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Collaboration is the cure: Dr. Vivian Pinn calls for renewed efforts to bring about health equity Speaking at the university where she was the only female and only African American student in her class, and in the auditorium named for her, “Healing Hate” conference keynote speaker Dr. Vivian Pinn reflects on progressing her career during eras of segregation, discrimination, and civil rights. Pinn says it's important to address the erroneous historical racial stereotypes that have informed contemporary unconscious bias. In working toward health equity, she says interdisciplinary collaboration is critical. “You've got to work together,” Pinn says. “No one person, no one group is responsible for it all. That synergy of collaboration, you can't beat.” She also describes her work at NIH, where she was the inaugural Director of the Office of Research on Women's Health, and explains why it's so important that everyone get involved at the socio-political level. This episode was originally published in 2020 with host Dr. Randall Morgan. Never miss an episode – be sure to subscribe to The Health Disparities podcast from Movement Is Life on Apple Podcasts, YouTube, or wherever you get your podcasts.
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Bzzzzzz! It's one of Gareth and Dan's all time favourites but what will the book club think as they head to Marpling (geddit?) and face time travellers, bombs and mutant evil wasps?
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Join Joe, Dan, Gareth and David as we head to the depths of season 22 where the Doctor barely features, violence runs amok and nobody gets a happy ending...
This week, I was joined by Dr. Anthony Pinn to discuss his latest book, "The Black Practice of Disbelief: An Introduction to the Principles, History, and Communities of Black Nonbelievers". Dr. Pinn is a former Baptist Minister who no longer identifies as a Christian or believer. Now, Pinn identifies as a Black Humanist and argues that Black Humanism is inherently Religious. We discuss the reason for his shift and some pretty sharp critiques that he has off the Church. Dr. Pinn walks me through his 6 pirnciples of Black Humanism then connects them to our everyday lives and the constant struggle for justice and human flouring. This was a deeply informative and moving conversation that has a lot to offer regardless of your religious identification or lack there of. Enjoy! RESOURCES: The Black Practice of Disbelief: An Introduction to the Principles, History, and Communities of Black Nonbelievers (Book) Dr. Anthony B. Pinn *A special thanks to Josh Gilbert, Marty Fredrick, and Dan Koch. Love you guys
Pinn Lawjindakul, Partner of Lightspeed Southeast Asia and Jeremy Au discussed: 1. Bain Consultant to Grab Head: Pinn recounted her shift from Bain & Company, where she started as an intern in 2011, to joining Grab in 2015 during its rapid expansion. She highlighted the operational and cultural differences between consulting in San Francisco and Southeast Asia, noting the latter's more hierarchical and less mature environment. At Grab, Pinn tackled challenges such as competing with Uber, Easy Taxi, and Rocket Internet, emphasizing the importance of localized operational advantages. 2. Tiger Global to Lightspeed VC Partner: Pinn reflected on her pivotal time at Tiger Global (2016–2019), where she immersed herself in growth-stage investments like Flipkart. The fast-paced environment and exposure to trend-driven, data-backed decision-making helped her realize the impactful nature of venture capital. This experience solidified her passion for working closely with entrepreneurs and shaping transformative businesses. Transitioning to Lightspeed Ventures, she embraced a focus on early-stage startups in Southeast Asia, drawn by the opportunity to guide founders from the outset and help them adopt a regional mindset critical for success 3. Southeast Asia vs. China & India: She highlighted Lightspeed's report, which debunked the longstanding comparisons of the region to China and India. The report argued that Southeast Asia's fragmented markets, diverse consumer profiles, and smaller economic scale require a unique approach, defying the traditional narratives borrowed from larger, more homogenous markets. They also championed Singapore's underestimated potential as a key driver of economic growth, countering the conventional wisdom that focuses almost exclusively on larger markets like Indonesia, e.g. Gojek vs. Grab. Pinn also highlighted the need for a more rational approach to capital allocation, underscoring how sustainable growth requires founders and investors alike to balance ambition with market realities. Jeremy and Pinn also discussed her perspective being a parent has changed her perspective on startups, what they learned as Bain interns and what advice she would give her younger self. == Pinn is a founding member of Lightspeed Southeast Asia, a global early-stage investment fund. Prior to Lightspeed, she was at Insignia Venture Partners and Tiger Global Management, where she focused on consumer and financial technology across SEA, India and China. She worked closely with Flipkart (sold to Walmart), Ola, Policybazaar, Hike, Games 24x7, Razorpay, Uxin (IPO exit). Pinn started her career as a management consultant at Bain & Company and also founded Grab's motorcycle-on-demand in Bangkok, Thailand. Pinn graduated from Wharton Business School at the University of Pennsylvania with a double degree in Psychology and Finance. === Watch, listen or read the full insight at www.bravesea.com/blog/navigating-sea-markets Nonton, dengar atau baca wawasan lengkapnya di www.bravesea.com/blog/navigating-sea-markets 观看、收听或阅读全文,请访问 www.bravesea.com/blog/navigating-sea-markets Xem, nghe hoặc đọc toàn bộ thông tin chi tiết tại www.bravesea.com/blog/navigating-sea-markets Get transcripts, startup resources & community discussions at www.bravesea.com WhatsApp: https://whatsapp.com/channel/0029VakR55X6BIElUEvkN02e TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@jeremyau Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/jeremyauz Twitter: https://twitter.com/jeremyau LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/bravesea Spotify English: https://open.spotify.com/show/4TnqkaWpTT181lMA8xNu0T Bahasa Indonesia: https://open.spotify.com/show/2Vs8t6qPo0eFb4o6zOmiVZ Chinese: https://open.spotify.com/show/20AGbzHhzFDWyRTbHTVDJR Vietnamese: https://open.spotify.com/show/0yqd3Jj0I19NhN0h8lWrK1
Philipians 3:12 - 14
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Prepare yourselves for five people to discuss three books - one they generally like, one they generally didn't and one...well press play.
