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Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/intellectual-history
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/south-asian-studies
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/language
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/indian-religions
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/religion
Surrender to God Across Languages: Multilingual Intellectual History of Premodern India (Oxford UP, 2026) explores the role of languages in the intellectual landscape of second-millennium India by way of six theological treatises composed between the twelfth and fourteenth centuries, each written by a key intellectual figure: Vātsya Varadaguru, Periyavāccān Pillai, Meghanādari Sūri, Pillai Lokācārya, and Vedāntadeśika. Drawing on theories of language politics and translation, Manasicha Akepiyapornchai proposes a new theoretical framework of "language sphere" to better capture the linguistic and intellectual interaction from a micro perspective.
| If we're talking about your private social media, you can do whatever you want! But when you're the face of your business, there's more strategy involved and you have to make decisions based on your audience. In this episode, I'm looking at 3 topics: 1. When does it make sense to post content in an additional language?2. 7 reasons why we sometimes get in our way with this – and what we can do instead3. 3 reasons why speaking to potential clients in your additional language(s) can help with visibility and credibility. The point of this episode is to be practical. To examine what is working/what could work for us in the future, some of the reasons why there's a gap between what we want to do and what we actually do, and an encouragement to move forward if this is a direction in which you want to go. It's not something that I find easy, so I also explain my plans and give myself some accountabaility by talking about them on the podcast. And of course, if you are looking for support with being more visible in English, let me know using the contact form on the show notes page and we can arrange a time to discuss it. I have a number of group and individual programmes in which I accompany people on this visibility journey. Also check my website if you'd like more details about the individual programmes.Show notes: https://englishwithkirsty.com/podcast/episode315/Home page: https://www.englishwithkirsty.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/kirsty-danielle-wolf-a8478235/
In today's episode, host James Cox sits down with internationally‑renowned singer‑songwriter, multi‑instrumentalist, and certified music therapist Harry Kappen After spending decades crafting soundscapes in the Netherlands, Harry made a life‑changing leap to Mexico City, where he's now recording his latest album After the Crossing and planning to re‑open his music‑therapy practice. Together they explore the deep connection between music and emotion, the challenges of learning a new language, and what it feels like to create an album that blends European rock roots with the vibrant spirit of his new home.Harry shares an insider's look at what it takes to become a music therapist, the daily rituals that keep his creativity flowing, and the personal stories behind standout tracks like “Distant Shore” and “Take a Step.” He also reflects on the therapeutic value of moving—both literally and artistically—and offers a heartfelt message for anyone grappling with anxiety or depression: sometimes the smallest step forward can change everything.Tune in for candid conversation, insightful anecdotes, and a fresh soundtrack for the soul. When words stumble, let Harry's music speak.
The first thing that struck me about Silke was her content. I knew she was fairly new to the freelancing world, but she was getting comments and starting conversations on her posts in a way that felt real and natural. I remember commenting on one of her posts, which led to a few more comments and we also started chatting privately.I hear so many comments about people not knowing what to post, people second-guessing themselves and in the end not sharing things, or outsourcing it all to AI and hoping for the best… I wanted to have this conversation with someone who was creating content that connects people and starts meaningful conversations.I also wanted to find out why Silke chose to focus on women's health and mental health content and to explore what happens when people don't have access to information that's relevant to them in a language that they understand.We talked about: Silke's story with languages and why she decided to focus on translating content on women's health topics How it was for Silke starting out as a freelancer in the language industry and why she set up a peer group for others in the same position How having a mentor helped Silke to gain clarity and make progress – check out Valentina Alia's episode from last week Why it's important to have business-related conversations in our additional languages Where Silke gets her inspiration for LinkedIn content and what's important to her when she writes her posts Silke's advice to others who are new in the language industry. Who is Silke?My name is Silke Kogler. I love learning foreign languages and talking about physical and mental wellbeing. That's why I recently decided to combine my two passions and become a German translator specializing in women's health and mental health. By helping international wellness brands with thoughtful and authentic translations into German, I want to empower women, especially, to educate themselves on how to live a happier and healthier life. Outside of work, I love reading all kinds of books, practicing yoga, and having deep conversations. I'm also currently taking a course on holistic women's health to deepen my knowledge and offer even better services to my clients.Find out more and access the episode links here on the show notes page: https://www.englishwithkirsty.com/podcast/episode314
