Podcasts about Raisa

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Best podcasts about Raisa

Latest podcast episodes about Raisa

The Exploring Series
Exploring the SCP Foundation: SCP-8976 - Diagraphephobia: fragmentation

The Exploring Series

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 21, 2025 42:41


https://scp-wiki.wikidot.com/scp-8976Written by: RounderhouseSummary: Maria Jones, Director of RAISA, recounts an anomaly she first encountered years ago that devours information.Support the Patreon to see Exploring videos early and vote on new ones!: http://bit.ly/1U9QkPhJoin the Discord!: https://discord.gg/beRYZgbbgPSupport the Series with official Merch!: https://t.co/aH0HApXp7vFollow me on Twitter for updates!: https://twitter.com/TES_ManggListen on Podcasts: https://anchor.fm/theexploringseriesExploring SCP Foundation Playlist: https://bit.ly/2whu8NAExploring Dungeons and Dragons Playlist: https://bit.ly/348IZZuExploring Warhammer 40k Playlist: https://bit.ly/2DoFZguExploring Celtic Mythology Playlist: https://bit.ly/2rTuHLmExploring Norse Mythology Playlist: http://bit.ly/2EAHTdaExploring Elder Scrolls Playlist: http://bit.ly/2fgqQoYExploring Star Wars Playlist: http://bit.ly/2lNtlN0Exploring Middle-Earth Playlist: http://bit.ly/2cGNctyExploring the Cthulhu Mythos Playlist: http://bit.ly/25OI9jYExploring History Playlist: https://bit.ly/2w7XMqMVideo Game Stories Playlist: https://bit.ly/3hhgbqKMy Gaming Channel: youtube.com/user/ManggsLPsContent relating to the SCP Foundation, including the SCP Foundation logo, is licensed under Creative Commons Sharealike 3.0 and all concepts originate from http://www.scp-wiki.net and its authors. This video, being derived from this content, is hereby also released under Creative Commons Sharealike 3.0.

English Podcast with Tommy

You might think romantic comedies are all fluff and cliché—but what if one could actually supercharge your English? 

Track17
#64 | Whatever The Weather, Rapt, Raisa K, Cloakroom, YHWH Nailgun

Track17

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 28, 2025 54:41


Alle Links in den Shownotes. >> Whatever The Weather – Whatever The Weather II (Ghostly International) Wenn ihr wissen wollt, wie ein Album klingt, das eine Durchschnittstemperatur von 12,58° hat, solltet ihr unsere Besprechung von Loraine James neuem Album hören, das mit leicht zittrigen Ambient-Sounds und einer zarten Version von Electronica und reduzierten IDM-Sounds zum Highlight wird. >> Rapt – Until The Light Takes Us (Z Tapes) Folk-Musik, die sich trotz eines tropischem Ersteindrucks vorrangig in den gespenstischen Nebelkulissen unbewohnter Dörfer der Vergangenheit aufhält. Bauen wir hier Sandburgen oder leben wir doch lieber in alten Steingemäuern? >>Raisa K – Affectionately (15 love) Für solche Alben steht man morgens noch auf. Leicht vom Schuss aufgeführter Pop-nicht-Pop. Leicht verhangene Melodie-Experimente. Musik so reich an Möglichkeiten und trotzdem entscheidet sich die Micachu-Komplizin immer für den charmanten Umweg. >> Cloakroom - Last Leg of the Human Table (Closed Casket Activities) Wackelige Soundwände groß wie Wolkenkratzer, Shoegaze aus dem Lehrbuch, Pop-Punk-Melodien und dann klopft auch noch Weezer an. Was will dieses Album von uns? Und können wir ihm das auch wirklich geben? Wir sind unterschiedlicher Meinung. >> YHWH Nailgun - 45 Pounds (AD93) 21 Minuten High-Speed-Gefrickel zwischen hibbeligem Math Rock, No Wave und Industrial. Zeit für Pausen hat das kurze, wuchtige Debüt der New Yorker nicht. Wir reviewen außerdem neue Musik von Building Instruments, Josi Devil, Blockhead, The Murder Capital, Saeko Killy, Maria Teriava uvm. **Setlist:** - [00:00:00] Intro + Zuletzt gehört: Mobbs/Susu Laroche und Jean Richie - [00:03:39] **Whatever The Weather // Whatever The Weather II (Ghostly International)** - [00:10:36] Playlist Part 1: Building Instrument, Josi Devil, The Murder Capitol, Cara Carpaccio - [00:15:54] **Rapt // Until The Light Takes Us (Z-Tapes)** - [00:24:35] **Raisa K // Affectionately (15 love)** - [00:30:34] Playlist Part 2: Maria Teriava, Library L'amour, Bandler Ching, Blockhead - [00:35:53] **Cloakroom // Last Leg Of The Human Table (Closed Casket Activities)** - [00:43:19] **YHWH Nailgun // 45 Pounds (AD93)** - [00:49:47] Playlist Part 3: Saeko Killy, D Stone, Lost Desert, Boldy James - Jetzt auf Spotify abonnieren. Neue Songs für die Playlist: Whatever The Weather - 3° Building Instrument - Saunte Josi Devil - Make It Better The Murder Capital - Love of Country Cara Carpaccio - Im Weltraum (576000003579 Jahre) Rapt - I Will Be My End Raisa K - FInal Generations Maria Teriava - What Is To Be Done Library L'amour - Deux Mains Bandler Ching - P'tit Île Blockhead - Oh Deer Cloakroom - Bad Larry YHWH Nailgun - Castrato Raw (Fullback) Saeko Killy – Jede Farbe D Stone - Banggg Lost Desert - Saudade Boldy James & Chuck Strangers - Unapologetic

Nova Club
Lundi Nouveautés : Saba, Flying Lotus, Spill Tab, Greentea Peng, LSDXOXO, Raisa K et plus !

Nova Club

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 25, 2025 113:03


Avec en exclu le nouveau Prosper produit par Blasé ! Chic – Happy ManSpill Tab – AssisSaba, No ID feat. Raphael Saadiq and Kelly Rowland – Crash Crazy P – One True LightGreentea Peng – Bali Skit, Pt. 1Raisa K – As It SeemsEtienne de Crecy – Small Screen feat Kero Kero BonitoFlying Lotus – OXYGENE Flying Lotus, Niki Randa – OBEY(from "ASH" Soundtrack)Prosper – Conditions LSDXOXO (feat. Boys Noize & VTSS)– RED Prince & The Revolution – Computer Blue ("Hallway Speech" Version)Sly & The Family Stone – In Timefeeble little horse – This Is RealYHWH Nailgun – Castrato Raw (Fullback)Sven Libaek – Misty CanyonDJ Elmoe – Come BackRosaliedu38, esone feat. Ptite soeur)– ADN Whatever the Weather – 5°CDistribué par Audiomeans. Visitez audiomeans.fr/politique-de-confidentialite pour plus d'informations.

Ouch: Disability Talk
Disabled life in Ukraine after three years of war

Ouch: Disability Talk

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 26, 2025 31:21


To mark the third anniversary of Russia's full-scale invasion of Ukraine, we catch-up with Oleksii and Raisa who previously spoke to Access All. Oleksii has learning disabilities and, after initially re-locating to Denmark, returned to his group home in Ukraine a few months ago. Raisa runs a nearby respite centre for disabled people.And we hear from Sara Cincurova, a human rights journalist, who has recently visited a specialist school in Ukraine for disabled children.This episode also shines a spotlight on teen actress Niamh Moriarty, who has cerebral palsy and was thrilled to break away from the stereotype of disabled characters and play a bully in her new film, September Says.Plus we hear how surf therapy is becoming a craze for the over 50s in Wales with mental health challenges.PRESENTER: Emma Tracey PRODUCERS: Daniel Gordon, Alex Collins EDITORS: Beth Rose, Ben Mundy SOUND RECORDING & MIX: Dave O'Neill

The Retrospectors
When Thatcher Met Gorbachev

The Retrospectors

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 16, 2024 12:24


Over a Chequers banquet of sole in shrimp sauce, fillet of beef, and caramelized oranges, Margaret Thatcher and Mikhail Gorbachev met for the first time on 16th December, 1984.  While their ideologies were worlds apart, Thatcher appreciated Gorbachev's frankness and imagination. The Soviet leader, meanwhile, seemed equally captivated by Thatcher's unapologetic firmness and sharp intellect. Their rapport formed the foundation of a relationship that would influence global politics profoundly, with Thatcher famously declaring the Russian "a man we can do business with". In this episode, Arion, Rebecca and Olly explore the rest of the Gorbachevs' holiday itinerary; explain how Neil Kinnock killed the vibes; and reveal what Denis and Raisa got up to while their spouses were deep in conversation…  Further Reading: • ‘Gorbachev and Thatcher: The Chequers meeting that melted the Cold War ice' (The Times, 2022): https://www.thetimes.com/article/e9c5616c-2942-11ed-9092-6adde03bf612 • 'Political leadership in the Cold War's ending: Thatcher and the turn to engagement with the Soviet Union' (British Politics and Policy at LSE, 2020): https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/politicsandpolicy/thatcher-end-of-cold-war/ • ‘Margaret Thatcher would 'do business with' Mikhail Gorbachev - Daily Mail' (BBC News, 1984): https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dhl680YRT6g Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

EN CONTEXTO
Impactos del ordenamiento territorial y urbanismo - Raisa Banfield, Ambientalista

EN CONTEXTO

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 7, 2024 22:58


Ongehoord Nieuws
Ongehoord Nieuws #210: Veroordeling Raisa, PfizerGate en verdwijnen contant geld

Ongehoord Nieuws

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 5, 2024 66:17


De 28e aflevering van Ongehoord Nieuws seizoen 6. Presentatie: Tom de Nooijer. Gasten: Sietske Bergsma, Rob Roos en Ab Flipse

Cronicari Digitali
Raisa Beicu și Dragoș Popescu iau la pas Bucureștiul

Cronicari Digitali

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2024 66:53


În noul episod, Raisa Beicu și Dragoș Popescu iau la pas Bucureștiul. Într-o discuție cu Diana Popescu și Ana Rubeli, invitații își dezvăluie relația paradoxală cu orașul, îi enumeră calitățile adesea ignorate și fac o pledoarie pentru buna conviețuire, estetică și umană.

Vai zini?
Vai zini, kāpēc lietvārdus var dēvēt par viltvārdiem, bet darbības vārdi raisa uzticību?

Vai zini?

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 28, 2024 4:40


Stāsta sociologs, zinātniskā institūta Baltic Studies Centre vadošais pētnieks, LU profesors Tālis Tisenkopfs Pēdējā laikā man ir sarežģītas attiecības ar lietvārdiem. Šiem mūžīgajiem karognesējiem, teikuma priekšmetiem un galvenajiem varoņiem, kuri visādos veidos pakļauj darbības vārdus. Man šķiet, ka lietvārdi melo un izliekas. Tāpēc esmu sācis tiem neuzticēties un dēvēt tos par viltvārdiem, sevišķi abstraktos lietvārdus, kuri apzīmē idejas. Nesen kādas mazpilsētas centrālajā laukumā ieraudzīju no atspoguļojošām plāksnēm uzbūvētu viltus fasādi, kura aizslēpa graustu. Īpašnieku strīdu un nolaidības dēļ grausts bija tur stāvējis desmitiem gadu un nokaitinājis pilsētas vadību. Tad nu tā bija izlēmusi graustu paslēpt, un vietējā reklāmas firma bija uzslējusi spoguļfasādi. Uz spīdīgās virsmas bija uzrakstīti vārdi, kuru uzdevums bija iedvesmot garāmgājējus, kuri ieklīda gandrīz mirušajā laukumā: ģimene, kultūra, miers, centība, izaugsme, patiesība, godīgums, tradīcija... Atspoguļojošās plāksnes bija nelīdzenas un rādīja kroplu attēlu ar izlauzītām mājām un līkiem karogu kātiem. Es izbijies raudzījos savā aukstajā atspulgā un domāju – ko šiem vārdiem no manis vajag? Lietvārdiem piemīt nevaldāma tieksme parādības definēt – uzdot patiesību, pareizību, jābūtību. Taču cilvēki nespēj vienoties par šo vārdu nozīmēm, tāpēc vieni un tie paši lietvārdi tiek izmantoti pilnīgi pretēju ideoloģiju, reliģiju un sadzīvisku pārliecību būvēšanā. Cilvēki iecērtas uz lietvārdiem un to paustajām pārliecībām, un tad tās kļūst par maldiem. Tāpēc man labāk patīk darbības vārdi. Šovasar dzīvoju laukos. Kā pašam šķiet, vienkāršu un piepildītu dzīvi. Pusi laika strādāju – rakstīju, vērtēju, kritizēju, slavēju; otru pusi darbojos – krāsoju, raku, zāģēju, skrūvēju, skaldīju, pļāvu. Arī atgūlos, atpūtos, ēdu. Mazliet satikos, parunāju, palīdzēju. Un man sāka šķist, ka darbības vārdos ir ieslēpta pareizās dzīves formula. Es sāku tos kārtot, grupēt un veidot proporcijas. Man iznāca četras darbības vārdu kategorijas: darbības vārdi lietai, piemēram – saskaldīt malku; darbības vārdi baudai, piemēram – dzert pēcpusdienas tēju; darbības vārdi ilūzijai, piemēram – uzrakstīt recenziju; un darbības vārdi cilvēkiem, piemēram – neatteikt. Varbūt man pietrūka darbības vārdu dvēselei – klausīties, iejusties, izprast. Un man sāka šķist, ka dzīves māksla ir prasme izveidot pareizās attiecības starp darbības vārdiem. Tādiem kā pavedieniem, kuri izveido mūsu biogrāfiju un dzīves ceļu. Un mums darbības vārdiem ir tikai nedaudz jāpalīdz. Mīlenbaha / Endzelīna vārdnīcā ir 125 tūkstoši vārdu, un pēc datorlingvistu aplēsēm latviešu valodā ir 20 miljoni vārdformu. Kembridžas angļu valodas vārdnīcā 37% vārdu ir lietvārdi, un 30% - darbības vārdi. Latviešu valodā varētu būt līdzīgi. Lietvārdi ir galvenā vārdu šķira valodā un vārdnīcās, bet vai arī cilvēka dzīvē? Lietvārdi nosaka mērķi, ar darbības vārdiem mēs cenšamies to sasniegt. Darbības vārdi ir atbildīgi par dzīves skriešanu, lietvārdi – par apmānīšanu. Kā raksta poļu autore, 2019. gada Nobela prēmijas literatūrā laureāte Oksana Tokarčuka – “Pasaule ir pilna steigā skrienošiem, sasvīdušiem un nogurušiem ļaudīm un viņu pazudušajām dvēselēm, kas nav jaudājušas tikt līdzi.” Un es aizdomājos – vai darbības vārdi vieni paši var izveidot pareizu dzīvi? Un kas notiktu tad, ja pazustu visi lietvārdi un darbības vārdi? Vasaras nogalē es atklāju sev poļu dzejnieci Vislavu Šimborsku un izlasīju dažus viņas dzejoļus. Viņas personība un dzeja bija mans spilgtākais vasaras izskaņas iespaids. Tā paplašināja manu pasauli un atgrieza pie lietvārdiem. Manī iesākās tāda kā lietvārdu renesanse. Mēs nevaram iztikt bez darbības vārdiem, lietvārdiem un citām vārdu šķirām. Bet, varbūt, svarīgāki par tiem ir īpašvārdi? Visbiežāk ar tiem apzīmē cilvēkus, kuriem mēs veltām visas vārdu šķiras un kuri apkopo mūsu eksistences mērķi ārpus mums.

