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Why is a cute Star Wars fan website now redirecting to the CIA? How come Cambodia has become the world's hotspot for scam call centres? And can a WhatsApp image really drain your bank account with a single download, or is it just a load of hacker hokum?All this and much more is discussed in the latest edition of the award-winning "Smashing Security" podcast by computer security veterans Graham Cluley and Carole Theriault, joined this week by Allan Liska.Warning: This podcast may contain nuts, adult themes, and rude language.Episode links:How I found a Star Wars website made by the CIA - Ciro Santilli on YouTube.How the CIA failed Iranian informants in its secret war with Tehran - Reuters.Isis and al-Qaeda sending coded messages through eBay, pornography and Reddit - Independent.Games Without Frontiers: Investigating Video Games as a Covert Channel - IEEE.General David Petraeus used clever Gmail trick during affair - Network World.Cambodia is home to world's most powerful criminal network: report - SCMP.How to protect yourself from suspicious messages and scams- WhatsApp.Is WhatsApp Safe? Tips for Staying Secure - WhatsApp.Hacked on WhatsApp – how to stay safe when using the messaging app - BBC.Just a GIF Image Could Have Hacked Your Android Phone Using WhatsApp - The Hacker News.Kon-Tiki: The Epic Raft Journey Across the Pacific - YouTube.Still Standing with Jonny Harris - CBC.Niki de Saint Phalle & Jean Tinguely - Myths & Machines - Hauser & Wirth.Smashing Security merchandise (t-shirts, mugs, stickers and stuff)Sponsored by:Vanta– Expand the scope of your security program with market-leading compliance automation… while saving time and money. Smashing Security listeners get $1000 off!
The program all about TV. Our guests: Dana Nachman, Dear Santa: The Series co-producer, writer and director; George Chung, co-founder (with Whoopi Goldberg) and chief executive officer of All-Women's Sports Network, now in its second month on Vizio's smart TV sets, and Brian Wallace, co-creator of World Twistories, one of the TV series pilots playing this weekend at the annual Dances With Films NY festival.
Task management can be a challenge, this week Noah and Steve talk about open source tools and ideas to managing your workflow. -- During The Show -- 00:50 Noah in CA CA experience Noah is in CA for SCALE 02:00 Windows For Charity - Wayne Separate task from desire Linux is non-profit's best friend Windows doesn't want you as a customer Snowflake Windows software Remmina (https://remmina.org/) ThinLinX (https://thinlinx.com/) Convincing mode Noah's strategy 13:00 KDE - Hank Versioning 14:45 News Wire Linux Reaches 4% - Network World (https://www.networkworld.com/article/1312235/linux-hits-4-desktop-user-share.html) Zorin OS 17.1 - Zorin Blog (https://blog.zorin.com/2024/03/07/zorin-os-17.1-is-released/) Kdenlive 24.02 - Kdenlive (https://kdenlive.org/en/2024/03/kdenlive-24-02-0-released/) Neptune 17 v6 - Juno Computers (https://junocomputers.com/us/product/neptune-17-v6/) GTK Accessibility Improvements - GTK (https://blog.gtk.org/2024/03/08/accessibility-improvements-in-gtk-4-14/) LXQT Wayland Ready - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/LXQt-Fully-Ready-Wayland) Linux 6.8 - OMG Ubuntu (https://www.omgubuntu.co.uk/2024/03/linux-kernel-6-8-new-features) Linux 6.9 Rust Toolchain - Phoronix (https://www.phoronix.com/news/Linux-6.9-Rust-Upgrade) NerbianRAT - ARSTechnica (https://arstechnica.com/security/2024/03/never-before-seen-linux-malware-gets-installed-using-1-day-exploits/) CISA OSS Summit - Security Magazine (https://www.securitymagazine.com/articles/100497-cisa-undertakes-new-efforts-to-fortify-open-source-ecosystem) Axios (https://www.axios.com/2024/03/07/biden-admin-open-source-security-promises) Grok AI Going Open Source - Reuters (https://www.reuters.com/technology/elon-musk-says-his-ai-startup-xai-will-open-source-grok-chatbot-2024-03-11/) Opus 1.5 Upgrade - Opus Codec (https://opus-codec.org/demo/opus-1.5/) 16:22 Task Management How do you track things Multi sources of tasks Super Productivity (https://super-productivity.com/) Simple Time Tracker (https://f-droid.org/packages/com.razeeman.util.simpletimetracker/) Kanban boards Nextcloud Tasks (https://apps.nextcloud.com/apps/tasks) Nextcloud Deck (https://deck.readthedocs.io/en/latest/) WeKan (https://wekan.github.io/) How Steve uses kanban boards Advice to others 35:30 Ilan Rabinovitch Interview Anita Zhang Julia Programming Language Autumn Nash - Women in Open Source Being intentional and aware SCALE Next Generation Bill Cheswick - Security Community Events Youth programs Presentations to look forward to Promo code: NOAH Dinner with Noah: Saturday March 16th (details to follow in The Geek Lab) #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://app.element.io/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/380) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed)
Can you trust AI with your sensitive data? And would you implement AI so that sensitive data isn't shared with the wrong people? And what is going to happen in 2024? Learn from the people working on the future. Big thanks to Cisco for sponsoring my trip to Cisco Live and this video. // Vijoy's SOCIAL// X: / vijoy LinkedIn: / vijoy Website: https://www.vijoypandey.com Cisco Blogs: https://blogs.cisco.com/author/vijoyp... // Websites REFERENCE // Cisco Motific: https://venturebeat.com/ai/cisco-laun... Network World: https://www.networkworld.com/article/... Outshift: https://outshift.cisco.com // David's SOCIAL // Discord: discord.com/invite/usKSyzb Twitter: www.twitter.com/davidbombal Instagram: www.instagram.com/davidbombal LinkedIn: www.linkedin.com/in/davidbombal Facebook: www.facebook.com/davidbombal.co TikTok: tiktok.com/@davidbombal Please note that links listed may be affiliate links and provide me with a small percentage/kickback should you use them to purchase any of the items listed or recommended. Thank you for supporting me and this channel! Disclaimer: This video is for educational purposes only.
Steve, McNew, Katie, Jeff, Lenny and Kathy discuss who they think is the male and female drinking champs from the ABV Network world. TBD music is by Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com). Important Links: Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/theabvnetwork Check us out at: abvnetwork.com. Join the revolution by adding #ABVNetworkCrew to your profile on social media.
This week on Ask A CISSP, we have an interview with Kayne McGladrey, Field CISO at Hyperproof. In this very entertaining episode, we'll learn Kayne's amazing cybersecurity "origin story" and discuss the need for more diversity of culture and thought within cybersecurity. We'll also go into upcoming Federal and State policy and how he and his team have developed the tools necessary to keep up with the future of Governance, Risk, and Compliance. Don't miss out! Please LISTEN
On this episode of Staying Connected, we're going to dig deeper into a recently published Network World article about how to navigate the co-management conundrum in managed service provider (“MSP”) engagements. MSP refers to the partners many enterprises seek to optimize the cost and service for the delivery and management arrangement for a range of ICT services essential to their business. In this 9-minute podcast, Managing Director of TC2 UK, Mark Sheard joins Tony Mangino to discuss how co-management is essential in any enterprise/MSP arrangement and the important factors an enterprise needs to consider in establishing the right balance for its needs. If you would like to learn more about our experience in this space, please visit our Technology Consulting & Strategy Development and Strategic Sourcing webpages.