Recorded May 21, 2026. A lecture by Professor Michael Cronin, Chair of French 1776, Trinity College Dublin The Trinity Long Room Hub Annual Humanities Horizons Lecture for 2026 was delivered by Prof Michael Cronin, on A STEM Strategy for Modern Languages? Mapping Ireland's Multilingual Futures. 250 years ago the first Chairs in Modern Languages in these islands were established in Trinity College Dublin. The TCD Chairs in French and German are the oldest, continuous Chairs in these languages in the world. But what of the future? How does Ireland build on its pioneering role in modern language education to make modern languages central to social cohesion, psychological wellbeing and economic prosperity on the island? The lecture argues for the benefits of a concerted strategy to make modern languages a strategic asset in the future development of our island community. About Michael Cronin Michael Cronin is 1776 Professor of French and Senior Researcher in the Trinity Centre for Literary and Cultural Translation. Michael Cronin received his BA from Trinity College Dublin, his MA from University College Dublin and his PhD from Trinity College Dublin. He has taught in universities in France and Ireland and has held Visiting Research Fellowships to universities in Canada, Belgium, Peru, France and Egypt. He is a Fellow of Trinity College Dublin, an elected Member of the Royal Irish Academy and the Academia Europaea, an Officer in the Ordre des Palmes Académiques. Michael Cronin is the author of 13 monographs, the co-editor of seven edited collections and the author of over 150 refereed articles and book chapters. His work has been translated into 16 languages including Arabic, Mandarin Chinese, Korean and Modern Greek. Among his published works are Across the Lines: travel, language, translation (Cork University Press, 2000), Translation and Globalization (Routledge, 2006), Translation and Identity (Routledge, 2006), The Expanding World: towards a politics of microspection (Zero Books, 2012), Translation in the Digital Age (Routledge, 2013), Eco-Translation: translation and ecology in the Age of the Anthropocene (Routledge, 2017), Irish and Ecology/An Ghaeilge agus an Éiceolaíocht (FÁS, 2019) and Eco-Travel: journeying in the Anthropocene (Cambridge University Press, 2022). His research interests are in the areas of eco-criticism and bio-cultural diversity. Learn more at www.tcd.ie/trinitylongroomhub
I discovered Valentina and her work a few months ago when I signed up to her newsletter. I was a silent reader for a while, but one of her newsletter topics resonated with me, so I sent an email … firstly because I think it's important to give people this feedback when we like their content, and secondly to ask Valentina whether she'd like to come on the podcast to talk about it!We talked about:Why Valentina decided to start her newsletter and her mentoring programme for freelance translators Why we don't have to be loud in order to find direct clients The link between imposter syndrome and marketing activities One step that you can take today to become more visible How we can focus more on value than just the services that we provide. And remember – if you're not a translator, these points about marketing and finding clients can be applied to other areas and industries too!If you're looking for direct clients at the moment, what would you say is the biggest challenge?Find out more about Valentina, her work, and how you can contact her by visiting the show notes page for our episode - htpps://www.englishwithkirsty.com/podcast/episode313
Speech-language pathologist Iván Campos joins the podcast to discuss multilingual assessment and intervention in the schools. Campos brings stories from his time delivering school services to students speaking Mayan languages, and he shares what he learned from that.In our conversation, he talks about dynamic assessment, collaborating with interpreters, and what the concept of translanguaging means to him professionally and as a multilingual speaker.Learn More:ASHA Voices: What Might Translanguaging Mean for Multilingual Services?Considerations in Utilizing Translanguaging Practices to Meet the Language Needs of Maya Children in U.S. SchoolsASHA Voices: A Personal and Professional Look at Multilingualism and CSDSimple Steps to Support Multilingual Students in SchoolsTranscript
Sieben Jahre Arbeit mit mehrsprachigen Familien. Was habe ich wirklich gelernt? In dieser Folge nehme ich dich mit beim Reminiszieren und teile meine sieben wichtigsten Erkenntnisse aus meiner Arbeit. Manche werden dich überraschen. Manche wirst du sofort wiedererkennen. Und eine davon hat mich selbst überrascht, obwohl sie im Nachhinein logisch ist. Die LingFLoWS®-Ausbildung startet am 1. Oktober 2026. Die ersten Plätze sind bereits vergeben, die Frühbuchaktion läuft noch. Trag dich jetzt in die Infoliste ein. Den Link findest du direkt in den Show Notes.
Multilingual artist, poet, essayist, musician premiers his new work NO MORE ANIMALS with his original music.
In this final episode of the school year with ARISE, we sit down with special guests Dr. Erin Papa and Alicia Pratt from the Coalition for a Multilingual Rhode Island.We discuss the profound ways language shapes our fundamental identity, connects us to our heritage, and builds community.We share powerful personal stories about navigating the stigmas of accents, the erasure that comes with anglicized names, and the complexities of code-switching and internalized racism. Finally, the conversation tackles systemic issues in the education system, highlighting the push for the Support and Access to Bilingual Education Act and the importance of implementing research-backed dual-language programs in public schools to celebrate students' home languages rather than erasing them.#Multilingualism #BilingualEducation #CulturalIdentity #LanguageAdvocacy #DualLanguagePrograms #RhodeIslandEducation #StudentVoices #HeritageLanguage #SteamboxPodcast #EducationReform
Feeling ready and being ready aren't the same! One of them can be influenced by a whole host of unrelated factors and the other one is based on facts. One depends on your mood, how much you want to listen to imposter syndrome today, or whether your old friends procrastination or perfectionism are knocking on your door. The other one is far more something that you can control.Taking the next step in any journey can be a bit scary because we're venturing into the unknown.But my question for you today is … is there something that you've been putting off doing, either in your business or personal life, because you don't yet “feel ready”? Is there anything you can do, or anyone who could help with that – to get from where you are to where you want to be?And of course, if it has something to do with actively using your English in spontaneous conversations, let's chat! I may be the person who can help you to move forward!You can find out more about what I offer here: https://www.englishwithkirsty.com
