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In this episode of the AdTechGod Podcast, host AdTech God speaks with Moe Chughtai, the global vice president at MIQ, about his journey in the advertising industry, the evolution of connected TV (CTV) and streaming, and the importance of data and measurement in advertising strategies. They discuss the transition from traditional linear TV to streaming platforms, the role of AI in sales enablement, and the future trends in the advertising space. Mo shares insights on the collaborative nature of the industry and the excitement that comes with constant change. Takeaways Moe Chughtai is a child of immigrants, shaping his worldview. He transitioned from a potential medical career to marketing. MIQ has grown from 200 to 1500 employees in eight years. The importance of personal connections in corporate culture. CTV is becoming a primary platform for marketers. Brands are looking for total video strategies, not just CTV. AI is transforming sales enablement in advertising. Collaboration is key in the evolving ad tech landscape. The advertising industry is experiencing significant maturity. Constant change in advertising keeps professionals engaged. Chapters 00:00 Introduction to Moe Chughtai and MIQ 01:36 Moe's Journey into Advertising 04:01 Transition from Adobe to MIQ 07:36 The Evolution of CTV and Streaming 10:17 Bridging the Gap: Data and Measurement in Advertising 12:54 Balancing Linear and CTV Strategies 15:05 Future Trends in Streaming and AI 20:58 The Excitement of the AdTech Industry Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
AdTech Heroes - Interviews with Advertising Technology Executives
In this episode, Dal speaks with Stephen Emsall, Head of Advanced TV at MiQ, about the evolving landscape of Connected TV (CTV) and its implications for the advertising industry. The conversation covers key learnings from 2024, predictions for 2025, the enduring relevance of linear TV, and the growing performance marketing aspect of CTV. Stephen emphasizes the need for audience-first approaches and the role of MIQ's TV intelligence tool in navigating the CTV ecosystem.
Chris Small from ABC Business Sales summed up the business loan scheme beautifully on the Mike Hosking Breakfast this morning: it was a balls up that was going to, has indeed, and will continue to cost the country hundreds of millions of dollars. Let me take you back to March 2020. Business loans were made available in May – the announcement was made in March for small businesses affected by Covid-19. Businesses were offered up to $20,000, plus $1800 per full time employee. More than 129,000 businesses took out loans worth $2.4 billion. Borrowers had five years to repay the loan, and many would reach that limit from June. It was never going to work. And the worst thing was everybody could see that it was not going to be a boon for the businesses that they thought it was, that it was not going to be a temporary stopgap, that the audits that Grant Robertson said would be put in place to protect the scheme were not going to work. Everybody could see that, everybody that is, but the previous government. “In hindsight if the previous regime could look back, I'm sure they would wind it back and put a few more bells and braces in there because what they're now finding is people basically took the money thinking it was unlikely they were going to pay it back. And sure enough, they haven't paid it back, with little consequences. No security was taken in the way of PG's (personal guarantees) or any GSAs over their businesses, so it was a real free hit for the business owner at the time. “Because there was no security taken, so the houses aren't at risk, no personal guarantee, so they can't get personally bankrupted, all the IRD, from what I've seen or read, can do is put in this default interest rate. Yes, that will keep mounting up and capitalising, and certainly a sole traders position, may just walk away and set up new entity or just ignore it. But I don't think it's realistic for the IRD to go around and just from an administration perspective, there's 120-odd thousand people to chase. It's just not going to happen. So it's just it was a balls up that's going to cost us hundreds of millions of dollars, unfortunately.” Yep, another one. That was Chris Small from ABC Business Sales on the Mike Hosking Breakfast this morning. Utter madness. And at the risk of triggering those of us who did not have a good time under the previous administration, we do have to discuss it as the mistakes made then must never be made again. They have to be acknowledged – that it was a balls up. He put it beautifully. There were many of them and we mustn't do them again. I think we can take it as read that high trust models don't work, we tried that experiment, didn't work. Didn't work for the business loans, didn't work for MIQ stays. BusinessDesk wrote back in 2023 that hotels that provided rooms for the government's controversial quarantine system received more than $1 billion. Just $187 million has been recovered by the government from people who had to pay for their MIQ stay, another $26 million is outstanding. So it didn't work there. High trust didn't work when it came to policing. It didn't work when it came to allowing troublesome tenants to stay on in Kainga Ora accommodation. I can't think of a single sector where it actually worked. I remember my accountant saying to me, she had businesses who were taking the loan and saying, oh, we're not going to pay it back. Why should we? There is absolutely no need to – if they're stupid enough to give us the money, we're not going to pay it back. Surely there is a moral authority that if you can, you should. And if you can and you won't, then you must never, ever talk about beneficiaries bludging off the system ever again. Same with student loan defaulters, you have no moral high ground at all. We can't move on. It'd be wonderful to be able to move on, but we can't move on when we are paying and paying and paying for stupid, ill-considered poorly advised decisions. And we're all going to be paying for a very, very long time to come. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== LECCIÓN DE ESCUELA SABÁTICA I TRIMESTRE DEL 2025Narrado por: Miguel PáezDesde: Bogotá, ColombiaUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist ChurchVIERNES 07 DE FEBREROPARA ESTUDIAR Y MEDITAR: Lee el capítulo titulado “El amor de Dios por el hombre” en las páginas 7 a 14 del libro El camino a Cristo, de Elena de White. “La Palabra de Dios revela su carácter. Él mismo ha declarado su infinito amor y piedad. Cuando Moisés oró: ‘Te ruego que me muestres tu gloria!', el Señor respondió: ‘Yo haré pasar toda mi bondad delante tu rostro' (Éxo. 33:18, 19). Esta es su gloria. El Señor pasó delante de Moisés y proclamó: ‘¡Jehová, Jehová! Dios fuerte, misericordioso y piadoso; tardo para la ira y grande en misericordia y verdad, que guarda misericordia a millares, que perdona la iniquidad, la rebelión y el pecado' (Éxo. 34:6, 7). Él es tardo para enojarse y ‘de grande misericordia' (Jon. 4:2), ‘porque se deleita en la misericordia' (Miq. 7:18). “Dios ha unido nuestros corazones a él con señales innumerables en los Cielos y en la Tierra. Él ha procurado revelársenos mediante las cosas de la naturaleza y de los más profundos y tiernos lazos terrenales que el corazón humano pueda conocer. Sin embargo, estas cosas solo representan imperfectamente su amor. Y, a pesar de que se han dado todas estas evidencias, el enemigo del bien cegó la mente de los hombres para que ellos miraran a Dios con temor, para que lo considerasen severo y no perdonador. Satanás indujo a los hombres a concebir a Dios como un ser cuyo principal atributo es una justicia inexorable; es decir, como un juez severo, un duro y estricto acreedor. Pintó al Creador como un ser que está vigilando con ojo celoso para discernir los errores y las faltas de los hombres para así poder castigarlos con juicios. Fue para disipar esta sombra oscura, para revelar al mundo el infinito amor de Dios, que Jesús vino a vivir entre los hombres” (Elena G. de White, El camino a Cristo, p. 10). PREGUNTAS PARA DIALOGAR: 1. ¿Por qué es tan importante reconocer que la gloria de Dios está ligada a su bondad? ¿Cómo corrige esto una teología de la gloria divina que enfatiza solo el poder sin destacar simultáneamente el amor y el carácter de Dios? 2. ¿Has cuestionado alguna vez la bondad de Dios? ¿Conoces a alguien que haya cuestionado la bondad de Dios por la forma en que actúan a veces quienes dicen seguir a Dios, o simplemente por todo el mal que existe en el mundo? ¿Cómo has resuelto eso para ti mismo y cómo podrías ayudar a alguien que esté luchando con la cuestión de la bondad de Dios? Ver la lección de la próxima semana. 3. Desarrolla en tu clase la respuesta a la pregunta del lunes. ¿Cómo nos ayuda la realidad del Gran Conflicto a entender todo el mal que existe?
