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Welcome to a special episode of the EUVC podcast! This time, we're experimenting with a new format where we bring together a founder and two of their key investors to uncover the dynamics behind building and scaling a venture-backed company.In this episode, we're joined by Stanislav Poslavsky, CEO and Co-Founder of MiLaboratories, a US-based biotech company founded in 2021. Focused on providing innovative solutions for genomic research, MiLaboratories operates on a B2B revenue model, catering to bioinformaticians and biologists in academic and pharmaceutical settings across the US, EU, and UK.Joachim Laqueur, Founding Partner at Acrobator Ventures, a seed-stage investment firm with €28M in assets under management. Based in the Netherlands, Joachim specializes in backing global startups with a focus on Europe and the US, targeting B2B software and software-enabled hardware.Miguel Arias, General Partner at KFund, €225M early growth fund, with €650M in assets under management. Based in Spain, Miguel focuses on Series A and B investments across Southern Europe and Latin America, targeting enabling technologies such as AI, IoT, and digital infrastructure.Together, we explore how MiLaboratories secured its place in their portfolios, the process of building conviction across investment stages, and the unique challenges and opportunities of funding a biotech company in today's landscape. Expect deep dives into deal-making dynamics, the art of company building, and even a few lighthearted moments that reveal the human side of venture capital.Go to eu.vc to read the core take-aways.Chapters:01:50 Journey: Founding MiLaboratories02:47 Joachim's Perspective: Investing in MiLaboratories04:05 The Early Fundraising Challenges05:30 The Role of COVID in Fundraising 07:45 Miguel's Introduction and Perspective10:08 Series A Fundraising Experience15:24 Lessons Learned in Fundraising19:46 Understanding MiLaboratories' Impact33:02 The Duality of Business Strategy33:13 Building a Sustainable Business34:23 The Power of Open Source35:48 Conviction in Venture Capital38:03 Choosing the Right Investors42:04 The Art of Pricing45:57 The CEO's Many Hats49:12 Understanding Platforma and MeXR53:35 Challenges and Lessons Learned57:47 The Future of MiLaboratories
To combat the traffic troubles and parking problems, the mayor and councilman Miguel Arias, wants the city council to support a negotiation agreement and start the process of building at least one multi-story parking structure for the area. Please Like, Comment and Follow 'The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson' on all platforms: --- The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever else you listen to podcasts. -- The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 FM KMJ | Website | Facebook | Instagram | X | Podcast | Amazon | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
To combat the traffic troubles and parking problems, the mayor and councilman Miguel Arias, wants the city council to support a negotiation agreement and start the process of building at least one multi-story parking structure for the area. Please Like, Comment and Follow 'The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson' on all platforms: --- The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson is available on the KMJNOW app, Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube or wherever else you listen to podcasts. -- The Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6 PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 AM & 105.9 FM KMJ | Website | Facebook | Instagram | X | Podcast | Amazon | - Everything KMJ KMJNOW App | Podcasts | Facebook | X | Instagram See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Vendors speak out following downtown Fresno's Arthop changes for August KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Vendors speak out following downtown Fresno's Arthop changes for August KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
INTERVIEW: Fresno City Councilmembers Garry Bredefeld & Miguel Arias discuss the eye-popping salaries of Valley Children's Hospital executives.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
March 29, 2024 Hour 1: Susan Wittrup, Fresno Unified School Board President posted an op ed stating that Fresno Unified should consider external candidates for the next superintendent & that F.U.S.D. should ensure the best-qualified candidates have an opportunity to apply. Miguel Arias and Gary Bredefeld asked California's attorney general Rob Bonta to investigate Valley Children's Hospital's operations. KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
March 29, 2024 Hour 1: Susan Wittrup, Fresno Unified School Board President posted an op ed stating that Fresno Unified should consider external candidates for the next superintendent & that F.U.S.D. should ensure the best-qualified candidates have an opportunity to apply. Miguel Arias and Gary Bredefeld asked California's attorney general Rob Bonta to investigate Valley Children's Hospital's operations. KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
PRESS CONFERENCE: Fresno City Councilmembers Garry Bredefeld and Miguel Arias discuss the eye-popping pay of Valley Children's Hospital executivesSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
February 26, 2024 Hour 2: When 16 Venezuelan migrants arrived in Fresno in early February, city councilmember Miguel Arias arranged for their lodging and meals with his city-issued credit card. Arias may have to pay for the expenses out of his pocket. State Assembly member Joaquin Arambula, introduced a bill that would let undocumented residents apply for a popular home loan program. KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
February 26, 2024 Hour 2: When 16 Venezuelan migrants arrived in Fresno in early February, city councilmember Miguel Arias arranged for their lodging and meals with his city-issued credit card. Arias may have to pay for the expenses out of his pocket. State Assembly member Joaquin Arambula, introduced a bill that would let undocumented residents apply for a popular home loan program. KMJ's Afternoon Drive with Philip Teresi & E. Curtis Johnson Weekdays 2-6PM Pacific on News/Talk 580 & 105.9 KMJ Follow us on Facebook, Instagram, and X Listen to past episodes at kmjnow.com Subscribe to the show on Apple, Spotify, or Amazon Music Contact See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
¿Conoces el término "sharenting"? Tiene que ver con compartir contenido de nuestros hijos en las redes sociales. Hoy, una práctica que tenemos más que normalizada y que en esta franca conversación con Miguel Arias, psicólogo y experto en educación digital, pudimos abordar más profundamente, especialmente qué debemos manejar como padres en cuanto a los riesgos que existen y que debemos tener en cuenta para cuidarnos y conversarlo en familia.
Miguel Arias will hold a ceremony at 2:30p tomorrow (Friday) to fly the Palestinian flag at Eaton Plaza. The Taiwan Strait — that's where the military showdown between China and the U.S. is happening right now in real time. The leaders of the nation's most elite universities are facing accusations of hypocrisy for defending free speech in the face of anti-Israel and pro-Palestinian protests while censoring conservative views on campus. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Emprender a golpes es el ilustrativo título del blog de Miguel. Me gusta cuando dice que uno no se define como emprendedor, sino que resolviendo un problema se convierte en emprendedor. Y lo hace, como sabemos los fans de Bukowski, porque arde en su interior. «A no ser que el sol dentro de ti queme tus tripas, no lo hagas. Cuando sea de verdad el momento, y si has sido elegido, sucederá por sí solo y seguirá sucediendo hasta que mueras o hasta que muera en ti. No hay otro camino. Y nunca lo hubo». Kapital es posible gracias a sus colaboradores: El mundo de las criptomonedas intimida a muchos inversores y Criptan te facilita el acceso desmitificando el activo y simplificando el uso. Yo, como usuario de la app, estoy muy satisfecho con la experiencia. Criptan es una fintech española que cubre todas las partes de una estrategia financiera: el ahorro, la inversión y también el gasto. En una misma plataforma, custodias tus criptomonedas, con rentabilidades que pueden llegar al 8%, para luego consumir con tu propia tarjeta de débito. Utiliza el código KAPITAL durante el registro para obtener beneficios extra en todas tus cuentas. Más información en Criptan.com. Tú dinero, tú decides. ¿Llevas meses siguiendo los contenidos de Kapital y tienes ya ganas de operar tu propia cartera de valores? Trade Republic es entonces el bróker para dar ese salto. Las operaciones se ejecutan allí de forma simple, en una plataforma transparente con millones de usuarios en toda Europa. Los precios son siempre claros, pudiendo invertir en acciones, bonos y fondos ETF de manera fraccionada y desde tan solo 1 euro. Trade Republic te ofrece un amplio catálogo de productos financieros para que automatices las inversiones en un plan de ahorro único. Invertir hecho sencillo. Patrocina Kapital. Toda la información en este link. Índice: 2.00. La sociedad nos quiere encasillados. 9.22. Mensaje a nuestro yo futuro. 21.45. El precio psicológico de emprender. 25.30. Los mercados mantequilla dura y blanda. 34.34. Aprendizajes en una gran corporación. 38.08. Si no eres optimista, no te hagas inversor. 45.41. Memorizar para trabajar la disciplina. 56.21. Cómo protegerse de una burbuja. 1.02.01. ¿Cuál es tu verdad en la que poca gente está de acuerdo contigo? 1.17.26. Que te infravaloren es tu combustible. 1.27.51. ¿Así que quieres ser escritor? 1.35.19. Unicornio en paro vigilando. 1.36.10. Tale of three cities. Apuntes: El inmortal. Jorge Luis Borges. La red social. David Fincher. La ciudad no es para mí. Pedro Lazaga. The techno-optimist manifesto. Marc Andreessen. Power. Jeffrey Pfeffer. De cero a uno. Peter Thiel. Hacerte la cama. William McRaven.
Full story - https://gvwire.com/2023/10/31/ethics-complaint-filed-over-alleged-gift-of-private-flight-to-arias/ For more top stories, visit https://www.GVWire.com Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/GVWire/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/gvwire Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/gvwire/ LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/gv-wire TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@gvwire --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/gvwire/support
A special surprise birthday celebration was held at the Windham retirement home in Fresno for 103-year-old Eileen Jura. The owners of the Benham Ice Cream building (later the Dale Bros. warehouse) had announced intentions to remove their sign due to safety issues in a letter to the city last month. “But, that's not their decision,” says councilmember Miguel Arias, whose district holds more than a few of Fresno's historic assets. Seven people in San Francisco suffered minor injuries when a Cable Car made a sudden stop Monday afternoon on Washington and Taylor Streets on Nob Hill. Tuesday - 10/10/2023 - Hour 4See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Councilmembers Garry Bredefeld, Miguel Arias and Mayor Jerry Dyer held a press conference to discuss their strong opposition to Fresno County's recent decision to bring Needle Exchange Program onto Fulton Street. These leaders view this decision and move as destructive and dangerous. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
INTERVIEW: Miguel Arias/Fresno City Councilmember discusses a public meeting to inform citizens of the potential of biosolid composting facility.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Fresno Councilmember Miguel Arias has announced he will run for Fresno County Supervisor in District 3. Arias will run against Luis Chavez and Sal Quintero who is the current Fresno County District 3 supervisor and who also expressed he will seek the re-election. ormer National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) Director Anthony Fauci rationalized his changing rhetoric about COVID-19 herd immunity in a recent New York Times interview, saying one of the outlet's previous reports had been used to attack him. The NYT's Donald McNeil reported in December 2021 that Fauci had acknowledged gradually “moving the goal posts” to higher estimates for the percentage of Americans who would have to gain COVID-19 resistance to achieve herd immunity. PayPal founder and Republican megadonor Peter Thiel has reportedly told associates that he won't financially back any political candidates in 2024 because he has grown weary of America's culture wars.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
MAGA launches "Pudding Fingers" ad against DeSantis. Dave Fansler sues Miguel Arias, city of Fresno. Scourge of red light runners in Fresno. Red light camera debate. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A Fresno restaurant owner says a Fresno city councilman illegally interfered with a business project. Now, he wants Miguel Arias and City Hall to pay. David Fansler, in a lawsuit filed last week, says Arias tried to extort him to drop ongoing litigation by holding up a hotel project. Fansler purchased land near his Pismo's Coastal Grill in north Fresno — with the intention to lease to a yet-unnamed company to build a high-end hotel. The 21-year-old arrested in connection with the leaked documents probe has been charged with unauthorized retention and transmission of national defense information and willful retention of classified documents, which collectively carry a maximum of 15 years in prison. Media reports have described the U.S. intelligence documents -- which seem to contain top-secret information about the Ukraine war and other parts of the world -- as being shared among a small group of users on Discord before getting wider notice. - Listeners Comment See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
President Biden said Thursday he has “no regrets” about keeping the discovery of mishandled classified documents dating to his vice presidency under wraps until after last year's midterms. After a month of more-than-abundant rainfall and years of drought in Fresno and the central San Joaquin Valley, the city of Fresno hopes to have an opportunity to buy discounted water from Millerton Lake that would otherwise flow down the San Joaquin River and be lost to the Pacific Ocean. Fresno City Councilman Garry Bredefeld found himself with an unusual ally against the council's emergency conditions that allow council members to join the meetings online: Miguel Arias. Save for the single member of the general public who spoke on the matter, the staff of, stakeholders in, and board of California's Water Resource Control Board Wednesday heaped praise on the State Water Resources Control Board's (SWCRB) first ever Racial Equity Action Plan.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
An EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW with Fresno Councilmember Miguel Arias on homelessness and his idea to turn the Fresno Convention Center into a shelterSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hablamos con Miguel Arias del Sindicato de Peones de Taxi.