Hour 4 of Jake & Ben on May 13, 2026 Live at 5 - Ryan Smith's Thoughts on Potentially Trading up for Number 1 Pick, Darryn Peterson likes where is athleticism is at now, & More from the NBA Combine. Pistons vs Cavaliers Tonight Jake is Multilingual
Jake & Ben Full Show from May 13, 2026 Hour 1 Belmont University Head Coach Evan Bradds, who was an Assistant at Duke last year and previously was an Assistant for Will Hardy on the Utah Jazz, joined Jake & Ben to talk about Cam Boozer and how his game will translate to the NBA level. Top 3 Stories of the Day: Kevin Young gives a Health Update on Richie Saunders, San Antonio takes Game 5, ACC & Big 12 Commissioners now push for 24 Team CFP. Jake takes back an opinion he had yesterday Hour 2 ESPN just put out a fluffy LeBron James article. Is he trying to save his legacy in LA? Jake knows a lot of famous people. Real Golf Radio's Brian Taylor talks PGA Championship Hour 3 In case you missed it, Belmont University Head Coach Evan Bradds, who was an Assistant at Duke last year and previously was an Assistant for Will Hardy on the Utah Jazz, joined Jake & Ben to talk about Cam Boozer and how his game will translate to the NBA level. What You Got Wednesday: Best Number 2 Overall Picks in NBA History & Best Female Movie Villains Audio Vault: A SpyGate Incident has hit the EPL Hour 4 Live at 5 - Ryan Smith's Thoughts on Potentially Trading up for Number 1 Pick, Darryn Peterson likes where is athleticism is at now, & More from the NBA Combine. Pistons vs Cavaliers Tonight Jake is Multilingual
It's been decades since Canada implemented an official bilingualism policy nation wide-- but the history of our two official languages in Canada goes back much further. And following a recent Macleans article questioning the validity of official bilingualism, the question remains: what is the state of bilingualism in Canada? Host Catherine Jette speaks with Dr. Luisa Veronis, Research Chair in Immigration and Franco-Ontarian communities at the University of Ottawa, to look at the historical and modern implications of Canada's language policy. Macleans Article: https://macleans.ca/politics/official-bilingualism-has-failed-canada/ We love feedback at The Big Story, as well as suggestions for future episodes. You can find us:Through email at hello@thebigstorypodcast.ca Or @thebigstory.bsky.social on Bluesky
Jadwiga is my final guest from the group of language professionals who agreed to share how they combine their love of animals, in Jadwiga's case horses, with a career in languages. You'll find out in the episode why Jadwiga wasn't able to join us for episode 300, but it was great to catch up with her this month to find out more about her … and her animals of course!We talked about : “Jadwiga's story and how she connected her career in translation with her love of horses The types of horse-related content that Jadwiga works on and what she most enjoys How Jadwiga keeps her equestrian industry knowledge up-to-date How we can be proactive in terms of identifying new opportunities and approaching potential clients in fields that interest us I particularly liked Jadwiga's take on the last point in terms of being open to identifying potential clients in the spaces where we already are and with the contacts that we already have. Sometimes you just need to have the courage to present yourself and explore those potential partnerships and collaborations.Find out more on the show notes page - https://www.englishwithkirsty.com/episode310
Teaching Conceptual Understanding in Multilingual Classrooms, authored by Juliette van Eerdewijk and Mindy McCracken, is a practical guide designed to help educators foster deep, enduring learning for multilingual students. The book introduces a concept-based curriculum that integrates theoretical explanations with actionable teaching strategies, such as translanguaging, to support diverse student populations. It provides teachers with essential resources, including sample lesson plans and reflection activities, making it a valuable tool for both pre-service and in-service professional development. Ultimately, the authors advocate for an inclusive pedagogical approach that places students' multilingual identities at the center of the classroom experience. https://www.multilingual-matters.com/page/detail/?k=9781836682752
Why Your Amazon Dashboard Is Lying to You + Remotion & Voice Cloning Reality Check | Claude Sessions Amazon Dashboard Brain, Remotion Video & ElevenLabs Voice Cloning | Claude Sessions SEO Description Shubhash Sharma on building a data brain behind your Amazon dashboard. Danny McMillan on Remotion video and ElevenLabs voice cloning realities. Episode Summary Week 3 of the month means Claude Sessions, and Danny McMillan and Shubhash Sharma are back with a double feature for Amazon and TikTok Shop sellers building their own AI tooling. Shubhash picks up from last episode's SP API and Ads API walkthrough with a hard lesson learned the wrong way: a polished dashboard wired straight into Amazon is a window with no room behind it. The numbers will lie, and you will not know when a feed silently dies. He walks through the fix: a "brain" sitting between the data sources and the dashboard. Supabase as the long term store, pgvector for unstructured stuff like contracts and reviews, n8n as the orchestration layer. Six core domains every seller shares (orders, products, analytics, ads, finance, affiliates and creators) plus an optional documents layer. He closes with a dual write migration pattern so you can flip between old and new without taking the business offline. Then Danny turns to video and voice. Remotion looks like toy town out of the box, but with the right plugins (motion blur, transitions, captions, shapes, fonts, rendering) and Claude doing the orchestration, it becomes a serious production tool that can pull in your footage, branding and design system. On the voice side, he has tested VoiceBox and F5TTS and come back to ElevenLabs Multilingual v2 at £22 a month. The missing gap everywhere is cadence. He also names the deeper bet: as the market floods with AI generated content, authentic voice becomes the differentiator that cannot be cloned. Key Topics Why dashboards lie when wired straight into Amazon, TikTok and Shopify The "brain" pattern: Supabase, pgvector and n8n as a centralised data layer The six core data domains every seller needs (plus a 7th for documents) Dual write migration so the old system and brain run in parallel Remotion as a code based video tool, and what it needs to stop looking toy town The four layer creative workflow: brief, story