We are very excited to have Pinn Yang here this week, seorang usahawan yang sudah mula berjinak dalam dunia perniagaan semenjak kecil lagi. Tapi macam mana dia boleh expand his business to other cabang selain daripada foodie franchise? #jomsembang
durée : 00:04:32 - Helena Pinnéo, expatriée américaine, installée à Pau
The Spiritual Condition Of Our Past, Our Present, And Our Future
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Join Rod, Joe, David & Dan as we face blobby foetuses, antimatter creatures, android duplicates, Gods from the Dawn of Time, Mr Butchers Leftovers & Homicidal Horticulture! Who will be victorious...
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Not only the gorgeous story of how Dan came to read Doctor Who books but a triumphant and surprising top and bottom ten list, and he ranks the ranges too.
A Church That Pleases Jesus
Support our Patreon: www.patreon.com/thepinksmoke All good things must come to an end. Hosts John Cribbs and Christopher Funderburg are joined by Marcus Pinn to discuss their memories of attending the Toronto International Film Festival over the course of twenty years. This set of personal reminiscences is not necessarily intended for general audiences; this is the deepest of Pink Smoke deep cuts. Their thoughts on two decades of cinema and one of the premiere international film festivals are intertwined with a discussion of poutine, junk shops selling rare novelizations, the Brass Rail and how much fun it is to bust Pinn's chops over his love of To The Wonder. They talk their favorite films they saw at the festival, their most memorable experiences, the changes to the festival throughout the years, the best years, the worst years, food poisoning, Andrew Wilson, Sportos in Batavia New York, crank-call party mix-tapes and, of course, the Eagles' sudden and unexpected transition from the Kevin Kolb era to the Michael Vick era. A tribute to one of the most important film festivals in the world and the trio's time spent there. The Pink Smoke site: www.thepinksmoke.com The Pink Smoke on X: twitter.com/thepinksmoke Christopher Funderburg on X: twitter.com/cfunderburg John Cribbs on X: twitter.com/TheLastMachine Intro music: Unleash the Bastards / “Tea for Two” Outro music: Marcus Pinn / “Vegas”
Reed Smith partners Howard Womersley Smith and Bryan Tan with AI Verify community manager Harish Pillay discuss why transparency and explain-ability in AI solutions are essential, especially for clients who will not accept a “black box” explanation. Subscribers to AI models claiming to be “open source” may be disappointed to learn the model had proprietary material mixed in, which might cause issues. The session describes a growing effort to learn how to track and understand the inputs used in AI systems training. ----more---- Transcript: Intro: Hello and welcome to Tech Law Talks, a podcast brought to you by Reed Smith's Emerging Technologies Group. In each episode of this podcast, we will discuss cutting-edge issues on technology, data, and the law. We will provide practical observations on a wide variety of technology and data topics to give you quick and actionable tips to address the issues you are dealing with every day. Bryan: Welcome to Tech Law Talks and our new series on artificial intelligence. Over the coming months, we'll explore the key challenges and opportunities within the rapidly evolving AI landscape. My name is Bryan Tan and I'm a partner at Reed Smith Singapore. Today we will focus on AI and open source software. Howard: My name is Howard Womersley Smith. I'm a partner in the Emerging Technologies team of Reed Smith in London and New York. And I'm very pleased to be in this podcast today with Bryan and Harish. Bryan: Great. And so today we have with us Mr. Harish Pillay. And before we start, I'm going to just ask Harish to tell us a little bit, well, not really a little bit, because he's done a lot about himself and how he got here. Harish: Well, thanks, Bryan. Thanks, Howard. My name is Harish Pillay. I'm based here in Singapore, and I've been in the tech space for over 30 years. And I did a lot of things primarily in the open source world, both open source software, as well as in the hardware design and so on. So I've covered the spectrum. When I was way back in the graduate school, I did things in AI and chip design. That was in the late 1980s. And there was not much from an AI point of view that I could do then. It was the second winter for AI. But in the last few years, there was the resurgence in AI and the technologies and the opportunities that can happen with the newer ways of doing things with AI make a lot more sense. So now I'm part of an organization here in Singapore known as AI Verify Foundation. It is a non-profit open-source software foundation that was set up about a year ago to provide tools, software testing tools, to test AI solutions that people may be creating to understand whether those tools are fair, are unbiased, are transparent. There's about 11 criteria it tests against. So both traditional AI types of solutions as well as generative AI solutions. So these are the two open source projects that are globally available for anyone to participate in. So that's currently what I'm doing. Bryan: Wow, that's really fascinating. Would you say, Harish, that kind of your experience over the, I guess, the three decades with the open source movement, with the whole Linux user groups, has that kind of culminated in this place where now there's an opportunity to kind of shape the development of AI in an open-source context? Harish: I think we need to put some parameters around it as well. The AI that we talk about today could never have happened if it's not for open-source tools. That is plain and simple. So things like TensorFlow and all the tooling that goes around in trying to do the model building and so on and so forth could not have happened without open source tools and libraries, a Python library and a whole slew of other tools. If these were all dependent on non-open source solutions, we will still be talking about one fine day something is going to happen. So it's a given that that's the baseline. Now, what we need to do is to get this to the next level of understanding as to what does it mean when you say it's open source and artificial intelligence or open source AI, for that matter. Because now we have a different problem that we are trying to grapple with. The problem we're trying to grapple with is the definition of what is open-source AI. We understand open-source from a software point of view, from a hardware point of view. We understand that I have access to the code, I have access to the chip designs, and so on and so forth. No questions there. It's very clear to understand. But when you talk about generative AI as a specific instance of open-source AI, I can have access to the models. I can have access to the weights. I can do those kinds of stuff. But what was it that made those models become the models? Where were the data from? What's the data? What's the provenance of the data? Are these data openly available? Or are they hidden away somewhere? Understandably, we have a huge problem because in order to train the kind of models we're training today, it takes a significant amount of data and computing power to train the models. The average software developer does not have the resources to do that, like what we could do with a Linux environment or Apache or Firefox or anything like that. So there is this problem. So the question still comes back to is, what is open source AI? So the open source initiative, OSI, is now in the process of formulating what does it mean to have open source AI. The challenge we find today is that because of