Miguel Arias Joined the Show In the posting made last Monday, Arias announced he would not join other city leaders in meeting with business people from China interested in learning more about opportunities in Fresno. He cited recent COVID protests in that nation, and the reaction of Chinese leaders to the demonstrators, as the reason. After asking him to elaborate on his reasoning, Arias surprised me again. He said that over the past two years, apartment complexes in his district have been purchased by firms working for Chinese investors. Two recent cases have been particularly egregious. On a Friday night in mid-October, Arias had to head off the eviction of families from a complex at Tulare and First streets. If the city had not stepped in, 100 children would have been put out onto the streets, he said. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Miguel Arias Joined the Show In the posting made last Monday, Arias announced he would not join other city leaders in meeting with business people from China interested in learning more about opportunities in Fresno. He cited recent COVID protests in that nation, and the reaction of Chinese leaders to the demonstrators, as the reason. After asking him to elaborate on his reasoning, Arias surprised me again. He said that over the past two years, apartment complexes in his district have been purchased by firms working for Chinese investors. Two recent cases have been particularly egregious. On a Friday night in mid-October, Arias had to head off the eviction of families from a complex at Tulare and First streets. If the city had not stepped in, 100 children would have been put out onto the streets, he said. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
On this Episode of the Scale Up Valley Podcast, Mike Dias speaks with Miguel Arias, General Partner at KFUND. Key takeaways: Experience from being on all sides of the table of the innovation ecosystem: corporate leader, teacher, VC, operator, founder… The importance of psychology in creating and backing a startup How is the LATAM ecosystem developing? In what ways is technology shaping the new world and creating new market opportunities? Will VR and AR create a new metaverse? Enabling tech applied to climate change
The CSU Fresno Collegian's editorial board voted not to endorse Measure E. Listeners comment, including Fresno councilmember, Miguel Arias.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The CSU Fresno Collegian's editorial board voted not to endorse Measure E. Listeners comment, including Fresno councilmember, Miguel Arias.See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Today, we have Miguel Arias on the show! Fresno City Councilmember President Miguel Arias represents District 3, including the Tower, West Fresno, Central and Downtown neighborhoods. His biography and accomplishments are expansive and we dig into them over the course of the podcast. Books: Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass by Frederick Douglass
An EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW Miguel Arias/Fresno Councilmember discusses whether fireworks should be banned in the City of Fresno See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
During a press conference Wednesday at The Fresno Memorial Auditorium, located on 2425 Fresno St. in Fresno, CA, councilpersons, Miguel Arias, Luis Chavez and Nelson Esparza proposed Measure V to fund services and improvements for facilities used by local veterans. The auditorium was built in 1935; asbestos is still in the walls of the facility. The HVAC system is in a makeshift status--hence, the reason why the building is unable to cool during Fresno's extraordinarily hot summer season. Measure V would supersede Measure P expenditure restrictions dedicated specifically for parks. For instance, the expensive restructuring of the antiquated, historical auditorium can utilize Measure P funds to fix the structures in and outside the building: uprooted flooring, asbestos, slipping roof tiles and replacement of original electrical work. It will cost millions of dollars just to fix the building; yet, veterans still need personal services and housing. Although it would cause an incremental tax raise for city of Fresno residents, 1/8th of a penny, Measure V, would generate $9.8 million per year, providing a permanent revenue source for veteran services and facilities, for such needs as housing, transportation and mental health services, to name a few.
Citing concerns from the Native American community, the San Francisco Unified School District will no longer use the word "chief" in connection with any work level. They have not selected a replacement word. Listeners comment. Fresno City Councilmember, Miguel Arias, joins the show to discuss the proposed city budget and Measure V, a proposed tax increase for Fresno residents that would generate money for veteran memorials, housing and mental health. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Citing concerns from the Native American community, the San Francisco Unified School District will no longer use the word "chief" in connection with any work level. They have not selected a replacement word. Listeners comment. Fresno City Councilmember, Miguel Arias, joins the show to discuss the proposed city budget and Measure V, a proposed tax increase for Fresno residents that would generate money for veteran memorials, housing and mental health. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hablamos con El titular del Sindicato de Peones de Taxis de Córdoba, Miguel Arias
EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW: Miguel Arias/Fresno Councilmember discusses the City Council's vote to purchase the Tower Theatre and land around it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Hoy tenemos un episodio muy completo, ya que Miguel Arias nos contará historias de emprendimiento, del mundo corporate y del venture capital. Su primera empresa, Imaste, pasa en 9 años de organizar fiestas icónicas con sus amigos de universidad a ser la pionera de las ferias virtuales hasta finalmente ser adquirida por la americana ON24. Luego entra en Carto, donde nos contará en detalle el crecimiento vertiginoso y las aplicaciones del modelo SAS de geolocalización que desarrollaron. Todo esto hace que Telefónica se fije en él, y rompiendo el tópico del emprendedor "anti gran empresa", Miguel estuvo muy a gusto en esta casa y logró un gran impacto. Aparte de contarnos su rol en el modelo inversor de esa casa, tendremos reflexiones interesantes de lo que hay que tener para triunfar en la gran empresa y recuerdos muy positivos de su paso por la misma. Hoy ha vuelto al mundo emprendedor pero desde el lado del Venture Capital, liderando el nuevo fondo de scale ups de K FUND. Aquí, una buena discusión sobre el mundo del VC y su rol en el ecosistema. Un episodio muy reflexivo en el cual ni una sola palabra tiene desperdicio. Créditos Musicales: Jahzzar https://freemusicarchive.org/music/Jahzzar
#NRDE Hoy en tu Podcast Alcohólico de Confianza nos visita una leyenda de la radio venezolana: Miguel Arias Total… nos reiremos de esto! Sponsored by Ron Diplomático http://rondiplomatico.com/es/filtro-edad/?r=http%3A%2F%2Frondiplomatico.com%2Fes%2F Weplash Agency https://weplashagency.com/ Envíos Packforward https://www.instagram.com/enviospf/. G&G Boutique https://www.instagram.com/gng.boutique/ Gestiona tu Visa https://www.instagram.com/gestionatuvisa/ Burdaerata https://www.instagram.com/juegaburdaerata/ Asistencia de producción: Sergio Schmilinsky Agencia Digital: Weplash Agency https://www.instagram.com/wplash/ Voice Over: Karen Ferreira https://www.instagram.com/karenferreirasoy/ Arte y thumbnails: https://www.instagram.com/elgoldblum/ https://twitter.com/nosreiremos https://www.instagram.com/nosreiremosdeesto/ https://www.nosreiremosdeesto.com/ Connector Media House LLC™
En el episodio de hoy conversamos con Miguel Arias, Ingeniero de Caminos por la UPM, MBA professional por el Instituto de Empresa y desde hace 16 años emprendedor vocacional y business angel aficionado. Hasta hace unos meses Miguel lideraba el área de emprendimiento global de Telefónica (Wayra y Open Future) para ayudar a emprendedores en todo el mundo. Su nuevo reto está en K Fund, un fondo español que invierte en las mejores startups seed de España.Nacido en Oviedo en 1978, vive en Madrid desde los 15 años, aunque también ha vivido en Alemania (Düsseldorf y Aachen) y en Vigo (pasando también por Brooklyn. Como Director Global Emprendimiento de Telefónica ha liderado estrategia de innovación abierta del grupo. Previamente, como COO de CARTO lideró los equipos de ventas, financiero y de operaciones en las oficinas de Madrid, DC, Londres y NY, dirigiendo el crecimiento de la compañía y su escalado global.Fue uno de los fundadores de IMASTE, la plataforma virtual líder en Europa de webcasts, hasta su adquisición por parte de ON24, Inc, una multinacional con base en Silicon Valley, en Junio de 2012. Tras la adquisición, fui el responsable de llevar a cabo el proceso de integración entre ON24 e IMASTE como responsable de negocio para Europa.Es el cofundador de la Asociación Chamberí Valley, que engloba a las scale ups de base tecnológica de Madrid, que facturan 1 millón de euros o tiene un millón de inversión.¡Empezamos!
Ricardo y Lucía Luzondo del ministerio Renovación Familiar nos presentan diversos temas que enfocan las situaciones que ocurren en el mundo actual y nos que afectan a los hombres, mujeres, jóvenes y niños en cualquier condición o estado de vida. A través de sus enseñanzas, experiencias, invitados y con la participación del público en vivo nos orientarán para vivir en el día a día iluminados por la fe. ¡EN VIVO! Miércoles,6pm (55 min)
Ricardo y Lucía Luzondo del ministerio Renovación Familiar nos presentan diversos temas que enfocan las situaciones que ocurren en el mundo actual y nos que afectan a los hombres, mujeres, jóvenes y niños en cualquier condición o estado de vida. A través de sus enseñanzas, experiencias, invitados y con la participación del público en vivo nos orientarán para vivir en el día a día iluminados por la fe. ¡EN VIVO! Miércoles,6pm (55 min)
Jim Patterson discuss how Governor Gavin Newsom is being called on to sign a bill that would make it faster and easier for survivors of human trafficking to clear their record of nonviolent crimes. A prominent Fresno developer has filed a claim with the city of Fresno accusing councilman Miguel Arias of engaging in a “pay to play” scheme in connection with a proposed project on the north end of the Fulton Mall. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Entrevista de Nico Yacoy, en Viva la Pepa! a Esteban Arias, hermano del diputado baleado en Corrientes Miguel Arias
En el marco de la investigación por el ataque con arma de fuego al diputado Miguel Arias, en un acto de campaña política, en la localidad correntina de Tapebicuá, el dirigente del partido Justicialista y concejal del Frente de Todos, manifestó su preocupación y descontento por los pocos avances del proceso de esclarecimiento del atentado, y denunció a la policía por aprietes a testigos. “Aun no podemos salir del estupor de lo que sucedió y estamos en un estado de indefensión”, detalló. En esa misma línea, el funcionario agregó que, "esto fue un atentado político a quienes pensamos diferente en esta provincia". Encuentro Nacional, lunes a viernes de 17.00 a 20.00 Con Luisa Valmaggia, Horacio Embón, Natalia Maderna, Nora Lafón, Daniela Bruno, Silvia Bacher, Claudio Leveroni y Carla Ruíz.
El secretario de Articulación Federal de la cartera, Gabriel Fuks, descartó algunas conjeturas que circularon por los medios como que la bala salió de entre el público o que "había ruido" y el disparo "no se escuchó". En este contexto, advirtió que hay una primera certeza: "No fue un tiro al azar".
Horacio Rodríguez Larreta se refirió a la deuda tomada por el gobierno de Alberto Fernández y aseguró: “Los números fueron muy claros, el ritmo de endeudamiento de Macri es igual o menor al de Fernández”. Gustavo Valdés, gobernador de Corrientes, se refirió al disparó que recibió Miguel Arias y dio un discurso desde su búnker de campaña donde asumió la victoria con el 75% de los votos. Javier Milei, en un encuentro con militantes realizado en Palermo, trató a Horacio Rodríguez Larreta de “zurdo de mierda” y de “sorete”. Sabina Frederic afirmó que Suiza debe ser más tranquilo que Argentina pero “también es más aburrido”. Por María O'Donnell y equipo de De Acá en Más en Urbana Play 104.3 FM. Seguinos en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deacaenmasok/
Escucha a Alfredo Zaiat y su editorial referido al ataque que recibió en la provincia de Corrientes el diputado Miguel Arias, quien participaba de un acto de cierre de campaña en vistas a los comicios provinciales que se desarrollarán mañana domingo. #AContramano
Mario Chiappa era el conductor del acto en donde se produjo el atentado de Corrientes: "Tapebicuá es un pueblito chico y la convivencia era buena, nadie preveía una cosa así" dice el locutor que conducía el acto en el cual balearon al diputado provincial Miguel Arias. Hablamos de la situación producida 3 días antes de las elecciones para gobernador de Corrientes: "Ahora la gente quedó con miedo, si ese era el objetivo, engendraron miedo". Escuchá esta nota para saber qué pasó en Corrientes
El diputado y candidato a senador del Frente de Todos por Corrientes, dijo además que el ataque contra el diputado Miguel Arias "genera un clima de inestabilidad democrática" .
