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Missade du trafiksäkerhetsdagarna i Göteborg i oktober? Här kommer ett nytt avsnitt av podden där Emelie Hedberg från NTF tillsammans med Magnus Granström, SAFER och Maria Håkansson, Guidance to Zero gör en sammanfattning av konferensen. Vill du veta hur programmet såg ut läs här.
Have you ever wondered where all your digital memories, work projects, or favorite photos actually live in the cloud? In this episode, Lois Houston and Nikita Abraham are joined by Principal OCI Instructor Orlando Gentil to discuss cloud storage. They explore how data is carefully organized, the different ways it can be stored, and what keeps it safe and easy to find. Cloud Tech Jumpstart: https://mylearn.oracle.com/ou/course/cloud-tech-jumpstart/152992 Oracle University Learning Community: https://education.oracle.com/ou-community LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/showcase/oracle-university/ X: https://x.com/Oracle_Edu Special thanks to Arijit Ghosh, David Wright, Kris-Ann Nansen, Radhika Banka, and the OU Studio Team for helping us create this episode. ------------------------------------------------------ Episode Transcript: 00:00 Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast, the first stop on your cloud journey. During this series of informative podcasts, we'll bring you foundational training on the most popular Oracle technologies. Let's get started! 00:25 Nikita: Welcome to the Oracle University Podcast! I'm Nikita Abraham, Team Lead of Editorial Services with Oracle University, and with me is Lois Houston, Director of Innovation Programs. Lois: Hey there! Last week, we spoke about the differences between traditional and cloud data centers, and covered components like CPU, RAM, and operating systems. If you haven't listened to the episode yet, I'd suggest going back and listening to it before you dive into this one. Nikita: Joining us again is Orlando Gentil, Principal OCI Instructor at Oracle University, and we're going to ask him about another fundamental concept: storage. 01:04 Lois: That's right, Niki. Hi Orlando! Thanks for being with us again today. You introduced cloud data centers last week, but tell us, how is data stored and accessed in these centers? Orlando: At a fundamental level, storage is where your data resides persistently. Data stored on a storage device is accessed by the CPU and, for specialized tasks, the GPU. The RAM acts as a high-speed intermediary, temporarily holding data that the CPU and the GPU are actively working on. This cyclical flow ensures that applications can effectively retrieve, process, and store information, forming the backbone for our computing operations in the data center. 01:52 Nikita: But how is data organized and controlled on disks? Orlando: To effectively store and manage data on physical disks, a structured approach is required, which is defined by file systems and permissions. The process began with disks. These are the raw physical storage devices. Before data can be written to them, disks are typically divided into partitions. A partition is a logical division of a physical disk that acts as if it were a separated physical disk. This allows you to organize your storage space and even install multiple operating systems on a single drive. Once partitions are created, they are formatted with a file system. 02:40 Nikita: Ok, sorry but I have to stop you there. Can you explain what a file system is? And how is data organized using a file system? Orlando: The file system is the method and the data structure that an operating system uses to organize and manage files on storage devices. It dictates how data is named, is stored, retrieved, and managed on the disk, essentially providing the roadmap for data. Common file systems include NTFS for Windows and ext4 or XFS for Linux. Within this file system, data is organized hierarchically into directories, also known as folders. These containers help to logically group related files, which are the individual units of data, whether they are documents, images, videos, or applications. Finally, overseeing this entire organization are permissions. 03:42 Lois: And what are permissions? Orlando: Permissions define who can access a specific files and directories and what actions they are allowed to perform-- for example, read, write, or execute. This access control, often managed by user, group, and other permissions, is fundamental for security, data integrity, and multi-user environments within a data center. 04:09 Lois: Ok, now that we have a good understanding of how data is organized logically, can we talk about how data is stored locally within a server? Orlando: Local storage refers to storage devices directly attached to a server or computer. The three common types are Hard Disk Drive. These are traditional storage devices using spinning platters to store data. They offer large capacity at a lower cost per gigabyte, making them suitable for bulk data storage when high performance isn't the top priority. Unlike hard disks, solid state drives use flash memory to store data, similar to USB drives but on a larger scale. They provide significantly faster read and write speeds, better durability, and lower power consumption than hard disks, making them ideal for operating systems, applications, and frequently accessed data. Non-Volatile Memory Express is a communication interface specifically designed for solid state that connects directly to the PCI Express bus. NVME offers even faster performance than traditional SATA-based solid state drives by reducing latency and increasing bandwidth, making it the top choice for demanding workloads that require extreme speed, such as high-performance databases and AI applications. Each type serves different performance and cost requirements within a data center. While local storage is essential for immediate access, data center also heavily rely on storage that isn't directly attached to a single server. 05:59 Lois: I'm guessing you're hinting at remote storage. Can you tell us more about that, Orlando? Orlando: Remote storage refers to data storage solutions that are not physically connected to the server or client accessing them. Instead, they are accessed over the network. This setup allows multiple clients or servers to share access to the same storage resources, centralizing data management and improving data availability. This architecture is fundamental to cloud computing, enabling vast pools of shared storage that can be dynamically provisioned to various users and applications. 06:35 Lois: Let's talk about the common forms of remote storage. Can you run us through them? Orlando: One of the most common and accessible forms of remote storage is Network Attached Storage or NAS. NAS is a dedicated file storage device connected to a network that allows multiple users and client devices to retrieve data from a centralized disk capacity. It's essentially a server dedicated to serving files. A client connects to the NAS over the network. And the NAS then provides access to files and folders. NAS devices are ideal for scenarios requiring shared file access, such as document collaboration, centralized backups, or serving media files, making them very popular in both home and enterprise environments. While NAS provides file-level access over a network, some applications, especially those requiring high performance and direct block level access to storage, need a different approach. 