Episode 49 is with Peter Minor (Absolute Climate) and Travis Caddy (Evident)Despite all of the recent progress to integrate carbon removal in carbon markets globally, a significant problem remains. Existing market mechanisms continue to commoditize carbon removal credits that we haven't effectively standardized yet. Carbon credits are sold as interchangeable units despite differences in how project quality is evaluated. Absolute Climate thinks it has solved this problem with the Absolute Carbon Standard and its partnership with longstanding registry Evident. I speak to Peter Minor and Travis Caddy about this standard and exciting new partnership.In this episode, Na'im, Peter and Travis discuss:* the importance of standardized carbon removal measures;* Creating conflict-free certification mechanisms;* the creation of the Absolute Carbon Standard by Absolute Climate* the role of Evident in offering independent certification* the challenges of commoditizing carbon credits* the significance of separation of responsibilitiesRelevant Links:* Absolute Climate - Website* Evident - Website* C-Capsule - Website* A Standardized Test for Carbon Removal - Heatmap News* Absolute Carbon Standard V1.0About Peter:Peter Minor is a co-founder and CEO of Absolute Climate, and a veteran of the carbon removal industry. He previously served as the Director of Science & Innovation at Carbon180, the premier US federal policy organization for carbon removal. While there, he contributed to the development of key programs like the DOE Regional DAC Hubs, and pioneered core principles required for high-accountability MRV. Peter is also a technical reviewer for the carbon removal XPRIZE and steered development of Activate's Carbon Management vertical. Always the optimist, Peter is a firm believer in humanity's capacity to solve big problems.About Absolute Climate:Absolute Climate develops industry-leading carbon removal standards and methodologies without the conflicts of interest. They partner with registries, rather than operating their own, in order to better align incentives with climate impact. Their first product is the Absolute Carbon Standard, the first “standardized test” for carbon removal. It applies the same universal criteria to all projects, providing apples-to-apples quality comparisons even for dramatically different approaches.About Travis:Travis Caddy is the Business Development Director of Evident, where he is leading growth and partnerships across multiple registries certifying the Clean Economy. Beyond renewable energy, he also supports market design and implementation for other emerging asset classes, including carbon removal, sustainable aviation fuel and biomethane. Travis holds a Bachelor of Arts from University College London and is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society in London. About Evident:Evident is the world leader in certification of the Clean Economy and provider of the world's most widely used registry of environmental assets, serving customers in over 140 countries. Evident collaborates with governments and standard-setters to implement robust, credible certification standards that encourage transition to a certified, global Clean Economy. Evident manages the I-REC certificate service for electricity, MiQ certificate service for low-methane natural gas, among others.This episode was made possible thanks to the generous support of the Consecon Foundation.This episode was created and published by Na'im Merchant. Episode production and content support provided by Tank Chen.Na'im Merchant is the co-founder and Executive Director of Carbon Removal Canada, a policy initiative focused on scaling carbon removal in Canada. He is on the advisory board of the Carbon Removal Standards Initiative and Terraset, and a former policy fellow with Elemental Impact. He previously ran carbon removal consulting practice Carbon Curve, and publishes The Carbon Curve newsletter and podcast. Every two weeks, Na'im will release a short interview with individuals advancing the policies, technologies, and collective action needed to scale up carbon removal around the world.Tank Chen is the Head of Content and Community at CDR.fyi, a public benefit corporation dedicated to accelerating carbon removal through transparency. He is also the co-founder of CDRjobs, a career platform for the carbon removal industry. Based in Taiwan, Tank is a carbon removal advocate focused on educating policymakers, corporate leaders, and the public on the importance of carbon removal, using data-driven insights to support communication and policy advocacy.If you enjoyed this episode, please subscribe to this podcast on your favorite podcast app or subscribe via The Carbon Curve newsletter here. If you'd like to get in touch with Na'im, you can reach out via LinkedIn. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit carboncurve.substack.com
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1======================================================================VIRTUOSADevoción Matutina Para Mujeres 2024Narrado por: Sirley DelgadilloDesde: Bucaramanga, Colombia===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================19 DE DICIEMBREHACE FALTA MÁS QUE BIOLOGÍA«Si te das a ti mismo en servicio del hambriento, si ayudas al afligido en su necesidad, tu luz brillará en la oscuridad, tus sombras se convertirán en luz de mediodía» (Isa. 58: 10).En una ocasión, una mujer le contó al renombrado autor Daniel Goleman una experiencia que acababa de vivir. Hacía poco tiempo que había fallecido su hermana, cuando esta mujer recibió la llamada telefónica de un amigo cuya hermana también había fallecido. El hombre le dio el pésame y ella, conmovida por aquel gesto, le abrió su corazón, contándole los detalles de la larga enfermedad por la que había atravesado su hermana antes de morir. De pronto, mientras contaba cosas tan privadas, profundas y dolorosas, se percató de un sonido al otro lado de la línea: las teclas de una computadora siendo presionadas a gran velocidad. Inmediatamente, al darse cuenta de que el amigo estaba haciendo dos cosas a la vez, la mujer fue vaciando de contenido sus comentarios hasta que la conversación se volvió superficial y se fue apagando por completo. Poco después, colgaron. *Parece obvio que el simple hecho de que en nuestro cerebro haya unas neuronas espejo que nos impulsan a contagiarnos de las emociones que experimentan los demás no es suficiente base para la compasión. Saber racionalmente que otra persona se siente mal no basta para garantizar una acción compasiva, misericordiosa y amorosa de nuestra parte. Con echar un vistazo a nuestro mundo nos damos cuenta de que falta un ingrediente más, pues la compasión, la misericordia y el amor brillan por su ausencia. Si bien las neuronas espejo son la base de la empatía, ese recurso biológico de nuestros cerebros no es suficiente para hacer justicia y amar la misericordia (ver Miq. 6: 8). Hace falta compromiso cristiano; hace falta una conciencia relacional basada en la fe y el amor.El paso que va de llamar a alguien que sufre porque sentimos que es lo correcto, a interesarnos de verdad por ese alguien, requiere el concepto previo de que Dios nos ha creado a todos y nos llama a ser luz, salvación y apoyo a la humanidad que sufre. Es solo, así como, además de sentir de manera intuitiva y refleja lo que otro siente (neuronas espejo), podemos responder compasivamente (compromiso cristiano). Esa suma de neuronas espejo más compromiso cristiano es lo que nos predispone hacia la bondad ejercida de una manera coherente, no para acallar culpas internas o para sentirnos mejor por ayudar a alguien, sino porque es nuestra misión, nuestro llamado.Una empatía real basada en principios bíblicos sólidos es una compañera perfecta para toda mujer cristiana.«La verdadera religión es el ejercicio de la compasión, la misericordia y el amor». Elena G. de White.* Inteligencia social, cap. 7.