Dialogamos con el Senador Provincial que en las últimas horas estuvo en contacto con su colega Miguel Arias, Diputado Provincial quien fuera baleado este jueves mientras participaba del acto de cierre de campaña del Frente de Todos en Corrientes.
Balearon en el abdomen al diputado Miguel Arias en el cierre de acto de campaña en Corrientes mientras hablaba Gloria Pared, candidata a viceintendenta de Tapebicuá. --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/urbanaplayfm/message
Balearon en el abdomen al diputado Miguel Arias en el cierre de acto de campaña en Corrientes. Martín Guzmán aseguró en el Council of Americas que actualizaron las proyecciones de crecimiento económico de 7% a 8% y afirmó que el acuerdo con el Fondo no va a generar “algo mágico en Argentina” y que no es “siquiera para celebrarlo”. El presidente del Banco Central, Miguel Ángel Pesce, dijo que el dólar oficial no está subiendo a la par de la inflación y que no va a perder competitividad. Horacio Rodríguez Larreta también participó en el Council of Americas: “Hoy en Argentina cuesta conseguir trabajo y a los que quieren invertir se les pone palos en la rueda, impuestos altísimos”. El jefe de Gobierno porteño llamó a todos los sectores a dialogar para “dar vuelta la historia”. Por María O'Donnell y equipo de De Acá en Más en Urbana Play 104.3 FM. Seguinos en Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/deacaenmasok/
En el episodio de hoy hablo con Juan Such, cofundador y presidente de Rankia. Es una charla distendida, donde tocamos muchos temas como algunas de las ideas de Nassim Taleb, el entorno financiero y bursátil actual, cómo ha cambiado Juan su estilo de inversión, lecciones que ha aprendido de sus proyectos empresariales, y mucho más. A continuación dejo las fuentes y recursos comentados: El homo indexatus, invertir a largo plazo y los “cisnes negros” en el blog de Indexa Capital Podcast We Study Billionaires con Morgan Housel Podcast We Study Billionaires con Mohnish Pabrai Episodios del podcast de Juan: Entrevista con Luis Cabiedes https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CZ1dEfrxr7o Entrevista con Veselin Topalov campeón de ajedrez: parte 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C2yI3-bNPkE y parte 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQdRF-A9lew Especial 18 cumpleaños de Rankia con Miguel Arias https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iBNQ2Gp-dOs Coloquio sobre el libro Alquimia con Samuel Gil https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DzZbYvWBBXc Coloquio sobre ideas clave de Taleb: parte 1 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3R3eoWxjd60 y parte 2 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gr29rbjFV1Y Web del Real World Institute de Nassim Taleb https://realworldrisk.com/ Artículos de Amy C. Arnott en Morningstar sobre la correlación entre clases de activos: Why Alternatives Don't Always Help Diversify https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1037329/why-alternatives-dont-always-help-diversify Do Commodities Still Work as Portfolio Diversifiers? https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1035322/do-commodities-still-work-as-portfolio-diversifiers Does International-Stock Diversification Still Work? https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1034112/does-international-stock-diversification-still-work Why I'm Lukewarm on Real Estate https://www.morningstar.com/articles/1028248/why-im-lukewarm-on-real-estate Libros Radical de Ricardo Semler ¡Cambia el barco de rumbo! de David Marquet
In the beginning of this episode of ONME Local: Fresno, producer host, Julia Dudley Najieb reviews Merced County news: UC Merced's 13th Recipient of Spendlove Prize; Black Lives Matter Co-Founder Alicia Garza. Also, Playhouse Merced will be back with its 2021-22 “The Story is Us” season of live, on stage productions starting this September. Its previous live season was unfortunately interrupted by the pandemic. The play, The Mountaintop, by African-American playwright, Katori Hall, will debut this season. The play is a fictional depiction of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.'s last night before he was assassinated in 1968, and is set entirely in the Lorraine Motel, where he was staying. Then Dudley Najieb reviews Fresno City Council and Mayor Jerry Dyer's once-escalated-now-resolved agreement regarding the raising of the Pride flag at City Hall located in downtown Fresno; an over 30-year request from the LGBQT&Other community was finally approved. A ceremony to recognize the raising of the Pride flag at City Hall was to continue forward this week. Also in Fresno news, City of Fresno councilman, Miguel Arias holds press conference to reveal the 109 year-old promise broken by the City of Fresno to service its residents with the creation of gutters, sidewalks, as well as the fixing of streets and pavements; there are schools and neighborhoods deemed unsafe for children walking home alone because there are no sidewalks. He also pointed out the deep neglect of trimming shrubbery and tree in neighborhoods or in front of local small businesses.
In this episode of, It's ONME Local - Central Valley, podcast show host Julia Dudley Najieb reviews Merced County press briefing with Governor Gavin Newsom, who has declared a state of emergency for several counties already experiencing drought conditions. He also announce a $5.1 billion plan to tackle the chronic drought issue by dealing with infrastructure changes for the long term.Meanwhile, a pilot youth-jobs program beginning in Southwest Fresno plans to expand its footprint across the entire city after an evaluation evaluation of the current project. Students are able to work after school, as they get paid to help beautify their community, starting with painting address numbers on the curb.Finally, City of Fresno Council Vice-President District 7 Nelson Esparza, District 4 Tyler Maxwell and District 3 Miguel Arias are weary of the pending June 30th eviction moratorium lift which will result in a tsunami of evictions throughout the city. Currently, 80 percent of Fresno County's evictions comes from the city of Fresno, according to councilman Arias.
En el episodio de hoy tenemos como invitado a Miguel Arias, Director Global de Emprendimiento en Telefónica. Él es responsable de gestionar el fondo de inversión semilla de Telefónica y todos sus espacios de emprendimiento a nivel global, dentro de estos están los 11 hubs de Wayra y los 50 espacios Open Future.Adicionalmente, Miguel es profesor asociado de emprendimiento en IE Business School de Madrid. Ha sido emprendedor, logrando vender su empresa. Luego fue el COO de Carto, una startup española líder en inteligencia de ubicación, donde Miguel se encargó de la gestión de las operaciones y actividades de ventas.Finalmente, fue mi jefe mientras estuve como Director de Wayra Perú y puedo dar fe que Miguel es una enciclopedia andante de emprendimiento. Por lo cual, desde ya los invito a leer su blog “Emprendiendo a Golpes".La conversación con Miguel se enfocó en compartir lecciones y recomendaciones que todo emprendedor interesado en realizar ventas a corporativos debería de tener claro. Vender a empresas grandes requiere de estrategias y tácticas totalmente distintas a las que utilizaríamos para llegar directo a los consumidores.Si tu negocio le vende a corporativos o estás pensando en entrar a este segmento, ¡este episodio es especialmente para ti!EnlacesLinkedIn de Miguel AriasTwitter de Miguel AriasPágina web de Wayra“180 días, y un consejo jedi", post de su blog “Emprendiendo a Golpes” con las lecciones de sus primeros días liderando Wayra.Twitter de Jason LemkinTemasPrincipales aprendizajes del proceso de venta a corporativos (14:30)¿Quién debería ser mi primer tipo de cliente? (18:10)El camino para llegar a venderle a la persona correcta (23:14)El timing y la generación del sentido de urgencia al corporativo (27:22)Orbitando alrededor de grandes planetas y sus ciclos (29:43)Las intros para iniciar el proceso de ventas corporativas (35:15)La pregunta de la máquina del tiempo (40:55)Te gustó este episodio? Compártelo
En el episodio de hoy, nos acompaña Miguel Arias. Nos comparte información sobre la importancia de cuidar nuestras finanzas desde los 20s, ya que es un tema que muchas veces se descuida a esta edad. Agradecemos la oportunidad que nos comparte hoy. Te invitamos a que escuches este episodio lleno de información de gran utilidad. Puedes seguir a Miguel Arias en Instagram como @miguelarias11 para más información sobre el tema. Recuerda seguirnos en Instagram y Facebook como @somosrompiendobarreras
Para celebrar el 18 cumpleaños de Rankia tengo una conversación con Miguel Arias, cofundador y Director ejecutivo de Rankia. Repasamos los hitos más importantes en el desarrollo de nuestra comunidad financiera, que ya está presente en 11 países, y los principales aprendizajes que hemos tenido como inversores particulares en este apasionante viaje.