skeleton, treatment, scene by scene ElevenLabs vs VoiceBox vs F5TTS for voice cloning your own voice Why cadence is the last hard problem in synthetic voice The authenticity premium in an AI flooded market Timestamps [00:00] Intro and welcome back to Claude Sessions [00:34] Shubhash kicks off: where to put the data you pulled last week [01:04] "Your dashboard is lying to you" and the polished dashboard pitfall [02:32] Dashboard is a window. The brain is the room behind it [04:54] Tech stack: Supabase (Postgres), pgvector, n8n [05:54] The six fundamental data domains [06:26] Orders, products, analytics, ads, finance, affiliates and creators [08:30] The optional 7th layer: unstructured documents via pgvector [09:44] Dual write pattern for safe migration [10:48] Three takeaways: audit, list domains, build one table at a time [12:28] Danny on Remotion: code based video and why it is toy town out of the box [13:51] What is missing: motion blur, transitions, captions, shapes, beat detection [14:54] The 80+ plugin packages that turn it into a real tool [16:56] Pulling in footage, logos, design systems and free music from Pixabay [18:30] The 4 layer creative workflow: brief, story skeleton, treatment, scenes [21:15] Voiceovers: ElevenLabs Pro setup and why the £22 is worth it [22:12] VoiceBox and F5TTS field test: garbage and 5 rounds of tuning later [23:22] Why cadence is the hardest thing for AI voice to fake [25:42] How much reference audio you actually need (30 min min, 2 hours ideal) [27:25] ElevenLabs UI parameters: speed, stability, similarity, exaggeration [28:52] The authenticity premium when the market floods with AI [30:30] Key takeaways, ElevenLabs API usage and locking in your voice once [34:24] Aside: "insane" and "most" as the new AI tells [36:31] SSL 2026 wrap, 18 days out, Ritu returns next week with Japan Key Takeaways Build a brain, not just a window. A dashboard wired straight to Amazon, TikTok or Shopify has no memory. When a feed silently fails, the dashboard happily lies. Sit a Supabase + pgvector + n8n layer in between, and your dashboard becomes a view on top of a real source of truth. Six domains cover almost every seller. Orders, products, analytics, ads, finance, and affiliates / creators. Map every place each one currently lives, then consolidate one domain at a time. Start with one table (orders) and let Claude do the heavy lifting. Use dual write when migrating. Write to the old store and the new brain in parallel for a week. Compare. Flip the dashboard's read side via a feature flag. If something breaks, flip back. Zero downtime, zero fear. Remotion is a system, not a tool. Out of the box it is bare. Add the plugins (motion blur, transitions, captions, fonts, rendering), bring your own footage and design system, and let Claude orchestrate the four layer workflow: brief, story skeleton, treatment, scene by scene. ElevenLabs Multilingual v2 still wins for voice cloning. VoiceBox and F5TTS were not close. Pay the £22, use Model 2, feed it 30 minutes minimum (2 hours ideal) of clean reference audio, and lock the setup in once. Cadence is the last mile. AI can match tone and timbre. It still cannot match the rises, falls and micro pauses that make a sentence sound like you. Use scripts split into short paragraphs, generate three variants, and tune the language you use to talk to Claude until the cadence lands. Authenticity becomes the moat. As written, visual and audio AI floods every channel, the brand voice that is unmistakably human becomes the differentiator. Do not give that away to save 22 dollars a month on a podcast. Notable Quotes "Dashboard is a window. We need a room behind the window. So the brain is going to be the room behind this window." Shubhash Sharma "If any of our SaaS went offline tomorrow, will our business still have its memory? The answer is no, because we haven't stored it. All we have is rented attention." Shubhash Sharma "When you migrate to your brain, don't rip out your old system. Use dual write. Run them in parallel for a week. If something breaks, flip it back. Zero downtime, zero fear." Shubhash Sharma "Remotion out of the box isn't great. It's almost like building some slides, just one step up. You have to build it as a system of what you need." Danny McMillan "The hardest part for AI to represent is cadence. It can get the tone of your voice. That's the easy bit. But the speed and the up and down of how you talk, that's where these models still fail." Danny McMillan "In our rush to use AI, you've got to remember the market floods with it. When everything sounds like AI, the only thing left is the authentic voice for your brand." Danny McMillan Resources Mentioned Supabase : Postgres backend used as the long term data store for the seller "brain" pgvector : Postgres extension for semantic search over unstructured data (contracts, reviews, supplier emails) n8n : Orchestration layer for scheduled pulls and cron jobs with a UI Amazon Selling Partner API (SP API) : Source for orders, inventory and finance data (covered in last episode) Amazon Ads API : Source for ad spend, campaign and keyword data Remotion : Code based, React powered video creation framework ElevenLabs : Voice cloning and text to speech. Model used: Multilingual v2 (Pro plan, £22 / month) F5 TTS : Open source text to speech model tested for voice cloning VoiceBox by Jamie Pine : GitHub voice cloning desktop app tested by Danny Pixabay : Free music and sound effects used inside the Remotion workflow Loom : Source of clean voice reference audio if you record team walkthroughs Seller Sessions Live 2026 : Conference 9 May 2026, 18 days out at recording Hosts Danny McMillan : Host of Seller Sessions and Claude Sessions, founder of DataBrill, building AI native tooling for Amazon sellers. Website: https://sellersessions.com LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dannymcmillan Shubhash Sharma : Engineer building data infrastructure for Amazon and TikTok Shop sellers. Returning Claude Sessions co host. What's Next Next week: Ritu returns from Japan with three subjects covered in this month's rotation. In 18 days: Seller Sessions Live 2026 in London on 9 May. Modular format, new venue confirmed. About Seller Sessions Seller Sessions is the leading podcast for serious Amazon sellers, hosted by Danny McMillan since 2017. Claude Sessions is the AI focused monthly strand where Danny and rotating co hosts work through the practical wins, false starts and engineering reality of building with Claude, MCPs and the wider AI stack inside real seller businesses.