Latent Space: The AI Engineer Podcast — CodeGen, Agents, Computer Vision, Data Science, AI UX and all things Software 3.0

If you've listened to the podcast for a while, you might have heard our ElevenLabs-powered AI co-host Charlie a few times. Text-to-speech has made amazing progress in the last 18 months, with OpenAI's Advanced Voice Mode (aka “Her”) as a sneak peek of the future of AI interactions (see our “Building AGI in Real Time” recap). Yet, we had yet to see a real killer app for AI voice (not counting music).Today's guests, Raiza Martin and Usama Bin Shafqat, are the lead PM and AI engineer behind the NotebookLM feature flag that gave us the first viral AI voice experience, the “Deep Dive” podcast:The idea behind the “Audio Overviews” feature is simple: take a bunch of documents, websites, YouTube videos, etc, and generate a podcast out of them. This was one of the first demos that people built with voice models + RAG + GPT models, but it was always a glorified speech-to-text. Raiza and Usama took a very different approach:* Make it conversational: when you listen to a NotebookLM audio there are a ton of micro-interjections (Steven Johnson calls them disfluencies) like “Oh really?” or “Totally”, as well as pauses and “uh…”, like you would expect in a real conversation. These are not generated by the LLM in the transcript, but they are built into the the audio model. See ~28:00 in the pod for more details. * Listeners love tension: if two people are always in agreement on everything, it's not super interesting. They tuned the model to generate flowing conversations that mirror the tone and rhythm of human speech. They did not confirm this, but many suspect the 2 year old SoundStorm paper is related to this model.* Generating new insights: because the hosts' goal is not to summarize, but to entertain, it comes up with funny metaphors and comparisons that actually help expand on the content rather than just paraphrasing like most models do. We have had listeners make podcasts out of our podcasts, like this one.This is different than your average SOTA-chasing, MMLU-driven model buildooor. Putting product and AI engineering in the same room, having them build evals together, and understanding what the goal is lets you get these unique results. The 5 rules for AI PMsWe always focus on AI Engineers, but this episode had a ton of AI PM nuggets as well, which we wanted to collect as NotebookLM is one of the most successful products in the AI space:1. Less is more: the first version of the product had 0 customization options. All you could do is give it source documents, and then press a button to generate. Most users don't know what “temperature” or “top-k” are, so you're often taking the magic away by adding more options in the UI. Since recording they added a few, like a system prompt, but those were features that users were “hacking in”, as Simon Willison highlighted in his blog post.2. Use Real-Time Feedback: they built a community of 65,000 users on Discord that is constantly reporting issues and giving feedback; sometimes they noticed server downtime even before the Google internal monitoring did. Getting real time pings > aggregating user data when doing initial iterations. 3. Embrace Non-Determinism: AI outputs variability is a feature, not a bug. Rather than limiting the outputs from the get-go, build toggles that you can turn on/off with feature flags as the feedback starts to roll in.4. Curate with Taste: if you try your product and it sucks, you don't need more data to confirm it. Just scrap that and iterate again. This is even easier for a product like this; if you start listening to one of the podcasts and turn it off after 10 seconds, it's never a good sign. 5. Stay Hands-On: It's hard to build taste if you don't experiment. Trying out all your competitors products as well as unrelated tools really helps you understand what users are seeing in market, and how to improve on it.Chapters00:00 Introductions01:39 From Project Tailwind to NotebookLM09:25 Learning from 65,000 Discord members12:15 How NotebookLM works18:00 Working with Steven Johnson23:00 How to prioritize features25:13 Structuring the data pipelines29:50 How to eval34:34 Steering the podcast outputs37:51 Defining speakers personalities39:04 How do you make audio engaging?45:47 Humor is AGI51:38 Designing for non-determinism53:35 API when?55:05 Multilingual support and dialect considerations57:50 Managing system prompts and feature requests01:00:58 Future of NotebookLM01:04:59 Podcasts for your codebase01:07:16 Plans for real-time chat01:08:27 Wrap upShow Notes* Notebook LM* AI Test Kitchen* Nicholas Carlini* Steven Johnson* Wealth of Nations* Histories of Mysteries by Andrej Karpathy* chicken.pdf Threads* Area 120* Raiza Martin* Usama Bin ShafqatTranscriptNotebookLM [00:00:00]: Hey everyone, we're here today as guests on Latent Space. It's great to be here, I'm a long time listener and fan, they've had some great guests on this show before. Yeah, what an honor to have us, the hosts of another podcast, join as guests. I mean a huge thank you to Swyx and Alessio for the invite, thanks for having us on the show. Yeah really, it seems like they brought us here to talk a little bit about our show, our podcast. Yeah, I mean we've had lots of listeners ourselves, listeners at Deep Dive. Oh yeah, we've made a ton of audio overviews since we launched and we're learning a lot. There's probably a lot we can share around what we're building next, huh? Yeah, we'll share a little bit at least. The short version is we'll keep learning and getting better for you. We're glad you're along for the ride. So yeah, keep listening. Keep listening and stay curious. We promise to keep diving deep and bringing you even better options in the future. Stay curious.Alessio [00:00:52]: Hey everyone, welcome to the Latent Space Podcast. This is Alessio, partner and CTO at Residence at Decibel Partners. And I'm joined by my co-host, Swyx, founder of Smol.ai.Swyx [00:01:01]: Hey, and today we're back in the studio with our special guest, Raiza Martin. And Raiza, I forgot to get your last name, Shafqat.Raiza [00:01:10]: Yes.Swyx [00:01:10]: Okay, welcome.Raiza [00:01:12]: Hello, thank you for having us.Swyx [00:01:14]: So AI podcasters meet human podcasters, always fun. Congrats on the success of Notebook LM. I mean, how does it feel?Raiza [00:01:22]: It's been a lot of fun. A lot of it, honestly, was unexpected. But my favorite part is really listening to the audio overviews that people have been making.Swyx [00:01:29]: Maybe we should do a little bit of intros and tell the story. You know, what is your path into the sort of Google AI org? Or maybe, actually, I don't even know what org you guys are in.Raiza [00:01:39]: I can start. My name is Raisa. I lead the Notebook LM team inside of Google Labs. So specifically, that's the org that we're in. It's called Google Labs. It's only about two years old. And our whole mandate is really to build AI products. That's it. We work super closely with DeepMind. Our entire thing is just, like, try a bunch of things and see what's landing with users. And the background that I have is, really, I worked in payments before this, and I worked in ads right before, and then startups. I tell people, like, at every time that I changed orgs, I actually almost quit Google. Like, specifically, like, in between ads and payments, I was like, all right, I can't do this. Like, this is, like, super hard. I was like, it's not for me. I'm, like, a very zero-to-one person. But then I was like, okay, I'll try. I'll interview with other teams. And when I interviewed in payments, I was like, oh, these people are really cool. I don't know if I'm, like, a super good fit with this space, but I'll try it because the people are cool. And then I really enjoyed that, and then I worked on, like, zero-to-one features inside of payments, and I had a lot of fun. But then the time came again where I was like, oh, I don't know. It's like, it's time to leave. It's time to start my own thing. But then I interviewed inside of Google Labs, and I was like, oh, darn. Like, there's definitely, like—Alessio [00:02:48]: They got you again.Raiza [00:02:49]: They got me again. And so now I've been here for two years, and I'm happy that I stayed because especially with, you know, the recent success of Notebook LM, I'm like, dang, we did it. I actually got to do it. So that was really cool.Usama [00:03:02]: Kind of similar, honestly. I was at a big team at Google. We do sort of the data center supply chain planning stuff. Google has, like, the largest sort of footprint. Obviously, there's a lot of management stuff to do there. But then there was this thing called Area 120 at Google, which does not exist anymore. But I sort of wanted to do, like, more zero-to-one building and landed a role there. We were trying to build, like, a creator commerce platform called Kaya. It launched briefly a couple years ago. But then Area 120 sort of transitioned and morphed into Labs. And, like, over the last few years, like, the focus just got a lot clearer. Like, we were trying to build new AI products and do it in the wild and sort of co-create and all of that. So, you know, we've just been trying a bunch of different things. And this one really landed, which has felt pretty phenomenal. Really, really landed.Swyx [00:03:53]: Let's talk about the brief history of Notebook LM. You had a tweet, which is very helpful for doing research. May 2023, during Google I.O., you announced Project Tailwind.Raiza [00:04:03]: Yeah.Swyx [00:04:03]: So today is October 2024. So you joined October 2022?Raiza [00:04:09]: Actually, I used to lead AI Test Kitchen. And this was actually, I think, not I.O. 2023. I.O. 2022 is when we launched AI Test Kitchen, or announced it. And I don't know if you remember it.Swyx [00:04:23]: That's how you, like, had the basic prototype for Gemini.Raiza [00:04:26]: Yes, yes, exactly. Lambda.Swyx [00:04:28]: Gave beta access to people.Raiza [00:04:29]: Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I remember, I was like, wow, this is crazy. We're going to launch an LLM into the wild. And that was the first project that I was working on at Google. But at the same time, my manager at the time, Josh, he was like, hey, I want you to really think about, like, what real products would we build that are not just demos of the technology? That was in October of 2022. I was sitting next to an engineer that was working on a project called Talk to Small Corpus. His name was Adam. And the idea of Talk to Small Corpus is basically using LLM to talk to your data. And at the time, I was like, wait, there's some, like, really practical things that you can build here. And just a little bit of background, like, I was an adult learner. Like, I went to college while I was working a full-time job. And the first thing I thought was, like, this would have really helped me with my studying, right? Like, if I could just, like, talk to a textbook, especially, like, when I was tired after work, that would have been huge. We took a lot of, like, the Talk to Small Corpus prototypes, and I showed it to a lot of, like, college students, particularly, like, adult learners. They were like, yes, like, I get it, right? Like, I didn't even have to explain it to them. And we just continued to iterate the prototype from there to the point where we actually got a slot as part of the I.O. demo in 23.Swyx [00:05:42]: And Corpus, was it a textbook? Oh, my gosh.Raiza [00:05:45]: Yeah. It's funny. Actually, when he explained the project to me, he was like, talk to Small Corpus. It was like, talk to a small corpse?Swyx [00:05:51]: Yeah, nobody says Corpus.Raiza [00:06:00]: It was like, a small corpse? This is not AI. Yeah, yeah. And it really was just, like, a way for us to describe the amount of data that we thought, like, it could be good for.Swyx [00:06:02]: Yeah, but even then, you're still, like, doing rag stuff. Because, you know, the context length back then was probably, like, 2K, 4K.Raiza [00:06:08]: Yeah, it was basically rag.Raiza [00:06:09]: That was essentially what it was.Raiza [00:06:10]: And I remember, I was like, we were building the prototypes. And at the same time, I think, like, the rest of the world was. Right? We were seeing all of these, like, chat with PDF stuff come up. And I was like, come on, we gotta go. Like, we have to, like, push this out into the world. I think if there was anything, I wish we would have launched sooner because I wanted to learn faster. But I think, like, we netted out pretty well.Alessio [00:06:30]: Was the initial product just text-to-speech? Or were you also doing kind of, like, synthesizing of the content, refining it? Or were you just helping people read through it?Raiza [00:06:40]: Before we did the I.O. announcement in 23, we'd already done a lot of studies. And one of the first things that I realized was the first thing anybody ever typed was, summarize the thing. Right?Raiza [00:06:53]: Summarize the document.Raiza [00:06:54]: And it was, like, half like a test and half just like, oh, I know the content. I want to see how well it does this. So it was part of the first thing that we launched. It was called Project Tailwind back then. It was just Q&A, so you could chat with the doc just through text, and it would automatically generate a summary as well. I'm not sure if we had it back then.Raiza [00:07:12]: I think we did.Raiza [00:07:12]: It would also generate the key topics in your document, and it could support up to, like, 10 documents. So it wasn't just, like, a single doc.Alessio [00:07:20]: And then the I.O. demo went well, I guess. And then what was the discussion from there to where we are today? Is there any, maybe, intermediate step of the product that people missed between this was launch or?Raiza [00:07:33]: It was interesting because every step of the way, I think we hit, like, some pretty critical milestones. So I think from the initial demo, I think there was so much excitement of, like, wow, what is this thing that Google is launching? And so we capitalized on that. We built the wait list. That's actually when we also launched the Discord server, which has been huge for us because for us in particular, one of the things that I really wanted to do was to be able to launch features and get feedback ASAP. Like, the moment somebody tries it, like, I want to hear what they think right now, and I want to ask follow-up questions. And the Discord has just been so great for that. But then we basically took the feedback from I.O., we continued to refine the product.Raiza [00:08:12]: So we added more features.Raiza [00:08:13]: We added sort of, like, the ability to save notes, write notes. We generate follow-up questions. So there's a bunch of stuff in the product that shows, like, a lot of that research. But it was really the rolling out of things. Like, we removed the wait list, so rolled out to all of the United States. We rolled out to over 200 countries and territories. We started supporting more languages, both in the UI and, like, the actual source stuff. We experienced, like, in terms of milestones, there was, like, an explosion of, like, users in Japan. This was super interesting in terms of just, like, unexpected. Like, people would write to us and they would be like, this is amazing. I have to read all of these rules in English, but I can chat in Japanese. It's like, oh, wow. That's true, right? Like, with LLMs, you kind of get this natural, it translates the content for you. And you can ask in your sort of preferred mode. And I think that's not just, like, a language thing, too. I think there's, like, I do this test with Wealth of Nations all the time because it's, like, a pretty complicated text to read. The Evan Smith classic.Swyx [00:09:11]: It's, like, 400 pages or something.Raiza [00:09:12]: Yeah. But I like this test because I'm, like, asking, like, Normie, you know, plain speak. And then it summarizes really well for me. It sort of adapts to my tone.Swyx [00:09:22]: Very capitalist.Raiza [00:09:25]: Very on brand.Swyx [00:09:25]: I just checked in on a Notebook LM Discord. 