Shelley West is the Chief Revenue Officer at Elite High Performance—an organization specializing in human-centric mindset coaching and high-performance leadership training for teams and individuals. Born in Manchester, England, and raised in Toronto, Shelley's early years were defined by her passion for dance. She studied different types, taught, and graduated from the prestigious Randolph College for the Performing Arts. Changes to the professional dancing landscape forced Shelley to rethink her pro career. She pivoted into media with Brunico, before assuming sales leadership roles with Rogers, Cimoroni & Company, and MiQ. Shelley West joins me to chat about her dancing career, why she retired from dance at 23, her move into media sales & adtech, and how Elite High Performance is redefining leadership development. **Subscribe to the Media People Newsletter** mediapeople.beehiiv.com/subscribe **Listen & Subscribe** www.mediapeople.ca www.youtube.com/@mediapeoplepodcast www.instagram.com/vicgenova/ www.tiktok.com/@media.people.podcast
Christmas and New Year's leave has been cancelled for military personnel set to cover for striking from non-uniform staff. The Defence Minister last month invoked the Defence Act, letting uniformed servicemen and woman fill the gaps. Advocacy group Mission Homefront has written to Judith Collins - saying that's unprecedented and unacceptable. Co-founder Hayden Ricketts says uniformed staff already give so much. "You know, those uniformed staff have worked their butts off during the Covid-19 response, they occupied and looked after our country and MIQ and the managed isolation facilities, they've done their best through Cyclone Gabrielle." LISTEN ABOVESee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
I am glad the Covid report has been released. Why wouldn't it be? It's ours, we lived it and are living through it. It says a lot of stuff you thought it would say; compulsory mandates were one of the most controversial measures. No kidding. The country was not prepared for border closures or MIQ. Really? They run the line that we had fewer infections and therefore fewer deaths than other countries. I note Chris Hipkins yesterday was still rejecting the idea that vaccine mandates were a mistake. And in that is the problem. Incompetent Governments lead to incompetent responses. Arrogance leads to an inability to do things differently, which is I think in part, the point of the report, to give us a blueprint for next time. The blueprint says mandates were a mistake. Hipkins, who could be Prime Minister as soon as 2026, seems to think he is more right than the inquiry. So are we any further ahead? You need to also factor in that phase one, despite what Tony Blakely told us yesterday, is not the full picture. It's a comprehensive picture within the guidelines he was given. The guidelines he wasn't given are why we are having phase two. I still argue it would have been better if we had taken the British route, the adversarial approach. Put Ardern and Hipkins and Bloomfield on the stand and ask some penetrating questions. It doesn't have to be a court to illicit material this report hasn't found. The really important part for me is not what we did then, but what the outworking of what we did then produced what we have now. What we are still living through and why, because what we have now is so badly damaged. We must learn not to do what we did last time. The kids not at school, the behaviour of so many that has been out of control, the moral fatigue, the social decline and the malaise. That is not measured totally in statistics. But the overarching feeling is this country is a shadow of what it once was. That's the real story of Covid. But I still maintain that you can write all the reports you want and inquire until you are blue in the face, but a pandemic is luck. If the Government that's in on the day the pandemic arrives is good, you will be OK. If it's Labour 2017-23, well, you don't need the report. Just look at us. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
This Covid phase one report – the verdict is in, and it's pretty much ‘guilty your honour'. Fine to begin with, and then they as the single podium of truth basically went too far, for too long. Tell us something we don't know. Trust in our institutions as shot, media took a hammering —and rightly so in some cases— Labour supporters and hysterical scientists and other groups went full militant. I never spoke about the messages I got from some of them during my interviews, challenging old Jacinda Ardern during that period, especially those outside of Auckland during the lockdown to end all lockdowns. They were threats of beatings on my social media, loads of homophobia, I was killing people with my questions, there was hate, there was vitriol. Now I'm not complaining about this, this is part of my job. But it just shows how wacko everyone got. Which is not to say the anti-mandate lot were angels either, but what we, the public were fed was a meal from only one of the two menus. Then there was the MIQ cruelty – you will never get another opportunity to kiss a loved one goodbye. Never. I watched Hipkins in his media stand up yesterday with the usual half mere culpa lines. We can learn lessons from this in the future and the benefit of hindsight is a great thing. What's the problem with that? Well, there were plenty of people with plenty of advice at the time. He could have listened to but chose not to. Instead, they labelled the protest as a river of filth, we wrote off entire sectors of scientific community in the name of social cohesion. Like a pack of rabid dogs attacking a limp lamb – that's what we were, we turned into that. Had they listened to Auckland, to the Plan Bers, some economists and experts and other fields, to Lady Deborah Chambers who bravely put her head above the parapet on behalf of the legal fraternity, Simon Bridges basically lost his job over a Facebook post, pointing out many of the problems that turned out to be quite accurate. But now it was all Siouxsie Wiles and Co. crying because we didn't go further and go harder. And where are we now? Kids not going to school, productivity jabbed in the face, crime out of control. Mental health and anxiety, particularly for kids, also taking a hit to the face. The wait list for critical medical treatments delayed, construction stopped, projects delayed despite the Aussies being faster and looser on both counts. It was the biggest overreach of power, both in real terms and in some cases, legally, this country has potentially ever seen. And only now do they say we might reconsider forcing a barista to get a jab that they don't want. Don't get me wrong, I got the jab twice, but that was my choice to a large extent. And is this all Labour's fault? No. The bigger culprits, in my mind: media hype, social media pylons, and unwavering support for the party pushing that lockdown agenda. The problem was tunnel vision. It was arrogance, ignorance or both, and now we're all paying a very hefty price tag for it. There was just one thing missing from yesterday. Any response from the four horsemen of the Apocalypse: Grant Robertson, Jacinda Ardern, Ashley Bloomfield, and Adrian Orr. Where were they? Grant's on $800,000 at Otago University, Orr's doing victory laps for cutting rates he hiked too high and then flooding the country with cash. And Adern, remember, she said her single biggest driver in politics was to fix child poverty, now living in New York while the cost of living crisis she helped engineer, then deny was existing, hammers some of our poorest, and to use a word they made famous during the Covid catastrophe, our most vulnerable. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ben Goodfriend sits down with Moe Chughtai, Head of Advanced TV at MIQ, for an insightful discussion tracing Moe's journey from teaching to ad tech. They explore industry challenges, including the art of simplifying programmatic advertising's technical complexities for diverse audiences—ranging from media professionals to everyday viewers. The conversation addresses pressing issues like unfilled inventory in live sports streaming and showcases innovative ad formats such as QR overlays and pause ads. They close by emphasizing the need to balance innovation with user experience and privacy, charting a thoughtful path forward as the streaming and advertising industries evolve. 00:00 Introduction and Background 03:48 Teaching and Transition to Advertising 08:24 Programmatic 101 11:16 Unfilled Inventory in Live Sports 20:11 Interactive Ad Units 29:29 Privacy Concerns and User Perception 32:53 Pause Ads 46:42 Political Advertising in CTV 53:33 Transparency 56:02 AI's Impact on Advertising Find us at www.amagi.com Send us questions and comments to ben@amagi.com Produced by Next Chapter Podcasts Amagi is an award-winning media technology company that provides cloud broadcast and targeted advertising solutions to broadcast TV and streaming TV platforms. Amagi supports 800+ content brands, 800+ playout chains, and 5,000+ channel deliveries on its platform in over 150 countries. Learn more about us at www.amagi.com
Matt Sattel is the Chief Revenue Officer at OpenX. In his role, he leads the company's global sales and partnerships team focused on broadening OpenX's relationships with markets and agencies. He concentrates on expanding the sales organization and deepening relationships across agencies and brands. Matt came to OpenX after spending nearly four years at programmatic media partner MiQ, where he rose from director of sales to SVP, head of in-housing. He led a team focused on helping Fortune 100 brands move their programmatic business in-house through trading and ad tech expertise. Prior to MiQ, Matt held senior posts at Samba TV, Speakr and xAd, Inc., becoming a well-known industry thought leader on critical issues such as inhousing and the evolution of programmatic buying. Matt holds a B.B.A. in Marketing from the University of Florida and a certificate in Data Analytics for Business Professionals from the University of Chicago. --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/dylanconroy/support
Following our CTV roundtable last week - all about collaboration, standardisation and ‘dropping the C' - we're continuing the conversation with some of the industry's leading voices. Joining our CMO James Chandler for this episode of the podcast is MiQ's Mike Lampard, PubMatic's Tim Wilcox and Vevo's Sarah Gul to discuss key issues facing CTV, including brand safety, overcoming fragmentation and driving transparency.Book IAB Debrief here: www.iabuk.com/events-training/iab-debrief-2024 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this edition of The MadTech Podcast Special, Paul Silver, global president, corporate development, MiQ, joins ExchangeWire research lead Mat Broughton to discuss the recent resurgence in ad tech M&A, and how investment trends in the sector are set to develop going forward.