I've been following Cátia's blog for a while now – since the time when I first started meeting more Portuguese people and eventually decided to learn Portuguese myself. Recently I decided to find out more about her work, her blog, and why she decided to write it. So, this is that conversation! If you want to know about Portugal – places, traditions, customs, and other interesting facts – head on over to the blog. If you're learning a language other than Portuguese, stick around for the language tips – most of them can be applied to any language! We talked about:
Unveiling the Hidden Powers of Language, Law, and Sovereignty with Russell J. Gould Join us in this eye-opening episode as Russell Gould dives into the secret structures behind global systems, law, language, and sovereignty. Discover how knowledge of grammar, contracts, and history can empower individuals to reclaim their freedom and sovereignty from hidden institutions. https://www.lastflagstanding.com/ worldwidetreaty.com Key Topics: Russell Gould's background as a whistleblower exposing the hidden systems governing society The impact of birth certificates and postal systems on controlling life and sovereignty Quantum grammar and its role in rewriting legal and financial constructs The influence of maritime law, the flag, and jurisdiction on national and personal sovereignty How language structure and word interpretation affect legal and spiritual realities The significance of prefixes, suffixes, and punctuation in controlling identity and contracts The role of secret societies and hidden power structures like the Freemasons Practical steps for individuals to reclaim authority through self-governance and understanding of law The future of humanity with transparency, love, and consciousness awakening To gain access to the second half of show and our Plus feed for audio and podcast please clink the link http://www.grimericaoutlawed.ca/support. For second half of video (when applicable and audio) go to our Substack and Subscribe. https://grimericaoutlawed.substack.com/ or to our Locals https://grimericaoutlawed.locals.com/ or Rokfin www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica Patreon https://www.patreon.com/grimericaoutlawed Support the show directly: https://open.spotify.com/show/2punSyd9Cw76ZtvHxMKenI?si=ImKxfMHgQZ-oshl499O4dQ&nd=1&dlsi=4c25fa9c78674de3 Watch or Listen on Spotify https://grimericacbd.com/ CBD / THC Tinctures and Gummies https://grimerica.ca/support-2/ Our Adultbrain Audiobook Podcast and Website: www.adultbrain.ca Our Audiobook Youtube Channel: https://www.youtube.com/@adultbrainaudiobookpublishing/videos Check out our next trip/conference/meetup - Contact at the Cabin www.contactatthecabin.com Other affiliated shows: www.grimerica.ca The OG Grimerica Show Join the chat / hangout with a bunch of fellow Grimericans Https://t.me.grimerica grimerica.ca/chats Discord Chats Darren's book www.acanadianshame.ca Eh-List Podcast and site: https://eh-list.ca/ Eh-List YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@TheEh-List www.Rokfin.com/Grimerica Our channel on free speech Rokfin Leave a review on iTunes and/or Stitcher: https://itunes.apple.com/ca/podcast/grimerica-outlawed http://www.stitcher.com/podcast/grimerica-outlawed Sign up for our newsletter http://www.grimerica.ca/news SPAM Graham = and send him your synchronicities, feedback, strange experiences and psychedelic trip reports!! graham@grimerica.com InstaGRAM https://www.instagram.com/the_grimerica_show_podcast/ Purchase swag, with partial proceeds donated to the show www.grimerica.ca/swag Send us a postcard or letter http://www.grimerica.ca/contact/ ART - Napolean Duheme's site http://www.lostbreadcomic.com/ MUSIC Tru Northperception, Felix's Site sirfelix.bandcamp.com Timestamps: (00:02) Introduction to Russell Gould and his vast areas of expertise (01:15) Russell's journey as a whistleblower and his insights into postal and birth certificate systems (02:47) Timing the 1999 bankruptcy and its implications on US sovereignty (04:08) Quantum grammar and language as tools to control space and contracts (06:28) Restructuring global financial systems outside of debt and credit paradigms (08:00) The influence of secret societies and hidden power structures (11:02) The impact of 9/11 and government overreach technologies (12:43) The ongoing covert battles over jurisdiction, sovereignty, and control (14:12) The importance of neutrality and maintaining a balanced perspective (16:37) The significance of the 1776 declaration and subsequent bankruptcies (20:07) The role of treaties, flags, and legal jurisdictions in global power plays (26:12) How language and grammar can be used to create self-governance (27:42) Studying prefixes, suffixes, and grammar to free the mind and life (28:24) Multilingual quantum translation and its global impact (29:49) The three paradigms of banking—earth, divine, and celestial space (31:52) Examples of language control and the power of words (36:04) The social behavior system and putting thinking on trial (49:37) The link between grammar, binary code, and artificial intelligence (55:48) How punctuation and language shape identity and control (59:42) The illusory nature of religious texts through syntax analysis (66:22) Predictions for the future based on current awakening processes (81:40) Resources for further exploration and empowering oneself
You may remember Katharina from last year when we did an episode on the importance of networking. If you missed it, you can check back to episode 294.Today we're talking about self-care. It's something we hear about a lot, but often it can feel like an afterthought or a nice-to-have-if-we-weren't-so-busy. But especially for those of us with one-person-businesses, self-care is essential. And of course, as this is a language podcast, we also talk about how our additional languages can be part of our mindfulness activities and help us to focus on what's happening here and now … and not in all the other times and places where our mind likes to wander.We talked about
If you've been carrying the weight of your child's minority language entirely on your own — this episode is going to change how you think about multilingual parenting.This week Eva is joined by multilingual family expert Eowyn to explore one of the most undertalked truths in raising bilingual children: you cannot do this alone, sustainably. Language lives in connection — not in one determined parent pushing harder.We talk about what a 'multilingual village' actually looks like for expat families in the Netherlands, how to build one intentionally when you don't have family nearby, the practical power of language partners and community events, and why having multiple people in your child's language life changes everything.Whether you're parenting in English, Bulgarian, Spanish, French or anything in between — this conversation will leave you feeling less alone and more equipped. For international families in the Netherlands, this is the permission to stop being a one-person show.