The most valuable crypto stories for Tuesday, May 9, 2023.This episode is sponsored by Ciphertrace."The Hash" tackles today's hot topics: Private equity giant Apollo is part of a bid to buy bankrupt crypto lender Celsius. Fintech firm Digital Asset is launching a blockchain network with some big names like Microsoft, BNP Paribas and Deloitte, among others. Pudgy Penguins raises millions in new capital for its NFT project. Global consequences are being felt as transaction fees on the Bitcoin network surge.See also:Private-Equity Giant Apollo Is Part of a Bid to Buy Bankrupt Crypto Firm CelsiusDigital Asset Will Start Global Blockchain Network With Deloitte, Goldman Sachs and OthersNFT Project Pudgy Penguins Raises $9MAfrica Moves to Lightning, Stablecoins as Bitcoin Transaction Fees SoarCiphertrace, a Mastercard company, helps banks, governments, regulators, exchanges and VASPs to trace the movement and risk of crypto funds, uncover illicit activity, and help comply with global regulations. Get in touch today to find out more at Ciphertrace.com.-This episode has been edited by senior producer is Michele Musso and the executive producer is Jared Schwartz. Our theme song is “Neon Beach.”See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
The most valuable crypto stories for Tuesday, May 9, 2023.This episode is sponsored by Ciphertrace."The Hash" tackles today's hot topics: Private equity giant Apollo is part of a bid to buy bankrupt crypto lender Celsius. Fintech firm Digital Asset is launching a blockchain network with some big names like Microsoft, BNP Paribas and Deloitte, among others. Pudgy Penguins raises millions in new capital for its NFT project. Global consequences are being felt as transaction fees on the Bitcoin network surge.See also:Private-Equity Giant Apollo Is Part of a Bid to Buy Bankrupt Crypto Firm CelsiusDigital Asset Will Start Global Blockchain Network With Deloitte, Goldman Sachs and OthersNFT Project Pudgy Penguins Raises $9MAfrica Moves to Lightning, Stablecoins as Bitcoin Transaction Fees SoarCiphertrace, a Mastercard company, helps banks, governments, regulators, exchanges and VASPs to trace the movement and risk of crypto funds, uncover illicit activity, and help comply with global regulations. Get in touch today to find out more at Ciphertrace.com.-This episode has been edited by senior producer is Michele Musso and the executive producer is Jared Schwartz. Our theme song is “Neon Beach.”See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Segment One: Amy's First Company & Some Updates April 1st marks the anniversary of Amy B's first company. We discuss how she got here. --- Segment Two: MSP Question of the Week & News Are you keeping an eye out for vendor errors? And one more thing about AI. Some people want to stop it. Elon Musk and Steve Wozniak: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/elon-musk-apple-co-founder-103416584.html --- Segment Three: Five minutes with a Smart Person ft. Rich Freeman and Manuel Palachuk Rich Freeman is founding editor and executive editor of The ChannelPro Network. One of the tech industry's most experienced, respected authorities on the SMB channel, Rich has been writing about managed services since 2007. He has spoken or moderated sessions at live and virtual events for Acronis, Auvik, Axcient, ChannelPro, IT Glue, and SkyKick, among others, and has written for CIO, Computerworld, InfoWorld, Network World, and Redmond Channel Partner magazines. Rich has also produced strategic content for vendors including AMD, Citrix, Dell, IBM, Microsoft, Oracle, and VMware. Manuel Palachuk has over 30 years of business, management, and training experience in the computer and electronics industries. Manuel has owned several successful businesses, managed several successful IT and MSP service companies, and coached, mentored, or trained many more businesses all over the world. He is an expert of process, systems, and their efficiency who is driven toward continuous improvement in all aspects of business. He is a well-known author in the IT consulting community for Small and Medium-sized Businesses, and an experienced speaker and trainer at industry conferences. --- Don't miss this: Asigra - Don't Be the Latest MSP Victim. Learn how new ransomware threats put your business at risk. - April 19th -https://mspwebinar.com/does-your-backup-protect-you-against-the-latest-ransomware-attacks/ Register Now: https://us02web.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_ruK7Mp77TEaZyIXID96DLQ NSITSP - Amy B., Karl, & Jeff Ponts - Channel Partners Conference & Expo on May 3rd Channel Partners Conference & Expo Here: https://channelpartnersconference.com/ NSITSP - Insurance - Brian Mahon - April 26th https://nsitsp.org/event/webinar-cyber-insurance-deep-dive-2023/ Resources & Links: Amy's Facebook communities Ransomware, Security, Compliance and Privacy https://www.facebook.com/groups/RansomwarePrevention Intune, MeM, Defender and Lighthouse https://www.facebook.com/groups/endpointmanager Legislation and Regulation https://www.facebook.com/groups/MSPRegulationAndLegislation
"Actually, awareness doesn't help. We are on the campaign to produce a desire for that transformation. Information is useless unless it's empowering. And of course, it has to be factual. If it's not factual, then it's going to be found out, and it also has to be relevant because otherwise, it's irrelevant. But if it's just relevant, it actually may just be counterproductive because if people see it as relevant but not empowering, they will use their brain to fight it. So that's why I think awareness campaigns don't work. We can only work on motivation, helping people to find a greater desire to get there, to say, yeah, that's what I want. A sense of agency that they say I can do something about it. Also, a sense of curiosity because we really don't know how to get there eventually.So, it takes a bit more than just awareness and that's what we learned a bit painfully, obviously, over the last 30 years or painfully because in the beginning we just thought, Oh, why don't people just measure how many planets we have compared to how many we use? And once they see the number, it would be very obvious to them. So we were the first to start to - and still are I think - the main accounting approach to compare directly how big human activities are compared to what the planet can renew.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."Actually, awareness doesn't help. We are on the campaign to produce a desire for that transformation. Information is useless unless it's empowering. And of course, it has to be factual. If it's not factual, then it's going to be found out, and it also has to be relevant because otherwise, it's irrelevant. But if it's just relevant, it actually may just be counterproductive because if people see it as relevant but not empowering, they will use their brain to fight it. So that's why I think awareness campaigns don't work. We can only work on motivation, helping people to find a greater desire to get there, to say, yeah, that's what I want. A sense of agency that they say I can do something about it. Also, a sense of curiosity because we really don't know how to get there eventually.So, it takes a bit more than just awareness and that's what we learned a bit painfully, obviously, over the last 30 years or painfully because in the beginning we just thought, Oh, why don't people just measure how many planets we have compared to how many we use? And once they see the number, it would be very obvious to them. So we were the first to start to - and still are I think - the main accounting approach to compare directly how big human activities are compared to what the planet can renew.”www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."Actually, awareness doesn't help. We are on the campaign to produce a desire for that transformation. Information is useless unless it's empowering. And of course, it has to be factual. If it's not factual, then it's going to be found out, and it also has to be relevant because otherwise, it's irrelevant. But if it's just relevant, it actually may just be counterproductive because if people see it as relevant but not empowering, they will use their brain to fight it. So that's why I think awareness campaigns don't work. We can only work on motivation, helping people to find a greater desire to get there, to say, yeah, that's what I want. A sense of agency that they say I can do something about it. Also, a sense of curiosity because we really don't know how to get there eventually.So, it takes a bit more than just awareness and that's what we learned a bit painfully, obviously, over the last 30 years or painfully because in the beginning we just thought, Oh, why don't people just measure how many planets we have compared to how many we use? And once they see the number, it would be very obvious to them. So we were the first to start to - and still are I think - the main accounting approach to compare directly how big human activities are compared to what the planet can renew.”www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"Actually, awareness doesn't help. We are on the campaign to produce a desire for that transformation. Information is useless unless it's empowering. And of course, it has to be factual. If it's not factual, then it's going to be found out, and it also has to be relevant because otherwise, it's irrelevant. But if it's just relevant, it actually may just be counterproductive because if people see it as relevant but not empowering, they will use their brain to fight it. So that's why I think awareness campaigns don't work. We can only work on motivation, helping people to find a greater desire to get there, to say, yeah, that's what I want. A sense of agency that they say I can do something about it. Also, a sense of curiosity because we really don't know how to get there eventually.So, it takes a bit more than just awareness and that's what we learned a bit painfully, obviously, over the last 30 years or painfully because in the beginning we just thought, Oh, why don't people just measure how many planets we have compared to how many we use? And once they see the number, it would be very obvious to them. So we were the first to start to - and still are I think - the main accounting approach to compare directly how big human activities are compared to what the planet can renew.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."As a minimal condition to be able to persist, we cannot use forever more than what we get back from nature, what nature can renew. It's a very mechanical view, but we are not even fulfilling this mechanical, bottom-line requirement. Ecologists will tell you that to maintain biodiversity because wild species are in competition for that regeneration, maybe it's not a good idea to use the entire capacity of the planet.So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately."www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"As a minimal condition to be able to persist, we cannot use forever more than what we get back from nature, what nature can renew. It's a very mechanical view, but we are not even fulfilling this mechanical, bottom-line requirement. Ecologists will tell you that to maintain biodiversity because wild species are in competition for that regeneration, maybe it's not a good idea to use the entire capacity of the planet.So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately."Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"If you can live with fewer resources, then you feel more safe. So we are talking more about resource security rather than reducing your demand, which is the same thing, but it comes with a twist. If we talk about you've got to reduce your demand, it generates resentment in society because if I put an effort into showering less or with cold water or not going somewhere, and I see my neighbor still doing it, I feel resentful about that neighbor. So it generates resentment in society. It's because you think I gave myself up for humanity and you didn't. Then it's unfair, you know? But if you think from a perspective of resource security, and you learn how to live not by depending on that many resources, you feel safe for yourself.And if your neighbor is not able to do it and still depends on all of the resources, you can feel empathy for the neighbor. Oh my god, my neighbor is really exposed. And so it's so by empathy, it's kind of a more stable mechanism. So I think we have to find ways to build empathy for saying, Wow, it's really about preparing ourselves.Like with COVID, if you protect yourself, that's good for society as well. And so that's kind of a win-win that we want to develop. Big shifts are needed if you want to be able to operate in the future. So it is very serious. I think in the end, only things we want to do will happen. So I think the best thing to get on that track is to. In our own speech, ban the word should because as soon as we say should, we indicate it's not going to happen, and we lose agency."Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."If you can live with fewer resources, then you feel more safe. So we are talking more about resource security rather than reducing your demand, which is the same thing, but it comes with a twist. If we talk about you've got to reduce your demand, it generates resentment in society because if I put an effort into showering less or with cold water or not going somewhere, and I see my neighbor still doing it, I feel resentful about that neighbor. So it generates resentment in society. It's because you think I gave myself up for humanity and you didn't. Then it's unfair, you know? But if you think from a perspective of resource security, and you learn how to live not by depending on that many resources, you feel safe for yourself.And if your neighbor is not able to do it and still depends on all of the resources, you can feel empathy for the neighbor. Oh my god, my neighbor is really exposed. And so it's so by empathy, it's kind of a more stable mechanism. So I think we have to find ways to build empathy for saying, Wow, it's really about preparing ourselves.Like with COVID, if you protect yourself, that's good for society as well. And so that's kind of a win-win that we want to develop. Big shifts are needed if you want to be able to operate in the future. So it is very serious. I think in the end, only things we want to do will happen. So I think the best thing to get on that track is to. In our own speech, ban the word should because as soon as we say should, we indicate it's not going to happen, and we lose agency."www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."In my way of talking, I try to move away from the word responsibility because people don't come to me and say, 'Thank you so much for giving me responsibility,' rather they avoid me at parties and so, how do we talk about it? So I like more the metaphor of brushing your teeth. Brushing your teeth is not so much an imposition. You must brush your teeth, otherwise, you're a really bad person, you know? No, you just brush your teeth because you want to have healthy teeth. It's not a capitalist plot either. They say, Oh, you're such a capitalist, protecting the capital in your jaw. No, we want to have healthy teeth. So it is just protecting your teeth is necessary. Make an effort today to protect the health of your tooth tomorrow. And that's kind of a similar approach. So the same principles that apply to a country or a city also apply to an individual. I mean, an individual could be an investor or can have a pension fund. And so the question is my investment going to be more valued in the future or not? Probably it's more likely to be valuable if it is aligned with what the future will look like. Or