Quick show notes Our Guest: Miguel Arias What he'd like for you to see: Kwes Forms His JAMstack Jams: Lowering the learning curve, Kwes, and AlpineJS His Musical Jams: Drake | Classical (and coding to rainfall) Transcript Bryan Robinson 0:14 Hello, everyone, welcome to another episode of That's My Jamstack, the podcast where we ask that simple Kwesion, what's your jam in the jam stack. I'm your host, Bryan Robinson. And this week we have Miguel arias on the show. Miguel is the co founder of Kwes forms. Hi, Miguel, thanks for being on the podcast with us today. Miguel Arias 0:42 Thank you for having me, man. It's a pleasure. Awesome. So Bryan Robinson 0:44 tell us a little bit about yourself. What do you do for work? What do you do for fun, that sort of thing. Miguel Arias 0:49 Okay, a little bit about myself. I'm the co founder of Kwes forms, it's a, it's a form service ideal for like the Jamstack community. I like to think of us as like the next evolution of what form service should be. Before we were around, there were a lot of over called, like endpoint services, to kind of handle your, like your submission, storing and whatnot. And then we kind of felt like there was a big gap in the market where, you know, like, it kind of took care of that. But then you had to go on your own and figure out validation and components, like date pickers, multi step, things of that nature. So we kind of felt like it was a perfect opportunity to kind of get in there and that space and put out a product that that we would love to use, you know, and that we felt like maybe other people in that space would like to use as well. So what I do for fun, you know, COVID is kind of killed a lot of it, but when I, what I normally do for fun is play basketball. The weird thing about it, though, is that I actually like to practice more than actually play. Sure, I think it comes with like my perfectionistic nature, I just, I just have this thing that I like to train and just and my wife is the same exact way. So I'm glad that we found each other because we didn't go to the parks when it's empty. And just like practice all day. It's like the weirdest thing, but that's what we like to do. You know, Bryan Robinson 2:09 I can totally get that, like, as soon as you as soon as you introduce other humans into it, then like there's so many ways that like imperfections happen because of that. Some people find beauty in that and then it's like, but no, if you really want to, like compete against yourself, like doing it on your own just makes so much sense. Miguel Arias 2:26 Are you like sports guy, he like we like playing basketball? Bryan Robinson 2:30 I am I am not particularly athletic. I do have sports. Basketball is is up there. I am very when you introduce other human beings, I am very bad when it's just me shooting and like, you know, kind of running around. It's okay. Like I could I can play horse decently. But you get somebody in my face and I fall apart. Miguel Arias 2:50 Yeah, you know, I kind of find it like it's like therapeutic in a way just to kind of compete against yourself. It's cool. It's a good way to kind of exercise patience and stuff. I really like it. Bryan Robinson 3:00 Yeah, it's like, it's like, Alright, you know, you know, free throws, right. And like, it's really funny. My, my mother is actually a huge like NBA fan. And like when she's rooting for her team, she gets so frustrated at the players missing free throws. Miguel Arias 3:11 Yeah. Bryan Robinson 3:12 Don't you practice that enough? Like, can't you just make that shot? It's like, Well, yeah, except for when all the variants happen. And you know, you will miss every once in a while. But yeah, you get to kind of practice that. And you get to like, find your form. And I think there's a lot of a lot of cool things that happen in that space. Miguel Arias 3:30 For sure. Yeah. Cool. Bryan Robinson 3:31 So let's talk about the Jamstack a little bit. And I'm sure we'll kind of weave in some more about Kwes as we go forward. But like, what was your entry point into into the idea that Jamstack or static sites or whatever you want to call it? Miguel Arias 3:41 Yeah, the funny thing is when we started our service, um, we really just started it, because at the time, like, I met my co founder, because he was actually my boss. Yeah, when I was about, like, 18, I was looking to, to get a job so I can marry my girlfriend at the time. Well, I mean, she's my wife, now. She's my girlfriend at the time. She's my wife. And so we used to use a service called formstack. You know, which is great, but it was like, a, it's like a drag and drop type of service. And then one day, I just kind of burst into his office, as I normally would do. And I was like, bro, we should make our own like form service. You know what I mean? Like, not drag and drop something that I would like to use, just because it was a hassle to kind of go through that process and then have to like, put it on your site, you have to strip all this styling. It was just like, it was like an unneeded amount of work. Right. It's how I felt. Bryan Robinson 4:33 I use Formstack quite a bit at the agencies that I worked at. And yeah, it was, it was super handy for that for like the editors making the forms. It was super awful for like the developers working Miguel Arias 4:43 Exactly. So then we kind of felt like, you know, this really isn't the ideal tool for us, you know, so then I burst into his office and I told him, we should make our own thing and he kind of just like, looked at me like I was crazy. I was like, Yeah, he's like, go back to work. So then, so I was like, Alright, cool. I went home, I kind of just kept thinking about it, it's just in my nature, like, I get obsessed with things. So I kind of kept thinking about it. And then one day, I think maybe it was like, the next day, the next evening, I was in the shower. And then I just got this idea of how I would be able to go about it, you know, and I, like ran out of the shower naked, like, super wave naked. And I ran to like my notebook and start writing down and my wife was looking at me, like, I'm like a lunatic, you know? And, and so that's how we kind of started it. But I didn't really know what Jamstack was at the time. I never even heard of it. Yeah, the only reason, the reason that we got into it was because as it started gaining, like popularity, we started noticing a trend, like we started noticing people telling us, oh, this is perfect for my Jamstack site. And this is good for Jamstack, whatever. And I was like, What the heck is a Jamstack? You know, we looked it up and, and we felt like, you know, this is awesome, I kind of felt when I saw it, it made perfect sense. Like, that's where the industry at least, I feel like that's where the industry is probably headed because of how simplistic it is in nature. Like, I feel like the theory, or the concept of a Jamstack is to like, try to simplify, you know, your workflow as much as possible, you know what I mean? So I felt like, you know, it was a perfect entryway for our service, and I just kind of just fell in love with, with the whole concept of it in the community, which then allowed me to allow me and my partner to kind of improve the product now that we kind of knew what was really meant for right hand out, let's improve it even further. Bryan Robinson 6:37 Out of curiosity, what was kind of the, the beginning there? Like, what, where, where are you targeting the forms before that cuz like said, like, it is, like a great fit, like finding these services that you can fit into the Jamstack is just is so important. So like, Where was the methodology? Like, who are you targeting before you kind of had this discovery? Miguel Arias 6:54 Yeah, the methodology was really just, we wanted to build something cool, you know, something that we liked, and then we just put it out there. And it's funny, because you always hear in the SaaS community, well, not even just when you're building a product in general, that you're normally not supposed to work in secret for such a long time, before you put something out, you know, you want to do a proof of concept, put it out, see what people think. But then we totally you know, we were rookie, so we, we worked in silence for like three years. The product still not knowing what Jamstack was, or anything, you know, and then we launched it on product con. And then Ever since then, you know, we've we, that's when we started kind of getting the feedback, you know, but when we put it out there, it was really just, you know, for people doing WordPress sites, or just for anything, really, we were just, we were just targeting developers in general, you know, Bryan Robinson 7:45 I got to say, yeah, wherever developers were working and needed a form that was maybe outside of whatever stack they were using, or didn't want to bother with, they could just pick it up and put it put it in Miguel Arias 7:55 Right and make something fun, you know, it's like something that they would actually enjoy using, we felt like if a developer could enjoy using it, that was that was our guy, you know, Bryan Robinson 8:03 Out of curiosity, is there, is there any sort of in the actual, like infrastructure behind the product? Like, are you using kind of notions that you've kind of discovered in the Jamstack? In the back end? are we are we talking? Is it? Is it kind of its own monolithic structure? Or is that you know, microservices or serverless functions? What what's kind of going on there? Miguel Arias 8:22 Well, it's definitely its own thing. It's the script itself, because it's built on JavaScript, right? Because, you know, handles your front end validation, back end validation, you know, helps you build out these like complex things like multi step forms, repeater fields, things that normally kind of take up a lot of your time, that's like monotonous, it helps you achieve these things in a much more enjoyable way. Right. So then, the first time I built it, I had built it on a front end framework. But then as I kind of got to understand the Jamstack community a little more I, my partner, and I realize how how much importance is placed on speed, right. And things being lightweight. So then we ended up, you know, rebuilding version two, which we released, like, a few weeks ago. And we we dropped the size of it from, like, 300 kilobytes to about 20 kilobytes. Oh, wow. Yeah. So and the only way that we were able to do that was to kind of try to stay to as native JavaScript as possible. You know what I mean? I guess to answer your Kwesion, like, yeah, we try not to use too many like microservices to accomplish it just so that we can kind of keep the file size down. Yeah, but yeah, so it's basically just supposed to be a script that you import into your site, and then you know, you're good to go. Bryan Robinson 9:41 And I love the idea that like, at first you had these kind of bigger pieces to it, but then seeing how people were building on the Jamstack and realizing the importance they placed in certain areas. So like you said, like, speed and performance being such a high level thing that that allowed you to kind of pivot the product in a way that was in line with those Same philosophies. Miguel Arias 10:00 Yeah. Like that just kept coming up, you know, and which, which is funny, like how I said we had spent, like three years building on that product. But then when that kept coming up, we just kind of realized, you know, this was not built on the right foundation. We had to scrap it go back to the drawing board start over, you know, but it was great. You know, I kind of I saw it as a learning experience. When I built the this the second version, I really knew who I was building it for, you know, Bryan Robinson 10:28 yeah, that the audience is super important to kind of figure out and find exactly their needs. And it's super cool that like the it's a it's a JavaScript solution that has performance built in like that's, that's always super important, because JavaScript can get real heavy real fast. If you're not paying attention to that. Miguel Arias 10:44 Yeah, definitely. Definitely. Bryan Robinson 10:46 Nice. So now that you've kind of kind of joined this, this Jamstack community of kind of builders, like, what would you say is kind of one of one of your jams in the Jamstack? Like, obviously, Kwes, I would have to assume as is one of them, but like, what sorts of ideas and like philosophies and maybe even other products and services? Are you really enjoying that you've kind of found yourself in this niche? Miguel Arias 11:07 Well, I mean, you took my first answer. Okay. Yeah. I think Well, like I said earlier, like the whole concept and theory behind Jamstack elite, at least for me, like, I really love the fact that it's kind of like, okay, you simplify your product. And then once you feel like, it's It is as simple as possible. You'd like simplifying again, you know what I mean? Like, I love how there's such an emphasis on like, lowering the learning curve, like this new thing came out pretty recently, Alpine js, I don't know if you've heard of it. Yeah, it's kind of like Vue js, at least, the way that they even describe it, it's kind of like uJs, where it's like very, very similar syntax, super simple, but it's written in like HTML markup pretty much. And I just blew my mind when I saw that, because I felt like Vue JS was already extremely simple. But then they found a way to simplify it even further, you know, and that's, like, super inspiring, I feel like you can always simplify your product to the point where it's just becomes almost like second nature to us it you know, like is, like picking it up. And learning it is like not a problem. Bryan Robinson 12:15 I was gonna say like, and getting it as close to like, the natural languages of the web is also like, super nice. Like you said, it gets Alpine is even close, like view got close to like, some the declarative nature of like HTML. And then Alpine took it a step further and said, You know what, let's make it look exactly like HTML. You know, Miguel Arias 12:32 it's funny, you say that, because that was like the whole concept behind our idea for the validation rules, because we had used certain, like, you know, other services that because, you know, there'll be services out there that are just front end validation rules. But I always felt like they were kind of, you know, like, not super difficult to write, but you had to write it in in JavaScript. And I felt like, it would be super cool. If we could put out a service where you could write the validation rules in just like markup, you know, what I mean, like HTML markup, so then that kind of gave us the idea to just add them inside, like a rules attribute inside the input. You know, like, you know, you have your input, you say, rules, and then you add your validation in there, and then a validated front end and back end at the same time, right. So it's like, the whole concept behind it was like what you said, trying to get it as close to like, the native, you know, markup language as possible. And I feel like Alpine JS did like, an amazing job of accomplishing that, you know, Bryan Robinson 13:30 yeah, yeah. And I like, I like that you're like building it in that way, too. Because like, if you think about the the nature of a product that is like making forms as easy that it's like, including