the success of open source in every sector of the industry, you find a lot of organizations now bending around and throwing around the label, our stuff is open source, our stuff is open source, when it is not. And they are conveniently using it as a means to gain attention and so on. No one is going to come and say, hey, do you have a proprietary tool? Adding that ship has sailed. It's not going to happen anymore. But the moment you say, oh, we have an open source fancy tool, oh, everybody wants to come and talk to you. But the way they craft that open source message is actually quite sadly disingenuous because they are putting restrictions on what you can actually do. It is contrary completely to what the open-source licensing says in open-source initiative. I'll pause there for a while because I threw a lot of stuff at you. Bryan: No, no, no. That's a lot to unpack here, right? And there's a term I learned last week, and it's called AI washing. And that's where people try to bandy the terms, throw it together. It ends up representing something it's not. But that's fascinating. I think you talked a little bit about being able to see what's behind the AI. And I think that's kind of part of those 11 criteria that you talked about. I think auditability, transparency would be kind of one of those things. I think we're beginning to go into some of the challenges, kind of pitfalls that we need to look out for. But I'm going to just put a pause on that and I'm going to ask Howard to jump in with some questions on his phone. I think he's got some interesting questions for you also. Howard: Yeah, thank you, Bryan. So, Harris, you spoke about the open source initiative, which we're very familiar with, and particularly the kind of guardrails that they're putting around what open source should be applied to AI systems. You've got a separate foundation. What's your view on where open source should feature in AI systems? Harish: It's exactly the same as what OSI says. We are making no difference because the moment you make a distinction, then you bifurcate or you completely fragment the entire industry. You need to have a single perspective and a perspective that everybody buys into. It is a hard sell currently because not everybody agrees to the various components inside there, but there is good reasoning for some of the challenges. But at the same time, if that conversation doesn't happen, we have a problem. But from AI Verify Foundation perspective, it is our code that we make. Our code, interestingly, it's not an AI tool. It is a testing tool. It is written purely to test AI solutions. And it's on an Apache license. This is a no-brainer type of licensing perspective. It's not an AI solution in and of itself. It's just taking an input, run through the test, and spit out an output, and Mr. Developer, take that and do what you want with it. Howard: Yeah, thank you for that. And what about your view on open source training data? I mean, that is really a bone of contention. Harish: That is really where the problem comes in because I think we do have some open source trading data, like the Common Crawl data and a whole slew of different components there. So as long as you stick to those that have been publicly available and you then train your models based on that, or you take models that were trained based on that, I think we don't have any contention or any issue at the end of the day. You do whatever you want with it. The challenge happens when you mix the trading data, whether it was originally Common Crawl or any of the, you know, creative license content, and you mix it with non-licensed or licensed under proprietary stuff with no permission, and you mix it up, then we have a problem. And this is actually an issue that we have to collectively come to an agreement as to how to handle it. Now, should it be done on a two-tier basis? Should it be done with different nuances behind it? This is still a discussion that is ongoing, constantly ongoing. And OSI is taking the mother load of the weight to make this happen. And it's not an easy conversation to have because there's many perspectives. Bryan: Yeah, thank you, for that. So, Harish, just coming back to some of the other challenges that we see, what kind of challenges do you foresee the continued development of open source with AI we'll see in the near future you've already said we've encountered some of them some of the the problems are really kind of in the sense a man-made because we're a lot of us rushing into it what kind of challenges do you see coming up the road soon. Harish: I think the, part of the the challenge you know it's an ongoing thing part of the challenge is not enough people understand this black box called the foundational model. They don't know how that thing actually works. Now, there is a lot of effort that is going into that space. Now, this is a man-made artifact. This piece of software that you put in something and you get something out or get this model to go and look at a bunch of files and then fine-tune against those files. And then you query the model, and then you get your answer back, a rag for that matter. It is a great way of doing it. Now, the challenge, again, goes back to because people are finding it hard to understand, how does this black box do what it does? Now, let's step back and say, okay, has physics and chemistry and anything in science solved some of these problems before? We do have some solutions that we think that make sense to look at. One of them is known as, well, it's called Computational Fluid Dynamics, CFD. CFD is used, for example, if you want to do a fluid analysis or flow analysis over the wing of an aircraft to see where the turbulences are. This is all well understood, mathematically sound. You can model it. You can do all kinds of stuff with it. You can do the same thing with cloud formation. You can do the same thing with water flow and laminar flow and so on and so forth. There's a lot of work that's already been done over decades. So the thinking now is, can we now take those same ideas that has been around for a long time and we have understood them and try and see if we can apply this into what happens in a foundational model. And one of the ideas that's being worked on is something called PINN, which stands for Physics Informed Neural Networks. So using physics, standard physics, to figure out how does this model actually work. Now, once you have those things working, then it becomes a lot more clearer. And I would hazard a guess that within the next 18 to 24 months, we'll have a far clearer understanding of what is it inside that black box that we call the foundational model. With all these known ways of solving problems that, you know, who knew we could figure out how water flows or how, who knew we could figure out how, you know, the air turbulence happens over a wing of a plane. We figured it out. We have the math behind it. So that's where I feel that we are solving some of these problems step by step. Bryan: And look, I take your point that we all need to try to understand this. And I think you're right. That is the biggest challenge that we all face. Again, when it's all coming thick and fast at you, that becomes a bigger challenge. Before I kind of go into my last question, Howard, any further questions for Harish? Howard: I think what Harish just came up with in terms of the explanation of how the models actually operate is really the killer question that everybody is poised with the work the type of work that I do is on the procurement of technology for financial sector clients and when they want to understand when procuring AI what the model does it they often receive the answer that it is a black box and not