you're making decisions about where to live. Like if you make yourself dependent on cars, then every time gasoline prices go up, then you get more exposed.If you can live with fewer resources, then you feel more safe. So we are talking more about resource security rather than reducing your demand, which is the same thing, but it comes with a twist. Big shifts are needed if you want to be able to operate in the future. So it is very serious. I think in the end, only things we want to do will happen. So I think the best thing to get on that track is to, in our own speech, ban the word should because as soon as we say should, we indicate it's not going to happen, and we lose agency.”www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"In my way of talking, I try to move away from the word responsibility because people don't come to me and say, 'Thank you so much for giving me responsibility,' rather they avoid me at parties and so, how do we talk about it? So I like more the metaphor of brushing your teeth. Brushing your teeth is not so much an imposition. You must brush your teeth, otherwise, you're a really bad person, you know? No, you just brush your teeth because you want to have healthy teeth. It's not a capitalist plot either. They say, Oh, you're such a capitalist, protecting the capital in your jaw. No, we want to have healthy teeth. So it is just protecting your teeth is necessary. Make an effort today to protect the health of your tooth tomorrow. And that's kind of a similar approach. So the same principles that apply to a country or a city also apply to an individual. I mean, an individual could be an investor or can have a pension fund. And so the question is my investment going to be more valued in the future or not? Probably it's more likely to be valuable if it is aligned with what the future will look like. Or you're making decisions about where to live. Like if you make yourself dependent on cars, then every time gasoline prices go up, then you get more exposed.If you can live with fewer resources, then you feel more safe. So we are talking more about resource security rather than reducing your demand, which is the same thing, but it comes with a twist. Big shifts are needed if you want to be able to operate in the future. So it is very serious. I think in the end, only things we want to do will happen. So I think the best thing to get on that track is to, in our own speech, ban the word should because as soon as we say should, we indicate it's not going to happen, and we lose agency.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"So by looking at the effect of Earth Overshoot, which we think is the second largest risk for humanity, it actually becomes easier to address because all things come together, and you start to see the self-interest to act. Because if you're in a world of overshoot, and you're not able to be resource-secured, really it's going to hurt you. So it's not just being nice to the rest of the world. I mean, that too, but primarily, it also becomes really essential. If you're not ready for that world, it's going to be very difficult for you. So by bringing this story out, make it resonant, people then also come to us, companies approach us and say, “Let's work with each other.” And it may not be that important how big they are, because we are impressed by stories to a large extent, so the more we can show examples where people build their own success by thinking about the world from that perspective, that's probably convincing others in some ways. So it's very hard to work effectively with institutions who deeply believe that the information is inconvenient because they come up with excuses and you try to overcome the excuses. And by the time you've overcome these excuses, they have invented seven other excuses. Like the hydra, chop off the head, and seven more heads grow. So I think that's really the big tragedy we find. And I think it actually would be so simple if we had a better narrative. We're so in love with the narrative of pointing fingers that we don't see the obvious.So it's like we are on a boat, and we see a big storm approach. And we realize our boat is not too seaworthy. And then the first thing we do is we go to an international Boat Owners Conference to find out who needs to fix their boat first. Doesn't make that much sense to me, you know?And then we complexify the story rather than saying, 'Actually I am exposed.' And so when you say, 'Oh, the poor Maldives,' we take ourselves out of the game. 'It's about these others'. It's actually about each one of us in some ways.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
The Creative Process in 10 minutes or less · Arts, Culture & Society
"Actually, awareness doesn't help. We are on the campaign to produce a desire for that transformation. Information is useless unless it's empowering. And of course, it has to be factual. If it's not factual, then it's going to be found out, and it also has to be relevant because otherwise, it's irrelevant. But if it's just relevant, it actually may just be counterproductive because if people see it as relevant but not empowering, they will use their brain to fight it. So that's why I think awareness campaigns don't work. We can only work on motivation, helping people to find a greater desire to get there, to say, yeah, that's what I want. A sense of agency that they say I can do something about it. Also, a sense of curiosity because we really don't know how to get there eventually.So, it takes a bit more than just awareness and that's what we learned a bit painfully, obviously, over the last 30 years or painfully because in the beginning we just thought, Oh, why don't people just measure how many planets we have compared to how many we use? And once they see the number, it would be very obvious to them. So we were the first to start to - and still are I think - the main accounting approach to compare directly how big human activities are compared to what the planet can renew.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."So by looking at the effect of Earth Overshoot, which we think is the second largest risk for humanity, it actually becomes easier to address because all things come together, and you start to see the self-interest to act. Because if you're in a world of overshoot, and you're not able to be resource-secured, really it's going to hurt you. So it's not just being nice to the rest of the world. I mean, that too, but primarily, it also becomes really essential. If you're not ready for that world, it's going to be very difficult for you. So by bringing this story out, make it resonant, people then also come to us, companies approach us and say, “Let's work with each other.” And it may not be that important how big they are, because we are impressed by stories to a large extent, so the more we can show examples where people build their own success by thinking about the world from that perspective, that's probably convincing others in some ways. So it's very hard to work effectively with institutions who deeply believe that the information is inconvenient because they come up with excuses and you try to overcome the excuses. And by the time you've overcome these excuses, they have invented seven other excuses. Like the hydra, chop off the head, and seven more heads grow. So I think that's really the big tragedy we find. And I think it actually would be so simple if we had a better narrative. We're so in love with the narrative of pointing fingers that we don't see the obvious.So it's like we are on a boat, and we see a big storm approach. And we realize our boat is not too seaworthy. And then the first thing we do is we go to an international Boat Owners Conference to find out who needs to fix their boat first. Doesn't make that much sense to me, you know?And then we complexify the story rather than saying, 'Actually I am exposed.' And so when you say, 'Oh, the poor Maldives,' we take ourselves out of the game. 'It's about these others'. It's actually about each one of us in some ways.”www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in a year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately.So that's why it's an underestimate. And still, it shows we use about 1.75 Earths, and that's more than three times half an Earth. So that's kind of the difference. But we also know overshoot will end one way or another. The question is do we choose to end it? Do we choose it by design, or do we let nature take the lead and end overshoot by disaster? So it's really ending overshoot by design or disaster. That's the big choice we need to make.”www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in a year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately.So that's why it's an underestimate. And still, it shows we use about 1.75 Earths, and that's more than three times half an Earth. So that's kind of the difference. But we also know overshoot will end one way or another. The question is do we choose to end it? Do we choose it by design, or do we let nature take the lead and end overshoot by disaster? So it's really ending overshoot by design or disaster. That's the big choice we need to make.”Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures."As a minimal condition to be able to persist, we cannot use forever more than what we get back from nature, what nature can renew. It's a very mechanical view, but we are not even fulfilling this mechanical, bottom-line requirement. Ecologists will tell you that to maintain biodiversity because wild species are in competition for that regeneration, maybe it's not a good idea to use the entire capacity of the planet.So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately."www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
"As a minimal condition to be able to persist, we cannot use forever more than what we get back from nature, what nature can renew. It's a very mechanical view, but we are not even fulfilling this mechanical, bottom-line requirement. Ecologists will tell you that to maintain biodiversity because wild species are in competition for that regeneration, maybe it's not a good idea to use the entire capacity of the planet.So shooting for one planet just means you would be totally dominant, and leave no space for other species. Ecologists say to maintain 85% of preindustrial biodiversity, it would take about at least half the planet left on its own. That would mean getting to half-planet. And now we use at least 1.75. I say at least because our assessments with about 15,000 data points per country in year are based on UN statistics, and their demand side is probably an underestimate because not all demands are included. And also on the supply side or the regeneration side, the UN is very production oriented, so it's the FAO numbers, for example, look at agricultural production, and the depletion side or the destruction side is not factored in adequately."Mathis Wackernagel is Co-founder and President of Global Footprint Network. He created the Ecological Footprint with Professor William Rees at the University of British Columbia as part of his Ph.D. in community and regional planning. Mathis also earned a mechanical engineering degree from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology. Mathis has worked on sustainability with governments, corporations and international NGOs on six continents and has lectured at more than 100 universities. Mathis has authored and contributed to more than 100 peer-reviewed papers, numerous articles, reports and various books on sustainability that focus on embracing resource limits and developing metrics for sustainability. Mathis' awards include the 2018 World Sustainability Award, the 2015 IAIA Global Environment Award, being a 2014 ISSP Sustainability Hall of Fame Inductee, the 2013 Prix Nature Swisscanto, 2012 Blue Planet Prize, 2012 Binding Prize for Nature Conservation, the 2012 Kenneth E. Boulding Memorial Award of the International Society for Ecological Economics, the 2011 Zayed International Prize for the Environment (jointly awarded with UNEP). He was also selected as number 19 on the en(rich) list identifying the 100 top inspirational individuals whose contributions enrich paths to sustainable futures.www.footprintnetwork.orgwww.footprintnetwork.org/toolswww.overshootday.org/power-of-possibility/www.creativeprocess.infowww.oneplanetpodcast.orgInstagram @creativeprocesspodcast
Fired Up Network brings their analysis from a Canadian perspectiveJoseph Peisich and Hall of Fame coach Carmine Isacco look back at Match Day 5 with Portugal and Brazil getting full points
Fired Up Network brings their analysis from a Canadian perspectiveJoseph Peisich and Hall of Fame coach Carmine Isacco look back at Match Day 5 with Portugal and Brazil getting full points
Our friends at the Fired Up Network in Toronto give you their World Cup preview- they even asked Jon to sit in...Guests include CAN MNT's Kemal Miller as you get your preview with a Canadian point-of-view
Our friends at the Fired Up Network in Toronto give you their World Cup preview- they even asked Jon to sit in...Guests include CAN MNT's Kemal Miller as you get your preview with a Canadian point-of-view
In the 41st episode of Wiz Talk with Chase, Chase will react to the World Series and give his thoughts on both the Astros and the Phillies, he will break down some College Football after some crazy games including Georgia over Tennessee and LSU over Alabama, and say how this affects the rankings and the College Football playoff race, and also give his picks for Week 9 of the NFL season! Listen to Wiz Talk with Chase: anchor.fm/chase085 Go to Chase's Sports News: chasessportsnews.com Subscribe to my newsletter: chasecoburn.substack.com Follow me on Instagram: chases_sports_news
Today we meet Rich Freeman and Matt Whitlock, hosts of the ChannelPro Weekly Podcast. Listen in on them interviewing Rick on his expertise on how he has built his brand, maintained it all while building his business and how Rick, Matt, and Rich want to give this knowledge back to the Managed Services Provider community.We Meet: Rich Freeman and Matt Whitlock, hosts of The ChannelPro WeeklyEpisode References: Nintendo 64Xbox 360 ChicagoChannelProChannelPro Weekly PodcastFunnel Hacking LiveDattoRob RaeMatt SolomonDelta737757Brian HamiltonMary HamiltonTikTokInstagramFacebookLinkedInThe Channel ProgramKaseyaGary VeeCommunityAshton KutcherFred VoccolaEBITDAAT&TVerizonConnect:Connect with Rick: https://linktr.ee/mrrickjordanConnect with Rich and Matt at ChannelPro: https://www.channelpronetwork.com/Universal Rate & Review: https://lovethepodcast.com/allinwithrickjordanSubscribe & Review to ALL IN with Rick Jordan on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/RickJordanALLINAbout Rich and Matt:Rich Freeman is founding and executive editor of the ChannelPro Network, where he's responsible for setting overall editorial direction, covering industry trends, and reporting on breaking news in the SMB technology market. A veteran writer and editor, Rich has more than 25 years of experience in the IT industry. His articles and white papers have appeared on the websites of Computerworld, Network World, CIO, InfoWorld, and Redmond Channel Partner magazines, among others.Matt Whitlock is Online Director and Tech Editor for the ChannelPro Network. He brings more than 20 years' experience working in the technology industry to his reviews, analysis, and general musings about all things gadget and gear. Matt's decade of experience in online media, community management, and web development has been instrumental in propelling the ChannelPro brand into the digital future. Matt also co-hosts the ChannelPro Weekly Podcast, a weekly audio program specifically tailored for resellers, VARs, MSPs, and system builders.
