.84 mikebledsoe No. 01:42:08.62 Max Shank They put all the dumb criminals in Jail to leave the really clever ones out of Jail so they can have the easier pick of what's left. But if you take the smart architects who are putting together this box those really smart guys. But the level of desire to be free of that Burden seems to supersede all of that technical Expertise All of the guards all of the stuff I mean it's what doesn't happen a lot but it still happens. 01:43:05.60 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, there's I mean if if you just study what's happening in the prisons right now not even escape but Gangs drugs. There's basically there's nothing but illegal activity happening in the prisons and the you know. 01:43:25.50 Max Shank Gangs gangs. 01:43:40.20 Max Shank Yeah, how could you stop it. 01:43:43.86 mikebledsoe Ah, the stated the stated intent is for them to not be to not experience that. But yeah, you're basically just concentrating a bunch of people who got caught and ah will continue to do things. 01:44:08.26 Max Shank Well I mean the prison system is a bad pattern. Um, because it it maximizes for ah, shame and isolation but not actually for compensation to the fucking victim of the crime.. The only thing we should care About. It does nothing for.. Ah. 01:44:50.12 mikebledsoe Yeah, yeah, I mean if if somebody violates. 01:44:56.80 Max Shank It's like it's like it's like okay so a crime was Committed. What are we going to do are we going to help out the victim. No What we're going to do is we're going to take a little bit of everybody's money including the victims and then we're going to take the bad man to a bad place so he can. Get really isolated and angry at everybody and probably link up with a murderous gang. Ah, That's what we're going to do I'm waiting for the punchline but there it's there's nothing. There. Yeah. 01:45:55.84 mikebledsoe Yeah, that's a very poor social pattern. So so I mean that's that's the that's the inside of you know of culture right? culture is the inside How we how we pattern our so our society. So. 01:46:24.60 Max Shank Right? Well how you discipline how you discipline society right? because Rule rule is the threat and discipline is the act right? So if you if the culture. 01:46:28.86 mikebledsoe The criminal Justice system. 01:47:02.78 Max Shank Is in a bit of a dysfunctional abusive schizophrenic relationship with its policing of Behavior. Do you think that naturally a lot of people would do the same thing internally so that internal or pattern of how you ah Govern or police. Or discipline your own behavior whether you do it with blame and shame and isolation of that part of you versus acceptance and learning and reeducation of that party right? It's like you're putting the same experience through a very different. 01:48:03.64 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:48:17.88 Max Shank Filter which I mean look the way we make Filters is really really tinier and tinier Meshes just like a net a water filter and a net that you catch fish with the the main difference is the size of the openings. 01:48:49.26 mikebledsoe Yeah, well, it's interesting when I think about these patterns I think about how they begun or began begun began and um these these patterns are fractal in nature so they usually started off as. They always start off as something small if we look at the pattern of humanity and um, there were not that many people on this planet five hundred years ago if you if you went to Paris France Five hundred years ago there weren't that many people there. I mean it was big for its time but compared to now it was just so tiny but all the rules all the ideas about how society should be governed stem from that time and. 01:50:07.24 Max Shank M. 01:50:29.82 Max Shank From France five hundred years ago or from the greeks like two thousand ish years ago like de ah when was democritus. 01:50:38.58 mikebledsoe Well yeah, you keep going for their back but I'm just using people can I think people I think people can possibly like if we don't go too far back. But yeah you you keep going further and further back you go to the greeks you go to the hebrews you go to the Egyptians and you you follow the the thread. 01:51:04.88 Max Shank Right? I for an eye you follow the thread which is interesting because it's like um how they did history for a while was through these tapestries and they would actually tell a story through the the chain. 