Podcasts about polymorphic

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Best podcasts about polymorphic

Latest podcast episodes about polymorphic

The Industrial Security Podcast
AI takes on polymorphic malware [The Industrial Security Podcast]

The Industrial Security Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 48:12


The bad guys keep getting better at what they do, and so must we defenders. Gary Southwell of Aria Cyber joins us to look at using AI to get ahead of constantly-changing malware.

כל תכני עושים היסטוריה
AI takes on polymorphic malware [The Industrial Security Podcast]

כל תכני עושים היסטוריה

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 5, 2024 48:12


The bad guys keep getting better at what they do, and so must we defenders. Gary Southwell of Aria Cyber joins us to look at using AI to get ahead of constantly-changing malware.

Cast Polymer Radio
232: What is Polymorphic Moulding?

Cast Polymer Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 23, 2024 18:35


On this episode, we feature an interview with Josh Shires, CEO of Fyous discussing their latest technology for tooling. It's called Polymorphic Moulding, an automated rapid shapeshifting molding technology that allows users to create accurate molds for tooling and will reduce time to market for a huge array of products. Their technology uses 28,000 digitally... The post 232: What is Polymorphic Moulding? first appeared on Cast Polymer Radio.

Composites Weekly
What is Polymorphic Moulding Technology? Interview with Josh Shires of Fyous

Composites Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 16, 2024 18:07


On this episode, Josh Shires, CEO of Fyous joins me to discuss their latest technology for tooling. It’s called Polymorphic Moulding, an automated rapid shapeshifting molding technology that allows users to create accurate molds for tooling and will reduce time to market for a huge array of products.  Their technology uses 28,000 digitally controlled pins to create […] The post What is Polymorphic Moulding Technology? Interview with Josh Shires of Fyous first appeared on Composites Weekly. The post What is Polymorphic Moulding Technology? Interview with Josh Shires of Fyous appeared first on Composites Weekly.

XrmToolCast
PACX and _n XrmToolBox Tools with Riccardo Gregori

XrmToolCast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 17, 2023 52:51


In this episode, Daryl and Scott talk to Riccardo Gregori about PACX command line utility belt for Dataverse and his other XrmToolBox tools. Some of the highlights: Scott Partying at Disney/Universal Studios PACX Lazy Italian Developers Automatically generate documentation at compile time Daryl and Scott give Ricardo homework Polymorphic lookup creation command XrmToolBox Tools _n.ConstantsExtractor _n.EnvironmentComparer _n.EnvironmentSolutionsComparer _n.ModernThemeBuilder _n.SolutionManager Generate Wiki Style Documentation for Dataverse Tables Please submit PRs for the PACX Riccardo's Info and other links: https://www.linkedin.com/in/riccardogregori GitHub: https://github.com/neronotte PACX repo: https://github.com/neronotte/Greg.Xrm.Command XrmToolBox Tools repo: https://github.com/neronotte/Greg.Xrm Tool Reviews https://linnzawwin.blogspot.com/p/nenvironmentcomparer.html https://linnzawwin.blogspot.com/p/nenvironmentssolutioncomparer.html https://linnzawwin.blogspot.com/p/nsolutionmanager.html Got questions? Have your own tool you'd like to share? Have a suggestion for a future episode? Contact Daryl and Scott at cast@xrmtoolbox.com. Follow us on LinkedIn and @XrmToolCast for updates on future episodes. Do you want to see us too? Subscribe to our YouTube channel to view the last episodes. Don't forget to rate and leave a review for this show at Podchaser. Your hosts: Daryl LaBar: https://www.linkedin.com/in/daryllabar | @ddlabar Scott Durow: https://www.linkedin.com/in/scottdurow | @ScottDurow Editor: Linn Zaw Win: https://www.linkedin.com/in/linnzawwin  | @LinnZawWin Music: https://www.purple-planet.com

Mises Media
The Radical Uncertainty of a Polymorphic Fed

Mises Media

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 8, 2023


Recorded at the Mises Circle in Fort Myers, Florida, 4 November 2023. Includes audience question and answer period. Special thanks to Murray and Florence M. Sabrin for making this event possible.

AAD's Dialogues in Dermatology
July JAAD: Development and Multicenter International Validation of a Diagnostic Tool to Differentiate between Pemphigoid Gestationis and Polymorphic Eruption of Pregnancy

AAD's Dialogues in Dermatology

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 9, 2023


Ethereum Cat Herders Podcast
PEEPanEIP #102: EIP-6049: Deprecate SELFDESTRUCT with William Entriken

Ethereum Cat Herders Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2023 46:57


Topics covered ------------------------- 0:39 - About EIP-6049 1:16 - About William Entriken 1:44 - Start of the talk 1:45 - About EIP-6049 by William Entriken 2:37 - What is SELFDESTRUCT? 4:40 - Problems with SELFDESTRUCT 6:13 - About CREATE2 8:50 - Polymorphic smart contract 10:11 - What kind of applications will be affected by deprecating SELFDESTRUCT? 13:28 - EIP Motivation 18:21 - Why choose Meta EIP? 21:04 - What advantage or relationship do we see with the rest of the SELFDESTRUCT EIP? 22:44 - What are other 'Core' proposals for SELFDESTRUCT? Is there a possibility of having one of these core proposals included in the Cancun upgrade? 34:27 - Where is SELFDESTRUCT on the priority list? 38:00 - Thoughts on EIP Process, forking the EIP repository 44:40 - Communication of "Core" EIPs 46:22 - Message to the community Resources: ----------------- EIP-6049: https://eips.ethereum.org/EIPS/eip-6049 PEEPanEIP - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4cwHXAawZxqu0PKKyMzG_3BJV_xZTi1F Shapella - https://www.youtube.com/playlist?list=PL4cwHXAawZxpok0smGmq-dFGVHQzW84a2 Questions for Guests - https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdsmujnH_ncIlSEJ23s9jzXAKwfpTGNeJqjREWPloBbkJVQTA/viewform Check out upcoming EIPs in Peep an EIP series at https://github.com/ethereum-cat-herders/PM/projects/2 Follow at Twitter William Entriken @fulldecent | Pooja Ranjan @poojaranjan19 Contact Ethereum Cat Herders --------------------------------------------------- Discord: https://discord.io/ethereumcatherders Twitter: https://twitter.com/EthCatHerders Medium: https://medium.com/ethereum-cat-herders Website: https://www.ethereumcatherders.com/

Cyber Security Headlines
Bypassing patches, ChatGPT polymorphic malware, Bitwarden goes passwordless

Cyber Security Headlines

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 19, 2023 7:09


Vendors bypassing security patches ChatGPT creates polymorphic malware Bitwarden acquires Passwordless.dev Thanks to today's episode sponsor, Cerby Did you know that over 60% of the cloud applications used by your company don't support identity standards like single sign-on? And that these applications are the leading cause of breaches? Cerby can help. Cerby discovers new applications, eliminates manual security tasks like offboarding, and addresses misconfigurations like disabled 2FA while increasing employee productivity. Wait. A security tool that increases productivity? Yup. Learn more at cerby.com.