We spend most of the hour on your questions and your feedback. Elon Musk purchases and promises to make the platform more open! -- During The Show -- 02:11 Listener responds Hearing Loss - John Part 15 transmitters AM Transmitter (https://www.amazon.com/Talking-House-AM-Radio-Transmitter/dp/B00XV97XZW/?tag=minddripmedia-20) 05:30 Caller James Check out Fedora Spins (https://spins.fedoraproject.org/) Check out the "Everything image" (https://alt.fedoraproject.org/) 09:50 Listener Responds SMB Mounts in Dolphin - Chris D A way of mounting SMB share from FreeNas gvfs-smb for samba gvfs-nfs for NFS gvfs-mtp for Android MTP gvfs-goa for online accounts 14:50 Listener Responds About Maps - Charlie Organic Maps (https://organicmaps.app/) Organic Maps Fdroid (https://f-droid.org/en/packages/app.organicmaps/) Organic Maps Apple Store (https://apps.apple.com/app/organic-maps/id1567437057) 21:20 Listener Got a Job! - Howard Steve helped a listener get a job trueup.io Success is standing on a pile of failures Encrypted APFS drive on Linux 25:10 Listener Responds to GFCI - Brian S GFCI Outlet should be first in the circuit GFCI Breaker Ark Fault vs GFCI 31:00 Firewall Question - Jim Cisco ASA You are paying for access to your own network Netgate 7100 Suricata (https://suricata.io/) 37:50 Home Automation - Ryan Smart thermostat Venstar Thermostat Steve's Solutions Stay away from the NEST Honeywell Red Link (https://www.resideo.com/us/en/pro/redlink/) Noah's Solution Start with Home Assistant (https://www.home-assistant.io/) 45:55 News Wire Nephio Automate 5G Edge * SDX Central (https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/news/google-linux-foundation-launch-nephio-to-automate-5g/2022/04/) * Fierce Wireless (https://www.fiercewireless.com/5g/linux-foundation-google-cloud-launch-nephio-automate-5g-edge-sites) MS SONiC Development shifts to Linux Foundation Hp Wire (https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/open-compute-project-foundation-announces-a-new-hardware-software-co-design-strategy/) Network World (https://www.networkworld.com/article/3657753/microsoft-shifts-sonic-development-to-the-linux-foundation.html) Razers first Linux laptop targets ML & AI Researchers (https://www.theverge.com/2022/4/14/23025968/razer-first-linux-laptop-lambda-tensorbook-tensorflow) Steam on Chrome OS (https://news.itsfoss.com/chromeos-steam-linux/) Intel Raptor Lake-P Support in Linux 5.19 (https://wccftech.com/intel-raptor-lake-p-graphics-driver-support-being-added-to-linux-5-19/) Coreboot Major Milestone (https://www.extremetech.com/computing/334037-open-source-bios-runs-on-alder-lake-motherboard-for-the-first-time) Distrobox 1.2.14 (https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox) LXQT 1.1.0 Released (https://news.itsfoss.com/lxqt-1-1-0-release/) Turnkey Linux 17.0 Released (https://www.turnkeylinux.org/blog/release) Manjaro Linux 21.2.6 (https://www.linuxcompatible.org/story/manjaro-2126-qonos-released/) Krita 5.0.5 (https://krita.org/en/item/krita-5-0-5-released/) Pipewire 0.3.50 (https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/releases/0.3.50) 48:18 Elon Musk Buys Twitter EFF (https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2022/04/twitter-has-new-owner-heres-what-he-should-do) Steve and Noah's thoughts on anonymity Past and Future direction of twitter -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/283) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
This week it's ALL feedback! We tackle your questions and your calls! -- During The Show -- Caller Josh Assistive Listening Device? Retekess (https://www.amazon.com/Transmitter-Retekess-Simultaneous-Translation-Transmission/dp/B087FJ48XC/?tag=minddripmedia-20) In Ear Monitor (IEM) (https://www.amazon.com/Wireless-Professional-Transmitter-Rehearsal-Performance/dp/B09BMXGBLN/?tag=minddripmedia-20) Wireless interference Telex (https://www.bhphotovideo.com/c/product/370613-REG/Telex_71917031_SM_2_Personal_Listening.html) 10:30 Smoke Detector Feedback - Dave automationdirect.com sm120x 13:00 Ryan Follows up on Unifi layout - Ryan UAP LR Outdated? What speed do you need? Replace slowly as needed UniFi will freeze all settings on all devices until you remove outdated equipment Replace the Access Points TP Link Omada (https://www.tp-link.com/us/business-networking/omada-sdn-access-point/) OpenWRT (https://openwrt.org/) ProxMox (https://www.proxmox.com/en/) LibVirt (https://libvirt.org/) OVirt (https://www.infoq.com/news/2015/02/fosdem-ovirt-criu/) 21:45 Tyler Follows up about Unifi Mini Switch - Tyler MS Windows is not reliable Unifi Controller on Linux solid VLan Setup with UniFi Controller 28:14 Ray Follows up about backups - Ray Cryptomator (https://cryptomator.org/) Cryptomator Github (https://github.com/cryptomator/cryptomator) ZFS native encryption Sanoid/Syncoid (https://github.com/jimsalterjrs/sanoid) 31:55 Question About Nextcloud Providers - Bhikhu Tomb (https://github.com/dyne/Tomb) Allen Pope wrote script to convert snaps to flatpak Allen Pope Tweet (https://twitter.com/popey/status/1419416024953274368?s=20&t=Q_vV8PPMZYGO07k5UhUD2Q) TarSnap (https://www.tarsnap.com/) SpiderOak (https://spideroak.com/) 38:00 Mooltipass since Ep 11 - Stephen Mooltipass (https://www.mymooltipass.com/) Trazor (https://trezor.io/) 40:55 Ruin My Search History - Daryll Proprivacy.com ruinmysearchhistory TrackMeNot (https://trackmenot.io/) NewsWire Linux Foundation & Google's Nephio Automate 5G Edge SDX Central (https://www.sdxcentral.com/articles/news/google-linux-foundation-launch-nephio-to-automate-5g/2022/04/) Fierce Wireless (https://www.fiercewireless.com/5g/linux-foundation-google-cloud-launch-nephio-automate-5g-edge-sites) MS SONiC Development shifts to Linux Foundation Hp Wire (https://www.hpcwire.com/off-the-wire/open-compute-project-foundation-announces-a-new-hardware-software-co-design-strategy/) Network World (https://www.networkworld.com/article/3657753/microsoft-shifts-sonic-development-to-the-linux-foundation.html) Razers first Linux laptop targets ML & AI Researchers (https://www.theverge.com/2022/4/14/23025968/razer-first-linux-laptop-lambda-tensorbook-tensorflow) Steam on Chrome OS (https://news.itsfoss.com/chromeos-steam-linux/) Intel Raptor Lake-P Support in Linux 5.19 (https://wccftech.com/intel-raptor-lake-p-graphics-driver-support-being-added-to-linux-5-19/) Coreboot Major Milestone (https://www.extremetech.com/computing/334037-open-source-bios-runs-on-alder-lake-motherboard-for-the-first-time) Distrobox 1.2.14 (https://github.com/89luca89/distrobox) LXQT 1.1.0 Released (https://news.itsfoss.com/lxqt-1-1-0-release/) Turnkey Linux 17.0 Released (https://www.turnkeylinux.org/blog/release) Manjaro Linux 21.2.6 (https://www.linuxcompatible.org/story/manjaro-2126-qonos-released/) Krita 5.0.5 (https://krita.org/en/item/krita-5-0-5-released/) Pipewire 0.3.50 (https://gitlab.freedesktop.org/pipewire/pipewire/-/releases/0.3.50) 45:55 ID_ENG Asked - LoRA Projects? Check out Pine64 48:00 Brule Asked - Long Term Storage Media Archive BluRay Upload the somewhere Spinning Rust not SSD 51:00 Southeast Linux Fest (SELF) Southeast Linuxfest is IN PERSON AND HAPPENING! June 10th, 11th, and 12th Confirmed with the venue, registration & reservations will be open shortly! -- The Extra Credit Section -- For links to the articles and material referenced in this week's episode check out this week's page from our podcast dashboard! This Episode's Podcast Dashboard (http://podcast.asknoahshow.com/282) Phone Systems for Ask Noah provided by Voxtelesys (http://www.voxtelesys.com/asknoah) Join us in our dedicated chatroom #GeekLab:linuxdelta.com on Matrix (https://element.linuxdelta.com/#/room/#geeklab:linuxdelta.com) -- Stay In Touch -- Find all the resources for this show on the Ask Noah Dashboard Ask Noah Dashboard (http://www.asknoahshow.com) Need more help than a radio show can offer? Altispeed provides commercial IT services and they're excited to offer you a great deal for listening to the Ask Noah Show. Call today and ask about the discount for listeners of the Ask Noah Show! Altispeed Technologies (http://www.altispeed.com/) Contact Noah live [at] asknoahshow.com -- Twitter -- Noah - Kernellinux (https://twitter.com/kernellinux) Ask Noah Show (https://twitter.com/asknoahshow) Altispeed Technologies (https://twitter.com/altispeed) Special Guest: Steve Ovens.