01:51:16.40 mikebledsoe Yeah. 01:51:30.24 mikebledsoe A. 01:51:44.20 Max Shank So it's it's really funny ah connection I made the other day and there are too many word puns to follow, but the funny connection I made is that a link is one connection and a chain is multiple connections in sequence Dna multiple connections in sequence. So that's a big difference. Um. In how those connections work together. Ah um, a chain is many connections. A matrix is also a different orientation of many connections and so different elements have different structures. That are more matrix-like or more chain-like like for example, long chain fatty acids that sort of thing so there are these um, different ways that we connect to things and a lot of it like you said tracing the thread. Back that's what we try to do. We're trying to go back and figure out where those connections started being made and the further back you go. It's none becomes None None becomes 2 None becomes 3 3 becomes all things that was in the dao two thousand years ago that's a pattern that a guy wrote down and we still can't ah absorb it. We can regurgitate it we can bounce it around. We can modify it but all those all those written things left a pattern and that is I think the story of. Human supremacy when you get right down to it. It's the fact that we were able to accumulate written knowledge and access it really quickly so you can take I mean right now on Youtube there's a thing learning about how materials are put together. Ah, Youtube channels called us auto industry and they take you through hydraulics and gears and aerodynamics and drag and they take you through all of these different things. The videos are super crystal clear simple and it's like you took that expert. His whole life and synthesized it into 10 minutes but those 10 minutes were based on generation after generation after generation of patterned ah accumulation of knowledge. So it's like ah, an external brain so we could. Ah, decode for later just very similar to Dna. It's basically a code for making a car or Dna is like a code for making proteins. But it's all it's all based on our ability to keep a record of it and a Dna of course is a living record. 01:57:14.86 mikebledsoe Yeah, well I think about what you were saying with written. Ah we have records written and up until what one hundred years ago most people were were illiterate and a small percentage of the population could even read. So only a small percentage of population had access to understanding and not only that the books that they had access to they usually existed in a university and so there was ah a highly It was a high concentration of knowledge that. People studied that were dictating society and then about one hundred years ago literacy started to really take hold and you know because they talked about the printing press but the printing the printing press it preceded literacy without the printing press. There wouldn't be literacy but the technology. Ah. Of there being an abundance of books caused the human mind to go be curious about that enough to study how to read to learn it and now we fast forward. 01:59:36.12 Max Shank Printing press I think that was a big thing for the gutenberg bible right. 01:59:39.38 mikebledsoe Yeah, and I think the I think the benefit of back then was there was a limited amount of things that you could consider and you didn't have to look. You didn't have to sift through as much to go back to the beginning. Or as far back to the beginning as you could now we pull out our phone and there's videos and everything that have trapped us in what's happening right now. The the average American Yeah, the average. Yeah yeah, it's not right now right now it's it's they're sucked into. 02:00:37.10 Max Shank Somewhere else though. 02:00:55.80 mikebledsoe What's happening. Well no way that they're they're they're considering what's happening today. What is happening today that matters. 02:01:11.20 Max Shank Ironically, it's a portal to anywhere else than here and now that's what's funny because you're saying it's like they're looking what's happening now elsewhere but ironic you're right? But it's also kind of ironic because you're looking for anything else. 02:01:37.78 mikebledsoe Yeah, but the yeah my point is that time the time consideration is is so short like what happened last week doesn't matter anymore. It only all that matters is today and people are so people are so yeah. 02:01:40.80 Max Shank But here and now. 02:01:53.80 Max Shank Yeah, yeah, yeah, okay so that's insanity. That's insanity full on insanity. 02:02:15.48 mikebledsoe People people are so engrossed they have so much data coming in about what matters today in the whole world that they think they should yeah they don't have boundaries but that person is totally ingrossed andgross in what's happening now doesn't have the opportunity to look back in history. 02:02:29.48 Max Shank Because they can't draw boundaries. 