your site is possible, you might be working with somebody that is, you know, creating maybe just HTML CSS, right, and they still won't be able to like import that into their project. Or maybe they're using something like 11 D, and it's a very, like HTML feel everywhere. And they still want that without having to go outside and be a JavaScript developer like that. That's, that's such a handy thing for something that should feel as simple as forms should feel. Miguel Arias 14:07 Right? Like, we want it to be able to allow users to build down like a complete form, like everything you would really need, but without really needing to know how to write JavaScript, you could and you could, like, extend it further, which is awesome. But you really don't need it to be able to create a fully functioning complete form, you know what I mean? Bryan Robinson 14:27 Yeah, and when you kind of look at it, and you look at, like, the big competitors in the space, like you mentioned, formstack, and there's stuff like wufu, that are these, like, you know, you know, GUI interface, like let's drag and drop the the the form fields in, like, that's, that's one step further, and then what you get out of it is like a jumbled mess. Whereas this can kind of be that that middle space, where it's like, you know, what, an editor might actually be able to stumble their way through this kind of thing. But it's going to be in a way that developers can come back and be like, Oh, no, no, we're gonna do this slightly differently, because I understand the underlying code. Miguel Arias 14:58 Yeah, that's true. But really our our intended audience is really just developers. If you know, HTML, CSS, I mean, you don't have to be like a crazy programmer, if you know, HTML, CSS, any developer can do it, you know, but that's why I felt services like formstack, and wufu. They're just like in a different space, right, they're servicing a different audience. Like you said, like the editors, people, like in marketing teams or something like that. And that's, you know, that's great, that's perfect for them. But then we kind of felt like they were also servicing developers, but just not as good as, as it could be, you know, what I'm saying, at least in my experience, when I use it, it just kind of felt not like a natural workflow for me, you know, Bryan Robinson 15:38 and what, you know, I used to look into, like their API's and to send the biggest thing you could do, and you could do, like, you could have created your own like, form API based on their API, but you know, no one's got time for all that when they just want to put a form on the page. So like, having something that is itself, given his own API driven experience, just means you get that kind of for free at that point. Miguel Arias 16:00 Yeah, and it's just, you know, it's simple, it's enjoyable, it's, that that's really the goal, which I feel like, it's the goal of overall Jamstack just like services like, like Vercel and Netlify, that just kind of, because I feel like Jamstack, you know, the the nature of it, is you have your front end framework, right. But then you got like the missing piece, which is the rest, like, you know, the whole back end, part of it, deploying, and in this case, forms, emails, things like that. So I feel like services, like ours, you know, services like Vercel, and Netlify, they kind of complete that whole environment for them. And I, and I honestly really do feel like it's where the industry is headed, just because of how simple it is to kind of start it up and get it going, you know? Bryan Robinson 16:47 Well, and the nice thing is, like you mentioned, like Netlify, and, you know, they've got the like, the super simple, like form stuff built in, right, you toss Netlify attribute on your form, and you're done. But that doesn't really accomplish, the more complex, you know, UI as you might want to do around forms. Because forms can be super simple, and that's great. But they can also be, you know, complex business, decision driven things that need some extra logic and need some extra handling built in, that you'd have to kind of roll on your own, if you're trying to use like, the super simple solutions that are out there, Miguel Arias 17:19 right, and things like, you know, not to bash on what Netlify hazard form services like those, they're just like an endpoint that don't really have, like a front end aspect to them, there's a certain kind of security that you're going to be lacking there. Because, for example, like validation rules, especially ours, we our validation rules are unique in the fact that they're on temporal. So if you were to, like, add a form and validation rules, you know, load of the page, if you were to inspect element and try to remove the rules, no, it's not, it's not gonna happen. They're the rules are there to state, you know, and maybe try to inject a new field, if you try to remove a field, you know, because it validates on the front end and the back end. So then when you kind of don't have that, that part of a form service, you know, it's a lot easier to be able to inject fields change, like the type attribute of a field, or if something's a read only, you can like go and just take off the read only attribute. And, you know, that is just a certain kind of security that will be lacking, if you're kind of lacking that part of it. Bryan Robinson 18:20 And you could, you could handle that on the front end, on your own. But like I said, like, when it comes to forms, you just want the form to work, you don't want to have to go and roll that yourself, you rather do whatever cool feature you're working on, that needs the form, like work work on it elsewhere, Miguel Arias 18:33 because it's just monotonous. And the thing is that every project that you do is kind of, you know, almost like 99% of the time, you're gonna need a form, you know, so then, you know, this part is solving a piece of it, but then you kind of have to every single time, figure out a way to add these, everything else has missing to it, you know what I'm saying? So, it's nice to just have a service that you could, you know, import the script plug it is done, you know, and I mean, it, everything's done, you don't have to go on a scavenger hunt and find, you know, like another Validation Service and then find a way to validate on the back end and then find yours or something like compliance, for example, right? Like you have these medical sites that need HIPAA compliance, and things like that, you know, what I'm saying is easy to, it's so much better to just be able to trust a company to kind of handle that for you. And that provides a really easy experience in regards to like implementation. Yep, Bryan Robinson 19:27 I did one HIPAA compliance site one time and I never want to touch that sort of thing again. Yeah. Unknown Speaker 19:35 I hear that cool. So Bryan Robinson 19:37 what what is your what's your actual jam right now? What are you listening to what sorts of music are you into or your favorite song or musician? Miguel Arias 19:44 You know, I wish I could be one of those people that have that's that's super unique taste in music knows all like the underground people before they get famous or something. I'm definitely not that. I feel like music has this this super unique way of putting putting you in like, the frame of mind that you want, right? So, you know if I'm trying to relax or something, maybe I'll listen to like something classical. You know, if I'm trying to focus, I'll listen to something else. And I'm trying to get inspired. Maybe there's like a Drake song that inspired me. So I think it's just gonna depend on, you know, what kind of what kind of move what, what kind of emotion I want to put myself in, right? Yeah. So I think it's cool how we can we live in this era that we could just, you know, on demand, just be like, okay, I feel like being inspired. Let me put on this song, you know? Bryan Robinson 20:32 So so let me let me ask this then. So when you're when you're coding when you're working on the product, what's in your earphones at that point, Miguel Arias 20:39 it's gonna be the weirdest thing ever. But what I listen to at that point is literally just like rain. I put like, how in the rain. I don't know why, but it just, it really helps me focus like crazy. So I just put like the sound of rain for like, 10 hours or something. Or like snow or something weird like that. Bryan Robinson 20:54 Yeah, I found some like some lo fi like YouTube videos that have like rain and stuff in the background like that. That's so soothing. Like, you can definitely get you into a focus minds. Miguel Arias 21:03 Yeah, I like that, too. So sometimes I put like the lo fi, hip hop or something like that. Bryan Robinson 21:07 Nice. So So what would you like to promote and kind of get out to the, to the Jamstack community as a whole? I mean, obviously, we're probably gonna talk about Kwes, but go for it. Miguel Arias 21:16 Yeah, I will, you know, we're still kind of new in the scene. You know what I mean, we launched it about so the whole story, you know, we worked on it for about three years. We launched it last year, we scrapped it somewhere. Like it like, I don't know, October not really scrapped, because it's still out, you know, it's still being supported. But then we kind of put out the the new version, I would say, maybe it's been a month already since we put it out. Okay, and yeah, I would like to get that out there, you know, for people to check it out. Give it a try. You know, we offer free trials and we feel like it's a really great service and we would love to hear anybody's opinions on it. The only reason why has gotten to this point is because of you know, all the love that people have shown and people reaching out to us. You know, we We always love when people reach out to us. They call it a game changer. They they really seem to love the product, you know, so any anybody out there that wants to check it out? give their opinion, definitely welcome you to hear. You could also check us out on Twitter. That's a Kwes forms, kW LS fo RM s, and my personal Twitter Miguel JSMIGU, el, Jay AR, I as I almost forgot how to spell my own name. Bryan Robinson 22:35 Well, and don't worry, I'll grab those links. And I will put them in the show notes for everyone to kind of grab as well as i think it's it's what kwes.io, right kW. Yes. Awesome. So, Miguel, thanks so much for being on with us today. And I hope you keep doing amazing things at Kwes as well as Kevin this broad Jamstack community. Miguel Arias 22:52 Awesome, man, thank you so much. You too. You got a great podcast going on. Here are some of your episodes. I love them. Bryan Robinson 22:58 I appreciate it. Thanks so much. Bryan Robinson 23:04 Thanks again to Miguel and thanks to everyone out there who listens week after week. If you enjoy the podcast, be sure to leave a review or a rating in your podcast app of choice. Until next time, keep doing amazing things on the web and keep things jammy Transcribed by https://otter.ai Intro/outtro music by bensound.com Support That's my JAMstack by donating to their Tip Jar: https://tips.pinecast.com/jar/thats-my-jamstack
En Hora de Noticias, Jona Kloner habló con Miguel Arias, Titular del Sindicato de Peones de Taxi, sobre las expectativas que se generaron con la reactivación del transporte interurbano y el trabajo en la zona de la Terminal de Ómnibus.
En Hora de Noticias, Jona Kloner habló con Miguel Arias, Titular del Sindicato de Peones de Taxi sobre el reclamo salarial del gremio y el posible aumento de las tarifas.
En Hora de Noticias, Jona Kloner habló con Miguel Arias, Titular del Sindicato de Peones de Taxi sobre el comunicado que publicó Uber.
This European People's Podcast episode is on EU climate policy. Featuring interviews with former European Commissioner for Climate, Miguel Arias Cañete from Spanish EPP Member Party, Partido Popular and EPP Vice President and MEP Esther de Lange from EPP Member Party in the Netherlands, CDA.
2020/09/04 Chataing conversa con el locutor Miguel Arias; con la cantante Lena Burke; y con su esposa Ximena Otero y ex-esposa Daniela Kosán.
Miguel Arias Cañete was the European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy and led the EU negotiations of the Paris Agreement. He's now involved with the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation which has launched the Prize for Humanity, an annual €1m award for people or organizations from all over the world focused on mitigation of, and adaptation to climate... The post Leading Spain in Paris Accords and Pushing Climate Policy Today | Miguel Arias Cañete appeared first on The Syndicate.
Como Global Entrepreneurship Director de Grupo Telefónica, Miguel administra el fondo de inversión semilla de Telefónica y todos los espacios de emprendimiento del operador, incluidos los 11 centros de innovación abiertos de Wayra y los 50 espacios de futuro abiertos en todo el mundo. Es responsable de liderar la nueva etapa en la estrategia de innovación abierta de Telefónica. Esto le compromete a buscar y desarrollar soluciones tecnológicas para complementar la I + D interna y al mismo tiempo crear una mejor conexión con los ecosistemas de emprendimiento internacional. Wayra es una plataforma global diseñada para conectar a emprendedores, startups, inversores y socios públicos y privados de todo el mundo para capturar la innovación y las oportunidades comerciales. Su objetivo es crear una interfaz fluida para que Telefónica trabaje con los principales innovadores a través de un modelo integral para la aceleración empresarial. Charlamos de emprendimiento, de LATAM, de Recursos Humanos, de inversiones y de valentía. Miguel, otro gran inventor. El blog de Miguel: http://emprenderagolpes.com Twitter de Miguel: http://twitter.com/mike_arias Sigue a Gran Invento en Instagram https://www.instagram.com/graninvento/ Sígueme en Twitter https://twitter.com/chrisbecerrasoy Sígeme en Instagram https://www.instagram.com/quien.es.chris/ Suscríbete a la Newsletter https://fast.cm/ykYRjb2Fa Apoya a Gran Invento Podcast en Patreon https://www.patreon.com/graninvento
In his first TV interview since being cited for battery from a scuffle with protesters at his home, Fresno city council president, Miguel Arias makes a new claim from the incident, and talks about the continuous threats to his family. House democrats pass the biggest stimulus relief package in U.S. History but is it dead on arrival in the Senate? Valley congressman Jim Costa, who helped create the Hero's Act joins Alexan Balekian exclusively. Plus, two members of the Fresno mayor's recovery committee talks about the reopening of businesses and if all of them are being represented.
City and County at odds over reopening businesses, required face masks, and shelter in place orders. Fresno city council president Miguel Arias and Fresno County Supervisor join the panel to hash out some of the confusion. Tulare County is considered a COVID hot spot in California, should the nursing homes be evacuated. Assemblyman Devon Mathis joins the show. Parlier Mayor Alma Beltran also on, as they become the first city to open all of their businesses, defying the state and county guidelines.
2020/04/22 "Arriba Miami" transmitido por Exitos 107.1FM Chataing conversa con el comediante y locutor Manuel Angel Redondo; y con el locutor Miguel Arias.