Sandra Henry-Stocker, @bugfarm on Twitter, whose column for Network World is Unix as a Second Language, joins Doc Searls and Dan Lynch from her home in the mountains of Western Virginia to share wisdom gathered from more than 30 years administering and writing about Unix and Linux systems. The topics range widely to adjacent subjects, including astronomy, containers and lesser operating systems. Hosts: Doc Searls and Dan Lynch Guest: Sandra Henry-Stocker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Sandra Henry-Stocker, @bugfarm on Twitter, whose column for Network World is Unix as a Second Language, joins Doc Searls and Dan Lynch from her home in the mountains of Western Virginia to share wisdom gathered from more than 30 years administering and writing about Unix and Linux systems. The topics range widely to adjacent subjects, including astronomy, containers and lesser operating systems. Hosts: Doc Searls and Dan Lynch Guest: Sandra Henry-Stocker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Sandra Henry-Stocker, @bugfarm on Twitter, whose column for Network World is Unix as a Second Language, joins Doc Searls and Dan Lynch from her home in the mountains of Western Virginia to share wisdom gathered from more than 30 years administering and writing about Unix and Linux systems. The topics range widely to adjacent subjects, including astronomy, containers and lesser operating systems. Hosts: Doc Searls and Dan Lynch Guest: Sandra Henry-Stocker Download or subscribe to this show at https://twit.tv/shows/floss-weekly Think your open source project should be on FLOSS Weekly? Email floss@twit.tv. Thanks to Lullabot's Jeff Robbins, web designer and musician, for our theme music. Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsor: bitwarden.com/twit
Two members of the CyberWire's hash table of experts: Steve Winterfeld: Akamai's Advisory CISO Paul Calatayud: Palo Alto Networks' Chief Security Officer for the Americas discuss SD-WAN architecture and security. Resources: “A History of SD-WAN,” by CATO. “Broadband history,” by Dani Warner, USwitch, 19 July 2018. “SD-WAN: What's the big deal for security leadership?” by Rick Howard, CSO Perspectives, The CyberWire, 10 October 2020. “The 6 Biggest SASE Buys of 2020 (So Far)” by Tobias Mann, SDxCentral, 26 August 2020. “The Secret to SASE is the Right SD-WAN,” by Network World from IDG, 2020. “What is MPLS: What you need to know about multi-protocol label switching,” by Neal Weinberg and Johna Till Johnson, Network World, 16 March 2016. “What is SD-WAN and why do you need it? Quick Explainer Video,” by Drew Schulke, Dell, 18 October 2019. “Your security stack is moving: SASE is coming,” by Rick Howard, CSO Perspectives, The CyberWire, 5 April 2020.
Rick discusses the history of enterprise connectivity, the benefits of SD-WAN, and the security obstacles to avoid when enterprises deploy SD-WAN today. He also makes the case for a coupling of SD-WAN and SASE. Resources: “A Brief History of the Enterprise WAN: How little has changed in the last 15 years,” by By Andy Gottlieb, Network World, 6 April 2012. “Bandwidth Key Words: DS1, T-1, DS2, T-2, DS3, T-3, DS4, T-4, OC-1, OC-3, OC-12, OC-48, ATM, Bandwidth Resources, MPLS, Satellite, Internet and Bandwidth Speeds: Explaining Bandwidth The Easy Way.” SolveForce. “Broadband history,” by Dani Warner, USwitch, 19 July 2018. “Cybersecurity Innovation Starts Here,” Lee Klarich, Palo Alto Networks, 13 November 2019. "MEF White Paper MEF 3.0 SD-WAN Services,” MEF, November 2019. “MEF 3.0 SD-WAN Services & Certifications – Frequently Asked Questions,” by MEF “SD-WAN drives managed network services trends for 2020,” By Tom Nolle, CIMI Corporation, TechTarget, December 2019. "SD-WAN Explained: The Ultimate Guide to SD-WAN Architecture,” by TectTarget “SD-WAN (Software-defined WAN),” TechTarger “SD-WAN vs. MPLS vs. Public Internet,” by Idan Hershkovich, CATO Networks, 28 February 2018. “SD-WAN security explained,” by ERICKA CHICKOWSKI, AT&T Business, 25 June 2020. “SD-WAN - What it means for enterprise networking, security, cloud computing "Software-defined wide area networks, a software approach managing wide-area networks, offers ease of deployment, central manageability and reduced costs, and can improve connectivity to branch offices and the cloud,” By Michael Cooney, Network World, 9 October 2019. “The 6 Biggest SASE Buys of 2020 (So Far)” by Tobias Mann, sdx central, 26 August 2020. “The Secret to SASE is the Right SD-WAN,” by Networkworld by IDG, 2020. “Tubes: A Journey to the Center of the Internet,” by Andrew Blum, Published January 2012 by Ecco. “What is MPLS: What you need to know about multi-protocol label switchinig,” By Neal Weinberg and Johna Till Johnson, NetworkWorld, 16 March 2016. “What is SD-WAN and why do you need it? Quick Explainer Video,” Drew Schulke, Dell, 18 October 2019. “Why SD-WAN is the next breed of WAN optimization,” By Sean Michael Kerner, TechTarget. “X.25 – What is X.25 Networks?” By Dinesh Thakur, Computer Notes. “Your security stack is moving: SASE is coming,” by Rick Howard, CSO Perspectives, The CyberWire, 5 April 2020.
We review and discuss Mark Dargin's Network World article "Credible threat: how to protect networks from ransomware." His article lays out several steps, each of which we discuss and expand upon: train your people, update your servers and apps, antivirus tools on endpointsm backup your data (of course), test your backups, and conduct vulnerability assessments (Pen tests). Read the original article here: https://www.networkworld.com/article/3218708/how-to-protect-your-network-from-ransomware-attacks.html
George Kurtz is the CEO and co-founder of CrowdStrike, a leading provider of next-generation endpoint protection, threat intelligence, and services. Kurtz is an internationally recognized security expert, author, entrepreneur, and speaker. He has more than 28 years of experience in the security space, including extensive experience driving revenue growth and scaling organizations across the globe. His entrepreneurial background and ability to commercialize nascent technologies have enabled him to drive innovation to market throughout his career. His prior roles at McAfee, a $2.5 billion security company, include Worldwide Chief Technology Officer and GM as well as EVP of Enterprise. Prior to joining McAfee, Kurtz started Foundstone in October 1999 as the founder and CEO responsible for recruiting the other founding team members. Foundstone, a worldwide security products and services company, had one of the leading incident response practices in the industry, and was acquired by McAfee in October of 2004. Kurtz has been quoted or featured in many major publications, media outlets, and television programs including CNN, Fox News, ABC World News, Bloomberg, CNBC, New York Times, USA Today, Wall Street Journal, The Washington Post, Associated Press, Network World, and may others. He also authored the best-selling security book of all time, Hacking Exposed: Network Security Secrets & Solutions.
Everett “Stony” Stonebraker, while earning a degree in Electrical Engineering at Georgia Tech, Stony built an electric car and worked for NASA on the Saturn V rocket in the Apollo space program. Later, he was with an electric utility managing their Telecommunications department and winning Network World's national User Excellence Award. Stony was a catalyst in forming two companies that were pioneers in the country's earliest fiber optics networks.During his career in technology, Stony invested in income-producing vacation condos, land, and single-family homes in Florida and North Carolina. Stony is a full-time commercial real estate investor with investments in over 1,000 units of multifamily properties in Florida and Texas.Stony also holds an MBA from the University of Miami and the CCIM designation as a commercial real estate professional.E-mail: stony@passivorei.comPhone: 305-987-3237Would love your feedback. Please feel free to contact us @ https://loombainvest.com. Connect with us: https://www.linkedin.com/in/vinkiloombahttps://www.linkedin.com/in/raju-datla/Follow us @: https://twitter.com/loombainvest, https://www.instagram.com/loombainvestment,https://www.facebook.com/Loombainvest
Gong, the revenue intelligence leader, leveraging artificial intelligence to transform revenue teams, has raised $250 million in Series E funding. The round was led by Franklin Templeton, bringing Gong's total funding to $584 million.LeoLabs raises $65M Series B, for its satellite monitoring and collision detection service. The round was jointly led by Insight Partners, and Velvet Sea Ventures. This latest round brings the company's total funding to more than $100 million. With the recent funds, the company is looking to expand the number of radar sites around the world, and scale its software-as-a-service business. Twitter launches its new subscription service, Twitter Blue, in Australia, and Canada. The paid-for extra service will add features such as an undo tweet button, bookmarks, and a reader mode. The limited launch is designed to gain a deeper understanding of what customers are looking for. The company also said the free-to-use version of the platform would also remain. It will cost $3.49 Canadian, and $4.49 Australian per month. Google selects 30 start ups, to receive a share of its $2 million Black Founders Fund in Europe. Google provides these companies with a spot of cash, some valuable cloud services and a bit of good old-fashioned networking among the Google crew. The fund was announced last fall, as part of a company-wide effort toward building a more equitable future for everyone, alongside grants and new sponsorships. Each company will receive up to $100,000, in non-dilutive funding, and up to $120,000 in Ads grants, and $100,000 in Cloud credits. Blackstone acquires tech publisher IDG for $1.3B, as private equity strikes again. With IDG, Blackstone gets tech analyst firm, IDC along with a collection of tech publications that includes CIO, Computerworld, InfoWorld, Macworld, Network World, PC World, and Tech Hive. The company has also been making some additions to the platform more recently, with a stronger focus on data and analytics. Exabeam, a late-stage startup that helps organizations detect advanced cybersecurity threats, has landed a new $200 million funding round, that values the company at $2.4 billion. The Series F growth round was led by the Owl Rock division of Blue Owl Capital. Exabeam, which has now raised $390 million in six rounds of outside funding, says it expects to use the new money to fuel scale, innovate, and extend the company's leadership. The company adds that it has made significant investments in its partner program over the last 12 months, which now includes more than 400 reseller, distributor, systems integrator, MSSP, MDR, and consulting partners globally.
