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Alessandra Pritie Maria Barzaghi"Le verità dei figli adottivi"Luci ed ombre dell'adozione internazionaleScatole Parlantiwww.scatoleparlanti.itIl racconto intimo e senza fronzoli dell'adozione internazionale affidato alle voci dei veri protagonisti: i figli adottivi. Sei uomini e dodici donne di diversa provenienza geografica, sradicati durante l'infanzia dal loro Paese di origine e giunti in Italia, ripercorrono i fatti salienti della rispettiva vicenda adottiva, le gioie e le soddisfazioni, ma anche gli ostacoli e le difficoltà che hanno incontrato durante il loro cammino nel nuovo mondo. Sono i nostri figli, mariti, fratelli, studenti, sono le nostre sorelle, mogli, madri, amiche, cittadini italiani a tutti gli effetti. Emergono figure coraggiose, piccoli e grandi guerrieri che con tanta fatica hanno saputo ricostruire la propria identità frammentata e trovare una dimensione esistenziale soddisfacente, affidandosi a quel dono inestimabile che è la vita. Ogni esperienza è un caso a sé, ma tutte insieme concorrono a sollevare tematiche scottanti tuttora oggetto di tabù ancestrali e di condizionamenti generazionali, invitando a una riflessione collettiva per un rinnovamento culturale.Alessandra Pritie Maria Barzaghi è nata a Pune (India) nel 1967, è stata adottata da una famiglia italiana e attualmente vive in Lombardia. Tra i primi casi di adozione internazionale curata dal CIAI, “Il Secolo XIX” ha dedicato un articolo al suo arrivo. Dopo il liceo linguistico, ha studiato Traduzione e interpretariato alla SSIT di Milano. Fondatrice di INTERPRES, ha svolto per trent'anni la professione di traduttrice e interprete. Ha frequentato vari workshop di scrittura narrativa, autobiografica, di suspense e sceneggiatura, e il corso di alta formazione per Editor & Ghostwriter organizzato da Accademia di Scrittura, di cui è membro. Si occupa di scrittura, traduzioni, editing e ghostwriting. Le verità dei figli adottivi – Luci e ombre dell'adozione internazionale è il suo primo libro.IL POSTO DELLE PAROLEascoltare fa pensarewww.ilpostodelleparole.itDiventa un supporter di questo podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/il-posto-delle-parole--1487855/support.
Send us a Text Message.In this episode, Mbozu and Shelly-Ann are joined by Professor Pradeep Suryawanshi, a neonatologist, researcher and educator from Pune India. Professor Suryanwanshi discusses his journey as a neonatologist and his work in India and Australia, the process of developing a neonatal care unit and the importance of mentorship. He also discusses factors contributing to India's progress in neonatal care, the challenges and progress in implementing surfactant therapy as well as advice on work-life balance.Resources mentioned in episode:Dr. Pradeep Suryawanshi website: https://www.drpradeepsuryawanshi.com/Neo POCUS course: https://www.drpradeepsuryawanshi.com/neopocus-course/Contact: drpradeepsuryawanshi@gmail.comAs always, feel free to send us questions, comments, or suggestions to our email: nicupodcast@gmail.com. You can also contact the show through Instagram or Twitter, @nicupodcast. Or contact Ben and Daphna directly via their Twitter profiles: @drnicu and @doctordaphnamd. The papers discussed in today's episode are listed and timestamped on the webpage linked below. Enjoy!
This is part 2 of my travel series about my recent trip to India with my family. (Part 1 was Mumbai). My father's younger brother (my “kaka” in Gujarati) lives in Pune, so that was our main reason to visit. Pune is about 4 hours by road from Mumbai. It's higher in elevation and has a cooler climate than Mumbai. This was my first time visiting Pune and it was so fun! I loved the vibes of the city a lot! Throughout our visit, we enjoyed the food, the local attractions, and, more food! Pune is a very historical city so we did a heritage walk of many old sites in the center of Pune. It was tiring but very educational. We had an amazing guide from an organization called INTACH. Listen for more details about the tour! We also visited Aga Khan Palace – where Mahatma Gandhi was kept under house arrest during India's war of independence. Super fun and educational! Pune is also known for it's ancient temples, so we visited a ton! My favorite was Pataleshwar, an ancient temple, which is more than 1200 years old! That absolutely blew my mind!! Another fun activity we did was taking the stairs up a mountain called “Parvati”. There were so many super cute puppies on the way! There was a museum about the Peshawas on top. And also a temple, so that was fun. : It wasn't a hard hike for me but I could see the adults in our group get tired. :) The food was so good – different from Mumbai but still so so good! Puna missal – spicy bean curry + local bread (pav) Vada paav – fried potatoes + chutnies + local break (pav) Marathi thaali – multiple curries/subzis, daals and sweets. So filling! And super yummy! Listen for more things we did! Overall the city felt a little more laid back than Mumbai, but there some similarities, like the street dogs. People were so mean to them! Shout outs to my fais (my dad's cousin sisters) - Kinjal fai and Priyanka fai for emailing me about my Mumbai episode. And to Harper and Emerson from my soccer team! If you live in Pune or have visited Pune, email me and tell me what you thought of my experiences at RiyaRamblings@gmail.com! You will get a shout-out!
The retail strategy allows companies to constantly tweak their prices in response to changes in the market.In the first of two programmes, we look at how dynamic pricing works in the airline industry, at ride-hailing companies like Uber and on India's sprawling rail network.And we speak to a director of e-commerce at US electronics firm Harman International, who tells us how dynamic pricing has enhanced its business, increasing revenue, margins and making the company more efficient.Archive of India: Our trains, electric, used courtesy of Made In Manchester.Presented and produced by: Gideon Long(Image: The Mumbai to Solapur Vande Bharat Express at Pune India. Credit: Getty Images)
In this episode, I have the great pleasure to speak with the lovely Arpita Garud who is based in India. To see Arpita's work, please visit her Instagram account at... Arpita "wafa" Garud (@crazy__nomad) • Instagram photos and videos Listen in on the conversation and if you like what you hear, please take a moment to follow and rate the show highly so that I may continue to bring you more content on a regular basis. Arpita started her journey as a street photographer in 2019. She owns a corporate branding business, and she is an author of a poetry book called Makhmali Dadhi (Velitinous Beard). She loves creating stories. Thus, she loves going out, clicking and creating small stories around her. Thank you so much! And remember, Keep walking and keep clicking!
India registered a seven wicket win over Bangladesh thanks to Virat Kohli's 103 not out! Up next for the hosts, an unbeaten New Zealand side! Twitter (X): https://twitter.com/CricCornerPod Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Dr. Nayan Kalnad has over 20 years of experience in healthcare. He began his career as a practicing medic, before transitioning into the world of pharma to work at the forefront of digital health innovation at Janssen. He is now CEO and co-founder at Avegen: a technology company that helps health organizations build digital health products that empower patients to manage long-term health conditions. We caught up with Dr. Nayan about digital health products and improving patient experience. In our conversation, he explains: Improving Outcomes for Individuals with Long-term Conditions. As many as 1 in 4 patients are living with long-term conditions and the cost of caring for those patients is increasing. Digital health products (DHPs) are the answer but an ever-changing deployment landscape is holding innovators back. Nayan is motivated by the needs of the patient, can empathize with the challenges facing clinicians, and is energized by how Avegen's work enables data to impact lives. Avegen's products have been used by over 1 million people globally and include maternity monitoring tools, cardiac rehab apps, and digital HIV care programs. Be sure to check out Dr. Nayan's links listed below. Enjoy the show! Connect with Dr. Nayan: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/nkalnad/ Website: https://avegenhealth.com/ Connect with Allison: LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/allisonsummerschicago/ Website: DisruptiveCEONation.com Twitter: @DisruptiveCEO #CEO #startup #startupstory #founder #founderstory #business #tech #AI #businesspodcast #podcast Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
A blazar candidate for the Fermi source 4FGL J1848 7-0129 by Pedro L. Luque-Escamilla et al. on Tuesday 29 November The Fermi source 4FGL J1848.7-0129 has been historically related to the globular cluster GLIMPSE-C01 since its very first detection. Although this association is widely accepted, as it appears in the most recent Fermi catalog, it deserves to be revisited given the multi-wavelength evidences and the recent discovery of variable X-ray sources in the Fermi source region. In particular, low frequency radio maps from the Giant Metre Radio Telescope in Pune (India) have been carefully inspected which, together with X-ray data re-analysis from Chandra, lead us to get a deep insight into the candidates to be associated to 4FGL J1848.7-0129. This results in the discovery of a new X-ray variable point source coincident with an unreported non-thermal radio emitter, both of them well inside the 4FGL J1848.7-0129 error ellipse. We analyze and discuss all these observational facts, and we propose now a newly discovered blazar candidate as the most promising responsible for the gamma ray emission in the Fermi source. If confirmed, this result would set constrains on the number of millisecond pulsars in GLIMPSE-C01 or their gamma-ray emission properties. arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/http://arxiv.org/abs/2211.15245v1
A blazar candidate for the Fermi source 4FGL J1848 7-0129 by Pedro L. Luque-Escamilla et al. on Monday 28 November The Fermi source 4FGL J1848.7-0129 has been historically related to the globular cluster GLIMPSE-C01 since its very first detection. Although this association is widely accepted, as it appears in the most recent Fermi catalog, it deserves to be revisited given the multi-wavelength evidences and the recent discovery of variable X-ray sources in the Fermi source region. In particular, low frequency radio maps from the Giant Metre Radio Telescope in Pune (India) have been carefully inspected which, together with X-ray data re-analysis from Chandra, lead us to get a deep insight into the candidates to be associated to 4FGL J1848.7-0129. This results in the discovery of a new X-ray variable point source coincident with an unreported non-thermal radio emitter, both of them well inside the 4FGL J1848.7-0129 error ellipse. We analyze and discuss all these observational facts, and we propose now a newly discovered blazar candidate as the most promising responsible for the gamma ray emission in the Fermi source. If confirmed, this result would set constrains on the number of millisecond pulsars in GLIMPSE-C01 or their gamma-ray emission properties. arXiv: http://arxiv.org/abs/http://arxiv.org/abs/2211.15245v1
There's been a high rise in global data breaches for several years, and 2022 has been littered with information thefts. As per Analytics India magazine, the data breach cost averaged Rs.176 million in 2022, reaching an all-time high.In July, Twitter suffered a data breach of 5.4 million accounts, and throughout the year so far, there have been several cases of data theft of various scales.Our today's guest, Jaspreet Singh, Founder & CEO Druva, has built and scaled the company since 2008 to provide a solution in this space.Druva is trusted by over 4,000 global organizations. The company has such strong faith in these data-protection systems, that they even offer a Data Resiliency Guarantee up to $10 Mn against five key data risks.In today's episode, Jaspreet shares with us the backstory of what led him to start Druva, move to the US, and more. Notes - 00:42 - Intro01:13 - Conceptualizing Druva04:06 - What kept him going in the first 5-years?05:37 - Reaching $1 Mn ARR07:08 - Druva's revenue till 2013 before getting their first large customer07:49 - What were they building in the first 5 years and what did they transition into after 2013?10:46 - Letting go of $8 Mn revenue 11:45 - Milestones and evolving for revenue growth14:19 - Critical requirement to shift to the US for scale17:19 - Is a India Product-Market-Fit exactly replicable in the US?19:26 - Zoho Sponsored – Prashant Ganti on Where do founders struggle with Payroll and how can they fix it?20:26 - What worked well for Druva in the 10 to 100 journey? 24:52 - His advice to SaaS entrepreneurs to reach $20 Mn ARRAlso, try out a 30-day free trial of Zoho Payroll, and simplify your Payroll journey as an entrepreneur!https://zoho.to/zoho-payroll
The 86th edition of Juicebox Radio welcomes Sachin Menon aka - Haen. Born in Kerala (India) and currently based in Pune (India), Sachin studied music business, composition and production at the School of Electronic Music, Manchester in 2017. After hitting a brick wall with his sound, the project 'Haen' was born in 2020 as an attempt to create music unfettered by genre/label boundaries. Haen draws inspiration from as many different genres and styles as possible and also runs 'Maldesoule' - an imprint affiliated with Mango Alley covering up the ambient & experimental sounds of electronic music. Check out his exclusive two hour mix for our show - where he features some of his current dancefloor favorites along with his upcoming debut on Juicebox Music, remixing Mike Rish's 'Tuumla' with MONé. Enjoy! // Tracklist // 01. Holly Walker - Straight Line (Neil Cowley Remix) [Dama Dama] 02. José González - Let It Carry You (Brandt Brauer Frick Remix) [von der haardt] 03. Kris Davis - Petroleum [Connaisseur] 04. Monax - Kombe (Paul Hazendonk Remix) [Mango Alley] 05. Jos & Eli - Lolita [Majestic Family] 06. Kabza De Small - Khusela feat. Msaki [Piano Hub] 07. Infinity Ink - Aya (THEMBA's Herd Extended Remix) [Cooltempo] 08. Hypaphonik - Lutar feat. Kali Mija, Offkey (TekniQ Remix) [Stay True Sounds] 09. 16BL - Leaving Home [Anjunadeep] 10. Atish, Tim Engelhardt - Bullfrog [Manjumasi] 11. ID - ID (Haen's ‘Down In Autumn' Remix) [Sound Avenue] 12. Warpaint - New Song (Jono Jagwar Ma Sun Mix) [Rough Trade] 13. Rodriguez Jr. - Mistral (Stephan Bodzin Remix) [Systematic] 14. TAYA., Doppel - Sanctuary [Stone Seed] 15. Undercatt - Hana [Diynamic] 16. Agoria feat. STS - Call Of The Wild (Glowal Wild Remix) [Sapiens] 17. Quivver - Funkily [Bedrock] 18. Kasper Koman - Wonderland [YOMO] 19. Cid Inc., Orsen - Ten [Replug] 20. Hammer, KILIMANJARO (UK) - Step It Up [Remmah] 21. Monojoke - Cold City (Kasper Koman Remix) [Juicebox Music] 22. Ras Algethi, Gam3 - Someday (Eynka Remix) [Somatic] 23. Sirens of Saturn - Another (Colin Benders Remix) [Suara] 24. Mike Rish - Tuumla (Haen & MONé Remix) [Juicebox Music] 25. Andre Sobota - Time (King Unique Stopped Watch Remix) [microCastle] // Links // Follow Haen on Facebook, Instagram & SoundCloud Follow Juicebox Music on Facebook, SoundCloud, Twitter, Beatport & Spotify
Meet Vishal Minawala, a fourth generation jeweller from Pune with interesting insights on investing in jewellery and building customer relationships. On this episode of #KarishmaKonnect, we discuss his journey, key things to know for youngsters looking to invest in jewellery, tips to choose the right diamonds, how to take care of your jewellery, why nothing can replace physical currency and what biking lends to business. Check out the full interview and stay tuned for my next episode dropping next month only on #KariKonnect. While at it, please SUBSCRIBE, like, comment, share and all that jazz. Follow me on Instagram at www.instagram.com/karishmaoverlatte Tune into KarishmaKonnect across platforms, links here: https://linktr.ee/karikonnect #jewellery #UnfilteredEveryday #gold #silver #interview #video #vodcast #Podcast #spotify #anchor #DIY #hacks #tips #viral #contentcreator #people #storytelling #pune #india #uae #dubai
Kalpak Shah | Principal Architect at Studio Course. After earning a bachelor degree in architecture from MMCA, Pune, India in 2010, Shah studied Masters in Advanced Architecture Design from Staedelschule Architecture class, Frankfurt, Germany in 2013. He also practised as an architect with gurus like Christopher Benninger, of CCBA, Pune and Bijoy Jain, of Studio Mumbai, India, between 2010-2015. After gathering such experience, he established the practice “Studio Course” in 2015. Since the conception, the firm has been involved in several projects, working design to more levels of innovation and perfection. Their projects have been published in several international magazines such as “ArchDaily”, “Domus”, “Dezeen”, “Elle Decor”, “Design Boom”, etc. They have also won national awards at “FOAID” 2017, “Hafele Trends” 2018, “Elle Decor India Design” 2019 and international award at “A Design”, Milan, Italy 2018, “German Design Council”, Frankfurt, Germany 2019.
Vishwas Parchure, Director of the Experiential Leadership Institute in Pune India, discusses with Phil his first experiences with working in the outdoors, his thoughts on conditioning, conduct and consciousness and answers the question; can facilitation be taught? Watch his Ewald and Hahn Address from the 2020 International AEE conference - You can learn more about Vishwas and the work of the Experiential Leadership Institute here - experiential.institute This episode is supported by Atomik Climbing Holds - atomikclimbingholds.com
This week I talked with Gaurav from Pune, India! Gaurav works in the IT field in Pune and spends his free time looking into the history of India. He's working on transcribing books and pages from ancient Indian texts to preserve for newer generations and help shed light on all that India has given the world. We talked about the Accomplishments India has made and what it's currently working towards as well as some lost knowledge that even many Indians may not know about. If you like this episode please hit that thumbs up and leave a comment! subscribe also if you haven't always and tune in next time for the latest in my Cultures Around the World series. Keep in touch with all things Reds Ramblings as well by checking the link below and possibly help out with the Patreon so I can bring you guys more videos! https://linktr.ee/RedsRamblings --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/jamie-goodman/message
"Cantik, tapi... " Tapi apa? Dengarkan pengalaman Nadiyah tentang ruang publik di sejumlah kota di India dalam obrolan Iche dan Kinoi di episode ketiga season ini di podcast Sepiring Berdua. Kali ini, kami ngobrol dengan seorang teman yang tinggal di kota Pune, yaitu Nadiyah Ramadhani. Kami juga mencoba memakai bentuk yang berbeda yaitu visual. Teman-teman bisa mengakses videonya di: https://youtu.be/jF69ouO2suA Silahkan kirimkan komentar, saran, dan sebagainya ke media sosial Iche atau Kinoi, atau melalui rekaman suara atau email ke podcast.sepiringberdua@gmail.com atau di Instagram kami di @podcast.sepiringberdua. Photos by Nadiyah (Taman lingkungan di Pune, India) Credit musik: Kevin MacLeod (incompetech.com) Licensed under Creative Commons: By Attribution 3.0 License http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
Lynda King is a successfull Fortune 500 executive, world traveler, wife, mother, daughter and community activist. Currently she spends her time between Omaha, Nebraska and Pune, India where she conducts business and donates her time to a children's orphanage. in this segment we discuss her journey from a fearful, young woman to an actualized, awakened being. Please tune in to hear this woman's amazing, ongoing journey.
Antibiotic resistance in Malarial parasites is a significant problem that has been observed in tropical regions. To create a long-term solution, the IISER-Pune-India iGEM team is designing a Cyclotide Drug Library for treatment, along with a Diagnostic tool for easy detection. Join the Pittsburgh iGEM team as they learn more about the team's project and some of the challenges they have faced so far!
In this episode, I speak with Silicon Valley engineer and artist Uma Kelkar, about what it means to "paint like an engineer". We speak about Uma's education, growing up middle-class in Pune (India), and the role art has played in her life. Uma uses her art as a way to find emotional contentment while pursuing creative goals. Painting like an engineer is a challenge to balance artistic pursuits with a scientific career, in a way that each informs and influences the other. Find Uma's work on IG @umapaints or www.umakelkar.com A transcript for this conversation (with links) can be found at www.sneakyartist.com/podcast.
The Top Entrepreneurs in Money, Marketing, Business and Life
Started digital agency at the age of 18 from Pune India. Launched Billbooks in 2011 with an aim to simplify invoicing with practical features and cost effective to freelancers and small businesses. I have always been facinated by computer software from the age of 10 and never imagined an alternate passion or career option. I pursued a corresponding degree in design and technology along with my core degree in business management. This fuelled my entrepreneurship skills before starting a global design agency, Billbooks, Framesbuy (an ecom for eyewear) and a few more businesses.
Thank you for listening, rating, reviewing, subscribing; and for most of all, getting something out of this episode! Today it is my honor to present my guest, Shrutkirti Fadnavis. She is a prominent Psychologist originally from Mumbai, living and practicing in Pune India. She is a Tedx Speaker, and teacher, offering lessons for personal transformation and growth. Today we chat about how we can better understand ourselves and the world around us, as we develop a deeper understanding that that there are many who understand our psychology better than we do. How can we better gain traction of our lives by more deeply studying our minds, triggers, personalities, traits, habits and histories. Shrutkirti's Tedx talk can be found here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L5zSTPDkxR4 She can be found on IG here: https://www.instagram.com/shrutifadnavis/ Debbie Reynolds as Unsinkable Molly Brown mentioned can be found here lmao: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IEHko2DkPvI And I can be found at natalieque.com, TikTok.com/@natalie.que, instagram.com/natalieque, and Youtube Affirmations & Meditation Co
Nitika soin Virdi lives with her husband in the Indian city of Pune. The picture of Buddha on her wall is very important to her. It represents harmony in a world of chaos, and shows that it's always possible to find happiness.
Nitika soin Virdi vive con su marido en un apartamento en Pune, India. Un cuadro de Buda en la pared representa para ella la armonía en un mundo caótico y muestra que siempre es posible encontrar la felicidad.
Santosh Yadav is a software developer from Pune India with 10 years of professional experience and a GDE (Google Developer Expert) for Angular, he shared his story on how the journey to a GDE began after attending his first NgIndia conference in 2019. He also talked about his current series of 20 days of NestJs and shared his secret to writing amazing articles every day. Santosh's Series on NestJS Read Here Link to NgIndia: https://www.ng-ind.com/ --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/talkoncoffee/message
In Nasik, Pune India a mother, daughter, Seema Mohan Gavit, and step daughter, Renuka Kiran Shinde, trio teamed up to commit crimes. The daughters were in their twenties when they started pick pocketing people. In 1990 they realized that they could use children to creat a diversion. Shinde was caught pickpocketing outside a temple and her son was with her. She used him as a defense, convincing the crowd that a woman with a child couldn’t be a thief. Shortly after this the women began abducting children and using them as a front. Most of the kidnappings took place in busy places such as temple compounds and fair grounds in cities like Nasik, Kolhapur and Pune. They were nicknamed the Sinister sisters by the news. Kiran Shinde drove the getaway car, a Fiat. Most of the kidnapped children were from poor families. The first victim was a beggar woman's one-year-old son, Santosh. The sisters used him as a distraction, if they were caught the woman carrying the child would throw them on the floor, creating a commotion while the other escaped. If the child cried or complained they would kill them. The mother was usually the one in charge of this. The sisters were caught when they visited Mohan to kidnap his second daughter in October 1996. His second wife had filed a complaint against them and their mother when her elder daughter went missing. During questioning the police found evidence of the other murders. The women were arrested on November 19, 1996. The police were able to get Shinde to crack and tell them everything, though later the women denied all the charges. On June 29, 2001, The women were charged with thirteen cases of kidnapping and nine murders. The first court found them guilty of kidnapping and murdering of six children. The high court found them guilty in five of those cases and gave them the death sentence. They did not convict them of the murder of Gavit’s son. The mother died while awaiting trail. The two daughters have exhausted their appeals, in 2014 the President of India rejected their mercy appeal.
I've been very tired in April this year, and I think it's because I was very busy in March. In March, I took two major trips that I'm going to talk about today -- the JoCo Cruise, which I mention a few weeks back in my interview with Robin Wilson Beattie, and a trip to Pune India, which I talked about in Facebook live. The JoCo Cruise was awesome as expected. I do sometimes worry that since I have high expectations that it meets, that I'm not walking away with the over the top feelings of awesomeness that some people do. Or maybe my affect is just a little flatter these days due to the combination of my stroke and meds. This year, there appeared to be more folks on the boat with visible disabilities than in years past. And we had more folks with both visible and invisible disabilities at the meetup for folks with disabilities. In general, it’s a really positive environment filled with helpful, caring people. If you like board games, nerdy things, or generally nerdy people, come join us next year. You can visit Jococruise.com for more details. I did manage to fall during the cruise while visiting Tortola. A post I chose to lean against objected to being leaned upon and moved out of the way. I fell, suffered only minor bumps and bruises and discovered an important lesson for folks who want to help those with disabilities. If a disabled person looks like they might need help, it's okay to offer assistance. Then listen to them. If they decline your help, BELIEVE THEM. They know better than you what will help and what will not help. My trip to India was also an amazing experience. I was there on business so I guess I am now technically and International Business Consultant. I know, big impressive sounding words, huh? Everyone was super helpful to me. Folks rushed ahead to open doors for me. I dropped my cane in the hotel lobby, and someone literally ran over to pick it up. At the buffet, I had table service most days. The breakfast egg chef apologized profusely for breaking the yolk on my sunny side up egg and wanted to throw it out and start again. I had to convince him it was fine. So my experience was great. But I did not see anyone else that week in India with a visible disability outside of the airport. I shouldn't be too shocked because what little I saw of the streets did not appear to be wheelchair friendly. Building had all sorts of little steps. Elevators were tiny. Folks also didn't seem comfortable with the topic and would change the subject if we got close to it. I'm not sure what that says about the broader culture or life for those with disabilities in the area. But again, I saw only a small fraction of the city. Hack of the Week Gianna Rojas had more hacks to share from her one-handed life. You can get magnetic clips for necklaces. They can attach to existing clasps or replace them. They make it possible to put on a necklace without using the regular clasp. You can ask your jewelry store to put them on if you can't do it your self. You can hear more from Gianna here. Links JoCo Cruise http://jococruise.com JoCo Related Strokecast Episode http://strokecast.com/tag/joco/ Facebook Live Video https://www.facebook.com/StrokeCast/videos/398618767353570/ Gianna on Strokecast http://strokecast.com/Golf Necklace Clasps on Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Dsmile-Magnetic-Lobster-Necklace-Bracelet/dp/B01NASHR96/ref=sr_1_3 Where do we go from here? What has your experience of travelling with disabilities been like? Let us know in the comments below. Share this episode with a friend colleague or relative by giving them the link http://strokecast.com/travel. Subscribe to Strokecast for free in your favorite podcast app. Don't get best...get better. Strokecast is the stroke podcast where a Gen X stroke survivor explores rehab, recovery, the frontiers of neuroscience and one-handed banana peeling by helping stroke survivors, caregivers, medical providers and stroke industry affiliates connect and share their stories.
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chandan Jhunjhunwal Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Chandan Jhunjhunwal, a tech lead at Coupa Software from Pune India. Listen to Chandan on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode. Chandan studied electronics in university but was hired as a software engineer at IBM after university and really liked programming. He then continued working as a developer for a startup before founding his own startup. Chandan is now working for the procurement department at Coupa Software. Chandan feels that no matter what your background is, nothing is too hard and if you like something you should dive in and do it. He also points out that especially in technology there is always a learning curve. Links Ruby Rogues 314: DynamoDB on Rails with Chandan Jhunjhunwal Chandan's GitHub Chandan’s Twitter Chandan's LinkedIn https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Chandan Jhunjhunwal: Rescuing The Daughter No Ordinary Moments by Dan Millman Michael Hartl's Ruby on Rails Tutorial Metaprogramming Ruby by Paolo Perrotta Charles Max Wood: Born to Run by Christopher McDougall Ultramarathonman by Dean Karnazes
Today on the show : Darsana Prime results: RESISTANCE 6 / ENLIGHTENED 5? Numbers don’t match! RES won Global Portal Capture (worth 2 pts) RES: Auckland, New Zealand & Pune India to win APAC (ENL won Quezon City, Philippines) ENL: Athens, Greece & Genoa Italy to win EMEA (RES won Lisbon, Portugal) ENL: Asuncion, Paraguay … 49: Boycott Losing Read More » The post 49: Boycott Losing appeared first on Agent Academy Podcast.