Miguel Arias Cañete (@mac_europa) was the European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy and led the EU negotiations of the Paris Agreement. [spreaker type=player resource="episode_id=24857421" width="100%" height="80px" theme="light" playlist="false" playlist-continuous="false" autoplay="false" live-autoplay="false" chapters-image="true" episode-image-position="right" hide-logo="true" hide-likes="false" hide-comments="false" hide-sharing="false" hide-download="true"]
Dr Carolyn Lam: Welcome to Circulation on the Run, your weekly podcast summary and backstage pass to the journal and its editors. I'm Dr Carolyn Lam, Associate Editor from the National Heart Center and Duke National University of Singapore. Dr Greg Hundley: I'm Greg Hundley, associate editor from the VCU Pauley Heart Center in Richmond, Virginia. Dr Carolyn Lam: Greg today's speaker paper is all about soy products and whether or not there is a benefit with them with regards to risk of coronary heart disease. Now, this has been extremely controversial and today's speech or paper is really important in its findings. Ha ha, I bet you want to get to it right now but I'm going to say, hold on let's get to some other really interesting papers in this series first. Can I start off? You got your coffee? Dr Greg Hundley: Yes. Let's get going Carolyn. Dr Carolyn Lam: So the first paper I want to highlight really talks about myocardial energetics in obesity, and you're going to love this one Greg it's got some really cool MRI techniques. We know that obesity is strongly associated with exercise intolerance and the development of heart failure particularly HFpEF. Well Dr Rayner from University of Oxford and colleagues looked at this carefully in 80 volunteers, which included 35 controls with an average BMI of 24 and 45 obese individuals with an average BMI of 35, who did not have coexisting cardiovascular disease. Now, these participants underwent body composition analysis and MRI of the abdominal liver and myocardial fat content, left ventricular function and 31 Phosphorus Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy to assess Phosphocreatine ATP and Creatine Kinase Kinetics at rest and during Dobutamine Stress. Dr Greg Hundley: Oh, wow Carolyn, this is right up my alley. You've got MRI imaging for body composition coupled with MR spectroscopy for metabolism, so what did they find? Dr Carolyn Lam: Thanks for putting that simply for us Greg. They found that in the obese resting heart, the myocardial creatine kinase reaction rate is increase, maintaining ATP delivery despite reduced energy stores during increased workload. While the non obese heart increases ATP delivery through creatine kinase the obese heart does not, and this is associated with reduced systolic augmentation and exercise tolerance. Weight Loss reversed these energetic changes, so these findings really highlight myocardial energy delivery via creatine kinase as a potential therapeutic strategy to improve symptoms in obesity related heart disease, as well as a fascinating modifiable pathway involved in the progression to heart failure. Now with this paper the central illustration is so critical, everybody has to pick up that issue and have a look. Furthermore, you must read the elegant editorial by Barry Borlaug and Craig Malloy. Dr Greg Hundley: Oh, you bet Carolyn. Craig always puts these MR spectroscopy papers in such fantastic perspective, really looking forward to that read and such an elegant study. Now, we haven't had Carolyn's quiz in weeks and we're going to get into one. This paper comes from Professor Nina Wettschureck, from the Max-Planck-Institute for Heart and Lung research, and it pertains to the infamous G-protein coupled receptors. Now, Carolyn here's your quiz and guess what, it's just multiple choice. All you have to do is fill in the blank. Dr Carolyn Lam: On G-protein coupled receptors? Dr Greg Hundley: Yeah, I know it's... we know a lot about these, but we're going to learn. So, G-protein coupled receptors are the largest family of transmembrane receptors in eukaryotes. They transduce signals of numerous physio-chemical stimuli including... and Carolyn you have to complete this sentence. So it's neurotransmitters, hormones, local mediators, metabolic or olfactory cues and got to complete the sentence. Is it air resistance? Time? Or light? Dr Carolyn Lam: Space. Dr Greg Hundley: That's not a choice. Dr Carolyn Lam: All right, all right let me guess light. Dr Greg Hundley: That's awesome. Fantastic, great job Carolyn. So in the vascular system the contract alternative vessels is crucially regulated by these GPCRs, including basic constrictors such as Angiotensin two and Endothelin one. In this study the investigators studied the role of GPRC5B, and the regulation of contractility and differentiation in human and murine smooth muscle cells in vitro, as well as in tamoxifen inducible smooth muscle cells Pacific knockout mice under conditions of arterial hypertension and atherosclerosis, and these experiments were done in vivo. Dr Carolyn Lam: Okay, so what were the results? Dr Greg Hundley: They found that GPRC5B regulates vascular smooth muscle tone and differentiation by negatively regulating prostate cycling receptor signaling. Thus, Carolyn inhibition of the interaction between GPRC5B and the prostacyclin receptor might be beneficial in human arterial hypertension and vascular remodeling. What a great new insight into basic science. Well, let me get on I have a clinical paper, and this is on the infamous topic from the COMPASS-PCI trial, Rivaroxaban plus Aspirin versus Aspirin alone in patients with Prior Percutaneous Coronary Intervention from Dr Kevin Bainey at the Canadian VIGOUR Center in University of Alberta. So Carolyn, the cardiovascular outcomes for people using anticoagulation strategies or COMPASS trial demonstrated dual pathway intervention with Rivaroxaban 2.5 milligrams twice daily plus aspirin, and 100 milligrams once daily versus aspirin 100 milligrams once daily, reduced the primary major adverse cardiovascular event outcome of cardiovascular death, MI or stroke as well as mortality in patients with chronic coronary syndromes or peripheral arterial disease. Now, whether this remains true in patients with a history of PCI is unknown. Dr Carolyn Lam: Oh, Greg I'm so disappointed. Why didn't you give me a quiz here? I know about the COMPASS trial. Okay, so what did the author's find? Dr Greg Hundley: So Carolyn of the 27,000 plus patients in COMPASS 16,500 plus patients had chronic coronary syndrome, were randomized to DPI or aspirin and of these 9,862 had prior PCI. So here are the results, DPI compared with aspirin produce consistent reductions in MACE mortality, but with increased major bleeding with or without prior PCI. So among those with prior PCI one year and beyond, the effects on MACE and mortality were consistent irrespective of time since the last PCI. Dr Carolyn Lam: Mm-hmm (affirmative) Interesting implications on dual platelet inhibition. Well, let me tell you a little bit about what's in the mailbag in the rest of this issue. There's a research letter by Dr Joseph Wu on molecular signatures of beneficial class effects of statins on human induced pluripotent stem cell derived cardiomyocytes. We have global rounds by Dr Annika Rosengren and Dr Lars Wallentin on the cardiovascular medicine in Sweden. We have a White Paper by Dr Abhinav Saxena and colleagues on the value of hemodynamic monitoring in patients with cardiogenic shock undergoing mechanical circulatory support. And we also have paired perspective pieces, one by Dr Salim Virani and colleagues on secondary prevention of atherosclerotic cardiovascular disease comparing recent United States and European guidelines on dyslipidemia, and another by Dr Neil Stone and colleagues on comparing primary prevention recommendations with the focus look at the US versus European guidelines on dyslipidemia. Dr Greg Hundley: Very good, Carolyn. Well, I've got a research letter Professor Do-Young Kwon from the Korea University of Ansan Hospital, Korea University College of Medicine and discusses the association of Parkinson's disease with the risk of cardiovascular disease and all-cause mortality, and a nationwide population-based cohort study. In addition, different series of letters Dr Seung-Jung Park from Asan Medical Center at the University of Ulsan College of Medicine, and Professor Lang Li of The First Affiliated Hospital of Guangxi Medical University exchanged letters regarding the article, Clinically Significant Bleeding With Ticagrelor versus Clopidogrel in Korean patients with Acute Coronary Syndromes Intended for Invasive Management, that previously published randomized clinical trial. Then finally one of those great ECG investigations from Dr Miguel Arias, and they have an ECG quiz entitled The Hidden Reveals the Hidden, but really, it's referring to a Brugada ECG pattern and a patient with Wolff-Parkinson-White. I can't wait to get onto that feature article discussing the potential benefits or harms of soy in men and women as it relates to cardiovascular disease. Dr Carolyn Lam: Yeah, you and I Greg let's go. Oh, boy today's feature paper really literally cuts close to the heart for me talking about soy products, and whether or not there's a relationship with cardiovascular health. This remains controversial but thankfully we've got really great data just published in this week's issue, so proud to have the first author with us Dr Qi Sun from Brigham and Women's Hospital, as well as our associate editor who's also an editorialist for this paper and that's Dr Mercedes Carnethon from Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. So welcome both I cannot wait to just jump right into it. Please, Qi, tell us what you found about soy products. Dr Qi Sun: First off this is a prospective cohort study that included three cohort studies, the Nurses’ Health Study and the Nurses’ Health Study II and Health Professionals Follow-Up Study. So those three big prospective cohort follow up studies. Now over the years we have collected much data of diet which has been repeated, reviewed, and assessed over the years, and we have accumulated many cases of cardinal heart disease the numbers are a solid. Now what we found is that the intake isoflavones which are the big family are flavonoids, the higher intake of isoflavones were associated with a lower risk of developing coronary heart disease in those three cohorts of men and women. And in addition because tofu and soy milk are the primary contributor in our guide of isoflavones, we also examine the tofu and soy milk in relation to the risk of cardinal heart disease What we found is that tofu intake is significantly associated with lower risk of developing heart disease, and soy milk is also associated with lower risk of developing heart disease. It's just the association for soy milk, soy milk is not significant. And I think very interestingly we also found that the menopausal status and the postmenopausal hormone use somewhat also modulated association primarily for coffee intake with heart disease risk, in that we found younger women who were before their menopause and also postmenopausal women who did not use hormone will benefit more from tofu intake. In contrast, for postmenopausal women who are using hormone the association was not significant. I think those are the primary findings of our prospective cohort study. Dr Carolyn Lam: Oh my goodness, hallelujah. That's really marvelous and beautifully summarized, Mercedes please explain why was this such a controversial area before? And what does this paper add? Love your editorial by the way. Mercedes Carnethon: We hear a lot about nutritional epidemiology studies, and we have a lot of debates about what we should believe, whether we should change our behavior based on these observational studies and quite often we have discussions about what's new. And I lean on that final point about why I like this particular paper so much, and that's because I found the topic of isoflavones, tofu intake and soy to be extremely relevant to a large proportion of the world's population, whose primary protein intake may be something made from a soybean, heavy and isoflavones. Within the United States it's also relevant even though a smaller proportion of our population relies primarily on vegetarian diet, there is a very large and interested group wondering whether soy intake is safe. There have been discussions about whether there's harm associated with it, and the possibility that it could have beneficial influence on our leading causes of death of coronary heart disease. So I was most thrilled about the innovation of this particular topic, and its methodological rigor. When we think about what we lean on, we lean on large studies, we lean on multiple events and the size of the study allowed the investigators to explore numerous subtleties. Subtleties such as that reported related to the moderation by menopausal status, and that was the point I was most curious about and why I'm really excited to have an opportunity to talk to you today Chi. Can you tell me a little more about the menopausal status finding? Dr Qi Sun: So first off as I mentioned tofu intake was more strongly associated with lower risk of developing heart disease among younger pre-menopausal women, or postmenopausal women who did not use ham. Before that I want to also mention for isoflavones intake where I also found a similar pattern in that isoflavones are more. Appear to be more strongly associated with lower risk also in those two groups of women, although the past by interaction was non-significant. Now in terms of why I think there are a couple reasons why is that, among postmenopausal female or in our use hormone, the isoflavone can function as estrogen and provide at least partially the estrogenic effects that were calculated in postmenopausal women who do not use hormone, and for premenopausal women we think that's probably because before menopausal, the activity of estrogen receptor may be higher than the estrogen receptor after menopausal. So, in reality, the other variables of isoflavones may provide estrogen effects after menopausal. So those are the hypotheses although I have to mention that those hypotheses, we need more evidence to really shed light on the mechanisms underlying those interactions between menopausal status, postmenopausal hormonal use, where's the intake of isoflavones and tofu. Dr Carolyn Lam: So Chi I love that explanation and giving it some biological possibility, although as you said it's a postulation. But may I ask so what's the implication for men? I lived with a man who thinks if he takes soy he's going to grow boobs. So what... did you see any sex differences and do studies like this and able looking for the downsides of eating soy? Dr Qi Sun: As a scientist I'm open to any kind of new findings as long as the findings are from well conducted, rigorously designed study. But having said that I couldn't exclude the possibility that maybe soy intake is associated with certain adverse health outcomes, but so far based on my experience I didn't see any such evidence. But having said this I always say I wouldn't risk any possibility, but coming... circling back to the coronary heart disease we really didn't see much difference between men and women. It's true for the younger women we saw a stronger association but for men I also see a lower risk of heart disease. So there's a kind of interesting image on soy intake or isoflavones intake in the United States that people believe they are estrogen so a man shouldn't take it, but if you look at the group of vegetarians, the vegans. There are a lot of guys they practice vegetarian, they practice vegan diets and we also publish on plant-based diet in relation to coronary heart disease and lot of men eat very healthy. And we found those people who practice those kinds of healthy diets, soy is often mouthful of primary sources of proteins and if you look at their risk of developing heart disease, type two diabetes is quite low. Something lower than other normal women who practice otherwise omnivore diet. Dr Carolyn Lam: It's true Qi soy intake could also be a marker of a healthier lifestyle in general, by extension of what you just said. But Mercedes I love that you discuss quite a number of these issues in your editorial and at the end of the day you asked the most important question, what does this mean for us? Should we all be increasing our intake of soy products? Could you give us your synthesis of that? Mercedes Carnethon: Yes, a point that I've definitely tried to make here, and this is really in response to what I expect to be the media fear surrounding new dietary findings. One of the first questions that I know that she and his colleagues will be asked is, should I change my diet? Can I extend my life? And that's because the media is really looking for a lot of sensational headlines in this topic, and I think we have to focus on what we learn from these observational studies. They're a very important step in the scientific process that helps us provide a justification for later clinical trials, that helps us think about the multiple components that work together to promote overall excellent health. And the point you were making right before this about the individuals who eat plant based diets that are heavily based in soy. In the paper it also describes that those individuals exercise more, they may have lower intakes of saturated fat, and so I think ultimately what I take from this at least for myself and for people who would ask is that an overall healthy diet seems to stand up very well in these well done observational studies. And that soy in particular may be a part of an overall healthy diet given what we're seeing here in this very well done study. Dr Carolyn Lam: Oh, that's beautifully put Mercedes and Chi perhaps I can give you the last word. What would you say is the take home message and what are next steps? Dr Qi Sun: I think the core message is this as Mercedes very well discussed, I think soy and especially tofu can be really good components of the overall healthy plant based diet, and by practicing that I think we can significantly reduce the risk of developing coronary heart disease for both men and the women. I think moving forward we would like to see evidence from clinical trials that target cardiometabolic risk factors as outcome, and to see whether increased consumption of tofu and isoflavones can really reduce those risk markers so that they have ample evidence to support the mechanisms. As you mentioned Carolyn that this is an initial study, and it could be soy, intake could be just macro how is it, through clinical trials, we can really control those confounding factors and really provide good evidence to support our findings. Dr Carolyn Lam: Well, in the meantime I just have to say you made my day this is coming from a soy eating vegetarian, so thank you so, so much. Thank you, listeners for joining us today. Dr Greg Hundley: This program is copyright the American Heart Association 2020.