07:38 Nikita: And what might this approach be? Orlando: Internet Small Computer System Interface, which provides block-level storage over an IP network. iSCSI or Internet Small Computer System Interface is a standard that allows the iSCSI protocol traditionally used for local storage to be sent over IP networks. Essentially, it enables servers to access storage devices as if they were directly attached even though they are located remotely on the network. This means it can leverage standard ethernet infrastructure, making it a cost-effective solution for creating high performance, centralized storage accessible over an existing network. It's particularly useful for server virtualization and database environments where block-level access is preferred. While iSCSI provides block-level access over standard IP, for environments demanding even higher performance, lower latency, and greater dedicated throughput, a specialized network is often deployed. 08:47 Nikita: And what's this specialized network called? Orlando: Storage Area Network or SAN. A Storage Area Network or SAN is a high-speed network specifically designed to provide block-level access to consolidated shared storage. Unlike NAS, which provides file level access, a SAN presents a storage volumes to servers as if they were local disks, allowing for very high performance for applications like databases and virtualized environments. While iSCSI SANs use ethernet, many high-performance SANs utilize fiber channel for even faster and more reliable data transfer, making them a cornerstone of enterprise data centers where performance and availability are paramount. 09:42 Oracle University's Race to Certification 2025 is your ticket to free training and certification in today's hottest technology. Whether you're starting with Artificial Intelligence, Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, Multicloud, or Oracle Data Platform, this challenge covers it all! Learn more about your chance to win prizes and see your name on the Leaderboard by visiting education.oracle.com/race-to-certification-2025. That's education.oracle.com/race-to-certification-2025. 10:26 Nikita: Welcome back! Orlando, are there any other popular storage paradigms we should know about? Orlando: Beyond file level and block level storage, cloud environments have popularized another flexible and highly scalable storage paradigm, object storage. Object storage is a modern approach to storing data, treating each piece of data as a distinct, self-contained unit called an object. Unlike file systems that organize data in a hierarchy or block storage that breaks data into fixed size blocks, object storage manages data as flat, unstructured objects. Each object is stored with unique identifiers and rich metadata, making it highly scalable and flexible for massive amounts of data. This service handles the complexity of storage, providing access to vast repositories of data. Object storage is ideal for use cases like cloud-native applications, big data analytics, content distribution, and large-scale backups thanks to its immense scalability, durability, and cost effectiveness. While object storage is excellent for frequently accessed data in rapidly growing data sets, sometimes data needs to be retained for very long periods but is accessed infrequently. For these scenarios, a specialized low-cost storage tier, known as archive storage, comes into play. 12:02 Lois: And what's that exactly? Orlando: Archive storage is specifically designed for long-term backup and retention of data that you rarely, if ever, access. This includes critical information, like old records, compliance data that needs to be kept for regulatory reasons, or disaster recovery backups. The key characteristics of archive storage are extremely low cost per gigabyte, achieved by optimizing for infrequent access rather than speed. Historically, tape backup systems were the common solution for archiving, where data from a data center is moved to tape. In modern cloud environments, this has evolved into cloud backup solutions. Cloud-based archiving leverages high-cost, effective during cloud storage tiers that are purpose built for long term retention, providing a scalable and often more reliable alternative to physical tapes. 13:05 Lois: Thank you, Orlando, for taking the time to talk to us about the hardware and software layers of cloud data centers. This information will surely help our listeners to make informed decisions about cloud infrastructure to meet their workload needs in terms of performance, scalability, cost, and management. Nikita: That's right, Lois. And if you want to learn more about what we discussed today, head over to mylearn.oracle.com and search for the Cloud Tech Jumpstart course. Lois: In our next episode, we'll take a look at more of the fundamental concepts within modern cloud environments, such as Hypervisors, Virtualization, and more. I can't wait to learn more about it. Until then, this is Lois Houston… Nikita: And Nikita Abraham, signing off! 13:47 That's all for this episode of the Oracle University Podcast. If you enjoyed listening, please click Subscribe to get all the latest episodes. We'd also love it if you would take a moment to rate and review us on your podcast app. See you again on the next episode of the Oracle University Podcast.
En este episodio de 50 minutos te explico NTFS de forma clara y práctica: su historia, arquitectura interna (MFT, metadatos, B-trees, journaling), funciones clave (ACLs/permisos, EFS/cifrado, compresión, hard links/symlinks, sparse files, cuotas y ADS), además de compararlo con FAT32, exFAT, ext4, APFS, ZFS y ReFS. Cerramos con compatibilidad (Windows, Linux, macOS), casos de uso reales (discos externos, dual-boot, SSD/HDD) y buenas prácticas para evitar sustos.
Läsa mejl när man borstar tänder, klämma in ett träningspass under lunchen, köra i turbo förbi en skola för att hinna handla. Karlavagnen ställer sig frågan varför vi ofta har så bråttom? Lyssna på alla avsnitt i Sveriges Radio Play. I mitten av augusti visade en mätning från Nationella trafiksäkerhetsförbundet (NTF) att varannan bilist i Sverige kör för fort när de passerar skolor. Så nu när höstterminen börjat lever många barn farligt och hastigheterna ska mätas igen.Och just på hösten brukar tempot gå upp. Många försöker åstadkomma så mycket som möjligt på så kort tid som möjligt. Vi stressar för att hinna hämta barnen efter jobbet, skriver sms samtidigt som vi går, struntar i vägarbetarnas varningsflaggor och brakar förbi i så höga hastigheter att de nästan ramlar i diket av vinddraget (i bästa fall, i sämsta blir de påkörda).Hur är det för dig? Har du bråttom för det mesta? Blir du stressad av att ha mängder av saker som måste fixas eller mår du tvärtom bra av det? Att ständigt vara på språng och ha en fullbokad almanacka kanske också kan kännas meningsfullt?Eller har du kanske slutat att skynda dig? Hur gick det i så fall till och vad har det gett dig att inte ha så bråttom?Vi vill gärna höra din historia!Programledare: Li SkarinProducent: Helene AlmqvistRing oss på 020-22 10 30 och berätta! Eller skriv till oss på våra sociala medier eller mejla till karlavagnen@sverigesradio.se. Slussen öppnar som vanligt kl 21:00 och programmet börjar 21:40.
Stay ahead of September 2025 Patch Tuesday. Automox experts Ryan Braunstein, Henry Smith, and Seth Hoyt break down three high-impact items you need to act on now: Hyper-V privilege escalation, XAML/Phone Link elevation paths, and an NTFS remote code execution.You'll get:Clear patch priorities and timing.Likely attack paths and real-world detection tips.Hardening moves: WDAC/AppLocker, least privilege, Phone Link controls, and removing Hyper-V where it's not needed.How to use the Automox console to group at-risk devices, push updates, disable features, and verify compliance.Subscribe, share with your team, and tighten your local attack surface today.