Pediheart: Pediatric Cardiology Today
Pediheart Podcast #234: Optimal Treatment Of Catecholaminergic Polymorphic Ventricular Tachycardia (CPVT)

Pediheart: Pediatric Cardiology Today

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 23, 2022 40:49


This week we enter the world of cardiogenetics and electrophysiology when we review the topic of catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia (CPVT). Is there a 'best' beta blocker for the treatment of this condition? Why is one better than others? How should one manage the patient who is intolerant of beta blockade but needs it for prevention of arrhythmia? What is the role of flecainide, sympathectomy or even ICD's for these patients? PhD candidate and physician Dr. Puck Peltenburg and CPVT world authority, Dr. Christian van der Werf (both of University of Amsterdam) share their deep insights this week. doi: 10.1161/CIRCULATIONAHA.121.056018. Epub 2021 Dec 7

MEOW: A Literary Podcast for Cats
9. Allie Rowbottom's Aesthetica, Erasure of the Flesh, and the Polymorphic Self

MEOW: A Literary Podcast for Cats

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 11, 2022 26:08


This podcast is sustained by sales of our debut book, Meow: A Novel (For Cats).  Episode 9: Allie Rowbottom's Aesthetica, Erasure of the Flesh, and the Polymorphic Self Allie Rowbottom's Aesthetica (available for preorder here) is a near-future peek into the inevitable. At 35, rudderless and lost, the protagonist, a former Instagram influencer, undergoes a dicey elective procedure to erase the years of fillers, lifts, laser and peels that extruded her form into one precision-engineered to resonate with a now-obsolete algorithm. We look back on the circumstances that led to her physical transformation and wonder whether yet another procedure could possibly allay her existential woes. In this episode of MEOW, we extend this scenario further into the future, positing ever-more-radical forms of physical transformation as the natural pursuit of the aging narcissist: human bodies, we suggest, will be reshaped into those of animals, insects, sculptural objects, architectural flourishes, and a variety of unfathomable machine-generated forms. Representing a compromise between Rowbottom's vision and our own, this week's narrator is a man who has had his vocal canal reconfigured in such a way as to only be able to produce the word “meow.” Human-language translation of this week's podcast is available upon request.  MEOW is the first and only literary podcast for your cat, conceived and presented in its native language. This podcast is sustained by sales of our debut book, Meow: A Novel (For Cats).  To pre-order Allie Rowbottom's Aesthetica, click here. Praise for Meow: A Novel "Breathtaking... a revelation." - Stubbs, Unaltered Domestic Shorthair "Meow meow meow meow meow, meow meow meow. Meow? Meow." - Joan Didion Follow us on Instagram: @meowliterature and Facebook: facebook.com/themeowlibrary  

TNM Unplugged
Oliver Barnett: Honouring the Sacred through Art, Music and Nature

TNM Unplugged

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 5, 2022 42:29


Oliver Barnett is an English photographic artist living in Cape Town, South Africa. Having emigrated from the UK to South Africa in 2007, It didn't take long to fall under the influence of the wild elemental scenery of the Cape, so stark in contrast to the beautiful but essentially manicured English countryside in which Oliver Barnett grew up. The move prompted a new creative path guided by valuable insights into the self-regulating intelligence of nature and the desire for an enhanced participation in the unfolding cycles we are bound to. Many hours have been spent exploring these new lands, Oliver taught himself photography and started to learn about the unique diversity of the Cape floral kingdom. This led to the development of adaptive editing techniques to create images that offer a narrative to a transforming sensory perception of place within the land. The resulting body of work intends to provide tools to connect to a collective perception of the environment and prompt new ways to encourage the seeds of recovered ecological sensibility occurring within human consciousness. Over the course of time, distinct threads have unravelled to create autonomous sequences of images that inform each other in the creative process. The early work consisted of landscape portals, extracted from notably vibrant natural settings encountered while walking. These sanctuaries, steeped in symbolic reference, intended to yield a sense of stillness and balance that the viewer can drift into and, if necessary, shelter from the tensions of modern life. As the eye and technique become more integrated, a microcosm has emerged, into which we are invited to take a closer look at familiar and unusual aspects of the landscape. This work sets out to encounter abstract natural structures that stimulate an extra-sensory response, whilst allowing room for any free-floating elements that may embellish the viewing experience. An awareness of the geometric principles that underlie the source material, an invaluable guideline when composing the photographs, allows a creative platform to create images that intend to explore and unite scientific and spiritual realms to invoke balance in the way humans interact with nature. The reflective technique emerged as a way of playing with my own bilateral perception of a scene, initially in forest settings. The representation of trees as symbolic, temple-like structures creates for Oliver Barnett is a window into a coherent, re-synchronized operating system that appeared to have become distracted by the demands of modern life. Through experimentation with depth of field and other relevant photographic techniques, Oliver attempt to fuse bilateral symmetry, which humans instinctively recognize as a primal archetype, with other planes of symmetry such as radial and rotational, which are more prevalent in the natural world of plants and other organic structures. Two solo shows in a six month period in London and Cape Town were followed by ‘Human Nature' in October 2014, a group show featuring a range of mixed media artists who each examine ways to communicate our changing relationship with the environment. 2016 will see the launch of a new exhibition ‘Polymorphic', which Oliver Barnett considers to be the culmination of all the influences along the journey this far. https://www.instagram.com/oliver_barnett_/

Trino Community Broadcast
38:Trino tacks on polymorphic table functions

Trino Community Broadcast

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 17, 2022 67:56


We'll be doing a more focused look at a specific feature that's being added to Trino: polymorphic table functions. We're excited to talk about what they do, where we are so far, where we're going, and how you can leverage them to make Trino better than ever!Show Notes: https://trino.io/episodes/38.htmlShow Page: https://trino.io/broadcast/YouTube Video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=90e5WxhwNas

Hidden Wings and Bloodlust
Episode 48: Calvia quatuordecimguttata - The Cream-Spot Ladybird