65,000 people. Yeah.Raiza [00:09:29]: Crazy.Swyx [00:09:29]: Just, like, for one project within Google. It's not, like, it's not labs. It's just Notebook LM.Raiza [00:09:35]: Just Notebook LM.Swyx [00:09:36]: What do you learn from the community?Raiza [00:09:39]: I think that the Discord is really great for hearing about a couple of things.Raiza [00:09:43]: One, when things are going wrong. I think, honestly, like, our fastest way that we've been able to find out if, like, the servers are down or there's just an influx of people being, like, it saysRaiza [00:09:53]: system unable to answer.Raiza [00:09:54]: Anybody else getting this?Raiza [00:09:56]: And I'm, like, all right, let's go.Raiza [00:09:58]: And it actually catches it a lot faster than, like, our own monitoring does.Raiza [00:10:01]: It's, like, that's been really cool. So, thank you.Swyx [00:10:03]: Canceled eat a dog.Raiza [00:10:05]: So, thank you to everybody. Please keep reporting it. I think the second thing is really the use cases.Raiza [00:10:10]: I think when we put it out there, I was, like, hey, I have a hunch of how people will use it, but, like, to actually hear about, you know, not just the context of, like, the use of Notebook LM, but, like, what is this person's life like? Why do they care about using this tool?Raiza [00:10:23]: Especially people who actually have trouble using it, but they keep pushing.Raiza [00:10:27]: Like, that's just so critical to understand what was so motivating, right?Raiza [00:10:31]: Like, what was your problem that was, like, so worth solving? So, that's, like, a second thing.Raiza [00:10:34]: The third thing is also just hearing sort of, like, when we have wins and when we don't have wins because there's actually a lot of functionality where I'm, like, hmm, IRaiza [00:10:42]: don't know if that landed super well or if that was actually super critical.Raiza [00:10:45]: As part of having this sort of small project, right, I want to be able to unlaunch things, too. So, it's not just about just, like, rolling things out and testing it and being, like, wow, now we have, like, 99 features. Like, hopefully we get to a place where it's, like, there's just a really strong core feature set and the things that aren't as great, we can just unlaunch.Swyx [00:11:02]: What have you unlaunched? I have to ask.Raiza [00:11:04]: I'm in the process of unlaunching some stuff, but, for example, we had this idea that you could highlight the text in your source passage and then you could transform it. And nobody was really using it and it was, like, a very complicated piece of our architecture and it's very hard to continue supporting it in the context of new features. So, we were, like, okay, let's do a 50-50 sunset of this thing and see if anybody complains.Raiza [00:11:28]: And so far, nobody has.Swyx [00:11:29]: Is there, like, a feature flagging paradigm inside of your architecture that lets you feature flag these things easily?Raiza [00:11:36]: Yes, and actually...Raiza [00:11:37]: What is it called?Swyx [00:11:38]: Like, I love feature flagging.Raiza [00:11:40]: You mean, like, in terms of just, like, being able to expose things to users?Swyx [00:11:42]: Yeah, as a PM. Like, this is your number one tool, right?Raiza [00:11:44]: Yeah, yeah.Swyx [00:11:45]: Let's try this out. All right, if it works, roll it out. If it doesn't, roll it back, you know?Raiza [00:11:49]: Yeah, I mean, we just run Mendel experiments for the most part. And, actually, I don't know if you saw it, but on Twitter, somebody was able to get around our flags and they enabled all the experiments.Raiza [00:11:58]: They were, like, check out what the Notebook LM team is cooking.Raiza [00:12:02]: I was, like, oh!Raiza [00:12:03]: And I was at lunch with the rest of the team and I was, like, I was eating. I was, like, guys, guys, Magic Draft League!Raiza [00:12:10]: They were, like, oh, no!Raiza [00:12:12]: I was, like, okay, just finish eating and then let's go figure out what to do.Raiza [00:12:15]: Yeah.Alessio [00:12:15]: I think a post-mortem would be fun, but I don't think we need to do it on the podcast now. Can we just talk about what's behind the magic? So, I think everybody has questions, hypotheses about what models power it. I know you might not be able to share everything, but can you just get people very basic? How do you take the data and put it in the model? What text model you use? What's the text-to-speech kind of, like, jump between the two? Sure.Raiza [00:12:42]: Yeah.Raiza [00:12:42]: I was going to say, SRaiza, he manually does all the podcasts.Raiza [00:12:46]: Oh, thank you.Usama [00:12:46]: Really fast. You're very fast, yeah.Raiza [00:12:48]: Both of the voices at once.Usama [00:12:51]: Voice actor.Raiza [00:12:52]: Good, good.Usama [00:12:52]: Yeah, so, for a bit of background, we were building this thing sort of outside Notebook LM to begin with. Like, just the idea is, like, content transformation, right? Like, we can do different modalities. Like, everyone knows that. Everyone's been poking at it. But, like, how do you make it really useful? And, like, one of the ways we thought was, like, okay, like, you maybe, like, you know, people learn better when they're hearing things. But TTS exists, and you can, like, narrate whatever's on screen. But you want to absorb it the same way. So, like, that's where we sort of started out into the realm of, like, maybe we try, like, you know, two people are having a conversation kind of format. We didn't actually start out thinking this would live in Notebook, right? Like, Notebook was sort of, we built this demo out independently, tried out, like, a few different sort of sources. The main idea was, like, go from some sort of sources and transform it into a listenable, engaging audio format. And then through that process, we, like, unlocked a bunch more sort of learnings. Like, for example, in a sense, like, you're not prompting the model as much because, like, the information density is getting unrolled by the model prompting itself, in a sense. Because there's two speakers, and they're both technically, like, AI personas, right? That have different angles of looking at things. And, like, they'll have a discussion about it. And that sort of, we realized that's kind of what was making it riveting, in a sense. Like, you care about what comes next, even if you've read the material already. Because, like, people say they get new insights on their own journals or books or whatever. Like, anything that they've written themselves. So, yeah, from a modeling perspective, like, it's, like Reiza said earlier, like, we work with the DeepMind audio folks pretty closely. So, they're always cooking up new techniques to, like, get better, more human-like audio. And then Gemini 1.5 is really, really good at absorbing long context. So, we sort of, like, generally put those things together in a way that we could reliably produce the audio.Raiza [00:14:52]: I would add, like, there's something really nuanced, I think, about sort of the evolution of, like, the utility of text-to-speech. Where, if it's just reading an actual text response, and I've done this several times. I do it all the time with, like, reading my text messages. Or, like, sometimes I'm trying to read, like, a really dense paper, but I'm trying to do actual work. I'll have it, like, read out the screen. There is something really robotic about it that is not engaging. And it's really hard to consume content in that way. And it's never been really effective. Like, particularly for me, where I'm, like, hey, it's actually just, like, it's fine for, like, short stuff. Like, texting, but even that, it's, like, not that great. So, I think the frontier of experimentation here was really thinking about there is a transform that needs to happen in between whatever.Raiza [00:15:38]: Here's, like, my resume, right?Raiza [00:15:39]: Or here's, like, a 100-page slide deck or something. There is a transform that needs to happen that is inherently editorial. And I think this is where, like, that two-person persona, right, dialogue model, they have takes on the material that you've presented. That's where it really sort of, like, brings the content to life in a way that's, like, not robotic. And I think that's, like, where the magic is, is, like, you don't actually know what's going to happen when you press generate.Raiza [00:16:08]: You know, for better or for worse.Raiza [00:16:09]: Like, to the extent that, like, people are, like, no, I actually want it to be more predictable now. Like, I want to be able to tell them. But I think that initial, like, wow was because you didn't know, right? When you upload your resume, what's it about to say about you? And I think I've seen enough of these where I'm, like, oh, it gave you good vibes, right? Like, you knew it was going to say, like, something really cool. As we start to shape this product, I think we want to try to preserve as much of that wow as much as we can. Because I do think, like, exposing, like, all the knobs and, like, the dials, like, we've been thinking about this a lot. It's like, hey, is that, like, the actual thing?Raiza [00:16:43]: Is that the thing that people really want?Alessio [00:16:45]: Have you found differences in having one model just generate the conversation and then using text-to-speech to kind of fake two people? Or, like, are you actually using two different kind of system prompts to, like, have a conversation step-by-step? I'm always curious, like, if persona system prompts make a big difference? Or, like, you just put in one prompt and then you just let it run?Usama [00:17:05]: I guess, like, generally we use a lot of inference, as you can tell with, like, the spinning thing takes a while. So, yeah, there's definitely, like, a bunch of different things happening under the hood. We've tried both approaches and they have their, sort of, drawbacks and benefits. I think that that idea of, like, questioning, like, the two different personas, like, persists throughout, like, whatever approach we try. It's like, there's a bit of, like, imperfection in there. Like, we had to really lean into the fact that, like, to build something that's engaging, like, it needs to be somewhat human and it needs to be just not a chatbot. Like, that was sort of, like, what we need to diverge from. It's like, you know, most chatbots will just narrate the same kind of answer, like, given the same sources, for the most part, which is ridiculous. So, yeah, there's, like, experimentation there under the hood, like, with the model to, like, make sure that it's spitting out, like, different takes and different personas and different, sort of, prompting each other is, like, a good analogy, I guess.Swyx [00:18:00]: Yeah, I think Steven Johnson, I think he's on your team. I don't know what his role is. He seems like chief dreamer, writer.Raiza [00:18:08]: Yeah, I mean, I can comment on Steven. So, Steven joined, actually, in the very early days, I think before it was even a fully funded project. And I remember when he joined, I was like, Steven Johnson's going to be on my team? You know, and for folks who don't know him, Steven is a New York Times bestselling author of, like, 14 books. He has a PBS show. He's, like, incredibly smart, just, like, a true, sort of, celebrity by himself. And then he joined Google, and he was like, I want to come here, and I want to build the thing that I've always dreamed of, which is a tool to help me think. I was like, a what? Like, a tool to help you think? I was like, what do you need help with? Like, you seem to be doing great on your own. And, you know, he would describe this to me, and I would watch his flow. And aside from, like, providing a lot of inspiration, to be honest, like, when I watched Steven work, I was like, oh, nobody works like this, right? Like, this is what makes him special. Like, he is such a dedicated, like, researcher and journalist, and he's so thorough, he's so smart. And then I had this realization of, like, maybe Steven is the product. Maybe the work is to take Steven's expertise and bring it to, like, everyday people that could really benefit from this. Like, just watching him work, I was like, oh, I could definitely use, like, a mini-Steven, like, doing work for me. Like, that would make me a better PM. And then I thought very quickly about, like, the adjacent roles that could use sort of this, like, research and analysis tool. And so, aside from being, you know, chief dreamer, Steven also represents, like, a super workflow that I think all of us, like, if we had access to a tool like it, would just inherently, like, make us better.Swyx [00:19:46]: Did you make him express his thoughts while he worked, or you just silently watched him, or how does this work?Raiza [00:19:52]: Oh, now you're making me admit it. But yes, I did just silently watch him.Swyx [00:19:57]: This is a part of the PM toolkit, right? They give user interviews and all that.Raiza [00:20:00]: Yeah, I mean, I did interview him, but I noticed, like, if I interviewed him, it was different than if I just watched him. And I did the same thing with students all the time. Like, I followed a lot of students around. I watched them study. I would ask them, like, oh, how do you feel now, right?Raiza [00:20:15]: Or why did you do that? Like, what made you do that, actually?Raiza [00:20:18]: Or why are you upset about, like, this particular thing? Why are you cranky about this particular topic? And it was very similar, I think, for Steven, especially because he was describing, he was in the middle of writing a book. And he would describe, like, oh, you know, here's how I research things, and here's how I keep my notes. Oh, and here's how I do it. And it was really, he was doing this sort of, like, self-questioning, right? Like, now we talk about, like, chain of, you know, reasoning or thought, reflection.Raiza [00:20:44]: And I was like, oh, he's the OG.Raiza [00:20:46]: Like, I watched him do it in real time. I was like, that's, like, L-O-M right there. And to be able to bring sort of that expertise in a way that was, like, you know, maybe, like, costly inference-wise, but really have, like, that ability inside of a tool that was, like, for starters, free inside of NotebookLM, it was good to learn whether or not people really did find use out of it.Swyx [00:21:05]: So did he just commit to using NotebookLM for everything, or did you just model his existing workflow?Raiza [00:21:12]: Both, right?Raiza [00:21:12]: Like, in the beginning, there was no product for him to use. And so he just kept describing the thing that he wanted. And then eventually, like, we started building the thing. And then I would start watching him use it. One of the things that I love about Steven is he uses the product in ways where it kind of does it, but doesn't quite. Like, he's always using it at, like, the absolute max limit of this thing. But the way that he describes it is so full of promise, where he's like, I can see it going here. And all I have to do is sort of, like, meet him there and sort of pressure test whether or not, you know, everyday people want it. And we just have to build it.Swyx [00:21:47]: I would say OpenAI has a pretty similar person, Andrew Mason, I think his name is. It's very similar, like, just from the writing world and using it as a tool for thought to shape Chachabitty. I don't think that people who use AI tools to their limit are common. I'm looking at my NotebookLM now. I've got two sources. You have a little, like, source limit thing. And my bar is over here, you know, and it stretches across the whole thing. I'm like, did he fill it up?Raiza [00:22:09]: Yes, and he has, like, a higher limit than others, I think. He fills it up.Raiza [00:22:14]: Oh, yeah.Raiza [00:22:14]: Like, I don't think Steven even has a limit, actually.Swyx [00:22:17]: And he has Notes, Google Drive stuff, PDFs, MP3, whatever.Raiza [00:22:22]: Yes, and one of my favorite demos, he just did this recently, is he has actually PDFs of, like, handwritten Marie Curie notes. I see.Swyx [00:22:29]: So you're doing image recognition as well. Yeah, it does support it today.Raiza [00:22:32]: So if you have a PDF that's purely images, it will recognize it.Raiza [00:22:36]: But his demo is just, like, super powerful.Raiza [00:22:37]: He's like, okay, here's Marie Curie's notes. And it's like, here's how I'm using it to analyze it. And I'm using it for, like, this