Shortly after the Trump administration took office, performing artist Marc Bamuthi Joseph was fired. Until then, he had served as the Artistic Director of Social Impact at the John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts in Washington, D.C. During The State of the World, he reflects on the challenges of making art in times of political tension.The State of the World is an annual interview series organized by De Balie and the Nederlands Theater Festival (NTF), in which a leading international artist reflects on the role of art in our changing world. This year's special guest is Marc Bamuthi Joseph. In the media, he has spoken out about the impact of these institutional shifts on artists and staff. His critical stance, along with his sharp vision on the role of art in a divided society, is the reason for his visit to Amsterdam.During The State of the World, Marc Bamuthi Joseph speaks about his personal experiences within the American arts sector, the challenges of creating art in politically turbulent times, and the power of imagination as a source of healing, resistance, and connection. The interview program The State of the World is a collaboration between NTF and De Balie, as part of Amsterdam Fringe x NTF PRO.About the speakerMarc Bamuthi Joseph is a TED Global Fellow and a member of the prestigious American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He has collaborated with major orchestras and opera houses across the U.S., including the LA Philharmonic, the New York City Ballet, and the Washington National Opera. His work—from spoken word to opera—is deeply rooted in themes such as social justice, community, spirituality, and reconciliation. As a performer, he is also widely recognized, having appeared in the HBO adaptation of Between the World and Me by Ta-Nehisi Coates.Moderator: Rokhaya SeckZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
In deze aflevering ontvangt Teddy Tops kunstenaar Carmen Schabracq. (https://www.instagram.com/carmenschabracq/) Carmen is genomineerd voor de ontwerpprijs van het NTF (https://tf.nl/genomineerden-allereerste-ontwerpersprijs-bekend/) en in september opent ze haar eerste solo expositie bij Red Lab Gallery in Milaan. De tips van Carmen: Boek: De bewaring, (https://dasmag.nl/product/de-bewaring/) Het moeder model (https://www.atlascontact.nl/boek/het-moedermodel/) Podcast: The Great Women Artists Theater: Mama Dada (https://www.theateraanderijn.nl/?s=mama%20dada) Dans: When I Saw the Sea (https://festival-avignon.com/en/edition-2025/programme/when-i-saw-the-sea-351178) Tentoonstelling: Sint-Denijs-City kunstroute (https://www.sintdenijscity.be/) Museum: De oude kerk (https://oudekerk.nl/?gad_source=1&gad_campaignid=717404393&gbraid=0AAAAADOaGP02ITqXqmuTtAeQnp7oezHnm&gclid=Cj0KCQjw_L_FBhDmARIsAItqgt5qvobdfsSSgeutHPSf2hbGWAreXtdIIj2qLsYVpEWlr40vXN5p0SwaAn7EEALw_wcB) Openbare kunst: Mbulu Ngulu (https://amsterdam.kunstwacht.nl/kunstwerken/bekijk/1542-mbulu-ngulu) Recent album: Meydan (https://meralpolat.nl/) Liedje: Çiya Icaro (https://meralpolat.nl/ciyaicaro/) Aankomend concert: Meral Polat (https://meralpolat.nl/) Festival: Circusbende (https://www.circusbende.nl/) Nu in de bioscoop: Sorry Baby (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt32843349/) Film op streaming: La Chimera (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt14561712/) Serie: Ripley (https://www.imdb.com/title/tt11016042/) Kindercultuur: Poppenkast op de Dam (https://poppenkastopdedam.nl/) Gratis: Galerie Fleur en Wouter (https://www.galeriefleurenwouter.com/), Gallery Fanny Freytag (https://www.vanfannyfreytag.com/) Andere culturele favoriet: evenementen van Plant een Olijfboom (https://www.planteenolijfboom.nl/events) Heb je cultuurtips die we niet mogen missen? Mail de redactie: eenuurcultuur@vpro.nl
Anoek Nuyens maakt met goed ontvangen voorstellingen als De zaak Shell en Beste mensen theater over de klimaatcrisis. Programmamaker Katarina Schul gaat met haar in gesprek over haar methode.Draaien we echt al vijftig jaar in dezelfde rondjes als het gaat om klimaat? Dat wilde Anoek Nuyens onderzoeken met haar nieuwste voorstelling Beste Mensen. Ze onderzocht talloze klimaatspeeches van de afgelopen vijftig jaar en baseerde daarop een indringende theaterperformance (opgevoerd door Hannah Hoekstra).Eerder waagde Nuyens zich met De zaak Shell ook al aan klimaattheater. Waarom blijft zij de klimaatcrisis aangrijpen als onderwerp voor theater? En wat hoopt ze met haar grondige onderzoekende benadering te bereiken? Anoek Nuyens studeerde Theaterwetenschap in Amsterdam en Berlijn en werkt(e) onder andere in Kinshasa, Brussel, Berlijn en Amsterdam. Ze maakt sociaal bewogen, documentair voorstellingen zoals De zaak Shell, waarvoor ze samen met Rebekka de Wit de Regieprijs 2021 (NTF) won. Ze is artistiek leider van Bureau Vergezichten, waar ze samen met onder meer Erik Whien en Rebekka de Wit werkt aan producties als Beste Mensen en de herneming van De Zaal Shell. Dit jaar schrijft ze ook aan NPO-serie over staalfabriek Tata Steel.In deze wekelijkse talkshow van De Balie interviewen programmamakers de makers die hen inspireren. Van cabaretiers tot schrijvers en van theatermakers tot kunstenaars.Interview door programmamaker Katarina Schul. De podcast wordt geïntroduceerd door programmamaker Kees Foekema.Fragment uit: TED talk: The new political story that could change everything | George MonbiotZie het privacybeleid op https://art19.com/privacy en de privacyverklaring van Californië op https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Dobrodošli na Zalet Podkast — podkast o dizajnu digitalnih proizvoda!Imamo novog gosta! U ovoj epizodi smo ugostili Nikolu Damjanova. Nikola je 3D generalista, dizajner i inženjer. Trenutno radi kao Principal Technical Artist u kompaniji Nordeus. Uživajte u putovanju kroz njegovu živopisnu karijeru.
Episode #88 With Jaime Schwarz Had a great conversation with Jaime about so many things, NFT's marketing, digital art, AI, cats and even raising kids a little bit. This short bio just scratches the surface: After growing up surrounded by over 20 struggling artists, performers, and art historians in his family and a decade long career as a creative director in NYC ad agencies, Jaime Schwarz filed the world's first NFT patent, "A system and method for identifying virtual goods," to advance the art industry's security, accessibility, expression, and equity. Now that this patent has been granted, Jaime is the founder of MRKD.art, the world's only digitally signed, multi-format, rights-managed, immutably-provenanced canvas. No more wallets, authenticators, or marketplaces - just the art, its signature, and that signature's access to its authentication, promotion, and commercialization from any format on which it's presented. From art to music, Jaime is also launching MRKD.dj in collaboration with Public Enemy's Keith Shocklee to democratize automated, rights managed remixes. As a serial startup co-founder, Jaime has focused on self, company, and system betterment for the past decade while living with his wife and two boys in Hastings on Hudson, NY, serving as a marketing adjunct at CUNY's CCNY and on the board of Wayfinders on the Hudson. Music for all episodes by Jon Griffin. My YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCugOLERePPuD4nwtZO-Zwnw?view_as=subscriber My Instagram: @joelyshmoley FaceBook: https://www.facebook.com/wereyoustilltalking/ #Podcasting #NFT #mrkd.art #marketing #CCNY #Copyright
De siste ukene har norsk fotballdemokrati fremstått som et eneste stort sirkus. Fra styrevalg i NTF, via fotballtingets mange kontroverser, til avstemninger om mistillit og misnøye i klubbenes årsmøter. Vi forsøker i denne episoden å gjøre rede for shitshowet som utspiller seg, og hvorfor de siste ukene kun er starten på konflikter og motsetninger som vil prege norsk fotball i lang tid fremover. Kos dere.