explainable which kind of defies the logic of what their experience is in terms of deterministic software you know if this then that you know ] find it very difficult to get their head around the answer being a black box box methodology and often ask you know what why can't you just reverse engineer the logic and plot a point back from the answer as a breadcrumb trail to the input? Have you got any views on that sort of question from our clients? Harish: Yeah, there's plenty of opportunities to do that kind of work. Not necessarily going back from a breadcrumb perspective, but using the example of the PINN, Physics Informed Neuro Networks. Not all of them can explain stuff today. We have to, no one, an organization and a CIO who is worth their weight in gold should ever agree to an AI solution that they cannot explain. If they cannot explain, you are asking for trouble. So that is a starting point. So don't go down the path just because your neighbor is doing that. That is being very silly from my perspective. So if we want to solve this problem, we have to collectively figure out what to do. So I give you another example of an organization called KWAAI.ai. They are a nonprofit based in California, and they are trying to build a personal AI solution. And it's all open source, 100%. And they are trying really, really hard to explain how is it that these things work. And so this is an open source project that people can participate in if they choose to and understand more and at some point some of these things will become available as model for any other solution to be tested against so so and then let me then come back to what the verify foundation does we have two sets of tools that we have created one is to create One is called AI Verified Toolkit. What it does is if you have your application you're developing that you claim is an AI solution, great. Now, what I want you to do is, Mr. Developer, put this as part of your tool chain, your CICD cycle. When you do that, what happens, you change some stuff in your code. Then you run this through this toolkit, and the toolkit will spit out a bunch of reports. Now, in the report, it will tell you whether it is biased, unbiased, is it fair, unfair, is it transparent, a whole bunch of things it spits out. Then you, Mr. Developer, make a call and say, oh, is that right or is that wrong? If it's wrong, we'll fix it before you actually deploy it. And so this is a cycle that has to go continuously. That is for traditional AI stuff. Now, you take the same idea in the traditional AI and you look at generative AI. So there's another project called Moonshot. That's the name of the project called Moonshot. It allows you to test large language models of your choosing with some inputs and what outputs come up with the models that you are testing against. Again, you do the same process. The important thing for people to understand and developers to understand, and especially businesses to understand is, as you rightly pointed out, Howard, the challenge we have, this is not deterministic outputs. These are all probabilistic outputs. So if I were to query a large language model, like AAM in London, by the time I ask the question at 10 a.m. in Singapore, it may give me a completely different answer. With the same prompt, exactly the same model, a different answer. Now, is the answer acceptable within your band of acceptance? If it is not acceptable, then you have a problem. That is one understanding. The other part of that understanding is, it suggests to me that I have to continuously test my output every single time for every single output throughout the life of the production of the system because it is probabilistic. And that's a problem. That's not easy. Howard: Great. Thank you, Harish. Very well explained. But it's good to hear that people are trying to address the problem and we're not just living in an inexplicable world. Harish: There's a lot of effort underway. There's a significant amount. MLCommons is another group of people. It's another open source project out of Europe who's doing that. AI Verified Foundation, that's what we are doing. We're working with them as well. And there's many other open source projects that are trying to address this real problem. Yeah so one of the outcomes hopefully that you know makes a lot of sense is at some point in time the tools that we have created maybe be multiple tools can be then used by some entity who is a certification authority so to speak takes the tool and says hey Mr. company a company b, we can test your ai solutions against these tools and once it is done you pass we give you a rubber stamp and say you have tested against it so that raises the confidence level from a consumer's perspective, oh, this organization has tested their tools against this toolkit and as more people start using it, the awareness of the tools being available becomes greater and greater. Then people can ask the question, oh, don't just provide me a solution to do X. Was this tested against this particular set of tools, a testing framework? If it's not, why not? That kind of stuff. Howard: And that reminds me of the Black Duck software that tests for the prevalence of open source in traditional software. Harish: Yeah, yeah. In some sense, that is a corollary to it, but it's slightly different. And the thing is, it is about how one is able to make sure that you... I mean, it's just like ISO 9000 certification. I can set up the standards. If I'm the standards entity, I cannot go and certify somebody else against my own standards. So somebody else must do it, right? Otherwise, it doesn't make sense. So likewise, from AI Verify Foundation perspective, we have created all these tools. Hopefully this becomes accepted as a standard and somebody else takes it and then goes and certifies people or whatever else that needs to be done from that point. Howard: Yeah and and we we do see standards a lot you know in the form of iso standards recovering almost like software development and cyber security again that also makes me think about certification which we're is seeing appear in European regulation. We saw it in the GDPR, but it never came into production as something that you certify your compliance with the GDPR. We have now seen it appear in the EU AI Act. And because of our experience of not seeing it appear in the GDPR, we're all questioning, you know, whether it will come to fruition in the AI Act or whether we have learned about the advantages of certification, and it will be focused on when the AI Act comes into force on the 1st of August. I think we have many years to understand the impact of the AI Act before certification will start to even make a small appearance. Harish: It's one thing to have legislative or regulated aspects of behavior. It's another one when you voluntarily do it on the basis of this makes sense. Because then there is less of hindrance or less of resistance to do it. It's just like ISO 9000, right? No one legislates it, but people still do it. Organizations still do it because it's their, oh yeah, we are an ISO 9035 organization, And so we have quality processes in place and so on and so forth, which is good for those that is important. That becomes a selling point. So likewise, I would love to see something that right now, ISO 42001, which is all the series of AI-related standards. I don't think any one of them has got anything that can be right now be certified yet. Doesn't mean it will never happen. So that could be another one, right? So again, the tools that AI Verified Foundation creates and Mel Korman creates and everybody feeds into it. Hopefully that makes sense. I'd rather see a voluntary take-up rather than a mandated regulatory one