02:02:54.90 mikebledsoe To go back and say how was consciousness formed. How did we come to these considerations. What actually is science. There is. 02:03:07.94 Max Shank Well think of the usefulness of code and the usefulness of 24 hour news it is antithetical so a book is code a person is the computer Basically that runs that code. And so if you want something to be organized. It should be organized by outcome or by subject or by material. But if you have it organized by what the fucking pricks are talking about on the Tv today. That's the worst organization possible and it's very difficult to get any kind of good information out of that and you're going to be basically putting out your own schizophrenic psychological fires because you're like oh my god didn't realize what was happening in Serbia and then the next week you're like oh my god I didn't realize what was happening in. South Africa and then you're like oh my god I didn't realize what was happening to the veterans and then pretty soon you're whipped up into this frenzy where you're upset about everything but you can't do anything about it and it makes you feel so disconnected because. What you're aware of your radius of awareness and your radius of control are so far apart and that goes back to why working with stuff with your hands even just moving stuff around like moving weights around with your hands that'll make a big difference. It'll connect you to reality. 02:05:55.26 mikebledsoe Yeah. 02:06:07.56 Max Shank Go climb a tree. Go take a walk Boom you're immediately connected into reality into moving your body locomotion or projectiles moving other stuff and if you are if you're just whipped into this frenzy because you know people are trying to program other people. It's all we do. In fact. 02:06:24.40 mikebledsoe Um, yeah. 02:06:46.70 Max Shank Pretty much as we try to program other people. Ah usually with the best of intentions too like I'm sure there are None of people who think school is like a good idea and and I just don't but that's fine. Yeah yeah, they they probably want people to like. 02:07:08.60 mikebledsoe Yeah, their heart's in the right place You think it's best for the kids. Well people also think that it's um, ah just they they think I think a lot of people they go Well I did it so it must be good. So other people should do it I mean that's. 02:07:21.12 Max Shank Behave themselves and like get married and like kept. 02:07:41.16 Max Shank Um, well and that's even a different thing like it. It's like hazing. 02:07:47.92 mikebledsoe That's big in the military of like I'm looking at the training and I go this doesn't really make sense. We're not really optimizing for getting better at our job. They're like well this we we went through it and no I'm like all whatever. 02:08:14.64 Max Shank Sometimes things are done a certain way because it really is the best way and sometimes things are done a certain way literally just because that's how they've been doing it and no one can imagine a different no one even tries to imagine a different way. 02:08:25.96 mikebledsoe Sometimes. 02:08:54.30 Max Shank You know and that's why you don't want to fight things Anyway, speaking of patterns when you fight something you immediately create a counterforce even if you punch the shit out of that thing upon that connection of your fist and that fucker's face. There's a counter force going right back into your fist and then more. Metaphorically speaking you're going to create a counter response to your active opposing Force. So That's why it's always better to obsolete than to fight if you have the option. 02:09:52.98 mikebledsoe Yeah I was reading a book yesterday that was talking about that is the the the people who are censoring are fighting. They're really fighting decentralization but censorship creates the necessity for decentralization and. You know Twitter Facebook Instagram they're trying to fight misinformation but the harder that they tried to fight misinformation with censorship the more prolific decentralization becomes because people start getting they start leaving the platform to go. 02:11:07.18 Max Shank It's natural. It's like cat and mouse. It's like it's natural cat and mouse evolution. The cat evolves longer claws. The mouse gets smaller and more clever. Ah same kind of idea right? You have hackers and then you got people who work in. 02:11:09.80 mikebledsoe To go to something That's not a platform. Yeah. 02:11:42.86 Max Shank Ah, software security which of course are also hackers. But they're basically like 1 upping each other all the time just the way that creatures have seemed to ah grow and evolve and fork out into these different sort of test branches almost. 02:12:13.96 mikebledsoe Now. Yeah. 02:12:20.66 Max Shank So it's better to obsolete and speaking of the patterns like we were talking about. Ah, it's hard to recognize which of the programs coming in are important and not important a lot of the time I think that can be a real challenge. 02:12:53.38 mikebledsoe Um, yeah, well that's a pattern too. The things that you're filtering what's important and not important so fast that it's it's built up over the years of life that you go. 02:12:57.58 Max Shank Most everything is ah like not important that. 02:13:31.62 mikebledsoe This is this is important. Not important people decide really quick and they miss opportunities really great opportunities all the time just pass right by them. There's there's this thing called the reticular activating system are familiar to ah Ras. Okay. 02:13:41.52 Max Shank Oh. 02:14:02.20 Max Shank No, but I'd like to be. 02:14:

Open||Source||Data
Data Meshes, Fabrics, and Discovery with Zhamak Dehghani, David Thomas, and Shirshanka Das

Open||Source||Data

Play Episode Listen Later May 4, 2022 4:26


This bonus episode features conversations from season 1 and 2 of the Open||Source||Data podcast. In this episode, you'll hear from Zhamak Dehghani, Director of Emerging Technologies at ThoughtWorks North America; David Thomas, Principal at Deloitte; and Shirshanka Das, Founder of LinkedIn DataHub and Acryl Data.Sam sat down with each guest to discuss data meshes, fabrics, and discovery. You can listen to the full episodes from Zhamak Dehghani, David Thomas, and Shirshanka Das by clicking the links below.-------------------Episode Timestamps:(00:36): Zhamak Dehghani(01:41): David Thomas(02:43): Shirshanka Das-------------------Links:Listen to Zhamak's episodeListen to David's episodeListen to Shirshanka's episode 

CHERTA PODCAST
045 / MESHES

CHERTA PODCAST

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 28, 2022 59:37


The 45th podcast in our series by @meshes from Tbilisi, Georgia. Enjoy!

The Dungeon
63. Rampage & Meshes of the Afternoon & Jallikattu

The Dungeon

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 3, 2022 65:39


1/2/2022 We celebrated a new year with a rewatch of long-time Dungeon-favorite Rampage (2018, Brad Peyton) alongside Meshes of the Afternoon (Maya Deren & Alexandr Hackenschmied, 1943) and Jallikattu (Lijo Jose Pellissery, 2019). Stay tuned for an Off the Menu discussion of Chaotic Emissions. Intro Music: "Hale Makame," 1930, Unknown author / Public domain Outro Music: "Fool Me Some More," 1930, Gus Arnheim / Public domain Off the Menu Outro Music: "Nowaa -- Ashima high life," Osei Nyantakyi and his Band, 1955–1959 (via Wikimedia Commons) --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/whatsyourdungeon/support

The Data Stack Show
52: Discussing Data Warehouses, Lakes, and Meshes with James Serra of EY

The Data Stack Show

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 8, 2021 68:53


Highlights from this week's conversation include:James' background at Microsoft and current work with EY's data fabric (2:22)The external and internal facing components of EY's data fabric (6:39)The importance of the data lineage (11:29)The most important requirements for data quality (15:32)Looking at the data capabilities of Microsoft (21:30)The data warehouse, explained (29:00)Using a data warehouse or a data lake (34:33)Defining the buzzword data mesh (51:13)The problem with data mesh (59:31)The Data Stack Show is a weekly podcast powered by RudderStack, the CDP for developers. Each week we'll talk to data engineers, analysts, and data scientists about their experience around building and maintaining data infrastructure, delivering data and data products, and driving better outcomes across their businesses with data.RudderStack helps businesses make the most out of their customer data while ensuring data privacy and security. To learn more about RudderStack visit rudderstack.com.

My Pop Five
Helena Hawkes: Big Fish, Rene Magritte, Meshes of the Afternoon/At Land, Stevie Wonder, and Culture as Weapon

My Pop Five

Play Episode Listen Later May 19, 2021 83:28


Helena Hawkes; a Los Angeles-based writer/director and a self-proclaimed Cinephile, Painter, and Soul & Disco Enthusiast. Helena has worked in Hollywood with the likes of Jason Blum of Blumhouse Productions and Leigh Wannel of the Saw and Insidious Franchises. Helena joins My Pop Five to break down Big Fish, Rene Magritte, Meshes of the Afternoon/At Land by Maya Deren, Master Blaster by Stevie Wonder, and Culture as Weapon by Nato Thompson. Helena discusses her relationship with each of the items on her "Pop Five", growing up in small-town, leaving the nest, her relationship with writing, and her "Yours, Mine and Ours" family. Support the show! Rate and Review on Apple Podcasts! 

Locked On Bills - Daily Podcast On The Buffalo Bills
Travis Etienne Buzz Heating Up, Veteran Fallback Options and How Draft Talent Meshes With Bills Needs

Locked On Bills - Daily Podcast On The Buffalo Bills

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 27, 2021 23:17


Joe Marino breaks down the recent rumors of the Buffalo Bills having interest in Clemson RB Travis Etienne before offering veteran free agent options the team could consider after the draft should needs not be filled. Lastly, Marino discusses how the talent in the 2021 NFL Draft meshes with the Buffalo Bills' needs. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition
Solo.io wants to bring order to service meshes with centralized management hub

TechCrunch Startups – Spoken Edition

Play Episode Listen Later May 16, 2019 4:27


As containers and microservices have proliferated, a new kind of tool called the service mesh has developed to help manage and understand interactions between services. While Kubernetes has emerged as the clear container orchestration tool of choice, there is much less certainty in the service mesh market. Solo.io announced a new open source tool called Service Mesh Hub today, designed to help companies manage multiple service meshes in a single interface.

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed
Full Stack Journey 018: Istio, Envoy & Service Meshes

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018


Today's Full Stack Journey dives into Istio, Envoy & service meshes with guest Shannon McFarland.

Packet Pushers - Full Stack Journey
Full Stack Journey 018: Istio, Envoy & Service Meshes

Packet Pushers - Full Stack Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 13, 2018


Today's Full Stack Journey dives into Istio, Envoy & service meshes with guest Shannon McFarland.

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed
Full Stack Journey 016: George Miranda, Service Meshes & Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Full Podcast Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2017


The Full Stack Journey podcast tackles service meshes and Linkerd. Joining to help explain is George Miranda from Buoyant.io.

Packet Pushers - Full Stack Journey
Full Stack Journey 016: George Miranda, Service Meshes & Linkerd

Packet Pushers - Full Stack Journey

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 12, 2017


The Full Stack Journey podcast tackles service meshes and Linkerd. Joining to help explain is George Miranda from Buoyant.io.