Siden forrige episode har Egil vært opptatt med å stille mistillitsforslag mot NTFs styreleder Cato Haug. Hva innebærer dette og hva er de essensielle punktene i forslaget? Dette er nok en anledning til å prate om den omfattende ukulturen som eksisterer blant norsk fotballs mest innflytelsesrike ledere, der kameraderi, lav profesjonalisme og svak dømmekraft sitter i vegga.
Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer Lee Mottershead to look at today's racing news. With the row continuing to brew over the PRA and their demand for payment from broadcasters for trainer interviews, Nick and Lee share details of the email sent by the PRA to trainers detailing their prime motivation for the request. Nick also gets comment from RMG on why jockeys are paid an annual sum for similar services. PRA board member Stuart Williams gives his reaction to the weekend's fallout and seeks to underline the central aims of the PRA, while NTF council member Jamie Snowden echoes the position of the Thoroughbred Group. Also on today's show, Timeform's Dan Barber gives perspective to the performance of East India Dock at the weekend, Lee looks ahead to the Dublin Racing Festival, while Gestut Lunzen's Nicolas Schenke and Tommy Witt are this week's Weatherbys Bloodstock Guests.
Nick is joined by Racing Post senior writer Lee Mottershead to look at today's racing news. With the row continuing to brew over the PRA and their demand for payment from broadcasters for trainer interviews, Nick and Lee share details of the email sent by the PRA to trainers detailing their prime motivation for the request. Nick also gets comment from RMG on why jockeys are paid an annual sum for similar services. PRA board member Stuart Williams gives his reaction to the weekend's fallout and seeks to underline the central aims of the PRA, while NTF council member Jamie Snowden echoes the position of the Thoroughbred Group. Also on today's show, Timeform's Dan Barber gives perspective to the performance of East India Dock at the weekend, Lee looks ahead to the Dublin Racing Festival, while Gestut Lunzen's Nicolas Schenke and Tommy Witt are this week's Weatherbys Bloodstock Guests.
Dette er i all hovedsak en Rosenborg-fri episode. Er du lei av diskusjonen om VAR, kan du med god samvittighet hoppe over denne. Kampen mot bruken av VAR i norsk fotball går mot slutten i denne omgang. Før NTF-eiermøtet hvor det ble stemt 19-13 i favør av å fjerne VAR fra norsk fotball så fort som mulig, satt vi oss ned og gikk gjennom historien så langt. Alt fra innføring, bruk av VAR og medlemsdemokratiets status er et massivt emne, så vi fikk hjelp av noen som er godt kvalifisert til å mene noe om det - medlem av VAR-utvalget Agnes Nærland Viljugrein. Som vi påpeker i løpet av episoden - dette er ikke en balansert debatt hvor begge sider får legge frem sitt syn. Alle som deltok i podcast-innspillingen er meget sterkt imot bruk av VAR. Dette kommer sikkert ikke som noe sjokk, men er greit å spesifisere i tilfelle noen skulle forville seg inn på episoden og forvente noe annet. Vil du se resultatene av vår Fantasy-liga for Elite/serien 2024 gjør du det her! Vil du kjøpe Troillprat-merch kan du gjøre det her. Hvis du ønsker å komme med innspill til Troillprat i sanntid er det mulig å se oss live på Twitch, YouTube, Twitter eller Facebook når vi spiller inn tirsdager. Link til dette kommer typisk i løpet av timen før opptak starter kl. 20 på RBKweb-forumet, Bluesky, Twitter, Facebook og vår Discord-server.
Get your Magic Mind subscription here https://magicmind.com/NFTCATCHER20You get up to 48% off with our code: NFTCATCHER20NFT market going crazy | Pudgy Penguins Pengu Token | Tokenproof tech purchased by Yuga | RTKTF shuts down | Magic Eden TGE claim | Art Basel | CHONKSLinks:Keen @NFTicketJennyFromTheBlockchain @jennifer_suttoNFT Catcher Podcast @NFTCatcherPodproduced by @ajc254NFT Catcher theme music by ItsJustLosemail : NFTCatcherPod@gmail.comNFT Catcher DiscordIf you enjoyed the content, please like, share, comment, and leave a review of our podcast! Get involved in the conversation by following us on X and joining our Discord community.
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ChatGPT 4o says: “Strap in, because this episode of Unrelenting is a no-bullshit, balls-to-the-wall takedown of modern tech headaches and the overpriced, overhyped machines we love to hate. From Mac Minis to NTFS drive clusterfucks, your hosts tear through the trenches of tech with the sharp wit and salty candor that makes them the most … Continue reading "136: Mini Mayhem"
Nick is joined by ITV and Sky presenter Matt Chapman to discuss the latest news from around the racing world. They begin with initial reaction to the draw for the Arc de Triomphe at Longchamp on Sunday, and talk to Yann Lerner, trainer of one of the favourites for the race, Look de Vega. They consider the likely pace of the race in the conditions, and debate the merits of Yutaka Take's booking for Al Riffa. Also on today's show, news on Goffs Orby sale while Guy O'Callaghan from Grangemore Stud looks ahead to selling Charyn at Tattersalls Book One next week. Plus, Charlotte gets the NTF reaction to the proposed commercial agreements from CEO Paul Johnson, while Tom talks to Racing Foundation Conference keynote Bob Langert about tackling negative perception of the sport, and Nick catches up with James Harron, the Aus-based agent who has just sold this year's Everest slot. Anthea Leigh - the newest judge to the Godolphin TIEA awards - reminds everyone to get voting.
Nick is joined by ITV and Sky presenter Matt Chapman to discuss the latest news from around the racing world. They begin with initial reaction to the draw for the Arc de Triomphe at Longchamp on Sunday, and talk to Yann Lerner, trainer of one of the favourites for the race, Look de Vega. They consider the likely pace of the race in the conditions, and debate the merits of Yutaka Take's booking for Al Riffa. Also on today's show, news on Goffs Orby sale while Guy O'Callaghan from Yeomanstown Stud looks ahead to selling Charyn at Tattersalls Book One next week. Plus, Charlotte gets the NTF reaction to the proposed commercial agreements from CEO Paul Johnson, while Tom talks to Racing Foundation Conference keynote Bob Langert about tackling negative perception of the sport, and Nick catches up with James Harron, the Aus-based agent who has just sold this year's Everest slot. Anthea Leigh - the newest judge to the Godolphin TIEA awards - reminds everyone to get voting.