thing that I'm writing.Raiza [00:22:44]: And that's really compelling.Raiza [00:22:45]: It's like the everyday person doesn't think of these applications. And I think even, like, when I listen to Steven's demo, I see the gap. I see how Steven got there, but I don't see how I could without him. And so there's a lot of work still for us to build of, like, hey, how do I bring that magic down to, like, zero work? Because I look at all the steps that he had to take in order to do it, and I'm like, okay, that's product work for us, right? Like, that's just onboarding.Alessio [00:23:09]: And so from an engineering perspective, people come to you and it's like, hey, I need to use this handwritten notes from Marie Curie from hundreds of years ago. How do you think about adding support for, like, data sources and then maybe any fun stories and, like, supporting more esoteric types of inputs?Raiza [00:23:25]: So I think about the product in three ways, right? So there's the sources, the source input. There's, like, the capabilities of, like, what you could do with those sources. And then there's the third space, which is how do you output it into the world? Like, how do you put it back out there? There's a lot of really basic sources that we don't support still, right? I think there's sort of, like, the handwritten notes stuff is one, but even basic things like DocX or, like, PowerPoint, right? Like, these are the things that people, everyday people are like, hey, my professor actually gave me everything in DocX. Can you support that? And then just, like, basic stuff, like images and PDFs combined with text. Like, there's just a really long roadmap for sources that I think we just have to work on.Raiza [00:24:04]: So that's, like, a big piece of it.Raiza [00:24:05]: On the output side, and I think this is, like, one of the most interesting things that we learned really early on, is, sure, there's, like, the Q&A analysis stuff, which is like, hey, when did this thing launch? Okay, you found it in the slide deck. Here's the answer. But most of the time, the reason why people ask those questions is because they're trying to make something new. And so when, actually, when some of those early features leaked, like, a lot of the features we're experimenting with are the output types. And so you can imagine that people care a lot about the resources that they're putting into NotebookLM because they're trying to create something new. So I think equally as important as, like, the source inputs are the outputs that we're helping people to create. And really, like, you know, shortly on the roadmap, we're thinking about how do we help people use NotebookLM to distribute knowledge? And that's, like, one of the most compelling use cases is, like, shared notebooks. It's, like, a way to share knowledge. How do we help people take sources and, like, one-click new documents out of it, right? And I think that's something that people think is, like, oh, yeah, of course, right? Like, one push a document. But what does it mean to do it right? Like, to do it in your style, in your brand, right?Raiza [00:25:08]: To follow your guidelines, stuff like that.Raiza [00:25:09]: So I think there's a lot of work, like, on both sides of that equation.Raiza [00:25:13]: Interesting.Swyx [00:25:13]: Any comments on the engineering side of things?Usama [00:25:16]: So, yeah, like I said, I was mostly working on building the text to audio, which kind of lives as a separate engineering pipeline, almost, that we then put into NotebookLM. But I think there's probably tons of NotebookLM engineering war stories on dealing with sources. And so I don't work too closely with engineers directly. But I think a lot of it does come down to, like, Gemini's native understanding of images really well with the latest generation.Raiza [00:25:39]: Yeah, I think on the engineering and modeling side, I think we are a really good example of a team that's put a product out there, and we're getting a lot of feedback from the users, and we return the data to the modeling team, right? To the extent that we say, hey, actually, you know what people are uploading, but we can't really support super well?Raiza [00:25:56]: Text plus image, right?Raiza [00:25:57]: Especially to the extent that, like, NotebookLM can handle up to 50 sources, 500,000 words each. Like, you're not going to be able to jam all of that into, like, the context window. So how do we do multimodal embeddings with that? There's really, like, a lot of things that we have to solve that are almost there, but not quite there yet.Alessio [00:26:16]: On then turning it into audio, I think one of the best things is it has so many of the human... Does that happen in the text generation that then becomes audio? Or is that a part of, like, the audio model that transforms the text?Usama [00:26:27]: It's a bit of both, I would say. The audio model is definitely trying to mimic, like, certain human intonations and, like, sort of natural, like, breathing and pauses and, like, laughter and things like that. But yeah, in generating, like, the text, we also have to sort of give signals on, like, where those things maybe would make sense.Alessio [00:26:45]: And on the input side, instead of having a transcript versus having the audio, like, can you take some of the emotions out of it, too? If I'm giving, like, for example, when we did the recaps of our podcast, we can either give audio of the pod or we can give a diarized transcription of it. But, like, the transcription doesn't have some of the, you know, voice kind of, like, things.Raiza [00:27:05]: Yeah, yeah.Alessio [00:27:05]: Do you reconstruct that when people upload audio or how does that work?Raiza [00:27:09]: So when you upload audio today, we just transcribe it. So it is quite lossy in the sense that, like, we don't transcribe, like, the emotion from that as a source. But when you do upload a text file and it has a lot of, like, that annotation, I think that there is some ability for it to be reused in, like, the audio output, right? But I think it will still contextualize it in the deep dive format. So I think that's something that's, like, particularly important is, like, hey, today we only have one format.Raiza [00:27:37]: It's deep dive.Raiza [00:27:38]: It's meant to be a pretty general overview and it is pretty peppy.Raiza [00:27:42]: It's just very upbeat.Raiza [00:27:43]: It's very enthusiastic, yeah.Raiza [00:27:45]: Yeah, yeah.Raiza [00:27:45]: Even if you had, like, a sad topic, I think they would find a way to be, like, silver lining, though.Raiza [00:27:50]: Really?Raiza [00:27:51]: Yeah.Raiza [00:27:51]: We're having a good chat.Raiza [00:27:54]: Yeah, that's awesome.Swyx [00:27:54]: One of the ways, many, many, many ways that deep dive went viral is people saying, like, if you want to feel good about yourself, just drop in your LinkedIn. Any other, like, favorite use cases that you saw from people discovering things in social media?Raiza [00:28:08]: I mean, there's so many funny ones and I love the funny ones.Raiza [00:28:11]: I think because I'm always relieved when I watch them. I'm like, haha, that was funny and not scary. It's great.Raiza [00:28:17]: There was another one that was interesting, which was a startup founder putting their landing page and being like, all right, let's test whether or not, like, the value prop is coming through. And I was like, wow, that's right.Raiza [00:28:26]: That's smart.Usama [00:28:27]: Yeah.Raiza [00:28:28]: And then I saw a couple of other people following up on that, too.Raiza [00:28:32]: Yeah.Swyx [00:28:32]: I put my about page in there and, like, yeah, if there are things that I'm not comfortable with, I should remove it. You know, so that it can pick it up. Right.Usama [00:28:39]: I think that the personal hype machine was, like, a pretty viral one. I think, like, people uploaded their dreams and, like, some people, like, keep sort of dream journals and it, like, would sort of comment on those and, like, it was therapeutic. I didn't see those.Raiza [00:28:54]: Those are good. I hear from Googlers all the time, especially because we launched it internally first. And I think we launched it during the, you know, the Q3 sort of, like, check-in cycle. So all Googlers have to write notes about, like, hey, you know, what'd you do in Q3? And what Googlers were doing is they would write, you know, whatever they accomplished in Q3 and then they would create an audio overview. And these people they didn't know would just ping me and be like, wow, I feel really good, like, going into a meeting with my manager.Raiza [00:29:25]: And I was like, good, good, good, good. You really did that, right?Usama [00:29:29]: I think another cool one is just, like, any Wikipedia article. Yeah. Like, you drop it in and it's just, like, suddenly, like, the best sort of summary overview.Raiza [00:29:38]: I think that's what Karpathy did, right? Like, he has now a Spotify channel called Histories of Mysteries, which is basically, like, he just took, like, interesting stuff from Wikipedia and made audio overviews out of it.Swyx [00:29:50]: Yeah, he became a podcaster overnight.Raiza [00:29:52]: Yeah.Raiza [00:29:53]: I'm here for it. I fully support him.Raiza [00:29:55]: I'm racking up the listens for him.Swyx [00:29:58]: Honestly, it's useful even without the audio. You know, I feel like the audio does add an element to it, but I always want, you know, paired audio and text. And it's just amazing to see what people are organically discovering. I feel like it's because you laid the groundwork with NotebookLM and then you came in and added the sort of TTS portion and made it so good, so human, which is weird. Like, it's this engineering process of humans. Oh, one thing I wanted to ask. Do you have evals?Raiza [00:30:23]: Yeah.Swyx [00:30:23]: Yes.Raiza [00:30:24]: What? Potatoes for chefs.Swyx [00:30:27]: What is that? What do you mean, potatoes?Raiza [00:30:29]: Oh, sorry.Raiza [00:30:29]: Sorry. We were joking with this, like, a couple of weeks ago. We were doing, like, side-by-sides. But, like, Raiza sent me the file and it was literally called Potatoes for Chefs. And I was like, you know, my job is really serious, but you have to laugh a little bit. Like, the title of the file is, like, Potatoes for Chefs.Swyx [00:30:47]: Is it like a training document for chefs?Usama [00:30:50]: It's just a side-by-side for, like, two different kind of audio transcripts.Swyx [00:30:54]: The question is really, like, as you iterate, the typical engineering advice is you establish some kind of test or benchmark. You're at, like, 30 percent. You want to get it up to 90, right?Raiza [00:31:05]: Yeah.Swyx [00:31:05]: What does that look like for making something sound human and interesting and voice?Usama [00:31:11]: We have the sort of formal eval process as well. But I think, like, for this particular project, we maybe took a slightly different route to begin with. Like, there was a lot of just within the team listening sessions. A lot of, like, sort of, like... Dogfooding.Raiza [00:31:23]: Yeah.Usama [00:31:23]: Like, I think the bar that we tried to get to before even starting formal evals with raters and everything was much higher than I think other projects would. Like, because that's, as you said, like, the traditional advice, right? Like, get that ASAP. Like, what are you looking to improve on? Whatever benchmark it is. So there was a lot of just, like, critical listening. And I think a lot of making sure that those improvements actually could go into the model. And, like, we're happy with that human element of it. And then eventually we had to obviously distill those down into an eval set. But, like, still there's, like, the team is just, like, a very, very, like, avid user of the product at all stages.Raiza [00:32:02]: I think you just have to be really opinionated.Raiza [00:32:05]: I think that sometimes, if you are, your intuition is just sharper and you can move a lot faster on the product.Raiza [00:32:12]: Because it's like, if you hold that bar high, right?Raiza [00:32:15]: Like, if you think about, like, the iterative cycle, it's like, hey, we could take, like, six months to ship this thing. To get it to, like, mid where we were. Or we could just, like, listen to this and be like, yeah, that's not it, right? And I don't need a rater to tell me that. That's my preference, right? And collectively, like, if I have two other people listen to it, they'll probably agree. And it's just kind of this step of, like, just keep improving it to the point where you're like, okay, now I think this is really impressive. And then, like, do evals, right? And then validate that.Swyx [00:32:43]: Was the sound model done and frozen before you started doing all this? Or are you also saying, hey, we need to improve the sound model as well? Both.Usama [00:32:51]: Yeah, we were making improvements on the audio and just, like, generating the transcript as well. I think another weird thing here was, like, we needed to be entertaining. And that's much harder to quantify than some of the other benchmarks that you can make for, like, you know, Sweebench or get better at this math.Swyx [00:33:10]: Do you just have people rate one to five or, you know, or just thumbs up and down?Usama [00:33:14]: For the formal rater evals, we have sort of like a Likert scale and, like, a bunch of different dimensions there. But we had to sort of break down what makes it entertaining into, like, a bunch of different factors. But I think the team stage of that was more critical. It was like, we need to make sure that, like, what is making it fun and engaging? Like, we dialed that as far as it goes. And while we're making other changes that are necessary, like, obviously, they shouldn't make stuff up or, you know, be insensitive.Raiza [00:33:41]: Hallucinations. Safety.Swyx [00:33:42]: Other safety things.Raiza [00:33:43]: Right.Swyx [00:33:43]: Like a bunch of safety stuff.Raiza [00:33:45]: Yeah, exactly.Usama [00:33:45]: So, like, with all of that and, like, also just, you know, following sort of a coherent narrative and structure is really important. But, like, with all of this, we really had to make sure that that central tenet of being entertaining and engaging and something you actually want to listen to. It just doesn't go away, which takes, like, a lot of just active listening time because you're closest to the prompts, the model and everything.Swyx [00:34:07]: I think sometimes the difficulty is because we're dealing with non-deterministic models, sometimes you just got a bad roll of the dice and it's always on the distribution that you could get something bad. Basically, how many do you, like, do ten runs at a time? And then how do you get rid of the non-determinism?Raiza [00:34:23]: Right.Usama [00:34:23]: Yeah, that's bad luck.Raiza [00:34:25]: Yeah.Swyx [00:34:25]: Yeah.Usama [00:34:26]: I mean, there still will be, like, bad audio overviews. There's, like, a bunch of them that happens. Do you mean for, like, the raider? For raiders, right?Swyx [00:34:34]: Like, what if that one person just got, like, a really bad rating? You actually had a great prompt, you actually had a great model, great weights, whatever. And you just, you had a bad output.Usama [00:34:42]: Like, and that's okay, right?Raiza [00:34:44]: I actually think, like, the way that these are constructed, if you think about, like, the different types of controls that the user has, right? Like, what can the user do today to affect it?Usama [00:34:54]: We push a button.Raiza [00:34:55]: You just push a button.Swyx [00:34:56]: I have tried to prompt engineer by changing the title. Yeah, yeah, yeah.Raiza [00:34:59]: Changing the title, people have found out.Raiza [00:35:02]: Yeah.Raiza [00:35:02]: The title of the notebook, people have found out. You can add show notes, right? You can get them to think, like, the show has changed. Someone changed the language of the output. Changing the language of the output. Like, those are less well-tested because we focused on, like, this one aspect. So it did change the way that we sort of think about quality as well, right? So it's like, quality is on the dimensions of entertainment, of course, like, consistency, groundedness. But in general, does it follow the structure of