Hidden Wings and Bloodlust

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 19, 2022 21:59


All about the cream-spot ladybird. Does include a discussion of reproduction with some mildly strong language so take care while listening!  Featuring a promo for the Wild Episode: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/the-wild-episode/id1364093026 @WildEpisode on Twitter    Buy me a coffee: https://www.ko-fi.com/hwabpodcast  Like my facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/hiddenwingsandbloodlust Follow me on instagram: 365.ladybird Follow me on twitter: @hwabpodcast  Apple Podcasts: https://podcasts.apple.com/gb/podcast/hidden-wings-and-bloodlust/id1476595771  Google Podcasts: https://podcasts.google.com/feed/aHR0cHM6Ly9mZWVkLnBvZGJlYW4uY29tL2hpZGRlbndpbmdzYW5kYmxvb2RsdXN0L2ZlZWQueG1s?sa=X&ved=0CAMQ4aUDahcKEwjIlauU6qr2AhUAAAAAHQAAAAAQAQ Sources: Field Guide to the Ladybirds of Britain and Ireland - Helen Roy  Ladybirds of UK FB group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/971664196190955 for more on cream-spot behaviour  https://bugguide.net/node/view/26792 - Polymorphic cream-spot ladybirds in the USA https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Calvia_Crispinilla  For distribution in Channel Islands see irecord data on channel islands and Calvia quatuordecimguttata (www.irecord.org.uk)  https://www.pherobase.com/database/species/species-Calvia-quatuordecimguttata.php https://academic.oup.com/aesa/article/88/6/785/162813?login=true (Also shows that lower temperatures = bigger ladybirds).  https://d1wqtxts1xzle7.cloudfront.net/42503173/Chemical_protection_of_Calvia_quatuordec20160209-30509-1qhtj4f-with-cover-page-v2.pdf?Expires=1650412784&Signature=AYhihYlKN4Dp5AUA51bV17b80GZ-6oyl0UzQYEjAt59NZy1tXE~Ax-Ocy-PZlC2pBKsJAXQkJn47250qu~qbjVl7XXYSGbRRm5IOEmh-b~SXa29wloRF-6xZcDqiihynzmb8nxdHM78mnJQSF~kTbsaiCQyps5HpYabJnrCTSf9mVJLX3vMeztRE~PwxWGcCoJDHQtv-ylcJEVCZOwpTVhvyNfy7CwQhXuPuMra0Bu03oFt0G86Z0E91LKRXgfaEEezYI52b29ruVTS9ulzHo0E5sFNGhuUFsisUaS9gpfixK1YT3A0yzqwj45PIT2RdXeI-hVsw84wPFq7WDa9McA__&Key-Pair-Id=APKAJLOHF5GGSLRBV4ZA - Alexandra Magro's study, 2007  https://www.researchgate.net/publication/333761329_Niche_width_and_niche_specialization_in_four_species_of_ladybirds_Coleoptera_Coccinellidae_co-occurring_in_the_same_habitat - Polish study of 4 different ladybirds    http://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33024/ - Investigating ladybird alkaloids as new leads for novel insecticides  https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdfdirect/10.1111/jeb.13074   https://doc.rero.ch/record/316061/files/10526_2012_Article_9470.pdf   https://resjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/pdf/10.1111/icad.12158 https://besjournals.onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10.1111/j.1365-2656.2004.00769.x - Sexually transmitted mites info  http://nora.nerc.ac.uk/id/eprint/513378/1/N513378PP.pdf  https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10530-016-1077-6  http://earaza.ru/wp-content/uploads/20210505_zoo_eco_issues.pdf#page=177 - Russian study comparing clutch sizes on apples and pears  https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Jean-Francois-Godeau/publication/269100775_Identification_of_prey_items_in_frass_of_three_ladybird_beetles_living_on_black_alder/links/548051bc0cf2ccc7f8bb98f2/Identification-of-prey-items-in-frass-of-three-ladybird-beetles-living-on-black-alder.pdf  https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/abs/pii/S0040402010001651 - Piperidines info   

The ConTechCrew
The ConTechCrew 297: Polymorphic Robotic Construction Strippers with Melvin Newman from Patabid

The ConTechCrew

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 21, 2022 81:09


This week's construction tech news with James Benham (@JamesMBenham), and Jonathan Marsh (@SteelToeGroup) Featuring: - Interview with Melvin Newman from Patabid - Construction Tech News of the Week Follow @TheConTechCrew on social media for more updates and to join the conversation! Listen to the show at http://thecontechcrew.com Powered by JBKnowledge Learn more at http://thecontechcrew.com or follow @JBKnowledge & @TheConTechCrew on Twitter.

Salesforce Trails & Trials
Ep. 12 - Miro Decision Tree & Flow UX/Polymorphic Visual Flow, Slack Bots, Gratitude, Soft Skills

Salesforce Trails & Trials

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 17, 2022 49:16


This time on Salesforce Trails and Trials, hosts Jon Cline and Erik Yewell talk about admin power in the wrong hands. Plus Slack bot platforms, Miro decision trees, bow ties, gratitude, and holiday lights. Jon Cline has been working in IT since 1998 and is a very curious person. Erik Yewell has been in IT for 23 years and done just about everything you can imagine. They share their wins and worse so you can learn with them. Erik talks about learning Slack bot platforms and automating tasks. You can do it with Heroku and Azure of course, but there are also options for MuleSoft, Workato, and Zapier. Meanwhile Jon learned about using Flow as a validation tool for handoff to Conga document generation. Plus, they both revel in learning anything on YouTube from tying a bow tie (something Jon learned) to changing a car window (something Erik learned about, but decided to leave to the professionals). For this episode's one small thing that can have big consequences, Erik and Jon talk about too many system administrators. In short, admin power in the wrong hands is not a good idea. But you can address this challenge and keep people happy by setting up a delegated administrator to restrict how much access some admins have.  What are you grateful for? Jon and Erik talk about the value of starting with gratitude, whether it's a meeting or a conversation, and they'd love to hear what you're grateful for. Who are the people that have helped you or projects that have moved you forward? Maybe it's a manager that gave you a good kick in the butt. You can call our Consulting Camp line and leave a message to share your story: 540-TRIALS-5 (that's 540-874-2575). Extras: Jon Cline is wearing a bow tie all month as a part of Dressember. You can make a donation to his campaign to stop human trafficking. The Salesforce Developers Podcast is worth checking out, especially recent episodes on Enterprise Apex programming and the SFXD user group on Discord. Salesforce Lightning Platform Enterprise Architecture by Andrew Fawcett. Jon shares Miro templates for creating decision trees and a polymorphic visual flow for Salesforce that can save a lot of time (check out the new architect resources coming soon).

Fit Womens Weekly Podcast
Ep. 345: Emmy Has 3 Autoimmune Diseases And Gives Zero Excuses

Fit Womens Weekly Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 24, 2021 46:18


Part of the Fit With Friends series, my client and friend Emmy, shares her personal experience with being diagnosed with 3 autoimmune diseases over the past 10 years.  And while many would slow down, Emmy shares how she keeps going and being a positive influence on her family and me. Lupus, Vitiligo, and Polymorphic light eruption doesn't stop her. Listen in to hear Emmy's story!  Have a story to share or want to connect? Email me at Kindal@fitwomensweekly.com or www.instagram.com/TrainerKindal  

ESC Cardio Talk
Journal Editorial - Initiation and management of polymorphic ventricular tachycardia: history gone full circle

ESC Cardio Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2021 13:12


With Christian van der Werf, Amsterdam University Medical Center - Netherlands & Pier Lambiase, University College London, London - United Kingdom. Link to paper Link to editorial

The Morning Drive with Marcus and Kurt
Corey Parent - St. Albans Town Director of Operations

The Morning Drive with Marcus and Kurt

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 29, 2021 21:58


Corey joins WVMT's The Morning Drive along with Parth Shah, CEO of Polymorphic, discusses how St. Albans Town is becoming the first municipality to use data to make government more efficient.