Miguel Arias Cañete (@mac_europa) was the European Commissioner for Climate Action and Energy and led the EU negotiations of the Paris Agreement.He’s now involved with the Calouste Gulbenkian Foundation which has launched the Prize for Humanity, an annual €1m award for people or organizations from all over the world focused on mitigation of, and adaptation to climate change.Miguel has served the Spanish Government as both the Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries and Minister for Agriculture, Food and Environment before being selected to head his Party List in the European Parliamentary elections.In today’s episode we discuss:- The unique challenges that went into crafting the Paris Accord- What the US’s withdrawal from the Paris Agreement means for climate policy- How hard it is to ensure collective action on big problems- China’s role in addressing the environment- Why Miguel thinks the US will rejoin the Paris Accords- How the EU is leading the effort on decarbonization- What to think about nuclear energy- The reason transportation is so hard to go green- What happens if we don’t reach climate goals- The problems of bureaucracy and why the EU is actually pretty efficient- Which agritech areas are most important to reduce global warming- How business can be used as a force for good- Are we headed for a future of mass migrations- Why democracy is a stronger governance system than centralized economies in the long run- How China’s policy on coal could crush climate goals
Dr Carolyn Lam: Welcome to Circulation on the Run, your weekly podcast summary and backstage pass to the journal and its editors. I'm Dr Carolyn Lam, associate editor from the National Heart Center and Duke National University of Singapore. Dr Greg Hundley: I'm Dr Greg Hundley from the Pauley Heart Center at VCU Health in Richmond, Virginia. Dr Carolyn Lam: Greg, this issue features a very important, but rather somber subject and it talks about suicide attempts among LVAD recipients and the real-life data from the Assist-ICD study. Now we have to get to that and it's a very interesting discussion, but first, let's discuss a couple of papers and I'll start. Now, we know that extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation using extracorporeal membrane oxygenation or ECMO, for hemodynamic support has been shown to enhance survival for patients with refractory VF or VT out of hospital cardiac arrest. However, what are the effects of prolonged CPR on development of metabolic derangements and neurologically favorable survival in these patients? Well, this was examined by Dr Bartos from University of Minnesota School of Medicine and colleagues who retrospectively evaluated survival in 160 consecutive adults with refractory VF/VT out of hospital cardiac arrest, treated with extracorporeal cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and compared these with 654 adults who had received standard CPR in the amiodarone arm of the ALPS trial. They found that extracorporeal CPR was associated with improved neurologically favorable survival compared to standard CPR at all CPR durations less than 60 minutes. However, CPR duration remained a critical determinant of survival with a 25% increase in mortality with every 10 minutes of CPR beyond 30 minutes. The progressive metabolic derangement which developed during prolonged CPR was associated with reduced neurologically favorable survival. Dr Greg Hundley: This mirrors an article that we had maybe about a month ago. What are the clinical implications of this particular study? Dr Carolyn Lam: Well, healthcare systems utilizing extracorporeal CPR for out of hospital cardiac arrest should optimize pre-hospital and in-hospital processes to minimize time to CPR. Further research is needed to identify strategies to increase CPR efficiency, improve profusion, and decrease the metabolic demands such that the progressive metabolic derangement associated with prolonged CPR can be delayed. This is discussed in an editorial by Dr Sonneville and Schmidt. Dr Greg Hundley: Very nice, Carolyn. Well, my next article is from Roxana Mehran from the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. It's really getting at the issue of high-risk implantation of inter-coronary stents and balancing where is that risk. Is it from bleeding or a complication from the procedure? In this study, they had a total of 10,502 patients and they were included from four registries. 3,507 were identified as having high bleeding risk. The authors aimed to evaluate the long-term adverse events in the high bleeding risk patients undergoing PCI with cobalt chromium, everolimus-eluting stent implantation. Dr Carolyn Lam: Ah, Greg. Awesome. I'm a fan of Dr Mehran and looks like I'm going to be a fan of this study. What did they find? Dr Greg Hundley: Well, Carolyn, I love just thinking about coated stents. How about that? Interestingly, those at high bleeding risk had more comorbidities. They had higher lesion complexity and a higher risk of four-year mortality. In fact, four times that of those without those risk factors. The risk of mortality was increased after coronary thrombotic events and after major bleeding. Thus, rather than just being evaluated as a subset of patients in whom the risk of bleeding takes precedence, high bleeding risk patients must be considered a vulnerable population in whom both ischemic as well as bleeding events have a significant impact on their mortality. Dr Carolyn Lam: Nice, Greg, and you said all of that without repeating everolimus. Dr Greg Hundley: Coated, remember, coated stents. Dr Carolyn Lam: These tongue twisters, but hey, my next paper provides novel insights into mechanisms underlying diastolic stiffness in cardiomyocytes and the myocardium. This is from Dr Prosser from Perelman School of Medicine in Philadelphia and colleagues, who interrogated the role of the microtubule network in the diastolic mechanics of human cardiomyocytes and myocardium. They found that stable detyrosinated microtubules contributed viscous forces during diastolic stretch that increased cardiomyocyte stiffness, particularly in patients with heart failure. Depolymerizing microtubules reduced myocardial stiffness over the range of strains and strain rates associated with early rapid filling in tissue from patients with diastolic dysfunction. Dr Greg Hundley: Now, how are we going to take this to patients? Are there any translational insights? Dr Carolyn Lam: Microtubule deep polymerization using colchicine. Colchicine, the stuff we use for gout, this reduced myocardial viscoelasticity with an effect that decreased with increasing strain. Post-hoc subgroup analysis revealed that myocardium from patients with heart failure reduced ejection fraction were more fibrotic and elastic than myocardium from patients with heart failure preserved ejection fraction, which were relatively more viscous. Now, colchicine reduced viscoelasticity in both HFpEF and HFrEF myocardium, but may confer greater benefit in conditions with limited myocardial fibrosis including HFpEF. How's that for translational? Dr Greg Hundley: Oh, very nice, Carolyn. My next paper comes from Dr Lior Zangi from Mount Sinai School of Medicine. Carolyn, in this study, the authors performed transcriptomics sphingolipid and protein analyses to evaluate sphingolipid metabolism and signaling after myocardial infarction. They investigated the effect of altering sphingolipid metabolism through a loss of chemical inhibitors or gain modified MRNA and modified RNA of acid ceramidase function post hypoxia or MI. Dr Carolyn Lam: Whoa, so what did they find? Dr Greg Hundley: Well, Carolyn, translationally, the authors found that transiently altering sphingolipid metabolism through acid ceramidase over expression is sufficient and necessary to induce cardio-protection after myocardial infarction. Carolyn, these results highlight a new therapeutic potential of acid ceramidase modified messenger RNA in ischemic heart disease. The basic science is just phenomenal in our journal. Dr Carolyn Lam: It is, and I loved the way you explained that one, Greg, thanks. Now, there's lots of stuff also in the journal. There's an On My Mind by Dr Ray entitled "LDL Cholesterol Lowering Strategies and Population Health: Time to move to accumulative exposure model." We also have a research letter by Dr Chen describing a novel mouse knock-in strategy utilizing a biotin ligase-based system called biotin identification 2, to identify the cardiac diet proteome in vivo. Well, very interesting stuff, especially in terms of this particular novel strategy. Dr Greg Hundley: You know, Carolyn, this week the mailbox is just full, so I've got a research letter emphasizing trends in anti-arrhythmic drug use among US patients between 2004 and 2016 and it's from Dr David Frankel from the Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania. I've also got a letter to the editor regarding the association between the use of primary prevention implantable cardio defibrillators in mortality in patients with heart failure, a prospective propensity matched analysis from the Swedish Heart Failure Registry, and the corresponding author is Professor Laszlo Littman from atrium health at the Carolinas Medical Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. There is also a response to this letter from Dr Gianluigi Savarese from Karolinska Institute. Then finally I have a new another EKG challenge, Carolyn, from Dr Miguel Arias. It's a case of new onset, recurrent syncope triggered by fever. Can you get it right from just looking at the EKG? Well, Carolyn, should we head on to our feature discussion, which this week has a very somber tone? Dr Carolyn Lam: Let's go. Left ventricular assist devices or LVADs are really becoming established therapy for end stage heart failure. Now, we who manage such patients realize there are numerous complications and have seen patients who suffer things like anxiety and depression. Interestingly, until today, there was very little data regarding the suicide risk in this population. I am so pleased to welcome the authors of a very unique and important research letter and they are Vincent Galand as well as Erwan Flécher, both from Ren University Hospital in France, and of course Mark Drazner, our associate editor from UT Southwestern. Vincent, could you start us off by telling us what made you do this important study and what did you find? Dr Vincent Galand: As you know, in the entire population where a lot of tests have thromboses or infection or ventricular arrhythmias, but there is a lack of data about the clarity of life for the secret distress or suicide in this population. I think it's very important to have information about the population. At the beginning is the Assist-ICD study is a study focused on arrhythmias in this population, but we recorded data about suicide in this population. What the objective of this study was to analyze the incidents of suicide in this population and to see if there is some predictor of suicides in this population. Dr Carolyn Lam: What did you find? Dr Vincent Galand: We find that in centers without LVAD nurse coordinator, the incidents of suicide, was higher. It was not significant, but it was a very big trend. Additionally, we found that patient implanted in destination therapy was a bigger risk of suicide compared to patient granted bridge transportation or bridge to recovery. I think there is two factors of suicide. The first one is a lack of LVAD nurse coordinator and the second one is the implementation and destination therapy. Dr Carolyn Lam: Yeah, and the really cool thing is that that first factor is something that I suppose can be addressed in future efforts. Mark, could I just ask you to put these findings and this research that are into context for circulation to publish quite a specialty, if you may, topic, why is this so important? Dr Mark Drazner: DT vans are really a rapidly emerging therapy for patients with advanced heart failure, with almost exponential growth. As these profound technologies are emerging on the scene, it's important, first, to consider all the ramifications for our patients. I think anyone could imagine having an LVAD implant and how that might have profound influence on your life in totality and the impact on the psychological aspects. While there's been previous studies, there seems to be much avoidance in us really fully understanding the total impact. There have been previous case reports of suicide, but not anything to this magnitude where a systematic series with an estimate of the frequency of as high as 2%, which may not sound high, but, compared to the general population, is increased. We view this as an important look at a critical topic. It's the beginning, there needs to be, as you said, it's a research writer on a case series, but it's a cautionary tale and really is pointing the way for us to proceed with further investigation as potentially important complication related to that. That's essentially why the editorial board found this interesting. Dr Carolyn Lam: Indeed. Could you just remind us how big this study was? Because this is really big for an LVAD study. Dr Erwan Flécher: We collected data from 19 university centers in France over 10 years period and we collected a lot of that especially in the fields of arrhythmia. As Vincent said, we thought it was interesting to take the entire picture, so we collected data about quality of life and how do they live and if they had a lot of risk of suicide, if not, and that's how we succeeded to lead this study. In France, what is important also for you to know is that we do implant a different population of patients than in the US. We do implants in bad patients, in very, very sick patients. Most of them are currently in cardiogenic shock or already under temporary support, ECMO support, IMPELLA support, so it may impact also our results. That's an interesting point to say and the overall thing is that our paper demonstrated, I think, that we need to take care of these patients not only about the device, not only about the anticoagulation, but also, I mean again, the entire picture. The social part, the quality of life, the way they do live is very important. Probably they should be proposed for psychological follow-up also, or