Miq në këtë episod do të ndiqni një bashkëbisedim me kolegun/mikun tim Eglent Bici, me të cilin herë pas here […] The post Ep 268 – Çfarë NUK na thuhet për Inteligjencën Artificiale! appeared first on EMI - Coaching and Consulting.
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== LECCIÓN DE ESCUELA SABÁTICA III TRIMESTRE DEL 2024Narrado por: Gustavo PérezDesde: Málaga, EspañaUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist ChurchJUEVES 22 DE AGOSTO“¿QUÉ QUIERES QUE TE HAGA?” Lee Marcos 10:46 al 52. ¿Cómo reaccionó Bartimeo al saber que Jesús estaba pasando por donde él estaba? Hasta este punto en el Evangelio de Marcos, Jesús ha estado, con pocas excepciones, pidiendo a la gente que guarde silencio acerca de sus milagros y de quién es él. En el caso de este incidente, mientras está saliendo de Jericó, un hombre ciego que mendiga junto al camino, al escuchar que está pasando por allí Jesús de Nazaret, comienza a gritar: “¡Jesús! ¡Hijo de David! ¡Ten compasión de mí!” (Mar. 10:47). En armonía con el tema revelación/secreto del libro, la multitud asume el papel de quienes piden silencio mientras tratan, insatisfactoriamente, de acallar al ruidoso mendigo. Pero Bartimeo no se inmuta, y grita aún más fuerte, “Hijo de David! ¡Ten misericordia de mí” (Mar. 10:48). Sus palabras son a la vez una confesión de fe en Jesús como el Mesías y de confianza en que puede sanarlo. El título “Hijo de David” estaba conectado en los días de Jesús con dos conceptos: la restauración de un rey en el trono de Israel (compara con Isa. 11; Jer. 23:5, 6; 33:15; Eze. 34:23, 24; 37:24: Miq. 5:2-4; Zac. 3:8; 6:12), y que este personaje sería un sanador y exorcista. Jesús se detiene y pide que llamen al hombre ciego. Significativamente, el hombre arroja su capa al acudir a Jesús. En esos días, las personas ciegas estaban en lo más bajo de la sociedad, junto con las viudas y los huérfanos. Eran individuos que estaban por debajo del nivel de subsistencia y en verdadero peligro. La capa constituía la seguridad de aquel hombre. Despojarse de ella significaba que tenía fe en que Jesús lo sanaría. Jesús nunca decepciona a las personas. Por cierto, en los evangelios, todo aquel que acude a él por ayuda siempre la recibe. Jesús hace la misma pregunta que a Santiago y Juan en Marcos 10:36: “¿Qué quieres que te haga?” (Mar. 10:51). Sin la menor duda, el hombre ciego pide recibir la vista, la que es inmediatamente restaurada por Jesús. El exciego sigue entonces a Jesús en el camino. Esta historia es la conclusión de la sección de Marcos acerca del discipulado; cierra el paréntesis que fue abierto con la curación de un ciego en Marcos 8:22 al 26. Las dos historias ilustran el hecho de que el discipulado consiste en ver el mundo con nuevos ojos, a veces no claramente al principio, pero siempre siguiendo a Jesús en armonía con su conducción. ¿De qué maneras has clamado a veces: “Jesús, Hijo de David, ten misericordia de mí”? ¿Qué sucedió entonces y qué aprendiste de esta experiencia?
AdTechGod sits down with Rob NormanRob has been in the advertising and marketing industry for over 40 years , most notably as the Chief Digital Officer of Group M Worldwide and advisor and Director for multiple companies including Piano, Simpli Fi, MIQ and more.. His insights and perspectives are ones I've been eagerly wanting to dive into.Rob is not just a respected figure in the field; he's a pioneer who has dedicated his career to improving marketing solutions and products. His entrepreneurial drive and commitment to innovation is admirable.Thank you adquick for sponsoring this episode.
There were no fireworks for the Democratic Party during last night’s debate between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump. While Trump made false claims throughout the night, Biden did little to assuage fears that he’s not up to the job. We’ll get into how the Biden campaign’s fundraising strategy is already shifting and what it might mean for downballot races. Then, we'll weigh in on Fourth of July travel and drone light shows during a game of Half Full/Half Empty! Here’s everything we talked about today: “Debate takeaways: Trump confident, even when wrong, Biden halting, even with facts on his side” from AP News “US Presidential Debate Viewership Analysis” from MiQ “Biden-Trump presidential debate draws 48 million TV viewers” from Axios “Politics and ‘a tale of different economies”’ from Marketplace “Why taxpayers keep footing much of the bill for new sports stadiums” from Marketplace “Google puts an end to continuous scroll” from Marketplace “MTV News Website Goes Dark, Archives Pulled Offline” from Variety “Fourth of July travel is set to break records. Here’s how to plan.” from The Washington Post “Why drones are replacing fireworks shows” from National Geographic “We RICK ROLLED The City of Austin, TX With 600 Drones” on YouTube We love to hear from you. Send your questions and comments to makemesmart@marketplace.org or leave us a voicemail at 508-U-B-SMART.