because things change. And it's much harder to change the rules than to do anything else. Howard: Well, I think that's a question in itself, but probably it will take us way over our time whether the market forces us to drive standardization. And we could probably have our own session on that, but it's a fascinating subject. Thank you, Harish. Bryan: Exactly I think standards and certifications are possibly the kind of the next thing to look out for for AI you know Harish you could be correct. But on that note last question from me Harish so, interestingly the term you use moonshot right and so personally for you what kind of moonshot wish would you have for open source and AI. Leave aside resources, yeah if you could choose what kind of development would you think would be the one that you would look out for, the one that excites you? Harish: I would rather that, for me, we need to go all the way back to the start from an AI training perspective, right? So the data. We have to start from the data, the provenance of the data. We need to make sure that that data is actually okay to be used. Now, instead of everybody going and doing their own thing, Can we have a pool where, you know, I tap into the resources and then I create my models based on the pool of well-known, well-identified data to train on. Then at least the outcome from that arrangement is we know the provenance of the data. We know how it was trained. We can see the model. model, and hopefully in that process, we also begin to understand how the model actually works with whichever physics related understanding that we can throw at it. And then people can start benefiting and using it in a coherent manner. Instead of what we have today, I mean, in a way, what we have today is called a Cambrian explosion, right? There are a billion experiments happening right now. And majority, 99.9% of it will fail at some point. And 0.1% needs to succeed. And I think we are getting to that point where there's a lot more failures happening rather than successes. And so my sense is that we need to have data that we can prove that it's okay to get and okay to use, and it is being replenished as and when needed. And then you go through the cycle. That's really my, you know, Mojoc perspective. Bryan: I think there's really a lot for us to unpack, to think about, but I think it's really been an interesting discussion from my perspective. I'm sure, Howard, you think the same. And I think with this, I want to thank you for coming online and joining us this afternoon in Singapore, this morning in Europe on this discussion. I think it's been really interesting from a perspective of somebody who's been in technology and interesting for the ReadSmith clients who are looking at this from a legal and technology perspective. And I just wanted to thank you for this. And I also wanted to thank the people who are tuning into this. Thank you for joining us on this podcast. Stay tuned to the other podcasts that the firm will be producing, and I do have a good day. Harish: Thank you. Howard: Thank you very much. Outro: Tech Law Talks is a Reed Smith production. Our producers are Ali McCardell and Shannon Ryan. For more information about Reed Smith's Emerging Technologies practice, please email techlawtalks@reedsmith.com. You can find our podcasts on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, reedsmith.com, and our social media accounts. Disclaimer: This podcast is provided for educational purposes. It does not constitute legal advice and is not intended to establish an attorney-client relationship, nor is it intended to suggest or establish standards of care applicable to particular lawyers in any given situation. Prior results do not guarantee a similar outcome. Any views, opinions, or comments made by any external guest speaker are not to be attributed to Reed Smith LLP or its individual lawyers. All rights reserved. Transcript is auto-generated.
Charlie Chami speaks to Chartered Arts & Antiques Surveyor, Toby Pinn. Toby discusses his early aspirations to join the Tour De France, exploring peoples lives through their possessions and building trusted relationships with solicitors to help with probate valuations.Toby Pinnhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/toby-pinn-mrics-9862b229/https://www.tobypinn.co.uk/Private Client Networkhttps://www.privateclientnetwork.co.uk/ https://www.linkedin.com/company/private-client-network/ https://www.instagram.com/private_client_network/ https://www.youtube.com/@ThePrivateClientPodcast Host: Charlie Chamihttps://www.linkedin.com/in/charleschami https://www.glamis-ifa.co.uk/ Host: Simon Tuttonhttps://www.linkedin.com/in/simontutton/
GUEST OVERVIEW: Major Fred Galvin served for over 26 years as a enlisted and Marine Corps officer including assignments in the infantry, reconnaissance, force reconnaissance and Marine Special Operations Command (MARSOC/Marine Raiders). He led hundreds of combat missions including raids, deep reconnaissance, ship seizures, and ambush operations in Iraq, Afghanistan and in the Arabian Gulf, Gulf of Oman and Gulf of Aden. The Marine Corps selected Galvin to command the first Marine Special Operations Task Force to deploy to combat. While conducting a combat mission in Afghanistan, Galvin and six other Marines were falsely accused of war crimes which led to the longest trial in Marine Corps history that led an acquittal. He is the author of A Few Bad Men: The True Story of U.S. Marines Ambushed in Afghanistan and Betrayed in America. GUEST OVERVIEW: Graham Pinn is a doctor like half the world's businessmen and politicians seem to be now a days, but he is a proper doctor-a medical one having stamped out disease in 10 different countries. Now in retirement, he has too much time on his hands, and writes about matters he considers of importance for The Spectator Australia. Regarding their importance his wife differs.
Dr. Pinn is a professor, activist, and author of the new book, "The Black Practice of Disbelief." He joins us for a candid conversation about religion and race in the United States.https://www.anthonypinn.comVIDEO of this conversationBecome a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/thethinkingatheist--3270347/support.
In Laws- Am I right? Ready or Not here comes another episode of Katie Afraidy with Actress, Director, and Horror Queen Devanny Pinn review Radio Silence's movie Ready or Not! Katie Afraidy is a horror movie review podcast where host, horror fanatic, and comedian Katie Hettenbach talks with comedians, actors, and filmmakers about horror movies! Subscirbe on Patreon for EXTENDED UNCUT Episodes, Stickers, and SO MUCH MORE! https://www.patreon.com/KatieAfraidy Get ready for more chaos coming every TUESDAY! Old episodes of Horror at The Store will be reposted to YouTube every THURSDAY! Use code KATIEAFRAIDY25 to get 25% off of your Fangoria subscription ! Check out Filmcraft Studio Gear! https://www.instagram.com/filmcraftla/ Please don't forget to subscribe, share, and give us a review! Love my little spooky community! Follow us on Socials! https://www.instagram.com/katie.afraidy/ https://twitter.com/katieafraidy https://www.instagram.com/kthetty/ https://www.tiktok.com/@katie.afraidy https://www.tiktok.com/@kthetty Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts! https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/katie-afraidy/id1647102737 https://open.spotify.com/show/33nXkTFCfsGqcWBckdm952
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Joe & Dan; 'You couldn't even design a simple doorknob!' How does this plot all come together - with all the factions joining forces to defeat the evil Kroagnon of course! We watch as this script completes its journey very neatly.