Episode SummaryWhat do you do when you can't stop the thing you're trying to fix?Three returning guests sit down for one of the most honest conversations about public sector modernization we've had on the show.From the latest on SF's 911 cloud migration, to what it means to modernize Harry Reid International Airport in real time while simultaneously designing the technology architecture for a second commercial airport 20 miles south, to Seguin's workforce transformation from one staff member with a degree and zero certifications in 2018 to 13 degrees and 27 certifications today - join us for this powerful conversation about leadership, community, and what it means to let others carry the message.FeaturingMichelle Geddes CIO San Francisco Department of Emergency ManagementRishma Khimji CITO Clark County Department of Aviation (Harry Reid International Airport) (now CIO Greater Orlando Aviation Authority)Shane McDaniel CIO City of Seguin, TX | TAGITM Past PresidentTimestamps(04:55) - The LinkedIn Banter Origin Story(07:20) - Michelle: SF's 911 Cloud Journey & Hybrid Architecture(09:25) - ESInet, Copper Lines Failing in LA & State Partnership(11:14) - AI for Multilingual 911 Dispatch(12:47) - Rishma: Harry Reid's Second Airport - 20 Miles South(14:31) - Using General Aviation Airports as Innovation Labs(16:40) - Computer Vision at Checkpoints & the 3-Year Rolling Stack(18:23) - Shane: Seguin's Workforce Story - 0 to 27 Certifications(23:48) - The Amazon Warehouse Hire & The Best Buy Delivery Driver(36:12) - TAGITM: The Solution Is in the Room(39:13) - Leadership, Community & Letting Others Carry the MessageListen now: YouTube x Apple x SpotifyWhenever you're ready, there are 3 ways you can connect with TechTables:1.
In this episode of the Language on the Move Podcast, Emily Pacheco speaks with PhD candidate Brynn Quick (Macquarie University, Australia) about her 2025 paper, The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. The conversation focuses on language policies in healthcare, the monolingual logic, and language access. Quick, B., Piller, I., & Lising, L. (2025). The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1080/01434632.2025.2594462 Abstract. This study investigates how Australian healthcare policies imagine communication between limited English proficiency (LEP) patients and healthcare providers to occur. This is done through a work as imagined (WAI) vs. work as done (WAD) analysis of 13 Australian medical policies from four levels of governance. Findings reveal that policies mostly conceptualise the work of determining if a patient needs a professional interpreter as an act of self-assessment that patients will do themselves. When policies direct healthcare staff to assess patients' English language proficiency, they often instruct staff to ‘determine if the patient can understand English', usually without clear instruction on how to do this. Finally, while communication is the goal that drives many of these policies, ‘successful' communication is conceptualised as language-neutral, implicitly privileging English and erasing LEP patients' language needs. These findings reflect a novel way of framing policies' monolingual logic of WAI within the multilingual reality of WAD and mark an innovative contribution to the study of language access rights. For additional resources, show notes, and transcripts, go here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/new-books-network
In this episode of the Language on the Move Podcast, Emily Pacheco speaks with PhD candidate Brynn Quick (Macquarie University, Australia) about her 2025 paper, The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. The conversation focuses on language policies in healthcare, the monolingual logic, and language access. Quick, B., Piller, I., & Lising, L. (2025). The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1080/01434632.2025.2594462 Abstract. This study investigates how Australian healthcare policies imagine communication between limited English proficiency (LEP) patients and healthcare providers to occur. This is done through a work as imagined (WAI) vs. work as done (WAD) analysis of 13 Australian medical policies from four levels of governance. Findings reveal that policies mostly conceptualise the work of determining if a patient needs a professional interpreter as an act of self-assessment that patients will do themselves. When policies direct healthcare staff to assess patients' English language proficiency, they often instruct staff to ‘determine if the patient can understand English', usually without clear instruction on how to do this. Finally, while communication is the goal that drives many of these policies, ‘successful' communication is conceptualised as language-neutral, implicitly privileging English and erasing LEP patients' language needs. These findings reflect a novel way of framing policies' monolingual logic of WAI within the multilingual reality of WAD and mark an innovative contribution to the study of language access rights. For additional resources, show notes, and transcripts, go here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/language
In this episode of the Language on the Move Podcast, Emily Pacheco speaks with PhD candidate Brynn Quick (Macquarie University, Australia) about her 2025 paper, The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. The conversation focuses on language policies in healthcare, the monolingual logic, and language access. Quick, B., Piller, I., & Lising, L. (2025). The (un)imagined work of determining patients' English language proficiency. Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 1-18. https://doi.org/10.1080/01434632.2025.2594462 Abstract. This study investigates how Australian healthcare policies imagine communication between limited English proficiency (LEP) patients and healthcare providers to occur. This is done through a work as imagined (WAI) vs. work as done (WAD) analysis of 13 Australian medical policies from four levels of governance. Findings reveal that policies mostly conceptualise the work of determining if a patient needs a professional interpreter as an act of self-assessment that patients will do themselves. When policies direct healthcare staff to assess patients' English language proficiency, they often instruct staff to ‘determine if the patient can understand English', usually without clear instruction on how to do this. Finally, while communication is the goal that drives many of these policies, ‘successful' communication is conceptualised as language-neutral, implicitly privileging English and erasing LEP patients' language needs. These findings reflect a novel way of framing policies' monolingual logic of WAI within the multilingual reality of WAD and mark an innovative contribution to the study of language access rights. For additional resources, show notes, and transcripts, go here. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices Support our show by becoming a premium member! https://newbooksnetwork.supportingcast.fm/australian-and-new-zealand-studies