any kind of support for the family. This is important in order to decrease the risk of suicide, in my opinion. Dr Carolyn Lam: I liked those take-home messages that are very practical, and you kind of read my mind about that question of generalizability. Mark, did you have any reflection on that? The generalizability to the US population? Dr Mark Drazner: Yeah, that's an important point. I was struck in the paper that 80% of the patients who committed suicide were followed at centers without LVAD coordinators. That number seems high compared to what we're used to seeing. It would be intriguing how widespread that is, where patients who are getting implanted don't have access to a VAD coordinator in your country. Dr Erwan Flécher: Well, that's an important point also. It is different in France. I mean, we just created...That coordinator did not exist a few years ago in France and I know you are used to work with VAD coordinator in the US, in the UK, even in Netherlands and Germany, but in France it was not like that and all patients were only followed by cardiologist or cardiac surgeons and a few centers started few years ago, five, eight years ago to have a VAD coordinator nurse program. We do believe it is very, very important. That's also plea for a better organization of care in our country. Dr Mark Drazner: Yeah, that's a thinking point. I didn't realize that that was not widespread practice and relatively new implementation. It'll be interesting to see if the rates subsequently fall with that change in practice. Can I ask, let me follow up in terms of your previous comment. It sounds like a lot of these patients were acute presentations and I wonder also whether they may not have had the full time to grasp exactly what they were getting into, for example. I think we've all been there. Someone went into cardiogenic shock, ends up crashing and burning and has to go for a durable VAD. A very different complex in someone who has consolidation has been followed in the center for a while, has a chance to come to understand what all that really is. You think that is a major factor in this experience? Dr Vincent Galand: We think that patients who are granted in case of emergency; it's a bigger risk of surgical distress afterwards the implantation. In fact, that they cannot many information before the implantation, information about the worth life after the LVAD implantation. Of course if they don't the information, they can't be prepared for life after surgery. I think it's a bigger risk, yeah. Dr Erwan Flécher: That's why maybe in your country or maybe elsewhere, I don't know, maybe the findings would have been different. That's, that's an option we should consider, also. In France, as we told you, we do implants. Most of our patients are implanted in emergency. They're already in ICU. Most of them are already under mechanical ventilation, so they just wake up and they learned that they have been implanted. Not all of them, but most of them, the vast majority of them, so of course they are not so well prepared and that may have an impact on the follow-up. We try to talk to the family; we try to talk to the general practitioner. Dr Mark Drazner: Of the 10 patients, it's very interesting that patients are being implanted and not knowing they're being implanted in and say waking up with an LVAD. I don't know if you have the granular detail, but do you know, of these 10 patients, how many of them were in that situation? Dr Vincent Galand: The patients were implanted in cardiogenic shock, so I think it's four patients, but six patients were implanted without cardiogenic shock. They received this kind of information before the LVAD implantation, so it's not a big part of the population, but it's some patients. Dr Mark Drazner: Could you, just for our readers, it's a little goory, I will admit, but in terms of how these patients attempted or actually committed suicide, just to explain in terms of, it was oftentimes related to a mechanism through the LVAD. If you could just summarize that and how they tried to commit suicide or commit suicide. Dr Vincent Galand: That was the case. The suicide was with drive line disconnection or drive line section. In two patients, it was drug suicides, but in most of the patients the drive line is the main way for suicide. Dr Mark Drazner: It's interesting that the mechanism that these patients tried to commit suicide was directly through the LVAD. Dr Erwan Flécher: Of course it's the easiest way to terminate their life and they just cut off it. Just don't plug the battery and they are alone and that was the main way to practice their suicide. Dr Mark Drazner: I know we don't have the initial report, we probably don't have all those, but in terms of you postulating in the paper why patients might get to the state where they would try or commit suicide with the LVAD. If you just want to throw out some of your hypotheses so that our listeners can hear those as well. Dr Erwan Flécher: I've got in mind two or three points in order to improve our results. First of all, we should implant maybe earlier patients in France in order to have a better way to prepare and to invest the VAD implantation. The second point would be to have a better organization of care and I think we should develop that VAD nurse coordinators program like in many countries. We still have some but not in all the hospitals implanting that. The third point would be also to get the better LVADs. I mean, probably the drive line in sections, batteries, the controller, this of course it's much better than it was 10 years ago. There is no noise. It's less big than it was, but still, I think if we can improve the device itself, I think we may observe maybe the decrease in the risk of a system in society, especially the drive line, if there is no drive line, the quality of life should be better. We may suggest that the risk of suicide would decrease. Dr Carolyn Lam: A very somber topic, but those last take home messages, leaving hope for improvement, were really important. Thank you everyone for sharing with us today, and thank you, audience, for joining us today. Dr Greg Hundley: This program is copyright, the American Heart Association 2020.
La transformació digital se sustenta en un ecosistema digital que ha de reunir unes condicions de creativitat, diversitat i innovació que Barcelona acull i projecta a través de nombroses iniciatives empresarials i socials que podrien ser potenciades si es coordinessin i s’integressin dins d’un relat més ambiciós. En aquest sentit, la proposta de Barcelona capital global de l’humanisme tecnològic podria impulsar un marc de disrupció digital basat en els actius que té la ciutat i que poden ser potenciats a partir d’una nova experiència d’urbs centrada en l’humà a través de la tecnologia.
El recorrido como emprendedores de nuestros dos invitados comenzó muy pronto. Poco después de licenciarse como Ingeniero de Caminos, Miguel Arias cofundó IMASTE, la plataforma virtual de webcasts líder en Europa, y trabajó como COO de CARTO. Por su parte, Javier Perea fundó su primera startup con 24 años, el primer antivirus de España, y lo vendió a McAfee en el 1998. Ahora, como CEO de Smart Protection, dirige una compañía presente en 22 países y con 85 empleados. En esta primera entrega de 'Scale This Up' podrás descubrir cómo ha sido el recorrido de estos dos valientes que te darán los mejores consejos para tomar la iniciativa y emprender tu propio camino. - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - En este podcast hemos contado con la participación de: María Crespo, periodista y presentadora del programa. (https://twitter.com/merinoticias) José María Venturo Ventureira, comunicación interna en Telefónica (https://twitter.com/venturovent) Miguel Arias, director global de emprendimiento de Telefónica (https://twitter.com/mike_arias) Javier Perea, CEO de Smart Protection (https://twitter.com/Javier_Perea) Andrés Saborido, director de Wayra España (https://twitter.com/SaboridoAndres) Aquilino Peña, socio fundador de Kibo Ventures (https://es.linkedin.com/in/aquilinopena / https://twitter.com/aquilino?lang=es) Iñaki Berenguer, CEO & Co-founder de CoverWallet (https://twitter.com/inakib) Si te interesa el mundo de la innovación y emprendimiento, visita la página web de Wayra y síguenos en LinkedIn, Twitter e Instagram.
Ep. 86 Interview with Miguel Arias, Global Entrepreneurship Director at Telefónica by Scaleup Valley Podcast
This week we turn our attention to the EU where there has been an attempt to increase the target of all member states to net zero by 2050. We talk about what happened, why this wasn’t adopted, and what can be done to ensure the EU stays in the leadership position we have come to rely on them for. Then, Christiana travels to Brussels where she sits down with EU Commissioner Miguel Arias Cañete, the man responsible for climate and energy policy across 28 countries for the last 5 years.
This week we talk to Fresno City Council members Esmerelda Soria and Miguel Arias about their trip to Washington DC and visit with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, as well as the friction that happened on the council as a result. Our panel discusses Gov. Newsom's new budget plan, State of the City, and ACLU/Black Lives Matter. We sit down with congressional hopeful Phil Arball about his run against Rep. Devin Nunes in CA-22. We also sit down with Fresno State professor Jenna Kieckhaefer to discuss the Breast Cancer Diagnosis Act of 2019. Guests: Fresno City Councilwoman Esmerelda Soria, Fresno City Councilman Miguel Arias, Political Analyst Jim Verros, Fresno City Councilman Steve Brandau, Building Healthy Communities CEO Sandra Celedon, congressional hopeful Phil Arball, Fresno State professor Jenna Kieckhaefer.
Fresno City Council Members Garry Bredefeld and Miguel Arias spar over last week's visit by Arias and Council Member Esmeralda Soria to Rep. Ocasio-Cortez in Washington D.C.
Fresno City Council Members Esmeralda Soria and Miguel Arias go to Washington D.C. and meet with Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez to help smooth relations over the recent Fresno Grizzlies-Memorial Day video.
Resumen de lo más destacado de los mercados. Entrevista con Miguel Arias, Rankia. Entrevista con Juan Ramón Caridad, responsable de GAM para Iberia y Latam. Noticias del Ibex
Miguel Arias has only been on the council for a few weeks and he's already trying to make big changes. You might agree or disagree with what he wants to happen, but you can't deny his passion for what he wants to see happen. Paul Swearengin and Craig Scharton talk to Council Member Arias about issues facing the city of Fresno such as parking, dealing with fulfillment centers and much more - and also hear about his humble beginnings in a small town and the journey to Fresno government. Don't miss this interesting Two Guys discussion. Thanks to Terry's House for being our title sponsor. Check out their website here. You can also, check out Council Member Arias' City webpage here. Please comment with any thoughts you have from the podcast below or on our Facebook Page. Want to Help Support this podcast - join our Patreon Community Here.
Miguel Arias, director global de emprendimiento de Telefónica y de Wayra, entrega claves para crear empresa y no fracasar en el intento.
La primera vez que pudimos hablar con Miguel Arias en nuestro podKast, su rol era el de COO de Carto. Desde entonces Miguel ha dado un giro importante a su carrera y hoy en día es Global Entrepreneurship Director en Telefónica y director de Wayra. En este nuevo episodio hablamos con Miguel Arias de este cambio de aires y de lo que está haciendo hoy en día en Telefónica y Wayra: - Qué es Wayra y qué es Open Future - Cómo ha evolucionado Wayra en los últimos años y cuál es su foco en estos momentos - Cómo Wayra y Telefónica adapta su estrategia según el país en el que opera: lo que se aplica en Londres, ¿sirve también en Latam? - Con qué tipo de startups están Wayra y Telefónica interesadas en trabajar y cómo pueden hacer estas startups para acercarse a un gigante así - Cuáles son los pros y los cons de que una startup reciba inversión de Telefónica - El papel del corporate en el ecosistema: ¿cliente o M&A?
Hablamos con Sergio Álvarez Leiva (CPO) y Miguel Arias (COO) sobre la trayectoria de Carto y la experiencia de crear y escalar un producto SaaS en España.
Música y canciones que nos acercan al Señor. Los videos originales se pueden ver en www.magnificat.tv Otros canales de comunicación de Magnificat TV de los Franciscanos de María: Podcast:http://goo.gl/FRhNmS Youtube : http://goo.gl/slj8LL Twitter: https://twitter.com/MagnificatTV Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Magnificattv
Descripcion del programa Siguiendo con la estela de las alternativas a la educación tradicional, esta vez hablamos de las plataformas de formación online como Udacity, pionera en la formación de nuevas hornadas de desarrolladores y programadores a distancia. Además, entrevistaremos a Alvaro Sanmartín, responsable de desarrollo europeo de Udacity, el cual nos explicará cuáles son las claves y frenos para la formación hoy en día.Además, entrevistaremos a Alvaro Sanmartín, responsable de desarrollo europeo de Udacity, el cual nos explicará cuáles son las claves y frenos para la formación hoy en día. ¿Te lo vas a perder? Recomendaciones Preguntas rápidas: Álvaro Sanmartín Quién me ha inspirado: Mis padres Imprescindible: El tema que te apasione A quién entrevistar: Felipe Navío A quién entrevistar: Miguel Arias A quién entrevistar: Sergio Álvarez Leiva Temas a tratar: ¿Cómo encontrar el tiempo para aprender cada día? Contacta con Álvaro Sanmartín Web Twitter Links del programa Udacity Code School CodeAcademy egghead KHAN Academy Pluralsight treehouse Recomendaciones de Nacho FreeCodeCamp DESIGNCUTS
Música y canciones que nos acercan al Señor. Los videos originales se pueden ver en www.magnificat.tv Otros canales de comunicación de Magnificat TV de los Franciscanos de María: Podcast:http://goo.gl/FRhNmS Youtube : http://goo.gl/slj8LL Twitter: https://twitter.com/MagnificatTV Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Magnificattv
(June 21, 2009) Miguel Arias interview; Communion for the sick, Claudio Otaiza, Age and Happiness, Musical Meditation