the deep dive? And I think when we talk about, like, non-determinism, it's like, well, as long as it follows, like, the structure of the deep dive, right? It sort of inherently meets all those other qualities. And so it makes it a little bit easier for us to ship something with confidence to the extent that it's like, I know it's going to make a deep dive. It's going to make a good deep dive. Whether or not the person likes it, I don't know. But as we expand to new formats, as we open up controls, I think that's where it gets really much harder. Even with the show notes, right? Like, people don't know what they're going to get when they do that. And we see that already where it's like, this is going to be a lot harder to validate in terms of quality, where now we'll get a greater distribution. Whereas I don't think we really got, like, varied distribution because of, like, that pre-process that Raiza was talking about. And also because of the way that we'd constrain, like, what were we measuring for? Literally, just like, is it a deep dive?Swyx [00:36:18]: And you determine what a deep dive is. Yeah. Everything needs a PM. Yeah, I have, this is very similar to something I've been thinking about for AI products in general. There's always like a chief tastemaker. And for Notebook LM, it seems like it's a combination of you and Steven.Raiza [00:36:31]: Well, okay.Raiza [00:36:32]: I want to take a step back.Swyx [00:36:33]: And Raiza, I mean, presumably for the voice stuff.Raiza [00:36:35]: Raiza's like the head chef, right? Of, like, deep dive, I think. Potatoes.Raiza [00:36:40]: Of potatoes.Raiza [00:36:41]: And I say this because I think even though we are already a very opinionated team, and Steven, for sure, very opinionated, I think of the audio generations, like, Raiza was the most opinionated, right? And we all, like, would say, like, hey, I remember, like, one of the first ones he sent me.Raiza [00:36:57]: I was like, oh, I feel like they should introduce themselves. I feel like they should say a title. But then, like, we would catch things, like, maybe they shouldn't say their names.Raiza [00:37:04]: Yeah, they don't say their names.Usama [00:37:05]: That was a Steven catch, like, not give them names.Raiza [00:37:08]: So stuff like that is, like, we all injected, like, a little bit of just, like, hey, here's, like, my take on, like, how a podcast should be, right? And I think, like, if you're a person who, like, regularly listens to podcasts, there's probably some collective preference there that's generic enough that you can standardize into, like, the deep dive format. But, yeah, it's the new formats where I think, like, oh, that's the next test. Yeah.Swyx [00:37:30]: I've tried to make a clone, by the way. Of course, everyone did. Yeah. Everyone in AI was like, oh, no, this is so easy. I'll just take a TTS model. Obviously, our models are not as good as yours, but I tried to inject a consistent character backstory, like, age, identity, where they work, where they went to school, what their hobbies are. Then it just, the models try to bring it in too much.Raiza [00:37:49]: Yeah.Swyx [00:37:49]: I don't know if you tried this.Raiza [00:37:51]: Yeah.Swyx [00:37:51]: So then I'm like, okay, like, how do I define a personality? But it doesn't keep coming up every single time. Yeah.Raiza [00:37:58]: I mean, we have, like, a really, really good, like, character designer on our team.Raiza [00:38:02]: What?Swyx [00:38:03]: Like a D&D person?Raiza [00:38:05]: Just to say, like, we, just like we had to be opinionated about the format, we had to be opinionated about who are those two people talking.Raiza [00:38:11]: Okay.Raiza [00:38:12]: Right.Raiza [00:38:12]: And then to the extent that, like, you can design the format, you should be able to design the people as well.Raiza [00:38:18]: Yeah.Swyx [00:38:18]: I would love, like, a, you know, like when you play Baldur's Gate, like, you roll, you roll like 17 on Charisma and like, it's like what race they are. I don't know.Raiza [00:38:27]: I recently, actually, I was just talking about character select screens.Raiza [00:38:30]: Yeah. I was like, I love that, right.Raiza [00:38:32]: And I was like, maybe there's something to be learned there because, like, people have fallen in love with the deep dive as a, as a format, as a technology, but also as just like those two personas.Raiza [00:38:44]: Now, when you hear a deep dive and you've heard them, you're like, I know those two.Raiza [00:38:48]: Right.Raiza [00:38:48]: And people, it's so funny when I, when people are trying to find out their names, like, it's a, it's a worthy task.Raiza [00:38:54]: It's a worthy goal.Raiza [00:38:55]: I know what you're doing. But the next step here is to sort of introduce, like, is this like what people want?Raiza [00:39:00]: People want to sort of edit the personas or do they just want more of them?Swyx [00:39:04]: I'm sure you're getting a lot of opinions and they all, they all conflict with each other. Before we move on, I have to ask, because we're kind of on this topic. How do you make audio engaging? Because it's useful, not just for deep dive, but also for us as podcasters. What is, what does engaging mean? If you could break it down for us, that'd be great.Usama [00:39:22]: I mean, I can try. Like, don't, don't claim to be an expert at all.Swyx [00:39:26]: So I'll give you some, like variation in tone and speed. You know, there's this sort of writing advice where, you know, this sentence is five words. This sentence is three, that kind of advice where you, where you vary things, you have excitement, you have laughter, all that stuff. But I'd be curious how else you break down.Usama [00:39:42]: So there's the basics, like obviously structure that can't be meandering, right? Like there needs to be sort of a, an ultimate goal that the voices are trying to get to, human or artificial. I think one thing we find often is if there's just too much agreement between people, like that's not fun to listen to. So there needs to be some sort of tension and build up, you know, withholding information. For example, like as you listen to a story unfold, like you're going to learn more and more about it. And audio that maybe becomes even more important because like you actually don't have the ability to just like skim to the end of something. You're driving or something like you're going to be hooked because like there's, and that's how like, that's how a lot of podcasts work. Like maybe not interviews necessarily, but a lot of true crime, a lot of entertainment in general. There's just like a gradual unrolling of information. And that also like sort of goes back to the content transformation aspect of it. Like maybe you are going from, let's say the Wikipedia article of like one of the History of Mysteries, maybe episodes. Like the Wikipedia article is going to state out the information very differently. It's like, here's what happened would probably be in the very first paragraph. And one approach we could have done is like maybe a person's just narrating that thing. And maybe that would work for like a certain audience. Or I guess that's how I would picture like a standard history lesson to unfold. But like, because we're trying to put it in this two-person dialogue format, like there, we inject like the fact that, you know, there's, you don't give everything at first. And then you set up like differing opinions of the same topic or the same, like maybe you seize on a topic and go deeper into it and then try to bring yourself back out of it and go back to the main narrative. So that's, that's mostly from like the setting up the script perspective. And then the audio, I was saying earlier, it's trying to be as close to just human speech as possible. I think was the, what we found success with so far.Raiza [00:41:40]: Yeah. Like with interjections, right?Raiza [00:41:41]: Like I think like when you listen to two people talk, there's a lot of like, yeah, yeah, right. And then there's like a lot of like that questioning, like, oh yeah, really?Raiza [00:41:49]: What did you think?Swyx [00:41:50]: I noticed that. That's great.Raiza [00:41:52]: Totally.Usama [00:41:54]: Exactly.Swyx [00:41:55]: My question is, do you pull in speech experts to do this? Or did you just come up with it yourselves? You can be like, okay, talk to a whole bunch of fiction writers to, to make things engaging or comedy writers or whatever, stand up comedy, right? They have to make audio engaging, but audio as well. Like there's professional fields of studying where people do this for a living, but us as AI engineers are just making this up as we go.Raiza [00:42:19]: I mean, it's a great idea, but you definitely didn't.Raiza [00:42:22]: Yeah.Swyx [00:42:24]: My guess is you didn't.Raiza [00:42:25]: Yeah.Swyx [00:42:26]: There's a, there's a certain field of authority that people have. They're like, oh, like you can't do this because you don't have any experience like making engaging audio. But that's what you literally did.Raiza [00:42:35]: Right.Usama [00:42:35]: I mean, I was literally chatting with someone at Google earlier today about how some people think that like you need a linguistics person in the room for like making a good chatbot. But that's not actually true because like this person went to school for linguistics. And according to him, he's an engineer now. According to him, like most of his classmates were not actually good at language. Like they knew how to analyze language and like sort of the mathematical patterns and rhythms and language. But that doesn't necessarily mean they were going to be eloquent at like while speaking or writing. So I think, yeah, a lot of we haven't invested in specialists in audio format yet, but maybe that would.Raiza [00:43:13]: I think it's like super interesting because I think there is like a very human question of like what makes something interesting. And there's like a very deep question of like what is it, right? Like what is the quality that we are all looking for? Is it does somebody have to be funny? Does something have to be entertaining? Does something have to be straight to the point? And I think when you try to distill that, this is the interesting thing I think about our experiment, about this particular launch is first, we only launched one format. And so we sort of had to squeeze everything we believed about what an interesting thing is into one package. And as a result of it, I think we learned it's like, hey, interacting with a chatbot is sort of novel at first, but it's not interesting, right? It's like humans are what makes interacting with chatbots interesting.Raiza [00:43:59]: It's like, ha ha ha, I'm going to try to trick it. It's like, that's interesting.Raiza [00:44:02]: Spell strawberry, right?Raiza [00:44:04]: This is like the fun that like people have with it. But like that's not the LLM being interesting.Raiza [00:44:08]: That's you just like kind of giving it your own flavor. But it's like, what does it mean to sort of flip it on its head and say, no, you be interesting now, right? Like you give the chatbot the opportunity to do it. And this is not a chatbot per se. It is like just the audio. And it's like the texture, I think, that really brings it to life. And it's like the things that we've described here, which is like, okay, now I have to like lead you down a path of information about like this commercialization deck.Raiza [00:44:36]: It's like, how do you do that?Raiza [00:44:38]: To be able to successfully do it, I do think that you need experts. I think we'll engage with experts like down the road, but I think it will have to be in the context of, well, what's the next thing we're building, right? It's like, what am I trying to change here? What do I fundamentally believe needs to be improved? And I think there's still like a lot more studying that we have to do in terms of like, well, what are people actually using this for? And we're just in such early days. Like it hasn't even been a month. Two, three weeks.Usama [00:45:05]: Three weeks.Raiza [00:45:06]: Yeah, yeah.Usama [00:45:07]: I think one other element to that is the fact that you're bringing your own sources to it. Like it's your stuff. Like, you know this somewhat well, or you care to know about this. So like that, I think, changed the equation on its head as well. It's like your sources and someone's telling you about it. So like you care about how that dynamic is, but you just care for it to be good enough to be entertaining. Because ultimately they're talking about your mortgage deed or whatever.Swyx [00:45:33]: So it's interesting just from the topic itself. Even taking out all the agreements and the hiding of the slow reveal. I mean, there's a baseline, maybe.Usama [00:45:42]: Like if it was like too drab. Like if someone was reading it off, like, you know, that's like the absolute worst.Raiza [00:45:46]: But like...Swyx [00:45:47]: Do you prompt for humor? That's a tough one, right?Raiza [00:45:51]: I think it's more of a generic way to bring humor out if possible. I think humor is actually one of the hardest things. Yeah.Raiza [00:46:00]: But I don't know if you saw...Raiza [00:46:00]: That is AGI.Swyx [00:46:01]: Humor is AGI.Raiza [00:46:02]: Yeah, but did you see the chicken one?Raiza [00:46:03]: No.Raiza [00:46:04]: Okay. If you haven't heard it... We'll splice it in here.Swyx [00:46:06]: Okay.Raiza [00:46:07]: Yeah.Raiza [00:46:07]: There is a video on Threads. I think it was by Martino Wong. And it's a PDF.Raiza [00:46:16]: Welcome to your deep dive for today. Oh, yeah. Get ready for a fun one. Buckle up. Because we are diving into... Chicken, chicken, chicken. Chicken, chicken. You got that right. By Doug Zonker. Now. And yes, you heard that title correctly. Titles. Our listener today submitted this paper. Yeah, they're going to need our help. And I can totally see why. Absolutely. It's dense. It's baffling. It's a lot. And it's packed with more chicken than a KFC buffet. What? That's hilarious.Raiza [00:46:48]: That's so funny. So it's like stuff like that, that's like truly delightful, truly surprising.Raiza [00:46:53]: But it's like we didn't tell it to be funny.Usama [00:46:55]: Humor is contextual also. Like super contextual is what we're realizing. So we're not prompting for humor, but we're prompting for maybe a lot of other things that are bringing out that humor.Alessio [00:47:04]: I think the thing about ad-generated content, if we look at YouTube, like we do videos on YouTube and it's like, you know, a lot of people like screaming in the thumbnails to get clicks. There's like everybody, there's kind of like a meta of like what you need to do to get clicks. But I think in your product, there's no actual creator on the other side investing the time. So you can actually generate a type of content that is maybe not universally appealing, you know, at a much, yeah, exactly. I think that's the most interesting thing. It's like, well, is there a way for like, take Mr.Raiza [00:47:36]: Beast, right?Alessio [00:47:36]: It's like Mr. Beast optimizes videos to reach the biggest audience and like the most clicks. But what if every video could be kind of like regenerated to be closer to your taste, you know, when you watch it?Raiza [00:47:48]: I think that's kind of the promise of AI that I think we are just like touching on, which is, I think every time I've gotten information from somebody, they have delivered it to me in their preferred method, right?Raiza [00:47:59]: Like if somebody gives me a PDF, it's a PDF.Raiza [00:48:01]: Somebody gives me a hundred slide deck, that is the format in which I'm going to read it. But I think we are now living in the era where transformations are really possible, which is, look, like I don't want to read your hundred slide deck, but I'll listen to a 16 minute audio overview on the drive home. And that, that I think is, is really novel. And that is, is paving the way in a way that like maybe we wanted, but didn'tRaiza [00:48:24]: expect.Raiza [00:48:25]: Where I also think you're listening to a lot of content that normally wouldn't have had content made about it. Like I watched this TikTok where this woman uploaded her diary from 2004.Raiza [00:48:36]: For sure, right?Raiza [00:48:36]: Like nobody was goin