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-leo Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/all-twittv-shows Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-mikah Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-leo Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
Leo and Mikah tackle a wide range of tech questions from viewers, covering everything from backup strategies to AI's impact on creativity. The hosts are joined by the Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson, who shares an impressive DIY home theater, and travel expert Johnny Jet with essential tips for renewing your passport online and staying cool while traveling in Europe. Don't miss Leo and Mikah's thought-provoking discussion on the future of AI and human creativity! Google research paper suggests AI "breaking reality" is a feature, not a bug. The team discusses the implications. Mathematicians discover the fifth "busy beaver" number after 40 years. Leo attempts to explain this computational math milestone. Cloudflare launches tool to block AI bots from scraping websites, as 85% of Cloudflare customers want to block AI. Saudi Arabia aims to be the eSports capital of the world with a $60 million prize pool. Martin asks for advice on replacing his Drobo Mini for backing up 8 family members' computers. Leo and Mikah recommend using a NAS for network backups, Time Machine for local backups, and cloud services like Backblaze for offsite backup. Richard wonders if he needs to convert his hard drives from NTFS to APFS when moving from Windows to Mac for his large video collection. The hosts explain NTFS works fine on Mac and recommend using a Synology NAS with Plex as a centralized media server. Jeremy wants to set up cloud backup with versioning for his daughter's MacBook before she heads to college. Mikah suggests using Time Machine locally and Backblaze for cloud backup. The Home Theater Geek Scott Wilkinson showcases an impressive DIY basement home theater built for under $24K. Jim, a movie sound professional, is looking for a Windows word processor that can handle his 2000+ page book with many illustrations. The hosts caution against trying to run macOS on a PC and recommend trying LibreOffice. Matthew asks if using the Google Photos app on iPhone will create duplicates. Mikah doesn't think so but suggests running a short test. Graham wants to play Apple Podcasts on his Google Nest speakers. Leo recommends using Spotify instead since it's supported by Google speakers. Hans, a multimedia artist, shares a fascinating discussion with Leo and Mikah about AI's impact on creative jobs. While some see AI as a threat, Hans embraces it as a tool to enhance creativity. Paul troubleshoots an issue where he's not getting play-by-play audio on certain sports streams through his TV speakers, but it works through his soundbar. The hosts suggest it's likely an encoding compatibility issue with his TV. Johnny Jet shares his unfortunate tale of catching hand, foot and mouth disease right before a big trip to Europe. He offers tips on travel insurance, the risks of posting your info publicly, and renewing your passport online. Vidak from Montenegro is experiencing audio cut-outs when using his Focusrite Scarlett audio interface with his M2 MacBook Pro. Mikah suspects a software conflict and suggests troubleshooting steps to isolate the issue. Hosts: Leo Laporte and Mikah Sargent Guests: Scott Wilkinson and Johnny Jet Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Show notes and links for this episode are available at: https://twit.tv/shows/ask-the-tech-guys/episodes/2032 Download or subscribe to this show at: https://twit.tv/shows/total-mikah Sponsor: cachefly.com/twit
In this special episode of the Decent Crypto Podcast, Karan and Matt welcome David Alderman and Christopher Jensen from the research desk at Franklin Templeton Digital Assets. They dive into the current landscape of digital assets, discussing trends in the Solana ecosystem, the potential of Bitcoin ordinals and runes, and the broader implications of digital asset adoption. This episode is packed with insights on the future of digital assets and how traditional finance intersects with the rapidly evolving crypto space. Chapters: (00:00) Welcome to the Decent Crypto Podcast (00:34) Introduction of guests: David Alderman and Christopher Jensen from Franklin Templeton (01:03) Backgrounds of David Alderman and Christopher Jensen and their roles at Franklin Templeton (05:17) Franklin Templeton's approach to digital assets and investment strategies (17:28) The rise and resilience of the Solana ecosystem (31:01) Exploring Ethereum's scaling challenges and the potential impact of Ethereum ETFs (38:54) Bitcoin ordinals and runes: Research, current state, and future infrastructure (44:09) User engagement and market dynamics for Bitcoin-based applications (50:18) Speculation on Bitcoin layer 2 solutions and their security assumptions (55:27) Future trends in NTFs, meme coins, and the broader tokenization landscape Find more research from Franklin Templeton Digital Assets: Franklin Templeton Insights Follow on Twitter: @FTI_DA Follow us on social media: Twitter: @decentcryptopod
Joe Biden's reelection campaign blasted Donald Trump for holding a fundraising dinner for supporters "suckered into paying" thousands for NTFs, instead of hitting the campaign trail on his day off from court, RadarOnline.com has learned.Advertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Happy 20th Birthday to Canonical, let's give OpenSuse and Warp a spin, and NTFS might get dropped from the kernel! Both AMD and Nvidia are making strides in opening more GPU code, there's a killer Linux laptop for real power users, and it might be time to retire the older NTFS driver from the Linux kernel. There's Wayland, desktops, and plenty more! For tips we have puter going open source, parted for growing your virtual partitions, dosage for keeping track of medication, and test for scripting goodness. Find the show notes at https://bit.ly/3PgU59f and enjoy! Host: Jonathan Bennett Co-Hosts: Rob Campbell, Ken McDonald, and Jeff Massie Want access to the video version and exclusive features? Become a member of Club TWiT today! https://twit.tv/clubtwit Club TWiT members can discuss this episode and leave feedback in the Club TWiT Discord.