Hidden Wings and Bloodlust
Episode 42: Chilocorus stigma - The Twice-Stabbed Ladybug

Hidden Wings and Bloodlust

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 19, 2021 21:23


This week's episode is all about the twice-stabbed ladybug. Found in North America, this ladybird has interesting genetics and a weird lifestyle. Plus, hear an update with new information about the kidney spot!  Podcast recommendation - The Wild Episode with Brian Ruckley. Follow https://twitter.com/WildEpisode or www.wildepisode.com :)  Sources:  Picture used in show notes by Parihav at the English-language Wikipedia, CC BY-SA 3.0 , via Wikimedia Commons. Picture can be found here: https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Twicestabbed1.jpg  https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/11/6/368 - Rigorous Morphological Studies Confirm That the Classical Object of Pest Control Chilocorus kuwanae Is the Same Species as Ch. renipustulatus (Coleoptera: Coccinellidae) https://biocontrol.entomology.cornell.edu/predators/Chilocoruss.php  https://www.scielo.br/j/gmb/a/dhbZYvwxrYCKKhnK3SmHJTs/abstract/?lang=en - Information on the XY chromosomes https://www.nature.com/articles/1931210a0 - Polymorphic chromosomes https://bugguide.net/node/view/817339 - Another similar ladybird :)  https://www.fs.fed.us/nrs/pubs/gtr/gtr_wo37/18_mayer_wo37.pdf - Chilocorus stigma and beech scale  https://aggie-horticulture.tamu.edu/galveston/beneficials/beneficial-16_twicestabbed_ladybug.htm  https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/16334330/  https://books.google.co.uk/books?id=VGQiB01pBeIC&pg=PA168&lpg=PA168&dq=chilocorus+stigma+mussel+scale&source=bl&ots=XrXmUpe-Se&sig=ACfU3U02pJOEFxUgGz5r2UaebZWKk5m6UQ&hl=en&sa=X&ved=2ahUKEwjvhJXfve_xAhVNSsAKHR_SC1QQ6AEwCXoECAcQAw#v=onepage&q=chilocorus%20stigma%20mussel%20scale&f=false - Chapter from Ivo Hodek's book with info on low survival rates on Mussel Scale.  Buy me a coffee at Ko-Fi: https://www.ko-fi.com/hwabpodcast  Follow me on Twitter @HWABPodcast Follow me on Instagram @365.ladybird  Like my facebook page - https://www.facebook.com/hiddenwingsandbloodlust  Wherever you get your podcasts: https://www.podfollow.com/hidden-wings-and-bloodlust  Music by Debra Torrance :) 

The Bike Shed
288: 10x Puppy

The Bike Shed

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 13, 2021 36:34


On this week's episode, Chris and Steph discuss migrating a polymorphic relationship over to UUIDs and balancing trade-offs between data integrity vs complexity. They also touch on a new Rails feature that adds support to safely remove and add columns, GitHub Discussions, measuring team experiments, and purposeful communication. This episode is brought to you by ScoutAPM (https://scoutapm.com/bikeshed). Give Scout a try for free today and Scout will donate $5 to the open source project of your choice when you deploy Modeling Polymorphic Associations in a Relational Database (https://hashrocket.com/blog/posts/modeling-polymorphic-associations-in-a-relational-database) Rails 6.1 - Add support for ifexists/ifnot_exists (https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/38352) GitHub Discussions (https://docs.github.com/en/discussions) Loom: Video Messaging (https://www.loom.com/)

Exponential Minds Podcast
S4: Ep 6 Tracey Follows talks about the polymorphic code of the self and losing control of who we are

Exponential Minds Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2021 32:04


TRACEY FOLLOWS is a professional futurist identifying the future trends that will shape our world. Her clients have included Telefonica, Google, Sky, Farfetch, Conde Nast and Virgin. She has spoken at UN HQ in New York, delivered her TedX at the UK Foreign & Commonwealth Office and closed at events such as Think With Google. She writes her own contributor column in Forbes and her opinions are regularly sought by national media. Tracey is also a member of the Association of Professional Futurists, World Futures Studies Federation and a Fellow of the RSA. Her first book, The Future of You: Can Your Identity Survive 21st Century Technology? published by Elliott & Thompson March 2021. Read her book - 'The Future of You' Follow her on Twitter - @traceyfutures See more of Nikolas’ thinking at www.nikolasbadminton.com

Architect Tips
Architect Tip: Testing Polymorphic EFCore Mapping

Architect Tips

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 2, 2021 5:24


Functional Design in Clojure
Ep 087: Polymorphic Metal

Functional Design in Clojure

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 23, 2020 29:55


We discuss polymorphism and how we tackle dynamic data with families of functions.

Intego Mac Podcast
Polymorphic Viruses

Intego Mac Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 5, 2020 32:45


We begin by learning how Josh got interesting in computer security. We then discuss Apple patches and flaws, end-to-end encryption, coronavirus scams, a Google lawsuit, and a photo that can crash Android phones. Show Notes: Computer Viruses, Artificial Life and Evolution by Mark Ludwig Zero-day in Sign in with Apple Turn off Face ID on your iPhone BBC World Service Director calls for trusted news access to chat apps Zoom’s Pledge to Work with Law Enforcement Spurs Online Blowback NHS contact tracing undermined by hackers sending fraudulent warnings to public NHS Contact Tracing website Google faces $5 billion lawsuit in U.S. for tracking 'private' internet use Android: Why this photo is bricking some phones Get 40% off Mac Premium Bundle X9, fully compatible with macOS Mojave, with the code PODCAST20. Download Intego Mac Premium Bundle X9 now at intego.com.

Swift by Sundell
71: “Polymorphic interfaces”, with special guest Dave Abrahams

Swift by Sundell

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 23, 2020 69:16


Dave Abrahams joins John to talk about Protocol-Oriented Programming and how to make the most out of the Swift Standard Library. Also, discussions on Swift’s overall design, why it puts such a strong emphasis on value types and protocols, and how it’s been influenced by other languages.

swift abrahams interfaces polymorphic protocol oriented programming
ESC Cardio Talk
Journal Editorial - Implantable cardioverter-defibrillators in previously undiagnosed patients with catecholaminergic polymorphic ventricular tachycardia resuscitated from sudden cardiac arrest

ESC Cardio Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 20, 2020 18:09


Haskell Weekly
Polymorphic Rounding

Haskell Weekly

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 13, 2019 15:49


Sara Lichtenstein and Taylor Fausak discuss converting between numeric types with polymorphic functions.