Jay-Jay & Flynny Catch Up Podcast
Raisa And Her Family's Fight for Survival as Hurricane Milton Hits Florida

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Play Episode Listen Later Oct 10, 2024 5:19


Raisa who is in Orlando Florida had a chat with Sarah & Flynny about how they decided to not leave home & bunkered down for Hurricance Milton.

Accepted: A College Admissions Podcast
#160 - Interview with a Columbia-Trained Research Scholar

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Play Episode Listen Later Oct 7, 2024 28:46


This week, Tokyo Academics' lead admissions consultant Jennifer Liepin chats with Raisa Alam, a published research scholar and college admissions expert. With experience in prestigious research competitions, mental health advocacy, and teaching, Raisa shares expert insights on building a standout research portfolio, prioritizing resilience, and using unique experiences to boost college applications. Whether you're new to research or looking to strengthen your profile, tune in for practical tips to craft a compelling admissions story! Join free webinars at www.tokyoacademics.com/eventsNeed help applying to college? Contact us for a free consultation where we'll discuss your strengths, weaknesses, and provide an initial assessment to optimize your success. If you want to maximize your chances of getting into your dream schools, we can help! Visit www.tokyoacademics.com/free-trial.

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...Seven Years Since feat @Raisa _Studio

The Most Unknown Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 27, 2024 194:40


...Seven Years Since feat @Raisa _Studio by The Most Unknown Podcast

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"Riesgos actuales son consecuencia de nuestras intervenciones" - Raisa Banfield

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Play Episode Listen Later Aug 15, 2024 17:33


Narikbi LIVE
Раиса Қадыр: 20 жыл шетелде тұру, 7 тіл меңгеру & кітап баспасын ашу / Narikbi LIVE #91

Narikbi LIVE

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2024 95:36


Бұл подкаст қонағы Steppe & World баспасының негізін қалаушы - Раиса Қадыр. Бұл жолы біз Раиса ханым 2018 жылға дейін 20 жылға жуық Мысыр, Түркия, Германия, Нидерланд, Англия, Моңғолия елдеріндегі өмірі, бұл жолда 7 тілді жетік меңгергені мен осы жолдың кітап баспасына алып келгені туралы сөз қозғадық.  Raisa: https://www.instagram.com/raise_kader Narikbi: https://www.instagram.com/narikbi Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/narikbi.live   Telegram: https://t.me/narikbi_live TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@narikbi.live   00:00 Тизер 02:04 Таныстыру 03:10 Хәрри Поттер 05:57 130 кітаптің ішіндегі ең ерекшесі  07:30 Балалардың фейковый дофамин алуы 08:50 Раиса ханымның өмірбаяны 16:20 Студенттік өмірі туралы 17:00 Мысырдағы үлкен революция 23:55 Білікті мамандардан білім алғаны туралы 26:00 7 тілді меңгергені 31:20 Германия және короновирус кезінде болған оқиғалар 41:20 Германия елінің инфраструктурасы 45:30 Толерантты болу немесе ойлау 49:00 Отбасылық өмірі және елге көшу туралы 56:02 Елге оралудағы сезім 1:04:00 Арбатқа 4 кітаппен шыққан туралы. 1:07:00 Моңғол халқы қандай? 1:12:40 Моңғол халқының кітаптары қалай дамып жатыр? 1:16:00 Кітапқа не конкуренция бола алады? 1:20:20 Баланың кітапқа деген қызығушылығы 1:28:10 Алдағы 2 жылда шығатын кітаптар 1:29:30 БЛИЦ! 1:31:00 Соңғы жылдағы оқыған ерекше кітаптар 1:33:15 Өмірдегі жақын фраза

blckbx.tv
blckbx today #317: 'Mr. Deepstate' Dick Schoof | Raisa over haar vervolging | Het stille pensioendrama

blckbx.tv

Play Episode Listen Later May 29, 2024 70:30


Beluister hier de volledige uitzending van woensdag 29 mei 2024 of bekijk deze via: https://www.blckbx.tv/livestreams/blc...Woensdag 29 mei 2024- Wat weten we over de beoogde premier en voormalig NCTV-baas Dick Schoof?- Live: Raisa Blommestijn over haar vervolging.- Is ons pensioen in gevaar door het nieuwe pensioenstelsel?Desk: partijleider BVNL Wybren van Haga, rechtsfilosoof Raisa Blommestijn en financieel expert Ab FlipsePresentatie: Erwin TaamsWil jij onderdeel uitmaken van Blckbx Business? Word dan een Blckbx Business Friend! ➡ https://www.blckbx.tv/businessRelevante achtergrondinformatieVoor relevante achtergrondinformatie en bronnen m.b.t. de uitzending, zie https://www.blckbx.tv/livestreams/blc... (na afloop van de uitzending)Waardeer je deze uitzending? Like de uitzending, abonneer je op ons kanaal en steun de onafhankelijke journalistiek van blckbx met een donatie ➡ https://www.blckbx.tv/donerenIedere maandag, woensdag en vrijdag LIVE om 19:00 uurWil je op de hoogte blijven?Telegram - https://t.me/blckbxtvTwitter - / blckbxnews  Facebook - / blckbx.tv  Instagram -  / blckbx.tv  LinkedIn - / blckbxnews  TikTok - / blckbx.tv  #blckbxtoday #premier #dickschoof #raisablommestijn #on #pensioenSupport the Show.

RTÉ - Morning Ireland
What impact would death of Ebrahim Raisa have on Iran and the Middle East?

RTÉ - Morning Ireland

Play Episode Listen Later May 20, 2024 8:36


Ali Vaez, Director of the Crisis Group's Iran Project, on the implications for Iran and the Middle East if Iranian President, Ebrahim Raisa, is confirmed dead in helicopter crash.

Zināmais nezināmajā
Pasaules kvantu diena: kvantu datoru iespējas raisa jautājumus par kiberdrošību

Zināmais nezināmajā

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 24, 2024 48:12


Aprīlī atzīmē Pasaules kvantu dienu, un šajā raidījumā pievēršamies kvantu priekšrocībām un trūkumiem kiberdrošībā. Kvantu datori varētu īsā laika posmā atšifrēt milzīgu datu apjomu. Tas rada jautājumus par mūsu datu drošību nākotnē. Vai kvantu komunikācija un datorika sniegs mums lielāku drošību virtuālajā telpā, vai tieši otrādi – pavērs jaunas iespējas kibernoziedzniekiem veikt lielāka mēroga noziegumus? Par to saruna raidījuma turpinājumā ar cilvēkiem, kuru darbs ikdienā ar kvantiem ir vistiešākajā veidā saistīts, un tie ir: Latvijas Universitātes tenūrprofesors fizikā Vjačeslavs Kaščejevs, Latvijas Universitātes asociētais profesors, Latvijas Valsts radio un televīzijas centra kvantiskās atslēgu sadales vadošais inženieris Leo Trukšāns un Latvijas Universitātes Matemātikas un informātikas institūta pētnieks, datorzinātnes doktors, Latvijas Universitātes asociētais profesors Sergejs Kozlovičs. Bet pirms tam noskaidrojam, kāpēc kvantu fiziķiem vajadzīgs ledusskapis. Ne jau tāds, kas atrodas ikvienā virtuvē, bet gan iekārta, kurā elektroniskie mērījumi notiek pie ļoti zemas temperatūras.

The Art of Kindness with Robert Peterpaul
Francia Raisa Shares Life-Changing Act of Kindness, Future of How I Met Your Father & More

The Art of Kindness with Robert Peterpaul

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 22, 2024 24:05


How I Met Your Father star Francia Raísa joins The Art of Kindness with Robert Peterpaul to discuss her life-changing act of kindness to Selena Gomez, paying it forward with her new Modelo partnership and much more. Also, today is Earth Day - please be kind to the earth! FRANCIA RAISA recently starred in the hit Hulu sitcom HOW I MET YOUR FATHER which ran for 2 seasons. As an entrepreneur, Raisa shared her family salsa recipe with the world in partnership with the La Victoria brand which had a limited run before selling out in Fall of 2023. She can also be seen as ‘Ana Torres,' a first-generation Cuban-American and roommate to Yara Shahidi's ‘Zoey Johnson,' on Freeform's GROWN-ISH, the BLACK-ISH spinoff. Francia has come a long way from her first role as young cheerleader ‘Leti' in the film BRING IT ON: ALL OR NOTHING. Continuing the development of her acting prowess in projects such as THE SECRET LIFE OF THE AMERICAN TEENAGER and Netflix's DEAR WHITE PEOPLE, she's been primed to tackle all that is ahead of her. In between roles that have won her awards such as a Gracie Award and La Femme Film Festival Rising Star, and nominations for Teen Choice, IMAGEN and an ALMA, Raisa is dedicated to assisting organizations dear to her heart like Unlikely Heroes, whose mission is to provide safe homes and restoration to victims of sex trafficking worldwide. Born and raised in Southern California, bi-lingual Raisa is of Honduran and Mexican decent. Modelo has partnered with Francia to celebrate the launch and expansion of Modelo Spiked Aguas Frescas, a line of vibrant, spiked, flavored malt beverages expanding to new markets across the country – and for the second year in a row, Modelo pays homage to the street vendors that helped inspire it and keep the beloved Mexican street drink tradition alive.  Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

FM Mundo
NotiMundo a la Carta - Raisa Corral, Incidentes en Comparecencia Sobre Impase Diplomático..

FM Mundo

Play Episode Listen Later Apr 10, 2024 13:06


NotiMundo a la Carta - Raisa Corral, Incidentes en Comparecencia Sobre Impase Diplomático.. by FM Mundo 98.1

Wireless Institute of Australia News Netcast
WIA News Netcast for Sun, 24 Dec 2023

Wireless Institute of Australia News Netcast

Play Episode Listen Later Dec 24, 2023


NATIONAL NEWS FOR WEEK COMMENCING DEC 26 SHOWCASES Peter VK4EA. - Roger, VK2ZHR WIA AR MAGAZINES EDITOR IN CHIEF. - Trent, VK4TS, Past WIA Director aAnd a SPECIAL hello to the Ladies of ALARA who along with Caryn Eve Murray KD 2 GUT and Raisa, R 1 BIG, presented last weeks WIA NATIONAL NEWS.

The Night Shift
Raisa Songbird unveiled her latest single Guard

The Night Shift

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 21, 2023 15:45


The incredible singer-songwriter Raisa Knusel unveiled her latest single Guard on the show, and I think it should be in a Disney movie! She also performed live with Stan Fedyuk on keyboards. See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

Jungianthology Podcast
Jungian Ever After | Briar Rose: Awakening & Transformation

Jungianthology Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 25, 2023 43:46


Our final episode of season 1 is a story near and dear to Raisa. This episode gets a lot more personal than some, as we discuss periods of awakening and transformation from various points in our own lives. The story is from ⁠Household Tales by Brothers Grimm⁠. Adina also recommends: Our intro/outro music is from Antoni […] The post Jungian Ever After | Briar Rose: Awakening & Transformation appeared first on C. G. Jung Institute of Chicago.

LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA
Érase una vez el Este #12 - El Pacto con el Diablo

LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 22, 2023 49:03


LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA presenta la audioserie titulada "Érase una vez el Este". Este es el duodécimo y último capítulo (o quizás no), y se se titula "El Pacto con el Diablo". Esta serie o audioserie en la que se mezclan la realidad y la ficción, consiste en una serie de programas en los que escucharéis como se habla de hechos reales que han sucedido en los últimos años y también en fechas recientes en Europa, concretamente en la zona del este de Europa. Como digo, es una audioserie muy conectada con la actualidad en los momentos en la que estamos presentándola. Y este proyecto no es idea mía, sino que es idea de dos amigos de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA, como son Juan Lamas, malagueño, historiador, escritor y guionista, y Verónica, barcelonesa, licenciada en administración y finanzas, actriz y cantante amateur y gran apasionada por la historia. Ellos son los artífices de esto y les agradezco su trabajo. Os dejo con el duodécimo capítulo titulado "El Pacto con el Diablo". *En este programa como colofón, tenemos el placer de contar con el amigo Doc Salvaje del podcast Relatos Salvajes interpretando la voz del Subsecretario del Interior de la Federación Rusa, con la amiga Raluca interpretando la voz de Solovey, con el amigo Joaquín interpretando la voz de Ahjmat y con un servidor interpretando la voz de Valeriy Yevgenyevich. Sinopsis: Absolutamente todos tenemos un precio. Unos cambian de parecer por poca cosa, otros venden su alma a un precio excesivo. En Rusia se pueden comprar lealtades y se pueden hacer pactos sólo con un gesto de buena voluntad, aunque a veces no haya dinero en el mundo para comprar el perdón. Este es un Podcast producido y dirigido por Gerión de Contestania, miembro del grupo "Divulgadores de la Historia". Somos un podcast perteneciente al sello iVoox Originals. Canal de YouTube de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCfHTOD0Z_yC-McS71OhfHIA *Si te ha gustado el programa dale al "Like", ya que con esto ayudarás a darnos más visibilidad. También puedes dejar tu comentario, decirnos en que hemos fallado o errado y también puedes sugerir un tema para que sea tratado en un futuro programa de LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA. Gracias. Música del audio: -El podcast LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA cuenta con licencia de Jamendo Music. Enlaces a los cortes de noticiarios y a la música empleada en el programa: Noticias: -THE PRAYER WITH WHICH OUR SOLDIERS GO ON A COUNTEROFFENSIVE TO LIBERATE UKRAINE-Krystyna from Ukraine. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kC1z5X8WTqM -GUERRA UCRANIA: MOSCÚ vuelve a ATACAR el puerto de ODESA como represalia al PUENTE de CRIMEA | RTVE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1KkzCydGrZs -RUSIA-WAGNER: PRIGOZHIN REAPARECE en SAN PETERSBURGO mientras se CELEBRA la CUMBRE con ÁFRICA | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nOatieg26RM -Prigozhin reaparece en África Wagner hace que Rusia sea aun más grande. La Vanguardia. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tp8JOU9SV34 -LA PMC CONVOY, la posible heredera de los negocios africanos de Wagner. Bellumartis actualidad Militar. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FxdNa8HACcs&t=25s -RUSIA: "Wagner inició la rebelión antes de que Putin hiciese rodar su cabeza" | EL PAÍS. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3VZ96bBy2hk -GRUPO WAGNER_ PUTIN se reunió con PRIGOZHIN cinco días después de la rebelión, revela el Kremlin. Diario Gestión. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dmAayxO11b0 -Según el presidente bielorruso, el líder del Grupo Wagner estaría en Bielorrusia. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=enF2QNP7y1o&t=55s -RUSIA_ LUKASHENKO confirma que PRIGOZHIN, jefe del GRUPO WAGNER, está en BIELORRUSIA. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T7op_p16lM0&t=31s -RUSIA PRIGOZHIN jefe del GRUPO WAGNER enterrado en un FUNERAL PRIVADO. RTVE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qzdx0Emrmtg -Entierran al jefe militar y confundador del Grupo Wagner. Agencia EFE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_5XE58FiaBY&t=18s -REVELAN ÚLTIMO VIDEO de Yevgueni Prigozhin antes de morir: "Todo va bien" - CHV Noticias https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=07_rwewMih4&t=76s -RUSIA | Putin sobre Prigozhin: “Cometió errores graves, pero logró sus objetivos” | EL PAÍS- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uH8_bYUT4uE&t=64s -Putin sobre Prigozhin: “Tenía un destino complicado y cometió graves errores” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9EIhUY5XHjY&t=74s -Fingió para escapar del Kremlin Teoría apunta que Yevgeny Prigozhin no murió en el avión. El Heraldo de México. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=h7FaZPQW98s&t=56s -Casinos y metanfetamina: la prosperidad de un hermético narcoestado birmano. EFE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zZMQfDhums4&t=69s -El mayor narcoejército de Birmania busca legitimarse en su 30 aniversario. EFE. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7GNsP_TNgus&t=7s -Muere Yevgeny Prigozhin, líder del grupo Wagner; tras accidente aéreo en Rusia. Milenio. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RH_EBCInSpk -RUSIA: Analizan las CAJAS NEGRAS y ADN para resolver las INCOGNITAS de la muerte de PRIGOZHIN | RTVE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LH_Pt0ODG_A Música: -Digital Remaster Vesti la giubba - Caruso 1907 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=udJmZXobWiU -"Scandinavianz - Stockholm" https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qS4m0dvEbOQ -Música de violín. Hvega. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QjxMWlUDbBU -Grabando música para películas - Escena de suspenso. Justo Morao. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5uukBu_d0g&t=25s -March of The Bogatyri (Epic Russian Music) https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JyPCp4_DNcQ -Dmitri Shostakovich - The Second Waltz. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5hTvc3f83Ws -DJ Blyatman Gopnik. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RHpWTC_QrwA -Dark Night - Russian Ballad - Mikhail Gorbachev's "Songs for Raisa". https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_pfJIokpUtk -The Ballad About Russian Boys Leonid Kharitonov the Alexandrov Red Army Choir 1966. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZBqNRsfosTo -IC3PEAK Марш. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xqohApD6Ng8 -IC3PEAK ft GHOSTEMANE - THE PIT. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IcWDCUdBlQ4 -Keane Bedshaped Cover Version. Mikko Kilpinen. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MiZzffftkJE -Amazing Mandalay. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BXBd71wW8Tc -L-Gante X El Mas Ladron X DT.Bilardo - PISTOLA - Cumbia 420 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=prjCrIuy9Fk Redes Sociales: -Twitter: LABIBLIOTECADE3 -Facebook: Gerión De Contestania Muchísimas gracias por escuchar LA BIBLIOTECA DE LA HISTORIA y hasta la semana que viene. Podcast amigos: La Biblioteca Perdida: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-podcast-la-biblioteca-perdida_sq_f171036_1.html Cliophilos: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-cliophilos-paseo-historia_sq_f1487551_1.html Niebla de Guerra: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-niebla-guerra_sq_f1608912_1.html Casus Belli: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-casus-belli-podcast_sq_f1391278_1.html Victoria Podcast: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-victoria-podcast_sq_f1781831_1.html BELLUMARTIS: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-bellumartis-podcast_sq_f1618669_1.html Relatos Salvajes: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-relatos-salvajes_sq_f1470115_1.html Motor y al Aire: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-motor-al-aire_sq_f1117313_1.html Pasaporte Historia: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-pasaporte-historia_sq_f1835476_1.html Cita con Rama Podcast: https://www.ivoox.com/cita-rama-podcast-ciencia-ficcion_sq_f11043138_1.html Sierra Delta: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-sierra-delta_sq_f1507669_1.html Permiso para Clave: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-permiso-para-clave_sq_f1909797_1.html Héroes de Guerra 2.0: https://www.ivoox.com/podcast-heroes-guerra_sq_f1256035_1.html Escucha el episodio completo en la app de iVoox, o descubre todo el catálogo de iVoox Originals