Coming from a humble background, Charlie Neer experienced financial turmoil early in his life. But over the years, he has found success in multiple senior executive positions at various organizations — currently as Chief Revenue Officer (US) at MiQ. Two years ago, Charlie became a client of Centura Wealth Advisory (Centura). In this episode, Centura's … Read More Read More
On today's MadTech Daily, Dot brings you all the latest, including the struggles of the delivery giants Deliveroo, Just Eat Takeaway et al, The Trade Desk ranking premium publishers and China's court backing Apple in a row over app store fees. Further reading • MiQ's Michael Lampard Chisvo on fragmentation in CTV • Audigent's Drew Stein on Why Ad Tech is not Big Tech
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1=======================================================================VIRTUOSADevoción Matutina Para Mujeres 2024Narrado por: Sirley DelgadilloDesde: Bucaramanga, Colombia===================|| www.drministries.org ||===================05 DE MAYOCUIDA TU CORAZÓN- 2A PARTE"Así como el Señor los perdonó, perdonen también ustedes" (Col. 3:13, RVC).Perdonar no solo es clave para la salud física de nuestro corazón, sino que es el corazón mismo de la vida cristiana. "Cristiano", como su nombre indica, es quien «profesa la fe de Cristo», y Cristo vino al mundo para perdonarnos y reconciliarnos con Dios. Por eso, así como Dios nos perdonó a nosotros en Cristo, nosotros hemos de ser compasivos unos con otros y perdonarnos mutuamente (Efe. 4:32); «porque si ustedes perdonan a otros el mal que les han hecho, su Padre que está en el cielo los perdonará también a ustedes» (Mat. 6: 14). Ese perdón, el perdón del Padre, es lo que un cristiano más anhela.Cuando hablamos de perdón, siempre pensamos en lo difícil que es para nosotras perdonar a alguien, y hacemos un análisis racional de cómo lograr algo tan difícil; pero sería más interesante, cuando pensamos en el perdón, hacer un análisis espiritual de las ofensas que nosotras hemos cometido contra otros y cómo Dios nos ha perdonado cosas que nosotras no somos capaces de perdonar. No se trata apenas de lo que los demás hacen contra mí, como si fuéramos víctimas inevitables de la maldad ajena; se trata también del mal que nosotras hacemos, convirtiendo a otros en víctimas de nuestros errores. El evangelio mismo es un llamado a aceptar el perdón que Dios nos da (porque, admitámoslo, somos pecadoras reincidentes y necesitamos ese amor perdonador para recuperar la paz mental), y a pasar esa bendición perdonando a otros, ayudándolos así a conocer mejor a Dios, el gran Perdonador.«Dios nos rescató de la oscuridad en que vivíamos, y nos llevó al reino de su amado Hijo, quien por su muerte nos salvó y perdonó nuestros pecados» (Col. 1: 13-14, TLA). Esa capacidad infinita de perdonar es una luz en sí misma y, ser luz, es otro de los llamados que nos hace el evangelio: «Procuren ustedes que su luz brille delante de la gente, para que, viendo el bien que ustedes hacen, todos alaben a su Padre que está en el cielo» (Mat. 5:16). Somos luz a medida que vamos reflejando el carácter de Dios; y este carácter es, sobre todo, perdonador: «¿Qué Dios hay como tú, que perdone la maldad y pase por alto el delito? [...] Tu mayor placer es amar» (Miq. 7: 18). Ser luz para rescatar a otros de la oscuridad, así como Dios nos rescató un día a nosotras de nuestra propia oscuridad, es un maravilloso privilegio. Para brillar hay que perdonar.Así de intricado está el perdón con el amor que debe permear la vivencia cristiana. Nuestra luz irá en aumento a medida que perdonar se vaya convirtiendo en nuestro mayor placer, es decir, nuestra forma de vivir auténticamente lo que es amar. Podemos empezar con esta oración: Señor, enséñame a reflejar tu amor a través del perdón."Perdonen, y se les perdonará".Jesús.
Georges discusses the pivotal role of MIQ in tackling methane emissions within the oil and gas industry, emphasizing the significant environmental impact this could have by 2030.This episode dives into:The gathering of major figures and executives in the energy sector during Sarah week, including discussions centered around methane emissions.MIQ's (Methane Intelligence Quotient) crucial function in identifying and addressing methane leaks in the oil and gas industry, using existing technologies and methodologies.The role of certification and market forces in encouraging companies to reduce methane emissions, alongside the introduction of grading systems for emissions assessment.The potential environmental impact of addressing methane emissions effectively, likened to removing 1 billion cars off the road or vastly surpassing the emissions reductions from the aviation sector.The application of MIQ's certification system, which provides transparency and a standardized approach to measuring and reporting methane emissions, facilitating better industry practices and consumer choices.Insights into the technological and operational frameworks utilized by MIQ to ensure the reliability and scalability of methane monitoring.Discussions on the broader implications for the energy market, including the financial, regulatory, and competitive pressures that drive companies towards lower methane emissions.Future projections for MIQ and the methane management landscape, emphasizing the need for widespread adoption and integration into global energy systems by 2030.Find us here
Featuring guests: Damien Beauchamp of 8 Rivers, Georges Tjbosch of MIQ, Jon Norman of Hydrostor's and Katie Zimmerman of Wood Group
Lara Koenig from MiQ gives us a class on SPO for CTV.For more in-depth discussion of these topics and links to the news we discuss, subscribe to the Marketecture newsletter at https://news.marketecture.tvCopyright (C) 2024 Marketecture Media, Inc.
This week, Ben Cahill talks with Georges Tijbosch about how certifying natural gas could help create a lower-emission energy future. Georges is the CEO of a company called MIQ, or Methane IQ. MIQ is a global leader in methane emissions certification. It aims to create transparency by providing buyers with information about the emissions associated with the natural gas they are purchasing. Read More: Why Methane & Certification?
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== LECCIÓN DE ESCUELA SABÁTICA I TRIMESTRE DEL 2024Narrado por: Gustavo PérezDesde: Málaga, EspañaUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist ChurchMARTES 19 DE MARZOSEÑOR, "QUIÉN HABITARÁ EN TU SANTUARIO? Lee Salmo 15. ¿Quiénes son las personas dignas de adorar en la presencia de Dios? La respuesta que se da en este salmo es el resumen de los requisitos ya dados en la Ley de Dios y en los profetas: aquellos cuyas acciones (“anda en integridad y practica la justicia”) y carácter (“en su corazón”) (ver Deut. 6:5; Miq. 6:6-8) son un reflejo de Dios. El Santuario era un lugar santo, y todo en él, incluidos los sacerdotes, estaba consagrado. Por ende, la santidad es un requisito obligatorio para entrar en la presencia de Dios. La santidad de Israel debía ser total; debía unir la adoración con la ética y debía ejercerse en todos los aspectos de la vida. La Ley fue dada al pueblo de Dios para permitirle alcanzar su mayor potencial: vivir como un reino de sacerdotes. El sacerdocio real incluye una vida de santidad en la presencia de Dios y llevar las bendiciones del Pacto a otras naciones. Lee Salmos 24:3 al 6 y 101:1 al 3. ¿Qué significa ser santo? La “integridad de corazón” es la mayor cualidad del adorador delante de Dios. El hebreo tamim (‘perfecto', o ‘íntegro') transmite la noción de “plenitud” y “totalidad”. Una vida “íntegra” está entera, intacta y sana (Eze. 15:5). Los animales ofrecidos en sacrificio debían ser tamim, o sin defecto (Lev. 22:21-24). El habla “íntegra” es totalmente veraz (Job 36:4). Por lo tanto, alguien “íntegro de corazón” es “puro de corazón” (Sal. 24:4), o alguien que anda en integridad (Sal. 15:2). Busca a Dios (Sal. 24:6) y el perdón de Dios lo restaura (Sal. 51:2-10). Una vida intachable es el resultado del reconocimiento de la gracia y la justicia de Dios. La gracia divina inspira y capacita a los siervos de Dios para vivir en el temor del Señor, lo que significa vivir en una comunión irrestricta con Dios y en sumisión a su Palabra. El testimonio de una vida devota y piadosa rinde alabanza a Dios y no al yo. Fíjate que la mayoría de los requisitos de Salmo 15 se dan en términos negativos (Sal. 15:3-5). No se trata de ganarse el favor de Dios, sino de evitar las cosas que nos separarían de Dios. ¿Cómo podemos tomar decisiones conscientes para evitar las cosas que nos alejan de Dios? ¿Cuáles son algunas de esas cosas y cómo podemos evitar hacerlas?