Sumit Rai, Chief Product Officer, introduces us to elevate.io, a browser-based video editor built for team collaboration. He demonstrates a laundry list of impressive features, including real-time shared editing, reviewer feedback, cloud processing, proxy-based performance, stock media licensing, AI transcription, subtitle handling, and voice cleanup. Sumit also gives us a peek at their future translation tools that mimic the speaker's voice, but in different languages. A free option and affordable pricing tiers help you try it and use it as needed for your projects. MacVoices is supported by Macstock Connference, taking place in Crystal Lake IL on July 10, 11, and 12, along with Ecamm Creator Camp on July 9. Sign up at macstockconference.com and use the code “macvoices” to save $50 off your ticket. Show Notes: Chapters: 0:00 Introduction to elevate.io and the promise of online editing1:01 The evolution of video editing from edit bays to the cloud4:36 How elevate.io approaches team-based collaborative editing8:08 Real-time collaboration with multiple editors in one project13:39 Bandwidth needs and accessibility for remote editing15:48 Export options, stock footage, and music licensing18:02 Finishing inside Elevate.io vs. exporting to other NLEs23:45 Hardware requirements and pricing tiers29:09 Team collaboration limits, reviewer mode, and feedback workflow31:17 AI transcription, subtitles, and voice cleanup features35:16 Multilingual tools and translation possibilities40:02 Target users, market position, and future development44:09 Final thoughts and how to get started with elevate.io Guests: Sumit Rai is the Chief Product Officer at elevate.io. Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss
Sumit Rai, Chief Product Officer, introduces us to elevate.io, a browser-based video editor built for team collaboration. He demonstrates a laundry list of impressive features, including real-time shared editing, reviewer feedback, cloud processing, proxy-based performance, stock media licensing, AI transcription, subtitle handling, and voice cleanup. Sumit also gives us a peek at their future translation tools that mimic the speaker's voice, but in different languages. A free option and affordable pricing tiers help you try it and use it as needed for your projects. MacVoices is supported by Macstock Connference, taking place in Crystal Lake IL on July 10, 11, and 12, along with Ecamm Creator Camp on July 9. Sign up at macstockconference.com and use the code "macvoices" to save $50 off your ticket. Show Notes: Chapters: 0:00 Introduction to elevate.io and the promise of online editing 1:01 The evolution of video editing from edit bays to the cloud 4:36 How elevate.io approaches team-based collaborative editing 8:08 Real-time collaboration with multiple editors in one project 13:39 Bandwidth needs and accessibility for remote editing 15:48 Export options, stock footage, and music licensing 18:02 Finishing inside Elevate.io vs. exporting to other NLEs 23:45 Hardware requirements and pricing tiers 29:09 Team collaboration limits, reviewer mode, and feedback workflow 31:17 AI transcription, subtitles, and voice cleanup features 35:16 Multilingual tools and translation possibilities 40:02 Target users, market position, and future development 44:09 Final thoughts and how to get started with elevate.io Guests: Sumit Rai is the Chief Product Officer at elevate.io. Support: Become a MacVoices Patron on Patreon http://patreon.com/macvoices Enjoy this episode? Make a one-time donation with PayPal Connect: Web: http://macvoices.com Twitter: http://www.twitter.com/chuckjoiner http://www.twitter.com/macvoices Mastodon: https://mastodon.cloud/@chuckjoiner Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/chuck.joiner MacVoices Page on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/macvoices/ MacVoices Group on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/groups/macvoice LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/chuckjoiner/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/chuckjoiner/ Subscribe: Audio in iTunes Video in iTunes Subscribe manually via iTunes or any podcatcher: Audio: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesrss Video: http://www.macvoices.com/rss/macvoicesvideorss
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In this deeply personal episode, Dr. Debi Silber is joined by her daughter Camryn for a candid, behind-the-scenes conversation about what it really looks like to get stuck in Stage Three — not because of a betrayal by someone else, but through our own patterns, thoughts, and avoidance. Camryn's story is one of extraordinary intelligence, world travel, and deep self-awareness ultimately leading to the most important journey of all: inward. If you've ever wondered what Stage Three looks and feels like from the inside — or suspected that your coping strategies might actually be keeping you stuck — this episode is for you. Meet Camryn Holds a Master's degree with a background in psychology Multilingual and a seasoned world traveler Deep empath with a gift for feeling collective emotion Now living in Asia — a move born from genuine inner clarity, not escape Camryn has always been the kind of person who sees the world differently — comfortable in spaces of authenticity (nature, animals, children, the elderly) and deeply uncomfortable with the masks and performance of social life. As a teenager, she deleted social media entirely because of how it made her feel. That instinct, long before it was a