Nord Crypto Master com DESCONTO EXCLUSIVO Skin in the Game:
Gäster: Viktor Engberg, Filip Andersson, Jonathan Rollins, Linus Nordström … Relevanta länkar: …NTFs rekommendationer https://ntf.se/fragor-och-svar/trafikmiljo/opinionsgrupper/kan-min-dotter-ga-sjalv-till-skolan/ …strejken https://www.aftonbladet.se/nojesbladet/a/VP7Bg1/skadespelarstrejk-i-hollywood-over …David Choe https://www.cnbc.com/amp/2017/09/07/how-facebook-graffiti-artist-david-choe-earned-200-million.html?fbclid=IwAR0AkGE0or2fHvIkPuhPib7rjBna9aiqD-acPI-ikOnx82YsWP1DCvkmbQo …morgonrutinen https://www.youtube.com/watch?app=desktop&v=cgwiPzuRhd0&fbclid=IwAR29b3FhrwSdUdt997s2903XiUGAej9rl17OJ-Rt_C_MJl__SJwsL-n4kAY …Kanyes kreativa safter https://pagesix.com/2022/10/10/kanye-west-shows-porn-to-adidas-execs-during-business-meeting/ …Timothée Chalamets Hamas-sketch https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/tv/news/snl-timothee-chalmet-hamas-skit-b2446458.html?fbclid=IwAR0Y2DUW7WcCATE0iK9F-aKGRUEX3n3jPTrmRkzjEHZJ-MRGsgqDLRkc_Oo Låtarna som spelades var: BAYRAKTAR is Life - Taras Borovko WYS ft. Sweet Medicine - Mourning Dove Heartless - Kanye West Öppna Din Dörr - Tommy Nilsson Alla låtar finns i AMK Morgons spellista här: https://open.spotify.com/user/amk.morgon/playlist/6V9bgWnHJMh9c4iVHncF9j?si=so0WKn7sSpyufjg3olHYmg Stötta oss gärna på Swish, varje litet bidrag uppskattas enormt! 123 646 2006
Has Canonical finally nailed snaps? Why it looks like Ubuntu has turned a new corner; our thoughts on the latest release. Plus, a special guest and more.
AND What a new beginning it is for us over here at Nothing to Fear. We bust back from summer hiatus like a Jason Voorhees who was buried in a far too shallow grave. And wouldn't you know it, we have a guest filling in for Luke on this episode. We are joined by none other than a Day One fan of Nothing to Fear and now real life friend, Danae! So there's hope for your parasocial relationships too! Danae joins us to talk all about this franchise and along the they come up with a new idea for a Jason Voorhees movie (Weekend at Jason's. It'll make a billion guaranteed), we reminisce about that kid in elementary school who only drew weapons and probably went into law enforcement, and weigh the merits of watching all the Friday the 13th movies in a row (do not do this). Everyone go find Danae on social media and bully them into starting a podcast of their own now that they've had a taste of the fame. @duhnae on instagram! You can also listen to Alex's curated daily song list over at @wansongaday on instagram. Once you've finished all of that you should definitely go listen to all of Super Scary Podcast including the episode that I recently guested on. We talked about 2019s The Hole in the Ground from A24. It'll Changeling your life! Look for The Super Scary Podcast wherever you get 'em! Thanks so much for downloading and listening to the show, if you could give us a boost we'd all really really love that. I know we've gone away for a bit and we need help spreading the NtF word. I still think it's really cool how my podcast outlasted NFTs. I hope all those monkey pictures bankrupted people. Billie. Go to bed. It's late. Bye for now everyone! See you again real soon! --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
Conventional wisdom says there are two certainties in life, death, and taxes. Well, to the former, there is at least one more certainty: if you're a reporter and you mess with Vladimir Putin, you're gonna fall out a window. If you're a mercenary, you're gonna have your private jet shot out of the sky. Oh, Yevgeny Prigozhin, you silly man… what were you thinking? That it would be safe to re-enter Russia after your march on Moscow? That your Wagner Group would protect you? Lol. Another saying most people know is: A fool and his money are soon parted. Well, in this case, it should be “a complete moron who shouldn't have money in the first place…” Fyre Festival 2.0 was announced, and they were able to sell 100 tickets at $500 a pop, and this without having (a) any acts lined up, (b) no location confirmed, and (c) no date set. Jake and nathan discuss what should be done with people so stupid they're buying tickets to Billy McFarland's second attempt at disaster. Also: Last week, the Idiots made fun of NTFs. Well, that sure made one commenter angry. Said comment is addressed, and mocked. Idiots on Parade: we mock the news, so you don't have to. Find Jake @jakevevera Find nathan: https://nathantimmel.com/
When transferring NTFS-formatted disks from one machine to another, permissions can restrict access. I'll cover both Widows GUI and command line solutions.
Rich is testing the new iOS 17 Public Beta software. He only recommends installing it if you are tech savvy or have a secondary device. Otherwise, the official software launches in the Fall.A feature called Personal Voice in iOS 17 lets you recreate your own voice using AI.If you're going to the movies, be sure to enable Theater Mode on your watch. Don't forget to turn it off when you leave the theater.Rich switched to Notion for his note-taking.Rich really likes the Nothing Phone (2).Rod in Los Angeles says his computer mouse is constantly double clicking.Hollywood actors are on strike and AI is part of the problem.Guest Sissie Hsiao explains what's new with Google Bard.Marcy in Rancho Cucamonga asks about a data breach. Google has a free and paid dark web monitoring service. You can learn more about it here.Ted in Fountain Valley asks if he can transfer his software over to his new laptop.Amazon Prime Day sets a new record for sales.Kathy in Duarte doesn't like the Yahoo email redesign.AmazeVR's Lance Drake and Kyungkuk Kim to talk about their new VR concert app.Kerry in Santa Ynez wants to know why her friend's TV volume goes up and down.Leslie in Laguna Beach is having trouble with Mint. Is there an alternative?The Roku Channel is now on Google TVBarry wants to know why his NTFS drive isn't working on his mac. Check out NTFS for Mac from Paragon Software.Google Calendar now lets you easily find a mutual meeting time and accept paid appointments.Ben Sin reviews the Nothing Phone (2).See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
What we really like in Debian 12, the big players backing RISC-V, and the improvements in NextCloud Hub 5. Note: Linux Action News will be off next week.
This one has been 3 months in the making and finally making its audio debut! Recorded LIVE at MRC 2023 I sat down with Dave Senci from Mastercard who I have worked with for years. Lately he's been working on their blockchain and crypto offerings as the Vice President of Blockchain and Digital Asset. We dive into what the terms actually mean and what they are as well as some of the actual real world use cases for things like Blockchains and NTFs and how the whole crypto "thing" is more than just coins. This was a fascinating episode for me to record and still felt like I came away with a better understanding of all these things overall. Enjoy! Dave Senci - https://www.linkedin.com/in/davesenci/ "Dave Senci is a Vice President of Blockchain & Digital Asset. He started at Mastercard in 2010, spending his first five years in Operations and Technology then moving to product management within Cyber and Intelligence Solutions. In Dave's current role at Mastercard, he focuses on the commercialization and product management of Mastercard's Crypto, Blockchain and Digital Asset products." ------------ Join our wonderful sponsor Spec and I LIVE on Linkedin Live on June 21st, 2023 at 9 am PT for a discussion on what Orchestration and customer journey ACTUALLY is. Register here today: https://www.linkedin.com/events/let-sreallytalkaboutorchestrati7069799414394982400/comments/ Spec is the leader in the customer journey management space with their patented Trust Cloud platform that connects you to any fraud vendor through a no code implementation. This allows you to have full control and visibility into your customer journeys, orchestrate and operationalize any fraud, abuse, and payments API, and take action on your website without having to negotiate priority with your engineering teams. The Spec Trust Cloud keeps you up to date as your needs change over time. Please check them out by visiting www.specprotected.com to learn how they help your fraud fighting future and see a demo that uses your actual LIVE website!