====================================================SUSCRIBETEhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UCNpffyr-7_zP1x1lS89ByaQ?sub_confirmation=1==================================================== LECCIÓN DE ESCUELA SABÁTICA I TRIMESTRE DEL 2024Narrado por: Gustavo PérezDesde: Málaga, EspañaUna cortesía de DR'Ministries y Canaan Seventh-Day Adventist ChurchMARTES 12 DE MARZOSION: EL HOGAR DE TODAS LAS NACIONES Lee Salmo 87:1 y 2. ¿Qué hace de Sion un lugar tan apreciado? Salmo 87 es un himno que celebra a Sion como la ciudad especialmente elegida y amada por Dios. Los cimientos del Templo de Dios están en el monte Sion (Sal. 2:6; 15:1). En el tiempo del fin, Sion se alzará sobre todos los montes, lo que representa la supremacía soberana del Señor sobre todo el mundo (Sal. 99:2; Isa. 2:2; Miq. 4:1). Salmo 87 se refiere a Sion como “montes”, para resaltar su majestad (Sal. 133:3). Dios ama las puertas de Sion “más que todas las habitaciones de Jacob” (Sal. 87:2); lo que expresa la superioridad de Sion sobre todos los demás lugares de Israel que fueron sitios especiales de reunión del pueblo de Dios en el pasado, como Silo y Betel. De este modo, el salmo afirma que la verdadera adoración a Dios se realiza en el lugar elegido y de la forma prescrita. Lee Salmo 87:3 al 7. ¿Qué cosas gloriosas se dicen de Sion? La gloria de Sion atrae a todas las naciones hacia Dios, y así las fronteras del Reino de Dios se extienden hasta incluir a todo el mundo. Fíjate que Dios no trata a las demás naciones como ciudadanos de segunda, si bien se describe a Sion como el lugar de nacimiento espiritual de todos los pueblos que aceptan al Señor como su Salvador. El registro de las personas se hacía según el lugar de nacimiento (Neh. 7:5; Luc. 2:1-3). Tres veces el salmo afirma que las naciones nacen en Sion, lo que significa que el Señor les ofrece una nueva identidad y les concede todos los privilegios de los hijos legítimos de Sion (Sal. 87:4-6). Salmo 87 apunta a la salvación tanto de los judíos como de los gentiles, y a su unión en una iglesia mediante el ministerio redentor de Cristo (Rom. 3:22; 10:12; Gál. 3:28, 29; Col. 3:11). La descripción que hace el salmo de la prosperidad de Sion nos recuerda la visión de Daniel del Reino de Dios convertido en un enorme monte que llena toda la Tierra (Dan. 2:34, 35, 44, 45) y la parábola de Jesús sobre el Reino de Dios que se convierte en un enorme árbol que acoge a las aves del cielo (Mat. 13:32). La buena disposición de Sion a adoptar a todos los pueblos, ¿de qué manera encuentra su cumplimiento en la gran comisión de la iglesia de predicar el evangelio a toda nación (Mat. 28:18-20)? ¿Cómo encaja esta idea con nuestro llamado a predicar el mensaje de los tres ángeles?
Gas, Miq, and Lion unite to talk in circles and gang up on each other about Borderlands stuff, and IMPORTANT stuff, like what type of french fry is the best fry. They accidentally ranted for, like, six hours. Here are the highlights.Follow Gas: https://www.twitch.tv/lilgasmask666https://www.youtube.com/lilgasmask666Follow Miq: https://www.twitch.tv/miqueagulhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UChc93M9XtVkTxcUtuEY_fXAEdit by AlecTheCleric @ Transmutation Media➭ https://twitter.com/AlecTheCleric➭ https://twitter.com/Transmute_MediaStay classy, kiddos! Follow SpeakingLion on Twitch | TikTok | YouTube | Instagram | Twitter | Threads. New episodes of DLC Required every week!
Hello Well Women! Today on the show I interview Viva Asmelash. She is a passionate workplace consultant and certified inclusion strategist specializing in forward-thinking employee engagement, equity-centered strategic planning, values-driven branding, and critical team conversations. Viva's professional purpose is to create environments where people feel truly seen and are inspired to be their best and most authentic selves. She often facilitates inclusive executive group coaching, delivers engaging keynotes and panel discussions, and crafts org-wide education experiences for clients like IDEO U, MiQ, and Reading Partners. As the co-founder of Liberation Labs, she proudly co-designed the first-of-its-kind Culturally-Aware Feedback Training™. She also co-authored the viral 2023 Harvard Business Review article, Creating Psychological Safety for Black Women at Your Company.As a first-generation Eritrean-American, Viva leverages a unique, lifelong perspective on race, gender, culture, belonging, privilege, and education access. With this lens and her breadth of experience, she takes deep care in helping teams evolve their people + inclusion ethos and efforts—all in hopes of planting seeds for collective liberation and joy.We discuss:How to Gain awareness of how identity factors into our pathways to emotional and psychological safety at workHow we can Swap "saviorism" for solidarityAnd why making workplaces safer and better for Black women actually benefits everyone.In celebration of Black History Month, I also want to highlight past episodes featuring the work and lives of Black women.265 The Urgency For Equal Rights - Carol Jenkins was President and CEO of the ERA Coalition/Fund for Women's Equality, which aims to amend the U.S. Constitution to include the Equal Rights Amendment, something many Americans believe already happened.298 How to Make and Keep Friends with Dr. Marisa G. Franco author of NYT bestselling book Platonic303 When Black Women Thrive at Work with Ericka Hines, author of Black Women Thriving, a report and call to action which seeks to define what it means for Black women to thrive in the workplace and determine how they find joy, success, and stability at work.245 Leading Inside the Beltway with Dr. C Nicole Mason, the past president and chief executive officer of the Institute for Women's Policy Research, a leading voice on pay equity, economic policies, and research impacting women.The Well Woman Show is thankful for support from Collective Action Strategies - a consulting firm that supports systemic change so that women and families thrive, and by the Well Woman Life Movement Challenge Quiz at wellwomanlife.com/quiz
Hey Nudist, I am so excited to introduce you all to my friend MiQ. She's one of the first people I met on Clubhouse and she's hilarious. This week we'll have some storytime about spinning the block and the foolery that comes with it. So take some time and enjoy this long episode, and please remember to spin with caution!!!