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Joe & Dan; 'I am Kroagnon, the Great Architect, and I will put an end to you and everyone in Paradise Towers!' The plot starts to coalesce beautifully, the Doctor is pulling all the threads together and Kroagnon reveals his hand.
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Joe & Dan; 'Build High for Happiness!' Episode two and we're seeing a Doctor form before our eyes, much discussion of Richard Briers as the Chief Caretaker and how do we feel about that dark fairytale cliffhanger?
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
Joe & Dan; 'Well you never can tell...' It's the dawn of a bold new era. Out with the camp, in with the urban comic book thriller. Maybe quite a bit of camp still. But brilliant worldbuilding, dialogue and an awesome Doctor emerging.
New Zealand jockey Wiremu Pinn joined Andrew Bensley on Racing Pulse and spoke about how his whirlwind time in Victoria came to an end and his hopes for the future. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
A Hamster With a Blunt Penknife - a Doctor Who Commentary podcast
You're a beautiful championship podcast, probably! Join Rod, Joe, Mark & Dan as they traverse Skaro, Paris, Chloris, Eden, Skonnos & Cambridge. Weakling scum!
Inspired by actual events, the film takes place over the course of 24 hours and recounts the grisly murders that occurred over winter of 1978, when a serial killer attacked multiple victims on an undisclosed college campus. The film, which premiered at the 2023 Cannes Film Festival, marks the directorial debut of award-winning actor/producer Devanny Pinn (Frost, The Dawn). A brutal and unflinching look at a terrifying rampage, The Black Mass takes a new perspective on the tropes of the serial killer biopic, giving voice to the ones who rarely have one: the killer's victims. Featuring performances by Jeremy London (Mallrats), Nicky Whelan (Hall Pass), Kathleen Kinmont (Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers), Lisa Wilcox (Nightmare on Elm Street 4: The Dream Master), and Susan Lanier (The Hills Have Eyes). The Blu-ray and DVD editions includes extra features, a slideshow, movie trailers and more. Blu-ray pre-order link: https://www.oldies.com/product-view/34398Y.html DVD pre-order link: https://www.oldies.com/product-view/34399Y.html --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/followingfilms/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/followingfilms/support
Director Devanny Pinn joins Matthew Pejkovic on the Matt's Movie Reviews Podcast to talk about her new film 'The Black Mass', a true-crime thriller that takes place over a 24-hour period in Florida during the winter of 1978, in which a notorious serial killer embarks on an unhinged rampage upon a sorority house. Support Matt's Movie Reviews PayPal: https://tinyurl.com/2x9tn2k4 Patreon: https://tinyurl.com/54jnzpsn Fandango: https://www.tkqlhce.com/click-101011980-10369449 TeePublic: https://tinyurl.com/2p9c5kpn Gift Card Store: https://t.cfjump.com/74781/t/62126 Follow Matt's Movie Reviews! Website: http://mattsmoviereviews.net Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Matts-Movie-Reviewsnet/151059409963 YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/user/MattsMovieReviews Twitter: https://twitter.com/MattsMovieRev LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/company/1036986/admin/ Rumble: https://rumble.com/c/c-1643285
Today we are joined with one of the horror queens of the screen Devanny Pinn around her directorial debut for a film called The Black Mass. Over the past decade you have seen her prevail or get absolutely slaughtered in some of the most famous and fun campy horror movies such as The Flood, Piranha 3D, and most likely anything that involves a 3 headed shark. She has even murdered our boy Danny Trejo with a chainsaw. Her new movie The Black Mass takes a very different approach by telling a horrific true crime story of the 70's with one of the most famous serial killers in history. The film hyper focuses on a specific real incident that often gets over looked by the media, takes a real take of that period of time, and Devanny explains that the intentions of this movie were to honor both the victims and survivors of these acts. Was cool to hear her break down the layers of thoughts of bringing this film to like as she believes that "Horror can both entertain and educate".
In this conversation, Vivian Pinn speaks with Robert Winn, guest editor of The Cancer Letter and the Cancer History Project during Black History Month, about the obstacles she faced as a medical student, how she incidentally helped integrate restaurants in Charlottesville in the 1960s, and her beginnings as a Research Fellow in Immunopathology at NIH. Pinn was the only African American and the only woman in her class to graduate from the University of Virginia School of Medicine in 1967. In 1982, she was the first African American woman to chair an academic pathology department in the United States, at Howard University College of Medicine. She went on to become the first full-time director of the Office of Research on Women's Health at NIH in 1991.
Much is said and assumed about the religious landscape of Black America, but it's more diverse than the common narratives. Holly Hollman speaks with Dr. Sabrina E. Dent and Dr. Anthony Pinn about misconceptions and how they brought together Black Church leaders and Black nontheists for key conversations. Tune in for this open and honest conversation about how we can work across racial and religious lines to help all communities thrive. SHOW NOTES Segment 1 (starting at 00:35): Misconceptions about the religious landscape of Black America Dr. Anthony Pinn is the Agnes Cullen Arnold Professor of Humanities at Rice University, and he's also the Founding Director of Rice's Center for Engaged Research and Collaborative Learning. He is the author/editor of more than 35 books, and he is also director of research for the Institute for Humanist Studies. Read Dr. Pinn's full biography here. Dr. Sabrina E. Dent is the director of the BJC Center for Faith, Justice and Reconciliation, which is the home of our project on Race and Religious Freedom. Learn more about the Center on our website and in this video. She is the editor and contributing author of the book African Americans and Religious Freedom: New Perspectives for Congregations and Communities. Read Dr. Dent's full biography here. “(Dis)belief: Reimagining the Religious Landscape of Black America” was the topic for the 2023 Religious Freedom Mobile Institute. Click here to read about it in a piece by Jaziah Masters, Research Fellow for the BJC Center for Faith, Justice and Reconciliation. Segment 2 (starting at 20:13): The connections between religious freedom and racial justice BJC's “Religious Freedom Has Been White Too Long: Voices of Black Scholars” was BJC's 2021 lecture featuring Dr. Anthony Pinn, Dr. Nicole Myers Turner, Dr. Teresa L. Smallwood, and Dr. David Goatley. Watch the event at this link and read a recap on our website. James Baldwin wrote in The New York Times on Feb. 2, 1969, that the bulk of the country's white population is beyond hope of moral rehabilitation. “They have been white, if I may so put it, too long.” Segment 3 (starting at 30:23): Key moments from the conference As mentioned, Dr. Dent and Dr. Pinn will be co-editors of a forthcoming book of essays from the participants in the conference. Keep up with BJC and the BJC Center for Faith, Justice and Reconciliation for the latest! Respecting Religion is made possible by BJC's generous donors. You can support these conversations with a gift to BJC.