Sanjay Sehgal has been the Chairman, and CEO of the MSys Group, MSys Technologies since 2007. MSys Technologies is one of the most consistent and trusted companies for its product engineering services, and digital transformation projects for its ISV and Enterprise clientele. Sanjay is a global leader who carries the vision to deliver the best in IT services and automation software.Sanjay Sehgal has been honored with numerous awards. He was recognized as the “Most Innovative Digital Transformation CEO” in 2019. He was also honored with The TiE Atlanta Top Entrepreneur Award 2018. He was invited to speak at the Web2.0 Summit Leadership in 2019.Sanjay Sehgal is a compulsive entrepreneur and a heartful businessman. He has successfully led and acquired tech companies like Clogeny, DigiFutura, Mobinius. He has been featured in and interviewed by several media networks and publications such as Forbes, Dark Reading, IDG, Network World, PC World, Tech Crunch, Atlanta Business Chronicle, and many more.His thoughts and ideas have been published in the Heartfulness Magazine on “What Lies Beyond Corona.”Sanjay is the best motivational, tech, and keynote speaker. He spoke at several conferences on various subjects and themes including storages, servers, gaming, and web. He was also a part of the panel discussion on consciousness shift in global leadership at the Impact of Leadership 21 Conference held in The United Nations Plaza in New YorkSanjay Sehgal is on the Board of Advisors of the prestigious Audisankara Group of Institutions at Nellore, India. Board of Trustees of Heartfulness Education Trust and Shanti Kunj Constructions. He is an angel investor, advisor, and board member for various technology start-ups in Artificial intelligence, Machine Learning, and Blockchain technologies.Sanjay indulges in his avid passion for philanthropy through Heartfulness a global non-profit organization. He manages global digital initiatives and he also practices and teaches Heartfulness meditation for free to thousands in Alpharetta. He lives here with his family, and at the Kanha Shanti Vanam Ashram in Hyderabad during his regular visit.Sanjay is a self-development enthusiast, humanitarian, and someone who works every day to create a real impact on human lives. He is one of the most inspiring and motivational influencers, who can communicate through his stories on overcoming obstacles, perseverance and how to deal with life's challenges.
Sanjay Sehgal has been the Chairman, and CEO of the MSys Group, MSys Technologies since 2007. MSys Technologies is one of the most consistent and trusted companies for its product engineering services, and digital transformation projects for its ISV and Enterprise clientele. Sanjay is a global leader who carries the vision to deliver the best in IT services and automation software.Sanjay Sehgal has been honored with numerous awards. He was recognized as the “Most Innovative Digital Transformation CEO” in 2019. He was also honored with The TiE Atlanta Top Entrepreneur Award 2018. He was invited to speak at the Web2.0 Summit Leadership in 2019.Sanjay Sehgal is a compulsive entrepreneur and a heartful businessman. He has successfully led and acquired tech companies like Clogeny, DigiFutura, Mobinius. He has been featured in and interviewed by several media networks and publications such as Forbes, Dark Reading, IDG, Network World, PC World, Tech Crunch, Atlanta Business Chronicle, and many more.His thoughts and ideas have been published in the Heartfulness Magazine on “What Lies Beyond Corona.”Sanjay is the best motivational, tech, and keynote speaker. He spoke at several conferences on various subjects and themes including storages, servers, gaming, and web. He was also a part of the panel discussion on consciousness shift in global leadership at the Impact of Leadership 21 Conference held in The United Nations Plaza in New YorkSanjay Sehgal is on the Board of Advisors of the prestigious Audisankara Group of Institutions at Nellore, India. Board of Trustees of Heartfulness Education Trust and Shanti Kunj Constructions. He is an angel investor, advisor, and board member for various technology start-ups in Artificial intelligence, Machine Learning, and Blockchain technologies.Sanjay indulges in his avid passion for philanthropy through Heartfulness a global non-profit organization. He manages global digital initiatives and he also practices and teaches Heartfulness meditation for free to thousands in Alpharetta. He lives here with his family, and at the Kanha Shanti Vanam Ashram in Hyderabad during his regular visit.Sanjay is a self-development enthusiast, humanitarian, and someone who works every day to create a real impact on human lives. He is one of the most inspiring and motivational influencers, who can communicate through his stories on overcoming obstacles, perseverance and how to deal with life’s challenges.
Sure after eight years the Network introduces a new World Title on Primetime LIVE, but how'd we get here? How'd we get a new championship. This episode should clear it up for you as well as give you some history on the United Wrestling Network. --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/theallianceblog/support
Jeff sits down with John Svedese to talk about the season 1 finale of The Basement Surge podcast. They talk his season surprises, the relationship that they've built and what it's motion for Season 2 of the Surge. This was the first LIVE show broadcast on Jeff's new Vodcast Network! Surge Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/basementsurge/ JNH FAcebook: https://www.facebook.com/jeffneedshelp/ Twitter: @BasementSurge Twittwer: @JHunt006
This episode we attend the Botswana Climate Change Network Webinar, the presenters are Lindiwe Modise, Dr. Douglas Rasbash, Nicholas Jankowski and Khulekani Magwaza. On AfricaBytes: Clement Kandodo from Malawi
With more of us connecting with our healthcare providers virtually during the coronavirus pandemic, hackers may find it more appealing to attack medical or hospital systems. Increased amounts of data due to telemedicine and medical internet of things (IoT) devices must be secure to protect individuals' privacy and for HIPAA compliance. Network World senior writer Jon Gold joins Juliet to discuss medical IoT security risks, why these attacks may or may not be especially prevalent now and how to mitigate IoT security risks.
With more of us connecting with our healthcare providers virtually during the coronavirus pandemic, hackers may find it more appealing to attack medical or hospital systems. Increased amounts of data due to telemedicine and medical internet of things (IoT) devices must be secure to protect individuals' privacy and for HIPAA compliance. Network World senior writer Jon Gold joins Juliet to discuss medical IoT security risks and how some device makers are utilizing IoT to give healthcare providers and private citizens alike valuable data about the coronavirus/COVID-19 pandemic.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) in the U.S. recently approved some wireless spectrum within the 6GHz band for Wi-Fi 6 use. This will nearly quintuple the existing Wi-Fi 6 spectrum. The version of Wi-Fi that will take advantage of this spectrum is called Wi-Fi 6E. Existing Wi-Fi 6 clients operate within the 2.4 GHz and 5GHz bands, so they will not be immediately able to access this new 6GHz band. Deploying Wi-Fi 6 may be appealing to enterprises' employees now working remotely, many of whom are working off of Wi-Fi 5 or Wi-Fi 4 networks. Network World senior writer Jon Gold joins Juliet to discuss what Wi-Fi 6E, when to adopt the much-hyped Wi-Fi 6 and what it means for the future of networking.
Over the past month, ThousandEyes has been flooded with questions about how the Internet is holding up given the extra strain it's been under with the sudden influx of remote workers, remote schoolers, and overall increased use due to COVID-19 related self-isolating and shelter in place orders. We've put out blogs and have conducted executive, media and analyst briefings. Network World and the IDG family of publications have even started publishing our data on a weekly basis to keep its readers up to date, as things are changing so frequently.Because of the continued interest in how the Internet is handling the current and, potentially, increasing traffic loads, we decided that now is the right time to kick off a show to answer this question each week. How is the Internet faring? What were some of the most interesting events we observed during the week? We're pleased to share the inaugural episode of The Internet Report.Listen along and don't forget to subscribe to our blog and our YouTube Channel to be the first to get these episodes moving forward. And feel free to leave a comment here, on YouTube, or on Twitter, tagging @ThousandEyes and using the hashtag #TheInternetReport. We hope you find this info useful, and we look forward to your feedback.Show Links:Review the interactive share link of the March 27 Google Outage here and here.Vodafone reports a 50% rise in Internet use as more people work from homeVerizon sees almost 20% increase in web traffic in one week due to COVID-19A large-scale Cogent Communications outage impacted the Northwest United States — see an interactive view of the outage here.Another Cogent outage impacted the reachability of Verily's projectbaseline.com for users in Northern California — see an interactive view of the outage here.
Since 2001, the Denim Group have been helping their clients create resilient software that can be deployed to withstand attacks. They do this across the portfolio of software that clients have, and also do it at scale across the enterprise. I wanted to learn more about how their software development background helps them bridge the gap between security and software development, which enables their clients to build more secure software faster. Dan Cornell joins me on my daily tech podcast to talk about all this and much more. A globally recognized application security expert, Dan Cornell holds over 15 years of experience architecting, developing, and securing web-based software systems. As the Chief Technology Officer and a Principal at Denim Group, Ltd., he leads the technology team to help Fortune 500 companies and government organizations integrate security throughout the development process. Cornell is a sought-after speaker on topics of web application security, speaking at international conferences including the RSA Security Conference, OWASP AppSec USA and EU, and Black Hat Arsenal. He has also appeared as a guest speaker at institutions such as the Los Alamos National Laboratory. He has published papers on topics ranging from data security to high-end graphical simulations, as well as an IBM Redbook on building server-side Java applications for the Linux platform. Today's guest is also a recognized expert in the area of web application security for SearchSoftwareQuality.com and has been quoted as an expert in SC Magazine, Network World, CSO Magazine, Dark Reading, and many more.
This week, we begin our conversation with the reason behind the inception of the Witz End Podcast. It was created to prevent ‘PR fails.’ In other words, the podcast was a great opportunity to share the insights we gained from top reporters with PR professionals, so that everyone can have a better understanding of how to engage the media. Who better to interview than the legendary Tim Greene -executive editor of Network World!