The History of Computing
The History of Computer Viruses

The History of Computing

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 26, 2019 17:00


Welcome to the History of Computing Podcast, where we explore the history of information technology. Because by understanding the past, we're able to be prepared for the innovations of the future! Todays episode is not about Fear, Uncertainty, and Death. Instead it's about viruses. As with many innovations in technology, early technology had security vulnerabilities. In fact, we still have them!  Today there are a lot of types of malware. And most gets to devices over the Internet. But we had viruses long before the Internet; in fact we've had them about as long as we've had computers. The concept of the virus came from a paper published by a Hungarian Scientist in 1949 called “Theory of Self-reproducing automata.” The first virus though, didn't come until 1971 with Creeper. It copied between DEC PDP-10s running TENEX over the ARPANET, the predecessor to the Internet. It didn't hurt anything; it just output a simple little message to the teletype that read “I'm the creeper: catch me if you can.” The original was written by Bob Thomas but it was made self-replicating by Ray Tomlinson thus basically making him the father of the worm. He also happened to make the first email program. You know that @ symbol in an email address? He put it there. Luckily he didn't make that self replicating as well.  The first antivirus software was written to, um, to catch Creeper. Also written by Ray Tomlinson in 1972 when his little haxie had gotten a bit out of control. This makes him the father of the worm, creator of the anti-virus industry, and the creator of phishing, I mean, um email. My kinda' guy.  The first virus to rear its head in the wild came in 1981 when a 15 year old Mt Lebanon high school kid named Rich Skrenta wrote Elk Cloner. Rich went on to work at Sun, AOL, create Newhoo (now called the Open Directory Project) and found Blekko, which became part of IBM Watson in 2015 (probably because of the syntax used in searching and indexes). But back to 1982. Because Blade Runner, E.T., and Tron were born that year. As was Elk Cloner, which that snotty little kid Rich wrote to mess with gamers. The virus would attach itself to a game running on version 3.3 of the Apple DOS operating system (the very idea of DOS on an Apple today is kinda' funny) and then activate on the 50th play of the game, displaying a poem about the virus on the screen. Let's look at the Whitman-esque prose: Elk Cloner: The program with a personality It will get on all your disks It will infiltrate your chips Yes, it's Cloner! It will stick to you like glue It will modify RAM too Send in the Cloner! This wasn't just a virus. It was a boot sector virus! I guess Apple's MASTER CREATE would then be the first anti-virus software. Maybe Rich sent one to Kurt Angle, Orin Hatch, Daya, or Mark Cuban. All from Mt Lebanon. Early viruses were mostly targeted at games and bulletin board services. Fred Cohen coined the term Computer Virus the next year, in 1983.  The first PC virus came also to DOS, but this time to MS-DOS in 1986. Ashar, later called Brain, was the brainchild of Basit and Amjad Farooq Alvi, who supposedly were only trying to protect their own medical software from piracy. Back then people didn't pay for a lot of the software they used. As organizations have gotten bigger and software has gotten cheaper the pirate mentality seems to have subsided a bit. For nearly a decade there was a slow roll of viruses here and there, mainly spread by being promiscuous with how floppy disks were shared. A lot of the viruses were boot sector viruses and a lot of them weren't terribly harmful. After all, if they erased the computer they couldn't spread very far. The virus started “Welcome to the Dungeon.” The following year, the poor Alvi brothers realized if they'd of said Welcome to the Jungle they'd be rich, but Axl Rose beat them to it. The brothers still run a company called Brain Telecommunication Limited in Pakistan. We'll talk about zombies later. There's an obvious connection here.  Brain was able to spread because people started sharing software over bulletin board systems. This was when trojan horses, or malware masked as a juicy piece of software, or embedded into other software started to become prolific. The Rootkits, or toolkits that an attacker could use to orchestrate various events on the targeted computer, began to get a bit more sophisticated, doing things like phoning home for further instructions. By the late 80s and early 90s, more and more valuable data was being stored on computers and so lax security created an easy way to get access to that data. Viruses started to go from just being pranks by kids to being something more.  A few people saw the writing on the wall. Bernd Fix wrote a tool to remove a virus in 1987. Andreas Luning and Kai Figge released The Ultimate Virus Killer, an Antivirus for the Atari ST. NOD antivirus was released as well as Flushot Plus and Anti4us. But the one that is still a major force in the IT industry is McAfee VirusScan, founded by a former NASA programmer named John Mcafee. McAfee resigned in 1994. His personal life is… how do I put this… special. He currently claims to be on the run from the CIA. I'm not sure the CIA is aware of this.  Other people saw the writing on the wall as well, but went… A different direction. This was when the first file-based viruses started to show up. They infected ini files, .exe files, and .com files. Places like command.com were ripe targets because operating systems didn't sign things yet. Jerusalem and Vienna were released in 1987. Maybe because he listened to too much Bad Medicine from Bon Jovi, but Robert Morris wrote the ARPANET worm in 1988, which reproduced until it filled up the memory of computers and shut down 6,000 devices. 1988 also saw Friday the 13th delete files and causing real damage. And Cascade came this year, the first known virus to be encrypted. The code and wittiness of the viruses were evolving.  In 1989 we got the AIDS Trojan. This altered autoexec.bat and counted how many times a computer would boot. At 90 boots, the virus would hide the dos directories and encrypt the names of files on C:/ making the computer unusable unless the infected computer owner sent $189 a PO Box in Panama. This was the first known instance of ransomeware. 1990 gave us the first polymorphic virus.  Symantec released Norton Antivirus in 1991, the same year the first polymorphic virus was found in the wild, called Tequila. Polymorphic viruses change as they spread, making it difficult to find by signature based antivirus detection products. In 1992 we got Michelangelo which John Mcafee said would hit 5 million computers. At this point, there were 1,000 viruses. 1993 Brough us Leandro and Freddy Krueger, 94 gave us OneHalf, and 1995 gave us Concept, the first known macro virus. 1994 gave us the first hoax with “Good Times” - I think of that email sometimes when I get messages of petitions online for things that will never happen.  But then came the Internet as we know it today. By the mid 90s, Microsoft had become a force to be reckoned with. This provided two opportunities. The first was the ability for someone writing a virus to have a large attack surface. All of the computers on the Internet were easy targets, especially before network address translation started to somewhat hide devices behind gateways and firewalls. The second was that a lot of those computers were running the same software. This meant if you wrote a tool for Windows that you could get your tool on a lot of computers. One other thing was happening: Macros. Macros are automations that can run inside Microsoft Office that could be used to gain access to lower level functions in the early days. Macro viruses often infected the .dot or template used when creating new Word documents, and so all new word documents would then be infected. As those documents were distributed over email, websites, or good old fashioned disks, they spread.  An ecosystem with a homogenous distribution of the population that isn't inoculated against an antigen is a ripe hunting ground for a large-scale infection. And so the table was set. It's March, 1999. David Smith of Aberdeen Township was probably listening to Livin' La Vida Loca by Ricky Martin. Or Smash Mouth. Or Sugar Ray. Or watching the genie In A Bottle video from Christina Aguilera. Because MTV still had some music videos. Actually, David probably went to see American Pie, The Blair Witch Project, Fight Club, or the Matrix then came home and thought he needed more excitement in his life. So he started writing a little prank. This prank was called Melissa.  As we've discussed, there had been viruses before, but nothing like Melissa. The 100,000 computers that were infected and 1 billion dollars of damage created doesn't seem like anything by todays standards, but consider this: about 100,000,000 PCs were being sold per year at that point, so that's roughly one tenth a percent of the units shipped. Melissa would email itself to the first 50 people in an Outlook database, a really witty approach for the time. Suddenly, it was everywhere; and it lasted for years. Because Office was being used on Windows and Mac, the Mac could be a carrier for the macro virus although the payload would do nothing. Most computer users by this time knew they “could” get a virus, but this was the first big outbreak and a wakeup call.  Think about this, if there are supposed to be 24 billion computing devices by 2020, then next year this would mean a similar infection would hit 240 million devices. That would mean it hits ever person in Germany, the UK, France, and the Nordic countries. David was fined $5,000 and spent 20 months in jail. He now helps hunt down creators of malware.  Macroviruses continued to increase over the coming years and while there aren't too many still running rampant, you do still see them today. Happy also showed up in 1999 but it just made fireworks. Who doesn't like fireworks? At this point, the wittiness of the viruses, well, it was mostly in the name and not the vulnerability. ILOVEYOU from 2000 was a vbscript virus and Pikachu from that year tried to get kids to let it infect computers.  2001 gave us Code Red, which attacked IIS and caused an estimated $2 Billion in damages. Other worms were Anna Kournikova, Sircam, Nimda and Klez. The pace of new viruses was going, as was how many devices were infected. Melissa started to look like a drop in the bucket. And Norton and other antivirus vendors had to release special tools, just to remove a specific virus.  Attack of the Clones was released in 2002 - not about the clones of Melissa that started wreaking havoc on businesses. Mylife was one of these. We also got Beast, a trojan that deployed a remote administration tool. I'm not sure if that's what evolved into SCCM yet.  In 2003 we got simile, the first metamorphic virus, blaster, sobbing, seem, graybeard, bolgimo, agobot, and then slammer, which was the fastest to spread at that time. This one hit a buffer overflow bug in Microsoft SQL and hit 75,000 devices in 10 minutes. 2004 gave us Bagle, which had its own email server, Sasser, and MyDoom, which dropped speeds for the whole internet by about 10 percent. MyDoom convinced users to open a nasty email attachment that said “Andy, I'm just doing my job, nothing personal.” You have to wonder what that meant… The witty worm wasn't super-witty, but Netsky, Vundo, bifrost, Santy, and Caribe were. 2005 gave us commwarrior (sent through texts), zotob, Zlob, but the best was that a rootlet ended up making it on CDs from Sony. 2006 brought us Starbucks, Nyxem, Leap, Brotox, stration. 2007 gave us Zeus and Storm. But then another biggee in 2008. Sure, Torpig, Mocmex, Koobface, Bohmini, and Rustock were a thing. But Conficker was a dictionary attack to get at admin passwords creating a botnet that was millions of computers strong and spread over hundreds of countries. At this point a lot of these were used to perform distributed denial of services attacks or to just send massive, and I mean massive amounts of spam.  Since then we've had student and duqu, Flame, Daspy, ZeroAccess. But in 2013 we got CryptoLocker which made us much more concerned about ransomware. At this point, entire cities can be taken down with targeted, very specific attacks. The money made from Wannacry in 2017 might or might not have helped developed North Korean missiles. And this is how these things have evolved. First they were kids, then criminal organizations saw an opening. I remember seeing those types trying to recruit young hax0rs at DefCon 12. Then governments got into it and we get into our modern era of “cyberwarfare.” Today, people like Park Jin Hyok are responsible for targeted attacks causing billions of dollars worth of damage.  Mobile attacks were up 54% year over year, another reason vendors like Apple and Google keep evolving the security features of their operating systems. Criminals will steal an estimated 33 billion records in 2023. 60 million Americans have been impacted by identity theft. India, Japan, and Taiwan are big targets as well. The cost of each breach at a company is now estimated to have an average cost of nearly 8 million dollars in the United States, making this about financial warfare. But it's not all doom and gloom. Wars in cyberspace between nation states, most of us don't really care about that. What we care about is keeping malware off our computers so the computers don't run like crap and so unsavory characters don't steal our crap. Luckily, that part has gotten easier than ever. 