Komið þið sæl. Það er nóg um að tala í dag. Enski boltinn og Liverpool og Man.City. Við spáum í leikina í kvöld og um helgina. Formúla 1 kemur við sögu og þá að sjálfsögðu Ferrari. Íslenski körfuboltinn er til umræðu og þá Tindastóll. Reykajvíkurmótið og svo Rúnar Alex, Mikael Andersson og Albert Guðmundsson. Þetta og margt fleira. Takk BK-kjúklingur, Slysalogmenn.is og Marpól. Fáðu þér áskrift og sjáðu alla þætti á Brotkast í fullri lengd inni á https://brotkast.is/askrift/
In this episode, Toby Pinn-Woodcock, DVM, DACVIM, joins us to discuss Lyme disease in horses. Discussion topics include clinical signs of Lyme disease, testing recommendations, treatments, vaccination protocols, and more.Disease Du Jour Podcast Hosts, Guests, and Links Episode 126:Host: Carly Sisson (Digital Content Manager) of EquiManagement | Email Carly (kbrown@equinenetwork.com) | Connect with Carly on LinkedInGuest: Dr. Toby Pinn-Woodcock, DVM, DACVIMPodcast Website: Disease Du JourThe Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you in 2024 by Merck Animal Health.
In this episode, Toby Pinn-Woodcock, DVM, DACVIM, joins us to discuss Lyme disease in horses. Discussion topics include clinical signs of Lyme disease, testing recommendations, treatments, vaccination protocols, and more.Disease Du Jour Podcast Hosts, Guests, and Links Episode 126:Host: Carly Sisson (Digital Content Manager) of EquiManagement | Email Carly (kbrown@equinenetwork.com) | Connect with Carly on LinkedInGuest: Dr. Toby Pinn-Woodcock, DVM, DACVIMPodcast Website: Disease Du JourThe Disease Du Jour podcast is brought to you in 2024 by Merck Animal Health.
Mick Kent and Wiremu Pinn joined RSN at Cranbourne on Wednesday.
This week's bonus interview is with a fellow Jerseyian, Actress and Filmmaker Devanny Pinn. Devanny was always a performer for as long as she can remember. She did an independent film in college called "The Lonely Ones" and people then started reaching out to her. We talked about Reality Shows, Lloyd Kaufman, quitting day jobs when they wouldn't let her audition, her music career, Vernon Wells, Piranha 3D, her new movie out soon called "The Black Mass", and more. Watch the unedited interview at sequelsonly.com/DevannyPinn Devanny's IMDb https://www.imdb.com/name/nm1922788/ Devanny's Twitter (X) https://twitter.com/devannypinn?lang=en Devanny's Instagram https://www.instagram.com/devannypinn/ Follow us on all social media @sequelsonly and our website is sequelsonly.com
The tyrannical reign of King Lucius Pinn must come to a bloody end, and there is only one shameless group for the job. This goofy and gory one shot adventure was originally streamed live in July 2022, and follows DM Owen as he sends legendary world-savers, The Slutty Six, (Haley, Gus, Moose, Reed, Sam, and Bri) towards their final fates. Unprepared Casters is still on hiatus, but in the meantime we will be bringing you our favorite one shots from our past every other week! Check our socials to keep up with what adventures will be coming your way, and for other upcoming announcements. Content warnings: strong language, alcohol use Follow us on... Twitter: https://www.twitter.com/unprepcasters Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/unpreparedcasters Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Barbie finally relinquished the top box office spot in a close race. It was extremely close and did nothing to make us believe that the pink phenom is done at theaters. The question becomes will it reclaim number one? We also talk about National Cinema Day and why 50 Cent is so pissed.Bootyology is a refreshing change of pace. Even the silliest movies we cover have an air of seriousness around them. A mockumentary about two white rappers who rap exclusively about butts has nothing serious to say, however. But is it too silly? Its subject matter means it is going to go for low hanging fruit. And as awesome as The Booty Boys are, the duo are incredibly dumb. Bootyology becomes a case of whether the pros outweigh the cons.On the other end of the spectrum is this week's feature presentation. The Black Mass is a true crime thriller about the twenty four hours leading up to a gruesome rampage. It is methodical, creepy, and has a third act that is hard to stomach. It is also about one of the most overused subjects in true crime.Devanny Pinn did not make it easy for herself in her feature debut. We have talked about our dislike of Bundy films. Even if you ignore the fact that he is always glamorized, there is just a glut of releases centered around him. The Black Mass strips away all of the serial killer's power and focuses on the evil around him, but did Pinn do enough to make it stand out?Adventures in Movies! is a part of the Morbidly Beautiful Podcast Network. Morbidly Beautiful is your one stop shop for all your horror needs. From the latest news and reviews to interviews and old favorites, it can be found at Morbidly Beautiful.Adventures in Movies! is hosted by Nathaniel and Blake. You can find Nathaniel on Instagram at nathaninpoortaste. Blake can be found on Twitter @foureyedhorror and on Instagram at foureyedhorror. You can reach us personally or on Twitter @AdventuresinMo1.Music in the background from https://www.FesliyanStudios.com
DEVANNY PINN
Welcome to GIVE ME THE FEAR - the Britflicks Podcast, Frightfest 2023 preview series.Hosted by screenwriter Stuart Wright, these brief, spoiler free interviews will – across the entire series – help you to discover the kind of knowledge and experience about how to make indie horror films that they don't teach at film school.After looking back at the blood, sweat and tears that went into their creative successes, I ask them one last question: If you could hand pick one person to be in the audience (alive or dead, famous or personal to you) for your Frightfest screening, who would it be and why? I think you going to love the answers this question elicits.This episode features NEW LIFE (John Rosman, SPOOKT (Tony Reames) & THE BLACK MASS (Devanny Pinn)CreditsOutro music is COME ON BABY by Tokyo Dragons (www.instagram.com/slomaxster/)Podcast for www.britflicks.com https://www.britflicks.com/britflicks-podcast/Written, produced and hosted by Stuart WrightSupport this podcast at — https://redcircle.com/britflicks-com-podcast/donationsAdvertising Inquiries: https://redcircle.com/brandsPrivacy & Opt-Out: https://redcircle.com/privacy
Young gun Wiremu Pinn joins Michael Felgate on Racing Pulse chatting about Sandown yesterday and looking forward to the weekends rides.