This episode contains spoilers for the movie we are discussing! Luke picked the episode for the fear of snakes (ophidiophobia) and he chose The Taking of Deborah Logan specifically so no one could choose Anaconda. Come along as we talk about the surprising punch to the gut that is the first half of the movie and *THAT* scene from the movie right as it's ending. If you know, then you know. Time Codes 00:00:23 - Introduction 00:13:19 - Trailer 00:15:12 - Movie Discussion incl Scariest part of the movie 01:19:36 - Ratings/Something to Cheer Credits Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your reviews and ratings help more people find us and help us continue to make more episodes. You can support the show but heading over to our Patreon found at Patreon.com/nothingtofear. Donation is on a pay what you can scale but we are suggesting a minimum of $1. For just One CANADIAN Dollar, you can help us keep the show going, help us rent movies and help us grow by getting things like episode transcriptions, upgrades to recording equipment and more things that we have planned. Consider supporting the show. We'll love you forever and ever. If you would buy a piece of NtF merch, you can follow the link.tree link in our Instagram and navigate to the Teepublic shop from there. Is it easy? No. Is it the best we could do? Also no. But I'm still busy and I have it on my to do list. Twitch.tv/Thetransverse is the place where you can watch me play Pathfinder once a month! Subscribe now and watch the live action play through of a Pathfinder campaign starring yours truly, Billie! (Seriously though. This actually pays me based on the number of views so put it on in the background and help me achieve my dream of online content creation/eventual therapist being my full-time job.) You can also get more Luke content by checking out his show with Other Alex using this link here Full Spectrum Cinema https://www.mixcloud.com/lexacorm/ You can follow us on Instagram - @nothingtofearpodcast, @wansongaday, @DesignBillie Email - nothingtofearpodcast@gmail.com Let us know how you're doing and tell us what you're cheering using the hashtag #SomethingToCheer --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nothingtofear/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
This episode contains spoilers for the movie we are discussing! This week we take a surprising departure from being a horror movie podcast and transition into a regular movie podcast with this 2 hour selection from our boy Alex Wan. 1995 was a wild time, the internet was new, Holly Hunter had the bluntest bangs decades before Zooey Deschanel, and people were too afraid to explicitly come out and say that any of their characters were gay. All of this, and more!, combine into the film Copycat. As you can tell, Luke is really happy with the fact that we picked this film for our horror movie podcast. Hopefully he can right the ship when it's his pick next week. Enjoy the show! Time Codes 00:00:23 - Introduction 00:2:35 - Movie of the week 00:7:05 - Trailer 00:8:59 - Movie Discussion incl Scariest part of the movie 01:00:44 - Ratings/Something to Cheer Credits Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your reviews and ratings help more people find us and help us continue to make more episodes. You can support the show but heading over to our Patreon found at Patreon.com/nothingtofear. Donation is on a pay what you can scale but we are suggesting a minimum of $1. For just One CANADIAN Dollar, you can help us keep the show going, help us rent movies and help us grow by getting things like episode transcriptions, upgrades to recording equipment and more things that we have planned. Consider supporting the show. We'll love you forever and ever. If you would buy a piece of NtF merch, you can follow the link.tree link in our Instagram and navigate to the Teepublic shop from there. Is it easy? No. Is it the best we could do? Also no. But I'm still busy and I have it on my to do list. Twitch.tv/Thetransverse is the place where you can watch me play Pathfinder once a month! Subscribe now and watch the live action play through of a Pathfinder campaign starring yours truly, Billie! (Seriously though. This actually pays me based on the number of views so put it on in the background and help me achieve my dream of online content creation/eventual therapist being my full-time job.) You can also get more Luke content by checking out his show with Other Alex using this link here Full Spectrum Cinema https://www.mixcloud.com/lexacorm/ You can follow us on Instagram - @nothingtofearpodcast, @wansongaday, @DesignBillie Email - nothingtofearpodcast@gmail.com Let us know how you're doing and tell us what you're cheering using the hashtag #SomethingToCheer --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nothingtofear/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
This episode contains spoilers for the movie we are discussing. We're looking at the top five strongest phobias this month for Nothing to Fear and picking movies based on that. First up is cynophobia which is the fear of dogs. Apart from The Sandlot or that movie where Liam Neeson gets attacked by wolves or whatever, there aren't many dog centric horror movies. Well. Except for Cujo. Stephen King is back at it again and we take a look at this adaptation from all the way back in 1983. Turns out the real bad guy was rabies all along. Time Codes 00:00:23 - Introduction 00:09:29 - Movie News returns triumphantly! 00:24:21 - Movie of the week 00:27:40 - Trailer 00:28:57 - Movie Discussion incl Scariest part of the movie 01:15:06 - Ratings/Something to Cheer Credits Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your reviews and ratings help more people find us and help us continue to make more episodes. You can support the show but heading over to our Patreon found at Patreon.com/nothingtofear. Donation is on a pay what you can scale but we are suggesting a minimum of $1. For just One CANADIAN Dollar, you can help us keep the show going, help us rent movies and help us grow by getting things like episode transcriptions, upgrades to recording equipment and more things that we have planned. Consider supporting the show. We'll love you forever and ever. If you would buy a piece of NtF merch, you can follow the link.tree link in our Instagram and navigate to the Teepublic shop from there. Is it easy? No. Is it the best we could do? Also no. But I'm still busy and I have it on my to do list. Twitch.tv/Thetransverse is the place where you can watch me play Pathfinder once a month! Subscribe now and watch the live action play through of a Pathfinder campaign starring yours truly, Billie! (Seriously though. This actually pays me based on the number of views so put it on in the background and help me achieve my dream of online content creation/eventual therapist being my full-time job.) You can also get more Luke content by checking out his show with Other Alex using this link here Full Spectrum Cinema https://www.mixcloud.com/lexacorm/ You can follow us on Instagram - @nothingtofearpodcast, @wansongaday, @DesignBillie Email - nothingtofearpodcast@gmail.com Let us know how you're doing and tell us what you're cheering using the hashtag #SomethingToCheer --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nothingtofear/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