cultural conversation, tells you everything about who she is. Key Themes & Takeaways What Stage Three Really Looks Like Stage Three — that place of surviving but not thriving — doesn't always look like suffering from the outside. Sometimes it looks like adventure. Camryn's version of Stage Three involved living in different countries, absorbing languages and cultures, sleeping in hostels, spending every dollar on experiences. From the outside: impressive. From the inside: a beautifully camouflaged method of avoiding herself. Dr. Debi draws a powerful parallel: just as some people numb with TV, alcohol, or overwork (all things that can look productive), Camryn's distraction was world travel — something that genuinely fed her AND kept her from staying still long enough to look inward. The Belief That Starts It All Dr. Debi shares one of her most-used teaching examples: a little boy with exciting news, shushed by his mother on the phone. In that moment, he might decide: "I don't matter." From there, everything confirms it — the car that cuts him off, the door that closes in his face. That core belief shapes who he dates, what he accepts, what he tolerates. The takeaway: we all carry a story. The work is finding out what story we've been telling ourselves — and whether it's true. Escaping Yourself (And Why It Doesn't Work) No matter where you go, you take your thoughts with you. Camryn describes the experience of arriving somewhere new — forced to think differently because the environment demanded it — and then slowly, inevitably, watching the same unhealed patterns creep back in. The breakthrough moment came before a planned move to New Zealand. A quiet, honest question: What do you think New Zealand is going to do for you? The answer was nothing. And that nothing was everything. The New Zealand Moment: Recognizing the Pattern This is the kind of moment that changes things. Not dramatic. Not loud. Just a pause, a look between mother and daughter, and a recognition that the pattern had been named. That's the beginning of Stage Four — when the fog lifts just enough to see what's been happening. Fear vs. Intuition: How to Tell the Difference One of the most practical and powerful parts of this conversation: how do you know if a decision is coming from your gut or from your fear? Camryn shares her process — sitting with a decision, asking whether the pull is expansive or constricting, whether it comes from the head (noisy, arguing, rationalizing) or something quieter and steadier underneath. The mind can convince you of anything. Intuition doesn't need to argue. She also shares the question she comes back to when facing a big decision: What would my oldest self have wanted? That question cuts through the noise of other people's opinions, social pressure, and fear. Honoring Others' Opinions — Without Being Ruled by Them When Camryn decided to move across the world from a close, loving family, there were feelings. Dr. Debi shares honestly that it wasn't "don't go" — it was "we'll miss you." And Camryn learned to hold that with love, express gratitude for the input, take her time, and then follow her own inner compass anyway. This is self-love in action. Not selfishness. Knowing yourself well enough to trust what you know. Being an Empath: Gift and Challenge Camryn is a deep empath — someone who doesn't just sympathize but actually feels the emotional energy of people around her, including collective pain. This explains so much: her comfort with children and animals (no judgment, no masks), her discomfort with performative social environments, and her need to move, process, and release what she absorbs. Dr. Debi reflects on her own journey to understanding empathy — not realizing she was an empath until 50, spending decades thinking she was "too sensitive." Camryn's empathy is even more acute, and learning to recognize what's hers versus what she's absorbing from others has been part of her healing. The flip side: empaths feel highs as intensely as lows. A bird. A rainbow. A baby laughing. Brought to tears of pure joy. That's not weakness — that's a gift, when it's understood and channeled. Ripping Off the Band-Aid Camryn's approach to fear has always been extreme: if something scares her, she goes straight at it. No gradual exposure — full immersion. It's how she processes. It's not the only way, but it's hers, and it works precisely because she knows herself well enough to trust it. She also has a clear filter: she won't do something just because it challenges a fear. The fear has to be worth facing. The experience has to align with who she is. That discernment is Stage Five wisdom. Quotable Moments "We put ourselves in a stage three trap — sometimes through betrayal, sometimes through our own doing." "You take the same thoughts, the same everything with you — except you'd be forced to think differently because you were in a new culture." "What do you think New Zealand is going to do for you?" "My oldest self would have wanted this." "The mind can put you in a prison — and convince you the only escape is to escape." "It's all a journey to self-love. Moving through betrayal completely, the five stages, overcoming whatever it is — it's all a journey to self-love." The Five Stages Connection This episode is a real-life illustration of the Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™ — not as something that happens only after someone hurts you, but as a map for anyone who has gotten stuck in survival mode: Stage 1 — The Setup: The beliefs and patterns laid down early that shape how we move through the world Stage 2 — The Breakdown: The moment something cracks open — could be a betrayal, could be a quiet realization Stage 3 — Survival: Functional on the outside, stuck on the inside — sometimes disguised as productivity, adventure, or achievement Stage 4 — The Shift: A moment of honest recognition — like the New Zealand conversation Stage 5 — Healing & Thriving: Living from a place of genuine self-knowledge, self-trust, and self-love Resources & Next Steps Learn more about the Five Stages from Betrayal to Breakthrough™ framework: https://thepbtinstitute.com Share this episode with someone who seems to be "thriving" on the outside but you sense is stuck on the inside
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