Wiremu 'Billy' Pinn has had a very interesting few weeks since he arrived in Australia. He's ridden plenty of winners but most of them were stripped after RV decided that he was riding with an incorrect claim
Welcome to The Voice of Retail podcast. I'm producer & host Michael LeBlanc, and this podcast is produced in conjunction with the Retail Council of Canada. Meet Brain Corp CEO David Pinn, leader of an AI software tech company that powers the world's largest fleet of autonomous mobile robots operating in commercial indoor public spaces, including retail stores and warehouses. We spoke just before David was to join us in Toronto for the big Collison tech conference and gathered his thoughts on the current and future state of AI in retail.About DavidDavid Pinn joined Brain Corp 2017. As Chief Financial Officer, he was responsible for the Finance organization along with building and implementing growth plans and partnerships. David brings nearly two decades of experience managing finance, strategy, and corporate development for innovative technology companies.Prior to Brain Corp, David was head of finance for Antenna79, a technology startup backed by L Catterton, the world's largest consumer-focused private equity group. David was a founder of Snaptracs, Qualcomm's consumer electronics subsidiary, and he led a number of acquisitions and divestitures within Qualcomm's Strategic Finance group. Prior to his career in finance, David was an electrical engineer designing test systems for cellular, WiFi, and Bluetooth applications.David earned his Bachelor of Science degree in Electrical Engineering from the University of Texas at Austin and completed a Master of Business Administration at the University of California, Berkeley, where he was a Mayfield Fellow. About Michael Michael is the Founder & President of M.E. LeBlanc & Company Inc. and a Senior Advisor to Retail Council of Canada and the Bank of Canada as part of his advisory and consulting practice. He brings 25+ years of brand/retail/marketing & eCommerce leadership experience with Levi's, Black & Decker, Hudson's Bay, Today's Shopping Choice and Pandora Jewellery. Michael has been on the front lines of retail industry change for his entire career. He has delivered keynotes, hosted fire-side discussions with C-level executives and participated worldwide in thought leadership panels. ReThink Retail has added Michael to their prestigious Top Global Retail Influencers list for 2023 for the third year in a row. Michael is also the president of Maven Media, producing a network of leading trade podcasts, including Canada's top retail industry podcast, The Voice of Retail. He produces and co-hosts Remarkable Retail with best-selling author Steve Dennis, now ranked one of the top retail podcasts in the world. Based in San Francisco, Global eCommerce Leaders podcast explores global cross-border issues and opportunities for eCommerce brands and retailers. Last but not least, Michael is the producer and host of the "Last Request Barbeque" channel on YouTube, where he cooks meals to die for - and collaborates with top brands as a food and product influencer across North America.
John Leek joins us to discuss the Wiremu Pinn situation and how any disqualifications would be devastating for him
Kelvin Bourke is the 1st trainer to seek recourse after the horse he trained finished second to a horse ridden by Billy Pinn who was incorrectly weighted .
Wiremu has got his Australian riding career off to a flyer landing his first city treble at Sandown on Saturday
Young NZ hoop Billy Pinn rode his first winner in Australia yesterday when he steered Mystery Moment to victory at Mornington
Without Your Head Horror Podcast! Horror actress Devanny Pinn joins us to talk about her career in over 80 films and her feature directorial debut in the upcoming Black Mass! Then Colin G Cooper returns to talk about his upcoming queer giallo short film BATH BOMB and how you can help make it happen! https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/bath-bomb#/ And Tara Hutchison of New Village Video! https://newvillagevideo.com/ Opening theme by The Tomb of Nick Cage and tunes by Music of the Month Strange Nocturnal! #WithoutyourHead #DivannyPinn #ScreamQueen #BlackMass #NewHorror #BathBomb #WomenInHorror #ColinGCooper --- Send in a voice message: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/withoutyourhead/message Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/withoutyourhead/support
Follow the All Ears English Podcast for more episodes with Lindsay and Michelle. Today Lindsay interviews Robert Pinn who talks about a new way to think about English. Focus on English for the entire world, not just English that native speakers use. This episode was originally published as Episode 759 on the All Ears English Podcast. Go here to follow All Ears English Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Cleopatra Entertainment's FROST, directed by Brandon Slagle (Battle of Saipan), based on James Cullen Bressack's story and adapted for screen by Robert Thompson, and starring Vernon Wells (Mad Max 2) and Devanny Pinn (House of Manson) is the story of a young woman and her father who have to fight for survival after being stranded on a remote mountainside during a storm, FROST will be released on October 11 on Digital and Blu-ray. A full motion picture soundtrack for FROST is scheduled for both the CD and VINYL LP formats to accompany the film's release and features contributions by Rick Wakeman (YES), Geoff Downes (YES/ASIA) and Terry Reid – amongst others - courtesy of Cleopatra Records. Today I'm joined by the star of FROST, Devanny Pinn, to discuss her incredible work in the film. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/followingfilms/support