This episode contains spoilers for the movie we are discussing! Join us and mid 2000s heart throb, Josh Hartnett as we tackle a group of vampires that want to make a meal out of the Northern most town in Alaska. We watched 30 Days of Night and we talk all about it. From the graphic novel hay day of the first decade of the 21st century, to all the silliest continuity errors you could name. Put on a parka, make sure your UV lamp is ready to go and come along for 30 Days of Night. There's no movie news section this week or even a proper introduction because we just ran out of time to record and life got a bit in the way of this silly little pod. We hope you enjoy it still! - Billie Time Codes 00:00:20 - Introduction 00:03:45 - Trailer 00:04:49 - Movie Discussion incl Scariest part of the movie 00:53:26 - Ratings/Something to Cheer Credits Thank you for listening and supporting the show. Your reviews and ratings help more people find us and help us continue to make more episodes. You can support the show but heading over to our Patreon found at Patreon.com/nothingtofear. Donation is on a pay what you can scale but we are suggesting a minimum of $1. For just One CANADIAN Dollar, you can help us keep the show going, help us rent movies and help us grow by getting things like episode transcriptions, upgrades to recording equipment and more things that we have planned. Consider supporting the show. We'll love you forever and ever. If you would buy a piece of NtF merch, you can follow the link.tree link in our Instagram and navigate to the Teepublic shop from there. Is it easy? No. Is it the best we could do? Also no. But I'm still busy and I have it on my to do list. Twitch.tv/Thetransverse is the place where you can watch me play Pathfinder once a month! Subscribe now and watch the live action play through of a Pathfinder campaign starring yours truly, Billie! (Seriously though. This actually pays me based on the number of views so put it on in the background and help me achieve my dream of online content creation/eventual therapist being my full-time job.) You can also get more Luke content by checking out his show with Other Alex using this link here Full Spectrum Cinema https://www.mixcloud.com/lexacorm/ You can follow us on Instagram - @nothingtofearpodcast, @wansongaday, @DesignBillie Email - nothingtofearpodcast@gmail.com Let us know how you're doing and tell us what you're cheering using the hashtag #SomethingToCheer --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/nothingtofear/message --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/nothingtofear/message
Sponsor:This is Casey Stubbs, 2022 was a disaster for most traders.I am releasing a new service called swing trading reports.Each Sunday before the market opens I will bring you up to speed on the latest market trends including gold, bitcoin, S&P 500, and multiple currency pairs. The normal price for this is $75 a year, but were bringing the price down to $50 a year if you use the code HowToTradeIt25 when signing up.Visit swingtradingreport.com to join the community of successful traders today!”Charlton Haupt is an entrepreneur and the creative mastermind behind the popular Bad Astro Society. With a passion to make a difference in the lives of others, Haupt is hoping to make a name for himself in the field of space exploration. He is creating a loyal following of people who desire to embark on real-life space travel at an affordable price. Bad Astro Society has discovered that NTFs are the way to make that possible. In this episode of How To Trade It, Charlton and Casey discuss the potential of NFTs and how this project can get 10,000 people into space for just a few thousand dollars. Subscribe to How To Trade ItYou'll want to listen to this episode, if you are interested in hearing Charlton Haupt discuss… [01:26] Entrepreneurship…nature vs. nurture?[04:00] “What am I doing with my life?”[06:00] All in with Crypto![08:39] Dollar Cost Averaging is the ultimate solution[12:35] “I want to do something amazing!”[19:48] People want to spend their money[23:40] Bad Astro Society project[32:59] The launch is coming! Resources & People Mentioned Bored Ape Yacht ClubEthereum NetworkBlue Origin - William Shatner; Jeff BezosVirgin GalacticSpaceXSpace PerspectiveOpenSea Connect with Charlton Haupt Website: badastrosociety.com Twitter:https://twitter.com/BadAstroSocietyLinkedIn: https://linkedin.com/in/charlton-haupt-757921249Email:charlton@badastro.com Support the showConnect with Casey: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/caseystubbs Twitter: https://twitter.com/caseystubbs TradingStrategyGuides.com: https://www.tradingstrategyguides.com/ Email: info@tradingstrategyguides.com
Today on the Dough Roller Money Podcast we are talking to Ish Verduzco! He's the author of How Successful People Get Ish Done, and the host of the Getting Ish Done podcast. In his early-to-mid 20s Ish became interested in personal development and started writing and researching his first book How Successful People Get Ish Done. With the creation and rise of NFT's in the last 2 years, Ish is currently in the process of creating an NFT playbook for those who want to start investing with NFTs. This year, Ish was named one of Hispanic Executive's 30 under 30 for 2021, and he gave the 2020 commencement speech at his alma mater, UC Merced. He currently hosts the podcast Getting Ish Done, and is only going up from there! In this episode Rob and Ish talk about the world of investing and NFTs. Ish shares how he began his journey in NTFs and how he has approached this space so far. He tells us his opinion on how he thinks crypto and NFTs can be used in the future and what we can expect from it's evolution. We are also able to get a glimpse into how he created his book and how making it into an NFTs is revolutionary. If you want an insider's look into the world of NFTs this episode is for you! Calls to Action: Follow Dough Roller on Linkedin: https://www.linkedin.com/company/dough-roller/ Follow Dough Roller on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/doughrollermoney/ Follow Dough Roller on Twitter: https://twitter.com/doughroller Check out the Dough Roller website and blog: https://www.doughroller.net/ Timestamps: 00:00 - Introduction to Ish Verduzco 01:43 - Ish talks about his background and an overview of his career 05:13 - He share about his framework and how it's worked for him overtime 08:38 - Ish's advice on how to tackle his framework 11:57 - He shares about his approach to investing and how he got started 14:58 - He explains how he has invested his 401K 15:53 - What Ish's crypto and NFT portfolio currently looks like 16:47 - In his on words Ish explains what an NFT is and his approach to the space18:38 - Ish breaks down how his book is also an NFT and why this is so special 25:39 - He shares about the NFTs he has purchased as investments and how he estimates their value 31:15 - How he goes to purchase NFTs and where he likes to keep them once purchased 33:23 - Ish shares his view on the longevity of NFTs and what can NFTs actually solve for us 41:04 - How Ish thinks the future will look like if decentralized finance becomes the norm 44:57 - Ish share where he invests his crypto and his reasoning behind it 47:55 - How Ish thinks crypto and NFTs will perform in the future when the economy run out of money 49:58 - Where to follow Ish and all of his endeavors Mentioned in the Episode: Buy Ish's book: https://www.ishverduzco.com/book Visit Ish's Website: https://www.ishverduzco.com/ Listen to Ish's Podcast: https://www.ishverduzco.com/podcast Follow Ish on LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/ishverduzco/ Follow Ish on Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ishverduzco/ Follow Ish on Twitter: https://twitter.com/ishverduzco