Lisa Seacat DeLuca and Pratima Gluckman discuss celebrating and advocating yourself in a male-dominated field of tech. Lisa Seacat DeLuca is a Director & Distinguished Engineer, leading the incubation and incorporation of the Digital Twin across IBM's IoT offering suite and driving the digital transformation of IoT solutions within IBM. Lisa holds a Masters of Science in Technology Commercialization from the University of Texas McCombs School of Business, and a Bachelors of Science in Computer Science from Carnegie Mellon University with minors in Business Administration and Multimedia Productions. This year, Lisa was named Innovator of the Year from Innovation & Tech Magazine. In 2018, LinkedIn named Lisa #1 on their list of Top Voices in Technology and one of their Top 15 Female Voices to Follow. In 2017, Lisa was inducted into the Women in Technology International (WITI) Hall of Fame, was named #2 in LinkedIn’s Top Voices in Technology List, named as a Top Women in Tech IoT Influencer by Onalytica, and received an honorary PhD from Claremont Graduate University. In 2016, Lisa was named one of the Most Influential Women in IoT. She was named one of MIT’s 35 Innovators Under 35 in 2015, as well as, LinkedIn’s NextWave of 10 Enterprise Technologists Under 35, one of Fast Company’s 100 Most Creative People in Business, and IBM’s Working Mother of the Year for Working Mother Magazine. In 2014, she was named one of Network World's 50 Most Fascinating People in the World of Technology. She is a TED speaker, a self-published author of two children’s books titled "A Robot Story" and “The Internet of Mysterious Things”, and the most prolific female inventor in IBM history and the only one to ever reach the 100th Invention Plateau Award (an IBM internal patent award system). Her innovation portfolio includes over 600 patent applications filed within the United States and abroad, of which, 400 have been granted, to date. The subject of her patent ideas range from areas such as cloud, mobile, IoT, social, security, cognitive, commerce and everything in between. Lisa is an AAAS-Lemelson Inventor Ambassador where she increases visibility to the importance of innovation. Lisa has spoken at numerous tech conferences and written articles to share her technology and innovation passion with others.For recent articles and information about Lisa, visit LisaSeacat.com or follow Lisa on Twitter @LisaSeacat.
Sí, en la nube también hay caídas de servicio, no son muy frecuentes y nunca afectan todos los servicios por completo, pero sí existen y ese es el tema que tratamos en el episodio cinco del podcast de Simplemente Nube. Tomamos información de una reciente en Network World. -- https://www.networkworld.com/article/3394341/when-it-comes-to-uptime-not-all-cloud-providers-are-created-equal.html Analizamos el resumen de caídas de servicio del año 2018-2019 de los proveedores de nube: Amazon Web Services, Google Cloud Plataform y Microsoft Azure. Para información en tiempo real e históricos de los servicios de estos proveedores pueden ingresar a estas páginas web: -- https://azure.microsoft.com/en-us/status/history/ -- https://status.cloud.google.com/ -- https://status.aws.amazon.com/ Mi correo: -- jonatan@simplementenube.com Para más información puedes visitar: - - https://jonatanchinchilla.com/podcasts/
To get work done today and in the future, leaders must embrace technology and the gig economy. Resistance is futile, yet we continue to ignore the technology skills gap, which threatens the future vibrancy of the U.S. economy, workforce development and national security. Who is responsible for creating it? What are the best solutions needed to address it? This week's special guest is Gary Beach, Publisher Emeritus, CIO Magazine, Wall St. Journal journalist, and thought leader, who is an authority on closing the technology skills gap. We will be discussing how technology links to strategy as a business imperative and discuss steps that must be taken to embrace diversity in the technology world. Gary Beach's career spans over three decades in the information technology media business. He has held executive posts at McGraw-Hill on Data Communications, the world's first digital networking magazine, and at International Data Group where he was publisher of Network World (1987), Computerworld (1991) and CIO Magazine (1997). In 1999, he founded of CIO India Magazine. Mr. Beach contributed technology commentaries to National Public Radio's “All Things Considered” and “Morning Edition” programs for four years and appeared regularly for a decade on CNBC's “Squawk Box”, “Squawk on the Street” and “The Closing Bell” programs where he spoke about technology investment and acquisition trends. In August 2013, John Wiley and Sons published Mr. Beach's best-selling book “The U.S. Technology Skills Gap” which critics acclaim the “best contextual history of STEM education written”. In 2014 he began an assignment as a columnist for The Wall Street Journal's CIO Journal where he writes regularly on the topic of technology talent. In 2015, Mr.Beach began work on “The Skills Gap Almanac” which appears on the Twitter platform, and monthly he partners with Oklahoma State University's Institute of Technology to publish the “Skills Gap Misery Index” which measures the pain caused by the skills gap.
Ben is a longtime tech reporter for Forbes, Network World, and Information Week. He's also the author of the wildly popular Diversity Blog and he does a bit of angel investing on the side. This week he's going to talk with us about the latest tech news and trends on Cloud Unfiltered!
DShield.org (https://secure.dshield.org/) , which is now the data collection engine behind the ISC. His work with the ISC has been widely recognized, and in 2004, Network World named him one of the 50 most powerful people in the networking industry. Prior to working for SANS, Johannes worked as a lead support engineer for a web development company and as a research physicist. Johannes holds a PhD in physics from SUNY Albany and is based in Jacksonville, Florida. His daily podcast (https://isc.sans.edu/podcast.html) summarizes current security news in a concise format. In this episode we discuss his start in physics and switch to cyber security, building the SANS Internet Storm Center, security challenges posed by the cloud, teaching for SANS (https://www.sans.org/instructors/dr-johannes-ullrich) , AI and machine learning, IoT security, and so much more. Where you can find Johannes: LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/johannesullrich/) Twitter (https://twitter.com/johullrich) SANS Internet Storm Center (https://isc.sans.edu/)
Uptake (https://uptake.com/) . Prior to Uptake, Nicholas was the Vice President of Global Services at Trustwave (https://www.trustwave.com/home/) where he led more than 2000 incident response and forensic investigations globally, ran thousands of ethical hacking & application security tests for clients, and conducted bleeding-edge security research to improve Trustwave's products. Before Trustwave, Nick ran the security consulting practices at VeriSign, & Internet Security Systems. In 2004, he drafted an application security framework that became known as the Payment Application Best Practices (PABP). In 2008, this framework was adopted as a global standard called Payment Application Data Security Standard (PA-DSS). As a speaker, he has provided unique insight around security breaches, malware, mobile security and InfoSec trends to public ( OWASP (https://www.owasp.org/) ) & private audiences (Including DHS, US-CERT, Interpol, United States Secret Service) throughout the world. Nick's research has been featured by media including: The Washington Post, eWeek, PC World, CNET, Wired, Network World, Dark Reading, Fox News, USA Today, Forbes, Computerworld, CSO Magazine, CNN, The Times of London, NPR, Gizmodo, Fast Company, Financial Times & The Wall Street Journal. Nick is also the creator of The Cavalry (https://www.iamthecavalry.org/about/overview/) movement. In this interview we discuss his early start with computers, what is a hacker, developing a methodology for penetration testing, how he developed the SpiderLabs name, analytics and automation, when you should evaluate opportunities, moving past the fear of public speaking, his personal "drink-a-different-beer-a-day" contest, research and public disclosure of vulnerabilities, how to secure Internet connected devices, where he recruits talent, and much more. I hope you enjoy this discussion. Please leave your comments below! Where you can find Nick: LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/in/c7five) Twitter (https://twitter.com/c7five) THOTCON (http://thotcon.org/) I am the Cavalry (https://www.iamthecavalry.org/about/overview/)
What are 'Standard International units'? Where are you from? Send us a postcard! Strange Attractor, c/ PO Box 9, Fitzroy, VIC 3065, Australia The seven Système International d'Unités (SI) base units: second, mole, metre, kilogram, kelvin, candela, ampere (National Physical Laboratory) The seven Système International d'Unités (SI) base units: second, mole, metre, kilogram, kelvin, candela, ampere (Wikipedia) The base units (Bureau International des Poids et Mesures) The SI system kicked off after 1799 (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) Moon Unit Zappa, child of Frank Zappa (Wikipedia) The 'cubit' was the length from the tip of one's middle finger to the bottom of the elbow (Wikipedia) History of length measurement: From cubits to lasers (National Physical Laboratory) A history of all the weird units of measurement from ye olde ancient times (Encyclopaedia Britannica) A history of the kilogram (National Physical Laboratory) Standard time was introduced from the mid-1800s around the world with the coming of the railways (Wikipedia) The Allegheny Observatory used to provide accurate time updates via telegraph in North America (Wikipedia) A history of timekeeping devices (Wikipedia) The second used to be defined as 1/86,400 of a day, but now it's "the duration of 9,192,631,770 periods of the radiation corresponding to the transition between the two hyperfine levels of the ground state of the caesium-133 atom" (Wikipedia) A brief history of the second (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) "A new optical clock ticks so consistently that if it had started at the dawn of the universe, it would have lost less than two minutes" (The Independent) The strontium optical clock (OSA Publishing) Where are atomic clocks? They're everywhere now (HyperPhysics, Georgia State University) Clock synchronisation around the world is really important for computers & stuff (Wikipedia) International Atomic Time tells us at which speed our clocks should tick (Time and Date) What is needed to synchronise time across atomic clocks in the world? (Quora) How to improve time accuracy on iPhone & Apple Watch (iPhone Tricks) Security implications of the humble computer clock (Network World) Who invented the second? Claudius Ptolemy around 150 C.E. (Reference) Why is a minute divided into 60 seconds, an hour into 60 minutes, yet there are only 24 hours in a day? (Scientific American) The book Johnny was talking about by Dava Sobel: 'Longitude: The true story of a lone genius who solved the greatest scientific problem of his time' (Wikipedia) See John Harrison's original clocks in the museum at Greenwich, London (Royal Museums Greenwich) We had the second for ages, then the kelvin was first defined in 1743, the kilogram & metre followed in 1793, the amp in 1881, the mole in 1900, & the candela in 1946, but they've been refined now (Wikipedia) The metre was originally defined as one ten-millionth of the distance from the equator to the North Pole (Wikipedia) The metre is now defined as the distance travelled by light in 1/299,792,458th of a second (Wikipedia) A brief history of the metre (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) The speed of light: 299,792,458 metres per second (Encyclopaedia Britannica) People debating pool tolerance & why timing isn't more accurate in swimming (Reddit) Meet the kilogram - a.k.a 'La Grande K' or 'Big K' (Wikipedia) There did used to be someone who went around checking stuff - the 'city meter' - "checking both the weights of goods as sold & the accuracy of the metal weights used" (Hall Genealogy Website) The International Prototype Kilogram (IPK) & its copies - Australia has one (Wikipedia) If someone knocks a chunk off the IPK, the definition of a kilogram changes (Wikipedia) A list of the prefixes for metric units of measurement: e.g. 