CRM Audio
PPDB: Polymorphic lookups, release 57, and accessibility guidelines

CRM Audio

Play Episode Listen Later May 12, 2019 7:37


This is the Power Platform Daily Brief for Monday, May 13 (brought to you by ClickLearn). Today's big news is that canvas apps now support polymorphic lookup fields for Owner, Customer, and Regarding, as well as related activities and notes. See the official documentation. Other news covered in today's daily brief: Release notes for PSA release 7: https://cloudblogs.microsoft.com/dynamics365/users/2019/05/08/release-notes-for-project-service-automation-update-release-7/ What's included in D365 v9.1 service update 52: https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/4503238/service-update-52-for-microsoft-dynamics-365-9-1-0 Canvas Apps Accessibility Guidelines whitepaper: https://powerapps.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/powerapps-canvas-app-accessibility-guidelines/ Add new fields when creating canvas apps: https://powerapps.microsoft.com/en-us/blog/add-new-fields-while-creating-your-canvas-app/

City Church Murfreesboro
Mark 16:1-8 - Polymorphic Pencils Sketching Diamonds: Why Its Time to Take Cosmic Resurrection Personally

City Church Murfreesboro

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 1, 2018 54:17


Support the show (https://pushpay.com/g/borocitychurch?src=hpp)

Unfiltered Copenhagen Podcast
Polymorphic Pervert - Ep 40 (2018-03-11)

Unfiltered Copenhagen Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 11, 2018 102:57


This week we take you on a short trip to Aarhus, where a new special kind of brothel is opening up. Over on the side of the Devil's Island there's once again submarine news! Peter Madsen's first day of trial was this past week, and his story has changed yet again. And Ford has a few (many!) words to say about the upcoming changes in the Danish language schools. So grab some popcorn, and celebrate our anniversary with us in this intense episode. Oh, yeah, and remember not to travel out of the country if you're on welfare. Enjoy!