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The news this week is that this is the month in which the Covid inquiry people will be wanting to hear from us. Epidemiologist Tony Blakely, a Kiwi living in Melbourne, was appointed to lead the investigation The key, sadly, is the terms of engagement. This is how Governments get around things You announce an inquiry and this immediately gets trouble off your back, because whatever the drama of the day is the next time the question arises you can say "we will leave that to the inquiry". If the inquiry result is bad news you release it on a Friday and hope no one notices, or if worse comes to worst, you say you accept the findings and recommendation This inquiry needed to happen given a lot of countries are having one and because there was tremendous upset and a huge array of question marks around how the pandemic was handled So far they've talked to a few at the coalface. Now it is time for the public submissions. Which means the next part is the disappointment. Whatever it says won't change anything and I think that, ultimately, is the great Covid lesson. You got what you got based on who was running the place, not because there was a playbook. If you want a good reference Britain is having their inquiry this week and one of this week's highlights has been Dominic Cummings. Dominic hates Boris Johnson. Dominic once liked Boris and worked for him, but when that changed Dominic has spent quite a lot of time and, certainly quite a lot more energy, crapping all over the Tories in a campaign of some real intensity. Part of that has played out for the cameras this week. The point being is it has less to do with Covid and more to do with politics. Dominic wants Boris to look bad. Ours will be no different. That's because, and this is the second part of the lesson, Covid is not only about who happens to be running the place but their response will almost certainly be politically motivated, not health related. They told us ours was health based. But the overlay was the Jacinda Ardern view of the world, the control freak-like approach to bossing everyone around and making astonishing amounts of rules based on not a lot. If you're an anti-vaxxer, an anti-mandater, an anti-MIQ'er then I wouldn't bother. They say they want to hear from you, but they don't. It ultimately will be a door-stop report with lots of anecdotes, a lot of praise for the difficult days and a suggestion we did amazingly. But as for light, clarity, lessons and change? Forget it. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
The media gang bid farewell to Charlie from MiQ, discuss the rise of virtual influencers and what not to do when taking selfies at work. Hosted by Bukky from Wavemaker, Charlie from MiQ, Harriet from Publicis and Jack from Craft Media.Check out some virtual influencers here:Shudu – The virtual supermodel that partnered with FentyTommy Hilfiger's Virtual Amasador, NoahOlaplex's AI team member, KaiMiquea – A 19-year-old ‘Robot' with millions of IG followersGot a media confession you need to get off your chest? Need some life advice from the gang? Submit your questions here: https://forms.gle/CXPYw4SDRSqXzZTt8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Our suited, booted and begowned gang chat British Heart Foundation, eBay Love Island, Bauer on the beach, Subway make your own and go crazy for Mimi. Hosted by Bukky from Wavemaker, Charlie from MiQ, Harriet from Publicis and Jack from Craft Media.Got a media confession you need to get off your chest? Need some life advice from the gang? Submit your questions here: https://forms.gle/CXPYw4SDRSqXzZTt8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
The media crusaders discuss why everyone's getting into gaming, why agencies should work harder for B2B brands, how B2B brands can supercharge their marketing efforts, and when sunshine yellow can secure you a mortgage. Hosted by Bukky from Wavemaker, Charlie from MiQ, Harriet from Publicis and Jack from Craft Media.Got a media confession you need to get off your chest? Need some life advice from the gang? Submit your questions here: https://forms.gle/CXPYw4SDRSqXzZTt8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Join us for a compelling conversation as Jackie engages with Sara "Axel" Axelbaum, who serves as the Global Head of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion at MiQ, a prominent programmatic media partner within the advertising technology sector. Discover Axel's remarkable journey and her unique insights into the realm of DEI, including her experience of starting a pivotal role amid a global pandemic and the outcry against racial injustice. Explore the outstanding achievements showcased in MiQ's 2023 Inclusion, Diversity, Equity, and Accountability Report, where gender pay equity was achieved. Gain valuable insights into the critical aspects of accountability, accessibility, and active allyship, essential for fostering an inclusive workplace and industry. Tune in to this discussion to understand the evolving landscape of DEI within ad tech and the profound responsibilities of organizations in embracing change, transparency, and ethical advertising practices during this era of rapid transformation. "Diversity Beyond the Checkbox" is presented by The Diversity Movement and hosted by Inc 200 Female Founders award winner, Jackie Ferguson. This show is proud to be a part of the Living Corporate network and to be produced by Earfluence.
Our fabulous four become CMOs of ITV, Roblox, X and Only Fans. What do their first 30 days in charge look like and where are the "Big Dog collabs"? Hosted by Bukky from Wavemaker, Charlie from MiQ, Harriet from Publicis and Jack from Craft Media.Got a media confession you need to get off your chest? Need some life advice from the gang? Submit your questions here: https://forms.gle/CXPYw4SDRSqXzZTt8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
In this latest MadTech Podcast Special, MiQ's James Parker joins John Still to discuss programmatic trends in APAC, how programmatic can bolster the value of OOH and CTV, some of the region-specific challenges facing programmatic, and what to expect at ATS Singapore 2023
Our media sages knock the tech giants down a peg or two, contemplate eyeball-tracking obsessives and remember to hand in their school essays. Hosted by Bukky from Wavemaker, Charlie from MiQ, Harriet from Publicis and Jack from Craft Media.Got a media confession you need to get off your chest? Need some life advice from the gang? Submit your questions here: https://forms.gle/CXPYw4SDRSqXzZTt8 Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
At Cop26 was launched the Global Methane Pledge to catalyse action to reduce methane. The problem is that no one really knew how much methane leaked nor who emitted what. Even the emitters didn't have a clear view of the problem.First came satellites, that provided a regional assessment of the problem. But they only solved a fraction of the equation. In order to get more granular and be able to precisely identify methane leaks and attribute them, new technologies had to be applied. Sensors are now carried by planes, drones or are stationary. And their constant monitoring finally allows the methane to be tracked at a micro level. The combination of those different technologies has revolutionised the tracking of methane leaks and help fix them. We have the pleasure of welcoming an old friend of the show, Gregg Rotenberg, a 20-year clean tech veteran and CEO Kairos Aerospace. Kairos is the global leader in mitigating methane emissions. Kairos and alongside others like MIQ, is firmly leading the methane chase.And it's just the beginning, because, if the US is starting to fix the problem, other countries like Venezuela, Mexico, Turkmenistan, Iraq or Libya couldn't care less and are totally irresponsible when it comes to methane. Certainly, a good subject of discussion for COP28. ----Useful links;https://kairosaerospace.com/https://www.basinwide.org/ ----The Episode is delivered in partnership with the Energy Institute. www.energyinst.org A supporter of the Methane Guiding Principles and Aiming for Zero initiatives, the Energy Institute and its industry partners are working to make energy lower carbon, safer and more efficient. ------The Episode is sponsored by PV CASE. PV CASE is the ultimate design software for solar PV developers from the earliest stages of planning all the way to the procurement phase. https://pvcase.com/RedefiningEnergy
Miqueagul makes games harder than they need to be. You probably know him from his Borderlands videos, where he makes Borderlands harder than it needs to be. Miq and Lion accidentally rant about Borderlands for 90 minutes. Go follow him.https://www.twitch.tv/miqueagulhttps://www.youtube.com/channel/UChc93M9XtVkTxcUtuEY_fXAEdit by AlecTheCleric @ Transmutation Media ➭ https://twitter.com/AlecTheCleric ➭ https://twitter.com/Transmute_MediaStay classy, kiddos! Follow SpeakingLion on Twitch | TikTok | YouTube | Instagram | Twitter | Threads. New episodes of DLC Required every week!