'kilo' just means a thousand (The National Institute of Standards and Technology) "The magnitude of many of the units comprising the SI system...are highly dependent upon the stability of a 137-year-old, golf-ball-sized cylinder of metal stored in a vault in France" (Wikipedia) The new kilogram is due out in 2018 - stay tuned (The National Institute of Standards and Technology) Redefining the kilogram: Mass, Planck & Einstein (The National Institute of Standards and Technology) Redefining the kilogram: The 'Watt balance' (The National Institute of Standards and Technology) After a fraught few years, experiments to redefine the kilogram have reached agreement (Nature) What is a mole? Not the burrowing kind with small eyes (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) Avogadro's number & the mole (Wikipedia) What is a mole & why are moles used? (About Education, Chemistry) Hello kelvin - this unit is 1/273.16 of the thermodynamic temperature of the triple point of water (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) What is the triple point of water? (Wikipedia) What is Celsius? (Wikipedia) Deep breath: "The ampere is that constant current which, if maintained in two straight parallel conductors of infinite length, of negligible circular cross section, & placed 1 metre apart in a vacuum, would produce between these conductors a force equal to 2 x 10-7 newton per metre of length" (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) What is the difference between voltage & current (amperes)? (The Charging Point) Everything you wanted to know about charging your iPhone or iPad (Apple, Communities) iPhone & iPad chargers appear to be around 1-2 amps according to this (Apple, Communities) I believe you now Johnny: Turns out the coloured rings for electric toothbrushes really are to tell family members' brush heads apart (Electric Teeth) Meet the candela, "the luminous intensity, in a given direction, of a source that emits monochromatic radiation of frequency 540 x 1,012 hertz & that has a radiant intensity in that direction of 1/683 watts per steradian" (The National Institute of Standards & Technology) What is black body radiation? (Cosmos, Swinburne University) We can use luminous intensity to measure how far away stars are (Science, How Stuff Works) 'Intrinsic luminosity' is how bright something is & 'apparent brightness' is how bright it looks - knowing these details helps us measure how far away stars are (Department of Astronomy & Astrophysics, Penn State) Stellar brightness (Department of Astronomy, The Ohio State University) Brightness, luminosity & the magnitude scale (Department of Astronomy, Cornell University) What is a standard candle? (Cosmos, Swinburne University) (non SI) Units for quantities that describe biological effects (Bureau International des Poids et Mesures) The future - proposed redefinition of SI base units (Wikipedia) A more fundamental International System of units (Physics Today) Corrections Sorry Johnny, you got latitude & longitude mixed up - latitude is north-south, longitude is east-west (Encyclopaedia Britannica) Cheeky review? (If we may be so bold) It'd be amazing if you gave us a short review...it'll make us easier to find in iTunes: Click here for instructions. You're the best! We owe you a free hug and/or a glass of wine from our cellar
Episode 0x69 Still Weekly! Still difficult to get everyone together for a recording but damn, we're trying. Keep sending in your questions to mailbag@liquidmatrix.org and if you see one of us at a conference, ask nicely and we'll give you a sticker! PS: The Security Intern joins us tonight - sorry you all can't see her commentary on the rest of the Liquidmatrix crew. Upcoming this week... Lots of News Breaches SCADA / Cyber, cyber... etc. finishing it off with DERPs/Mailbag (or Deep Dive) And there are weekly Briefs - no arguing or discussion allowed And if you've got commentary, please sent it to mailbag@liquidmatrix.org for us to check out. DISCLAIMER: It's not that explicit, but you may want to use headphones if you're at work. ADDITIONAL DISCLAIMER: In case it is unclear, this is the story of 5 opinionated infosec pros who have sufficient opinions of their own they don't need to speak for anyone except themselves. Ok? Good. In this episode: News and Commentary Badlock Bug Site Get out your Sad Trombones everyone. Steve Ragan Fulfils Curmudgeon Role - Badlock Hype Tero Hänninen calls bullshit in a simple way Network World notes that Microsoft doesn't think it's Logo-worthy Eset et al. Take down Mumblehard Linux/BSD botnet Breaking Google Captcha Investigating the Potential for Miscommunication Using Emoji California lawmakers take step toward outlawing 'ransomware' Breaches Security Flaws found in 3 state health insurance websites (THANKS OBAMA) Petya Ransomware Encryption Defeated SCADA / Cyber, cyber... etc Lockheed Martin - Integrated Infrastructure: Cyber Resiliency in Society OMGee - Canada is vulnerable, eh? FBI Claims that businesses have lost $2.3 Billion to Email Scams from October 2013 to February 2016 DERP Maynor Fixes All The Maps - MaxMind and Default Locations in GeoIP Misconfigure your way to Panama Success Mailbag Compliance is the Naturopathy of Information Security - DISCUSS. Briefly -- NO ARGUING OR DISCUSSION ALLOWED Random MAC addresses not enough... Integrating Bro IDS with the Elastic Stack Dealing with Digital Death Automating thought leadership Scan Onion Services for Security Issues Submit to the SecTor CFP!Early acceptance deadline is Sunday April 17 - final deadline is August 14th Upcoming Appearances: -- more gratuitous self-promotion Dave: - NAB Show, Interop, RMISC, HackMiami, NolaCon James: - Desperately working on new material for Blackhat Cloud Security Training Ben: - Vogon poetry reading Wil: - Remedial HTML for beginners (Cue Jamie's rant here) Other LSD Writers: - Really? Advertising - pay the bills... Thinking about SecTor this October? Be sure to use the code "liquidmatrix2016" and save 10% off the registration fee! Or if you've just got time to cruise the SecTor Expo Hall, the code "liquidmatrix2016expo" will get you in for $0 Next Week - because we'll be here next week! We'll be discussing the idea of making cyber a regulated profession. Send us your thoughts. Also, California, what's up with that? Closing Thoughts Seacrest Says: Cause, baby, now we got badlock Creative Commons license: BY-NC-SA
Download and listen to our conversation about using IT as a transformative strategic asset with Tim Hebert, CEO of award-winning Atrion, a “top 1% organization” with a proven track record for helping clients fuse IT with their businesses. Under Tim's leadership over the past 20 years, Atrion has earned numerous industry awards, including: Best Place to Work, Business Excellence Award Winner, and Inc. 5000 Company. Tim is also a published thought leader who regularly blogs for IDG Enterprise, the leading enterprise technology media company composed of CIO, Computerworld, CSO, DEMO, InfoWorld, ITworld and Network World. We discuss: How IT can transform business models to creatively respond to emerging market needs What it takes to foster a truly strategic IT organization capable of delivering breakthrough value Three essential questions for maximizing IT expenditures to grow and transform a business
Episode 13 summary: Our Mantra and its origin Be Proactive! Be Positive! Add Value! Share Opportunity! Technology News Google’s self-driving cars in Mountain View Selfie sticks banned at Disney World If you were given $1,000 to spend on your career, what would you use it for? Mary Brandel’s article at Network World download episode 13 Other […] The post 13 – What would you do with $1,000 dollars and our mantra: Be Proactive! Be Positive! Add Value! Share Opportunity! appeared first on Building Your I.T. Career.
Avram Piltch has written articles that have received their share of negative comments, and he wears that as a badge of honor. In fact, he believes that, for someone to take the time to respond negatively, he must have hit a good topic. If that is the case, this week was a success with the 6 Reasons the iPhone 6 Has Already Lost, having received whole response articles from Network World and The Unofficial Apple Weblog. He discusses the topics of his "well-received" article, as well as the sudden fame from his astute observations.
Avram Piltch has written articles that have received their share of negative comments, and he wears that as a badge of honor. In fact, he believes that, for someone to take the time to respond negatively, he must have hit a good topic. If that is the case, this week was a success with the 6 Reasons the iPhone 6 Has Already Lost, having received whole response articles from Network World and The Unofficial Apple Weblog. He discusses the topics of his "well-received" article, as well as the sudden fame from his astute observations.
The news includes: FamilySearch has announced the addition of another 26 million new names. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) will celebrate Independence Day on Sunday, July 4th, with its annual ceremony, its first ever National Independence Day Parade float, and a brand new logo. EasyNetSites (http://easynetsites.com) announces the availability of its products to create a customized website for genealogical societies, individuals, and small businesses. You don't need to know anything about HTML, XHTML, or other programming languages in order to use it. Listener email includes: Drew reads an item sent to him in French (and realizes after the podcast that the unusual word was actually a proper name!). Mike thanks Deborah effusively for her great help in opening up new research avenues for him! Clive asks for advice about DNA tests in the UK. Carla asks about her Afican-American and American Indian ancestry, and DNA results that suggest Ukranian ancestry. Steve and Patrice both wrote in to Drew to suggest the use of Newark, New Jersey, city directories for locating his Smith ancestors. Steve suggests the directories at Footnote.com and Patrice recommends working with the Newark Public Library. Louis Kessler is suggesting a new Genealogy Software and Internet site for users to handle FAQs. It needs 60 followers to make it permanent. Visit the site at http://tinyurl.com/LKessler. Try out a computational search engine at WolframAlpha. Network World published an article about the digital preservation of the WWII Enigma messages. See the full article at: http://www.networkworld.com/news/2010/060510-archive-project-will-digitize-wwii.html Tim wrote to report that he has received court transcripts from NARA of a federal court case in 1895 for his great-uncle. Tina addresses the issue of Ancestry.co.uk's high prices to order BMD records from the General Register Office (GRO) for you. Melanie asks about the correct way of recording events. George and Drew discuss three books: Abstracts of the Testamentary Proceedings of the Prerogative Court of Maryland: Volume XXIV: 1744-1746, compiled by V. L. Skinner, Jr. (Clearfield Company/Genealogical Publishing Co.) The First Parish Register of Belize 1794-1810 and the First Four Censuses 1816-1826, compiled by Sonia Bennett Murray (Clearfield Company/Genealogical Publishing Co.) Who Do You Think You Are? by Megan Smolynak Smolenyak (Viking)
Companies spend millions of dollars implementing security technologies to protect their corporate networks. Laptop computers and other mobile devices lose this protection once they leave the confines of the corporate office. This presentation will define mobility-related threats, show live hacks and define best security practices to address these risks, with a particular focus on Network Access Control and NAP technologies. About the speaker: Daniel V. Hoffman is a the author of two books by Wiley Publishing "Blackjacking: Security Threats to BlackBerry Devices, PDAs, and Cell Phones in the Enterprise," released in April and "Implementing NAP and NAC Security Technologies: The Complete Guide to Network Access Control", due out in March. He is a regular speaker at events throughout the world and has been interviewed as a security expert by numerous worldwide media outlets including Forbes, Network World, Clear Channel Communications and NewsWeek.