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chandan Jhunjhunwal Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Chandan Jhunjhunwal, a tech lead at Coupa Software from Pune India. Listen to Chandan on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode. Chandan studied electronics in university but was hired as a software engineer at IBM after university and really liked programming. He then continued working as a developer for a startup before founding his own startup. Chandan is now working for the procurement department at Coupa Software. Chandan feels that no matter what your background is, nothing is too hard and if you like something you should dive in and do it. He also points out that especially in technology there is always a learning curve. Links Ruby Rogues 314: DynamoDB on Rails with Chandan Jhunjhunwal Chandan's GitHub Chandan’s Twitter Chandan's LinkedIn https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Chandan Jhunjhunwal: Rescuing The Daughter No Ordinary Moments by Dan Millman Michael Hartl's Ruby on Rails Tutorial Metaprogramming Ruby by Paolo Perrotta Charles Max Wood: Born to Run by Christopher McDougall Ultramarathonman by Dean Karnazes
Sponsors Sentry use the code “devchat” for 2 months free on Sentry small plan CacheFly Host: Charles Max Wood Special Guest: Chandan Jhunjhunwal Episode Summary In this episode of My Ruby Story, Charles hosts Chandan Jhunjhunwal, a tech lead at Coupa Software from Pune India. Listen to Chandan on the podcast Ruby Rogues on this episode. Chandan studied electronics in university but was hired as a software engineer at IBM after university and really liked programming. He then continued working as a developer for a startup before founding his own startup. Chandan is now working for the procurement department at Coupa Software. Chandan feels that no matter what your background is, nothing is too hard and if you like something you should dive in and do it. He also points out that especially in technology there is always a learning curve. Links Ruby Rogues 314: DynamoDB on Rails with Chandan Jhunjhunwal Chandan's GitHub Chandan’s Twitter Chandan's LinkedIn https://devchat.tv/my-ruby-story/ https://www.facebook.com/DevChattv Picks Chandan Jhunjhunwal: Rescuing The Daughter No Ordinary Moments by Dan Millman Michael Hartl's Ruby on Rails Tutorial Metaprogramming Ruby by Paolo Perrotta Charles Max Wood: Born to Run by Christopher McDougall Ultramarathonman by Dean Karnazes
Ishan Talathi is a young entrepreneur, founder and CEO of LeapSwitch Networks. He tells us how he started more than 10 years ago, driven by his early motivation as a young student to be independent financially and to found his own company. He remembers his experiences while he had to grow into an entirely new role as a leader, first of a two-person-company, now with a thirty people team operating globally. In absence of a role model or mentor, he summarizes that trial-and-error was his best teacher. Ishan is now aware, that focus and being willing to learn are the key to success, both with regards to his business and to his leadership style. In both areas long-term goals and clear demarcation are important for him in managing the balancing act between national and international markets while leading Indias seven largest web hosting company to even more ambitious goals.
From his own experiences, Robert Raymond Riopel has days where he is patient and days where he is not. In this episode, he shares with you how a 5-hour road trip from Pune India to Mumbai reminded him of the important *clue of being present and how that impacts your life and patience. Download the […] The post Episode 072 – A Practice In Patience appeared first on Success Left A Clue.
The Big Cat is on Suara PodCats with a set he recorded at Pune (India) last year. This is the first hour from an original three hour set. Check this deeper side of Coyu! Meeooow!
Let's celebrate with Jesse and Kelly, they have reached Episode 10!Lets all climb on board the SST Crypto-One and travel to England, India, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, and Sunny California!We have stories of the mysterious Bhootbilli. What is eating the pigeons of a poor farmer in Pune India?What's the deal with the Castle Ring in Cannock Woods? We have centaurs, Momo and another installment of "The Perils of PA"Thank you to all of our listeners! Every week the download numbers grow and it's an exciting thing to see. We appreciate your feedback and love to interact with all of you.If you aren't part of the gang, come hang out with us and other crypto-enthusiasts in Facebook at the Cryptophiles group. You never know when Sissy Quatch my show up and post!Drop Kelly or Jesse a line, send them feedback or give them an idea of a cryptid to research and discuss.Podcast email - cryptophiles@gmail.com Jesse:email - jesseb83@comcast.nettwitter - @thejesseb83Kelly:email -killbot74@gmail.comtwitter - @kmk797Download the EpisodeSubscribe to RSS Feed Find us on itunes and stitcher
The global middle class is expected to swell by more than 1 billion people over the next decade, with the biggest increases in China and India. While millions are being lifted out of poverty as a result, the booming middle class is also consuming more global resources. As a result, prices for everything from steel to gasoline to food are soaring. NOW reports from Pune, India, where college graduates are getting tech jobs, traditional families are flocking to the new mall, and professionals are hoping their new-found economic might will make their country an even bigger global player. But can America's middle-class -- and the rest of the world -- afford this unprecedented shift in the global economy? The world is buying like never before, but who's paying the price?