Miércoles XXII Semana Tiempo Ordinario Fiesta de la Natividad de la Santísima Virgen María Porque nosotros la queremos tanto???, pues hoy la palabra nos ayuda a descubrir que es lo que nosotros vemos en María, a que nos motiva… Es impresionante saber cómo cuando nos dejamos usar por Dios El hace maravillas!!! Lee los textos y atrévete como María a dejarte llevar de la mano de nuestro Señor… Miq 5, 1-4 o bien Rm 8, 28-30 Sal 112 Mt 1, 1-16.18-23
Zach welcomes Sara Axelbaum, the global head of diversity, equity, and inclusion at MiQ, to the podcast this week, and they discuss her role at MiQ, the landscape of workplace DEI today, and more. Connect with Sara on LinkedIn. https://bit.ly/3rkK0z9 Check out MiQ's official website. https://bit.ly/46Hbmzu
'Significant financial hardship, stress, and emotional strain' The Retirement Commissioner says pensioners caught out during the border closures had major difficulties navigating government bureacracy to solve problems. Some left when the trans Tasman bubble opened, and like so many other Kiwis couldn't get back home while the borders were shut. Many were faced with navigating the online MIQ lobby system, losing their pension and the threat of having to pay it back. The Retirement Commissioner wants changes from MSD, to make sure it doesn't happen again. Louise Ternouth reports.
Join us in this insightful episode as we unravel the mystery of seeing the same ads repeatedly on streaming platforms like YouTube TV, Hulu, and Peacock. We sit down with Caleb Williams and Moe Chughtai, leading figures at MiQ, a forefront player in programmatic marketing. We delve into the strategic choices behind ad repetition, discussing the roles of budget, targeting, ad inventory, and frequency capping. Listen in as we explore the psychological effect of repeated exposure to advertisements and its potential pitfalls, such as viewer ad fatigue. Advertising on streaming platforms is a delicate balancing act, and Caleb and Moe shed light on the effort that goes into creating a viewer-friendly and effective ad campaign. As a viewer, if you've ever asked yourself why you're repeatedly exposed to the same ads, this episode is a must-hear. As industry professionals, the knowledge shared in this episode provides a fresh perspective on ad strategies in the digital age. Please comment on this episode and let's continue the conversation. Guest: Caleb Williams, Senior Sales Director at MiQ Guest: Moe Chughtai, Product and Strategy Executive | Global Head of Advanced TV at MiQ Producer: Rolf Ruiz, Digital Strategist, Creative Technologist & Agricultor at LERMA/ Host: Francisco Cardenas, Principal of Digital Integration at LERMA/ Music: Pedro Lerma and the Band, LERMA/ Remember to tune in and let's demystify digital advertising together! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/lerma-agency/message
Next in Media spoke with Charlie Neer, chief commercial officer at MiQ, about why retail media is poised to dominate even further this year, whether brands are actually ready for a post-cookie world, and why in-game advertising is a sleeping programmatic giant. Guest: Charlie NeerHost: Mike ShieldsIn partnership with: Beet.TVSponsored by: MiQ (https://www.wearemiq.com/next-in-media)Produced by: Fresh Take
Next in Media talked to Morning Brew's Ryan Barwick on how the ad industry is prepping for increased regulation, why DC lawmakers may be more tuned into the inner workings of Google and Facebook than you think, and how everything has become an ad tech story. Guest: Ryan BarwickHost: Mike ShieldsIn partnership with: Beet.TVSponsored by: Miq (https://www.wearemiq.com/next-in-media)Produced by: Fresh Take
"When we talk about augmented reality to brands, we talk about enriching all of their marketing". This week on Next in Media, we spoke to Adam Shlachter, Head of Marketing, Strategic & Brand Partnerships at Niantic. Adam talked about how Niantic is bring brands into Pokemon GO, while helping to make augmented reality shopping an standard behavior. Adam is also bullish on bringing more brands to gaming, and thinks consumers are ready to start wearing digital glasses on an everyday basis. Guest: Adam ShlachterHost: Mike ShieldsIn partnership with: Beet.TVSponsored by: MiQ (https://www.wearemiq.com/next-in-media)Produced by: Fresh Take
In this episode Lona Small discussed ways lab leaders can use an innovative way to set career goals they would be excited to keep. Lona discussed the importance of setting end goals instead of means goals, in order to reach career objectives.Lona also discussed the 3 MIQ or 3 Most Important Questions made popular by Vishen Lakhani. She also mentioned the use of Vivid Vision that was discussed in detail in Episode 66: "Setting a Clear Vision for Your Medical Laboratory."Listen to the full episode to find out the details of how you could use these steps discussed in this episode to set effective career goals. Call to ActionYou can reach Lona Small directly at lonasmall@lonasmall.com if you have questions regarding this subject or you want to contact her regarding LabOPEX coaching and training. You can also catch Lona on LinkedIn under Lona Gordon Small and follow hashtag #YouAreAnEqualPartOfTheWhole.We would love to feature YOU!!! Share your favorite takeaway from today's episode or anyone from this season: Video Review Be an eLABorate Supporter! 1. Listen on directimpactbroadcasting.com, Spotify, Apple Podcast, or your favorite podcast platform2. Become a member of LabVine at labvinelearning.com and listen to eLABorate Topics podcast on VineStream3. Don't forget to subscribe to the show on your phone, tablet, or notebook so you never miss an episode! 4. Be sure to leave a comment, and share it with fellow medical laboratory professionals!5. Join our eLABorate Topics Group on LinkedIn6. Leave us a Video Review and we will feature you on our Social Media: Video Review Be a Guest on our show!If you have a leadership or laboratory message to share and would like to be a guest on the show, please reach out to us by completing the guest interest form or send us an e-mail us at elaboratetopics@directimpactbroadcasting.com. Please tune in next week to hear another amazing episode of eLABorate Topics!
Today we had the pleasure of hosting Georges Tijbosch, CEO of MiQ in our office for a special edition COBT. Georges and his team are in town for CERAWeek and have made exciting announcements during the conference. MiQ is an independent non-profit organization that set up a framework to certify natural gas graded on methane leak levels. They are largely funded by philanthropic efforts and are committed to addressing methane issues in this decade, a mission we appreciate. Jeff Tillery, Mike Bradley and I greatly enjoyed visiting with Georges. To help guide today's discussion, Georges first provided background on the organization including the formation of the group, their technical process for evaluating emissions, how attitudes around methane emissions have changed in the past few years, and the organization's interaction with the energy industry. In the past year, they have increased to certifying ~20% of US gas production. We also discuss the organization's future plans, the advantage of being an independent group, the typical methane escape associated with natural gas production, Georges' vision for ten years from now, the organization's interactions with the investment community, and natural gas as a long-term solution for Europe. Earlier this week, MiQ announced that BP has certified 100% of its U.S. onshore upstream operations with MiQ. It was an exciting time to meet with Georges! The conversation with Georges was far ranging and incredibly stimulating. For those of you like us who strongly believe in natural gas as an answer, Georges will have you thinking about not just how good an answer it can be but also about what can be the problems. You will also hear that so many of those problems are “low hanging fruit” and can be fixed and fixed soon. We are so glad Georges came by the office to visit during this busy CERA season. We look forward to staying connected with the team at MiQ and watching their progress in the years to come. Thanks to you all!