Always Hold On To Arrow
131: Fallout

Always Hold On To Arrow

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 16, 2023 56:05


Kevonte and Lance discuss the sixth season premiere of Arrow, "Fallout." They talk Oliver now being a single parent, Diggle and Dinah's inappropriate chemistry, Raisa's return, and Oliver's secret identity being exposed...again.BULLSEYE, OFF THE MARK, MISS, or FAILED THIS CITY?Lance: BULLSEYEKevonte: BULLSEYEArtwork by Tom Gehrke: https://tomsart.threadless.com/PATREON: https://www.patreon.com/alwaysmallvilleTWITTER: https://twitter.com/donotfailourpodFACEBOOK: https://www.facebook.com/alwaysmallvilleEMAIL: alwaysarow@gmail.comThis show is part of the Spreaker Prime Network, if you are interested in advertising on this podcast, contact us at https://www.spreaker.com/show/5497038/advertisement

Gran Angular
Padre e hija formando tándem como fotógrafos oficiales de un equipo de baloncesto ACB

Gran Angular

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 4, 2023 72:34


Photolari cuenta con el apoyo de la AFPE y Premios LUX Podéis informaros de como asociarse a la Asociación de Fotógrafos Profesionales, y apuntaros a los Premios LUX en estos links: https://afpe.pro/asociarse/ https://premioslux.com/ Episodio de HOY En el episodio de hoy contamos una de esas historia de la fotografía que nos encanta descubrir. Mariano Pozo y su hija Raisa son los fotógrafos oficiales del equipo de baloncesto de la ACB, Unicaja de Málaga. Mariano lleva cuatro décadas en el sector, pero su hija a penas acabaza de comenzar con 20 años y ya trabaja con él cómo fotógrafa oficial. Hablamos de su relación profesional, las diferentes formas de entender la fotografía según las generaciones, su flujo de trabajo, y muchas cosas más. En definitiva, una bonita historia de la que aprender y escuchar.  Enlaces del Podcast Twitter de Photolari https://twitter.com/Photolari Web Mariano Pozo https://www.marianopozo.com/ Twitter Rodrigo https://twitter.com/RodrigoRivasPHInstagram Rodrigo https://www.instagram.com/rodrigorivasph/

How I Write

In this weeks episode, I have a conversation with Dr. Raisa Alvarado- an assistant professor of communications at CSUSB. We talk about Linguistic compliance, code- switching, and our "gold star lifestyles". We also talk about fitting in to academia and finding a spaces within  spaces that was Raisa says were not made for us but can be challenged. A special thank you to Coyote Radio who let us record this episode in their Podcast Studio here at CSUSB and to student assistant Alexis Rios who edited this episode. Coyoute radio offers audio recording and editing for podcast at the Coyote Radio Podcast Studio by appointment- they are open to all students, staff and faculty. Message Coyote Radio on Instagram @Coyote_Radio_ or email Aimee.Alvarez@CSUSB.edu 

Plötzlich Bäcker
PB 90 - Vom Wesen des Dinkels - Im Gespräch mit Dinkelzüchterin Catherine Cuendet

Plötzlich Bäcker

Play Episode Listen Later Oct 2, 2023 132:47


Catherine Cuendet ist "die" Dinkelzüchterin im Biobereich. Etliche neue Sorten sind seit einigen Jahren in aller Munde und stammen aus ihrem Zuchtgarten in Hessen (darunter Copper und Raisa). Im Gespräch erklärt sie die Entstehungsgeschichte des Dinkels, räumt mit allerlei Mythen auf und beschreibt ihren Züchterinnenalltag. Ein langes, intensives und lehrreiches Gespräch über eine Arbeit, ohne die wir alle kein (Dinkel-)Brot backen könnten.

Game-Changing Health
Estrogen Dominance Part 2 with Registered Dietitians Kara & Raisa

Game-Changing Health

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 25, 2023 39:08


In this week's episode, we are back for part 2 of estrogen dominance with Kara Goss, Functional Dietitian and Raisa, Functional Dietitian. We cover:Symptoms of estrogen dominanceTesting if you suspect estrogen dominanceHow to improve estrogen dominance Kara's Instagram:https://instagram.com/karagoss_rd?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==Raisa's Instagram:https://instagram.com/raisaz?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== Labs to Request Annually (free): https://gianna-beasley-registered-dietitian.ck.page/0e665013a0 Connect with Me: IG: https://www.instagram.com/dietitian.gianna/ https://www.instagram.com/gamechanginghealthpodcast/ Website: https://www.giannabeasley.com/ Want to work together? Send me a DM on IG or slide into my inbox!

Game-Changing Health
Estrogen Dominance Part 1 with Registered Dietitians Kara & Raisa

Game-Changing Health

Play Episode Listen Later Sep 18, 2023 39:41


In this week's episode, I am joined by two of my colleagues who are Functional Dietitians, Kara Goss and Raisa. We are kicking off a two episode series on estrogen dominance!We cover:What is estrogen dominance?What role does estrogen play in our body?Do we detox estrogen? How do we detox estrogen?Is there a connection between estrogen dominance and the gutKara's Instagram:https://instagram.com/karagoss_rd?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA==Raisa's Instagram:https://instagram.com/raisaz?igshid=MzRlODBiNWFlZA== Labs to Request Annually (free): https://gianna-beasley-registered-dietitian.ck.page/0e665013a0 Connect with Me: IG: https://www.instagram.com/dietitian.gianna/ https://www.instagram.com/gamechanginghealthpodcast/ Website: https://www.giannabeasley.com/ Want to work together? Send me a DM on IG or slide into my inbox!

Histórias para ouvir lavando louça
EU SABIA QUE IRIA PERDER MINHA IRMÃ

Histórias para ouvir lavando louça

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 22, 2023 21:47


A Raisa e a Daniele são irmãs e sempre foram muito ligadas uma na outra. Mas Raisa, que é a mais velha, começou a pressentir que perderia a Dani… e infelizmente isso aconteceu.  Durante o ano anterior à partida da Daniele, a intuição da Raisa dizia algo. A Raisa nunca soube explicar a origem desse sentimento, mas estava certa de que sentia agonia quando o assunto era a sua irmã. Por conta dessa sensação, a Raisa passou a ser ainda mais carinhosa com a irmã. Ela pediu perdão por todas as brigas bobas da adolescência e a Daniele retribuía todo o afeto enviando mensagens de áudio dizendo que a amava todos os dias. Ainda que Daniele estivesse presente, a Raisa sentia que havia algo errado. Isso pode ter ocorrido pela Raisa ter abraçado a responsabilidade de proteger a irmã, ou por ter visto a Daniele encarar algumas barreiras ao longo da vida. Aos 6 anos, a Daniele foi diagnosticada com epilepsia. Embora seja uma condição conhecida, ela lidou com diversas situações preconceituosas, como ser demitida de um emprego após uma crise. A situação passou a afetar a saúde mental da Daniele. Por outro lado, a Daniele era faixa azul em jiu-jitsu e chegou a ganhar o primeiro lugar em um torneio no ano de 2015. Em 2016, o namorado estava preparando uma festa para celebrar as conquistas dela e a vida parecia estar fluindo normalmente. Ainda em 2016, a Dani tirou a própria vida e a perda súbita foi um grande choque para toda a família. Enfrentar o luto foi bastante difícil. Nos meses seguintes, a mãe das duas irmãs se tornou o pilar da família e, aos poucos, todos foram ressignificando as memórias. Depois de um tempo, a Daniele apareceu em um sonho da Raisa e disse: "Com você estarei sempre." Desde a partida da irmã, todo ano, no dia do aniversário dela, a Raisa compra flores e acende uma vela para celebrar a vida que a irmã teve. Elas sempre estarão ligadas uma na outra, seja onde for. Outras histórias que comentamos no episódio: História da Vivian: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XoSjCeh8wSQ História da Ofélia: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6mk4jdVFeAw História da Virag: https://open.spotify.com/episode/0FztogdVM3Mpq65Yjyrhf3?si=91a08e60674d430e História da Cibelle: https://open.spotify.com/episode/5wk9nbBpusXYVcYmnxMfBZ?si=GT5szSUaSu-eNMKQcF31kA "A história do outro muda a gente", o primeiro livro do ter.a.pia está disponível para compra. Garanta o seu aqui: ⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠https://amzn.to/3CGZkc5⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠⁠ O Histórias para ouvir lavando louça é um podcast do ter.a.pia apresentado por Alexandre Simone e Lucas Galdino. Para conhecer mais do ter.a.pia, acesse historiasdeterapia.com. Para entrar no grupo do Whatsapp e receber as histórias do canal e do podcast com antecedência, é só contribuir no site apoia.se/historiasdeterapia. Edição: Felipe Dantas Roteiro: Luigi Madormo

Dean's Chat - All Things Podiatric Medicine
Ep. 36 - Samuel Merritt University - College of Podiatric Medicine - APMSA Leaders

Dean's Chat - All Things Podiatric Medicine

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 11, 2023 42:57


Over the next few months, Dean's Chat will be providing bonus episodes interviewing students from the Schools and Colleges of Podiatric Medicine. This week we are joined by four students from Samuel Merritt University – College of Podiatric Medicine (SMU-CPM), Raisa Chiri Zarzosa, Miko Fogarty, Nicolette Medrano, and Dayron Hernandez. Raisa is representing the Class of 2024, Miko represents the Class of 2025 and Nicolette and Dayron represent the Class of 2026. All represent the American Podiatric Medical Students Association (APMSA) within SMU-CPM. Join our discussions each week on the podiatric journey our students are embarking on at the various schools. Students share their path on discovering podiatric medicine, to applying to what is now eleven schools and colleges of podiatric medicine, to the first and second year of didactics, Boards Part 1 and 2, and clinical experiences and opportunities. We do some professor shout-outs and discuss student services, extracurricular activities, and student life at each school. Enjoy! In this bonus episode of Dean's Chat, Dr. Jeffrey Jensen welcomes four students from the Samuel Merritt University College of Podiatric Medicine. The students join the conversation to discuss their educational experiences and shed light on the field of podiatric medicine. Tune in to learn more about this fascinating field and the experiences of these aspiring podiatrists. The students delve into the significance of finding balance in life and prioritizing activities that bring joy and relaxation. They share their personal strategies for recharging and achieving equilibrium. They encourage listeners to prioritize these activities, whether it involves teaching ballet, socializing with friends, exploring new places, or finding moments of relaxation at home. One of the students shares her experience of planning a family while pursuing a career in the medical field. She emphasizes that with determination and courage, it is possible to strike a balance between both aspects. She highlights the importance of having a strong support system in place, mentioning how her fiance played a significant role in supporting her and caring for their baby when she needed to be at the hospital or study. She firmly believes that with determination, courage, and passion, individuals can achieve both goals. She also mentions the ever-evolving nature of the medical field, which presents opportunities for individuals to pursue their career aspirations while also having a family. Throughout the episode, the students are commended for their remarkable journey and contributions to Samuel Merritt University College of Podiatric Medicine.  Dean's Chat Website  Dean's Chat Episodes  Dean's Chat Blog Why Podiatric Medicine?  Become a Podiatric Physician   

Game-Changing Health
Setting Realistic Expectations In Your Health Journey with Special Guest Registered Dietitian Raisa

Game-Changing Health

Play Episode Listen Later Aug 7, 2023 46:29


Labs to Request Annually (free): https://gianna-beasley-registered-dietitian.ck.page/0e665013a0 Connect with Me: IG: https://www.instagram.com/dietitian.gianna/ https://www.instagram.com/gamechanginghealthpodcast/ Website: https://www.giannabeasley.com/ Want to work together? Send me a DM on IG or slide into my inbox!

Ngobrol Sore Semaunya
Cerita Mereka Tentang Sang Anak | NSS Ep. 112

Ngobrol Sore Semaunya

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 20, 2023 13:54


Selamat datang di Ngobrol Sore Semaunya! Di episode kali ini, kita melakukan kompilasi cerita menyentuh dari beberapa tamu spesial NSS tentang sang anak. Mulai dari Raisa hingga Ibu Atalia Praratya, masing-masing punya cerita yang mengharukan tentang sang anak dan pesan menyentuh yang mereka utarakan untuk sang anak tercinta. Follow Us! Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ngobrolsore... TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ngobrolsorese... Ngobrol Sore Semaunya hadir setiap Kamis jam 18.00 WIB hanya di cxomedia.id & YouTube CXO Media #NgobrolSoreSemaunya #CXOMedia #PutriTanjung

Rádio Coluna do Flamengo
RAISA SIMPLICIO | PODFLA #56

Rádio Coluna do Flamengo

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 27, 2023 153:01


RAISA SIMPLICIO | PODFLA #56 by colunadofla.com

How I Got Here
Raisa (Rasin) Karim Cosplay

How I Got Here

Play Episode Listen Later Jun 12, 2023 75:43


Did you ever want to do Cosplay? Have you ever wanted to create a character of your own? Do you like to sew? Come take a listen to how Raisa the Raisin was born. Raisa will tell you how she discovered her love of comic books, and cosplay along with finding the love her life (not in my class), in middle school. Come listen to how the love of learning, the love of the library, and the love of taking a chance has payed off for Raisa the Raisin. Come listen to how hard work from The Don, to FAU High School, to The University of Florida X2 (masters degree) that gave Raisa the chance at an amazing job in NYC, and it allows her the time to pursue her real dream of costume designs and Cosplay. As always, thank you for llistening. .