Showcase Mondays
POLYMORPHIC(Exclusive Mix For Showcase Mondays)02/19/2018

Showcase Mondays

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 20, 2018 55:54


Follow @polymorphiccc Track List: 1. Kyle Watson - Camouflage Cat 2. Polymorphic - Grovel Buzz 3. Thee Cool Cats - Breaker 919 4. M. Fischer - Lose Control 5. Daniel Fernandes, K19 - Dead Boy 6. Malive, So Schway - Wolfs 7. Kenkode - Klublast (Polymorphic Remix) 8. Dateless & Lucati, Dateless, Lucati - Terminate 9. JuanDollar - Ninetysix 10. Gandolfi B. - Move Yourself 11. Matroda - BO$$ 12. Airwolf x Rrotik - What You Think Gonna Happen 13. Mancodex - Freak Out 14. Weiss (UK) - Bounce 15. Holt 88 - Thus Stori 16. Alex Senna & Teken - Hood Rules 17. The Ragga Twins & MDE - Move It Up 18. Green Velvet, Walker & Royce - Rub Anotha Dub 19. Selecta - G 20. PROXY & Embassy - Virgo (Westend & Steve Darko Remix) 21. AC Slater - Big Riddim (feat. Jamakabi) 22. Disto - Nobody Stop Freaks 23. Electrixx & Fast Foot - Move 24. BYOR - Like This 25. Hare Tones - Fetish

International Conference on Functional Programming 2017

Yuu Igarashi (Kyoto University, Japan) gives the second talk in the fourth panel, Integrating Static and Dynamic Typing, on the 3rd day of the ICFP conference. Co-written by Taro Sekiyama (IBM Research, Japan), Atsushi Igarashi (Kyoto University, Japan). We study an extension of gradual typing--a method to integrate dynamic typing and static typing smoothly in a single language--to parametric polymorphism and its theoretical properties, including conservativity of typing and semantics over both statically and dynamically typed languages, type safety, blame-subtyping theorem, and the gradual guarantee--the so-called refined criteria, advocated by Siek et al. We develop System F-G, which is a gradually typed extension of System F with the dynamic type and a new type consistency relation, and translation to a new polymorphic blame calculus System F-C, which is based on previous polymorphic blame calculi by Ahmed et al. The design of System F-G and System F-C, geared to the criteria, is influenced by the distinction between static and gradual type variables, first observed by Garcia and Cimini. This distinction is also useful to execute statically typed code without incurring additional overhead to manage type names as in the prior calculi. We prove that System F-G satisfies most of the criteria: all but the hardest property of the gradual guarantee on semantics. We show that a key conjecture to prove the gradual guarantee leads to the Jack-of-All-Trades property, conjectured as an important property of the polymorphic blame calculus by Ahmed et al.

Kannibalen Radio
(Ep.103) [Mixed by Lektrique] + Polymorphic Guest Mix

Kannibalen Radio

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 1, 2017 62:00


Subscribe to Kannibalen Radio: http://bit.ly/KanniRecsFollow Polymorphic:https://soundcloud.com/polymorphiccchttps://facebook.com/polymorphiccchttps://twitter.com/Polymorphiccchttps://instagram.com/polymorphicccFollow Lektrique:https://soundcloud.com/lektriquehttps://facebook.com/lektriquehttps://twitter.com/lektriquehttps://instagram.com/lektriqueFollow Kannibalen Records:https://soundcloud.com/kannibalenrecordshttps://facebook.com/Kannibalen.Recordshttps://twitter.com/KannibalenRecshttps://instagram.com/kannibalenrecordsTracklist⚡ Lektrique ⚡Dead Battery - All Is Red [Forthcoming on Kannibalen]Oski x Hydraulix - Lose It ft. Macntaj [Quality Goods]Sonny Banks & Stereoliez - Mollybreath [Confession]iBenji - Funky Shit Ft. Cold Cue [Free DL]Rob Gasser - Hypemachine [Kinphonic]Excision & Space Laces - Push It Up [Rottun]DJ Snake - 4 Life Feat. G4shi (Habstrakt Remix) [DJ Snake Music]Dyro - Good Feelin [WOLV]Jaycen A'mour x Holly - Reaver [Thrive]Delayers & SLVR - Bass Code [DOORN]Noisia - Tommy's Theme (Noisia's 'Outer Edges' Remix) [VISION]☠ Polymorphic ☠ZHU & Nero - Dreams [Mind of a Genius]Monista - Show off (with Slum Village) [Beastbeats]Felix - Nothin More I Need (feat. Brendan Reilly) (Rrotik Remix) [Dance FX]Polymorphic - Corrosion [Brooklyn Fire]Matroda & Wess - Get Down [Dim Mak]Tony Junior & Tommie Sunshine ft. DJ Isaac - F.D.A.U. (Polymorphic Remix) [Free DL]Jay Faded - I Can See [YosH]Jean Beatz - Cocaine [Pyro Records]Snails & heRobust - Pump This (Ghastly Remix) [OWSLA]Jauz - Alpha [Jauz]Pegboard Nerds & Quiet Disorder - Move That Body [Monstercat]GODAMN - Bright feat Metthod [Gold Digger Records]Marc Spence - On Air [OWSLA]Taiki Nulight & LO'99 - Okay [This Ain't Bristol]Petey Clicks - I Can't Hold It In [Night Bass]Herve - My Love (feat. Phizzals) (Maximono Remix) [Skint Records]Inkline - Ignition (feat. Taiki Nulight) [Free DL]Malaa & Dombresky - Hostyl [Confession]Weiss (UK) - Warp [This Ain't Bristol]BS1 - Kick It [BNR]Polymorphic - Instinсt [Brooklyn Fire]Proxy, Lektrique - Yow [Kannibalen]--Enjoy & Survive

FoundMyFitness
#032 Does Meat Consumption Cause Cancer?

FoundMyFitness

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 28, 2017 15:10


Does meat consumption cause cancer? Or, put another way… does avoiding meat help prevent cancer? If you aren't already savvy to the topic, this may sound more absurd than it should. Here's why: there have been many, many, many correlative studies that have found that higher meat consumption is associated with a significantly higher risk of cancer and cancer mortality. Some of the publications mentioned in this podcast: Association of Animal and Plant Protein Intake With All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality Effect of aerobic exercise on insulin, insulin-like growth factor-1 and insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 in overweight and obese postmenopausal women Prospective study of colorectal cancer risk in men and plasma levels of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and IGF-binding protein-3 Polymorphic variants of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) receptor and phosphoinositide 3-kinase genes affect IGF-I plasma levels and human longevity: cues for an evolutionarily conserved mechanism of life span control. Functionally significant insulin-like growth factor I receptor mutations in centenarians Congenital IGF1 deficiency tends to confer protection against post-natal development of malignancies Changes in plasma somatomedin-C in response to ingestion of diets with variable protein and energy content   Join over 300,000 people and get the latest distilled information on meat consumption causing cancer straight to your inbox weekly: https://www.foundmyfitness.com/newsletter Become a FoundMyFitness premium member to get access to exclusive episodes, emails, live Q+A's with Rhonda and more: https://www.foundmyfitness.com/crowdsponsor  

FoundMyFitness
Does Meat Consumption Cause Cancer?

FoundMyFitness

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 27, 2017 15:10


Does meat consumption cause cancer? Or, put another way… does avoiding meat help prevent cancer? If you aren't already savvy to the topic, this may sound more absurd than it should. Here's why: there have been many, many, many correlative studies that have found that higher meat consumption is associated with a significantly higher risk of cancer and cancer mortality. To try to answer this question we end up going deep into discussing plausible mechanisms that might help explain this phenomenon and, indeed, discussing a little bit of cancer biology as well. Some of the publications mentioned in this podcast: Association of Animal and Plant Protein Intake With All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality Effect of aerobic exercise on insulin, insulin-like growth factor-1 and insulin-like growth factor binding protein-3 in overweight and obese postmenopausal women Prospective study of colorectal cancer risk in men and plasma levels of insulin-like growth factor (IGF)-I and IGF-binding protein-3 Polymorphic variants of insulin-like growth factor I (IGF-I) receptor and phosphoinositide 3-kinase genes affect IGF-I plasma levels and human longevity: cues for an evolutionarily conserved mechanism of life span control. Functionally significant insulin-like growth factor I receptor mutations in centenarians Congenital IGF1 deficiency tends to confer protection against post-natal development of malignancies Changes in plasma somatomedin-C in response to ingestion of diets with variable protein and energy content

Rails Coach
Polymorphic Associations

Rails Coach

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2011 9:23


Devchat.tv Master Feed
Polymorphic Associations

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 8, 2011 9:23


Rails has the concept of Polymorphic associations, which are associations that can be of different data types. For example, let’s say we have a Comment model. A comment in your app can be on a post or a page. Rather than creating a PostComment model and a PageComment model, you can set up your Comment model to have a polymorphic association to a Page or a Post. Generally people call these associations “something-able”. In this case, it would be commentable. Here’s a quick code sample: class Comment < ActiveRecord::Base belongs_to :commentable, :polymorphic => true end class Page < ActiveRecord::Base has_many :comments, :as => :commentable end class Post < ActiveRecord::Base has_many :comments, :as => :commentable end The only other thing you need to know is the database structure. On the database, you need two columns. A [polymorphic-association-name]_type string column and [polymorphic-association-name]_id integer column. In this case, it would be “commentable_type” and “commentable_id”.

Devchat.tv Master Feed
Polymorphism with Many-to-Many Associations – A Teach Me To Code Tutorial

Devchat.tv Master Feed

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2011 20:03


Polymorphic associations are very simple, as are many-to-many associations. When you blend the two, it's not nearly as simple. Since there isn't a working build-in mechanism for many-to-many polymorphic associations. Here's a quick demo of what happens if you try to set up a traditional has_many :through association with a polymorphic association. I also show how to set things up so you can get the associated objects. Download 101.3 MB Download (iPod & iPhone) 45.5 MB

Teach Me To Code » Screencasts (iPhone/iPod)
Polymorphism with Many-to-Many Associations – A Teach Me To Code Tutorial

Teach Me To Code » Screencasts (iPhone/iPod)

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 3, 2011 20:03


Polymorphic associations are very simple, as are many-to-many associations. When you blend the two, it's not nearly as simple. Since there isn't a working build-in mechanism for many-to-many polymorphic associations. Here's a quick demo of what happens if you try to set up a traditional has_many :through association with a polymorphic association. I also show how to set things up so you can get the associated objects. Download 101.3 MB Download (iPod & iPhone) 45.5 MB

Medizin - Open Access LMU - Teil 17/22
Functional role of the polymorphic 647 T/C variant of ENT1 (SLC29A1) and its association with alcohol withdrawal seizures.

Medizin - Open Access LMU - Teil 17/22

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 1, 2011


Adenosine is involved in several neurological and behavioral disorders including alcoholism. In cultured cell and animal studies, type 1 equilibrative nucleoside transporter (ENT1, slc29a1), which regulates adenosine levels, is known to regulate ethanol sensitivity and preference. Interestingly, in humans, the ENT1 (SLC29A1) gene contains a non-synonymous single nucleotide polymorphism (647 T/C; rs45573936) that might be involved in the functional change of ENT1. Our functional analysis showed that prolonged ethanol exposure increased adenosine uptake activity of mutant cells (ENT1-216Thr) compared to wild-type (ENT1-216Ile) transfected cells, which might result in reduced extracellular adenosine levels. We found that mice lacking ENT1 displayed increased propensity to ethanol withdrawal seizures compared to wild-type littermates. We further investigated a possible association of the 647C variant with alcoholism and the history of alcohol withdrawal seizures in subjects of European ancestry recruited from two independent sites. Analyses of the combined data set showed an association of the 647C variant and alcohol dependence with withdrawal seizures at the nominally significant level. Together with the functional data, our findings suggest a potential contribution of a genetic variant of ENT1 to the development of alcoholism with increased risk of alcohol withdrawal-induced seizures in humans.

The Foxcast : Electronic Music
Foxcast #5 (Polymorphic)

The Foxcast : Electronic Music

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 30, 2010 60:00


Foxcast presents Polymorphic (Electronic) Playlist : 1.Redial - Deadrising (Original Mix) 2.CHROMEO - Don't Turn The Lights On (Noise Invaders Dub) 3.Deadmau5 and Wolfgang Gartner - Animal Rights (Original Mix) 4.Carte Blanche - Gare Du Nord (Original Mix) 5.Hot Pink Delorean - Bee Eff Eff (Lazy Rich Remix) 6.Bart B More - Brap (Original Mix) 7.Hey Today! - Strange (Polymorphic Remix) 8.Congorock - Babylon (Proxy Remix) 9.Eclier - The Hole (Marseille Remix) 10.DJ Antention - Elevator (Original Mix) 11.HappyBoxx - Destroy It (Original Mix) 12.The Chemical Brothers - Dissolve (Bloody Beetroots Remix) 13.Polymorphic - Apocalypse (Original Mix) 14.Costello - Get Crazy feat. NineLives The Cat (Original Mix) 15.The Subs - Vomit In Style (Original Mix) 16.Tiga - You Gonna Want Me (Hey Today! Remix) 17.Boys Noize and Erol Alkan - Lemonade (Original Mix) 18.The Bloody Beetroots - Domino (Original Mix) 19.Tai feat. Steve Aoki - Paradise Poltergeist (Original Mix) 20.Shinichi Osawa feat. Paul Chambers - Singapore Swing (Original Mix) 21.Porter Robinson - Say My Name (Original Mix) 22.Sovnger - Breathless (Alex Gopher Night Remix) - http://soundcloud.com/polymorphiccc - http://www.foxcast.fr

remix electronic tai deadmau5 boys noize polymorphic foxcast shinichi osawa bart b more brap original mix
RailsCasts (Mobile)
#154 Polymorphic Association

RailsCasts (Mobile)

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2009 8:52


Polymorphic associations can be perplexing. In this episode I show you how to set it up in Active Record and then move to the controller and view layer.

RailsCasts
#154 Polymorphic Association

RailsCasts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 23, 2009 8:52


Polymorphic associations can be perplexing. In this episode I show you how to set it up in Active Record and then move to the controller and view layer.