Not Your Quick Fix
Episode 95: What They Don't Tell You About Postpartum with Raisa

Not Your Quick Fix

Play Episode Listen Later May 15, 2023 73:56


This week, your hosts are excited to welcome a very special guest, their friend Raisa, back to the podcast. Raisa is a Registered Dietitian, online health and fitness coach, and works as an assistant coach for DLD Nation. She is also an absolute wealth of knowledge regarding hormonal and women's health. Kara and Kylie are not only hyped to chat all things Eras Tour with Raisa (the three of them are going together this June), but to chat all things postpartum, as Raisa is a brand-new mom. Raisa opens up to Not Your Quick Fix about her journey through pregnancy and into postpartum life, how her health and fitness routine has changed, c-section birth, giving herself grace as her body changes, trying to avoid comparing herself to other moms/pregnant women, tips for breastfeeding, and the mentally tough parts of postpartum that not a lot of people share with expecting (or new) mothers.  This episode is highly valuable to any other new moms, or moms-to-be, and we hope you take something important away, or at least feel less alone in your journey by hearing Raisa share her story.  Follow the NYQF Podcast Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠https://www.instagram.com/notyourquickfixpodcast/⁠⁠⁠ Connect with Raisa: https://www.instagram.com/raisaz Connect with Kara: Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠Instagram.com/karagoss_rd⁠⁠⁠ Facebook: ⁠⁠⁠https://www.facebook.com/groups/523529175060599⁠⁠⁠ TikTok: ⁠⁠⁠https://www.tiktok.com/@karagoss_rd⁠⁠⁠  Connect with Kylie: Instagram: ⁠⁠⁠Instagram.com/writewithkylie⁠⁠⁠ TikTok: ⁠⁠⁠https://www.tiktok.com/@heyitskylie_13⁠ Previous Podcast Episodes Referenced: Episode 43: Managing PMS and Understanding Your Menstrual Cycle with Raisa Episode 56: Staying Fit During Pregnancy with Olivia Lagunzad

Boss Maidel's Podcast
Rachel Barenbaum

Boss Maidel's Podcast

Play Episode Listen Later May 11, 2023 26:48


In this episode, we chat about Rachel's new book Atomic Anna. From the critically acclaimed author of A Bend in the Stars, an epic adventure as three generations of women work together and travel through time to prevent the Chernobyl disaster and right the wrongs of their past. In 1986, nuclear scientist Anna Berkova is asleep in her bed in the Soviet Union when Chernobyls reactor melts down. The energy surge accidentally sends her through time. When she wakes up, shes in 1992 and discovers Molly, her estranged daughter, shot in the chest. Should Anna travel in time to save her daughter or stop Chernobyl? Anna goes to 60s Philadelphia, where Molly is coming of age as an adopted refusenik in a family full of secrets. Molly finds solace in comic books, drawing her own series, Atomic Anna. But when she meets volatile Viktor, their romance sets her life on a dangerous course. Anna then seeks out Mollys daughter, Raisa, in the 80s. Raisa is a lonely teen and math prodigy, who finds new issues of Atomic Anna in unexpected places. Each comic challenges her to solve equations leading to two impossible conclusions Time travel is real and so is the strange old woman claiming to be her grandmother. These three remarkable women must work together across time to prevent the greatest nuclear disaster of the twentieth century, but simply because you can change the past, does it mean you should? You can follow Rachel at www.rachelbarenbaum.com You can listen to her podcast Check This Out with Rachel Barenbaum here. To join the Boss Maidel Booklcub for $5.99 per month click here.

Sew What?
Weaving and Unweaving: An Interview with Raisa Kabir

Sew What?

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 30, 2023 58:34


In this episode, Isabella interviews interdisciplinary artist and weaver Raisa Kabir. The pair talk about Raisa's weaving practice, the tangled relationship between textiles and colonialism, and all sorts of looms.Images and sources are available at @sewwhatpodcast on Twitter, Instagram, and Facebook. The podcast has a website, sewwhatpodcast.com.

Creative Guts
Raisa Tolchinsky

Creative Guts

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 15, 2023 56:44


In this episode of Creative Guts, co-hosts Laura Harper Lake and Sarah Wrightsman sit down with Raisa Tolchinsky, also known as The Poem Doctor! This episode is a special one. Not only was it recorded in front of a live audience at Exeter High School, but Raisa opens this episode by reading several custom poems, which she wrote in response to prompts from the students at EHS! And, in lieu of rapid fire, this episode concludes with questions from the audience!Raisa Tolchinsky, or The Poem Doctor, is the George Bennett Writer-in-Residence at Phillips Exeter Academy. She is a recipient of the Henfield Prize for Fiction and a 2x Pushcart Prize nominee. Raisa earned her M.F.A. in poetry from the University of Virginia and her B.A. from Bowdoin College. Raisa's debut book “Glass Jaw” is forthcoming from Persea Books in 2024! In this episode, we talk about Raisa's creative process, her advice for aspiring poets of all ages, and how she defines success.Learn more about Raisa on her website and get your own custom poem, here: www.raisatolchinsky.com and follow Raisa on Instagram, here: www.instagram.com/thepoemdoctor. A special thank you to Exeter High School, the Racial Unity Team, and the NH State Council on the Arts for making this special episode possible!Listen to this episode wherever you listen to podcasts or on our website www.CreativeGutsPodcast.com. Be friends with us on Facebook at www.Facebook.com/CreativeGutsPodcast and Instagram at  www.Instagram.com/CreativeGutsPodcast. If you love listening, consider making a donation to Creative Guts! Our budget is tiny, so donations of any size make a big difference. Learn more about us and make a tax deductible donation at www.CreativeGutsPodcast.com.

Por Falar em Correr
PFC 602 - Raisa Marcelino

Por Falar em Correr

Play Episode Listen Later Mar 6, 2023 51:31


Confira como foi o episódio com a Raisa Marcelino. Falamos da história dela no esporte, da vida na corrida, dos treinos, de maratonas e muito mais. Escute, informe-se e divirta-se. https://www.instagram.com/raisa.marcelino/ SEJA MEMBRO DO CANAL NO YOUTUBE DO PFC

Shots to the Dome
Episode 155: Avoiding the Quick Fix Trap with DLDNation Client Michelle!

Shots to the Dome

Play Episode Listen Later Feb 28, 2023 38:42


Have you been trying the "quick fix" solutions when it comes to your health and fitness and feel like you're never making any progress? Are you tired of feeling stuck and want to make a lasting change? Our guest today felt the same way even after hiring a few coaches in her past, found DLDNation, and has given her a roadmap for long lasting success. DLDNation client Michelle along with DLDNation assistant coach Raisa is joining us today to talk about Michelle's experience with online coaching, being introduced to steroids by a former coach, what makes DLDNation different, and so much more!   Time Stamps:   (2:34) Michelle's Experience with Online Coaching (5:53) Amount of Women Eating 1000-12000 Calories (9:33) Being Introduced to Steroids (16:58) What DLDNation is Doing Different (20:40) Michelle's Advice to You (27:17) Other Metrics of Success Than Scale Weight (32:08) Final Thoughts (37:08) Where to Find Michelle ---------------------------- Follow Us on Instagram! @mbritton19  @raisaz  @fitnessshaman @dalalovesdumbbells @dldnation @shotstothedomepodcast ---------------------------- We have helped over 4,000 people transform their lives through sustainable health! If you want to be the next, click here to apply for coaching! ---------------------------- Check out our website for freebies, amazing client results, and more! DLDNation.com

Tales from the Fandom
Episode 295: Raisa aka Raisin Cosplay talks Mass Effect, Star Wars, DC Comics, Cosplay, and Cosplay Photography

Tales from the Fandom

Play Episode Listen Later Jan 2, 2023 97:35


Raisa aka Raisin Cosplay joins me to talk about some of her favorite fandoms as we start 2023! We start things off with talking about the Mass Effect video game franchise. Raisa talks primarily about the trilogy, but we also talk Andromeda and the new game coming. She talks about the game style she plays, some of the choices she makes, romances, the thematic shift in the games, and more. If you like Mass Effect, you'll love this. Then we change fandoms and talk all about Star Wars. We discuss the Clone Wars series, Rebels, Ahsoka Tano, The Mandalorian, and we touch on the Star Wars galaxy as a whole. Find out who she wants more of in future shows or movies. We then dive into comics, specifically DC Comics. She talks about her love for Martian Manhunter, the Green Lantern Corps, and Aquaman. We also touch on Superman, some DC movie thoughts, and what she'd like to see. Then, Raisa talks about Cosplay. From how she got into cosplay, the community evolution, sewing, and how she chooses her characters. We also talk about how she got into Cosplay Photography. Why she got into cosplay photography, her style and editing, and more. You can find Raisa at: https://www.instagram.com/raisincosplay/ https://www.instagram.com/raisphoto/ https://www.tiktok.com/@raisincosplay https://twitter.com/raisincosplay https://www.etsy.com/shop/RaisinCreations Get 10% off your order of Woodmarks, Tolkien style maps, and more from In The Reads by using code TALES10 at checkout. Visit them at: https://inthereads.com/ Time Markers: 2:45 Mass Effect 22:10 Star Wars 47:45 DC Comics 1:12:30 Cosplay and Cosplay Photography

Shots to the Dome
Episode 140: Reverse Dieting 101 w/ Coach Raisa!

Shots to the Dome

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2022 38:37


One of the most frequent questions we receive at DLDNation is, "what is a reverse diet?" Our society and culture has conditioned us to always be in a traditional "diet" and cutting calories to lose weight. Chronic dieting for months and even years can lead to a concept called metabolic adaptation aka your body gets used to those lower calories. A host of negative side effects can come from metabolic adaptation and along with stalling weight loss, fatigue and decreased hormonal health can set in. How do we solve this? This is where reverse dieting comes in! I have with me DLDNation Coach Raisa on the show to discuss what a reverse diet is, results we've seen with clients who go through a reverse, what the process looks like, and so much more!   Time Stamps:   (1:20) What is a Reverse Diet? (3:00) Why Reverse Diet? (4:26) What is Metabolic Adaptation? (7:30) Societal Expectations on How We Should Look (11:30) When Client's Need a Reverse Diet (15:20) Results From a Reverse Diet (21:03) Trusting the Process and Hack Your Health (22:54) What The Reverse Dieting Process Looks Like (25:40) Will I Gain the Weight Back? (30:47) What is TDEE? (37:20) Where to Find Raisa ---------------------------- Follow Us on Instagram! @raisaz @fitnessshaman @dalalovesdumbbells @dldnation @shotstothedomepodcast ---------------------------- Book a Life Coaching Session w/ Sean ---------------------------- We have helped over 4,000 people transform their lives through sustainable health! If you want to be the next, click here to apply for coaching! ---------------------------- Check out our website for freebies, amazing client results, and more! DLDNation.com

Naked Beauty
Black Punk Beauty Looks, Diversity in Modeling, and Makeup Techniques ft. Raisa Flowers

Naked Beauty

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 7, 2022 51:58


“I work backstage and it teaches you so much. The models are getting so many photos taken of them, so you have to be perfect.” - my guest makeup artists & model, Raisa FlowersRaisa is an icon in the beauty game and I've been wanting to interview her for so long! She's done everything from hit the runway as a model for Rihanna's most recent Savage x Fenty show to working with musicians to working at fashion week's top shows. The NY native continuously serves some of the most eccentric looks within the beauty industry, earning her a seat on the Dazed 100, and features in publications such as Vogue and The Cut. Links to Products Mentioned: Pat Mcgrath Lip Pencil, Fenty Gloss Bomb, Glossier Invisible Shield, MAC Pro Palette Skin Corrector, MAC 24-Hour Studio Fix Concealer, MAC Mineralize Skinfinish, A.J. Crimson Universal Finishing Powder (Bamboo), Laura Mercier Loose Setting Powder, Danessa Myricks Evolution Powder #3, Fenty Pro Filt'r Setting Powder, Glossier Milk Jelly Cleanser, Caudalie Cleansing Exfoliator, Glossier Haloscope, Glossier Skin Tint, Pat McGrath Skin Fetish Foundation, Pat McGrath Mothership Palettes, Glossier Brow Flick, Nars Creamy ConcealerJoin the Naked Beauty Community on IG: @nakedbeautyplanet Check out nakedbeautypodcast.com for all previous episodes & search episodes by topicFollow Raisa: @raisaflowers Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

Newshour
Ukraine grain tycoon killed in Russian shelling of Mykolaiv

Newshour

Play Episode Listen Later Jul 31, 2022 48:37


Ukraine's president, Volodymyr Zelensky, has described the killing of one of the country's richest businessmen as a great loss. Oleksiy Vadatursky and his wife, Raisa, died when a Russian missile hit their home in the southern city of Mykolaiv. Also in the programme, England have won their first major women's tournament in the Euro 2022 final against old rivals and eight-time champions Germany. (Photo: NIBULON)

Daebak Show w/ Eric Nam
Ep. #138 | Catching Up: Raisa

Daebak Show w/ Eric Nam

Play Episode Listen Later Nov 15, 2021 55:20


Eric calls up Indonesian solo artist Raisa to chat about how music came into her life, her big plans for the future, and her recent collaboration with singer-songwriter Sam Kim! Make sure to subscribe to @daebakshow (IT'S FREE) and leave a comment, rating and/or review on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, Soundcloud, and YouTube. Thank you to our sponsor for this episode, Better Help! Take charge of your mental health and get 10% off your first month by visiting https://betterhelp.com/kpop To find out more about MINDSET by DIVE Studios, visit here: https://www.getmindset.com/ Download the MINDSET by DIVE Studios app at https://bit.ly/3rbOanf Episodes are presented by @thedivestudios Connect with us on all social media platforms and at https://www.divestudios.io/ SUPPORT & JOIN DIVE Studios' Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/divestudios JOIN DIVE Studios' Discord Channel: https://discord.gg/nnYX2E4 Connect with Eric: https://www.instagram.com/ericnam/ Connect with Raisa: https://www.instagram.com/raisa6690/ https://twitter.com/raisa6690 #Kpop #DaebakShow #DIVEStudios #EricNam #에릭남 #Raisa #RaisaSamKimSomeday #Someday Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices